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Borgmann, Cronk repeat as Flagler Palm Coast Athletes of the Year | Observer Local News

Christina Borgmann and Colby Cronk were named the Female and Male Athletes of the Year, respectively, at the Flagler Palm Coast Athletic Awards Show on May 20 at the Fitzgerald Performing Arts Center. The two seniors were also the Bulldogs’ Athletes of the Year in 2024. They both won state championships for the second year […]

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Christina Borgmann and Colby Cronk were named the Female and Male Athletes of the Year, respectively, at the Flagler Palm Coast Athletic Awards Show on May 20 at the Fitzgerald Performing Arts Center.

The two seniors were also the Bulldogs’ Athletes of the Year in 2024. They both won state championships for the second year in a row. Borgmann defended her state wrestling title, and Cronk repeated as Class 4A state shot put champ.

Cronk also set the FPC football team’s career sacks record. He attended the awards show remotely from North Carolina State University where he has begun his first college semester and is training for his freshman football season. The defensive end is FPC’s first football player to sign with a power-five football conference directly out of high school.

Borgmann helped lead the Bulldogs to the state girls wrestling championship. They won FPC’s Team of the Year Award. Borgmann and Kendall Bibla each won a state title for the second time, while five others on the team placed in the top five: Ana Vilar (second); Joslyn Johnson, Mariah Mills and Tiana Fries (third); and Alexa Calidonio (fifth).

Wrestling coach David Bossardet, who has stepped down after moving into the district office as Flagler Schools’ safety specialist, won the Coach of the Year Award.

Three-sport athlete Corinthians “RJ” Watson won the Spirit of Flagler Award, representing the embodiment of what it means to be a Bulldog on and off the field. Watson was on the football, basketball and track and field teams. He placed eighth in triple jump at the Class 4A track and field championships. Watson plans to play football this fall at St. Thomas University in Miami.

Here are the Principal Award winners for each sport. The winners were recognized for their sportsmanship, dedication, spirit and achievement:

Athletic Training: Chloe Wallace

Baseball: Logan Shudy

Boys Basketball: Roman Caliendo

Girls Basketball: Alexandra Perez

Beach Volleyball: Morghan Mackey

Boys Bowling: Sean Bibby

Girls Bowling: Brooke Bokanoski

Competitive Cheerleading: Kayleigh Phillips

Boys Cross Country: Ryan Gilvary

Girls Cross Country: Cassidy DeYoung

Flag Football: Giavanna Piazza

Football: Mikhail Zysek

Boys Golf: Adam Kleinfelder

Girls Golf: Madison Heck

Boys Lacrosse: Tamajah Pinnock

Girls Lacrosse: Carly Griffin

Boys Soccer: Aron Binkley

Girls Soccer: Eva Sites

Softball: Sadie Schell

Boys Swimming: Loris Eolyan

Girls Swimming: Emma Gilbert

Boys Tennis: Joshua Thorpe

Girls Tennis: Tatiana Leontyeva

Boys Track and Field: Tanner Cauley Bennett

Girls Track and Field: Maya Tyson

Girls Volleyball: Dyllis Mballesube

Boys Weightlifting: Bobby Branton

Girls Weightlifting: Madeline Brinker

Boys Wrestling: Ronden Ricks

Girls Wrestling: Alisha Vilar

 



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Quarles and Vukelja Earn Men’s Track & Field CSC Academic All-District Honor

Story Links The 2025 Academic All-District Men’s Track & Field Teams, selected by College Sports Communicators (CSC), were announced on Tuesday. The CSC Academic All-America program recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom.  Carlos Quarles and Nikola Vukelja were recognized as Academic District honorees.   Carlos […]

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The 2025 Academic All-District Men’s Track & Field Teams, selected by College Sports Communicators (CSC), were announced on Tuesday. The CSC Academic All-America program recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom. 

Carlos Quarles and Nikola Vukelja were recognized as Academic District honorees.

