Connect with us

Sports

CSUN Quartet Opens Competition at NCAA West First Round

Story Links COLLEGE STATION, Texas—CSUN Track & Field opened up the 2025 NCAA West First Round on Wednesday with the Matador men’s team represented in five total events. Despite a number of solid performances in each event, the quartet of Matadors did not advance to the next round. Senior Chase Mars […]

Published

on



COLLEGE STATION, Texas—CSUN Track & Field opened up the 2025 NCAA West First Round on Wednesday with the Matador men’s team represented in five total events. Despite a number of solid performances in each event, the quartet of Matadors did not advance to the next round.

Senior Chase Mars competed in both the 100m and 200m first round competitions on Wednesday. Mars would come the closest to advancing in the 200m, as he finished with a time of 20.94 to take 24th place overall. However, by virtue of finishing outside the top three in his heat (fifth place finish), Mars was denied the chance of advancing to the quarterfinals. In the 100m first round, Mars would take 28th place overall after charting a time of 10.49. Mars’ 100m and 200m regional appearances were the second each of his Matador career. Previously, Mars won the 200m Big West title in 2024 while he competed in last year’s NCAA Outdoor Championships in the event.

In the long jump, junior Joey Nations entered as the No. 37 seed in the competition and would improve to 30th place overall in the competition. His second leap of the day would be his best, which marked at 7.23m (23-8.75), but would fall short of the top 12 that advanced to nationals. Nations’ west regional debut was the first of his Matador career. His 2025 season also included his first career Big West title in the long jump. 

Sophomore Tibyasa Matovu would take 34th place overall in the 400m first round. His time of 46.79 finished fourth in his heat, just missing the cut to the quarterfinals. His regional appearance in 2025 was the first as a collegiate competitor, capping a strong first season with CSUN. Matovu would break the CSUN school 400m outdoor record this season (46.01) while he was the runner up at the Big West Outdoor Championships earlier in May.

Returning to the NCAA West First Round for a fourth time in his career, senior Trey Knight would come up short of qualifying for the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships after fouling his three attempts. Despite the outcome on Wednesday, Knight capped a historic season with CSUN in 2025, which included a second consecutive Big West hammer throw championship as well as a school record toss of 77.91m (255-7) in March. Last season, Knight claimed All-America First Team honors in the hammer throw with a sixth-place finish at the 2024 NCAA Outdoor Championships.

UP NEXT

CSUN’s Summer Mosley and Jasmine Haskell will represent the Matador women’s team on Thursday at the NCAA West First Round. Mosley will compete in the hammer throw beginning at 8:00 a.m. PT while Haskell looks to move on to the quarterfinals as she participates in the 400m at 5:25 p.m. on ESPN+.

On the men’s side, Jay Louison-Roe competes for the Matadors in the triple jump on Friday afternoon at 12:30 p.m. PT.

#GoMatadors

 



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Foley Adds 22 Public Courts for Pickleball and Volleyball

Foley, Ala. — (OBA) — Foley now offers 12 public pickleball courts and 10 sand volleyball courts near the Coastal Alabama Farmer’s and Fishermen’s Market. The city officially opened the new courts on Monday, June 2. Just minutes after the 6 p.m. opening, all 12 pickleball courts were full. Each court had four players enjoying […]

Published

on


Foley, Ala. — (OBA) — Foley now offers 12 public pickleball courts and 10 sand volleyball courts near the Coastal Alabama Farmer’s and Fishermen’s Market. The city officially opened the new courts on Monday, June 2. Just minutes after the 6 p.m. opening, all 12 pickleball courts were full. Each court had four players enjoying the new space.


“Today is a great day for Foley with lighted courts that are free to the public, and we really are looking forward to this being open,” said Mayor Ralph Hellmich.


The mayor said it took years of planning to make the project happen. City staff, contractors, and City Council members worked together to design and build the courts.


He added that David Thompson, the executive director for leisure services, and his team played a big role in getting the job done.


“The planning that went behind this is incredible,” Hellmich said. We wanted it to fit into this acreage here. Councilman (Charles) Ebert was very passionate about maintaining as much open space. We have housing units nearby. We have open space. We’re going to continue to improve all this area, but we believe it all blends together beautifully with the Farmers Market, which is one of the best in our area.”


Impact fees, charges paid by developers building in Foley, paid the cost of the courts.


“This is money that is created by the growth, and it’s used to support the needs of our quality of life for our current residents,” Hellmich said. “This did not come out of any tax dollars that residents who live here in Foley pay. It’s impact fee money, so it’s something that is really an incredible resource for us.”


Thompson said the courts will be a great resource for Foley residents.


“Today is an exciting day for our community,” Thompson said. “We’re officially opening our brand-new pickleball complex and our very first beach volleyball courts, and I have to say, they look amazing. These projects are big wins for our residents, and the best part is they’re open to the public every day until 10 p.m. So whether you’re an early riser or a night owl, we’ve got you covered with lighted courts and no excuses to get out and play.”


“These new facilities aren’t just about sports, they’re about community and about giving people a place to come, move, connect and compete,” Thompson added. 


He said a future phase of the park will also include more passive park areas at the site and restroom facilities shared with other areas of the site. 


Thompson said crews from the Foley Public Works Department built the road linking the new courts to Stabler Drive and the new parking lot for the facility.


Thompson said contractors, including Sawgrass Engineering, WAS Design, Harris Contracting, Asphalt Services and Smith Electric, helped make the project a reality.


Hellmich said the council and city staff members are also working on additional plans for new parks.


“As we bring these projects forward, you’re going to see signs of future park infrastructure, remodeling and things of that nature around town,” Hellmich said. “We’re just going to continue working. We have a plan going forward. We’re going to keep implementing these items. There are great things to come.”



