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Braves Minor League Recap

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Braves Minor League Recap

Sunday saw the Atlanta Braves organization split their four games, though we had some exciting performances – especially down in Augusta. The Augusta lineup featuring John Gil, Tate Southisene, Owen Carey, and Dixon Williams went off in a 12-run showing, and that wasn’t even the headline, as Lucas Braun turned in his best start of 2025.

Norfolk Tides 6, Gwinnett Stripers 4

  • David McCabe, DH: 1-4, RBI, .214/.298/.381
  • Luke Waddell, SS: 3-4, 2B, R, RBI, .289/.384/.371
  • Carlos Carrasco, SP: 6 IP, 7 H, 4 R, 2 BB, 4 K, 3.58 ERA
  • Daysbel Hernandez, RP: 0.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K, 1.17 ERA

Carlos Carrasco tossed six innings in his start for the Stripers, giving up four runs on seven hits and a pair of walks. Carrasco was able to eat innings effectively, and also did manage to pick up 18 whiffs to go with four strikeouts, but he had trouble keeping runners off the base paths – as he managed only two innings where no one reached base safely. Davis Daniel followed, and after a pair of scoreless innings he was brought back out for the ninth, where he proceeded to give up a pair of runs while recording just one out. Daniel actually pitched well, until the ninth, and picked up three strikeouts with six whiffs. The final Gwinnett pitcher to appear was Daysbel Hernandez, who struck out the first two batters he faced – though the second one reached on a wild pitch, then proceeded to walk a hitter before getting a ground out to finish off the inning.

The star for the Stripers lineup had to again be Luke Waddell, who continues his strong second half. Waddell went three for four with a double, run scored, and run batted in. The only other extra-base hit by the Stripers was a Jonathan Ornelas double, and Ornelas also added a single. Cade Bunnell recorded a pair of singles to join Waddell and Ornelas with multi-hit games. David McCabe singled and batted in a run in the loss, and recorded the game’s highest exit velocity at 104.3 MPH.

Swing and Misses

Carlos Carrasco – 18

Davis Daniel – 6

Columbus Clingstones 3, Rocket City Trash Pandas 0

  • Ethan Workinger, DH: 3-5, 2B, 3B, 2 R, .227/.298/.400
  • Drew Compton, 1B: 3-4, 2B, BB, R, RBI, .258/.363/.385
  • Lucas Braun, SP: 7 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 9 K, 3.99 ERA

Lucas Braun turned in his best start of the season, if not one of the best of his career on Sunday. Braun threw seven innings of one-hit shutout baseball, striking out nine and walking none. He needed just 85 pitches to get through the seven innings, and recorded 16 swings and misses as he just carved up the Trash Pandas. A scoreless inning apiece from Blane Abeyta and Ryan Bourassa sealed off the combined shutout, with Abeyta adding a pair of strikeouts and Bourassa picking up one – while also notching the save.

The offense was carried by two guys in this one, Ethan Workinger and Drew Compton. Workinger spent the day as the DH, and went three for five with a pair of runs scored while finishing a homer short of the cycle. Compton also had a three-hit day, as he was three for four with a double, walk, run scored, and one batted in. Cal Conley and EJ Exposito each had two for five days and batted in a run with all of those hits going for singles. Despite the Stones scoring only three runs, it was a productive day for the lineup as everyone but Geraldo Quintero reached base once. The recently promoted Ambioris Tavarez singled in four at bats, though he did get caught stealing second base.

Swing and Misses

Lucas Braun – 16

Blayne Abeyta – 5

Winston-Salem Dash 5, Rome Emperors 0

  • Isaiah Drake, CF: 2-4, .265/.321/.306
  • Cody Miller, SS: 1-4, 2B, .310/.326/.476
  • Jacob Kroeger, SP: 4 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 2 BB, 2 K, 2.03 ERA
  • Logan Samuels, RP: 2 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 0 BB, 5 K, 6.29 ERA
  • Isaac Gallegos, RP: 2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 5 K, 3.28 ERA

The final score doesn’t tell the whole story about how well the Rome pitching staff worked on Sunday. Starter Jacob Kroeger went four innings, and outside of a solo homer in the second inning didn’t allow any other runs to score on four hits and two walks. Rob Griswold followed and allowed three runs in his inning of work, which was the blemish for the pitching staff in this game as the rest of the pen was excellent. Logan Samuels was next, and outside of a solo homer to the same player who hit the one off of Kroeger, allowed three hits and no walks with five of his six outs being strikeouts. Not to be outdone Isaac Gallegos came in for the final two innings and allowed one hit and no walks, also recording strikeouts for five of his six outs.