 


Carlos Quarles, Second Year, Tampa, Florida

  • Recorded a 3.87 in Sports Management
  • A Sun Conference All-Academic selection
  • Named an NAIA Scholar-Athlete
  • Competed in the 200m, the 400m, and the 4x400m relay
  • Logged three top-10 finishes in the 4x400m relay
  • Had a personal record in the 100m dash, posting a time 11.40
  • Set a PR in the 60m dash with a time of 7.13 at the Keiser Winter Open, placing 12th


Nikola Vukelja, Third Year, Krusevac, Serbia

  • Posted a 4.00 in Exercise and Sports Science
  • Earned Sun Conference All-Academic honors for the second straight year
  • Named an NAIA Scholar-Athlete of the second time in his career
  • Raced in the mile run, the 600m, the 800m, the 1500m, and the 3000m steeplechase
  • Had three top-10 finishes
  • Finished eighth in the 3,000m steeplechase at the Sun Conference Championships (Apr 26-27) (11:49.97)
  • Set a PR in the 1,500m run at the Emory Thrills in the Hills (Mar 27-29) with a time of 4:15.60
  • Placed eighth in the 600m run with a time of 1:29.12 at the Celebration Pointe Classic (Feb 7)

 


For all the latest on Keiser track and field, follow @keisertf on X and Instagram and like us on Facebook.

General athletic news can be found at KUSeahawks on Facebook, kuseahawks on Instagram, and kuseahawks on X.

 





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Kentucky vs. Pitt Volleyball Tickets Presale Link Now Live – UK Athletics

FT. WORTH, Texas – Presale tickets for the 2025 Shriners Children’s Showdown at the Net are now available through Ticketmaster and HERE, where fans can begin purchasing tickets in the Kentucky block with the presale code: WILDCATS. Kentucky will be facing the Pitt Panthers at 6:30 p.m. ET/5:30 p.m. CT on Wednesday, Sept. 10 as […]

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FT. WORTH, Texas – Presale tickets for the 2025 Shriners Children’s Showdown at the Net are now available through Ticketmaster and HERE, where fans can begin purchasing tickets in the Kentucky block with the presale code: WILDCATS.

Kentucky will be facing the Pitt Panthers at 6:30 p.m. ET/5:30 p.m. CT on Wednesday, Sept. 10 as part of a doubleheader of action at Dickies Arena in Ft. Worth, Texas, followed by Louisville facing off against Texas in the late match. Both matches will be televised on ESPN.

The Wildcats and Panthers met in the 2024 NCAA Volleyball Championship Regional Final, with the Panthers edging the Wildcats in three tight sets to advance to the NCAA Final Four last December. Pitt is one all four NCAA Final Four teams from 2024 that UK is set to face in its 2025 non-conference schedule.

Tickets go on sale to the general public without the presale code of a specific team Friday at 11 a.m. ET. The pre-sale link is good for the next 24 hours.

Earlier this year, ESPN Events also announced the “Broadway Block Party”, a volleyball event hosted by the Nashville Sports Council featuring three matchups between Big 10 and SEC schools.

 

2025 Showdown at the Net ACC/SEC Challenge

Tuesday, Sept. 9

Georgia Tech @ Tennessee (SEC Network)

Texas A&M @ SMU (ESPN2)

Boston College @ Arkansas (SEC Network+)

Stanford @ Missouri (ESPN)

Virginia @ Auburn (SEC Network+)

Florida @ North Carolina (ACC Network)

Georgia @ Clemson (ACC Network Extra)

LSU @ Notre Dame (ACC Network Extra)

 

Wednesday, Sept. 10

Kentucky vs. Pittsburgh (6:30pm ET, ESPN)*

Texas vs. Louisville (9pm ET, ESPN)*

Florida State @ Oklahoma (SEC Network)

Duke @ Mississippi State (SEC Network+)

South Carolina @ NC State (ACC Network)

Wake Forest @ Alabama (SEC Network+)

Ole Miss @ Miami (FL) (ACC Network Extra)

Vanderbilt @ California (ACC Network Extra)

 

* Shriners Children’s “Showdown at the Net” (Dickies Arena; Ft. Worth, Texas)

 

For the latest on UK Volleyball, follow the Wildcats on Twitter and Instagram at @KentuckyVB.