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Standout Student Poe Made Huge Mark in Just Two Years at Livermore | Schools/Education

LIVERMORE – Livermore High School’s Class of 2025 turned its tassels on May 30, marking the end of a high school journey and the beginning of the next chapter. Among the graduating seniors were the year’s top students, Valedictorian Abigail Poe and Salutatorian Lucie Ansell. Abigail Poe Abigail Poe When she packs her bags for […]

Published

on


LIVERMORE – Livermore High School’s Class of 2025 turned its tassels on May 30, marking the end of a high school journey and the beginning of the next chapter.

Among the graduating seniors were the year’s top students, Valedictorian Abigail Poe and Salutatorian Lucie Ansell.

Abigail Poe







LIV-LHS VAL POE.jpg

Abigail Poe


When she packs her bags for UC Berkeley in the fall, Livermore’s valedictorian will be taking with her more than a prestigious accomplishment and a thirst for knowledge. The declared chemistry major will also be taking the support and blessings of her close friends and family.

“I had really good teachers, especially in the honors classes, which was huge,” Poe said. “My dad has also been a huge support and really keeps me grounded.”

Poe’s journey to becoming valedictorian was not a straight line. Born in Orange County, she moved to New Mexico with her parents and two brothers when she was in elementary school, and then to Livermore at the beginning of her junior year in high school.

With just two years at Livermore High, Poe took full advantage of the opportunities there and credits her teachers and supportive family for helping her achieve the highest honors.

“I had it (becoming valedictorian) in the back of my mind freshman and sophomore year, but I was in New Mexico and I was just trying to do the best I could in math and science,” Poe said. “And then when I got to Livermore, I said to myself, ‘Ya know, let’s go for it,’ and I did.”

Not only did she graduate as the school’s valedictorian, but Poe also engaged in several clubs and organizations throughout her academic journey. She participated in the Science Olympiad, a national non-profit STEM competition for middle and high school students. Additionally, Poe was a member of the high school dance team.

“I really like dancing, but I’m not that good at it,” she said, laughing. She is also a volunteer for her church’s worship team.

“That time is a huge thing for me,” she said. In her free time, Poe works at Ophelia’s Kitchen, a local sandwich shop in Livermore.

Now, as she looks ahead, Poe plans to spend the summer working and squeezing in a quick trip to New York City, where she will perform at Carnegie Hall with her high school choir group.

“I’m really hyped about that. I have never been, and I am looking forward to it,” Poe said.

After New York, she will soak up the rest of her senior summer, preparing for Berkeley and all that awaits her.

“I’m really looking forward to taking classes regarding chemistry because I had no room this year. I am very passionate about it and looking forward to taking some courses,” Poe said. “And I am really looking forward to managing my own time … I’m tired of waking up at the same time every day.”

Lucie Ansell







LIV-LHS SAL ANSELL.jpg

Lucie Ansell


If you ask Lucie Ansell how it feels to be Livermore’s salutatorian, she will tell you it feels pretty darn good.

“I was very surprised, but it’s nice to be able to get recognized for that and know that the hours and hours of hard work paid off,” Ansell said.

During her high school career, Ansell was on the swimming and water polo teams, competing on the varsity team for three years in both sports. She also played four years of club water polo. Alongside her sports, Ansell played bass in the Chamber Orchestra and was a member of the Environmental Action and Red Cross clubs, as well as a lifeguard and swim instructor for the Livermore Area Recreation and Park District.

Now, armed with a weighted 4.71 GPA and an acceptance letter from Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Ansell plans to major in computational media, a program that blends computer science, design and communication, with a possible second major in graphic design. Her advice to students beginning their high school careers is to stay focused and balanced.

“What I have learned along the way is that having people around you who support you and are rooting for you is so important,” she said. “Also, take the time to get out of your room, away from studying, and interact with people. I think a lot of people kind of pigeonhole themselves into this academic goal by thinking they have to only study. I think it is more important to have an open mind to everything, along with the classes.”

And so, as Ansell plans and packs for the fall, she will be taking with her a lifetime of memories and a grateful heart.

“I am mostly very excited at this point,” Ansell said. “I kind of got what I needed from high school and I am ready to meet new people and explore new places with peers who are as motivated as I am … but I will definitely miss my family and the community I have built, especially in sports, but I am ready to move on.”





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Enquirer names spring sports nominees for High School Sports Awards

The Cincinnati Enquirer announces its complete list of nominations for the 2025 High School Sports Awards live show, presented by Beacon Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine, which will be Wednesday, June 18, 2025, at Princeton High School’s Matthews Auditorium. The award show will feature Cincinnati Bengals Hall of Famer Anthony Munoz, with Fox 19’s Joe Danneman […]

Published

on


The Cincinnati Enquirer announces its complete list of nominations for the 2025 High School Sports Awards live show, presented by Beacon Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine, which will be Wednesday, June 18, 2025, at Princeton High School’s Matthews Auditorium.

The award show will feature Cincinnati Bengals Hall of Famer Anthony Munoz, with Fox 19’s Joe Danneman joining as a special guest.

All invited athletes are entitled to three tickets. All athletic directors of nominated athletes are also entitled to three tickets, which they can share with their coaches, staff or their athletes. Click here to reserve your free tickets. While these tickets are free, reservations are required to attend. Starting June 12, unclaimed tickets will open for families who need up to three (3) more tickets.

When reserving tickets, please register in the athletes’ or athletic directors’ names. The Enquirer reserves the right to cancel tickets for unrecognized names or multiple reservations past the initial claimed three (3) tickets. 

Athletes should dress up for the event. Scroll down to see the premium and seasonal invitees for spring, winter and fall.

Please note this awards show is not affiliated with the all-city/all-star teams or athlete of the week winners. However, The Enquirer will have a place to pick up athlete of the week certificates at the event. Those not picked up will be mailed to the athletic departments.

Questions? Email mlaughman@enquirer.com.

