Connect with us

Sports

Bobcat track and field sets records and makes multiple podium visits at Texas Invitational – The University Star

The Texas State track and field team competed at the Texas Invitational (April 24-25) in Austin, Texas. The Bobcats made trips to the podium and set records in their last track meet before the Sun Belt Conference Outdoor Championships. Freshman Kendall Lemm placed second in the women’s high jump. Lemm put forth a mark of […]

Published

on


The Texas State track and field team competed at the Texas Invitational (April 24-25) in Austin, Texas. The Bobcats made trips to the podium and set records in their last track meet before the Sun Belt Conference Outdoor Championships.

Freshman Kendall Lemm placed second in the women’s high jump. Lemm put forth a mark of 1.70m and remains the Sun Belt leader in the event.

The Dynamic duo of Kason O’Riley and Aiden Hayes continued to shine on the men’s side of the high jump event. O’Riley won gold in the event with a personal best outdoor mark of 2.21m. O’Riley is first in the Sun Belt and tied for fourth in the NCAA in the event.

Hayes won silver with a mark of 2.13m and sits firmly in second place in the conference.

Another freshman who made noise at the meet was Mihajlo Katanic. Katanic bested his previous PR in the 400m hurdles with a time of 50.48. This time ranks him first in the conference and is the second-best 400m hurdle time in school history.

Taejha Badal took gold in the women’s 200m when she recorded a new PR time of 23.23. Badal ranks second in the Sun Belt for the event.

Anthony Sandoval capped off the first night of the meet when he placed third in the men’s 5000m. Sandoval recorded an outdoor PR in the event with a time of 15:07.01.

Drew Donley continues to have a record-shattering year in the 100m event. Donley improved on his time and broke the school record that he previously set last week with a spectacular time of 10.22.

The freshmen duo of women javelin throwers Charlize Goody and McKenah Sears etched their names into the Texas State record books. Goody recorded a mark of 48.86m, good enough to be the fourth-best throw in school history and take gold at the meet. Sears placed third with a mark of 46.11m, the 10th-best mark in school history.

Precious Okougbodu earned third place in the women’s triple jump with a mark of 12.36m. Okougbodu also contributed to the Bobcats 4×100 relay team, placing second with a time of 45.02.

Texas State track and field will look to rest up next week with the Sun Belt Conference Outdoor Championships in Harrisonburg, Virginia, looming. The Bobcats will compete May 8-10.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Healey outraged as ICE detains Massachusetts teen heading to volleyball practice

Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey took to social media Sunday evening to demand answers after ICE agents arrested a high school student heading to volleyball practice over the weekend. The student, 18-year-old Marcelo Gomes, is a junior at Milford High School in Milford, Massachusetts.  In her post, Healey says she is “disturbed and outraged” and that […]

Published

on


Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey took to social media Sunday evening to demand answers after ICE agents arrested a high school student heading to volleyball practice over the weekend.

The student, 18-year-old Marcelo Gomes, is a junior at Milford High School in Milford, Massachusetts. 

In her post, Healey says she is “disturbed and outraged” and that she wants answers immediately explaining why the student was taken into immigration enforcement’s custody.

“I’m demanding that ICE provide immediate information about why he was arrested, where he is and how his due process is being protected,” she s.

BLUE STATE GOVERNOR SOUNDS OFF ABOUT ‘DISTURBING’ ICE OPERATIONS ON AFFLUENT LIBERAL ISLANDS

Milford high school

People walked to Milford High School’s graduation ceremony on June 1, 2025. Several ICE arrests were made in Milford on Saturday, including a Milford High student who was detained on his way to volleyball practice.  (Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

In the post she blames the Trump admin for what she describes as an attempt to create fear.

“The Trump Administration continues to create fear in our communities, and it’s making us all less safe,” her post states.

In her statement, Healey claims that the student was detained on Saturday without any warning or subsequent explanation provided to state officials.

“Yet again, local officials and law enforcement have been left in the dark with no heads up and no answers to their questions,” she said.

The community gathered to protest outside of Milford on Sunday. Hundreds demanded Gomes be set free and that ICE stop harassing members of their community.

protestors

Milford High School graduates protest outside of Milford Town Hall a day after 18-year-old Marcelo Gomes Da Silva was detained by ICE on his way to volleyball practice.  (Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

DEM GOVERNOR BACKS ICE ARRESTING ‘CRIMINALS’ DESPITE VOWING TO USE ‘EVERY TOOL’ AGAINST TRUMP DEPORTATIONS

U.S. Rep. Jake Auchincloss, a Democrat who represents Milford in Congress, attended the protest and made note on X that Gomes was “enrolled in honors classes, a coaching assistant for girls volleyball [and] player for boys volleyball, and a member of the school band.” 