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How have coaches hired under Chris Del Conte fared?

Danny Davis, Austin American-Statesman  |  Hearst – Austin Transition Last Friday, the Texas softball team announced that it had added Arizona transfer Kaiah Altmeyer to its roster. Altmeyer, a utility player, spent her first three years of college at Arizona. During the 2025 season, she hit .365 with 55 RBIs and 50 runs while earning all-conference […]

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Last Friday, the Texas softball team announced that it had added Arizona transfer Kaiah Altmeyer to its roster.

Altmeyer, a utility player, spent her first three years of college at Arizona. During the 2025 season, she hit .365 with 55 RBIs and 50 runs while earning all-conference honors in the Big 12. 

This is not the first time that Texas has turned to someone with Arizona ties to help out its softball program. Bella Dayton, a star outfielder on UT’s 2022 and 2024 Women’s College World Series teams, was once an Arizona transfer. 

Then there’s the story of the Longhorns’ coaching search in 2018.

As Texas celebrated its national championship during a June 7 ceremony at McCombs Field, athletic director Chris Del Conte shared a story about how Mike White became the Longhorns’ head coach. Back in the summer of 2018, Connie Clark — the only person to lead the Texas softball program — revealed she would not be returning for a 24th season. 

Because he once worked as an associate athletics director at Arizona, Del Conte reached out to then-Wildcat coach Mike Candrea for advice. Who was the best softball coach in the country, Del Conte asked. Candera retorted that aside from him, the answer was White. White was coaching Oregon at the time, and his nine-year run with the Ducks included a 435-111-1 record and five College World Series appearances. 

“If you can get Mike White to come to Texas, you’ll win a national championship,” Del Conte recalled Candera telling him.

So, Del Conte got White to come to Texas and White eventually made Candera’s prediction come to fruition. On June 6, Texas bested Texas Tech in the decisive game at the Women’s College World Series to secure the 30-year-old program’s first national championship.

That title wasn’t just significant for the softball program. It also spoke to Del Conte’s ability to hire. White was the second coaching hire made by Del Conte, who took over the UT athletic department in December 2017. Track and field coach Edrick Floréal and White, who were hired within two weeks of each other during June 2018, have since combined to win three NCAA championships.

How have Chris Del Conte’s coaching hires fared at Texas? 

During Del Conte’s Texas tenure, the athletic department has hired 12 head coaches. Just two of those coaches — men’s basketball coaches Chris Beard and Rodney Terry — have been dismissed. (These numbers do not reflect Erik Sullivan, the volleyball assistant who directed the startup beach volleyball team in 2023 during its first year of existence.)

Those hires have won four national championships. In addition to Floreal’s two titles and White’s softball crown, Bob Bowman secured a national championship this past March during his first year with the men’s swimming and diving program. A fourth coach, Bruce Berque, led Texas men’s tennis to NCAA supremacy in 2019 as an interim coach.

