Sports
Aggies' Early Offense Not Enough in Loss at FIU
History MIAMI – NM State came out swinging in the top of the first, jumping out to a quick 2-0 lead, but the bats cooled off and FIU steadily pulled away, handing the Aggies an 8–2 loss Saturday night. The two sides will return to FIU Baseball Stadium on Sunday at 10 a.m. MT for […]

History
MIAMI – NM State came out swinging in the top of the first, jumping out to a quick 2-0 lead, but the bats cooled off and FIU steadily pulled away, handing the Aggies an 8–2 loss Saturday night. The two sides will return to FIU Baseball Stadium on Sunday at 10 a.m. MT for the series-deciding contest.
The Aggies looked sharp early, with Brandon Forrester setting the tone by singling through the right side and stealing second. After a pair of outs, NM State strung together some timely offense as Bryce Campbell’s infield single moved Forrester to third, and a hit-by-pitch loaded the bases. Forrester then stole home in a heads-up play, and Sheehan O’Connor followed with an RBI single to give the Aggies a 2–0 advantage.
Unfortunately, this would be the only inning the Aggies would muster any offense in as they were held to just six hits and no runs for the remainder of the bout.
FIU responded immediately in the bottom half of the first with a two-run home run from Keshon Frett to tie the game, and from there, the Panthers controlled the pace. Frett struck again with another two-run shot in the fourth to put FIU up 6–2 before the Panthers added two more insurance runs in the seventh.
The Aggies had their chances, leaving 13 runners on base, including a bases-loaded situation in the fourth inning. Bryce Campbell and Boston Vest each had multi-hit nights while Austin reached base three times with a hit and a pair of walks, but NM State couldn’t convert following the first.
Aggie pitching saw some bright spots out of the bullpen, with Connor Wylde recording seven strikeouts in 3.2 innings of work and Dylan Weekly and Jaden Davis combining to tally three strikeouts and no runs allowed across two innings of action.
NUMBERS OF NOTE
- Bryce Campbell recorded his ninth multi-hit game of the season in just 18 games played.
- Sheehan O’Connor was the lone Aggie to record an RBI, bringing his season total to 23.
- Saturday marked just the fourth time this season that the Aggies failed to score more than two runs and the first time since March 8 against Texas A&M.
- Boston Vest produced the fourth multi-hit game of his freshman campaign.
- Connor Wylde matched a career high in strikeouts with seven – a mark he set earlier this season at UNC Greensboro on March 19.
For complete coverage of NM State Baseball, visit NMStateSports.com – the official home of Aggie athletics – and follow us on Twitter (@NMStateBaseball), Instagram (@NMStateBaseball) and like us on Facebook (NM State Baseball).
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Sports
Long Beach Poly vs. Edison, CIF Softball – The562.org
Nina Fife Nina Fife is a sophomore at Pepperdine University double majoring in Journalism and English with a writing and rhetoric emphasis. She began working with The562 in the inaugural intern class before being hired as their Social Media Director and now Assistant Editor. Nina is a proud Long Beach schools alum who graduated with […]

Nina Fife is a sophomore at Pepperdine University double majoring in Journalism and English with a writing and rhetoric emphasis. She began working with The562 in the inaugural intern class before being hired as their Social Media Director and now Assistant Editor. Nina is a proud Long Beach schools alum who graduated with valedictorian honors.
Sports
Dolphins Take On Opening Day Of ASUN Championship
Story Links JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The Jacksonville University track and field team took to the facilities of UNF for the opening day of the ASUN Championship Thursday. Starting the day off, Eva Belot placed 10th overall in the high jump with a 1.54-meter leap. In the preliminary round of the 400-meter hurdles, […]

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The Jacksonville University track and field team took to the facilities of UNF for the opening day of the ASUN Championship Thursday.
Starting the day off, Eva Belot placed 10th overall in the high jump with a 1.54-meter leap.
In the preliminary round of the 400-meter hurdles, Joy Whittington qualified for the finals with a sixth-place finish and a time of 1:04.78.
Cassie Thompson and Mariandree Chacon both qualified for the finals in the 200-meter with top four showings in the prelims. Thompson finished third overall with a time of 23.90. Chacon was right behind with a 24.14 time, just .02 seconds shy of her season best.
The final event, the grueling 10,000-meter run, featured four different JU runners. Jordan Dix finished best among the team with a 10th place finish and a final time of 39:00.30. Lana Grelli finished in 12th, Gabby Huxtable finished in 13th and Alexis Holmes finished in 14th.
Jacksonville will be active during the second day of competition, with student-athletes featured in the long jump, 400m trials, 100m trials, 100m hurdle trials and the 3,000m steeplechase.
The ASUN Championships can be streamed on ESPN+.
Sports
Kaylie Laskody Promoted to Interim Head Track and Field Coach
Story Links Adrian, Mich. – Adrian College Athletics is proud to announce the appointment of Kaylie Laskody as the Interim Head Coach for its Track and Field program. A former collegiate athlete and dynamic student leader, Laskody brings a wealth of energy, experience, and vision to the program, having served as the Assistant Coach of […]