“This administration has its public safety priorities backwards. It pardons cop-beaters from Jan. 6 but detains high-school volleyball players. It makes gun-purchaser background checks harder while pushing for tax breaks to buy silencers for pistols. This reckless behavior does not make the residents of Milford safer, and I stand with the community in support of law [and] order,” he wrote.

U.S. Rep. Jake Auchincloss

U.S. Rep. Jake Auchincloss, a Democrat who represents Milford in Congress, attended the protest and made note on X that Gomes was “enrolled in honors classes, a coaching assistant for girls volleyball [and] player for boys volleyball, and a member of the school band.”  ( Rep. Jake Auchincloss on X)

Milford School District Superintendent Kevin McIntyre says that Gomes’ detention is one of many apprehensions to take place in the southern Massachusetts community.

McIntyre says the district cannot take any role in immigration enforcement, but they will “support all of our students and families, including those who are immigrants to the United States.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“They are members of the community, students in our classrooms, athletes that compete representing Milford, musicians, artists, friends, and neighbors. We will do everything in our power to support our students and families during these difficult times,” he said in his statement.

Sunday morning was Milford High School’s graduation and Healey says a day of celebration has now been tarnished.

“My heart goes out to the Milford community on what was supposed to be a celebratory graduation day,” she said.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Springfield area top Class 4-5 performances

Jackson Cantwell: Miami football recruit nearly breaks shot put record Nixa 2026 offensive lineman Jackson Cantwell finished one centimeter behind the NFHS shot put record while capturing his third straight state championship. JEFFERSON CITY — A handful of individuals put on impressive performances throughout the weekend. Here are the most notable athletes from the area. […]

Published

on


play

JEFFERSON CITY — A handful of individuals put on impressive performances throughout the weekend. Here are the most notable athletes from the area.

The Southwest Missouri region performed well at this week’s state track and field championships in Jefferson City, which included the Nixa boys finishing second in Class 5.

Cantwell finished the three-peat in both Class 5 discus and shot put events.

In the shot put, he finished one centimeter shy of the NFHS record with a throw of 23.45 meters (76 feet, 11 ¼ inches). It broke his own state record.

In the discus, he threw 64.14 meters (210 feet, 5 inches).

Hayden Mays, Nixa

Mays finished right behind Cantwell in both the shot put and discus events.

His discus throw went 59.35 meters (194 feet, 8 inches). His shot put throw was a personal record, going 18.34 meters (60 feet, 2 inches).

Maddux NeSmith, Marshfield

NeSmith finished second in the boys’ Class 4 pole vault by clearing 4.47 meters (14 feet, 8 inches). He finished 2.5 inches behind the champion.

Madiyln Olds, Carl Junction

Olds finished second in the girls’ Class 4 javelin throw with a toss of 43.56 meters (142 feet, 11 inches).

Chase Stilley, Webb City

Stilley won the Class 5 girls’ high jump by clearing 1.72 meters (5 feet, 7 ¾ inches).

West Plains boys’ relay team

The Zizzers finished third in the Class 4 200-meter relay at 1:27.53. The team included William Stauffer, Cameron Miller, Lincoln Miller and Zackery Tinsley.

The same group finished the 100-meter relay in third place with a time of 41.89 seconds.

Ava Doll, Joplin

Doll finished third in the 3200-meter run in Class 5, finishing the two-mile in 10:59.66.

Brayden Hicks, Marshfield

Hicks won his second consecutive Class 4 triple jump championship, this year finishing at 14.18 meters.

William Sanley, Nixa

Sanley finished third in the Class 5 pole vault, clearing 4.64 meters.

Avarus Kuhn-Wofford, Joplin

Kuhn-Wofford finished second in the Class 5 300-meter hurdles at 38.45 seconds.

Nevada boys’ relay team

Nevada’s Class 4 400-meter relay team finished first at 3 minutes, 20.24 seconds. The team included John Collins, Aiden Watts, Shaityn Williams and Jackson Cheaney.

Gracelyn Bull, Marshfield

Bull finished third in the girls’ Class 4 shot put with a toss of 12.47 meters (40 feet, 11 inches).

