Sports
An audience with Billy Beane
It’s pretty hard to stay grounded when a major film is made about your life, harder still when a two-time winner of the Sexiest Man Alive award is cast to play you.
But Billy Beane shows no signs of letting Brad Pitt and Moneyball go to his head. He carries himself with a relaxed humility, freely admitting that “my success has been driven by having really smart people around me”.
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He’s joined in Belfast by one of those smart people: Luke Bornn, a scientific adviser for Teamworks and former Harvard statistics professor whose career spans Italian football side Roma, the NBA team Sacramento Kings, and a French football club, Toulouse FC, where he oversaw a data-driven rebuild.
When The Athletic spoke to the pair, they were eagerly awaiting The Open Championship at Royal Portrush, golf’s fourth and final major of 2025. But before soaking up Scottie Scheffler’s masterclass, they sat down for an hour for a wide-ranging conversation that touched on:
- The seismic impact of Moneyball
- Why football has struggled to follow baseball’s analytical revolution
- The evolving role of the manager and Beane’s admiration for Sir Alex Ferguson
- How data identified Mohamed Salah early
- The strengths and perils of signing younger players
- Why data has had “little to no impact” on tactics
With data now deeply embedded across modern sport, it’s easy to forget just how radical Billy Beane’s approach was as general manager at the Oakland Athletics. A former player, not a number-cruncher, he wasn’t the obvious figurehead for sport’s analytics revolution.
But it was precisely that background that gave his evidence-based approach credibility in a world still dominated by ex-pros. “When we were implementing data and doing things differently, they weren’t able to say, ‘Well, what do you know, you haven’t played’,” Beane said.
At the turn of the millennium, with Beane as general manager, the Oakland Athletics reached the playoffs in four consecutive years, and in 2002 became the first team in more than 100 years of American League baseball to win 20 games in a row.
Beane, now a senior adviser and minority owner at the Athletics, sees himself as the “Trojan horse” who smuggled more technically minded thinkers like Bornn through the boardroom gates.
In baseball, the cloak-and-dagger approach is no longer necessary, where data scientists now move freely through the corridors of power and are a vital part of top-level decision-making. Beane jokes that he “wouldn’t be able to apply for a job now because I’m not qualified” and says that he’s competing with top-tier companies such as Google, Goldman Sachs, and JP Morgan for data talent.
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Bornn, a former co-founder of Zelus Analytics, says that the same shift in football is lagging further behind, with former players still clutching the reins tightly. “I think it is evolving, but much slower than public perception would have you believe.”
Beane’s success ushered in a top-down approach across sport, where data-hungry executives rather than managers hold sway. But for Beane, it was never about marginalising the coach, rather “redefining” their role.
“What we tried to do at Oakland,” he explains, “is we wanted the manager to manage the team, manage what was going on here in the game, and then give him the tools to be better at that. But to expect him to see every other game that’s going on in the rest of the league, that’s an impossible task.
“And quite frankly, what data has allowed you to do in some respect — not just in baseball, but in every sport — is it allows you to evaluate every game and everything that’s going on without having to see it.”
He has a special admiration for the way Sir Alex Ferguson ran Manchester United, a club where he spent 26 years as manager and won 38 major trophies.
“Most of them (managers) move on to bigger, better jobs and better compensation, but there are a few icons in each sport.
“And one reason I think they’re great — whether it be Sir Alex Ferguson, Bill Belichick (six Super Bowls with the New England Patriots during a 24-year spell), Nick Saban in Alabama (six national championships across a 16-year tenure) — is because they ran their club like they’re never going to leave, which is unusual, and the decisions they make are for the future.”
Ferguson holding the FA Cup and Premiership trophies after completing the Double with United in 1997 (John Peters/Manchester United via Getty Images)
He likens Ferguson’s long-term view to how Fenway Sports Group run Liverpool, led by Beane’s personal friends John W Henry and Tom Werner.
“They have resources, but they also deploy capital wisely and efficiently,” he says, later pointing to how they reinvested the £142million ($190.5m) received from Barcelona for Philippe Coutinho in January 2018 to build a title-winning team.
