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Chicago Cubs Minor League Wrap

Right-hander Nolan Clenney was promoted to Double-A Knoxville from High-A South Bend. Iowa Cubs Rained out in Louisville. Doubleheader tomorrow (Friday). Knoxville Smokies The Knoxville Smokies were speared by the Pensacola Blue Wahoos (Marlins), 3-0. Chris Kachmar started and got the loss as a victim of non-support. Kachmar allowed two runs on six hits over […]

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Chicago Cubs Minor League Wrap

Right-hander Nolan Clenney was promoted to Double-A Knoxville from High-A South Bend.

Iowa Cubs

Rained out in Louisville. Doubleheader tomorrow (Friday).

Knoxville Smokies

The Knoxville Smokies were speared by the Pensacola Blue Wahoos (Marlins), 3-0.

Chris Kachmar started and got the loss as a victim of non-support. Kachmar allowed two runs on six hits over 5.2 innings. Kachmar walked two and struck out three.

Third baseman BJ Murray Jr. went 2 for 3 with a walk.

The Smokies had just three hits, all singles. Center fielder Jaylen Palmer was 1 for 3.

South Bend Cubs

The South Bend Cubs couldn’t fly with the Beloit Sky Carp (Marlins), 3-0.

Starter Jaxon Wiggins pitched well, but he took the loss anyway. Wiggins allowed just one unearned run on three hits over four innings. Wiggins struck out seven and walked two.

Evan Aschenbeck made his South Bend debut in delief of Wiggins and he gave up his first earned run of the year. But he still looked good, allowing just one run on three hits over four innings. He walked two and struck out three.

The Cubs were being no-hit until shortstop Cristian Hernandez led off the bottom of the ninth with a clean single. Hernandez was 1 for 3 with a walk. It was South Bend’s only hit of the night.

Some Jaxon Wiggins highlights.

Myrtle Beach Pelicans

The Myrtle Beach Pelicans split a doubleheader with the Kannapolis Cannon Ballers (White Sox), losing game one 6-1 and winning the second game 10-2.

Will Frisch started game one and surrendered four runs on three hits and two walks over three innings. Frisch also hit a batter. He struck out five.

Center fielder Alexey Lumpuy tripled in the third inning and scored on a sacrifice fly for the Pelicans only run of game one. Lumpuy was 1 for 3.

The Birds had just three hits in game one. DH Cole Mathis was 2 for 3 with a double.

In game two, Nazier Mulé got the start and the win. He allowed two runs on three hits over 5.1 innings. Mulé walked four, hit one and struck out seven.

The Pelicans scored all ten runs in the bottom of the fifth inning, sending 15 batters to the plate. The biggest blow was a bases-loaded, three-run triple by catcher Owen Ayers. Ayers was 2 for 3 with one run scored.

Center fielder Leonel Espinoza was 1 for 4 with a two-run single in the fifth. He scored on Ayers’ triple.

Shortstop Eriandys Ramon was 1 for 2 with a walk and an RBI single to plate the first run in the fifth. Ramon also scored one run.

Ayers’ triple.

Full highlights.

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ICE detains Milford High student on his way to volleyball practice

Milford school superintendent Kevin McIntyre did not immediately return the Globe’s request for comment Saturday. In a statement to WCVB-TV, he confirmed that a high school student had been detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents somewhere off campus on Saturday. School committee chair Matthew Zacchilli deferred comment to McIntyre’s office on Saturday night. […]

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Milford school superintendent Kevin McIntyre did not immediately return the Globe’s request for comment Saturday. In a statement to WCVB-TV, he confirmed that a high school student had been detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents somewhere off campus on Saturday.

School committee chair Matthew Zacchilli deferred comment to McIntyre’s office on Saturday night.

Craig, an interim assistant principal at Stacy Middle School, declined to share the student’s name, but called him “an integral part” of the school and town community. She said she had first heard the news from several other educators in the district.