Adrian, Mich. – Adrian College Athletics is proud to announce the appointment of Kaylie Laskody as the Interim Head Coach for its Track and Field program. A former collegiate athlete and dynamic student leader, Laskody brings a wealth of energy, experience, and vision to the program, having served as the Assistant Coach of Track and Field & Cross Country at Adrian.
Laskody is a 2023 graduate of Alderson Broaddus University, where she earned dual majors in Exercise Science with a focus in Physical Therapy and Prosthetics, complemented by minors in Psychology and Strength and Conditioning. She is currently pursuing her Master’s degree in Sports Management at West Virginia University.
A standout student-athlete herself, Laskody competed for four years on the Alderson Broaddus Track and Field team, culminating her senior year as team captain. Her leadership extended far beyond the track, serving as both the Student Body President and Senior Class President during the 2022–2023 academic year. Recognized for her dedication and impact on campus, she was awarded the Outstanding Senator of the Year for 2021–2022.
“We had a good season, even with battling some injuries throughout we really had some breakout performances and even saw some records fall and a few medals come home after our conference meets,” added Laskody. “We laid a really solid foundation this season to be able to help us continue building our program in a positive direction. We are really excited for our returners and the incoming freshman class to continue helping us make an impact on the conference.
With starting this position, I’m excited to get to work and really see the potential of our team shine through and really show what the Bulldog Mentality is.”
In addition to her competitive background, Laskody has actively contributed to high school track programs as a volunteer coach across multiple event groups. Her coaching experience and strong communication skills make her a well-rounded asset to a department that is proud to have her on board.
Adrian College looks forward to a successful future under Coach Laskody’s leadership. The Morgantown, West Virginia native will begin her head coaching duties effective immediately. She will remain on the Cross Country staff as an Assistant under Miles Caine.
Adrian College will begin a national search immediately for a new head track and field coach for the 2025-26 season.
Sports
National track bids finalized for Central
Story Links PELLA — The Central College track and field program will have another sizable group headed to the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field Championships next weekend. The national meet is to be held in Geneva, Ohio at the Spire Institute next Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The Dutch have […]

PELLA — The Central College track and field program will have another sizable group headed to the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field Championships next weekend.
The national meet is to be held in Geneva, Ohio at the Spire Institute next Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The Dutch have eight individuals qualified across seven events..
Olivia Bohlen (junior, Belle Plaine) enters No. 3 in the women’s heptathlon with 5,045 points. Peyton Steffen (junior, Marion) is No. 4 in the 3,000-meter steeplechase (10 minutes, 33.21 seconds) and No. 18 in the 5,000 meters (16:42.09)
Kale Hobart (sophomore, Mason City) qualified second in the men’s decathlon with 6,922 points. Reid Pakkebier (senior, Cedar Rapids, Kennedy HS) is also in the decathlon, entering 17th with 6,366 points). The Dutch men also have a pair of athletes in the 110-meter hurdles. Gunner Meyer (junior, Fairbank, Wapsie Valley HS) is No. 6 (14.10 seconds) and Grant Miller (junior, Norwalk) is No. 13 (14.20 seconds).
Men’s triple jumper Kale Purcell (senior, Holton, Kan.) is the No. 16 qualifier with a mark of 48 feet, 6.25 inches.). Jack Brown (sophomore, Norwalk) was the 21st qualifier in the 3,000-meter steeplechase (8:57.83).
Central College NCAA Championships schedule of events
Thursday, May 23 (times are EST)
11:30 a.m. – men’s decathlon (100-meter dash)
12:30 p.m. – women’s heptathlon (110-meter hurdles)
12:15 p.m. – men’s decathlon (long jump)
1:15 p.m. – women’s heptathlon (high jump)
1:25 p.m. – men’s decathlon (shot put)
2:45 p.m. – men’s decathlon (high jump)
3:10 p.m. – women’s heptathlon (shot put)
4:30 p.m. – women’s heptathlon (200-meter dash)
4:40 p.m. – men’s decathlon (400-meter dash)
5:35 p.m. – men’s 1500 meters (prelims)
7:10 p.m. – men’s 3,000-meter steeplechase (prelims)
7:35 p.m. – women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase (prelims)
Friday, May 24 (times are EST)
10 a.m. – men’s decathlon (110-meter hurdles)
10:45 a.m. – men’s decathlon (discus throw)
11 a.m. – women’s heptathlon (long jump)
Noon – men’s decathlon (pole vault)
12:15 p.m. – women’s heptathlon (javelin throw)
2:10 p.m. – men’s 110-meter hurdles (prelims)
2:45 p.m. – men’s decathlon (javelin throw)
2:45 p.m. – women’s heptathlon (800 meters)
4:30 p.m. – men’s decathlon (1500 meters)
4:40 p.m. – men’s 3,000-meter steeplechase (finals)
4:55 p.m. – women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase (finals)
Saturday, May 25 (times are EST)
11 a.m. – men’s triple jump (prelims and finals)
1:25 p.m. – men’s 1500 meters (prelims)
2:10 p.m. – men’s 110-meter hurdles (finals)
4:25 p.m. – women’s 5000 meters (final)
Sports
Joel Edgerton on His Cannes Thriller The Plague
“I have two almost 4-year-olds, and I’m quite powerful and influential in certain circles, but not with two 4-year-olds,” says Joel Edgerton. “Kids run their own country, in a way.” Edgerton’s been thinking a lot lately about those nascent years before entering adulthood thanks to his latest project, The Plague, which looks at the complicated […]

