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Cerro Madsen in the Shadow of the Fitzroy Towers

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Cerro Madsen in the Shadow of the Fitzroy Towers

Report from August 27 & 28, 2025

After skiing Vespignani, Creston x2, and Mosquito, we were feeling stronger and ready for a bigger mission.

The weather forecast looked just about right for a trip to Cerro Madsen, adjacent to the Fitzroy Towers.

Well, it did look good, but just as we were pulling the trigger, the forecast changed and looked miserable for summit day…

  • Summit:  5,925 feet
  • Car:  1,476 feet
  • Camp:  2,425 feet
  • Vertical From Car:  4,449 feet 
  • Vertical From Camp:  3,500 feet
  • Vertical skied:  2,393 feet (3,093 feet when you include 2nd lap)
  • Max Pitch:  38?º
  • Average Pitch:  35?º
  • Aspect:  East Southeast
  • Distance: 17 miles round trip
  • Hiking Time From Car to Summit:  6 hours & 7 minutes
  • Time From Camp to Summit: 4 hours & 4 minutes
  • Car to Car Time:  14 hours & 44 minutes
  • Recommended Equipment:  camping gear, crampons, ice axe, skins

Greggy had a flight to Bariloche for a wedding on Friday, which put us in a pinch.

We either go for it or repeat something we’d already done.

Initially, we’d planned on two camping nights for this trip, but due to Greggy’s time constraints, we only had one night.

We decided we’d hike in on Wednesday, chill all afternoon, then go to the summit and back to the car in one huge day on Thursday.

Kinda like back when I worked on Mt. Rainier.

Packs were heavy.

Piedras Blancas glacier. image: snowbrains


We ground through the hike to camp with good spirits.

The packs kinda hurt at first, but our bodies adjusted.

We took 3 breaks and weren’t in a rush.

Miles likes it. image: snowbrains

The views along the trail were magnificent.

Piedras Blancas glacier, the Fitzroy Towers, Cerro Electrico, Cerro Madsen, all of it.

The hike was warm, and I did it in shorts and Greggy stripped down to his skivies.

Packing pic! image: snowbrains

We rolled into camp after 5 miles of walking with 1,000 vertical feet gained and it took us 3 hours.

We set up our brand new Big Agnes tent and sleeping pads and could not believe how easy the tent was to set up and how comfy the pads were.

We immediately chilled out in the tent for a while and I was flabbergasted.

Piedras Blancas glacier. image: snowbrains

I haven’t had a new sleeping pad in a while and this thing was by far the most comfy sleeping pad I’ve ever draped myself across.

Sandwiches, cheese, salami, bread, and soup for dinner.

Sunset at 7:12 pm.

Lights out at 8 p.m.

Greggy, piedras blancas glacier. image: snowbrains

I awoke in the night to drizzle…

Damn.

The day felt lost before I’d even gotten outta bed.

Electrico sun halo. image: snowbrains

Alarm at 5:30 am.

Still drizzling…

Back to sleep.

Alarm at 6 am.

Summit selfie. image: snowbrains

“Well, shit, we’re here, we’ve been in bed for 10 hours, lets go have a look and at least hike up to the lake.”

We left camp about 7:30 am, grabbed water from the stream, blasted the darkness with headlamps, and moved west.

We were still experiencing PTSD after not putting our boots on soon enough on Cerro Electrico, so we thought we’d just start in boots this time to be conservative.

Greggy on top. image: snowbrains

Too conservative…

We walked on dirt and rock for 45 minutes before we hit ice on the trail.

Yuck.

Crampons on and we cranked up the trail.

Cerro Electrico & Fitzroy. image: snowbrains

The sun was up by the time we hit Laguna de los Tres and the towers were in full view.

Grey skies continued, but above the towers, blue was making its move.

Once our skins were on, we flew up the mountain – except for the prolific photo taking.

Piedras Blancas. image: snowbrains

There was 1mm of new snow.

Then there was 1cm, then 4cms, then 10 cm, and finally about 30 cm high.

I was spooked about avalanche conditions and dug a lot of hand pits before committing to 4 compression tests.

CTN, CTN, CTN, CT26 – Q3.

Sun halo turn. image: snowbrains

The first 3 tests revealed no failure and the final test failed on the 26th tap.