Brooke Hedger, Webb City

Hedger finished third in the Class 5 800-meter run at 2:14.13.

Carl Junction girls’ relay team

Carl Junction took second in the 100-meter relay in Class 4 at 48.3 seconds. The group included Olivia Battagler, Jazmyne Blaney, Kadence Hunt and Sydney Ward.

Morgan Nicholls, Kickapoo

Nicholls finished fourth in the Class 5 shot put with a 17.45-meter throw (57 feet, 3 inches).

Trent Putman, Branson

Putman finished second in the Class 5 Paralympic event for the 100-meter. He finished in 23.04 seconds. He also took third place in the mixed 100-meter event.

McDonald County boys’ relay team

The Mustangs finished third in the Class 4 400-meter relay at 3 minutes, 21.14 seconds. The team included Dominic Navin, Miguel Mora, Ryder Martin and Aidrian Short.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Which two area teams are in the PIAA volleyball and lacrosse playoffs?

Two teams from the Beaver Valley will be competing in the boys volleyball and girls lacrosse high school state tournaments.  Here is what you need to know about the upcoming tournaments and the two area teams competing.  When are the PIAA boys volleyball and girls lacrosse tournaments? Both the PIAA boys volleyball and girls lacrosse […]

Published

on


Two teams from the Beaver Valley will be competing in the boys volleyball and girls lacrosse high school state tournaments. 

Here is what you need to know about the upcoming tournaments and the two area teams competing. 

When are the PIAA boys volleyball and girls lacrosse tournaments?

Both the PIAA boys volleyball and girls lacrosse playoffs will begin on Tuesday, June 3, with quarterfinal action beginning on June 7, followed by the semifinals on June 10 and the championships on June 14. 

Where are the PIAA boys volleyball and girls lacrosse tournaments?

The boys volleyball championship matches will take place at the Recreation Building at Penn State University, while girls lacrosse will be played at Panzer Stadium on campus. 

Who are the reigning PIAA boys volleyball champions?

Class 2A: Meadville (10) def. Manheim Central (3) 3-1

Class 3A:  Shaler (7) def. Parkland (11) 3-0

Who are the reigning PIAA girls lacrosse champions?

Class 2A: Archbishop Carol (12) def. Twin Valley (3) 16-7

Class 3A: Conestoga (1) def. Radnor (1) 10-4

Who are the Beaver Valley teams competing in the PIAA boys volleyball and girls lacrosse playoffs?

Ambridge boys volleyball

For the sixth straight season, Ambridge has qualified for the PIAA playoffs, coming in as the No. 2 seed out of the WPIAL in Class 2A.

In its WPIAL Class 2A championship match, it fell to Shaler in three sets (25-18, 25-18, 25-16) against the reigning WPIAL and PIAA Class 3A champion back on May 24. It comes into the state tournament sporting a 15-2 overall record. 

While the team has had success qualifying for the state tournament, it will look to advance to the quarterfinals for the first time since the 2019 season when it faces District VIII champion Obama Academy in the first round. 

Quaker Valley girls lacrosse

Quaker Valley returns to the state tournament for the first time since the 2023 season. It comes into the state tournament after avenging its regular season loss to Blackhawk by winning the WPIAL Class 2A third-place game 13-9. 

The team has been led this season by junior tandem Lucy Roig and Alexa Westwood, who have scored 57 and 35 goals, respectively. Freshman Katherine Miller has also made a sizable contribution offensively tallying 21 goals. 

While the team has had solid offensive production, Quaker Valley has been anchored by reliable goaltending from senior Emily Reiner, who has saved 69% of the shots that she has faced this year and also accumulated 600 saves in her career.

Quaker Valley will face Wyomissing in the opening round of the PIAA Class 2A tournament at 4:30 p.m. 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Pair of Badgers headed to NCAA track and field championships | WTAQ News Talk | 97.5 FM · 1360 AM

(UW ATHLETICS) – COLLEGE STATION, Texas –The Wisconsin women’s track and field duo of Emma Kelley and Taylor Kesner punched their tickets for the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships on Saturday at the NCAA West First Round. Kelley ran a personal-best time and the No. 3 mark in school history to advance in the 800 meters while […]

Published

on


(UW ATHLETICS) – COLLEGE STATION, Texas –The Wisconsin women’s track and field duo of Emma Kelley and Taylor Kesner punched their tickets for the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships on Saturday at the NCAA West First Round.

