Sports
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 […]

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.
Sports
BYU’s Lexy Lowry destroys national record, finishes 2nd in NCAA steeplechase – Deseret News
BYU’s Lexy Lowry destroyed the national record in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at Saturday’s NCAA track and field championships in Eugene, Oregon. Unfortunately for her, someone else broke it ahead of her. Alabama’s Doris Lemngole, a sophomore from Kenya, crossed the finish line with an astounding time of 8:58.15. Not only did Lemngole run the fastest […]

BYU’s Lexy Lowry destroyed the national record in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at Saturday’s NCAA track and field championships in Eugene, Oregon.
Unfortunately for her, someone else broke it ahead of her.
Alabama’s Doris Lemngole, a sophomore from Kenya, crossed the finish line with an astounding time of 8:58.15. Not only did Lemngole run the fastest time in the world this year by 4 ½ seconds, but it was also the ninth fastest time ever.

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She also broke her own collegiate record by nearly 12 seconds.
In finishing second, Lowry broke the BYU school record — set by Courtney Wayment en route to winning the 2022 NCAA championships — by 7 ½ seconds and recorded the sixth-fastest time in the world this year.
She improved her personal record by 10 seconds.
In the day’s other big local news, BYU’s Meghan Hunter, a senior from Provo, finished third in the fastest collegiate 800-meter run ever, and Sami Oblad became the school’s first first-team All-American sprinter.
BYU finished 18th in the team race, with 16 points.
Right from the start in the steeplechase, Lemngole and Lowry broke away and opened a huge gap on the rest of the field. Everyone else was running for third.
Lowry ran within a stride or two of Lemngole for four of the race’s 7 ½ laps and then the Kenyan’s wilting pace began to take its toll. Lemngole pulled away from her challenger and won by 10 seconds.
Lowry finished eight seconds ahead of the third-place finisher. Lowry’s teammate, the fast-rising Taylor Lovell, was placed ninth with a time of 9:39.43 – same as her ninth-place finish in last year’s race, only 10 seconds faster.
Pity Lowry. If not for Lemngole, she would own two national championships. She also finished second to Lemngole in the NCAA indoor championships 5,000-meter run in March (Lemngole and Lowry also finished 2-3, respectively, in the indoor 3,000 24 hours later).
Lowry, a senior from Meridian, Idaho, has to be considered a contender to make the U.S. World Championships team (she easily surpassed the automatic qualifying time on Saturday; now she must place among the top three at the U.S. national championships later this summer).
Undoubtedly, she will receive several contract offers from shoe companies to continue her career as a professional.
Lowry might be the most accomplished female distance runner in BYU history. She is the second-fastest collegian ever in the steeplechase and the fifth-fastest collegian ever at 5,000 meters. This season she set school records in the steeplechase, the indoor and outdoor 5,000-meter run and the indoor 3,000-meter run.
She was eighth in last summer’s U.S. Olympic trials and has improved dramatically since then.
Like Lemngole and Lowry in the steeplechase, Hunter and LSU’s Michaela Rose broke away from the field at the sound of the gun in the 800-meter run and opened a big gap.
Rose set a blistering — if not foolish — pace of 56.09 for the first lap, and Hunter followed in 56.41. It proved to be too much.
Stanford’s Roisin Willis, a former NCAA indoor champion, ran a more measured race and passed Rose and Hunter in the middle of the homestretch to win with a meet-record time of 1:58.13.
North Carolina’s Makayla Rose passed Hunter at the finish line to take second in 1:58.97. Hunter was third in 1:59.03. Rose, the 2023 NCAA champion, faded to fourth.
It is believed to be the fastest 800-meter race in NCAA history, with five runners dipping under two minutes. Hunter ends her collegiate career as the fourth-fastest collegian ever.
Meanwhile, Oblad, the converted heptathlete and high jumper from Stansbury Park, placed seventh in the 400-meter dash with a time of 51.57 to earn first-team All-America honors (awarded to the top eight finishers in each event).
She is the most decorated female sprinter in school history.
BYU, one of the premier distance-running schools in the nation, has competed in collegiate track and field for 43 years and has totaled some 290 event qualifiers for the NCAA championships during that time.
Only seven of them qualified in an individual sprint race — the 100, 200 or 400 — and none of them advanced to the finals until Oblad did it this week. She set an eye-popping school record of 50.49 a month ago.
In other local developments, Southern Utah’s Aja Hughes, a junior from New Mexico, earned first-team All-American honors by finishing eighth in the high jump.
It was a tight competition to say the least. Seven jumpers had a best jump of 5 feet, 10 ½ inches, and 15 jumpers cleared 5-8 ½, Hughes among them. The placements were based on fewest misses. Nebraska’s Jenna Rogers won the competition.
BYU’s Jenna Hutchins challenged the leaders with one lap to go in the 5,000-meter run, but when the field shifted to a sprint in the final 150 meters, she faded to 11th place with a time of 15:40.87.
BYU’s Gretchen Hoekstre, the school record holder in the discus, placed 22nd in that event with a throw of 165 feet, 7 inches.
Sports
Coronado Woman’s Club Supports The Fourth … | Coronado Island News
Coronado volunteers coming together to make the Coronado Fourth of July a day to enjoy and remember! Sponsorship from groups like the amazing Coronado Woman’s Club makes our big day possible. Pictured (L-R) Bridgette Jorgenson (CFOJ), Debbie Quigley (CWC), Emily Williamson (CWC), Jamie Hartnett (CFOJ), Ana Magdaleno (CWC), Kathy Fink (CWC), Virginia Bayer (CWC), and […]

