Sports
Bears Ready For NCAA Outdoor Championships
James Molgaard / KLC fotos
World record-holder and The Bowerman candidate Mykolas Alekna looks to claim his first NCAA title this week at Hayward Field.
5 Women, 3 Men To Compete At Hayward Field
Eight student-athletes from the California track & field team will appear on one of the biggest stages of the sport this week, closing out the collegiate season with the NCAA Outdoor Championships at historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. All events from the competition will be streamed on the ESPN family of networks.
Each event has 24 entrants (12 from the West region and 12 from the East region). The top 8 finishers will be named First-Team All-Americans, while places 9-16 will be dubbed Second-Team All-Americans.
As usual, several throwers at the NCAA Championships will be wearing the Blue & Gold.
World record-holder Mykolas Alekna seeks his first NCAA title in the men’s discus, having placed second as a freshman in 2022 and third in 2023 before redshirting his junior season in preparation for the Olympic Games (where he earned a silver medal). At just 22 years old, he is the only man in history to have surpassed the 75-meter barrier, posting a mark of 75.56m (247-10) in Ramona, Oklahoma, in April. He later picked up the ACC title with a new meet and Kentner Stadium record, then broke both the meet and E. B. Cushing Stadium records at the NCAA West Regional with a mark of 72.12m (236-7). Last Thursday, Alekna was named to The Bowerman Watch List for the 23rd time in his career, more than any thrower and third-most of all men in history.
Fellow 2024 Olympian Caisa-Marie Lindfors will be the last Cal athlete to compete this week, entering the meet as the No. 6 seed in the women’s discus. Her season-best throw of 61.52m (201-10) from the 130th Big Meet, while short of her school-record PR of 62.48m (205-0), was enough to cement her as the second-best discus thrower in the conference and third in the West region. Lindfors also claimed second place at the ACC Championships, as well as a third-place finish in the shot put. She last appeared at the NCAA Championships in 2022, where she finished fourth while competing for Florida State.
The women’s hammer will feature three Cal throwers for the first time in program history, also the largest group in the event since USC fielded three in 2012. ACC silver medalist and Cyprus native Valentina Savva, the nation’s top freshman and No. 8 overall, is the highest seed of the trio with a personal best of 69.20m (227-0), which she set at the Mt. SAC Relays in April for a Cal freshman record and the Bears’ third-best mark of all time. Savva is just four inches away from a Cypriot national record in the event, which currently stands at 69.29m (227-4).
Giavonna Meeks, a transfer from Vanderbilt, claimed ACC gold with a personal-best and Kentner Stadium record mark of 67.86m (222-8, fourth-best in program history) to pair with her conference indoor weight throw title, while 2023 Second-Team All-American Audrey Jacobs returns to the NCAA Championships for the first time in two years after an injury during the 2024 outdoor season. Jacobs boasts a season-best of 64.94m (213-0) and hopes to surpass her PR of 65.22m (213-11) that ranks sixth-best in Cal history.
The Bears will have an entry in the women’s shot put at NCAAs for the first time since 2001 after Lucija Leko, who is in her first season at Cal after spending a year at the University of Zagreb, posted a school-record 17.10m (56-1.25) two weeks ago at the NCAA West Regional to qualify for the final. In addition to placing well at NCAAs, her goal is to surpass the Croatian national record of 17.52m (57-5.75).
The Golden Bears’ two track athletes set to race – Garrett MacQuiddy (1500m) and Johnny Goode (400m) – have both posted historic seasons.
MacQuiddy has competed at Cal for his entire collegiate career, last reaching the outdoor championships in 2023 and finishing 20th in the semifinals before redshirting the 2024 season. He broke a 10-year-old school record in the 1500m in April at the Bryan Clay Invitational, finishing the race in 3:38.50, and followed that up with a silver medal at the ACC Outdoor Championships for his first conference podium finish. To advance to the final in Eugene, he will either need to finish among the top five in his heat or post one of the two fastest additional times among both heats.
Goode, a transfer from the College of San Mateo, crushed the 40-year-old school record in the 400m by .44 seconds last month at the ACC Outdoor Championships (45.02) to clinch the bronze medal. He has also posted the third-fastest 200m time in school history at 20.71, as well as an all-conditions personal best of 20.60. Goode will be the first Cal man to compete in the 400m (excluding all 440y competitors) at the NCAA Outdoor Championships since Dave Archibald and Forrest Beaty in 1964. He will need to be one of the top 2 finishers in his heat – or run one of the next three-fastest times of any competitor to not earn the auto-bid – to progress to the final.