The failure was at the ground on rounding depth hoar and the entire snowpack up high was only 40cms…

These were excellent results and we felt good about stability after this.

Greggy & Big Agnes Copper Spur. image: snowbrains

The summit view bent our brains.

Glaciers, towers, icefalls, lakes, desert, all of it.

The Fitzroy Tower looked like it could fall over on us.

Honestly, it was intense up there.

Up close towers. image: snowbrains

The towers demand attention.

Greggy dropped first and layed in the snow with supreme confidence.

I watched his run and my heart sang.

“We are going to be OK. We are gonna be just fine,” My mind echoed.

Blue blue. image: snowbrains

I’d been scared and anxious about avalanche conditions and more all day.

Madsen’s main face simply falls off the Earth into a snowless chasm.

If anything goes awry up here, you’re done.

I dropped second and enjoyed high-quality, very predictable, classical Patagonian snow.

Greggy, piedras blancas glacier, sun halo. image: snowbrains

After 14 ski seasons in Bariloche, Argentina, we knew and loved this snow very well.

Greggy demanded another lap, and I obliged.

The second lap was even better as we skied down lower and I got to go first.

From there, we skied an icy face down to the lake and it skied much better than feared.

Run #2 selfie. image: snowbrains

Wind had deposited a skiff of soft snow on the ice, making for pleasant turns.

From the lake, it was survival skiing through rocks, bushes, and rotten snow.

We didn’t push it far.

We cut to the trail after a short stint and put the skis back on the pack where they belong in Patagonia.

Towers. image: snowbrains

Down the trail in crampons, then just boots, across the river, filled up the water bottles, and back in camp around 3:30 pm.

We were tired…

Camp packed up quickly thanks to how well-designed the Big Agnes gear is.

We ate a buncha food, drank a liter of water each, and hit the trail with heavy but lighter-than-they-were packs.

Piedras Blancas blue. image: snowbrains

5 miles and about 2.5 hours later were back at Malvadisco, our trusty steed, with sore feet and shit-eating grins.

We’d done it.

We’d proved to ourselves that we can do it and we knew we could do it again.

The next 7 weeks are gonna be wild.¡Graciass, Argentina!

Cerro Electrico & Fitzroy. image: snowbrains
It all stars here… image: snowbrains
Greggy looking like a kid. image: snowbrains
Start selfie. image: snowbrains
Vespignani. image: snowbrains
Greggy in the flats. image: snowbrains
Green and towers. image: snowbrains
Fitz art. image: snowbrains
Cerro Chalten. image: snowbrains
Piedras Blancas glacier. image: snowbrains
Stunning towers. image: snowbrains
Greggy in his skivies! image: snowbrains
Piedras Blancas selfie. image: snowbrains
Madsen in front. image: snowbrains
Tower trees. image: snowbrains
Almost to camp selfie. image: snowbrains
Big Agnes Copper Spur tent. image: snowbrains
Big Ages Copper Spur & Miles. image: snowbrains
The forest for the trees. image: snowbrains
Tower sunset. image: snowbrains
Momentous gets us up. image: snowbrains
Looking east after dawn. image: snowbrains
Miles up close. image: snowbrains
Moody towers. image: snowbrains
Greggy in the expanse. image: snowbrains
Greggy & Towers. image: snowbrains
Greggy and blue ice. image: snowbrains
Suunto Summit details. image: snowbrains
Blue. image: snowbrains
Greggy, piedras blancas glacier, sun halo. image: snowbrains
Big south chute off Electrico. image: snowbrains
Tower. image: snowbrains
Sun dog. image: snowbrains
Tower view. image: snowbrains
Poincenot Tower. image: snowbrains
Camp to camp time and numbers. image: snowbrains
Greggy headed home. image: snowbrains
Last look. image: snowbrains
Greggy in soft light. image: snowbrains
Sunset for us. image: snowbrains
PIedras blancas in the shade. image: snowbrains
river valley. image: snowbrains
Sunset cloud. image: snowbrains


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Kentucky volleyball tops Wofford in Lexington NCAA tournament bracket

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Updated Dec. 4, 2025, 11:27 p.m. ET

  • Top-seeded Kentucky volleyball defeated Wofford in three sets to advance in the NCAA Tournament.
  • Brooklyn DeLeye led Kentucky with 14 kills during the first-round victory.
  • Kentucky will now face No. 8 seed UCLA for a spot in the Sweet 16.