  • Edrick Floréal (track and field, hired June 2018): Won a national championship with the Texas men’s indoor team in 2022 before he led the UT women to an outdoor title at Myers Stadium in 2023.
  • Mike White (softball, hired June 2018): Under White, Texas has compiled a 316-93-2 record with a national title and three appearances in the Women’s College World Series.
  • Bruce Berque (men’s tennis, hired May 2019): In the wake of Michael Center’s involvement in the Varsity Blues scandal, UT won a national championship with Berque serving as an interim coach. Five years later, Texas was the NCAA runner-up.
  • Vic Schaefer (women’s basketball, hired April 2020): Since Schaefer’s hire, Texas has won conference titles in the Big 12 and SEC. This past season, UT reached the Final Four for the first time since 2003.
  • Steve Sarkisian (football, hired January 2021): The Sarkisian era has featured 38 wins, a Big 12 championship and two appearances in the semifinals of the College Football Playoff.
  • Chris Beard (men’s basketball, hired April 2021): Went 29-13 but Beard was fired in January 2023 following his arrest on a third-degree felony domestic violence charge.
  • Rodney Terry (men’s basketball, hired March 2023): Terry went 40-29 in two full seasons after leading Texas to the Elite Eight as an interim coach. He was fired following the 2024-25 season.
  • Stein Metzger (beach volleyball, hired May 2023): Hired to build a beach volleyball program at Texas, Metzger led the Longhorns to a conference title and a NCAA Tournament win this season.
  • Bob Bowman (men’s swimming and diving, hired April 2024): Lured away from Arizona State to replace the legendary Eddie Reese, Bowman immediately made a splash by winning the program’s 16th national title in his first season.
  • Laura Ianello (women’s golf, hired June 2024): Texas concluded its first year under Ianello with a quarterfinal loss to Oregon in NCAA match play.
  • Jim Schlossnagle (baseball, hired June 2024): Texas won 44 games and an SEC title in its first season with Schlossnagle, a Texas A&M defector. The Longhorns, however, were upset in an NCAA regional that they hosted.
  • Sean Miller (men’s basketball, hired March 2025): Needing to replace Terry, Del Conte turned to Miller. Miller arrives in Austin with a 487-196 career record at Xavier and Arizona.

Chris Del Conte has often chased the top coaches to fill vacancies

Del Conte’s conversation seven years ago with Candera was foreshadowing of how Texas would handle coaching searches. By asking around about the country’s best softball coach, Del Conte signaled that Texas would go big-game hunting with him in charge.

Of the 12 coaches that Texas has hired during Del Conte’s time in Austin, three — Bowman, Ianello and Metzger — won a national championship before they got to Texas. Beard, Floreal, Schaefer and Schlossnagle had each led schools to runner-up finishes. Most of those hires had also just been head coaches at major schools with Berque, a championship-winning interim coach who had previously been the head coach at Michigan, and Sarkisian, a highly-regarded Alabama assistant who had led the programs at Washington and USC, being among the few exceptions.

So, what can a sales pitch from Del Conte sound like?

After replacing Ryan Murphy last summer, Ianello was asked just that. The ex-Arizona coach said that Del Conte randomly called her while she was in her office and told her that he was looking to make a coaching change. He then said, “I want you to go home, talk to your husband, talk to your family and you just let me know probably in 24 hours if it’s a thumbs up or a thumbs down.”



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Sports This Week: Water Polo standout headed to Sask Sport HoF

Noah Miller will become the first athlete from water polo to be inducted. YORKTON – Water polo might not be the first sport one thinks about when considering Saskatchewan athletes but one put together such a notable career in the sport he is among the athletes being inducted into the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame later […]

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Noah Miller will become the first athlete from water polo to be inducted.

YORKTON – Water polo might not be the first sport one thinks about when considering Saskatchewan athletes but one put together such a notable career in the sport he is among the athletes being inducted into the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame later this year.

Noah Miller will become the first athlete from water polo to be inducted.

“I was just surprised – elated. I felt honoured,” Miller said of learning of his selection, adding there is a level of gratification in being honoured for all the work he put into the sport.

Miller was born in Regina in 1980, and actually started out as a youth with a swim club in the city.

“I was five years old. Mom put me in the swim club because my older brother was in it,” Miller told Yorkton This Week in a recent interview.

But it so happened his mother Klara Kesmarky Miller was involved as the executive director of the provincial water polo organization, a sport the younger Miller was interested in.

“When I was 12 or 13 I told my mom I wanted to switch into water polo,” he recalled, adding his parents were always supportive of whatever sport activity he was involved in.

“. . . Both my parents were big proponents of sport. They supported me in anything that was sport-related. They just felt sport was a really good tool and instrument to develop kids.”

