Sports
Alejado To Join Baseball Program as Pitcher
Story Links Purchase Baseball Tickets Football Season Ticket Deposits HONOLULU – The University of Hawai’i baseball team announced Tuesday morning a new addition to the active roster as Micah Alejado will be available to pitch the rest of the season beginning with tonight’s contest against Hawai’i Pacific. Alejado is well-known as the starting quarterback for the […]


HONOLULU – The University of Hawai’i baseball team announced Tuesday morning a new addition to the active roster as Micah Alejado will be available to pitch the rest of the season beginning with tonight’s contest against Hawai’i Pacific.
Alejado is well-known as the starting quarterback for the Rainbow Warrior football team. He made his first career start in the final game of the 2024 campaign knocking off bowl hopeful New Mexico, and exciting fans for the 2025 season.
“He has a live arm,” says head coach Rich Hill. “Everyone saw what he can do on the football field, but he (Micah) showed interest in the fall about pursuing the path of being a dual-sport athlete. When he hit low to mid 90s consistently on his fastball during a workout, we started to consider the seriousness of what he could do to help us. But he’s not a one pitch-pitcher he showcased an ability to throw a 12-6 curveball and every time I saw it, I laughed to myself because not everyone can throw it like he does. We joked about calling it the “Hawai’i Hammah.”
Alejado is now the second student-athlete from the football roster to join the baseball roster, as his locker is located next to dual-sport teammate Jarret Nielsen at Les Murakami Stadium.
“It’s rare to have two guys as talented as the two of them in the quarterback room and the locker room of a baseball team,” said head football coach Timmy Chang. “Micah is one of those young men who when he has his mind set on something, he’s going to do it. I’m going to keep a watchful eye but I support him. He’s extremely excited about being active with the baseball team, he’s earned this opportunity.”
Through the course of the 2025 season, Alejado will be strictly used out of the bullpen for the Rainbow Warriors. He adds another left-handed arm to the pitching staff, making him the eighth on the roster.
“I’m going to enjoy the challenge,” said Alejado. “Coach Hill believes in me and what I’ve shown, and Coach Chang believes in me. Having their support motivates me even more to see what I can do and be a contributor to a team chasing a Big West title.”
First pitch against HPU is set for 6:35 p.m. HT.
Sports
Seven Recognized as Strength & Conditioning Athletes of the Year – Minnesota State University
Story Links COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Seven Minnesota State student-athletes were recognized this year as Strength & Conditioning Athlete of the Year for their sport through the National Strength & Conditioning Association (NSCA). Winners were honored at various team events this spring with a certificate. The Strength and Conditioning Athlete of […]

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Seven Minnesota State student-athletes were recognized this year as Strength & Conditioning Athlete of the Year for their sport through the National Strength & Conditioning Association (NSCA). Winners were honored at various team events this spring with a certificate.
The Strength and Conditioning Athlete of the Year Award program recognizes those collegiate and high school athletes whose athletic accomplishments reflect their dedication to strength training and conditioning.
Awards have been given since 1998.
” These student-athletes are the best of the best in Strength & Conditioning,” said Minnesota State Head Strength & Conditioning Coach Andy Stocks. “They have shown tremendous effort and passion on a daily basis. Their work ethic and dedication to Strength & Conditioning are undeniable. Their progress and performance during their collegiate career have far exceeded expectations.”
2024-25 Minnesota State Strength & Conditioning Athlete of the Year Winners
Emily Russo (Basketball)
Abby Gronholz (Swimming & Diving)
Nathan Gribble (Football)
Lucy Weninger (Soccer)
Megan Narveson (Track & Field)
Spencer Wright (Baseball)
Emma Loveall (Volleyball)
Stocks on Russo
“Emily has had a tremendous impact on the Minnesota State basketball program and the Strength & Conditioning department. Her work ethic sets a great example for others and her leadership drives her team to success. Emily is a true role model.”
Stocks on Gronholz
“Abby has shown tremendous effort in all aspects of being a student-athlete. She uses her performance in the weight room to drive success in the pool. Her hard work has won multiple NSIC championships and NCAA All-American honors. She is also successful in the classroom, being named to the NSIC All-Academic Team. Her drive to excel will lead her to great success in the future.”
Stocks on Gribble
“Gribble is a stalwart for the Maverick football program and the Strength & Conditioning department. His grittiness, intensity, and love for lifting are second to none. Gribble’s blue collar work ethic will drive him to great success in the future.”
Lee on Narveson
“Megan has fully bought into strength training to further her success any time she runs. She has used the weight room as a place to thrive and ensure her body stays strong and durable so she can handle what comes with running longer distances. She pushes herself every training session no matter how she feels and consistently finds a way to improve! She is a joy to have around every training session and does a great job pushing her teammates to the next level! She helps foster a positive training environment for our entire weight room!”
Lee on Wright
“Spencer understands and uses the weight room to create the best competitive advantage he can for himself on the mound. He trains with the highest intent whenever he steps in the weight room. He comes in every day looking to better himself as the strongest and most powerful athlete he can be. He also holds his teammates to the highest standards in the weight room to create a hard-working culture for the entire program! He is a great leader to have in the room every day.”
Lee on Loveall
“Emma bought in fully to the training system here on campus and used it to her advantage. She always came in with a positive mindset and put her best foot forward when it came to training every day. She pushed herself to be the strongest and most powerful version of herself, which would then help translate to her performance on the Volleyball Court. She was a joy to have around in the weight room during her time on campus!”
Sports
The 2024-25 Frank Kush Award winner is…
In the middle of June, every Sun Devil head coach casts a single vote for the Sun Devil Coach of the Year in honor of Frank Kush. The award – presented around the anniversary of Coach Kush’s passing (June 22, 2017) – is a way for each coach to recognize a peer that impressed them […]