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But Beane recognises the challenge of thinking along these long-term lines amid the constant pressure from fans to “win now”.
“We all want to run our sports teams like Warren Buffett runs his Berkshire Hathaway. It’s not always easy to do that… what separates clubs is their ability to execute and sort of fend off the noise.”
Since Ferguson’s departure, United have struggled to maintain this sustained vision, instead cycling through managers with varying tactical visions. Bornn warns against this.
“If there’s an evolution every six months, 12 months, 18 months, and every coach wants to do things slightly differently, wants a different type of player, that leads to a tremendous amount of inefficiency from the recruitment perspective.”
Both highlight the pitfalls of narrowly focusing on certain targets or positions in the transfer market. Beane argues that instead of reactively filling a weakness, teams should look at where the best value lies.
“Teams will say we need a left-back, so you just look at the left-backs… but maybe the better value is in strengthening a strength.
“Running a sports team is ultimately about maximising the dollars that you have in being efficient. And I think you get myopic sometimes — when you have a need, you look specifically for people who can fill that weakness as opposed to maybe getting better value and making a strength even stronger.”
Whereas data analysis in baseball has evolved to the point where every “baseball team has a pretty good idea how good a player is right now”, it still gives a major edge to those who use it in football. Structural differences between the sports play a part.
“Baseball is very closed. The one thing about football is it’s a world game. You’ve got different leagues, different cultures. In baseball, we have no relegation and just 30 teams. Systems that are successful are quickly adopted.”
Conor O’Neill speaking to Billy Beane and Luke Bornn (Teamworks)
Bornn is more sceptical about the cultural side of football’s slow uptake.
“We’re going to look back in 10 years and laugh at it. Because we’re the sport where a lot of teams hire data analytics folks because they don’t want to look like Luddites.
And they say publicly, ‘Yeah, we are data driven’, but yet internally they don’t actually use it. They don’t want to look like they’re old-fashioned, so they hire the people and put that public image out there, but then internally make the decisions traditionally.”
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Beane agrees that this data window-dressing exists, but points to Brentford and Brighton as clubs that, in his view, “use data for all their decisions, not just now and again when it backs up their opinion”.
“The data’s out there for everyone, information’s out there for everyone. Really, executing on that data is the most important thing. And some teams do it better than others.”
With data uptake still patchy across football, there’s a clear edge for those who know how to use it properly. Beane explains that the top names flagged by the models typically align with who we instinctively consider the world’s best and that advanced models often incorporate the “wisdom of the crowd” when scanning for talent.
The real opportunity, he says, lies in spotting the lesser-known outliers hidden among the elite.
“What you want to do is when you see Lionel Messi, you see all the usual suspects up there, and then all of a sudden some kid named Jude Bellingham pops up as a 17-year-old playing at Birmingham, you realise, ‘Oh my gosh, there’s a 17-year old kid who’s playing at a level as one of the top 15 players’.”
Bellingham playing for Birmingham in 2019 (Nathan Stirk/Getty Images)
He later references Viktor Gyokeres’ spell at Coventry as another hidden gem who was playing in the Championship, English football’s second tier. Gyokeres has recently joined Arsenal from Sporting CP in a move worth an initial €63.5million (£54.8m; $74.2m) plus €10m in add-ons.
“That’s where it’s at, when you sort of find those guys the year before they go to that top four or five club. When Luis Suarez came over from Uruguay, he was playing in the Dutch league, right? That’s a great example. I’m pretty sure data was part of that decision-making process. And he turned into one of the best players in the world.”
This idea of using data to spot value early ties into football’s modern obsession with youth. “The reason that young players were valuable to the Oakland A’s wasn’t because they’re young, it was because they were cheap,” said Beane, adding that this approach drives profitable player trading because “you’ve got economic value at the end of the contract, too”.
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The Chelsea co-owner and chairman Todd Boehly has closely followed Oakland’s blueprint, pouring considerable resources into young talent. Boehly also owns 20 per cent of the Los Angeles Dodgers, a team Beane holds in the highest regard.
“The Los Angeles Dodgers, to me, are really sort of the pinnacle of how sports teams should be run, particularly ones that have a lot of capital. I mean, not only do they have a lot of money, but they’re brilliant.