Premium award nominees for the 2025 Enquirer High School Sports Awards

Boys athlete of the year

Tyler Fryman, Beechwood; Elijah Guttman, Cincinnati Country Day; Patrick McLaughlin, La Salle; Max Mehlman, Batavia; Matt Ponatoski, Moeller; Jaxson Snell, Taylor

Girls athlete of the year

Bailey Bacher, Lakota East; Rodnora Jones, Gamble Montessori; Lily Parke, Beechwood; Abigail Pettyjohn, Deer Park; Grace Pitzer, Mount Notre Dame

Boys coach of the year

Evan Dreyer, Anderson football; Kelven Moss, Lakota West basketball; Tom Rapp, Mason cross country; Frank Russo, Moeller track; Scott Sievering, SCD boys soccer

Girls coach of the year

Alyssa Flading, Roger Bacon volleyball; Carlton Gray, Winton Woods girls basketball; Justin Holthaus, Cooper girls basketball; Gretchen Krumdieck, St. Ursula girls volleyball; Jamie Tipton, Springboro girls soccer; Blaine Wallace, Western Brown softball

Boys team of the year

Aiken boys basketball; Covington Catholic boys tennis; Indian Hill boys soccer; Mason baseball; McNicholas boys volleyball

Girls Team of the Year

Badin flag football; Lawrenceburg girls soccer; Madeira girls soccer; Purcell Marian girls basketball; Seton volleyball

Spring sports nominees for the 2025 Enquirer High School Sports Awards

The Enquirer sports staff chose the following athletes based on several factors, including postseason awards, statistics, college commitments, game-changing ability, team roles and divisional and positional diversity. We asked prominent coaches for feedback in nearly all categories.

Ohio baseball

Joey Buchanan, Milford; Conner Cuozzo, Moeller; Devlan Daniel, Indian Hill; Caleb Driessen, Badin; Eric Fleetwood, Anderson; Derek Fleming, Loveland; Wil Kraus, Oak Hills; Evan Lafferty, MVCA; Matt Ponatoski, Moeller; Jack Ryan, St. Xavier; Wyatt Shaw, Princeton; Zion Theophilus, Moeller; Andrew Visconti, Mason

Northern Kentucky/Indiana baseball

Sam Bond, East Central; Chase Flaherty, Beechwood; Adam Forton, Highlands; Dylan McIntyre, Ryle; Tyler Ruete, Simon Kenton; Tyler Schumacher, Campbell County

Girls flag football

Harlowe Allen, Seton; Ta’Niyah Anderson, Aiken; London Armstrong, Shroder; Aly Beckenhaupt, Mount Notre Dame; Penelope Bolinger, St. Ursula; Lauren Bower, St. Ursula; Jamyala Brown, Spencer; Lauren Enginger, Mercy McAuley; Amiyah Foster, Hughes; Bella Heile, Badin; Charlotte Holm, Seton; Morgan Mitchell, Clark; Tabriyia Richardson, Woodward; Evie Schoolfield, MND; Brooke Sebastian, Badin; Breanne Tereba, Ursuline

Ohio boys lacrosse

Clay Barkimer, Milford; Garrett Brenkert, Sycamore; Seth Farrell, Mariemont; Alex Gordon, Wyoming; Khalif Hocker, St. Xavier; Gus Kleeman, Mason; Sam Koehler, Mariemont; Tyler Lupinski, Mason; Peter Marietta, Mason; Luke Sprong, St. Xavier; Talon Vianello, Mariemont; Trent Yelton, St. Xavier

Northern Kentucky boys lacrosse

Brayden Brzygot, Dixie Heights; Brady Dickman, St. Henry; Ryan Forbes, Cooper; Keegan Gregory, Walton-Verona; Blake Leiker, Ryle; Finn Maddox, Covington Catholic; Gideon Turner, Cooper; Bryson White, Ryle; Aiden Wood, Dixie Heights

Ohio girls lacrosse

Carson Bahl, Indian Hill; Grace Bevington, Ursuline; Marin Bode, Kings; Reilly Hellmann, Ursuline; Cassie Larsen, Indian Hill; Macy LaShells, CHCA; Jane Muller, Mariemont; Jordana Ronis-Tobin, Sycamore; Mandy Schneider, Milford; Faith Sellet, Seton; Charlotte Soller, Mariemont

Northern Kentucky girls lacrosse

Meaghan Bailey, Ryle; Andrea Carothers, Notre Dame; Georgi Kirtley, Notre Dame; Jessica Matusik, Cooper; Grace Panko, Notre Dame; Hannah Powers, Notre Dame; Samantha Sandefur, Cooper; Sarah-Kate Siroky, Dixie Heights

Ohio softball

Kylie Bailey, Waynesville; Olivia Basil, St. Ursula; Kylie Cobb, Talawanda; Alisha Fox, Mason; AnnaBelle Geiser, Mason; Charlee Helton, Western Brown; Ava Hensley, Fairfield; Meghan McClellan, Milford; Grace Parkhurst, Kings and Ella Teubner, Lebanon

Northern Kentucky/Indiana softball

Payton Brown, Highlands; Kaitlyn Dixon, Highlands; Hope Hamilton, Campbell County; Taylor Jones, Simon Kenton; Averie Lightner, Conner; Abby Turnpaugh, Notre Dame

Ohio boys tennis

Drew Baumgartner-Peyton Nelson, Springboro; Greg Bernadsky, Mason; Neelan Gandhi-Michael Ryu, Indian Hill; Gareth Kurowski-Jeremy Starczynowski, Indian Hill; Nihal Narisetty, St. Xavier; Adi Nayak, Seven Hills; Janek Teply-Daniel Tonkal, Mason

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys tennis

Shayaan Ahmad, Villa Madonna; Kalei Christensen-Blake Hussey, Covington Catholic; Jacob Kramer/William Tribble, Covington Catholic; Finley Mackay, Walton-Verona; Neel Reddy, Beechwood; Navneeth Selvaraju, Ryle; Alex Yeager, Covington Catholic

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls tennis

Cassidy Derry-Isabella Norvell, Dixie Heights; Kayla Johnson, Cooper; Sadie Jones, Beechwood; Avery Love-Niveditha Selvaraju, Ryle; Kaylin Lovell, Scott; Julia Lyons, Villa Madonna; Isabella McElwee-Malia Christensen, Notre Dame Academy