LEXINGTON — Top-seeded Kentucky volleyball defeated Wofford in three sets Thursday night at Historic Memorial Coliseum to advance to the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

Brooklyn DeLeye led the Wildcats with 14 kills.

“This team especially, our depth, is so strong, and I think that just helps in practice,” DeLeye said after the match. “We’re pushing one another. No spot is guaranteed, and I think that’s truly helped us get to this No. 1 seed.”

UK will battle No. 8 seed UCLA Friday at 7 p.m. for a spot in the Sweet 16. UCLA defeated Georgia Tech in five sets Thursday night. A familiar face in former Louisville and current UCLA middle blocker Phekran Kong will sit across the net.



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UNI volleyball stuns Utah in NCAA Tournament reverse sweep

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OMAHA, Neb. — Lily Dykstra, Cassidy Hartman and Reese Booth all posted double-double performances for the UNI volleyball team on Thursday as the Panthers rallied from down two sets to none to stun the Utah Utes in the opening round of the 2025 NCAA Tournament at D.J. Sokol Arena.

Northern Iowa was unblocked by an 18-4 margin and struggled early out of system in the first two frames, but roared back with a gritty third set win, a fourth set victory thanks to a strong start and a wire-to-wire win in the winner-take-all fifth. The reverse sweep marks the first time UNI has rallied from down 2-0 in an NCAA Tournament match to advance since 2002 against Missouri.

 

HOW IT HAPPENED

Utah set an early tone with a 6-0 scoring run in the opening frame with a service ace to open the match. The Panthers would struggle offensively with seven attack errors and seven kills on .000 hitting as the Utes tallied a .448 hitting clip with 14 terminations and four blocks en route to a 25-15 win over UNI. Hartman and Isabelle Elliott would record two kills each in the frame.

Northern Iowa would put up a strong fight in the second stanza with 12 kills on .122 hitting. The Panthers used a 4-0 run to tie the set up at 10-10 before the Utes took the lead back with a 3-0 run of its own. UNI would even the score at 18-18 with a 4-0 run on a kill by Molly Shafer, back-to-back aces and a rare termination from Jadyn Petersen, but the Utes, hitting .343 with 12 kills, pulled away for a 25-21 lead and a two-set lead in the match. Dykstra led the Panthers with five kills in the set, with Hartman tallying three terminations.

The Panthers battled the Utes in another tight set in the third frame featuring ten ties and four lead changes. Booth dished out a service ace with Maryn Bixby blocking to give UNI a 9-7 lead as Utah grabbed and held a narrow lead for much of the frame. Northern Iowa would fight back however, led by eight kills from Dykstra and four from Hartman to recapture the lead, survive bonus ball and win the third set, 26-24 on 19 team terminations and .286 hitting.

UNI carried its momentum into set four with a 6-0 scoring run and would lead from start to finish with Dykstra adding an ace for a 9-1 advantage. Utah would chip away at the Panthers’ lead, but a .317 hitting clip by UNI and 19 more team terminations would help push the Panthers across the line, led by eight additional kills from Dykstra and five for Hartman.

In set five, the Panthers continued their momentum with a 5-1 scoring run to begin the decisive frame before Utah closed the gap. Hitting .389 with nine terminations, UNI never relinquished the lead and closed on a 3-0 run, including an ace from Sydney Golden to set up match point with Hartman delivering the winning point for a 15-10 win and the come-from-behind match victory.

Dykstra led the Panthers with career-highs in kills (25) and digs (14), with Hartman notching 19 kills and 11 digs, as Shafer, Bixby and Elliott each tallied six terminations. Booth posted a 32 assist, 11 digs double-double, while Golden notched 18 assists. On defense, Petersen led UNI with 16 digs, as Bixby posted three of the Panthers’ four total blocks on the night.

“I am so proud of this crew,” said UNI head coach Bobbi Petersen. We were a little unsure with this match with so many who haven’t experienced an NCAA Tournament match before. It didn’t look pretty in those first two sets but I felt we never gave up, kept fighting and finding ways to score. They definitely put pressure on us and it was a battle and a fun NCAA Tournament match!”