Coronado volunteers coming together to make the Coronado Fourth of July a day to enjoy and remember! Sponsorship from groups like the amazing Coronado Woman’s Club makes our big day possible. Pictured (L-R) Bridgette Jorgenson (CFOJ), Debbie Quigley (CWC), Emily Williamson (CWC), Jamie Hartnett (CFOJ), Ana Magdaleno (CWC), Kathy Fink (CWC), Virginia Bayer (CWC), and Debbie Balsley (CFOJ).
VOL. 115, NO. 24 – June 11, 2025
Sports
Big 12 Track and Field Teams Conclude 2025 Season at NCAA Championships with Three Individual Titles
Story Links The 2025 NCAA DI outdoor track and field season concluded following four days of action in Eugene, Oregon at Hayward Field. All 16 Big 12 programs were represented at the national championship, with three Conference student-athletes securing individual NCAA titles. A total of 16 gold, silver or bronze medals […]

The 2025 NCAA DI outdoor track and field season concluded following four days of action in Eugene, Oregon at Hayward Field. All 16 Big 12 programs were represented at the national championship, with three Conference student-athletes securing individual NCAA titles.
A total of 16 gold, silver or bronze medals were collected by Big 12 student-athletes during the week’s competition.
On the men’s side, BYU and Oklahoma State tied for 11th place with 19 points each, while Kansas’ 16.5 points posted the Jayhawks in 16th place. Texas Tech’s 16 points tied them for 17th. Houston rounded out the Conference’s top-20 finishers at 19 with 15 points.
The Red Raider women tallied 22 points for a 12th-place finish to lead the league’s teams within the top-20. BYU earned 16 points to place 18th, while TCU tied for 20th with 13 points.
Three individual titles were collected by Big 12 runners on Friday during the final day of competition on the men’s side as BYU’s James Corrigan collected the program’s second men’s 3,000-meter steeplechase title in three seasons with a time of 8:16.41.
Continuing his record-breaking season in the men’s 400-meter hurdles, BU’s Nathaniel Ezekiel set a personal best time of 47.49 in the event after already besting his previous NCAA-leading time multiple times this season.
The Cowboys’ Brian Musau rounded out the Big 12’s individual event titles after sweeping both the indoor and outdoor men’s 5,000-meter NCAA titles with a time of 13:20.59.
Additionally, the Conference posted an excellent display in the men’s 110-meter hurdles as hurdlers from three different Big 12 programs placed second through fifth. Arizona’s Zach Extine earned the silver medal, followed by Houston’s John Adesola and Jamar Marshall Jr. finishing third and fourth, respectively, as Baylor’s Demario Prince rounded out the event’s top five finishers.
NCAA Individual Champions
Nathaniel Ezekiel, Baylor – Men’s 400 Meter Hurdles (47.49)
James Corrigan, BYU – Men’s 3,000 Meter Steeplechase (8:16.41)
Brian Musau, Oklahoma State – Men’s 5,000 Meters (13:20.59)
Silver Medal Winners
Zach Extine, Arizona – Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles (13.13)
Alexis Brown, Baylor – Women’s Long Jump (6.63 meters)
Lexy Halladay-Lowry, BYU – Women’s 3,000 Meters Steeplechase (9:08.68)
Ashton Barkdull, Kansas – Men’s Pole Vault (5.73 meters)
Blair Anderson, Oklahoma State – Men’s Long Jump (8.02 meters)
Shelby Frank, Texas Tech – Women’s Hammer Throw (71.05 meters)
Bronze Medal Winners
Meghan Hunter, BYU – Women’s 800 Meters (1:59.03)
John Adesola, Houston – Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles (13.28)
Emil Uhlin, K-State – Men’s Decathlon (7,859 points)
Irene Jepkemboi, TCU – Women’s Javelin (60.31 meters)
Ernest Cheruiyot, Texas Tech – Men’s 10,000 Meters (29:10.37)
Shelby Frank, Texas Tech – Women’s Discus Throw (63.37 meters)
Joy Naukot, West Virginia – Women’s 10,000 Meters (31:34.34)
Sports
Club Four sending two teams to USA Volleyball junior national championships in Dallas
QUINCY — The confidence the Club Four Volleyball Club’s 14 Boost players gained from a successful showing at the 2024 USA Volleyball Girls Junior National Championship at the 13U level has helped them earn to a return trip to nationals this year. All but one of the players on this year’s roster was on the […]