In a phone call Saturday night, boys’ volleyball coach Andrew Mainini said the rest of the team was “devastated” when they heard the news.

“I expected them to be upset,” Mainini said. “But they were more upset than I could have ever imagined.”

Mainini said the detained student was a “model citizen” who was enrolled in honors classes and, as a member of the school band, an “exceptional musician.”

Describing the student as a “great kid,” Craig said the student had his “issues” in middle school, but stressed that he had “matured” since then. Aside from his role on the boys’ volleyball team, she said he was known for helping coach girls’ volleyball and taking care of his younger siblings, who also attend Milford Public Schools.

The news of his detention, she added, was “heartbreaking.”

“He’s been in this country since he was 5,” Craig said. “Where is he going to be sent? He can’t function [on his own].”

The student’s country of birth was not made public on Saturday.

According to a post circulating on social media, a rally to “support our students” is scheduled to be held in front of Milford Town Hall at noon Sunday — immediately after the conclusion of Milford High’s graduation ceremony, which is scheduled to start at 10 a.m.

“Please join us for a peaceful, community-led demonstration in front of Milford Town Hall as we come together to show support for our students and families who are facing unjust treatment and fear,” reads the post.

It’s not clear from the post who is organizing the rally, but school committee member Michael Aghajanian described it as a “student and community lead grassroots event.”

Craig said that many educators and school community members plan to attend to show their support for the detained student and his family.

Nicholas Molinari, president of the Milford Teachers Association, said in a brief phone call Saturday night that he intended to discuss the situation with the association’s executive board.

As part of the rally, students are planning to march from Milford High, where graduation is being held, to town hall at 11:45 a.m. Sunday, according to the school’s first-year student council.


Camilo Fonseca can be reached at camilo.fonseca@globe.com. Follow him on X @fonseca_esq and on Instagram @camilo_fonseca.reports.





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Trans athlete wins girl high jump event at California track and field finals

CLOVIS, Calif. (AP) — A transgender athlete bested the competition Saturday at the California high school track and field championship to take home her first gold in the girls high jump at a meet that has stirred controversy and drawn national attention. AB Hernandez — a trans student who on Friday finished ahead in the […]

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CLOVIS, Calif. (AP) — A transgender athlete bested the competition Saturday at the California high school track and field championship to take home her first gold in the girls high jump at a meet that has stirred controversy and drawn national attention.

AB Hernandez — a trans student who on Friday finished ahead in the girls high jump, long jump and triple jump qualifying events — competed under a new rule change that may be the first of its kind nationally by a high school sports governing body.

On Saturday, she finished the high jump with a mark of 5 feet, 7 inches (1.7 meters), with no failed attempts. The co-winners, Jillene Wetteland and Lelani Laruelle, also cleared the bar at that height after each logged a failed attempt. The three shared the first-place win and the podium because of a new policy in California.

Hernandez placed second in the girls long jump and was a top contender in the girls triple jump.

Olympians Marion Jones and Tara Davis-Woodhall previously set state championship records in the long jump in 1993 and 2017, respectively, both surpassing 22 feet (6.7 meters). This year’s winner, Loren Webster, topped 21 feet (6.40 meters), with Hernandez trailing by a few inches.

The California Interscholastic Federation announced the new policy earlier this week in response to Hernandez’s success. Under the policy, the federation allowed an additional student to compete and medal in the events where Hernandez qualified.

The two-day championship kicked off Friday in the sweltering heat at high school near Fresno, and more hot temperatures followed Saturday for the finals.

The atmosphere was relatively quiet despite critics — including parents, conservative activists and President Donald Trump — calling for Hernandez to be barred from competing with girls. Some critics wore pink bracelets and T-shirts that read “Save Girls’ Sports.”