Interestingly Kesmarky Miller is also being inducted this year for her involvement in gymnastic which lasted more than 60 years. At 16 she judged her first provincial competition and was helping coach the Regina Girls Gym Club’s competitive program. Miller spent 27 years as a judge and launched the YWCA Limberettes Gym Club in her teens and then helped establish the Queen City Kinsmen Gymnastics Club. She would serve as the Chief Executive Officer of Gymnastics Saskatchewan for 30 years.

It will be the first induction to feature a parent and child being inducted at the same time who were not inducted together as part of a team.

Once involved in water polo it became a passion for Miller and he excelled at it.

He was first selected to the Canadian National Water Team as a Youth player in 1995, and continued his national team international career until his retirement in 2008.

Miller spent nine years on the Canadian men’s national water polo team including serving as the team’s captain for five of those years. Miller competed at six FINA World Championships, three FISU World University Games, and won bronze medals at the Pan Am Games twice in 2003 (Santo Domingo) and 2007 (Rio de Janeiro). Miller also won six Canadian national championships with three clubs tying the most by a Saskatchewan water polo player.

“There are no regrets with my path,” said Miller, adding he tried other sports, in particular basketball which his father was good enough to be a University of Regina Cougar in in the 1960s, but the hoops gene missed his son.

In water polo Miller said he found a completely different sport.

“The sport of water polo is so different from any other sport. You’re in a foreign environment,” he said.

But it is an environment Miller said creates a dynamic sport that deserves more attention, as it does in Europe and Australia with pro leagues, something he hopes for in North America one day.

“It’s been talked about for a long time,” he said, adding it will take a lot of work “to have that come to fruition.”

The 2025 Induction Dinner & Ceremony will be held at the Conexus Arts Centre in Regina on Saturday, Sept. 20.





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St. Olaf puts 173 on winter/spring Academic All-MIAC list

Story Links 2024-25 Winter/Spring Academic All-MIAC MIAC Release BLOOMINGTON, Minn. – A total of 173 St. Olaf College student-athletes were honored as 2024-25 Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) Winter/Spring Academic All-Conference honorees, as announced on Thursday morning. St. Olaf’s 173 […]

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BLOOMINGTON, Minn. – A total of 173 St. Olaf College student-athletes were honored as 2024-25 Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) Winter/Spring Academic All-Conference honorees, as announced on Thursday morning.

St. Olaf’s 173 honorees were the second-highest total in school history – just four behind last year’s record of 177 – and were the second-highest total in the conference, while representing nearly half (46.3 percent) of St. Olaf’s eligible student-athletes. Women’s track and field led the way with 33 honorees, followed by men’s track and field (32), baseball (24), men’s hockey (16), women’s hockey (14), and softball (11), among teams with double-digit honorees.

Each of St. Olaf’s 14 sports had multiple Academic All-MIAC selections. Baseball, women’s hockey, and women’s track and field’s totals all were the highest in the conference, while men’s hockey and men’s track and field were second among all MIAC institutions.

To qualify for Academic All-MIAC status, student-athletes must be sophomores, juniors, or seniors by academic standards with a minimum cumulative grade-point average (GPA) of 3.5 on a 4.0 scale. Student-athletes must also complete one full-time academic year at their current institution before becoming eligible for the honor. A student-athlete must be a member of a MIAC-sponsored varsity sports team, be academically and athletically eligible, have utilized a season of participation per NCAA and MIAC definitions, and have remained on the sports roster through the conclusion of the sports season to be eligible for Academic All-Conference honors.