“They have brilliant staff. They’re efficient. They’re ruthless in their implementation of what they believe in. You can make the argument that they’re the most valuable sports team in the entire world. And the most efficient and the most successful… I have a lot of respect for what they do there.”
The Dodgers have won two of the past five World Series titles, including the latest in 2024, spearheaded by the remarkable Shohei Ohtani.
Ohtani signed a 10-year $700million contract with the Dodgers in 2024 (Alex Slitz/Getty Images)
But Bornn thinks that, in football, the youth-recruitment pendulum may have swung too far. “You look at what they’re spending on these players and think, is that the right choice?” he says. To only “recruit players under 22 or under 24 would be ridiculous because you want to get the best value you can, whether that’s a 35-year-old or an 18-year-old”.
And Bornn knows a thing or two about spotting value.
During his time at Roma, he was involved in the recruitment of Mohamed Salah, Antonio Rudiger and Alisson. On Salah, in particular, he’s unequivocal. “At the time, our models said he was one of the best players in the world. It’s like when I was at the Sacramento Kings when Luka Doncic was drafted and people said, ‘Oh did your models like Doncic?’ And I was like, ‘Anyone who looked at data for 10 seconds would have loved Doncic.’
Salah moved to Liverpool for around £37million in 2017 and will go down as one of the club’s greatest-ever players. He is their third-highest goalscorer of all time and has played pivotal roles in two Premier League title wins, a Champions League triumph, and reaching the final on two other occasions.
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But while Bornn has used data to unearth elite talent, he still considers football analytics relatively rudimentary.
By modern standards, the use of statistics in Moneyball is also basic, focused largely on identifying undervalued players using metrics such as on-base percentage. Today, they use advanced machine learning models to paint a more complete picture of player performance. Beane believes that baseball has “significantly explored using AI for making player selections and player evaluations”.
Football, Bornn says, is “still kind of back in the on-base percentage days… but it’s growing very rapidly”. The advent of off-ball tracking data, in particular, has added a new layer of insight, allowing analysts to measure things like the value created by off-ball runs.
“It used to be like, ‘This player’s good because they have a lot of success dribbling or a lot of take-ons’. So basic counting stats. And now we can say things like, ‘This player is great because he makes these off-ball runs which open up space for passing lanes which increase the expected value because it opens up this passing or this through a ball’.”
But the sport still lags in assessing technical skill: “In soccer, we’re not quite measuring yet the quality of the first touch or the exact execution of the pass in terms of the projection of the ball.”
In comparison, Bornn sees baseball as a leader when it comes to pinning down the biomechanics that make the sport tick.
“Baseball is ahead of other sports in multiple areas. Biomechanics is definitely one of them. There are actually good reasons for that,” Bornn explains.
“Pitching mechanics — because they’re sort of on the mound and in one spot — are much easier to analyse than, let’s say, a striker’s shot, because of the movement, because of the distance of the cameras, all that kind of stuff.
“But they’re doing things now where they will have guys, you know, ‘Hey, if on your release, you get your elbow like a little bit more this way, we can deliver this many newton meters of force on the ball’. It’s just incredible what they’re able to do and, like, add meaningful velocity, meaningful spin to pitchers.”
Edwin Diaz pitching for the New York Mets earlier this month (Al Bello/Getty Images)
This forensic breakdown of player mechanics matters because it separates repeatable processes — like good passing technique or ball-striking in football, which translates across levels — from results-based metrics like goals and assists, which are more dependent on context.
For Beane, process is paramount. “People used to pay for goals, but then they saw expected goals (xG) have more of a process.” Bornn adds to this: “With expected goals, you’re just removing some randomness, and by removing that randomness, you’re essentially better at predicting the future.”
Despite breakthroughs, analytics has yet to make a meaningful impact on how the game is played. Bornn says, “The overall impact on tactics has been little to none.”
“I think there’s still a pretty big cultural gap. There are definitely isolated examples, especially for specific examples where the data is really clear, like certain set-piece tactics, where there’s no question that data has changed certain teams the way they do set pieces.