During Friday’s qualifying events, an aircraft circled above the stadium for more than an hour, carrying a banner that read: “No Boys in Girls’ Sports!” Two groups — the Independent Council on Women’s Sports and Women Are Real — that oppose transgender athletes participating in women’s sports took credit for flying the banner.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

CLOVIS, Calif. (AP) — A transgender teen is competing in the California high school track-and-field finals on Saturday, one day after advancing in the competition as a protest plane circled about the meet that has drawn national attention, including criticism from President Donald Trump.

AB Hernandez — a trans student who on Friday finished as the top qualifier in the girls high jump, long jump and triple jump — is in the finals Saturday, competing under a new rule change that may be the first of its kind nationally by a high school sports governing body.

The California Interscholastic Federation announced the policy earlier this week in response to Hernandez’s success. Under the policy, the federation will let an additional student compete and medal in the events where Hernandez qualified.

The two-day championship kicked off Friday in the sweltering heat at high school near Fresno, with more hot temperatures on tap for Saturday’s finals. The atmosphere has been relatively quiet despite critics — including parents, conservative activists and Trump — calling for Hernandez to be barred from competing with girls.

A man used a megaphone to shout “No boys in girls’ sports” as Hernandez and her group prepared for the long jump final. Other critics in the stands wore “Save Girls’ Sports” T-shirts. The day before an aircraft circled above the stadium for more than an hour during the qualifying events, carrying a banner that read: “No Boys in Girls’ Sports!”

Separately, one person was arrested outside the competition on Friday after getting in a confrontation with another protester that turned physical, according to the Clovis Police Department.

In the long jump final, Hernandez faulted on her first attempt but spanned just over 20 feet (6.10 meters) on her second to take the lead. The field had four more tries to go.

On Friday, she led in the long jump qualifier with a mark close to 20 feet (6 meters) to advance to the final. She also advanced in the high jump, clearing 5 feet, 5 inches (1.7 meters) with ease and finished the triple jump with a mark close to 41 feet (13 meters) — nearly 10 inches (25 centimeters) ahead of her closest competitor, San Francisco Bay Area junior Kira Gant Hatcher.

California at center of national debate

The federation’s rule change reflects efforts to find a middle ground in the debate over trans girls’ participation in youth sports.

“The CIF values all of our student-athletes and we will continue to uphold our mission of providing students with the opportunity to belong, connect, and compete while complying with California law,” the group said in a statement after announcing its rule change.

A recent AP-NORC poll found that about 7 in 10 U.S. adults think transgender female athletes should not be allowed to participate in girls and women’s sports at the high school, college or professional level. That view was shared by about 9 in 10 Republicans and roughly half of Democrats.

The federation announced the rule change after Trump threatened to pull federal funding from California unless it bars trans female athletes from competing on girls teams. The federation said it decided on the change before then.

The U.S. Department of Justice also said it would investigate the federation and the district that includes Hernandez’s high school to determine whether they violated federal sex discrimination law by allowing trans girls to compete in girls sports.

Some California Republicans also weighed in, with several lawmakers attending a news conference to criticize the federation for keeping Hernandez in the competition.

California law allows trans students to compete on sex-segregated sports teams consistent with their gender identity.

The federation said the rule opens the field to more “biological female” athletes. One expert said the change may itself be discriminatory because it creates an extra spot for “biological female” athletes but not for other trans athletes.

The federation did not specify how they define “biological female” or how they would verify whether a competitor meets that definition.

Hernandez told the publication Capital & Main earlier this month that she couldn’t worry about critics.

“I’m still a child, you’re an adult, and for you to act like a child shows how you are as a person,” she said.

Another student breaks a record

California’s state championship stands out from that of other states because of the sheer number of competitors. The state had the second-largest number of students participating in outdoor track and field in the nation during the 2023-2024 school year, behind Texas, according to a survey by the National Federation of State High School Associations.

Olympians Marion Jones and Tara Davis-Woodhall previously set state championship records in the long jump in 1993 and 2017, respectively, both surpassing 22 feet (6.7 meters).