 

ADDITIONAL NOTES

  • UNI improves to 3-1 all-time against Utah in the first NCAA Tournament matchup between the Panthers and Utes.
  • Northern Iowa is now 18-26 all-time in NCAA Tournament matches. Thursday’s win marks the first time the Panthers have won matches in the tournament in consecutive seasons since 2002 and 2003. The win was also UNI’s first over a Big 12 Conference opponent since 2012 (Kansas State).
  • The Panthers extended their winning streak on the season to 22 matches, the eighth-longest streak in program history.
  • UNI is now 5-5 in five-set matches in the NCAA Tournament with victories in 1999 (Ball State), 2001 (Minnesota), 2002 (Missouri) and 2003 (UC Santa Barbara).
  • Lily Dykstra recorded her fourth 20+ kill match of the year on Thursday (Southern Illinois, Drake, UIC). She has also posted at least eight kills in 29 of 31 matches this season, as well as 18 matches with ten or more terminations and her second career double-double, both coming this year.
  • Cassidy Hartman notched her 26th match this year with ten-plus terminations with her 14th double-double of the season.
  • Reese Booth’s double-double was her ninth of the 2025 season.

 

UP NEXT

The Panthers will face off against the winner of No. 11 and third-seeded Creighton and Northern Colorado on Friday in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. First serve is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. CT at D.J. Sokol Arena in Omaha, with live coverage available on ESPN+ and the Panther Sports Radio Network (106.5 Corn Country).

 

UNI volleyball action can be followed all season long on social media on Facebook (UNI Volleyball), X (@UNIVolleyball) and on Instagram (@univolleyball). The full 2025 schedule and roster, along with the latest Panther news and information can be found online at UNIpanthers.com.





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No. 3 Badgers stifle Panthers to kick off postseason action

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MADISON, Wis. – The No. 3 Wisconsin volleyball team dominated in the First Round of the NCAA Tournament, sweeping Eastern Illinois (25-11, 25-6, 25-19) behind another strong performance on the offensive end. 

The Badgers (25-4) advanced to the Second Round of the NCAA Tournament with the help of a .435 (47 – 10 – 85) hitting percentage—jumping out of the gates in set one. 

Outside hitter Mimi Colyer continued to lead the way for UW, tallying six kills on eight attempts in set one. The Badgers won 13-of-14 rallies early on to take a 17-3 lead, forcing a Panthers’ (24-8) timeout. 

From there, UW never looked back in the first frame, as right side Grace Egan racked up a kill to put away Eastern Illinois with a 25-11 final score. 

The Badgers put together their best showing of the season in the second set, winning 25-6. The six points allowed were the least by a Wisconsin unit in the rallying scoring era in the NCAA Tournament, dating back to 2007. UW earned four service aces in the set—including a pair from setter Charlie Fuerbringer

Wisconsin enjoyed another large run in the second frame, winning seven-straight rallies to go up 19-5. Outside hitter Trinity Shadd-Ceres provided a quality spark off of the bench in set two, recording back-to-back kills in the latter half of the frame. The sophomore earned four kills on four attempts, a season-best. 

Eastern Illinois provided a response in the third set, but the Badgers were able to answer quickly to earn the sweep. Middle blocker Tosia Serafinowska concluded the match with her first kill of her postseason career, punching the Badgers’ ticket to a battle with North Carolina tomorrow evening at the UW Field House. 

Colyer tallied double-digit kills for the 16th consecutive match, finishing with 10 on a .562 swinging percentage. Vajagic put together a solid showing in her postseason debut, also accumulating 10 kills to complement her five digs. 

Defensively, libero Kristen Simon was a staple in the back row, as the freshman notched 15 digs—tying her highest total since the Badgers’ match against Indiana on Nov. 9. 

The middle blockers for UW continued to be efficient, as seniors Carter Booth and Alicia Andrew combined for 12 kills and zero hitting errors. 

Fuerbringer did it all for the Badgers to round out the standouts, paced by 35 assists. The sophomore added eight digs, four blocks and a pair of service aces, too. 

Straight from the Court

Head Coach Kelly Sheffield (on tonight’s performance): “Really happy with the way we came out and played. We did a lot of good things. Kristen really set the tone behind the service line and was aggressive defensively, getting balls and just hunting, making strong moves.”