“In fact, even us at Toulouse, the year that we got promoted, we had just incredible set-piece numbers. Brentford, Midtjylland are known for this.”
Bornn is no longer involved with Toulouse but a year ago Zelus Analytics was acquired by Teamworks, for whom Beane is an investor. Teamworks is an operating system used by thousands of professional and collegiate sports teams across the globe, including all 32 NFL teams and 90 per cent of Premier League clubs.
Bornn has an advisory role for their data analytics arm, Teamworks Intelligence, which provides teams with their own data platform to use in their day-to-day operations.
Beane lightly ribs Bornn during the hour-long conversation, flashing a mischievous, knowing grin as he asks: “But how do you measure heart, Luke?”
Later, he jokes: “You’re basically trying to take all the romance out of sports, aren’t you? Oh yeah, come on. You really are. You really turned it into a math class, and none of us like math.”
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Yet despite the teasing, the lasting legacy of Moneyball for Beane is that it has empowered brilliant minds such as Bornn’s to get involved in running sports teams.
“To me, that’s been the best thing about the data revolutions: all the brilliant people that are now a part of it,” he says. “You think of all the young kids growing up who didn’t play Major League Baseball, which basically represents 99.9 per cent of the population who didn’t play in the big leagues, but are Yankees fans or Dodgers fans. And they went to MIT and they now get a chance to work for the Dodgers or the Yankees.
“And think about football, they now get to work for Chelsea or Man United, or Liverpool. They’ve got mathematics degrees from university — 20 years ago, people wouldn’t even turn their resume.
“These are brilliant young men and women who now have the opportunity to work. To me, that’s the beauty of the data revolution is that the best and the brightest now get the opportunity to work in an industry that they’re passionate about.”
(Top photos: Teamworks)

Sports
Men’s, women’s track & field unveil 2025-26 indoor schedule
Holy Cross Richard L. Ahern ’51 Director of Cross Country and Track and Field Egetta Alfonso has announced the Crusaders’ 2025-26 indoor track & field schedule for the men’s and women’s programs.
The Crusaders are set to open the season on Saturday, Dec. 6 at the Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener hosted by Boston University and the Alden Invitational hosted by Brown. Next weekend, Holy Cross heads to New Hampshire for the Dartmouth December Invitational that will be held on Dec. 12 and 13.
Following a break for the holidays, the team returns to action on Jan. 17 at the URI Invitational and the Suffolk Ice Breaker on Jan. 18. The women’s team will compete on Jan. 30 at the David Thomas Terrier Classic in Boston followed by the men on Jan. 31 with the order of events staying the same for the River Hawk Invitational hosted by UMass Lowell on Feb. 6 and 7.
Holy Cross will then compete in meets at Boston University/URI (Feb. 14) and Brown (Feb. 21) in preparation for the 2026 Patriot League Indoor Track & Field Championships that will be hosted by BU on Feb. 28 and March 1.
The annual New England Indoor Championships are slated to be held on March 7-8 at the Reggie Lewis Center in Boston
FOLLOW THE CRUSADERS
Be sure to follow the Holy Cross track & field and cross country teams — and all things Crusader Athletics — on social media!
X – @HCrossTFXC | @goholycross
Instagram – @hcrossmxctf | @hcrossWXCTF | @goholycross
Facebook – Holy Cross Men’s Track & Field | Holy Cross Women’s Track & Field | Holy Cross Athletics
YouTube – GoHolyCross
Sports
Phoenix Athletes Shine On Day Two At Liberty Kickoff
LYNCHBURG – Coming home with a pair of event titles and several personal bests, the Elon University women’s track and field team wrapped up competition Friday at the Liberty Kickoff inside the Liberty Indoor Complex.
Isabella Johnson led the Phoenix in the shot put with a fourth-place finish. The sophomore recorded a personal-best throw of 13.99m, moving into fifth on the program’s indoor performance list. Adriana Clarke placed fifth with a personal-best toss of 13.01m.
On the track, Elon earned two event wins as Jasmine Young and Winter Oaster claimed titles in the 5,000 meters and the mile, respectively. Young posted a time of 17:26.66, while Oaster crossed the line in 5:10.95. Shayla Cann added a sixth-place finish in the 500 meters with a time of 1:15.63.