Boys volleyball

Cam Evans, St. Xavier; Konnor Farnsworth, Ryle; Bryce Fielman, Milford; Gavin Gerhard, McNicholas; Ethan Gundrum, McNicholas; Carter Lucas, Loveland; Josh Sabin, Fenwick; William Sauer, Moeller; Grant Simer, Lakota East; Joe Taggart, St. Xavier; Tommy Tierney, Elder; Andrew Weigand, Roger Bacon

Ohio boys track and field

Gavin Barry, Moeller; Teague Boland, Moeller; Dom Ellis, St. Xavier; Matt Fogler, Moeller; Nathaniel Gockerman, CHCA; Grant Harrison, New Richmond; David Lorek, Loveland; Joel Nimoh, Lakota West; Cale Wilson, Clinton-Massie; Matthew Wright, Purcell Marian

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys track and field

Charlie Ford, Newport Central Catholic; Will Kemper, East Central; Josiah Lockridge, Lloyd Memorial; Brayden Polly, Simon Kenton; Will Sheets, Covington Catholic; Brennan Simpson, Dixie Heights; Paul Van Laningham, Cooper

Ohio girls track and field

Kristen Berwanger, Mercy McAuley; Delaney Cilley, Loveland; Lily Eagleston, Mason; Emma Goins, Little Miami; Chloe Hamilton, Mercy McAuley; Heidi Harmeyer, Seton; Claire Iaciofano, Turpin; Camille Lewis, Deer Park; Vivian Momper, Madeira; Penelope Webb, Wyoming

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls track and field

Callie Bentley, East Central; Olivia Holbrook, Campbell County; Alexis Howard, Simon Kenton; Caroline Nordman, Beechwood; Lily Parke, Beechwood; Ava Walters, Bishop Brossart; Zoey Woosley, Bishop Brossart

Winter sports nominees for the 2025 Enquirer High School Sports Awards

Boys archery

Jack Albertson, Ryle; Marshall Anstaett, Highlands; Kennan Caudill, Ryle; Logan Hammer, Boone County; Brayden Henry, Boone County; Corbin Jones, Grant County; Brayden Nevels, Cooper; Ethan Pauciulo, Ryle; Kayson Stone, Cooper; Christian Wallace, Ryle.

Girls archery

Addison Alloway, Scott; Ava Boertlein, Notre Dame; Lexus Goff, Scott; Abigail Jewell, Ryle; Anna Beth McCarty, Simon Kenton; Nyla McIntosh, Simon Kenton; Cora Beth Mehltretter, Simon Kenton; Prisha Shah, Ryle; Kilee Spegal, Simon Kenton; Amelia Whalen, Ryle.

Ohio boys basketball

Jaiden Arnold, Aiken; Tommy Clark, Kings; Alex Kazanecki, Moeller; Michael Lewis, Fairfield; Trey Perry, Lakota East; Nate Riep, Oak Hills; Bryce Snell, Cincinnati Country Day; Joshua Tyson, Lakota West; Cayleb Walters, Summit Country Day; Jacob Wassler, St. Xavier; Kellen Wiley, Wyoming; Christian Wilkins, Winton Woods; Cam Williams, Elder

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys basketball

Jay Bilton, Simon Kenton; Griffen Derry, Dixie Heights; Aaron Gutman, Walton-Verona; Garyn Jackson, Campbell County; Andy Johnson, Cooper; Landon Lorms, Ryle; Finn Louden, Conner; Athens McGillis, Covington Catholic; Yamil Rondon, Newport; Jack Sullivan, Beechwood; E. J. Walker, Lloyd Memorial

Ohio girls basketball

Dee Alexander, Purcell Marian; Katie Berrey, Waynesville; Kailee Bransford, Mount Notre Dame; Mari Gerton, Princeton; Layla Hale, West Clermont; Bryn Martin, Springboro; Ky’Aira Miller, Purcell Marian; Callie Nichols, St. Ursula; Madison Parrish, Mason; Alli Robertson, Harrison; Daniah Trammell, Winton Woods; Aniya Trent, Springboro

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls basketball

Catherine Buddenberg, Dixie Heights; Caroline Eaglin, Newport Central Catholic; Marissa Green, Highlands; Isabella Jayasuriya, Campbell County; Maya Lawrie, Notre Dame Academy; Zoee Meyers, Bishop Brossart; Aumani Nelson, Holy Cross; Haylee Noel, Cooper; Brynli Pernell, Simon Kenton; Braylin Terrell, Walton-Verona

Ohio boys bowling

Jace Amann, La Salle; Jayden Brown, Elder; Ben Carberry, Fairfield; Connor Copeland, Lebanon; Colby Hosier, Lakota West; Tanner Iles, Oak Hills; Sam Massie, Clinton-Massie; Aiden Rapien, Elder; Jordan Rottinghouse, Elder; Johnathan Schneider, La Salle; Will Shepard, West Clermont

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys bowling

Tyler Blume, Simon Kenton; Kyan Brewer, Pendleton County; Dylan Davis, Covington Catholic; Peyton Elmore, Boone County; Tony Fox, Simon Kenton; J.D. Hitt, Campbell County; Tyler Ketron, Cooper; Maddox Kuryla, Boone County; Bryce Sargent, Campbell County; Kenny Sparks, Cooper

Ohio girls bowling

Kaylee Braun, Mt. Notre Dame; Kendall Cook, Mercy McAuley; Carolyn Edmisten, Georgetown; Kylie Fisher, Wilmington; Anna Francisco, Harrison; Lily Holder, Western Brown; Taylor Hooks, West Clermont; Mackenzie Pyle, Wilmington; Izzy Rhoads, Wilmington; Nevaeh Williams, Walnut Hills

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls bowling

Alyssa Bechtol, Dixie Heights; Kree Brewer, Pendleton County; Teegan Ellison, St. Henry; Olivia Hicks, Lloyd Memorial; Maddie Marshall, Pendleton County; Ava Mayfield, Boone County; Hayley Pelstring, Notre Dame; Abby Sargent, Campbell County; Alexis Tignor, Cooper; Abree Young, Dixie Heights

Gymnastics

Leah DeVilbiss, Lakota East; Anya Freson, Lakota East; Kiera Laite, Mariemont; Leah McElveen, Lakota West; Zoey Ostdiek, Lakota West; Ella Oum, Turpin; Quinn Strong, Indian Hill; Maddy Smith, Turpin

Ice hockey

Brendan Canham, Mason; Andrew Coburn, St. Xavier; Finn Friede, Moeller; Max Gerber, Moeller; Finn Hayes, St. Xavier; Maddox Malton, Northern Kentucky Norse; Eli Natorp, Mason; Brian O’Connor, St. Xavier; Joey Rusnak, St. Xavier; Jacob Sackenheim, Moeller; Braeden Sample, Moeller; Greyson Sanders, Springboro; Benjamin Unkraut, Northern Kentucky Norse

Ohio boys swimming and diving

Cooper Burt, Ross; Connor Bennett, Ross; Brady Campbell, Milford; Bryce Cousins, West Clermont; Jaeger Ellerman, St. Xavier; Chase Grisi, St. Xavier; Aidan Jansen, Mason; Hayden Meyers, Turpin; Arjun Velayutham, Indian Hill; Jason Zhao, Indian Hill

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys swimming and diving

Chanith Abeysinghe, Highlands; Griffin Barlow, Highlands; Chase Knopf, Ryle; Andy Pleiman, Ryle; Cono Presti, Beechwood; Isaiah Reinhart, Simon Kenton

Ohio girls swimming and diving

Taylor Bacher, CHCA; Bella Basford, Anderson; Grier Gordon, Ursuline; Ansley Neff, Wyoming; Reese Reilly, Roger Bacon; Addie Robillard, Sycamore; Quinn Schureck, Walnut Hills; Maya Schweikert, Kings; Julia Shafer, CHCA; Bella Teply, Mason

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls swimming and diving

Ryon Argo, Beechwood; Sadie Hartig, Notre Dame; Clare Herfel, Notre Dame; Sarah Jones, Highlands; Gabriella Stephens, Ryle; Reese Yauger, Ryle; Liv Wallace, Notre Dame

Ohio boys wrestling

Will Adkins, Moeller; Jack Hoffman, Springboro; Holden Huhn, La Salle; Matt Kowalski, Springboro; Konner Lambers, Elder; Gage Murphy, Reading; Isaiah Nichols, Edgewood; Kane Shawger, St. Xavier; Demetrius Stanley, Lakota East; Colin Wooldridge, La Salle

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys wrestling

Ethan Davis, Grant County; Landon Evans, Ryle; Luke Hyden, Walton-Verona; Jonah McCloskey, Simon Kenton; T.J. Meyer, Walton-Verona; Rider Trumble, Ryle

Ohio girls wrestling

Natalie Carlisle, Lebanon; Rylee Dearwester, Harrison; Gabby Fenton, Taylor; Camryn Gresham, Lakota East; Liberty Johnson, CNE; Charley Jones, New Richmond; Kelsey King, Lakota West; Elizabeth Madison, Loveland; Chenelle Trammell, Lebanon; Leah Willen, Harrison

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls wrestling

Sophie Anderson, WaltonVerona; Peyton Brinkman, Ryle; Emma Hood, Highlands; Emma Moore, Walton-Verona; Leighna Prater, East Central; Rose Thomas, Conner

Fall sports nominees for the 2025 Enquirer High School Sports Awards

Ohio boys cross country

Alex Bruns, St. Xavier; Samuel Darmanie, Springboro; Dom Ellis, St. Xavier; Nathaniel Gockerman, Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy; Wyatt Gockerman, Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy; Ryne Reynolds, Little Miami; Caden Winship, Mason; Ronan Wolfer, Loveland; Liam Woodward, Summit Country Day; Jason Xu, Mason; Michael Zegarski, Little Miami.

Northern Kentucky and Indiana boys cross country

Jake Chapman, Batesville; Jonathan Christopher, Campbell County; Lincoln Herald, Grant County; Nathan Hopper, Conner; Joe Mayer, Covington Catholic; Luke McLane, Covington Catholic; Will Sheets, Covington Catholic; Paul Van Laningham, Cooper

Ohio girls cross country

Elle Campbell, Milford; Molly Deardorff, Lakota East; Callie Fox, Summit Country Day; Cate LeRoy, Madeira; Adriana Luking, Talawanda; Efa Paschka, Mason; Evelyn Prodoehl, Lakota West; Lucia Rodbro, Talawanda; Abby Sewell, Mercy McAuley; Ava Shepard, Lakota West; Brady Sterbling, Bethel-Tate

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls cross country

Callie Bentley, East Central; Aidan Christopher, Campbell County; Lila Dunlevy, Campbell County; Olivia Holbrook, Campbell County; Allison Kopser, Ryle; Lily Parke, Beechwood; Alexandra Rooney, Cooper; Jena Weiler, East Central

Field hockey

Josie Broenner, Mount Notre Dame; Chloe Castellini, Summit Country Day; Laura Fagan, Mount Notre Dame; Rachel France, Mount Notre Dame; Kincade Givens, Indian Hill; Harper Hodgett, Ursuline Academy; Ella Jones, Mount Notre Dame; Maddie Lanphear, Indian Hill; Liz Thurnau, St. Ursula Academy; Julia Ward, Ursuline Academy

Ohio football ‒ offense

Justice Burnam, Anderson, Devlan Daniel, Indian Hill; Gracen Goldsmith, Hamilton; Demico Harris, St. Bernard-Elmwood Place; Aidan Hopewell, Madeira; Trace Jallick, Anderson; Tucker Kattus, St. Xavier; Jamison Kitna, Lakota East; Cole Koops, Harrison; Jovan Love, Moeller; Patrick McLaughlin, La Salle; Caden Piening, Anderson; Matt Ponatoski, Moeller; Jahmeir Spain, Mt. Healthy

