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Chapman announces 2025 Athletics Hall of Fame class — The Panther Newspaper

Jeremiah McKibbins, a Class of 2016 communication studies alumnus, set 10 different rushing records during his four years playing football at Chapman. He was a three-time All-Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC) selection and four-time team captain. McKibbins, however, operates with an unassuming excellence. “Football isn’t something you do alone, it’s built on brotherhood, trust […]

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Jeremiah McKibbins, a Class of 2016 communication studies alumnus, set 10 different rushing records during his four years playing football at Chapman. He was a three-time All-Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC) selection and four-time team captain.

McKibbins, however, operates with an unassuming excellence.

“Football isn’t something you do alone, it’s built on brotherhood, trust and showing up for the person next to you every single day,” McKibbins said.

Despite his humble attitude towards success, it seems to follow McKibbins. He, along with four other former Chapman athletes, was announced as part of the 2025 Athletics Hall of Fame class.

“This honor isn’t just about stats or wins, it’s about the moments in the locker room, the battles on the field and the lifelong connections made along the way,” he said. “It’s a reminder of what we built together and the legacy we left behind.”

McKibbins captures the authentic greatness many athletes strive to obtain, and his legacy at Chapman rewards him for that. Discipline and hard work is a major part of excelling at anything you do, but the impact you make on anything is often a clear reflection of character.

The Chapman University Athletics Hall of Fame class is set to be inducted during the 42nd Annual Night of Champions and Hall of Fame Induction Weekend on Oct. 24 and Oct. 25, 2025. 

Since 1980, Chapman’s Hall of Fame induction has honored athletic excellence and school spirit. Held each October, the two-day Night of Champions weekend reunites alumni and celebrates new inductees with a Friday banquet, a halftime announcement at Saturday’s home football game and a plaque unveiling on Victory Way.

All five inductees played within one of Chapman’s Division III teams and will make Panther history as a member of the third class in Chapman’s Hall of Fame History: Scott Martino ’01 (soccer), Jennifer Manship ’09 (water polo), Erin Dudzinski ’09 (softball), Brian Rauh ’14 (baseball) and McKibbins ’16 (football).

The Hall of Fame Committee Chair, Jack Bauerle summed up the significance of this event.

“To put it simply, these are the best of the best,” Bauerle said. “Being selected into Chapman’s Hall of Fame, just as any other hall of fame, puts you in elite company. These particular student athletes’ exemplified the pillars of the university, coupled with excellence in the classroom, the athletic field, court or aquatics. We want their legacy to continue and inspire the future Panthers.”

McKibbins further emphasized how not only discipline, but being a good person, defined his time at Chapman.

“I showed up every day with purpose,” he said. “I wasn’t chasing clout, I was chasing growth. I treated my teammates and my community with kindness and respect because, at the end of the day, how you treat people matters more than any stat sheet.”

By definition, exceptional means “unusually good: outstanding,” and to be recognized as such takes more than talent — it requires integrity, consistency and a mindset that elevates those around you. Athletes like McKibbins — and the rest of the 2025 class — embody that standard in the way they lead and live, both on and off the field.

“I believed in doing things the right way, showing up for others and building a reputation you can stand on long after the game’s over,” said McKibbins.

Manship, an accounting and business administration major, is now the second ever aquatics member of the Hall of Fame. Manship is a two-time All-American athlete who set Chapman’s record, scoring 223 goals in 2007. She stands as a trailblazer today, as the first Panther to score 100-plus goals in a season, and ranking second in the highest total goals in school history.

Beyond her athletics, Manship showcased every positive attribute of a teammate. Eric Ploessel, Chapman’s men and women’s water polo coach, described the incredible stature of Manship’s character beyond her skills in the water. 

“(Manship) made all the players around her better,” said Ploessel. “That’s what made her such an amazing player. Besides the records she broke, it’s that she wanted her teammates to score and help them become better players. Finding a star that’s willing to make some of their teammates better is huge for programs.”