In the high jump, Hannah Schonhoff finished third after clearing 1.68 meters. Newcomer Eloise Mulready placed fifth with a clearance of 1.63 meters. In the 400 meters, Duna Viñals finished fourth with a time of 57.73 while Mary Sollars took sixth in a personal-best 58.74.
Caden Cerminara finished seventh in the pole vault, clearing 3.75m, while Ja’Mia Johnson placed eighth in the finals of the 60-meter hurdles with her time of 8.91.
ON DECK
Select members of the Phoenix distance group will compete at the Sharon Colyear-Danville Opener tomorrow, hosted at Boston University.
— ELON —
Sports
Big day for Hillsdale’s throwers as Charger men kick off season at GVSU Holiday Open
The Hillsdale College men’s track and field team got off to a strong start in the throws on Friday, kicking off the 2025-26 indoor season at the GVSU Holiday Open.
All four of Hillsdale’s season-opening provisional qualifying marks came in the shot put and weight throw at the meet, showing why the Chargers are one of the best throws programs in NCAA DII.
Leading the way was senior and defending NCAA DII weight throw national champion Ben Haas, who began his title defense by taking second overall and first among collegiate throwers in the event on Friday with a provisional qualfying throw of 21.33 meters.
Haas was joined in setting a provisional qualifying mark in the weight throw by not one, but two teammates on Friday. Redshirt freshman Dominic Scharer had an collegiate debut to remember on Friday, opening his career with a 20.02 meter mark that makes him the just the fourth Charger in program history to break 20 meters in the weight throw. Along with Scharer, junior Dimitry Ermakov had a massive new personal best in the weight throw to earn a provisional mark in the event for the first time with a distance of 18.58 meters. That mark gives Ermakov the sixth-best weight throw mark in Hillsdale College history as well.
Along with his performance in the weight throw, Haas also started strong in the shot put, placing fourth with a throw of 17.24 meters to give himself a second provisional mark on the day. Scharer also had a notable debut in the shot put, with a top throw of 14.99 meters that gives him the eighth-best mark in program history as well.
On the track, Hillsdale had a few notable standouts. Senior Gabriel Phillips ran well against an elite field in the fastest heat of the 5,000m run, finishing ninth in a new personal best time of 14:30.62, the fourth-best mark in the event in program history. Freshman John Richardson also had a strong first collegiate 5K, finishing in a strong time of 15:02.60 for the Chargers as well, and junior Caleb Youngstedt also ran a new personal best in the 5K of 15:06.17 for Hillsdale.
Two freshmen put together impressive first races as well for the Chargers. Watson Magwenzi had a debut to remember for Hillsdale, becoming just the 11th Charger in program history to go under seven seconds in the 60m dash with a time of 6.99, and also running a solid 22.53 in his first collegiate 200. In the 400m dash, freshman Jack Polizzi also started fast for Hillsdale, placing sixth in 49.48 just ahead of teammate Zealand Tarrant, who ran a new personal best 49.77 to take ninth. Magwenzi also was pushed in the 60 and 200 by sophomore Sam Jones, who a personal best 7.03 in the 60 and a 22.63 in the 200.
Senior Mark Masaka placed 10th (1:56.19) and freshman Wyatt Widolff placed 14th (1:57.48) in the 800m run as well for Hillsdale, and freshman Luan Kummle took 14th in the long jump (6.26 meters).
Hillsdale now heads into the Christmas break, and will pick back up in 2026 with the Al Campbell Invite hosted by the University of Akron on Jan. 16.
Sports
Men’s Track & Field: Stefanowicz Tops Hurdles Record at M City Classic
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – The Macalester College men’s track & field team opened the 2026 indoor season at the M City Classic, hosted by the University of Minnesota on Friday. Senior Sebastian Stefanowicz (Portland, Ore./Valley Catholic) broke the school record in the 60-meter hurdles.
Stefanowicz finished fifth in the 60-meter hurdles behind three Division I athletes and an unattached runner with a time of 8.63. The performance betters the old record of 8.68, set by John Shepard ’01 in 1999. Senior Hamza Mahamud (Eden Prairie, Minn./Eden Prairie) finished seventh in 9.10. Stefanowicz also placed 12th in the 60-meter dash with a time of 7.15, which ranks sixth on Macalester’s all-time performance list.