Northern Kentucky/Indiana football ‒ offense

Clay Hayden, Beechwood; Cash Harney, Covington Catholic; Isaiah Johnson, Cooper; Ryan Minges, East Central; Cam O’Hara, Cooper; Dylan Stewart, Conner; Adam Surrey, Highlands

Ohio football – defense

Grant Beerman, Lakota West; Ja’Kobe Clapper, St. Xavier; Raishawn Cotton, Mt. Healthy; Ryan Coyle, Cincinnati Country Day; Aaron Dowdell Jr., Taft; Jess Hauer, Wyoming; Jonah Hayes, Moeller; Justin Hill, Winton Woods; Paul Nelson, Princeton; Brady O’Connor, La Salle; Drayden Pavey, Taft; Jayonn Saunders, Anderson; Derek Uran, Elder; Trey Verdon, Hamilton

Northern Kentucky/Indiana football ‒ defense

Austin Alexander, Cooper; Tyler Copeland, Lloyd Memorial; Mattox Kelly, Beechwood; Noah Knigga, Lawrenceburg; Tate Kruer, Covington Catholic; Jacob Savage, Ryle; Dillon Smith, Ryle

Ohio boys golf

Ethan Argus, Cincinnati Country Day; Finley Bartlett, Wyoming; Landon Harris, Moeller; Marshall Morency, Anderson; Cayse Morgan, Elder; Michael Stagnaro, St. Xavier

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys golf

Talen Beane, Campbell County; Ben Carter, St. Henry; Will Carter, St. Henry; Paxton McKelvey, Ryle; Hank Shick, Highlands; Nate Surrey, Highlands

Please note: Boys golf is a spring sport in Indiana so we may add more players to this grouping.

Ohio girls golf

Eva Becerril, Sycamore; Campbell Drum, Mount Notre Dame; Taylor Dunkle, Springboro; Sophia Fink, Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy; Ellie Hartung, Madeira; Paige Treherne, Lakota West

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls golf

Tatjana Andracenko, Dixie Heights; Didi Jiradamkerng, Notre Dame; Emma Laker, Bishop Brossart; Anika Okuda, Ryle; Rowan Pies, East Central; Reagan Ramage, Cooper

Ohio boys soccer

Ryan Boyd, Lakota West; Shaun Dickerson, Lakota East; Alex Dorko, Anderson; Nick Feldhaus, Waynesville; Nick Henke, Milford; Gaven Johnson, Harrison; Karson Lang, Moeller; Max Murphy, Mariemont; Marcos Neto, Mason; David Ray, Summit Country Day; Everett Rinaldi, Seven Hills; Connor Wilkes, Indian Hill

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys soccer

Austin Bush, Campbell County; Parker Byland, Boone County; David Do, Covington Catholic; Harrison Gamble, Highlands; Donovan Lameier, Dixie Heights; Sam Lang, Highlands; Brennan Lewis, East Central; Maddox Pemberton, Cooper; Tanner Robertson, Covington Catholic

Ohio girls soccer

Tessa Blain, Springboro; Anna Cornejo, Madeira; Chloe Dunford, Waynesville; Lauren Flax, Anderson; Anneliese Knight, Mason; Alex Lewis, Cincinnati Christian; Lexi O’Shea, Seton; Presley Pennekamp, Oak Hills; Emily Steiner, Batavia; Mia Stevens, Summit Country Day; Olivia Trick, Mount Notre Dame; Addy Zawaly, Mariemont

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls soccer

Reagan Buchert, Conner; Jozie Holmes, Campbell County; Izelee Kerns, Conner; Aubree LaBazzo, Lawrenceburg; Megan McGraw, Notre Dame; Rylee Schloss, East Central; Rachel Shewmaker, Bishop Brossart; Ally Welch, Conner

Ohio singles tennis

Caroline Boyle, Badin; Addison Cassidy, Mason; Ana Gotike, Mason; Maria Poon, St. Ursula Academy; Saanvi Reddy, Mason; Sophia Thompson, Indian Hill

Ohio doubles tennis

Caroline Brown / Cassie Larsen, Indian Hill; Pratyusha Chaudhuri / Emma Wagner, Mason; Renee Harper / Brooke Lint, Oak Hills; Maggie Marburger / Katelyn Bastos, Summit Country Day; Allison Sayles / Serena Sayles, Sycamore; Bhavana Singidi / Adriana Moreno, Mason

Ohio girls volleyball

Sakura Codling, Seton; Callie Combs, Seton; Molly Creech, St. Ursula Academy; Addy Franz, Ursuline Academy; Mariah Gaines, Roger Bacon; Emma Frietch, St. Ursula; Katie Gielas, Ursuline Academy; Luci Heid, Badin; Ally Hughes, Roger Bacon; Makenna Kirlin, Loveland; Ava McIntyre, Kings; Caroline Moore, Mercy McAuley

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls volleyball

Madelyn Demler, St. Henry; Julia Grace, Notre Dame Academy; Keira Hans, Simon Kenton; Morgan Heater, Ryle; Milyn Minor, Scott; Kate Neltner, Bishop Brossart; Ava Tilden, Notre Dame; Lucy Trapp, Ryle

Ohio boys water polo

Grant Carmody, Sycamore; Jackson Connor, Milford; Marco Di Loreto Tarot, Mason; Cole Dowden, Sycamore; Sam Franke, St. Xavier; Thomas Pitstick, St. Xavier; Evan Preissler, Sycamore

Ohio girls water polo

Tia Fidanza, Sycamore; Rachell Hemmila, Mavericks (Hughes High School); Maddie House, Milford; Cam Kilimnik, Mavericks (St. Ursula Academy); Mariam Ndiaye, Mason; Claire Ponstingle, Mason; Isabelle Shade, Sycamore



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Former players reflect on life in the minor leagues

Heath Lane, left, and Beau Hintz, right, spent years in the minor leagues but never made it to the majors. Lane was drafted by Milwaukee in 1988, while Hintz was selected by Seattle in 2001. Guy Dossi/Calaveras Enterprise Baseball is a romantic game. From tiny farm towns to large cities and everywhere in between, there […]

Published

on

Former players reflect on life in the minor leagues

Heath Lane, left, and Beau Hintz, right, spent years in the minor leagues but never made it to the majors. Lane was drafted by Milwaukee in 1988, while Hintz was selected by Seattle in 2001. Guy Dossi/Calaveras Enterprise

Baseball is a romantic game.