Ploessel, who coached Manship for three seasons, further said that her selflessness impacted more than her teammates and the game.

“She wants to make people around her better,” he said.“That included me. We butted heads a lot when I was coaching her but that was because she wanted the best out of me. She was the first player to demand more out of me. I was younger when I coached her with less experience than I do now. Coaching her made me a better coach.”

Manship said receiving the honor has been surreal — and incredibly meaningful. Her words echoed the same humble character that Ploessel described.

“We must celebrate the accomplishments of all past, present and future but to be called out as one of the greats, it somehow does not feel real,” she said.

Rauh, a business administration major, was drafted into the MLB for the Washington Nationals, before bouncing around in the minor leagues, and now provides professional-level baseball training for young athletes. He said that he believes his experience at Chapman built the foundation for his success.

Rauh credits his head coach, Tom Tereschuk, and his pitching coach, Dave Edwards, for playing a huge role in his development as not just a player but as a man.

“Neither of them let me get away with being average — or just good,” he said. “They wanted me to be great, and that’s how I live my life now, whether personally or professionally. That (mindset) was instilled in college with those two coaches who, again, saw more in me and wanted me to be something special.”

Looking back on his experience, Rauh emphasized the importance of embracing the process and finding purpose in each moment.  

“That’s what life’s about,” he said. “It’s not the end goal, it’s who you impact on the way. The relationships. The memories. It’s good to have goals and try to pursue them, but you also want to enjoy the process. When you look back, that’s the stuff you remember: the people I met along the way, the experiences, the games, the road trips and all that.”

Rauh said that it’s not only important to learn from the moments that positively impact you but also to take time to understand the negative ones because, together, they shape who we are.

“I tell a lot of the kids I work with (that) I would give anything to go back and live one of my worst outings I ever had on a baseball field,” Rauh said. “Just to be there in the atmosphere and compete again is something special that not a lot of people get to experience.”

Dudzinski, a marketing major, played softball for Chapman until 2009 but now she balances her life between work and motherhood and this recognition carries an ever deeper meaning.

“It means every ounce of sweat, every long car ride, every cheer from the sidelines was worth it,” Dudzinski said. “And now, as a new mom, I get to share this honor with my kids — to show them firsthand that hard work and passion can take you amazing places… and that, yes, their mom was kind of a big deal.”

Getting to this point in her life did not come easy for Dudzinski, however.

“Graduating in 2009 during the financial crisis wasn’t easy. Jobs were scarce, and no one was hiring,” she said. “But I landed an interview for a sales position, and they were specifically looking for former athletes — people who knew how to compete, hustle and thrive under pressure. I never imagined myself in sales, but now, years later, I’m leading a team and ranking as a top performer.”

Dudzinski also reflected on how her time on the field laid the foundation for everything that followed.

“Chapman didn’t just prepare me for the field — it prepared me for life,” she said. 

From navigating a tough job market after graduation to rising through the ranks in her career, the mindset she built as a student-athlete stayed with her. Now, as she looks ahead to the Hall of Fame induction, she sees it as more than just a personal milestone — it’s a full-circle moment she gets to share with her family.

Martino, a business finance major, graduated from Chapman and says he’s had the pleasure of attending Hall of Fame events in the past, so to be considered and recognized is certainly an honor. He said that learned valuable lessons from playing soccer through the season’s highs and lows.

“We made the tournament the first three years and then in my senior year we did not make it,” Martino said. “The lesson of actually losing and learning how to deal with that and (learning) how to think through that actually was just as impactful as the winning seasons.”

Doug Aiken, assistant athletic director, and Steven Olveda, sports information director, shared their thoughts on the incredible achievements of the inductees.

“Brian Rauh’s streak of 24 wins to start his career was pretty special,” Aiken said. “Not sure that’s been done or will be done again at Chapman or elsewhere. He was as automatic a pitcher as I’ve ever seen. Same with Scott Martino’s 50-point season. Pretty incredible.”