In the 600 meters, seniors Henry Schonebaum (Faribault, Minn./Faribault) and Thomas Malecha (Faribault, Minn.) finished sixth and seventh, respectively. First year Aj Baehr (Columbia, Mo./Rock Bridge) took seventh in the 400 meters (51.18) in his first collegiate race.
In the field events, first year Alex Peters (Belle Plaine, Minn./Jordan) took fourth in the shot put with a mark of 12.55 meters (41-2.25) in his first competition as a Scot. Sophomore Ataa Mensah (St. Paul, Minn./Roseville) finished fourth in the triple jump with a leap of 12.77 meters (41-10.75), followed by first year Garner Miyagawa (Encinitas, Calif./San Dieguito Academy) in fifth with a mark of 12.26 (40-2.75).
Macalester resumes competition in January by hosting the Vanessa Seljeskog Classic on Jan. 24 in the Leonard Center Fieldhouse.
Click here for results.
Sports
Tigers Win Seven Events at Birmingham Icebreaker
Gizel Clayton captured the women’s 60-meter hurdles (8.43) title for the second straight year, while Alex Bobak won the mile (4:15.97) for the first time in his career, setting a personal best in the process. Poorna Raorane also took home a victory in the shot (14.65m) put after finishing third at last year’s meet.
Courtland Noble won the 400m (48.55) making his second career victory in this event.
The Tigers recorded 10 top-five finishes, including sophomore Trinity Brown, who placed second and set a PR in the triple jump (11.91m).
Memphis athletes combined for 21 personal records, the most in a single meet since Feb. 15, 2025, at the Bulldog Open and Invite.
A full list of today’s six wins, top-five finishes and PRs can be found below. Comprehensive meet results can be found in the link above.
Tigers will be back in action in the new year, opening 2026 at the Bob Teel Invitational in Columbus, Missouri, on January 24.
Wins
Gizel Clayton, Women’s 60mH, 8.43
Alex Bobak, Men’s One Mile, 4:15.97
Poorna Raorane, Women’s Shot Put, 14.65m
Oageng Mdlela, Men’s Triple Jump, 15.16m
Kaseiana Meriweather, Women’s 200m, 24.08
Courtland Noble, Men’s 400m, 48.55
Meghan Porterfield, Women’s Weight Throw, 17.49m
Top Finishes (Top 5)
Kaseiana Meriweather, 2nd, Women’s 60m, 7.49
Destiny Jenkins, 4th, Women’s 60m, 7.55
Jazmyn James, 2nd, Women’s Shot Put, 13.88m
Meghan Porterfield, 3rd, Women’s Shot Put, 13.30m
Jean Yves Thiemble Marco, 3rd, Men’s Long Jump, 7.20m
Kouto Anyika, 4th, Men’s 300m, 33.95
Alexandra Allen, 2nd, Women’s 400m, 56.61
Judy Elful, 3rd, Women’s 400m, 56.95
Lilith Stenger, 2nd, Women’s High Jump, 1.60m
Trinity Brown, 2nd, Women’s Triple Jump, 11.91m
Tristian Robinson, 2nd, Men’s Weight Throw, 17.55m
Natalie Albert, 2nd, Women’s Weight Throw, 17.21m
Dajuan Montague, 2nd, Men’s High Jump, 2.10m
PRs
Elizabeth Markwell, Women’s 3000m, 11:10.48
Brooke Doyle, Women’s 3000m, 11:44.71
Jackson Turner, Men’s 3000m, 9:03.57
Jay Prettyman, Men’s 3000m, 9:12.56
Jagger Noel, Men’s 3000m, 9:19.46
Kaseiana Meriweather, Women’s 60m, 7.49
Destiny Jenkins, Women’s 60m, 7.55
Alex Bobak, Men’s One Mile, 4:15.97
Urko Extebeste, Men’s One Mile, 4:28.33
Resse Martin, Women’s 1000m, 3:10.96
Shantel Reed, Women’s 300m, 42.22
Kouto Anyika, Men’s 300m, 33.95
Bryson Wilson, Men’s 300m, 34.47
Jonathan Bunch Jr., Men’s 300m, 36.70
Alexandra Allen, Women’s 400m, 56.61
Lilith Stenger, Women’s High Jump, 1.60m
Trinity Brown, Women’s Triple Jump, 11.91m
Tristian Robinson, Men’s Weight Throw, 17.55m
Amri White, Men’s Weight Throw, 15.70m
Zion Smith, Women’s Long Jump, 5.15m
Dajuan Montague, Men’s High Jump, 2.10m
How to follow the Tigers: For complete information on Memphis Tiger Cross Country and Track & Field, visit www.GoTigersGo.com and follow the team’s social media channels on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.