St. Olaf’s Winter/Spring Academic All-MIAC Honorees












































































































Name Class Sport Previous Academic All-MIAC Accolades
Jack Alley Sr. Baseball 2022-23, 2023-24
Peter Bambakidis Sr. Baseball
Henry Black Jr. Baseball 2023-24
Chris Blum Sr. Baseball 2022-23, 2023-24
Mason Buck Jr. Baseball 2023-24
Connor Chervany Jr. Baseball 2023-24
Luke Crawshaw Sr. Baseball 2023-24
Ian Enyeart Sr. Baseball 2022-23, 2023-24
Jacob Fickenscher Sr. Baseball 2023-24
Carter Follman So. Baseball
Brendan Goldman Jr. Baseball 2023-24
Kieran Haaland So. Baseball
Joey Haas So. Baseball
Sam Hruska So. Baseball
Calvin Keesler Jr. Baseball 2023-24
Kanen Kreafle So. Baseball
Matthew Kulesa Sr. Baseball 2022-23, 2023-24
Frank Lavin Jr. Baseball 2023-24
Nick Levasseur So. Baseball
Cade Mutscher Jr. Baseball
Jack Nord So. Baseball
Matthew Oberlander Sr. Baseball 2022-23, 2023-24
Cole Pleimann So. Baseball
David Scheil Sr. Baseball 2022-23, 2023-24
Jachin Mertes So. Men’s Basketball
Dashiel Walker Sr. Men’s Basketball
Joy Brandenstein So. Women’s Basketball
Kyla Elsbury So. Women’s Basketball
Sophia Kormann Sr. Women’s Basketball 2022-23, 2023-24
Sarah Tangen Sr. Women’s Basketball 2022-23, 2023-24
Bree Wilkerson So. Women’s Basketball
Ziling Zhen Sr. Women’s Basketball 2023-24
Tyler Cooper Sr. Men’s Golf 2022-23, 2023-24
Brady Heuer Jr. Men’s Golf 2023-24
Josh Sansom Sr. Men’s Golf 2023-24
Isaac Schmidt Jr. Men’s Golf 2023-24
Marit Lyle So. Women’s Golf
Solveig Senf So. Women’s Golf
Kadyn Triebenbach Sr. Women’s Golf
Belle Mae Williams Jr. Women’s Golf 2023-24
Ella Wright So. Women’s Golf
Camden Benson So. Men’s Hockey
Jack Boxer Jr. Men’s Hockey
Eric Brown Sr. Men’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Tyler Cooper Sr. Men’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Gunnar Johnson Jr. Men’s Hockey 2023-24
Connor Kalthoff Sr. Men’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Pavel Karasek Jr. Men’s Hockey 2023-24
Joey Kennelly So. Men’s Hockey
Thomas Lalonde Sr. Men’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Tyler Laureault Jr. Men’s Hockey 2023-24
Tony Leahy So. Men’s Hockey
Ben Luscko Sr. Men’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Matthew Pointer Sr. Men’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Cody Sherman Sr. Men’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Michael Webster So. Men’s Hockey
Jonathan Young Sr. Men’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Maya Ballard Sr. Women’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
MaKenna Beaver Jr. Women’s Hockey 2023-24
Solvei Berg-Messerole Jr. Women’s Hockey 2023-24
Kate Carfagnini Sr. Women’s Hockey
Devon Cole Sr. Women’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Emma Heath Jr. Women’s Hockey
Andi Huselid So. Women’s Hockey
Grace Lankas Sr. Women’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Sophie McBane Sr. Women’s Hockey
Hannah Metric Sr. Women’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Mandy Moran Sr. Women’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Carley Tuman Jr. Women’s Hockey
Iona Welsch Sr. Women’s Hockey 2022-23, 2023-24
Rachel Wieland Sr. Women’s Hockey
Jill Arp So. Softball
Shreya Ashok 5th Softball 2021-22, 2022-23, 2023-24
Amelia Christenson Sr. Softball 2022-23, 2023-24
Brearley Jayne Curfman So. Softball
Eva Hokanson So. Softball
Rylan Nakamura So. Softball
Kyra Narum So. Softball
Jaelyn Orth 5th Softball 2021-22, 2022-23, 2023-24
Roxanne Ring Jr. Softball 2023-24
Medora Rylee Sr. Softball 2022-23, 2023-24
Belle Schmidt Jr. Softball 2023-24
Beau Giddings Jr. Men’s Swimming and Diving 2023-24
Leo Griffey-Byram Jr. Men’s Swimming and Diving
Ben Gusdal Sr. Men’s Swimming and Diving 2022-23, 2023-24
Marcus Hauck 5th Men’s Swimming and Diving 2021-22, 2023-24
Avery Nevins Sr. Men’s Swimming and Diving 2023-24
Nick Starcevich Jr. Men’s Swimming and Diving 2023-24
Lexi Cucchiaro Sr. Women’s Swimming and Diving 2023-24
Olivia Hopewell Jr. Women’s Swimming and Diving
Rowan Krueger-Barth Jr. Women’s Swimming and Diving 2023-24