In the middle of June, every Sun Devil head coach casts a single vote for the Sun Devil Coach of the Year in honor of Frank Kush.
The award – presented around the anniversary of Coach Kush’s passing (June 22, 2017) – is a way for each coach to recognize a peer that impressed them the most.
There are no true guidelines for this honor; coaches can nominate someone who earned any honors, a coach who made an impression in their first year, or simply the nicest coach in the building. Once the nominations are in, one Sun Devil coach earns what one can consider the ultimate show of respect: an award from their peers in the 26-sport, 22-head coach department.
This year’s winner – and Arizona State graduate — did all of this…
–led his team to the Big 12 title (after being picked for last)
–earned Big 12 Coach of the Year
–had his team go undefeated at home for the first time since 2004
–placed his team seventh in the final Associated Press rankings
–impressed everyone associated with the program with a complete rebuild after back-to-back 3-9 seasons (only one was his)
–had every head coach vote for him, the first time that has happened in the awards history.
Congratulations Kenny Dillingham!
Where leadership meets legacy
As voted by his fellow ASU coaches, @KennyDillingham has been named the 2024-25 Frank Kush Coach of the Year! #ForksUp /// #ActivateTheValley pic.twitter.com/zVOUyAQM1V
— Sun Devil Football (@ASUFootball) June 17, 2025
ANNUAL FRANK KUSH AWARD WINNERS
2024-25: Kenny Dillingham, football
2023-24: JJ Van Niel, volleyball
2022-23: Bob Bowman, swim and dive
2021-22: Matt Thurmond, men’s golf
2020-21: Todd Clapper, water polo
2018-19: Greg Powers, hockey
2017-18: Trisha Ford, softball
Sports
Six Fisher Athletes Earn College Sport Communicators Academic All-District Women’s At Large Honors
General | 6/17/2025 4:18:00 PM Story Links PITTSFORD, N.Y. – St. John Fisher student athletes Emma Cooper (field hockey), Audrey Grieb (field hockey), Sydney Carpenter (women’s lacrosse), Kaley Griffin (women’s lacrosse), Anna Winters (women’s rowing) and Sarah Burgess (women’s golf) have been selected to the 2025 NCAA Division III College Communicators Academic […]