Kelley ran a personal-best time and the No. 3 mark in school history to advance in the 800 meters while Kesner threw the No. 2 mark in program history in the discus. 

EMMA TO EUGENE
A four-time champion in the 800 meters at the Division III level at WashU, Kelley advanced to her first NCAA championship at the Division I level thanks to a historic performance on Saturday. 

Kelley finished fourth in the third section of the 800 in 2 minutes, 1.87 seconds, a personal-best mark and the No. 3 time in school history, to advance to the NCAA outdoor championships. Her time was the sixth-fastest time during the evening and was almost a second faster than her previous-best mark.

Only UW legends Suzy Favor and Amy Wickus have run faster 800 meter-times in program history than Kelley. 

Kelly will compete in the semifinals of the 800 meters on Thursday, June 12 at 7:58 p.m. CT while the final will take place on Saturday, June 14 at 9:14 p.m. CT. 

KESNER CONTINUES 
EXCELLENCE
Taylor Kesner’s stellar showings continued on Saturday afternoon, as the Highland, Illinois, native qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships in a second event—earning a mark of 189 feet, 8 inches (57.83m).

She moved to No. 2 all-time in school history in the process, in addition to becoming the only athlete this season to advance to the NCAA Championships in both the discus and javelin. In Texas, Kesner wrapped up her first-ever regional appearance with a pair of personal bests.

Kesner will throw the javelin on Thursday, June 12 at 7:15 p.m. CT and the discus at 7:40 p.m. CT on Saturday, June 14, 2025. 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Oregon female athletes step down from medal podium next to trans competitor

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! A pair of girls’ track and field athletes did not stand on the medal podium alongside a transgender athlete for high jump at the Oregon state championship on Saturday night.  Footage obtained by Fox News Digital showed the two high school seniors, Reese Eckard of Sherwood High […]

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A pair of girls’ track and field athletes did not stand on the medal podium alongside a transgender athlete for high jump at the Oregon state championship on Saturday night. 

Footage obtained by Fox News Digital showed the two high school seniors, Reese Eckard of Sherwood High School and Alexa Anderson of Tigard High School, step down from their respective spots on the podium next to a trans athlete who represented Ida B. Wells High School. 

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Eckard, in fourth place, and Anderson, in third, each finished ahead of the trans athlete, who tied for fifth place. But the two females faced the opposite direction as the other competitors received their medals from officials. 

The footage then showed an official confront the two young women, and gesture for them to move away. Eckard and Anderson were then seen walking away from the podium and standing off to the side. 

Fox News Digital has reached out to the Oregon School Activities Association for a response. 

The trans athlete previously competed in the boys’ category in 2023 and 2024, Fox News Digital previously reported.

Eckard and Anderson were praised for not standing on the podium on social media, and were even shouted out by prominent conservative activist Riley Gaines. 

CALIFORNIA TOWN RALLIES BEHIND TRUMP AS IT HOSTS TRACK AND FIELD CHAMPIONSHIP AMID TRANS ATHLETE CONTROVERSY

“We didn’t refuse to stand on the podium out of hate. We did it because someone has to say this isn’t right. In order to protect the integrity and fairness of girls sports we must stand up for what is right,” Anderson said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

Girls and women making symbolic gestures to protest trans inclusion in sports has become a growing trend in 2025. 

On May 17 at a California track and field sectional final, Reese Hogan of Crean Lutheran High School stepped from the second-place spot onto the first-place medal podium after her trans opponent, AB Hernandez stepped down from it. Hogan’s stunt was lauded on social media by Gaines and others. 

On April 2, footage of women’s fencer Stephanie Turner kneeling to protest a trans opponent at a competition in Maryland, and subsequently getting punished for it, went viral and ignited global awareness and scrutiny against USA Fencing.

Oregon is one of many Democratic-controlled states that saw transgender athletes compete in girls’ track and field championships this weekend, with other highly-publicized incidents taking place in California, Washington, Maine and Minnesota. 

The America First Policy Institute (AFPI), a nonpartisan research institute, filed a Title IX discrimination complaint against Oregon for its laws that allow biological males to compete in girls’ sports on May 27. 

The complaint was filed to the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights, which has already launched Title IX investigations against the high school sports leagues in California, Minnesota, Maine and Massachusetts. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Oregon girls' track and field athletes don't stand on a medal podium

Oregon girls’ track and field athletes Reese Eckard and Alexa Anderson don’t stand on a medal podium next to a trans opponent. (Courtesy of America First Policy Institute)

“Every girl deserves a fair shot – on the field, on the podium, and in life,” said Jessica Hart Steinmann, AFPI’s executive general counsel and vice chair of the Center for Litigation, in a statement. 