Rachael Olson Jr. Women’s Swimming and Diving 2023-24
Ellie Porrata Jr. Women’s Swimming and Diving 2023-24
Della Schmidt So. Women’s Swimming and Diving
Alana Schmitzer So. Women’s Swimming and Diving
Paige Steenblock Jr. Women’s Swimming and Diving 2023-24
Samantha Sylvester So. Women’s Swimming and Diving
David Azcona Sr. Men’s Tennis 2023-24
Ryan Birnesser So. Men’s Tennis
Cathal Mee So. Men’s Tennis
Marjan Veldic So. Men’s Tennis
Bogdan Vizoli Jr. Men’s Tennis 2023-24
Alexandra Berns Jr. Women’s Tennis 2023-24
Sarah Clark Sr. Women’s Tennis 2022-23, 2023-24
Emma Clift Jr. Women’s Tennis 2023-24
Mads Hockmuth So. Women’s Tennis
Jane Spading Sr. Women’s Tennis 2022-23, 2023-24
Olha Zubarieva Sr. Women’s Tennis 2022-23, 2023-24
Max Albertson So. Men’s Track and Field
Dylan Arnold Sr. Men’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Alex Bittner Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Owen Chamberlin Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Josh Charlton Sr. Men’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Andrew Cogley Sr. Men’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Spencer Collins So. Men’s Track and Field
Grant Crespi So. Men’s Track and Field
Julian Cumps Sr. Men’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Eli Doran Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Esosa Edo-Ohonba So. Men’s Track and Field
Angelo Fiataruolo Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Gavin Hoelzel So. Men’s Track and Field
Henry Johnson So. Men’s Track and Field
Lex Kaye So. Men’s Track and Field
Henrik Lange Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Sam Laurel Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Aidan Mackie Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Gael Manzur Strandlund Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Braeden Marker So. Men’s Track and Field
Zach Martin Jr. Men’s Track and Field
Parker Max Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Quinn McCabe So. Men’s Track and Field
Galen McGlynn Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Cullen Moore Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Lance Nemecek Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Jesse Olson So. Men’s Track and Field
Jonathan Pattie Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Otto Schmidt Sr. Men’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Andrew Skemp Sr. Men’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Max Thomas Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Kevin Turlington Jr. Men’s Track and Field 2023-24
Sophie Abernethy Sr. Women’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Erin Anderson So. Women’s Track and Field
Alison Bode Sr. Women’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Shannon Breuer Jr. Women’s Track and Field
Sofia Carlson Sr. Women’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Ava Craven Sr. Women’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Emma Dauner So. Women’s Track and Field
Molly DiNardo So. Women’s Track and Field
Siri Erickson So. Women’s Track and Field
Jules Fromm Sr. Women’s Track and Field
Cate Gleason Sr. Women’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Ada Guetschow So. Women’s Track and Field
Elise Harriman So. Women’s Track and Field
Emma Johnson Sr. Women’s Track and Field 2022-23, 2023-24
Ashlyn Jore Jr. Women’s Track and Field 2023-24
Claire Keech Jr. Women’s Track and Field 2023-24
Aubree Klein So. Women’s Track and Field
Ella Landis Jr. Women’s Track and Field 2023-24
Gracia Larsen-Schmidt Sr. Women’s Track and Field 2022-23,2023-24
Otelia Lighthill So. Women’s Track and Field
Abbie Manhard Jr. Women’s Track and Field 2023-24
Molly Kate McCloskey Jr. Women’s Track and Field
Nora Mickelson So. Women’s Track and Field
Grace Moeller Jr. Women’s Track and Field 2023-24
Emma Sahly Sr. Women’s Track and Field 2022-23,2023-24
Ava Shirley Jr. Women’s Track and Field 2023-24
Kayla Sieck Jr. Women’s Track and Field 2023-24
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Golden Bears name Jason Barshinger head women’s volleyball coach