Unfortunately the Rome offense didn’t really get going as they got shut out on just five hits. Four of those five hits came from two players, as Isaiah Drake and Jake Steels each had two-hit days, with Drake getting four at bats and Steels needing just three for the feat. Cody Miller had a double for the final hit, his second in High-A. The Emperors had three walks as well, with Logan Braunschweig drawing two of them and Colby Jones picking up the other.

Swing and Misses

Isaac Gallegos – 9

Jacob Kroeger – 8

Logan Samuels – 7

Augusta GreenJackets 12, Charleston RiverDogs 7

  • John Gil, SS: 1-3, 2B, 3 BB, 2 R, 2 RBI, .254/.349/.370
  • Tate Southisene, 2B: 2-6, 3 R, RBI, .237/.256/.342
  • Owen Carey, CF: 2-5, 2B, BB, R, 3 RBI, .256/.328/.342
  • Dixon Williams, DH: 1-3, 3 BB, R, RBI, .268/.391/.479
  • Jacob Shafer, SP: 5 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 3 K, 2.57 ERA

Jacob Shafer made the start and was excellent, shutting out Charleston through his first four innings of work. He allowed a two-run homer in the fifth that accounted for all of the damage against him, as he allowed six hits and two walks with three strikeouts over those five innings. Carter Lovasz was next and struggled with commanding the ball the way he wanted to, which led to him being hit around a bit. Lovasz allowed three runs on four hits and a walk in his inning of work, needing 37 pitches to complete the frame. Kade Woods pitched the final three innings and showed why the Braves drafted him, as he was missing bats. Woods allowed two runs on three hits and a walk, but struck out three and recorded eight swings and misses.

Another day, another fun game from this talented young Augusta lineup. Offensively it was so hard to pick out a couple standout performances in this 12-run outburst, as every one of the first five hitters in the Augusta lineup had a notable game. John Gil went one for three with a double, but reached base four times because of his three walks, and notched two runs scored and two batted in. Dixon Williams also reached base four times, hitting a single and walking three times in three at bats, with one run scored and batted in. Juan Mateo joined them in reaching four times, though he had a three-hit afternoon that included a double, plus a walk and two batted in plus a run scored. Then you have Owen Carey who reached base three times in the win. Carey was two for five with a double, walk, run scored, and three batted in. First round pick Tate Southisene also had a big day, going two for six with three runs scored and one batted in.

Swing and Misses

Kade Woods – 8

Jacob Shafer – 7

Carter Lovasz – 3

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Men’s Volleyball Sweeps EIVA Weekly Awards – Penn State

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UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – Penn State men’s volleyball swept the first conference awards of the season as Sean Harvey was named EIVA Offensive Player of the Week and Ryan Merk was selected as the Defensive Player of the Week. The Nittany Lions picked up the honors after opening the season with a four-set win over Mount Olive and a sweep over Manhattan at Rec Hall.

Harvey earned a weekly award from the conference for the first time after hitting .426 with 27 kills (3.86/set) over the two wins. He opened the season with 13 kills, three blocks, and five digs in the win over Mount Olive. The outside hitter followed that by hitting .667 with 14 kills, one block, one dig, and one ace in the victory over Manhattan

Merk led Penn State’s defensive effort that resulted in the opposition hitting just .158 over the two matches. He totaled 18 digs with nine in each match, giving him 2.57/set for the week. The redshirt senior libero also helped get the offense going with a 36-36 mark on serve receive. Merk is now a five-time EIVA Defensive Player of the Week honoree.

No. 13 Penn State is back at Rec Hall when it hosts St. Thomas Aquinas on Thursday at 7 p.m. The Nittany Lions then host No. 9 Lewis on Saturday at 7 p.m. Both matches will stream on B1G+.



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Waverly Senior Sophia D. Commits to Sarah Lawrence College Volleyball

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The Waverly School proudly congratulates senior Sophia D. on her commitment to play collegiate volleyball at Sarah Lawrence College this fall. Sophia officially celebrated her signing at Waverly’s fall athletics lunch in December, surrounded by her teammates and fellow fall student-athletes.

Sophia’s achievement reflects years of hard work, dedication, and the leadership she brings to Waverly’s athletic community. Through Waverly’s athletics program, students grow not only as competitors, but also as leaders—developing teamwork, resilience, time management, and confidence within a culture that values sportsmanship, balance, and personal growth.