From tiny farm towns to large cities and everywhere in between, there are little kids pretending to be the star player on their favorite team – coming to bat with the bases loaded and two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning in Game 7 of the World Series.

Every day, a dad or mom, a sister or brother, an aunt or uncle, or a grandparent is teaching a future ballplayer how to throw, catch, and love the game. Those kids then begin to grow and make the move from T-ball to Little League, to youth travel ball, and finally to playing on their high school team.

For some, just being around the game at a young age is all they could hope for. Yet for others, there is the dream of playing in college – either at a junior college or a four-year university. And for those who dare to dream big, they set their sights on playing in the pros.

The road to becoming a Major League Baseball player is a long one, with a gratifying result at the end. However, what about those players whose dreams of making it to the show come up short? Year after year, thousands of players are spread out across the country in the minor leagues, just dreaming about a call-up that never comes.

For most players, getting the chance to play for a Major League team is a goal that never gets completed. They live the minor league baseball life for as long as possible, and for whatever reason – injuries, age, skill, or bad luck – it just doesn’t pan out.

Heath Lane and Beau Hintz have a number of things in common. They both fell in love with baseball at a young age. They both had the option of being drafted out of high school but chose to go the college route. They both got drafted after college and spent years in the minor leagues. And they both said goodbye to baseball before getting to wear a Major League uniform.

Lane, a longtime Bret Harte High School teacher and former Bret Harte baseball head coach, and Hintz, Bret Harte’s current baseball head coach, had the remarkable opportunity to play minor league baseball and experience the good, the bad, and the heartbreaking that comes with being baseball players. And even though they didn’t reach their ultimate goals, they both enjoyed the journey for as long as they could.

Diamond dreamers

Lane grew up a fan of the San Francisco Giants, and his love for baseball started at a young age. As soon as he was able to pick up a baseball and throw it more than a couple of feet, he was in his backyard pretending to be his Giant.

“I was five years old in the backyard pretending I was Willie McCovey,” Lane said. “I was a big Giants’ guy, so I followed him. I loved baseball from the time I could pick it up; three, four, five years old it was the sport. I did other things, but me and my brother would play for hours until dark in our backyard. We just loved every bit of it.”

Hintz also developed an early love for baseball, but being the son of a coach, he was introduced to many sports. While he played as many sports as he could, it was his skill on the baseball diamond that began to catch the attention of those with connections. As a freshman in high school, Hintz’s abilities began to be noticed.

“I was pretty good at multiple sports,” Hintz said. “I just liked to compete more than anything. I always knew I was good at baseball, and I was lucky to grow up with a lot of good players that I played with in Little League and in high school. I think maybe around my freshman season when I started being recruited, kind of opened my eyes a little bit. But still, more than anything, I just liked to compete in whatever sport I was playing that season.”

Lane didn’t start to get recruited until his senior year at Linden High School. Even though he was being recruited, the idea of playing professional baseball seemed like a fairytale and not reality.

“I didn’t even consider the thought of professional baseball, which is kind of strange because I guess that wasn’t really something that we thought about a lot then,” Lane said. “I was just playing and loving it.”

Heath Lane spent years coaching at Bret Harte High School. Guy Dossi/Calaveras Enterprise

Even with scouts watching him pitch, Lane opted to go the junior college route and played at nearby San Joaquin Delta College.

Like Lane, Hintz didn’t truly imagine himself as a big-league baseball player.

“You always have that dream as a kid and I always looked up to certain players,” Hintz said. “Yeah, you dream, for sure, but it wasn’t like, I’m going to play in the major leagues. Yeah, you want to play, but it’s very hard to get there.”

As Hintz progressed in his high school career, the buzz surrounding him began to grow. Yet he felt that his lack of size would hurt him if he entered the draft straight out of high school. He believed that playing in college would not only give him time to grow physically, but also make him a better player, increasing his draft stock later on.

“There were a lot of teams that were interested,” Hintz said. “My dilemma was that even though my stats were good as a pitcher, I was a much better position player and hitter than I was a pitcher. When I graduated high school, I was pretty skinny, like 6-foot-4, 175 pounds, just a little bean pole. I knew that I wanted the college experience, and I wanted to go to college to figure out what I was going to do, and I wanted to be able to get stronger and learn myself as a person and as a player. So, more than anything, I wasn’t going to be ready to play professional baseball as an 18-year-old.”

After strong high school careers that caught the attention of scouts, both Lane and Hintz decided to try their luck in college.

“I would get some scouts in the stands, but I still wasn’t strong enough and didn’t have high enough velocity at that point in time, but I knew I wanted to play in college,” Lane said.

College men

In 1984, Lane attended San Joaquin Delta College as a pitcher. He performed well enough that the Texas Rangers selected him in the second round of the 1986 draft as the No. 29 overall pick. Future three-time World Series champion Curt Schilling was drafted just 10 picks later.

At 20 years old, Lane was offered $50,000 by the Rangers. He declined.

“The director of scouting came to my house, met with my parents, and I didn’t even have an agent,” Lane recalled. “I’m sitting in my living room with my parents and went through the whole spiel of, ‘Hey, you can be starting up your car tomorrow morning,’ and ‘You know, we want you, blah, blah, blah,’ and I thought and thought and thought about it. Looking back at the time, I was maybe a little cocky and arrogant, thinking that I was worth more than that. And $50,000 was a lot of money then. It was a high signing bonus.”