QUINCY — The confidence the Club Four Volleyball Club’s 14 Boost players gained from a successful showing at the 2024 USA Volleyball Girls Junior National Championship at the 13U level has helped them earn to a return trip to nationals this year.
All but one of the players on this year’s roster was on the team last season that finished third after not earning a bid, but applying for an at-large bid.
“It definitely boosted our confidence because going into it, we were like, ‘Oh, we didn’t get a bid. All these teams got bids,’” said Paisley Patterson, a right side who attends Barry Western. “There were people like, ‘Oh, you’re paying to go?’ Then we came out and got third, and that drove us this year. We want to do even better this year.”
The tournament will be played June 25-28 at the Kay Bailey Hutchinson Convention Center in Dallas, the same location as last year’s 13U national tournament.
Morgan Mueller, an outside hitter and incoming freshman at Quincy Notre Dame, said last year’s team had plenty of butterflies ahead of their trek to Dallas.
Mueller expects a different mentality from her and her teammates this time around.
“I feel like we’re not as nervous this year, and we’re more excited,” Mueller said. “Last year was our first year playing together, and this year, we’re better friends and used to the place, so I feel like we’re going to do well this year.”
Sarah Janes, the 14 Boost coach, anticipates the same thing.
“Last year, they went in and were a little bit timid, but I think they’re going to kill it this year,” Janes said. “At least I expect them to.”
This Club Four team earned a bid to the national tournament by finishing seventh in the Donna Mayer Gateway Big Event in St. Louis in April. The club went 5-2 in the three-day tournament.
“We’re definitely playing with a lot of confidence at these tournaments this year,” said Cadence Smith, a middle blocker and incoming sophomore at QND. “We just keep working harder and harder, and it keeps getting higher and higher. Every time we do well in tournaments, it just gets better.”


The 14 Boost team will not be Club Four’s lone representative in Dallas, though. The 16 Boost team also qualified for the national tournament by winning the the Show Me Qualifier on April 14.
“A lot of us were emotional,” said Leah Knudson, the team’s libero and an incoming junior at Quincy High School. “Winning a qualifier was one of our goals at the beginning of the season.”
Knudson’s QHS and 16 Boost teammate, Madison Loos, missed the first day of that qualifier — Quincy’s prom was the same day — but she and her family left in the wee hours of the morning on April 13 to make it to Kansas City in time.
“It was tough, but energy drinks got me through,” Loos said. “I did sleep on the way there.”
Loos got enough rest to help her team reach Monday’s championship game against the KC Voltage.
“We walked up to our court for the championship game and there were these two huge girls,” Loos said. “We never thought, ‘Oh, we don’t have a chance,’ but we just went out there and gave it our all.”
Club Four was not intimidated. It won 26-24, 25-20, punctuating a bid to nationals.
“I was just so proud of everybody, and I started sobbing,” said Kate Gramke, an outside hitter from QND. “I was so excited.”
Like the 14s, the players on the 16 Boost roster have been to nationals, as well, having gone last year. Josie Stanford, who coaches the 16 and 18 Boost teams, said that experience along with scrimmages against some of the 18 Boost players leading up to the tournament have prepared her players for what lies ahead.
“We’re doing everything in this gym to make us ready for Dallas,” Stanford said. “Last year, we prepared, but we weren’t as prepared as we’d like to be.”
That has changed this year.
“We’re trying to prove ourselves and show who we are,” Gramke said. “Not many people know of us, so we have to make a good impression.”
Sports
Georgia women soar to first outdoor track championship
Jun 15, 2025, 12:58 AM ET EUGENE, Ore. — Buoyed by top performances in the hammer throw, high jump and 400 meters, the Georgia women’s track and field squad distanced itself from the opposition and cruised to its first outdoor national championship Saturday. Georgia lapped the field with 73 points ahead of runner-up USC (47) […]