Congratulations, Sophia. Waverly looks forward to cheering you on as you take this exciting next step in your athletic and academic journey.

The Waverly School, 67 W. Bellevue Drive, Pasadena, (626) 792-5940 or visit thewaverlyschool.org.

 

 

 



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Men’s volleyball set to replicate success with new lineup, rotation in 2026 season

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The only thing worse than losing might be finishing second.

But with last season’s national championship loss in the rearview mirror, all sights are now set on the 2026 campaign.

No. 1 UCLA men’s volleyball (2-0, 1-0 MPSF) welcomed its new season with two straight sweeps against No. 15 McKendree (0-2) and Concordia (0-2, 0-1) on Friday and Sunday, respectively, at Pauley Pavilion.

Although several key members of last season’s championship run have departed, including 2025 MPSF Player of the Year Cooper Robinson, the Bruins are confident in their ability to replicate previous successes.

“The locker room’s fun,” said sophomore outside hitter Sean Kelly. “I think we have great team chemistry this year, and we’re really getting better every day.”

(Ruby Galbraith/Daily Bruin)
Sophomore outside hitter Sean Kelly rises to serve the ball. (Ruby Galbraith/Daily Bruin)

Kelly tallied 142 total kills on a .323 clip while making 14 starts during the 2025 season to earn a spot on the MPSF All-Freshman Team. He opened 2026 with eight kills against McKendree on a .571 success rate. His four kills in the first set against Concordia helped propel the team to a 25-13 set victory – the fewest points allowed by UCLA in a non-deciding set since January 2025.

Alongside Kelly in the offensive are seniors outside hitter Zach Rama and setter Andrew Rowan. Over the opening two victories, Rama led the team with 27 total kills on a .420 hitting percentage, while Rowan added an efficient 12.67 assists per set.

With both entering their final year as Bruins, they understand the increased leadership role they will play throughout the season.

“We got a lot of new pieces in the starting lineup, so early on in the year, we’re trying to find our groove and find our rhythm,” Rowan said. “It’s definitely so familiar being a senior here … but every season is different. To the younger guys, we’re just trying to teach them the work ethic that we try to build here.”

Junior middle blocker Micah Wong Diallo has already seen an elevated role from last season, where he only started in two matches. The Los Angeles local started both matches to open up the season, tallying 14 kills on a .824 hitting percentage and adding three blocks.

(Amelia Chief/Daily Bruin senior staff)
Junior middle blocker Micah Wong Diallo jumps with his arm extended in preparation to spike the ball. (Amelia Chief/Daily Bruin senior staff)

Coach John Hawks – now in his second season as UCLA’s head honcho – spoke about his high hopes for Diallo moving forward in the year.

“Micah’s got a bright future,” Hawks said. “Last year, we probably would have played him more. I think there were just some injuries that he dealt with that he had to work through. I expect big things from Micah.”

Hawks has been experimenting with a rotation of Diallo and senior middle blocker Cameron Thorne to open up the season, and he is pleased with the results so far. Thorne recorded five blocks in each match, accompanied by 13 total kills on a .688 clip.

“I thought our middles were perfect,” Hawks said. “We just need to get those guys more attempts and figure out how to open them up a little bit.”

The victories did not come without mistakes. The Bruins committed 18 service errors against McKendree and 11 against Concordia. Hawks said he wanted to clean up ball control and tighten up blocking rotations.

(Ruby Galbraith/Daily Bruin)
Coach John Hawks speaks to redshirt junior opposite David Decker on the sideline. (Ruby Galbraith/Daily Bruin)

And for a team that came so close to a national championship just eight months ago, correcting those mistakes could help ensure a different ending to this season.

UCLA will now look ahead to next weekend, when they will match up against Ball State and Loyola Chicago as part of the First Point Collegiate Challenge.

“I’m excited,” said Hawks, who served as head coach of Loyola Chicago from 2022-24. “I’m excited where we are right now, and I’m looking forward to some team bonding.”



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Three Podiums Highlight Season Opening Alpine Action

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GEORGETOWN, Colo. – The Colorado Buffaloes ski team opened the alpine portion of the season with three podium finishes Monday in the slalom races at Loveland Ski Area as part of the Denver Invitational.