NCAA OUTDOOR CHAMPIONSHIPS – June 11-14 (Hayward Field – Eugene, Oregon)
Schedule
Live Results
Live Streams – Cal Events
EVENT SCHEDULE (All Times PT)
Wednesday, June 11
4:21 p.m. – Men’s 1500m Semifinals (Garrett MacQuiddy – Heat 1)
5:41 p.m. – Men’s 400m Semifinals (Johnny Goode – Heat 3)
Thursday, June 12
1:30 p.m. – Women’s Hammer Final (Giavonna Meeks – Flight 1; Valentina Savva – Flight 2; Audrey Jacobs – Flight 2)
6:10 p.m. – Women’s Shot Put Final (Lucija Leko – Flight 1)
Friday, June 13
2:15 p.m. – Men’s Discus Final (Mykolas Alekna – Flight 2)
5:12 p.m. – Men’s 1500m Final (if qualified – Garrett MacQuiddy)
6:02 p.m. – Men’s 400m Final (if qualified – Johnny Goode)
Saturday, June 14
12:30 p.m. – Women’s Discus Final (Caisa-Marie Lindfors – Flight 2)
STAY POSTED
For complete coverage of Cal track & field, follow the Bears on X/Twitter (@CalTFXC), Instagram (@caltfxc) and Facebook (@Cal Cross Country/Track and Field).
Sports
UNT Student-Athletes Boast Record Setting G.P.A.
For the first time ever all 14 athletic programs earned a semester G.P.A. above a 3.150. Six teams earned their highest semester G.P.A. in their respective program’s history and four others achieved their second highest semester G.P.A. in their program’s history.
This marked the 13th consecutive semester of a 3.0 or better department wide grade point average and the seventh consecutive semester that UNT improved on the previous semester’s departmental G.P.A.
“The Fall 2025 semester was an outstanding one for Mean Green Athletics in the classroom,” said UNT VP/Director of Athletics Jared Mosley. “Our student-athletes continue to demonstrate a commitment to academic excellence, and their success is a direct reflection of the support and expectations we have in place. I want to thank our academic services team, led by Suzanne Dickenson, for their leadership and dedication in supporting our student-athletes and helping them reach their full potential both on the field and in the classroom.”
For the sixth consecutive semester the UNT women’s golf team led the way for the department as they earned a 3.907 fall semester G.P.A.
The Mean Green tennis team has now recorded a team G.P.A. of 3.0 or better for 28 consecutive semesters. The UNT soccer team and swim and dive team have both also maintained streaks of 20-plus consecutive semesters with a team G.P.A. above a 3.0.
Fifty-two UNT student-athletes this past fall earned a 4.0 grade point average. The Mean Green women’s track team led the way as they had 11 student-athletes named to the prestigious 2025 Fall President’s List. The tennis team had the highest percentage of student-athletes earning President’s List honors as 72% of its roster had a 4.0 G.P.A.
The UNT men’s basketball, men’s cross country, men’s track and field, women’s basketball, women’s cross country and women’s track and field teams all earned their highest semester G.P.A.s in program history.
Lastly, 47 UNT student-athletes earned their diplomas this past fall.
Sports
Spencer McLachlin Named Head Coach at UC San Diego
McLachlin becomes the eighth head coach in UCSD program history and will coach the Tritons in their final season as members of the Big West (2026) before the program transitions to the West Coast Conference ahead of the 2027 campaign. He joins JJ Van Niel (Arizona State), Tyler Hildebrand (Saint Mary’s College), and Amy Pauly (Orlando Valkyries) as former USC assistants under Brad Keller who have moved into head coaching positions.
“This opportunity is no surprise and has been a long time coming for Spencer,” said Keller. “UCSD is getting one of the best coaches in the game. Spencer and I have worked together in many different phases of our careers, and I know USC is in a better place with a brighter future for everything he has done here. Spencer is an innovator, a creator, and most importantly, a dreamer. Our game needs more leaders like him. I couldn’t be prouder of what he has done and for this new opportunity for him and his family.”