Sports
Liston Breaks 5K School Record, Track & Field Starts Indoor Season Strong
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – In their first meet in 195 days, the men’s and women’s track and field teams started strong at the MSU Chuck Peterson Open and M City Classic, with Molly Liston setting a school record in the 5000-meter and multiple top-five finishes against Division I, II, and III opponents at the M City Classic.
Head Coach Aaron Lund elected to send Liston to the Chuck Peterson Open, hosted by MSU-Mankato, with the goal of setting the school record in the 5000m, fresh off of a cross country season where she finished 41st at the NCAA Championships, just one spot away from All-American honors. It was clear that the heartbreak in Spartansburg, South Carolina fueled Liston, who crushed the previous school record of 17:30.02, set in 2006 by Kourtney Joyce, with a time of 17:11.07. The Richfield native maintained record-setting pace throughout the race, running 1000m times of 3:24.98, 3:25.29, 3:27.42, 3:29.41, and 3:23.97 to break the record.
The other nine women for Gustavus traveled to Minneapolis to compete at the M City Classic, hosted by the University of Minnesota. Maddox Lee competed in the pentathlon for the Gusties, scoring 2455 to finish 16th, including tying a personal record in the high jump, clearing 1.44m. On the track, McKenzie Luetmer set her personal record with a time of 8.22 in the 60-meter, as the only person who ran the race for Gustavus. In the 60-meter hurdles, three Gusties advanced to the finals after qualifying in the prelims. In the finals, all three Gustavus women ran faster times than their prelim times, where sophomore Kayla Kajer set a personal record with a time of 9.64, first-year Sophia Vogel ran a time of 9.72, and sophomore Emily Podulke finished just a second slower with a time of 9.73 to finish sixth, seventh, and eighth, respectively. Sophomore Teagan Stark was the only entrant for the Gustie women in the 400-meter, running a time of 1:05.26 to finish third in the event and classmate Ella Kienitz was the only entrant in the 600-meter, crossing the finish line in a time of 1:47.79. Two Gustavus women ran in the 300-meter, with Lauren Rocheford finishing in 11th with a time of 45.13 and Podulke with a time of 46.55. Luetmer and Vogel competed in the 200-meter, completing in times of 27.53 and 28.64 respectively. In the field, first-year Kaylee Hawks and Kajer both reached heights of 1.55m, good for second at the M City Classic.
On the men’s side, first-year Amos Anderson started the season for the Gusties, running in the 60-meter prelims, placing 36th with a time of 7.71. In the 400-meter, first-year Luke Scheel led the Gustavus contingent with a time of 52.00 to finish 10th place, followed by Cohen Stursa with a time of 52.67 and Reese Blondin with a time of 53.77. Stursa was also the only entry in the 200-meter for the Gusties, finishing in a time of 24.17 for 19th. In the field, two Gusties competed in the long jump, Ben Wynia and Logan Sandmeyer. Wynia jumped a 6.07m mark, good for ninth place and Sandmeyer leaped to a 5.91m mark, finishing 10th. Three entrants competed in the pole vault, led by first-year Anderson and sophomore Alex Palmer, both vaulting over heights of 3.90m, with senior Joe Ream just behind them with a height of 3.75m.
Gustavus track and field takes a few weeks off now, getting back to competition on January 17th, when the team competes at the Ole Opener, hosted by St. Olaf in Northfield.
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