The Buffaloes earned runner-up finishes in both the men’s and women’s races, highlighted by Louison Accambray’s career-best second-place finish on the women’s side and a 2–3 showing from freshmen Stanley Buzek and Feb Allasina in the men’s race. Through two of eight alpine races this week, Colorado sits second in the team standings.

Accambray led the CU women, while Alexa Brownlie finished seventh, Hannah Soria placed 14th and Cathinka Lunder finished 16th. Paige DeHart did not finish her first run.

On the men’s side, Colorado faced adversity early, as Justin Bigatel and Christoffer Oestroem did not finish the first run, while Filip Wahlqvist crashed just five gates from the finish on the second run after holding a sizeable lead following the opening run. Despite the setbacks, Buzek and Allasina delivered podium performances to keep the Buffs firmly in contention.  It was the first time two alpine newcomers were on the podium in their first college race since 2007 when Drew Roberts and Stefan Hughes went 1-2 in a slalom race at Utah.

HOW IT HAPPENED

The CU women were first on the course and posted a solid opening run before surging in the second run. Accambray climbed from sixth after the first run to finish second overall, while Brownlie jumped from 16th to seventh and Soria made a significant move from 23rd to 14th. Lunder remained steady throughout the race, sitting 14th after the first run and finishing 16th. Collectively, the three skiers gained 22 positions between runs, with Soria posting the fourth-fastest second run and Brownlie recording the fifth-fastest.

In the men’s race, early first-run exits by Bigatel and Oestroem placed increased pressure on the remaining Buffs, and both Buzek and Allasina responded. Allasina surged from a starting position of 35 to 15th after the first run, then vaulted into third place with one of the fastest second runs in the field. Buzek, who started 16th, was third after the first run and moved up one position to finish second. Buzek recorded the second-fastest second run, while Allasina posted the third-fastest.

UP NEXT

Colorado remains at Loveland Ski Area on Tuesday for another set of slalom races as part of the Spencer James Nelson Memorial Colorado Invitational before heading to Aspen for giant slalom races Wednesday and Thursday.

WHAT IT MEANS

The somewhat short-handed alpine teams had a solid season opening performance, with some highs (two freshmen on the podium, career-best finish for Accambray) and lows (Filip Wahlqvist crashing five gates from the finish, three DNFs on the men’s side), which is the nature of the business for all skiers, especially alpine skiers.  But CU did place four women in the top 16 and despite only scoring two men, still are just eight points out of the lead.  A solid start to the alpine season.

 

TEAM NOTES

SKIER NOTES

  • Louison Accambray finished second for her career-best slalom result and sixth podium finish overall, including her second slalom podium, in 15 career races.
  • Alexa Brownlie / Hannah Soria both made strong collegiate debuts for Colorado, with Brownlie placing seventh in her first college race and Soria finishing 14th. For Soria, the result marked her 10th career top-20 finish in her 19th collegiate slalom race.
  • Cathinka Lunder placed 16th, recording her fourth career top-20 finish and second in slalom. It marked her second-best slalom finish, trailing only a 12th-place result at Loveland in a qualifier race last season.
  • Stanley Buzek / Feb Allasina both reached the podium in their first collegiate race, with Buzek finishing second and Allasina third. It marked the first time two alpine newcomers finished on the podium in the season-opening race since Drew Roberts and Stefan Hughes went 1–2 in the Utah slalom opener in 2007.

TEAM SCORES (DAY 1): 1. Denver, 163; 2. Colorado, 155; 3. Utah, 127.5; 4. Alaska Anchorage, 125; 5. Montana State, 110; 6. Colorado Mountain, 104; 7. Nevada, 92.5; 8. Westminster, 30.

WOMEN’S SLALOM: 1. Sara Rask, Denver, 1:29.20; 2. Louison Accambray, Colorado, 1:29.66; 3. Elisabeth Creighton, Denver, 1:30.05; 3. Mia Hunt, Denver, 1:30.05; 5. Ella Bromee, Alaska Anchorage, 1:30.11; 6. Stella Buchheister, Denver, 1:30.18; 7. Alexa Brownlie, Colorado, 1:30.20; 8. Carmen Nielsen, Alaska Anchorage, 1:30.22; 9. Nicola Rountree-Williams, Denver, 1:30.36; 10. Tea Kiesel, Montana State, 1:30.45.

Other CU Finishers: 14. Hannah Soria, 1:31.19; 16. Cathinka Lunder, 1:31.40; Paige DeHart, DNF (Run 1).