In his three seasons at USC, McLachlin helped lead the Women of Troy to three straight NCAA tournament appearances. The Trojans advanced to the second round in each of their three postseason berths. Most recently, McLachlin helped USC reach 25 wins and finish in a tie for third place in the Big Ten. Six Trojans received awards on all-conference teams and USC led the league in blocking (2.76 bps). The Trojans also ranked second (12th in the NCAA) in total blocks (322.5) and were second for opponent hitting percentage (.184). OH London Wijay earned AVCA All-America honorable mention.
With McLachlin on staff in 2024, USC advanced to the second round of the NCAA tournament for the third straight year and finished 22-10 overall with a 13-7 mark in the Big Ten (tied for sixth). Setter Mia Tuaniga was named to the AVCA All-America third team. In his first season with the Women of Troy, McLachlin helped USC go 19-13 with a 12-8 mark in the Pac-12 for a fifth-place finish. That season, OH Skylar Fields was honored with AVCA All-America first-team recognition.
McLachlin is married to former USC volleyball standout opposite hitter Diane Copenhagen (2004-07), a 2004 Pac-10 All-Freshman Team selection. The McLachlins are parents to two daughters, Leila and Malia, and a son named Koa.
The 14th-ranked Trojans (25-7, 15-5 Big Ten) finished the regular season tied for third in the Big Ten and were awarded one of 33 at-large berths—and a hosting bid—into the 2025 NCAA tournament. USC made its fourth straight appearance in the tourney under sixth-year head coach Brad Keller (41st all-time) and moved into the second round for the fourth consecutive year with a 3-0 sweep of Princeton. The Women of Troy were eliminated from postseason play in a hard-fought five-set loss to Cal Poly in the second round.
For more information on the USC women’s volleyball team, please visit USCTrojans.com/WVB. Fans of the Women of Troy can follow @USCWomensVolley on X, Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok.
Sports
Defending Big West Regular Season And National Champion Long Beach State Chosen As 2026 Preseason Coaches’ Poll Favorite
Long Beach State’s status as a national powerhouse was further reinforced in the 2026 AVCA National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll (Dec. 23), where the Beach were ranked No. 3 nationally behind UCLA and Hawai’i.
The Beach also placed multiple student-athletes on the 2026 Big West Preseason Coaches’ Team, as Skyler Varga and Alex Kandev earned preseason recognition following standout performances during Long Beach State’s championship 2025 season.
Varga returns as one of the nation’s premier attackers. During the 2025 season he played a central role in Long Beach State’s run to the NCAA National Championship, earning NCAA All-Tournament Team honors for his performance in the title match. He finished the year with 270 kills (2.73 per set) on a .368 attack percentage, while adding 33 service aces, 70 total blocks, and 341 points across 99 sets. In addition to his on-court excellence, Varga also received CSC Academic All-America recognition, underscoring his impact as a scholar-athlete.
Kandev, now a sophomore outside hitter, made his mark on the national stage during the 2025 NCAA Championship match. In the title match victory over UCLA, Kandev helped the Beach secure their fourth national title and earned NCAA All-Tournament Team honors in the process. He concluded his freshman season with 210 kills (3.23 per set) while hitting .458, ranking among the team leaders in efficiency, and added 21 aces, 36 blocks, and 250 points in 65 sets.
Following Long Beach State atop the Big West preseason poll, Hawai’i was chosen second with 22 points and two first-place votes, and UC Irvine was tabbed third with 17 points. CSUN, UC San Diego, and UC Santa Barbara rounded out the poll, each earning nine points.
With proven postseason performers and returning national contenders, Long Beach State enters 2026 as both the team to beat in the Big West and one of the top programs in the nation.
2026 Big West Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Poll
- Long Beach State – 24 points (4)
- Hawai’i – 22 points (2)
- UC Irvine – 17 points
- T-4. CSUN – 9 points
T-4. UC San Diego – 9 points
T-4. UC Santa Barbara – 9 points
First-place votes in parentheses
2026 Big West Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Team
George Bruening, UC Santa Barbara
Alex Kandev, Long Beach State
Jalen Phillips, CSUN
Tread Rosenthal, Hawai’i
Adrien Roure, Hawai’i
Kristian Titriyski, Hawai’i
Skyler Varga, Long Beach State
Sports
NSU adds goalkeeper transfer – Northwestern State University Athletics
NATCHITOCHES—After dipping into the transfer portal for a midfielder and defender, Northwestern State soccer head coach Ian Brophy now picks up a goalkeeper in the form of transfer Saki Tsuchiya.