“When state institutions knowingly force young women to compete against biological males, they’re violating federal law and sending a devastating message to female athletes across the country.”

President Donald Trump signed the “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports” executive order on Feb. 5 and his administration has made combating the continued enabling of trans athletes in girls’ sports by Democratic states a priority. 

The U.S. Department of Justice has already launched a lawsuit against Maine for its defiance of Trump’s executive order, and the president suggested on Tuesday that federal funding pauses could be coming against California amid the situation involving Hernandez.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

13 Bruins qualify for national championshps at NCAA West Regionals

Winning at regionals is an accomplishment. But it’s just the beginning, serving as the first stepping stone to potentially capturing a national title. UCLA track and field competed in the NCAA West Regional at Texas A&M’s E.B Cushing Stadium in College Station, Texas, from Wednesday to Saturday. Thirteen Bruins qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Track […]

Published

on


Winning at regionals is an accomplishment.

But it’s just the beginning, serving as the first stepping stone to potentially capturing a national title.

UCLA track and field competed in the NCAA West Regional at Texas A&M’s E.B Cushing Stadium in College Station, Texas, from Wednesday to Saturday. Thirteen Bruins qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships as individuals, while both the 4×100- and 4×400-meter relay teams advanced on the women’s side.

The women’s 4×400-meter relay squad finished out the meet Saturday with a season-best 3:28.18 mark. UCLA trailed Texas A&M the entire race, but junior Naomi Johnson closed out the race with a team-best 51.43 split to send the squad to second in its heat and fourth overall.

On Friday, the men’s 4×400-meter relay squad placed dead last with a 22nd place finish in a time of 3:16.00. Junior Zaire Waring, who ran the second leg for UCLA, appeared to sustain an injury after the first 100 meters of his race as his stride quickly turned into a limp.

Waring pulled through with a 51.10 second split, the slowest leg of any competitor in the field, but still managed to finish despite his apparent pain during the majority of the race.

Despite missing out on qualification with the relay, sophomore Gabriel Clement II punched his ticket to Eugene, Oregon, after posting a personal best 46.75 to place third in the first heat of the 400-meter dash.

Juniors Michael Pinckney and Tamaal Myers were the other national qualifiers on the men’s side. Pinckney punched his ticket with a fourth-place finish in the discus event after throwing a personal-best 60.88 meters.

(Nicolas Greamo/Daily Bruin senior staff)
Junior Michael prepares to launch a hammer in Drake Stadium. (Nicolas Greamo/Daily Bruin senior staff)

The Queens, New York, local tossed another personal best mark in Wednesday’s hammer throw, opening the meet with a 64.91 meter throw to place 15th.

On the women’s side, 10 Bruins recorded national championship-qualfiying performances. Graduate students Ka’Leila Abrille and Katerina Adamiec earned their spots after placing first and seventh, respectively, in the pole vault competition, clearing the 4.42 meter mark – the third best jump in program history.

Abrille took home the regional title despite the top six competitors matching her mark clearing all four heights on her first attempt. While both recorded personal bests, Adamiec’s career bests on her third and four jumps, shattering her previous record by .14 meters.

The women’s team racked up four top-10 finishes in the field events, with senior Sydney Johnson qualifying for nationals in the heptathlon as well as the long jump.

Senior Yanla Ndjip-Nyemeck placed second overall in the 100-meter hurdles after posting a career-best 12.82 second mark in the second heat. Alongside Ndjip-Nyemeck’s victory, freshman Celeste Polzonetti earned her first ticket to the national championships after placing third in the same heat – and seventh overall – with a personal-best 13.08 time.

Another pair of Bruins in sophomore Taylor Snaer and Johnson qualified in the 200-meter dash after placing eighth and 12th, respectively. Snaer automatically qualified with a third-place finish while recording a personal-best 22.64 mark in the first heat. Johnson snagged a nationals spot after finishing 12th overall with a 22.94 mark.

With the first round of the 2025 Outdoor Track and Field Championships complete, UCLA will shift its focus to the national championships from June 11 to June 14 at Hayward Field.

And with one less Bruin headed to Eugene this year compared to 2024, the pressure to win seems stronger than ever.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending