Sports
Bodine Selected by Baltimore in First Round of MLB Draft
Story Links ATLANTA — Coastal Carolina University catcher Caden Bodine was selected by the Baltimore Orioles with the No. 30 overall pick in the first round of the 2025 Major League Baseball Draft. Bodine, one of the elite catches in college baseball, won the Johnny Bench and Buster Posey Awards, was an […]

ATLANTA — Coastal Carolina University catcher Caden Bodine was selected by the Baltimore Orioles with the No. 30 overall pick in the first round of the 2025 Major League Baseball Draft.
Bodine, one of the elite catches in college baseball, won the Johnny Bench and Buster Posey Awards, was an ABCA/Rawlings Gold Glove Award winner at catcher and was a four-time All-American, earning spots on teams from the College Baseball Foundation (First), D1Baseball (First), Perfect Game (second) and NCBWA (third).
His selection marks 29 straight seasons with a Chanticleer being selected in the MLB draft, dating back to 1997. Bodine is only the second first-round choice in school history, joining Eric Brown in 2022 to the Milwaukee Brewers (No. 27 overall).
Coastal Carolina had a nation-leading and school record 56 wins, a Sun Belt Conference Championship, Sun Belt Tournament Championship, Conway Regional Championship, Auburn Super Regional Championship and a 3-0 run in Omaha to the Men’s College World Series Championship Final. Over the last quarter of the season, Coastal posted a 26-game winning streak, the fourth-longest winning streak in DI in the last five years.
Bodine turned in an outstanding all-around campaign in 2025. The First-Team All-Sun Belt Conference selection started 67 games for the Chanticleers — 66 behind the dish, one at DH — guiding a pitching staff that ranked No. 2 nationally in both ERA and WHIP. Offensively, he hit .318 with a team-best .454 on-base percentage, drawing 47 walks and being hit by 17 pitches. He added 24 extra-base hits, drove in 42 runs and slugged .461, serving as a consistent presence atop the lineup.
Behind the plate, Bodine was a defensive anchor. He threw out 19 would-be base stealers on 44 attempts — tied CCU’s career record with 46 runners caught stealing — and finished with a .998 fielding percentage. His leadership helped elevate Coastal to the Sun Belt Conference Regular Season and Tournament Championship, where he was named the Most Outstanding Player and also earned a spot on the All-Tournament Team. He followed that up with All-Tournament honors in the NCAA Conway Regional as the Chants advanced to the Super Regionals and Men’s College World Series for the first time since 2016.
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Sports
Training sessions at World Aquatics Masters Championships cancelled due to Sentosa’s water quality issues
SINGAPORE – The water quality issue that affected the World Aquatics Championships open water swimming events at Sentosa earlier in July has also struck the World Aquatics Masters Championships, with the morning and afternoon open water training sessions cancelled on July 25. World Aquatics sent a message to participants and explained that the decision was […]

SINGAPORE – The water quality issue that affected the World Aquatics Championships open water swimming events at Sentosa earlier in July has also struck the World Aquatics Masters Championships, with the morning and afternoon open water training sessions cancelled on July 25.
World Aquatics sent a message to participants and explained that the decision was made because of “water quality levels exceeding acceptable thresholds”.
The world governing body added that a technical meeting is planned for 4.45pm and that it will “continue monitoring water quality” and provide more information, before the competition starts on July 26 with the women’s 3km race in the waters off Palawan Beach. The men’s 3km event is scheduled for a day later.
The July 26-Aug 22 World Aquatics Masters Championships is expected to feature about 6,000 athletes from around 100 countries and territories aged 25 and above, competing in swimming, diving, water polo, artistic swimming and open water swimming.
The Straits Times has contacted the local organising committee for comment.
At the World Aquatics Championships, the men and women’s 10km open water swimming events were postponed due to “unacceptable water quality results”.
The women’s 10km initially scheduled for July 15 was moved to July 16, 10.15am, about three hours after the men’s 10km, because water samples drawn at the race site two days earlier showed “exceeding levels” of the Escherichia coli (E. coli) bacteria.
However, results from a July 15 sample showed that the levels were still above acceptable thresholds, causing the men and women’s flag-offs to be further delayed to 1pm and 4pm respectively on July 16. The competition proceeded as scheduled from then on.
E. coli is a bacteria commonly found in the intestines of people and animals. While most strains are harmless, some can cause serious illness such as diarrhoea, urinary tract infections, pneumonia and sepsis.
According to World Aquatics regulations, E. coli levels in ocean and transitional (tidal) waters must not exceed 250 colony-forming units per 100 millilitres.
ST understands that World Aquatics adopts stricter water quality standards compared to guidelines set for recreational swimming, given the prolonged exposure faced by athletes during competition.
Earlier, World Aquatics executive director Brent Nowicki had noted that water quality disruptions were not unprecedented, with the Paris 2024 Olympics men’s triathlon postponed hours before the scheduled start due to pollution levels in the River Seine.
ST also reported that while the National Environment Agency does not usually assess marine water quality based on E. coli levels, it has started monitoring the bacteria levels at Sentosa’s beaches following the recent incidents.
Sports
Here are all the winners from the 2025 HBCU Sports Awards
Saturday marked another moment of recognition and pride across Black College athletics with the 2025 HBCU Sports Awards presentation. Hosted by HBCU Sports Founding Publisher and Editor Kenn Rashad alongside Jarrett Hoffman and Chris Stevens, the annual virtual event spotlighted the very best in HBCU sports. It honored athletes in 23 categories, coaches in 12, […]

Saturday marked another moment of recognition and pride across Black College athletics with the 2025 HBCU Sports Awards presentation.
Hosted by HBCU Sports Founding Publisher and Editor Kenn Rashad alongside Jarrett Hoffman and Chris Stevens, the annual virtual event spotlighted the very best in HBCU sports. It honored athletes in 23 categories, coaches in 12, and administrators in 10 from institutions across the Division I, Division II, and NAIA landscape.
In addition to celebrating competitive excellence, the show also recognized extraordinary service by presenting this year’s Lifetime Achievement Awards to two iconic contributors, Patricia Cage-Bibbs and Rob Brodway.
Below is the complete list of winners from the 2025 HBCU Sports Awards:
2025 HBCU Sports Awards Winners
Women’s Track & Field Athlete of the Year
Spirit Morgan, North Carolina A&T
Men’s Track & Field Athlete of the Year
Joseph Briscoe, Virginia State
Women’s Track & Field Runner of the Year
Shaneal Clarke-Giddings, Lincoln (Mo.)
Men’s Track & Field Runner of the Year
Brian Kemei, Morehouse
Women’s Track & Field Sprinter of the Year
Kevell Byrd, Dillard
Men’s Track & Field Sprinter of the Year
Jamarion Stubbs, Alabama State
Women’s Volleyball Player of the Year
Kiersten Eggleton, West Virginia State
Women’s Tennis Player of the Year
Sofya Chursina, South Carolina State
Men’s Tennis Player of the Year
David Jeanne-Grandinot, Alabama State
Softball Player of the Year
Taylor Ames-Alexander, South Carolina St.
Baseball Player of the Year
Cardell Thibodeaux, Southern
Women’s Golfer of the Year
Paris Fieldings, Howard
Men’s Golfer of the Year
Jose Berenguel, Arkansas-Pine Bluff
Bowler of the Year
Maya Avilez, North Carolina A&T
Women’s Soccer Player of the Year
Olivia Ankrom, Shaw
Women’s Cross Country Runner of the Year
Shamia Jones, Alabama State
Men’s Cross Country Runner of the Year
Brian Kemei, Morehouse
Women’s Basketball Player of the Year
Diamond Johnson, Norfolk State
Men’s Basketball Player of the Year
Blake Harper, Howard
Defensive Football Player of the Year
Elijah Williams, Morgan State
Offensive Football Player of the Year
Jada Byers, Virginia Union
Lifetime Achievement Award: Female
Patricia Cage-Bibbs
Lifetime Achievement Award: Male
Rod Broadway
Baseball Coach of the Year
Jonathan Hernandez, Bethune-Cookman
Bowling Coach of the Year
Tiffany Clark, Prairie View A&M
Cross Country Coach of the Year
Clyde Duncan Sr., Texas Southern
Football Coach of the Year
Chennis Berry, South Carolina State
Golf Coach of the Year
Sam Puryear, Howard
Women’s Basketball Coach of the Year
Larry Vickers, Norfolk State
Men’s Basketball Coach of the Year
Tony Madlock, Alabama State
Soccer Coach of the Year
Brent Leiba, Howard
Softball Coach of the Year
Vernon Bland, Prairie View A&M
Tennis Coach of the Year
Anuk Christiansz, Alabama State
Track & Field Coach of the Year
Allen Johnson, North Carolina A&T
Women’s Volleyball Coach of the Year
David Brooks, Delaware State
Best Social Media Presence
Grambling State
Broadcaster of the Year
Charles Edmond, Alcorn State
Band of the Year
Jackson State
Sports Information Director of the Year
Derek Bryant, Howard
Conference Media Relations Director of the Year
Andrew Roberts, SWAC
Conference Commissioner of the Year
Jacqie McWilliams, CIAA
Athletic Conference of the Year
Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC)
Female Student-Athlete of the Year
Kesmat El Tawil, Alabama State
Male Student-Athlete of the Year
Christopher Flippin, Maryland-Eastern Shore
Athletic Director of the Year
Ashley Robinson, Jackson State
Athletic Program of the Year
Alabama State
Sports
Montana State’s Rob McManus places 6th, Owen Smith 9th in steeplechase at World University Games | Bobcats Track and Field
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Sports
Mapping myths: Researchers create first milky sea database
For centuries, sailors have returned from voyages with tales of eerie, steady-glowing oceans. These episodes would sometimes last for months, atop water capable of glowing in a bucket, deep beneath a ship’s keel. While the earliest accounts were written off as tall tales, the stories are true. Named “milky seas” by the explorers who first […]

For centuries, sailors have returned from voyages with tales of eerie, steady-glowing oceans. These episodes would sometimes last for months, atop water capable of glowing in a bucket, deep beneath a ship’s keel. While the earliest accounts were written off as tall tales, the stories are true.
Named “milky seas” by the explorers who first documented it, the phenomenon is a rare event of marine bioluminescence. A new database created in collaboration between Colorado State University’s department of atmospheric science and the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere has brought together historical eyewitness accounts for the first time.
“Milky seas describe very large regions of ocean that produce a sustained and widespread glow, often appearing to extend to the horizon on dark, moon-free nights,” CIRA Director and atmospheric science Professor Steven Miller wrote in an email-based interview.
The journal Advancing Earth and Space Sciences recently published an article recounting the database’s development, which drew from 415 individual observations of milky seas over the past 400 years.
“The oldest one that I was able to find goes back to 1615, and it was one of the first-ever voyages of the British East India Company,” said Justin Hudson, a postdoctoral researcher in the department of atmospheric science and the paper’s first author. “So there’s a good chance it’s actually the earliest account ever in English.”
While sorting through the historical accounts, Hudson had to differentiate the individual sightings to make sure each milky sea event was unique, rather than two separate people noting the same event. In the end, the database’s construction was guided by a defined methodology that outlined specific characteristics of a milky sea event.
Every event had to feature “a steady, nonflashing gray/white/green-blue/turquoise glow coming from the nighttime ocean surface,” the paper reads. The event also has to be widespread across the ocean’s horizon and occur within nondisturbed water. A shape line of demarcation must also occur between the glowing and nonglowing water, fade in and out of brightness and have a calm ocean surface. Lastly, the sea must return to normal, dark water once the sun or moon rises.
After categorizing the observations by the database’s criteria, Miller and Hudson were able to estimate both the rate of milky sea occurrences and the general geographic region they occur within.
“Milky seas may occur one to two times per year globally, but they are by no means a regular occurrence and there may be many years between events,” Miller wrote. “Based on historical sightings and, more recently, satellite observations, we know that they tend to form more often in the northwest Indian Ocean and Indonesia.”

While the exact cause of the bioluminescent event is unknown, bacteria is theorized to play a major role in its development.
“Based off of the fact that it’s a consistent, nonflashing light … and it covers such a large area and sort of other various qualities, we think it’s caused by bacteria,” Hudson said. “For the largest event we know of, basically, if it was only a centimeter thick, it would have one mole of bacteria involved. And if you work out how much it could weigh, you get over a million kilograms of bacteria.”
The geographical regions where the events occur most frequently experience weather patterns that result in an environment bacteria thrives in. In the Indian Ocean, the Indian Ocean Dipole causes a fluctuation in sea surface temperatures across the western and eastern sides of the sea, which are categorized by positive, negative and neutral phases.
“It is a sea surface temperature pattern that happens in the Indian Ocean where one side will have cooler sea surface temperatures than normal, and one side will have warmer than normal, and whichever side has warmer temperatures, that’s really good at making (sure) there’s more evaporation, (as) hotter air wants to rise,” Hudson said.
Bacteria thrives in warmer ocean temperatures, which Hudson theorized causes milky seas to occur more frequently in the region the Dipole is most present.
“We think that this phase, the positive phase, in the Indian Ocean Dipole (is) associated with that cool, nutrient-rich water from down below coming up in that region, and it causes milky seas to happen at a much higher rate than you would expect if it didn’t have an impact,” Hudson said.
Miller’s interest in the fabled phenomenon began in 2005 when he published an article in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences discussing the first detection of a milky sea event through satellite imaging technology.
“It was pretty amazing to think that we could do this from space, and especially for a form of bioluminescence that had been more a part of the maritime folklore than of scientific knowledge,” Miller wrote. “Since then, I’ve been hooked on the topic and was excited to work with a new generation of satellite technology that might be even more capable of detecting and measuring milky seas.”
Combined with the newfound knowledge from the database, this satellite technology has allowed the team to chart milky sea occurrences from 2017 that were previously undocumented.
“As part of my work, I do what’s called a Hindcasting model — (a) forecast model, just going backwards,” Hudson said. “I actually was able to predict a previously unknown milky sea event.”
The ultimate goal of the researchers is to predict an event before it occurs with enough time to chart a scientific expedition in the predicted region, with the hopes of observing a milky sea in person, firsthand.
“(We want to) kind of work (with) other scientists internationally, to form a team who would be able to go out there, … get on a boat and sort of combine all their expertise to be able to, like, sample the water, study it and figure out what’s going on (and) how does this fit into everything else?” Hudson said.
Understanding this phenomenon more closely will provide not only more information about the suspected bacteria itself, but also hold broader implications for understanding the ocean’s ecosystem in its entirety.
“(We’re) learning more about how such a dramatic population explosion of nature’s tiniest, simplest and oldest organisms could conspire to form a signal (one) large and strong enough to be (seen) from outer space, and what that is telling us about how major components of the Earth’s system ‘talk to each other’ and interact may hold very important insights to the future of our planet,” Miller wrote.
Reach Katie Fisher at science@collegian.com or on social media @CSUCollegian.
Sports
Men’s Water Polo Team Drops 2025 Schedule
UC San Diego men’s water polo team has revealed their 2025 schedule, entering their third year in the Big West conference. The season kicks off with the Triton Invitational from August 29-31, featuring top-ranked teams. Home games include notable matchups against Stanford and LMU, along with six tournaments and four away games. The Big West […]
UC San Diego men’s water polo team has revealed their 2025 schedule, entering their third year in the Big West conference. The season kicks off with the Triton Invitational from August 29-31, featuring top-ranked teams. Home games include notable matchups against Stanford and LMU, along with six tournaments and four away games. The Big West Championship will take place from November 21-23, offering a chance for the Tritons to qualify for the NCAA National Collegiate Championship in December.
By the Numbers
- 2024 record: 17 wins, 12 losses
- Big West conference victories: 3 against UC Davis, UC Santa Barbara, and Cal State Fullerton
State of Play
- Home games will be played at Canyonview Aquatic Center, drawing large crowds, especially during student return week.
- The Tritons are the defending champions of the Battle of the Kings against LMU.
What’s Next
As anticipation builds for the season opener and home matches, the Tritons aim to improve upon last year’s performance. The team is also positioned to compete strongly in the Big West Championship and potentially earn an NCAA bid.
Bottom Line
The 2025 season presents a significant opportunity for UC San Diego’s men’s water polo team to build on previous successes and deepen their competitive edge in the Big West, ultimately striving for a berth in the NCAA Championship.
Sports
New York Yankees Top Prospect Reportedly Drawing Serious Trade Interest
If the New York Yankees are looking to add in the coming days, they may have to part ways with some of the young talent rising through the ranks of their farm system. The New York Post’s Jon Heyman reported Thursday afternoon that catcher Rafael Flores was one Yankees prospect who has been coveted by […]


If the New York Yankees are looking to add in the coming days, they may have to part ways with some of the young talent rising through the ranks of their farm system.
The New York Post’s Jon Heyman reported Thursday afternoon that catcher Rafael Flores was one Yankees prospect who has been coveted by trade partners. Flores was promoted from Double-A Somerset to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre last Saturday.
Flores hit .287 with 15 home runs, 23 doubles, 48 runs, 56 RBIs, six stolen bases and an .841 OPS across 87 games in Double-A. Through six Triple-A contests, the 24-year-old catcher is batting .208 with one home runs, three runs, three RBIs and a .720 OPS.
MLB Pipeline has Flores ranked as the Yankees’ No. 8 prospect, making him the only catcher in the organization’s top 25.
One Yankee prospect coveted by trade partners: Catcher Rafael Flores, who was just called up to Triple-A
— Jon Heyman (@JonHeyman) July 24, 2025
The Yankees already swung a blockbuster deal with the Colorado Rockies on Friday, acquiring third baseman Ryan McMahon, parting ways with pitching prospects Griffin Herring and Josh Grosz in order to complete the trade. The following day, superstar outfielder Aaron Judge hit the 10-day injured list with a flexor strain.
Those two moves could change New York’s plans for the coming days, including their willingness to move Flores. The future of second-year first baseman Ben Rice, who has spent roughly one-seventh of his time at catcher this season, could also play a part in determining Flores’ availability.
The trade deadline is scheduled for 6 p.m. ET on Thursday.
Continue to follow our Minor League Baseball On SI coverage on social media by liking us on Facebook.
You can also follow Sam Connon on Twitter @SamConnon.
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