EUGENE, Ore. — Buoyed by top performances in the hammer throw, high jump and 400 meters, the Georgia women’s track and field squad distanced itself from the opposition and cruised to its first outdoor national championship Saturday.
Georgia lapped the field with 73 points ahead of runner-up USC (47) and third-place Texas A&M (43). Fourth-year Bulldogs coach Caryl Smith Gilbert won national titles at USC in 2018 and 2021.
Olympic gold medalist Aaliyah Butler and Dejanea Oakley took the first two spots in the 400 meters with Butler posting a 49.26 and Oakley a 49.65. Butler’s time was the fifth-best all time for a collegian, and Oakley’s was eighth.
The Bulldogs expanded their lead when Elena Kulichenko won the high jump after tying for the title last year. The Odessa, Russia, native won with a jump of 6 feet, 5 inches.
Michelle Smith, a freshman, finished third in the 400-meter hurdles at 55.20 to clinch the team title. Skylynn Townsend took sixth in the triple jump at 44-4¼.
Georgia ended the night by finishing first in the 4×400-meter relay with a time of 3:23.62 as Butler took the lead in the final leg.
The Bulldogs entered competition Saturday in the lead with 26 points after Stephanie Ratcliffe won the hammer throw Thursday with a nation-leading distance of 234 feet, 2 inches.
Washington and USC shared the lead earlier Saturday night after Washington’s Sophie O’Sullivan won the 1,500 meters and USC’s Samirah Moody won the 100, but Georgia got 18 points from Butler and Oakley and never looked back.
Georgia also got points in the javelin with a second-place finish from freshman Manuela Rotundo and a fourth-place finish from Lianna Davidson. Senior Keslie Murrell-Ross finished sixth in the shot put.
Sports
Valentin Caps Decorated Career with First Team All-American Status to Highlight Panthers’ Performance at NCAA Nationals
Story Links EUGENE, Ore. — FIU track and field’s Michaelle Valentin, competing in discus, earned the fifth All-American honor of her career as the Panthers wrapped up their week at the 2025 NCAA Championships, hosted by Oregon. Valentin closed her illustrious FIU career in style with her first-ever First Team honor, placing […]

EUGENE, Ore. — FIU track and field’s Michaelle Valentin, competing in discus, earned the fifth All-American honor of her career as the Panthers wrapped up their week at the 2025 NCAA Championships, hosted by Oregon.
Valentin closed her illustrious FIU career in style with her first-ever First Team honor, placing 8th-nationally in the women’s discus final. She is the first Panther to earn First Team All-America honors since Rhema Otabor finished fourth in the javelin in 2022.
Valentin’s throw of 59.67 meters was the second-best in her flight and seventh-best in the opening round, qualifying her for the finals. The Haitian-national caps her FIU tenure with three outdoor All-American awards in Discus, adding the First Team accolades in 2025 to Second Team recognition in both 2023 and 2024. She was also an Outdoor Second Team honoree in the Hammer in 2024 and Indoor Second Team member in the weight throw this season.
Arndis Oskarsdottir also competed for the Panthers at the NCAA Championships, participating in the women’s javelin final on Thursday. The freshman placed 19th with a throw of 49.96 meters, earning honorable mention All-America status.
SOCIAL MEDIA
Get all the latest information on the team by following @FIUTrackXC on Twitter, @FIUTrackXC on Instagram and @FIUTrackXC on Facebook. General athletic news can also be found at @FIUSports on Facebook and @FIUAthletics on Twitter and Instagram.
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