General | 6/17/2025 4:18:00 PM
PITTSFORD, N.Y. – St. John Fisher student athletes Emma Cooper (field hockey), Audrey Grieb (field hockey), Sydney Carpenter (women’s lacrosse), Kaley Griffin (women’s lacrosse), Anna Winters (women’s rowing) and Sarah Burgess (women’s golf) have been selected to the 2025 NCAA Division III College Communicators Academic All-District Women’s At Large Team.
Cooper and Carpenter have advanced to the CSC Academic All-America ballot. NCAA, NAIA and College Division Women’s At-Large Academic All-America® First-, second- and third-team honorees will be announced on July 8.
The 2025 Academic All-District® Women’s At-Large teams, selected by College Sports Communicators, recognize the nation’s top student athletes for their combined performances in competition and in the classroom. The CSC Academic All-America® program separately recognizes at-large honorees in four divisions — NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III and NAIA.
Cooper sustained a 4.0 grade-point average as a biochemistry student at Fisher. She started in all 20 games and recorded 20 points during the 2024 season en route to second-team All-Region honors from the National Field Hockey Coaches Association (NFHCA). Cooper is a four-time NFHCA DIII Scholar of Distinction.
Grieb maintained a 3.93 grade point average as a nursing student at Fisher. A four-time NFHCA Division III Scholar of Distinction, Grieb played and started in all 20 games this past season, tallying 20 points on six goals and eight assists. She garnered All-Empire 8 Conference first-team honors.
Carpenter, who studied education and finished her time at Fisher with a 3.90 GPA, earned first-team All-America honors from the Intercollegiate Women’s Lacrosse Coaches Association for the second time in three years this past season. She finished her career with 300 points, the second-most in Empire 8 history, and holds the conference record for draw controls with 504.
An accounting and finance student, Griffin has maintained a 3.98 GPA through her junior year. This past season, she set career highs in goals (44), assists (14), total points (58) and draw controls. She was named MVP of the Empire 8 Conference Championship Tournament, during which she had seven points on six goals and one assist to go along with nine draw controls over two games.
Winters, a rising junior, has maintained a 3.76 grade-point average while studying accounting and Spanish for two years at Fisher. She was named to the 2025 Liberty League Women’s Rowing All-Academic Team in May.
Burgess, a biology major, has sustained a 4.0 GPA through two years at St. John Fisher. She earned All-Empire 8 first-team honors for the 2024-25 season.
Sports
Ohio State women’s volleyball team to benefit from revenue sharing boost
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WSYX) — Ohio State University’s women’s volleyball team is set to receive a financial boost as part of a new revenue-sharing initiative. Starting July 1st, colleges can pay student-athletes directly with a cap of $20.5 million. Schools also have the option to allocate a chunk of the money for scholarships. Ohio State Athletic […]

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WSYX) — Ohio State University’s women’s volleyball team is set to receive a financial boost as part of a new revenue-sharing initiative.
Starting July 1st, colleges can pay student-athletes directly with a cap of $20.5 million. Schools also have the option to allocate a chunk of the money for scholarships.
Ohio State Athletic Director Ross Bjork announced last week that OSU will share $18 million with athletes from four sports: football, men’s and women’s basketball, and women’s volleyball. Ohio State is also adding 91 scholarships across all sports, worth up to $2.5 million of the $20.5 million cap.
Head Coach Jenn Flynn Oldenburg says the investment underscores the university leadership’s support for both the program and Big Ten women’s volleyball.
“Be one of four, I think, sets the tone for the conference and for our program because volleyball is big in the Big Ten,” Oldenburg said. “In order to compete, you have to compete with the big dogs. And by saying that we’re one of the four at Ohio State to get revenue share, we’re going to compete with the big dogs in volleyball.”
Oldenburg will now be responsible for allocating the funds among her players, with plans to distribute the money based on roster production and incentive-based awards.
“I think it’s going to be year by year based on the roster production awards, those kinds of things. It’s more incentive-based. We have a plan in place. It’s not locked in stone. And I think that we can be creative with it. I think that’s the exciting part about this year. Yeah, I’m excited to be able to use it as we need it,” she said.
As a former decorated Ohio State volleyball player herself, Oldenburg remarked on the remarkable growth and support for the athletes. She said the team is eager to return to the court and pursue championships.
The Buckeyes’ season begins on August 29, with their home opener against Florida scheduled for September 7 at the Covelli Center.
Sports
Harvard Track and Field Goes the Distance at NCAA Outdoor Championships | Sports
Harvard’s track and field team capped off an impressive week at the NCAA Outdoor Championships this weekend, earning All-America First Team selections on both the men’s and women’s side. Hungarian sophomore Ferenc Kovacs took home the bronze in the men’s 1,500-meter final with a time of 3:47.42 — becoming Harvard’s highest finisher in the event. […]

Harvard’s track and field team capped off an impressive week at the NCAA Outdoor Championships this weekend, earning All-America First Team selections on both the men’s and women’s side.
Hungarian sophomore Ferenc Kovacs took home the bronze in the men’s 1,500-meter final with a time of 3:47.42 — becoming Harvard’s highest finisher in the event. Then, just two days later, he ran a 3:34.79 in the event at the Portland Track Festival to set a new Ivy League record and put him in a tie for the 14th fastest 1500-meter time in NCAA history. The two races added to Kovacs’ already impressive resume, after he broke the 1,500-meter school record during his freshman campaign.
Alongside Kovacs, seniors Chloe Fair and Izzy Goudros also received first team honors — an award given to the top eight finishers. Fair, who finished sixth in the women’s 400-meter hurdles, becomes just the fourth Harvard women’s hurdler to receive the honor. Goudros finished seventh in the heptathlon after a stellar long jump of 6.39 meters moved her up in the standings from 14th place and earned her a new school record.
The Crimson had an historic performance at the 2024 Outdoor Championships, sending a record 18 athletes and picking up a first-place finish from Maia Ramsden ’24. Still, even though the team did not match last season’s stand-out results, this season marked the third consecutive year the program sent more than 10 athletes to compete, with 15 making the trip.
Fair said that the energy of the meet was palpable — particularly due to its location at the University of Oregon’s Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon.
“Everyone there is actually genuinely fans of track and field,” Fair said. “You look up and the stadium’s almost full, and it’s just absolutely insane.”
Fair, who graduated in May and is now headed to the University of Georgia to continue her track career, said it was “tough” knowing that the meet was her last time competing for the Crimson.
“Being a part of Harvard track and field is the thing I am most proud of from my time at Harvard,” Fair said.
Senior Ben Rosa was one of Harvard’s six athletes to earn an All-America Second Team nod, as the Ivy League 5,000 meter and 10,000 meter champion finished tenth in the 10,000 meters at the NCAA championships. Rosa is Harvard’s first All-American in the event since Crimson star Graham Blanks, who surrendered his remaining NCAA eligibility in December to compete professionally.
Because the race started off slowly, Rosa said he knew “there was going to be a big burn up somewhere in the second half.” But even as the bell lap arrived, the group was still clustered together, and he liked his odds.
“About 600 meters to go, we were still so bunched up. I was saying, ‘shoot, I could win this thing,’” Rosa said. “At that point, I was racing to win.”
With 200 meters to go, the race finally spaced out as Ishmael Kipkurui of New Mexico made a decisive move, gapping the rest of the field. Still, Rosa — who was also participating in the final race of his collegiate career — said he was content with his 10th place finish.
“10th is a little bit far removed from that, but I would not have had it any other way,” he said.
Sophomore Tito Alofe, who was participating in the long jump at the championships for the second straight year, had been battling a nagging knee injury coming into the meet. Just three weeks after winning the Ivy League championships with a personal best jump of 2.25 meters, he aggravated his knee while qualifying for the outdoor championships at regionals.
“When I competed on Friday, I just was not very close to 100%. I actually did better than I expected, to be 100% honest,” Alofe said.
But he will head into the offseason encouraged by his season and motivated for the future.
“While I did not end up getting first team all-American, which was my ultimate goal, I’d say I’ve put myself in a pretty good position to do pretty big things next year,” he said.
On the women’s side, senior Victoria Bossong capped off her decorated Crimson career with a ninth place finish in the 800 meters, earning All-America Second Team recognition.
With the NCAA championships behind them, Harvard’s track and field athletes will now have some time to rest before many return to Oregon for the USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships at the end of July.
—Staff writer Akshaya Ravi can be reached at akshaya.ravi@thecrimson.com. Follow her on X @akshayaravi22.
—Staff writer Cam N. Srivastava can be reached at cam.srivastava@thecrimson.com. Follow him on X @camsrivastava.
Sports
LADY COYOTE VOLLEYBALL STARTS WITH HISTORIC TRYOUTS AT “MIDNIGHT MADNESS”
Home Sports LADY COYOTE VOLLEYBALL STARTS WITH HISTORIC TRYOUTS AT “MIDNIGHT MADNESS” LADY COYOTE VOLLEYBALL STARTS WITH HISTORIC TRYOUTS AT “MIDNIGHT MADNESS” By Pete VasquezPvasquez@cherryroad.com For the first time in program history, the Alice Lady Coyote Volleyball team is launching their 2025 season with a Midnight Madness… Previous Post YOUNG EDINBURG MAN KILLED IN EARLY […]

LADY COYOTE VOLLEYBALL STARTS WITH HISTORIC TRYOUTS AT “MIDNIGHT MADNESS”
-
High School Sports2 weeks ago
Parents Speak Out As Trans Pitcher Throws Shutout In MN State Quarterfinals
-
College Sports3 weeks ago
IU basketball recruiting
-
Health2 weeks ago
Oregon track star wages legal battle against trans athlete policy after medal ceremony protest
-
Professional Sports2 weeks ago
'I asked Anderson privately'… UFC legend retells secret sparring session between Jon Jones …
-
Professional Sports2 weeks ago
UFC 316 star storms out of Media Day when asked about bitter feud with Rampage Jackson
-
Rec Sports3 weeks ago
Scott Barker named to lead CCS basketball • SSentinel.com
-
High School Sports2 weeks ago
The Arizona Daily Star's top high school athletes, coaches and moments of the 2024
-
Rec Sports2 weeks ago
2x NBA All-Star Reacts to Viral LeBron James Statement
-
NIL2 weeks ago
Patrick Mahomes in OKC for WCWS, praises NiJaree Canady and Texas Tech
-
College Sports2 weeks ago
OKC’s Mark Daigneault knows what it takes to win championships. His wife has won a ton of them