Tsuchiya, a native of Takasaki, Japan, comes to NSU following a season at Valparaiso.
“We are very excited to add an experienced goalkeeper who really fits our style of play,” Brophy said. “Her ability with the ball at her feet is something that definitely suits us and should help us as a team. She will instantly provide competition in an already very competitive group and certainly makes us better.”
She played in three games for the Crusaders, sporting a save percentage of .708 and goals against average of 3.36 in just under 134 minutes. She recorded 12 saves this past season, seven coming against Drake and then posting five saves against Illinois.
Prior to her season at Valpo, Tsuchiya started her collegiate career at Tyler JC, where she competed for two seasons.
For Tyler JC, she appeared in 30 matches during the two years, where she posted a 1.18 GAA and a .780 save percentage.
She recorded three solo shutouts and five combined shutouts among her 13 wins as a sophomore in 2024. That season also earned her a Second Team All-Region selection, as her team captured the Region XIV championship and played in the NJCAA National Tournament 2023 and 2024.
As a freshman, she was named to the NJCAA Second Team All-Academic Team for 2023-24.
She played summer soccer in 2024 for TLH Reckoning of the USLW and in 2025 for Peoria City of the WPSL.
In high school at Kaishigakuen JAPAN Soccer College koutoubu, she was a three-year starter in net.
She joins an already impressive goalkeeper room that includes Second Team All-Southland Conference selection Kennedy Rist and rising sophomore Audrey Marfia, who recorded a goals against average of 0.39, surrendering just one goal in 230:32.
Tsuchiya will be the first Japan native to play for the Demons and joins Hosane Soukou, Ravina Sandhu and Anika Sproxton as players on the team not from the United States.
Sports
Lauren Watson Becomes First Player in USD Beach Volleyball History
SAN DIEGO — Defender Lauren Watson became the first player in USD beach volleyball history on Monday afternoon when she signed a grant-in-aid agreement to play for the Toreros.
Watson, who hails from Phoenix, Arizona, attends Notre Dame Preparatory High School, where she was twice named the Arizona Beach Volleyball Player of the Year by the Arizona Republic. She will join San Diego for its inaugural beach volleyball season in the spring of 2027.
“Lauren is a really good all-around talent,” said USD beach volleyball head coach Derek Olson. “As a defender that can sit in the pocket and run shots down, she has good defensive instincts and covers a lot of sand.”
Her high school career thus far has seen her earn two Arizona Beach Volleyball Pairs State Championships, three All-League First-Team honors, and her league’s Defensive Player of the Year award.
“She also knows how to win and that’s very apparent by her results in tournaments,” Olson added. “But what I appreciate most about Lauren is her ability to play with anyone and make them better. She adds value to the environment that she is in.”
Sports
Spencer McLachlin named new women’s volleyball head coach – The UCSD Guardian
On Tuesday, Dec. 23, UC San Diego Athletics announced that USC associate head coach Spencer McLachlin will be the next head coach of Triton women’s volleyball. He replaces Melanie Greene, who stepped down on Dec. 6 after two seasons as head coach.
The coaching change comes after a tumultuous 6-24 season where a promising Triton team never found its rhythm. The Tritons were eliminated from postseason contention with three games left in the season following a loss to UC Riverside on Nov. 17. Assistant coach Kara Barkdoll Coy was named interim head coach for the final six games of the season after Greene’s departure.
“Spencer brings exactly what we need at this moment,” athletic director Andy Fee said in a press release. “He’s helped build winning programs, developed All-Americans, and knows how to compete at the highest level.”
McLachlin played collegiately at Stanford, winning a national championship with the Cardinal in 2010 and ending his four years in Palo Alto ranked third in career kills. McLachlin then served as an assistant coach at Hawai’i, California, UCLA, and Indiana before joining USC as associate head coach in 2023. This past season, the Trojans went 25-7 but fell in the second round of the NCAA Championship in a five-set upset loss against Cal Poly. McLachlin’s new position at UCSD will be his first head coaching role.
“I am thrilled to join UC San Diego as the Head Coach of the women’s volleyball program,” McLachlin said. “This is an incredible opportunity for my family and me to be part of an historic and beautiful university and build a program with great potential.”
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