“I have two almost 4-year-olds, and I’m quite powerful and influential in certain circles, but not with two 4-year-olds,” says Joel Edgerton. “Kids run their own country, in a way.”
Edgerton’s been thinking a lot lately about those nascent years before entering adulthood thanks to his latest project, The Plague, which looks at the complicated and occasionally terrifying social dynamics of kids — specifically adolescent boys.
The feature debut of director Charlie Polinger, the film is set in the world of a competitive water polo summer camp, focusing primarily on the dynamic within a group of 12- and 13-year-old boys who have ostracized one camper because he has “the plague,” a nasty-looking case of eczema. One camper, Ben (Everett Blunck), struggles between his desire to help the outcast camper and his worry about incurring the wrath of the larger group. In the film, Edgerton plays the well-meaning if ineffective water polo coach.
“In the age of renewed questions about and considerations of the manosphere, The Plague is a prescient title,” wrote THR critic Lovia Gyarkye in her review of the film, which is quickly becoming one of the stand-outs of the fest.
Beyond displaying considerable range as an actor in everything from Baz Luhrmann’s The Great Gatsby to Paul Schrader’s The Master Gardener and George Clooney’s The Boys in the Boat, Edgerton is also a filmmaker — he received a DGA nom for first-time director for his 2015 thriller The Gift, which he also wrote and starred in.
Ahead of Cannes 2025, where The Plague is set to screen in the Un Certain Regard section, Edgerton talked to THR about the inherent horror of being a preteen: “I’ve often said about school experience that it’s like a documentary where you’re watching a depleting watering hole in the African savanna.”
What drew you to a story that is focused on a gaggle of 13-year-olds?
I’m really interested in this idea of when do we become responsible adults. There is an untethered, unchecked period of our life, even though we have parents, we have teachers and, in this case, camp counselors. There’s a nature in children that is natural, that can be beautiful or can be dark. It’s through a passage of experiential moments that we learn what makes others around us feel good, and therefore how that reflects our own character and that shapes who we are. I thought the journey within this film of the central character was a really, really interesting universal exploration of how we shape ourselves in the world. I just wanted to help make sure that the movie got made.
What was it about the script that had you saying, “I want to help it get made”?
There’s a real careful attention and accuracy to how children — while they might be terrible at understanding the ramifications or the collateral damage that they can cause — are excellent at socio-diplomacy. They learn where to position themselves within a flock or a herd. They understand hierarchy. They understand what is dangerous and what is safe. Whether we believe those instincts and cues to be good ones, they very quickly discern where they need to stand and with whom. Ben’s journey is about understanding that it’s dangerous to be caring towards the ostracized, wounded member of the group, but his nature draws him in that direction and draws him into the danger as well.
There is the old adage in film about not working with kids and animals, but in this movie, you are only working with kids. How did you find the experience?
I always marvel at kids, whatever the ages of kids that I’ve worked with. You’ll work with a child who’s never been in a film before and you’ll learn something from them. Kayo [Martin], who plays the bully, he could run rings around me to the point where we would shoot things, and when the lines were blurred, I wanted to throttle him. He knew that his job was just to be cocky to everybody, and so he didn’t stop with me. I don’t just look upwards to the older, wiser actors. There’s something to be learned from everybody. It’s very impressive, too, on Charlie’s side, to create the sense of danger for the character of Ben. Intention and effect are different things. I might say something just to make my friends laugh at me that really hurts you. I think there is a real accuracy and detail within that for the film. It’s not just like bullies going, “I’m going to be mean.” It’s “I’m being mean because I’m trying to survive.” For Kayo’s character, his way of surviving is to be the leader of a group.
When you put it like that, being a kid is pretty Darwinian.
The adult world has its own governing set of rules, and we impose those on our own children, supposedly to show them the ropes to the world that they’re about to take a hold of. But children have their own language, their own rules. They create them. They create their own society. Then an adult, like my character, becomes a foreigner within their country.
You are really the only adult in the film. What did you see as your character’s position in the middle of the kids’ dynamic?
Adults can hover around a camp or a school or a household, but they can’t be all knowing and all seeing. Their advice or their own experience can reflect or offer wisdom, but it doesn’t necessarily help when you’re living in the pain of something. Ben may remember my character as Charlie remembers his experience 30 years later, but I can guarantee it’s hard to receive all of that parental wisdom or teacherly wisdom when you’re in the midst of the turmoil of living in a nation of children. This was the closest thing I’d ever read to a Lord of the Flies type scenario — a society built and run and organized by children. I’ve been a big fan of movies like Thirteen in the past, because they’re like a peephole or a window into a life we don’t get to experience once we’re of a certain age. We don’t know how kids talk when they’re with each other. I think we’re all scared of them. I think we’re scared of youth.
There are times where the movie feels like a true horror film, like there is something audiences should be truly afraid of onscreen.
I’ve often said about the school experience that it’s like a documentary where you’re watching a depleting watering hole in the African savanna, crocodiles, and there’s a baby antelope and everything in between. It’s a dangerous place, and anything can happen. There’s something really Full Metal Jacket about this movie. There are similar tones to this.
I thought the choice of setting it inside a water polo camp was interesting. What did you think of having it set in that world specifically?
It could have been anything. It could be a tennis camp, gymnastics or whatever the culture. The specificity of that culture, cinematically, is beautiful, and the confines of being in one swim center and the danger of the water is very potent. Through the experience, I was just thinking back to so many experiences of my own as a child and everyone on the crew was talking about that stuff. Childhood is full of sentimental, beautiful memories, but it’s also full of crazy trauma. Those things diminish over time, we move on, and events get swallowed up, but they’ve all made their little kind of scars.
Sports
Vorpagel Advances to 800 Final on Day Two at MAC Championships
Story Links ATHENS, Ohio – Senior Emma Vorpagel led the way for the Northern Illinois University women’s track and field team on Friday in the second day of competition at the 2025 Mid-American Conference Track & Field Championships at Goldberry Track in Athens, Ohio. Vorpagel (Hartland, Wis./Arrowhead HS) ran […]