Olveda followed, highlighting other standout athletes.

“Jeremiah was a threat to score every time he touched the ball on the football field,” Olveda said. “Everyone knew it and he would still find a way to break off a big run. Jennifer Manship was our scoring leader for over 15 years and is next in line of deserving student-athletes from the pool.”

He continued: “Erin Dudzinski was such a special player. She would take away hits in center field, double to lead off a game, or steal a base to put herself in scoring position. A champion on the softball diamond.”

As a society, we look to our heroes for inspiration and guidance. The Chapman Hall of Fame Class of 2025 embodies this ideal, representing individuals who not only excelled as athletes and students but also spread positive growth. Their legacies will extend beyond their personal achievements, being honored within Chapman.



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Maple Ridge water polo player wins silver at PanAm championships

Airi Cowie of Maple Ridge has won a silver medal with the women’s national U17 water polo team at the PanAm Aquatics Championships, held from May 13 to 25 in Medellin, Colombia. Cowie said the win was a highlight of her career, on par with last year’s appearance with the U16 national team that competed at […]

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Airi Cowie of Maple Ridge has won a silver medal with the women’s national U17 water polo team at the PanAm Aquatics Championships, held from May 13 to 25 in Medellin, Colombia.

Cowie said the win was a highlight of her career, on par with last year’s appearance with the U16 national team that competed at the World Championships in Turkey. She won player of the match in one of those games, with a four-goal performance.

At the PanAms, Cowie played more of a defence and assisting role she said, but scored seven goals during the tournament – including a four-goal performance in one game.

The Canadian women started the tournament with three wins: 28-24 against Mexico, 25-9 over Brazil and 21-9 over Argentina.

They then lost 16-10 to Team USA, but bounced back and beat Colombia 28-13, and Peru 24-1. That put them in the championship game, and the U.S. won the battle again, by a score of 18-7. 

“The U.S. is obviously very strong,” said Cowie. “I definitely think our team under-performed against them.”

However, she noted Team Canada still won a big prize – a qualifying spot in the 2026 U18 World Championships. The host venue has yet to be decided, but Cowie is hoping it’s someplace exotic and interesting.

“I love that I get to travel a lot with my sport,” she said.

Cowie is a Grade 11 student at Maple Ridge Secondary, and plays for the Surrey Water Polo club. She said her place on next year’s team is not guaranteed, but she is confident she will have a good chance of again wearing the Maple Leaf at the worlds.

Her coach was happy with the team’s overall improvement at the PanAms.

“These two weeks, our team had an amazing progression,” said Water Polo Canada’s women’s U17 national team head coach David Paradelo. “Starting from one week training in California where we were able to come together for the first time, the athletes were hungry for more every day and the staff was easily able to get the girls in a professional behaviour that lead to a quick evolution of the team chemistry.

“We were able to start the tournament in Colombia setting the tone in the first few games. We were able to maintain this through the tournament, yet lacked some composure in the games versus the USA,” Paradelo added. “The girls learned a lot within adversity from in and out of the water in an experience that will teach them for their future in water polo and in life.”

The Canadian men’s U17 team won gold, making it the best-ever finish for the Canadian delegation at the event.

Cowie has a big summer ahead of her.

Her club team will compete at the U18 national championships in Calgary from June 5 to 7. After that, she is going to be on the roster of a U.S. club team, competing in high-level water polo events in California this summer.

Long-term, Cowie is hoping to follow in the footsteps of her older siblings Yuri and Andy, who both played water polo on scholarships for U.S. universities in the NCAA.