MEN’S SLALOM: 1. Johs Herland, Utah, 1:29.59; 2. Stanley Buzek, Colorado, 1:30.29; 3. Feb Allasina, Colorado, 1:31.00; 4. Lucas Ellis, Colorado Mountain, 1:31.05; 5. Pierick Charest, Utah, 1:31.34; 6. Harry Hoffman, Utah, 1:31.38; 7. Sindre Myklebust, Utah, 1:31.64; 8. Adrian Hunshammer, Denver, 1:31.78; 9. Bosse Mikelsson, Montana State, 1:31.79; 10. Giorgio Baldo, Alaska Anchorage, 1:32.02.

Other CU Finishers: Filip Wahlqvist, DNF (Run 2); Justin Bigatel, DNF (Run 1); Christoffer Oestroem, DNF (Run 1).

 



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Men’s And Women’s Track And Field Come Out On Top In Final Home Meet

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HANOVER, N.H. – The Dartmouth men’s and women’s track and field teams hosted the Ivy vs. America East Challenge, marking their final home meet of the indoor season. 

Both teams had impressive finishes, placing first overall. The women wrapped up the meet with a final score of 73.83, while the men finished with a score of 63. 

Andie Murray won the women’s 500m, finishing the race in 1:15.39. Emmy Thornton clinched the 800m with a final time of 2:20.65. Claire McDonald placed first in the 3000m with her 9:59.68 mark. Mariella Schweitzer won the 60m hurdles with an impressive 8.67 finish, as well as the long jump with a 5.97 mark. 

Charlotte DiRocco secured points for Dartmouth after clearing 1.65m in the high jump, finishing in first place. Similarly, Ellison Weiner cleared 3.65m to clinch first place in the pole vault. As for the throws, Kylee Bennett and Zaneta Pivcova clinched the weight throw and shot put, with 15.41m and 14.54m marks, respectively. 

Jack Rousseau won the 400m for the men with his final time of 50.13, followed by Noe Kemper clinching the 800m with a 1:54.31 finish. Michael Bueker, Keion Grieve, Jack Inglis and Jack Intihar clinched the men’s 4×4 with a 3:27.64 finish. As for the jumps, David Adams cleared 4.95m to clinch the pole vault for the Big Green, Intihar clinched the long jump 7.14m mark and Roy Leibovitz won the triple jump with a 15.45m mark, which is good for No. 14 in the nation. 

Colton McMaster rounded out the meet for the men, clinching the shot put and weight throw with 17.53m and 19.17m marks, respectively.

The Big Green will return to action when heading to New Haven, Conn., for the annual Dartmouth-Yale-Columbia meet on Saturday, Jan. 17.



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University of Georgia set to dedicate new track and field facility Feb. 18 | Georgia Sports

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A brand-new track and field facility will open in Athens on Feb. 18, aiming to serve both the University of Georgia campus and the local community, according to its athletic department.

Located on South Milledge Avenue, the complex will feature a 400-meter, nine-lane Spec Towns Track with an infield long jump, a triple jump and a pole vault facility. The venue will have a capacity of 2,500 that can accommodate up to 4,000 for select events with a grandstand, a press box, an observation deck, restrooms and concession stands.

The new venue replaces the old one on South Lumpkin Street, which had not hosted an event for the Georgia men’s or women’s track and field team since April 2023. Now, the Bulldogs are slated to host the Spec Towns Invitational at the new complex this April, the Torrin Lawrence Memorial in May and the SEC championships in 2027. 

High school competitions will also be held at the new facility with the Classic City Track and Field Invitational scheduled for March, making it the first competition on the venue’s calendar, and the GHSA state track meet in May. 

The project, which cost $59.8 million, was funded exclusively by donations and gifts, and will become one of the “premier track and field destinations in the country,” according to the university’s director of athletics Josh Brooks.

“We are excited about the opportunities this facility will create for our athletes, our campus and our community,” Brooks said. “While it will support our student-athletes at the highest level, it will also create opportunities that will bring athletes of all ages to our campus throughout the year.”

The new complex will have a strong emphasis on strengthening ties between the university and local community, as public usage hours will give residents a new place to run and exercise, while big events can boost the local economy through hotel stays and visits to local businesses and restaurants. 

“The Classic City Track and Field Invitational in March will mark the first competition in the new facility, bringing a regional high school meet to campus and expanding access to elite facilities for local student-athletes,” Alison McCullick, the university’s director of community relations, said. “In addition to competitions, the space will remain open for walking, running and everyday recreation, making it a year-round asset for the university and Athens.”



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