The boys 100-meter dash heats also were a highlight Friday. Junior Jaden Jefferson of De La Salle High School in Concord finished in 10.01 seconds, about 0.2 seconds faster than a meet record set in 2023. Jefferson’s time won’t count as a record unless he can replicate his results in the final.

___

Austin is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Austin on X: @sophieadanna





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University Northern Iowa

COLLEGE STATION, Tex. — UNI’s Josie Moreland and Emma Hoins rounded out the 2025 outdoor track and field season for the Panthers on Saturday, competing in the women’s high jump and 3,000-meter steeplechase at the NCAA West Preliminary Meet at Texas A&M’s E.B. Cushing Stadium. HOW IT HAPPENED Moreland, making her NCAA Preliminary Meet debut, […]

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COLLEGE STATION, Tex. — UNI’s Josie Moreland and Emma Hoins rounded out the 2025 outdoor track and field season for the Panthers on Saturday, competing in the women’s high jump and 3,000-meter steeplechase at the NCAA West Preliminary Meet at Texas A&M’s E.B. Cushing Stadium.

HOW IT HAPPENED

Moreland, making her NCAA Preliminary Meet debut, cleared five feet, seven and one-quarter inch (1.71m) on her second attempt before coming up short on all three attempts to clear five feet, nine and one-quarter inch (1.76m), finishing in 32nd place in the 48-woman field. The 2025 Missouri Valley Conference (MVC) outdoor high jumping champion, Moreland finishes a strong sophomore season where she posted a career-best mark of five feet, ten inches, a height she cleared to win the Drake Relays title back in April. Moreland also captured the MVC’s indoor high jumping crown in March during an indoor season where she broke UNI’s 43-year old program record at five feet, nine and one-quarter inch (1.76m).

Hoins, who placed 32nd in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the NCAA Prelims a year ago, ran a 10:39.37 to place 37th. Concluding her historic UNI distance career, Hoins, who was the MVC’s runner-up in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the conference meet finishes her time at Northern Iowa as the program’s record holder in the event at 10:15.39, a mark she set in April at the Bryan Clay Invitational in California, along with the second-fastest outdoor mile time in team history (4:26.76).

 

PANTHERS RESULTS AT NCAA WEST PRELIMINARY MEET

Wednesday, May 28

  • Men’s Javelin (First Round) | Justice Miller – 19th – 217 feet, 1 inch (66.18m)
  • Men’s Shot Put (First Round) | Carson Lienau – 22nd – 59 feet, 9 inches (18.29m)
  • Men’s Shot Put (First Round) | Spencer Kessel – 34th – 57 feet, 11 ¾  inches (17.67m)
  • Men’s Shot Put (First Round) | David Russell – 41st – 56 feet, 7 ½  inches  (17.26m)
  • Men’s Pole Vault (Semifinals) | Brendan Safley – 21st – 16 feet, 11 ½ inches (5.17m)
  • Men’s 800m (First Round) | Drake Hanson – 32nd – 1:49.35
  • Men’s 800m (First Round) | Chase Knoche – 37th – 1:50.03


 


Thursday, May 29

  • Women’s Shot Put (First Round) | Katie Fare – 22nd – 51 feet, 5 ¾ inches (15.69m)
  • Women’s 400m Hurdles (First Round) | Carlie Jo Fusco – 42nd – 1:00.76

 

Friday, May 30

  • Men’s 4x400m Relay (Quarterfinals) | Butcher, Kiewiet, Hanson, Fall – 19th – 3:08.36

 

Saturday, May 31

  • 3:30 p.m. CT – Women’s High Jump (Semifinal) – Josie Moreland – 32nd – 5 feet, 7 ¼ inch (1.71m)
  • 5:40 p.m. CT – Women’s 3,000m Steeplechase (Quarterfinals) – Emma Hoins – 37th – 10:39.37

 

UNI track and field action can be followed all season long on social media on Facebook (UNI Track and Field), X (@UNITrackFieldXC) and on Instagram (@uni_tf_xc). Schedules and rosters, along with the latest Panther news and information can be found online at UNIpanthers.com.



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University of North Texas

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — The outdoor season came to an end for the UNT track and field program on Saturday with the conclusion of the NCAA West Preliminary Rounds in College Station, Texas.   The Mean Green had 12 qualifiers in individual events, marking the most of the Doug Marshall era and tying the most […]

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COLLEGE STATION, Texas — The outdoor season came to an end for the UNT track and field program on Saturday with the conclusion of the NCAA West Preliminary Rounds in College Station, Texas.
 
The Mean Green had 12 qualifiers in individual events, marking the most of the Doug Marshall era and tying the most since 2010.
 
Hendrick Hundl and Chase Lehr advanced to the quarterfinals in their respective events, while Jake Parchman was just two spots shy of a trip to the NCAA Championships in the hammer throw.
 
Parchman wrapped up his decorated career with his second appearance at the regional meet. The American Athletic Conference champion posted a mark of 65.09 meters on his first of three attempts. Despite the mark being the fourth best in school history, Parchman finished 14th, coming just short of a berth to Eugene.
 
Hundl also earned a spot in the NCAA West First Round for the second time in his career after doing so at Sam Houston in 2024. Hundl took third in his heat in the first round with a time of 13.83 to automatically advance to the quarterfinals. He became the first UNT athlete to advance to the quarterfinals in the 110-meter hurdles since at least 2005. In the quarterfinals, Hundl clipped the seventh hurdle leading to a time of 14.11 and 20th-place finish.
 
Lehr clocked a personal best 1:48.65 in the prelims to earn a spot in the quarterfinal round of the 800 meters. The sophomore made the most of his opportunity after being a late addition to the field, finishing 22nd in the region.
 
The men’s team also saw Vitus Hansgaard wrap up his career in his fourth appearance at the NCAA West Preliminary Round. Hansgaard placed one spot ahead of teammate Akeel Hanchard, who was making his first appearance in the national postseason. The duo placed 32nd and 33rd with throws of 62.91 meters and 62.47 meters.
 
Derrick Warren and Clarence McGill also competed Wednesday in the first round for the Mean Green. Warren placed No. 41 with a mark of 7.04 meters in the long jump, while McGill’s time of 51.75 in the 400-meter hurdles was good for 35th place.
 
The women’s team had five representatives at the meet with two on the track and three in field events.
 
Aariyana Williams nearly made it to the quarterfinals in the 400 meters with a time of 53.16 to place No. 25. It was the third consecutive race that Williams clocked a 53.16, tying her personal best and the second-fastest mark in school history. Morgan Taylor ended her career by taking 45th place in the 100-meter hurdles with a time of 14.09.
 
Mackenzie Kuehl was the first of the women’s athletes to compete on Thursday, The junior placed No. 34 in the javelin throw with a mark of 44.71 meters in her first regional appearance. Meanwhile, Ava Roberts put a bow on a stellar freshman season that featured two all-conference honors with a 38th-place finish in the shot put. Brya Brewer was the final North Texas athlete to compete with the women’s triple jump being contested on Saturday, but failed to record a mark.



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Mavs Wrap Up Outdoor Season At NCAA West Regional

Story Links 2025 West Regional Women’s 800m Quarterfinals Final Results COLLEGE STATION, Texas – The 2025 outdoor season came to a close for the UT Arlington track and field team on the fourth and final day of the NCAA West Regional at E.B. Cushing Stadium […]

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COLLEGE STATION, Texas – The 2025 outdoor season came to a close for the UT Arlington track and field team on the fourth and final day of the NCAA West Regional at E.B. Cushing Stadium on the campus of Texas A&M down in College Station.
 
Winnie Kipsang was the lone Maverick to compete on the day, looking to punch her ticket to TrackTown USA in the women’s 800m. The top three from each heat plus the next three fastest times move on to Eugene. Kipsang ran in heat two of three, finishing fifth overall with a time of 2:04.66. It was Kipsang’s fastest time of the outdoor season and just short of her personal record of 2:04.61.
 
Kipsang fell just short of moving on to Eugene, finishing 14th overall with the top 12 moving on.
 

– #BuckEm –

 
FOLLOW ALONG
For updates, behind-the-scenes photos, videos and more engaging and personal content, be sure to follow the UTA track and field and cross country teams on X (formally known as Twitter) (@UTAMavsTFXC), Instagram (@UTAMavsTFXC) and Facebook (/UTAMavsTFXC).
 





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MHSAA Division 1 track and field state championship complete results

The MHSAA Division 1 track and field state championship meet occurred on Saturday, May 31, at East Kentwood High School. Belleville won the boys track and field championship for the first time in school history. Belleville finished with 57 points, followed by Northville (35 points) and Grand Haven (31 points). Oak Park finished as the […]

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The MHSAA Division 1 track and field state championship meet occurred on Saturday, May 31, at East Kentwood High School.

Belleville won the boys track and field championship for the first time in school history. Belleville finished with 57 points, followed by Northville (35 points) and Grand Haven (31 points). Oak Park finished as the Division 1 girls champions for the third straight year with 86 points, followed by Detroit Renaissance (47 points) and Holland West Ottawa (46 points).

Here are the winners from each individual event from the boys and girls events at the track and field finals. Measurements provided by athletic.net.

100m

Boys: Samson Gash, Novi Detroit Catholic Central (10.41); Chance McNeill, Novi (10.42); Jeremy Dixon, Kalamazoo Central (10.45).

Girls: Kamryn Tatum, West Bloomfield (11.66); Jayla Dace, Detroit Renaissance (11.75); Willow Mason, Saginaw Heritage (11.87).

200m

Boys: Jeremy Dixon, Kalamazoo Central (21.11); Chance McNeill, Novi (21.12); Samson Gash, Novi Detroit Catholic Central (21.36).

Girls: Kamryn Tatum, West Bloomfield (23.55); Willow Mason, Saginaw Heritage (23.93); Mauriel Seeberger (23.96).

400m

Boys: Brody Leyendecker, Byron Center (47.96); Rodney Endsley, Walled Lake Western (48.22); Kiniey Poole, Ann Arbor Huron (48.51).

Girls: Neveah Burns, Oak Park (54.34); Janae Coleman, Oak Park (55.04); Mauriel Seeberger, Portage Northern (55.16).

800m

Boys: Wendell Childs, Clarkston (1:50.71); Greg Myers, Ypsilanti Lincoln (1:51.36); Caden Karcher, Rockford (1:54.79).

Girls: Collette Wierks, Holland West Ottawa (2:11.65); Valerie Beeck, Grand Haven (2:11.94); Meredith Cook, Zeeland East (2:13.00)

1600m

Boys: Luka Hammond, Grand Haven (4:09.69); Caden Livermore, Grandville (4:10.17); Jackson Lam, Kalamazoo Loy Norrix (4:14.24).

Girls: Victoria Garces, Midland Dow (4:48.74); Helen Sachs, Holland West Ottawa (4:51.56); Valerie Beeck (4:54.79).

3200m

Boys: Beckett Crooks, Ann Arbor Pioneer (9:00.80); Kyle O’Rourke, Highland-Milford (9:06.54); Kamari Ronfeldt, Ann Arbor Pioneer (9:08.99).

Girls: Helen Sachs, Holland West Ottawa (10:16.56); Natasza Dudek, Ann Arbor Pioneer (10:21.68); Victoria Garces, Midland Dow (10:23.13).

110m hurdles (boys)

Will Jaiden Smith, Belleville (11.35); Schmar Gamble, Belleville (11.36); Michael Wilkerson, Rochester Adams (13.78).

100m hurdles (girls)

Carrie VanNoy, Oak Park (13.70); Laila Hawkins, Detroit Cass Tech (13.98); Mia Barnett, Chippewa Valley (14.10).