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Perry’s School Record Highlights Day Two of NCAA West Prelims

Story Links Day One Results  COLLEGE STATION, Texas (May 29, 2025) – Four Northern Arizona track and field athletes have qualified for the next round of the NCAA West Preliminary Round today in College Station, Texas.   LiNay Perry is on to Saturday’s quarterfinals in the 400-meter hurdles after breaking her […]

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Day One Results 

COLLEGE STATION, Texas (May 29, 2025) – Four Northern Arizona track and field athletes have qualified for the next round of the NCAA West Preliminary Round today in College Station, Texas.

 

LiNay Perry is on to Saturday’s quarterfinals in the 400-meter hurdles after breaking her own school record once again with a time of 57.40. She auto qualified by finishing third in her heat and placed 12th overall in the first round after entering the event ranked 17th.

 

She will race at 5:25 Mountain Standard time on Saturday, May 31.

 

All three Lumberjacks entered in the 1,500-meters advanced to Saturday’s quarterfinals by auto-qualifying in their heat. Maggi Congdon placed second in her heat with a time of 4:17.10 which was good for 12th overall. Alexandra Carlson raced in the same heat as Congdon and placed fifth, clocking 4:18.79 to place 17th overall. Keira Moore ran a near personal best of 4:18.80 to place fifth in her heat and 18th overall after coming in ranked 33rd.

 

Congdon is looking to punch her second-straight ticket to the National Championships in the 1,500-meters. The quarterfinals take place on May 31st at 3:15 p.m. Mountain Standard time.

 

In the 400-meters, Kyairra Reigh placed 28th with a time of 53.35.

 

Odessa Zentz placed 32nd in the 800-meters with a time of 2:07.93, followed by Kiki Vaughn in 38th with a time of 2:10.09.  

 

Sariyah Horne-Kemp placed 31st in the hammer throw with a toss of 57.02-meters.

 

Alexis Kebbe placed 35th in the 10,000-meters with a time of 35:49.09.

 

The men are back in action tomorrow, beginning with the field events at 11 a.m. MST and the track events at 3 p.m. MST. The meet is streamed on ESPN+ with live results available here.

 





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NCAA track and field East, Jacksonville 2025: Records broken

JU junior qualifies for nationals in long jump College World Series; Women’s College World Series; NFL OTAs | 2MD College baseball’s 64-team tournament is set to begin; the Women’s College World Series is down to 8 teams; Dolphins, Jaguars, Bucs OTAs. Multiple Hodges Stadium records tumbled at the NCAA Track and Field East First Round […]

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JU junior qualifies for nationals in long jump

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  • Multiple Hodges Stadium records tumbled at the NCAA Track and Field East First Round competition in Jacksonville, Florida.
  • Evan Puckett, Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan, and Tima Godbless set new stadium records in pole vault, shot put, and the women’s 100-meter dash, respectively.
  • Jacksonville University’s Julia Sue-Kam-Ling qualified for nationals in the women’s long jump.
  • Grace Hartman added a facility record in the women’s 10,000.

Evan Puckett sent a message on May 29. Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan did, too. Then, Tima Godbless.

The recipient: The University of North Florida. The subject: The Hodges Stadium record books are about to need a fresh round of updates.

Stadium records tumbled early and often, while hometown athlete Julia Sue-Kam-Ling of Jacksonville University punched a breakthrough ticket to nationals in May 29 action at the NCAA Track and Field East First Round competition.

Beginning with Tennessee junior Puckett’s mark of 17 feet, 9 3/4 inches in the men’s pole vault, the nation’s top Division I college athletes from the nation’s eastern half earned top billing on day two over the latest bout of inclement weather.

Thunderstorms once again disrupted competition for more than two hours beginning at 4:38 p.m., forcing track officials to push back the women’s shot put and later flights of the women’s pole vault for another day.

In addition to JU’s Sue-Kam-Ling, who qualified from the unseeded second flight in the women’s long jump, University of North Florida senior Smilla Kolbe also continued her postseason quest with a dominant race in the women’s 800 meters.

RECORD FESTIVAL AT UNF

The men’s pole vault, postponed from May 28 because of opening-day thunderstorms, set the tone.

Not only did Puckett surpass the previous facility record of 17 feet, 9 inches from Nebraska’s Tyler Loontjer in 2021, but four other vaulters topped the record as well: Georgia senior Nikolai van Huyssteen, Indiana State senior William Staggs, Ole Miss sophomore John Kendricks and High Point freshman Ricardo Montes de Oca.

Then it was the turn of Ole Miss junior Robinson-O’Hagan, who unleashed an attempt of 68 feet, 5 inches to win the men’s shot put while breaking the old Hodges Stadium mark of Florida’s Stipe Zunic (67 feet, 7 inches) from 2014.

Finished with the records? Not yet. Godbless, an Olympian for Nigeria in 2024 in Paris, then ran 10.91 for LSU in the first heat of the women’s 100. Moments later, Ohio State’s Leah Bertrand followed with a 10.92 that would have equaled the previous stadium best of Cambrea Sturgis from North Carolina A&T.

Appropriately, the night ended with a fourth facility record when N.C. State’s Grace Hartman ran 32:32.80 in the women’s 10,000, beating the 2021 mark of 33:06.83 from Alabama’s Mercy Chelangat.

DOLPHIN SOARS IN LONG JUMP

Going by the numbers, JU junior Sue-Kam-Ling entered as a decided long shot to punch a ticket for the June 11-14 national finals in Oregon. She was competing from an unseeded flight, ranking outside the top 30 long jumpers in the event.

But the junior from Nesconset, N.Y. broke through on her third and final attempt, leaping 20 feet, 2 1/4 inches to climb into second place.

Sue-Kam-Ling then faced a tense wait as the meet’s 24 highest-seeded jumpers tried to overtake her mark. Only nine succeeded, leaving the Dolphin with the 11th of the 12 qualifying berths.

UNF’s Kolbe remained smoothly on course in her 800 heat, leading nearly wire to wire in 2:02.29. Her time ranked fifth among all first-round participants ahead of the May 31 second round.

Former Bishop Kenny runner Ka’Myya Haywood moved on with the No. 9 time in the women’s 800, but Kolbe’s UNF teammate, Ella Chandler, placed 39th in the race, one of several others with local ties not advancing to the next stage.

For JU, Cassidra Thompson placed 27th in the women’s 400 heats, only 0.13 from the last at-large spot, and Cassie Thompson came in 29th in the women’s 200, just 0.12 away. Also in individual events were Miami’s Brittney Jennings (Creekside, 41st in women’s 100 hurdles), South Florida’s Terren Peterson (Mandarin, 38th in women’s 200), Navy’s Layne Rivera (Bolles, 48th in women’s javelin) and South Florida’s Skyler Watts (Episcopal, 39th in women’s 400).



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New York Times, Amazon sign AI licensing deal

The Amazon.com logo and stock price information is seen on screens at the Nasdaq Market Site in New York City, New York, U.S., September 4, 2018. (REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo) Staff Reports | REUTERS The New York Times said on Thursday it would license its editorial content to Amazon.com for use in the tech giant’s artificial-intelligence […]

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Photo of AmazonPhoto of Amazon
The Amazon.com logo and stock price information is seen on screens at the Nasdaq Market Site in New York City, New York, U.S., September 4, 2018. (REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo)
Staff Reports | REUTERS

The New York Times said on Thursday it would license its editorial content to Amazon.com for use in the tech giant’s artificial-intelligence products, marking the publisher’s first licensing deal tied to generative AI.

The multi-year agreement allows Amazon access to its news articles and content from NYT Cooking and sports website The Athletic.

“This will include real-time display of summaries and short excerpts of Times content within Amazon products and services, such as Alexa, and training Amazon’s proprietary foundation models,” the publisher said.