Story Links KUTZTOWN, Pa. – Kutztown University announced the hiring of Jason Barshinger as its head women’s volleyball coach Thursday morning.   Barshinger brings five seasons of collegiate men’s volleyball head coaching experience to Berks County, most recently leading NCAA Division III Bryn Athyn College since 2023.   “We’re thrilled to welcome Jason […]

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KUTZTOWN, Pa. – Kutztown University announced the hiring of Jason Barshinger as its head women’s volleyball coach Thursday morning.
 
Barshinger brings five seasons of collegiate men’s volleyball head coaching experience to Berks County, most recently leading NCAA Division III Bryn Athyn College since 2023.
 
“We’re thrilled to welcome Jason to Kutztown and have him leading our women’s volleyball program,” director of athletics Renee Hellert said. “Jason’s passion for the sport and his holistic approach to student-athlete development stood out during the search process. His strong knowledge of the sport and competitive drive will have an immediate impact on our program.”
 
Barshinger worked quickly to raise the level of play at Bryn Athyn, which was in just its second season of varsity play when he arrived in 2023. The Lions won a program record 12 matches and enjoyed their longest winning streak (four) in 2024. Barshinger mentored the first All-United East First Team selection in program history and boasted four all-conference selections, a senior scholar-athlete and four player of the week award winners overall.
 
Under Barshinger’s leadership, the Lions ranked eighth in NCAA Division III in aces per set and 20th in digs per set during the 2024 season.
 
“I appreciate the opportunity to lead the volleyball program at Kutztown University,” Barshinger said. “I am excited to get to work with the players and develop a focused, energetic, and team-centered style of play. I want to thank Renee Hellert and the hiring committee for entrusting me with the success of the student-athletes on the court, in the classroom, and with the life lessons that the game can teach us all.”
 
Prior to arriving at Bryn Athyn, Barshinger was the first head men’s volleyball coach at Wilson College from 2015-17. The Phoenix developed into an eight-win program in just their second year of competition in 2017. Barshinger also relaunched the women’s volleyball program as head coach at Central Penn College from 2012-15 and led the team to 15 wins by its third season.
 
Barshinger enjoyed a successful stint as a head coach at the scholastic level between stints at New Oxford High School and Abington High School. He was named 2015 YAIAA Coach of the Year at New Oxford after leading the team to its first winning season in nearly a decade and upsetting a state-ranked opponent. In 2022, Barshinger led Abington to a 13-6 record.
 
In addition to his coaching duties at Bryn Athyn, Barshinger also served as the assistant director of recruitment, an academic advisor, residence life coordinator and event planner for admissions.

A three-year starter for Pennsylvania boys’ volleyball state power Central York High School, Barshinger also played for Yorktowne Volleyball Club and participated in the 1999 USA Volleyball Junior National Championship Tournament in New Orleans.

While at Central Penn College, Barshinger was a member of the basketball, cross country and golf teams and was named Athlete of the Year in 2002. He earned his associate’s degree in communications from Central Penn in 2003 before graduating with a bachelor’s degree in business administration from Elizabethtown College in 2021.

 

Barshinger, a member of the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA), lives in Philadelphia with his wife, Jenifer, and daughters, Elianna and Karina. He will begin his new role at Kutztown June 30.

 

 



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