300m hurdles

Boys: Will Jaiden Smith, Belleville (37.79); Caleb Washington, Novi Detroit Catholic Central (37.91); Phillip Burney, Oak Park (38.48).

Girls: Carrie VanNoy, Oak Park (42.59); Jada Wilson, Belleville (42.80); Lauren Bickerdt, Detroit Renaissance (43.61).

4×100 relay

Boys: Belleville (41.85), Grand Haven (41.88), Hudsonville (42.14).

Girls: Oak Park (47.19); East Kentwood (47.48); West Bloomfield (47.56).

4×200 relay

Boys: Belleville (1:26.50), Grand Haven (1:26.85), Brighton (1:27.03).

Girls: Oak Park (1:37.80), Saginaw Heritage (1:39.67), West Bloomfield (1:39.97).

4×400 relay

Boys: Oak Park (3:15.52), Bryon Center (3:16.19), Ann Arbor Huron (3:16.85).

Girls: Oak Park (3:53.52), Detroit Renaissance (3:51.59), Holland West Ottawa (3:54.91).

4×800 relay

Boys: Northville (7:41.24), Clarkston (7:42.90), Brighton (7:49.08).

Girls: Holland West Ottawa (9:01.69), Zeeland East (9:10.06), Oak Park (9:11.77).

Shot put

Boys: Garrod Alexander, Walled Lake Central (64′ 1.25″); Maxwell Stoecker, Midland (58′ 10.25″); Dominic Weatherly, L’Anse Creuse (58′ 9″)

Girls: Lorelai Zielinski, Traverse City Central (46′ 11.75″); Leigha Stoepker, Jenison (43′ 11.25″); Izzy Krause, Plymouth (43′ 0.75″).

Discus

Boys: Ray Glory Ejoyokah, Birmingham Groves (179′ 3″); Maxwell Stoecker, Midland (179′ 3″); Conrad Squitieri, Grosse Pointe South (172′ 0″).

Girls: Lorelai Zielinski, Traverse City Central (155′ 1″); Ellie Mendoza, Rochester (141′ 9″); Leigha Stoepker, Jenison (138′ 0″).

Pole vault

Boys: Reece Emeott, East Kentwood (16′ 0″); Grady Myers, Grand Rapids Forest Hills Northern (15′ 3″); Sean Cinzori, Plymouth (15′ 3″).

Girls: Isabel German, Lowell (13′ 0″); Izzy Robbins, Grand Haven (12′ 9″); Raiden Kipfmiller, Dexter (12′ 9″); Aubree Bowers, Grand Rapids Forest Hills Northern (12′ 9″); Katie Blue, Grand Ledge (12′ 9″).

High jump

Boys: Giovanni Charles, Walled Lake Central (6′ 8″); Zechariah Jones, Grand Ledge (6′ 6″); Drelen Lillard, Novi (6′ 6″); Deon Robertson, Woodhaven Brownstown (6′ 6″); Blake Jones, Saginaw United (6′ 6″).

Girls: Greta Caprathe, Rockford (5′ 6″); Tori Lator, Mason (5′ 5″); Layla Visser, Rockford (5′ 4″); Elyse Sanders, Grand Ledge (5′ 4″); Kaydence Hoolsma (5′ 4″).

Long jump

Boys: Quincy Isaac, Canton (24′ 11.5″); Nick Henson, Woodhaven Brownstown (22′ 8.75″); Jhavon Alexander, East Kentwood (22′ 8.5″).

Girls: Maya Justice, Woodhaven Brownstown (19′ 5.25″); Celeste Davis, Detroit Renaissance (18′ 10.25″); Raquel Walker, Muskegon Reeths-Puffer (18′ 7.75″).

Nominate a high school athlete for the Detroit Free Press boys and girls athlete of the week.

Jared Ramsey covers high school sports for the Detroit Free Press. Contact him at jramsey@freepress.com; Follow Jared on X or Bluesky.



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