(On everyone gaining in-match experience): “You certainly don’t go into the match thinking you’ll empty the bench. We have a lot of people who work hard and when an opportunity presents itself in the NCAA Tournament where you can add year played to their experience, especially in the Field House, that is pretty special.”

Middle Blocker Alicia Andrew (on what went well tonight): “I was really impressed with both Mimi and Kristen. They were really going for it on their serves and it showed. They got the team out of the system a lot and that was so much fun to watch. I think our side out transition game, like Coach mentioned, we were able to be in the system a lot of the time courtesy to Kristen and that was really good.”

Libero Kristen Simon (on continuing to build confidence): “It’s been a process just building up my confidence and going for every ball. Obviously, you find more range and just find more confidence behind the defensive line and just reading your hitters.”

Notes: 

  • With the sweep over EIU, Wisconsin moves to 27-1 all-time in the First Round of the NCAA Tournament, and 71-29 all-time in the NCAA Tournament.
  • The match-up against EIU marked the first time the two teams met since 1995. Wisconsin improves 5-2 all-time against the Panthers.
  • For the seventh time this season, the Badgers hit .400 or better (47-10-95). The Badgers outhit EIU .435 to .022.
  • The Badgers surrendered just six points in the second set to EIU making it the lowest point total by an opponent in program history of the NCAA tournament.
  • For the 16th-consecutive match, outside hitter Mimi Colyer totaled double-figure kills. She led the team with 10 kills. The senior is now tied at third in program history with Arlisa Hagan (1991-92) for most consecutive matches with double-digit kill totals.
  • Sophomore Morgan Van Wie made an appearance in the third set as a serving substitute.
  • The 49 digs marks the fourth-highest dig total in a three set match this season for the Badgers.
  • Sophomore Maile Chan recorded her first service ace in the third set.
  • Senior Carter Booth recorded her seventh match without a hitting error. Both totaled seven kills on 11 swings.
  • Libero Kristen Simon led the team with 15 digs. This marks Simon’s 20th match with double-figure digs.

Up Next: The Badgers are back in action tomorrow evening in the Second Round of the NCAA Tournament, as they will take on North Carolina at 7:00 p.m. CT at the UW Field House. Wisconsin holds an 8-2 record all-time against the Tar Heels, as the two teams last competed against each other back in 2019. The match will be streamed on ESPN+.



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Volleyball Closes Season Against No. 1 Kentucky in NCAA Tournament

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LEXINGTON, KY. – The Wofford volleyball team was defeated by the No. 1 seeded Kentucky Wildcats 3-0 on Thursday night inside of Historic Memorial Coliseum in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. The Terriers close the season 17-14 with a 10-6 record in conference action. Kentucky will take on UCLA tomorrow night.

“Our mindset was to come out and leave it out there,” said head coach Lynze Roos. “I feel like we competed in some really good points. They got some separation and that was tough, but I’m really proud of the way that these women competed in the season that we had.”

 

Wofford totaled 27 kills on 26 assists throughout the match. On defense, the team posted 54 digs and four blocks. The Wildcats finished the match with 45 kills on 44 assists. Kentucky also posted 56 digs and four blocks.

 

Leading Wofford was Bradley Brown who had 10 kills on a .259 hitting percentage. Brown also led the team with three blocks. Following behind was Chloe Smith with six kills. Maddy Frazier dished out a team-high 13 assists, while Taylor Pecht had 10. Laney Klika recorded a team-high 13 digs, along with 10 from Caroline Przystup. Annemarie Rakoski and Natalie Arnold tallied one block apiece.

 “We talk a lot about playing relentless defense and going for every single ball. We knew that tonight was going to be a tough task, but you never really know unless you go for it,” said Laney Klika

“We talked a lot before the game about playing how we play and not letting their offense or defense change the way that we like to play,” added Annemarie Rakoski.

“It was amazing just to be able to have some family and friends that I don’t get to see very much anymore come watch me play. It was super cool to just have that support,” said Chloe Smith.

 

Kentucky grabbed the first two points of set one, but Wofford responded with a solo block by Annemarie Rakoski. Another solo block from Bradley Brown kept the Kentucky lead within one point. With the Wildcats leading 13-8, Kentucky would add four unanswered points to bring the Wofford deficit to nine points. The Terriers could not overcome the Kentucky lead, losing set one 25-11.