NYT recorded $4.4 million in pretax litigation costs in the first quarter related to its copyright lawsuit against Microsoft and ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, which it filed in 2023.

Editor’s Note: Reporting by Jaspreet Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika Syamnath

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Air Force Academy Athletics

COLLEGE STATION, Texas – Junior India Jones represented the Air Force track and field team this evening (May 29), as the women opened competition at the West Preliminary of the NCAA Outdoor Championships in College Station, Texas.   Jones, who celebrated her birthday with a 25-lap circuit around the track at E.B. Cushing Stadium, clocked […]

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COLLEGE STATION, Texas – Junior India Jones represented the Air Force track and field team this evening (May 29), as the women opened competition at the West Preliminary of the NCAA Outdoor Championships in College Station, Texas.
 
Jones, who celebrated her birthday with a 25-lap circuit around the track at E.B. Cushing Stadium, clocked a time of 35:10.87 to place 25th out of 48 runners in the regional final of the outdoor season’s longest event. The finish, eight spots above her original seeding, was second among the six conference runners in that race.
 

The Falcons are back at Texas A&M tomorrow (May 30) for the third day of action at the NCAA West Prelim. Junior Texas Tanner will compete in the discus throw at 1:00 p.m., while the men’s 4×100-meter relay will run at 4:00 p.m. (all times Central).

 



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Montes de Oca Punches Ticket to Eugene

Story Links JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – On Thursday afternoon, Ricardo Montes de Oca from the High Point University men’s track and field team represented the Panthers in the men’s pole vault at the NCAA East First Rounds. The freshman from Venezuela qualified for the NCAA Championships in Eugene, Oregon, becoming the first […]

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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – On Thursday afternoon, Ricardo Montes de Oca from the High Point University men’s track and field team represented the Panthers in the men’s pole vault at the NCAA East First Rounds. The freshman from Venezuela qualified for the NCAA Championships in Eugene, Oregon, becoming the first men’s pole vaulter to punch their ticket to the big dance.
 
The final 12 competitors advanced to the NCAA Championships in each field and Montes de Oca made the cut after clearing three bars. He opened the day at 5.03m, clearing it with ease on his first attempt. He continued his first attempt streak clearing the second bar at 5.18m.
 
Moving on to the third bar along with 15 other athletes, Montes de Oca missed on his first and second attempts. Not feeling any pressure as a young freshman at his first NCAA’s, he regrouped on his third attempt and sailed over 5.43m. He landed a spot in the top 12 and will advance to the NCAA Championships in Eugene, OR and will compete on Wednesday, June 11 at 4:35 p.m. at Hayward Field.
 
Brianna Malone competed in the women’s 1500m first rounds on Thursday afternoon. She paced with the front group of runners in the second heat and crossed the finish line in the top five to qualify for the quarterfinals. She clocked a 4:15.50 time. She will compete in the quarterfinals on Saturday, May 31 at 5:15 p.m. The top 12 athletes will move on to the NCAA Championships in June.
 
Due to weather delays, Emily Romano, Auriane Viola and Sydney Horn will resume the women’s pole vault on Friday at 9:30 a.m. Rachel Vesper and Jackson Tuomey also competed in the pole vault on Thursday and concluded their seasons.
 
On Wednesday, Drew Noblet represented the Panthers in the men’s javelin to jumpstart the events. He placed 32nd in his first-ever NCAA First Round appearance, launching the spear 62.13m on his birthday.
 
Weather delays halted the next events, pushing Justin Sluijter to a 10:00 p.m. jump as he registered a second jump of 7.32m to finish 20th. It was the Dutchman’s first time competing at the NCAA East First Round.
 
Camerin Williams wrapped up the opening day, running in the 800m at nearly midnight and advancing to the quarterfinals on Friday at 7:05 p.m. for a spot in Eugene. The freshman set a new personal best and program record with his third-place 1:47.11 finish.
 

#GoHPU x #DefendTheTeam

 
 



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