ATHENS, Ohio – Senior Emma Vorpagel led the way for the Northern Illinois University women’s track and field team on Friday in the second day of competition at the 2025 Mid-American Conference Track & Field Championships at Goldberry Track in Athens, Ohio.
Vorpagel (Hartland, Wis./Arrowhead HS) ran a time of 2:10.61 in the 800-meter preliminaries to qualify for Saturday’s final with the seventh fastest time. She will run in the finals at 1:50 p.m. (CT) on Saturday.
Also on the track for NIU on Friday, Talayssia Sanders (Waco, Texas/Waco Connally HS) ran a season-best time of 56.22 in the 400-meter dash to place ninth, just one spot out of qualifying for the finals. Sanders came into the meet with the 13th best time in the MAC.
The Huskies’ Stella Oyebode (Nigeria) and Sam Huber (Villingendorf, Germany) did not advance out of their heats to the finals in the 100 meters.
NIU returns to action at the MAC Championships at 11:30 a.m. (CT) Saturday beginning with action in the triple jump with women’s running events scheduled to start at 12:10 p.m. with the 4 x 100-meter relay. Click here to follow live results.
FRIDAY HUSKIE RESULTS
2025 MAC Championships
Athens, Ohio – Goldberry Track
800-meter Run (Prelims)
7. Emma Vorpagel – 2:10 .61 (qualifies for final)
400-meter Dash (Prelims)
9. Talayssia Sanders – 56.22
100-meter Dash (Prelims)
21. Stella Oyebode – 12.07
23. Sam Huber – 12.15
Long Jump
20. Precious Umukoro – 3.63m/11-11
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