 

The teams were back-and-forth to start set two, as the Terriers would take an early 5-4 lead. Wofford took its biggest advantage – a 15-13 lead – after a pair of Kentucky attacking errors. The Wildcats fought back to take a 20-19 lead, and the team scored the final five points of the stanza to take set two 25-19. Bradley Brown totaled eight kills and one block in the second set alone.

 

Wofford jumped out to a 2-0 lead to start the third set of the match by way of a Bradley Brown kill. Kentucky responded with a 7-1 run, however, to regain the lead. The Wildcats would eventually take a 13-4 advantage. Wofford cut the deficit to six points a few rallies later, but the team would lose set three and ultimately the match.

 

Wofford concludes the season 17-14 with a 10-6 mark in Southern Conference play. The team entered the conference tournament as the No. 3 seed and defeated both No. 6 Samford and No. 2 Furman to reach the championship match. The Terriers took down No. 1 ETSU to win their third-straight conference championship and earn another bid to the NCAA Tournament.

 



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Demon Deacons Open Season at Liberty Kickoff

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LYNCHBURG, Va. – The Wake Forest track and field team opened their 2024-25 indoor track schedule on Thursday afternoon as a pair of Demon Deacons competed in the Liberty Kickoff at the Liberty Indoor Track Complex.

Junior Seren Rodgers secured a third place finish in the pentathlon, totaling 3,771 points. With the result, the Taunton, England, native now sits sixth all-time in program history in the women’s indoor pentathlon.

Overall, Rodgers recorded three podium finishes during the competition, including a pair of runner up results in the long jump, where she recorded a jump of 10.32 meters, and the 800m, crossing the line in 2:19.62. Rodgers also claimed third place in the 60m hurdles after clocking a time of 8.86 seconds.

Meanwhile, freshman Julia Aere also competed in the pentathlon, securing eighth place with 3,462 points in her collegiate debut. The Delray Beach, Fla., native placed inside the top-10 in all five events, highlighted by a third place finish in the shot put after recording a distance of 11.13 meters, as well as a fifth place result in the 800m after recording a time of 2:27.34.

Notable Finishes

Pentathlon

2025-26 Indoor Track and Field Top-10 Marks in School History

From the Staff
“I’m really pleased with how the competition progressed today. Julia and Seren competed well and this meet was a great measure of how hard we have worked throughout the fall semester. It gave us a chance to get out, perform at a high level and still recognize that we left some points on the table, which is exciting. We are in a great place heading into the holiday break and this will keep us motivated and hungry. These two ladies set the tone early for the team and we are eager for the rest of the team to compete this weekend.” – Assistant Coach Ryan Grinnell

Up Next

The Demon Deacons return to action on Saturday with a pair of meets. One group of Wake Forest athletes will travel to Boston to compete in the 5K race at the Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener. Meanwhile, several Deacs will compete at the Visit Winston-Salem College Kick-off at the JDL Fast Track.



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Lopes unveil 2025-26 indoor slate

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Grand Canyon unveiled its 2025-26 indoor track and field schedule, which starts this week with the first of eight regular-season meets and concludes with the Mountain West Indoor Championships in late February.
 
After the Lopes dominant WAC indoor run of 14 conference titles between the men’s and women’s teams, GCU will compete in its first season as a Mountain West member.
 
Coach Flood celebrates with sprinter after final “This schedule and competition should prepare both our men’s and women’s teams to make a lot of noise at our inaugural Mountain West Conference Indoor Championships, as well as send a lot of our athletes to the NCAA Indoor Championships,” GCU head coach Tom Flood said.
 
Grand Canyon’s indoor schedule will feature meets in trips to Flagstaff, Arizona; Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Reno, Nevada.
 
“Again, we are really excited about our indoor schedule,” Flood said. “We will again be competing at some of the finest indoor facilities in the country and against some of the best track and field programs in the country.”
 
The 2025-26 season begins Thursday as the Lopes travel to Reno, Nevada, before taking a break until the new year. From there, they will travel to Flagstaff and Albuquerque before heading back to Reno for the Mountain West Indoor Championships.
 
GCU aims to represent at the NCAA Indoor Championships, which will be held March 13-14 in Fayetteville, Arkansas.
 
For the full indoor schedule, click here.

 



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