As much as Lane wanted to play professionally, he also wanted the full college experience – and he dreamed of playing in the College World Series. After two years at Delta, he accepted a scholarship offer to the University of Arizona. Lane hoped that while at Arizona, he’d not only get to play in the College World Series but also improve his draft stock and become a first-round pick.

“I think I thought to myself that I would sign as a junior, and I had more leverage after a year at Arizona,” Lane said. “I thought I would still be a high-round draft pick, and I thought maybe I could increase that.”

Lane’s hopes of being a high-round pick following his junior year were derailed by injury. He was selected in the 20th round by the Oakland Athletics and again declined to sign. He was eventually drafted following his senior season by the Milwaukee Brewers – for $2,500.

“I got hurt the last half of my (first) season at the University of Arizona and didn’t finish it,” Lane said. “So, I ended up not getting drafted until the 20th round, and that was by Oakland. Oakland offered me $25,000, and I said, ‘No, I’m not signing for $25,000.’ I turned down $50,000 last year, and they said, ‘Well, we don’t know whether you’re healthy, blah, blah, blah,’ and I said, ‘I’ll wait.’ So, then I waited until my senior year, and got drafted in the 16th round by Milwaukee and signed for $2,500.”

While Lane went the junior college route after high school, Hintz hopped on Highway 99 and went south from his home in Stockton to California State University, Fresno, where he played for three years. Hintz made a splash right away and found success, which led him to believe he’d eventually be a high-round draft pick.

“I had had some really good summers,” Hintz said. “My freshman year, I was one of 37 players invited to the USA National team and one of seven freshmen in the country. And then I played in the Alaska Baseball League the last half of the summer, and then I played in the Cape Cod League after my sophomore year. I had gotten better as a pitcher, gotten stronger physically, put on 25, 30 pounds, and I was projected to be a higher draft pick than I was. But stuff happened in my junior year, which is a long story, where a handful of us ended up quitting halfway through our junior year, and that dropped me to the 10th round.”

Hintz was the 309th overall pick in the 2001 draft. At 21 years old, he signed for $45,000 and had the rest of his schooling paid for.

“It was a lot more money than I had ever seen,” Hintz said. “Luckily, you get it in two payments. It wasn’t a lot of money, and I didn’t do anything crazy with it. I was just trying to get my feet wet in minor league baseball.”

Business over pleasure

The difference between playing college baseball and being in the minors was noticeable to Lane right away. Shortly after being drafted, he was sent to Helena, Montana, to take part in short-season rookie league. It was there he discovered firsthand that he was no longer in college.

“It’s a totally different world because you’re dealing with a totally different clientele,” Lane said. “You know, you were playing with Dominican and Puerto Rican players, and you had guys smoking cigarettes in the locker room.”

Lane also felt a difference in the way teammates supported one another.

“The difference between Arizona and professional baseball was at U of A you were pulling for everybody,” Lane said. “Even if you were struggling, you wanted to win because your goal was to win the College World Series. You get into professional baseball and you’re sitting in the stands charting your best friend, and in the back of your mind, you’re almost hoping he fails because it’s so competitive and there’s only so many spots. If they do well, you don’t.”

In 1988, Lane’s first season, he went 8-4 with a 3.30 ERA. Feeling confident about his performance, he was eager to move up the ranks – but the Milwaukee organization felt otherwise.

“The biggest challenge was the mental aspect of it, the day in and day out of it,” Lane said. “There’s nothing like it. I think the hardest thing for me was I wanted to move up faster than they were willing to move me up. I started off great. I had a great rookie season and kept wondering the whole year, ‘Why am I not going to Stockton?’ or ‘Why am I not going to Beloit?’”

Lane family/Courtesy photo

When Lane finally got his long-awaited promotion, he thought his upward momentum would continue. But after ending the 1988 season on a high note, he didn’t make the jump he expected.

“The last two weeks of the year, they moved me up to Stockton,” Lane said. “I had great outings. I threw a complete game in the North championship against San Jose. They sent me to Instruction League, and then the next year, after instructional, I got sent to Beloit, which is the low A, and Stockton is a high A, and they gave you the same thing: ‘There’s only so many starting spots in our organization and you’re a starting pitcher.’”

In 1989, Lane got off to a hot start, but his luck didn’t hold. With every bad outing, he had to wrestle with the mental side of the game just as much as the physical.

“I was in Beloit, and I started off on fire; I think I won my first four or five games, and I was the opening day starter, and I was there, and I wasn’t moving,” Lane said. “I still wasn’t moving. And then you get 142 games now, instead of 70, and you have a bad game, and then you’re like, ‘Oh, am I that good?’ And then you have another bad game.”

Hintz’s first experience after being drafted was short-season ball in Everett, Washington. Unlike Lane, Hintz felt comfortable with his new teammates – as if it were just an extension of college baseball.

“Short season A-ball for me was actually a lot of guys that had just come out of college, whether they made it to regionals or the World Series, so my first year, it was actually a good group of guys,” Hintz said. “Even though we were competing for spots, it still didn’t feel like super cutthroat that first year. Now, once you go to spring training, that’s a different story.”

Hintz family/Courtesy photo

In 2001, Hintz went 3-4 with a 6.39 ERA. His career was soon put on hold when he needed Tommy John surgery, and he didn’t return to the mound until 2003. Between the round he was drafted in and then having to work through a significant injury, Hintz saw firsthand how much baseball is a business – and how that factors into decisions.

“It’s definitely eye-opening,” Hintz said. “You realize that it’s a business more than anything, and you’ve got to be in the right place at the right time, and you have to be in the right organization. You see it all the time: guys get stuck behind guys that are above them in higher levels at the same position. Maybe they have more money invested in those guys, and they can get stuck for two, three, four years until they become a free agent or get traded or released and then sign with another team. It’s a lot of luck involved. Obviously, you have to perform, but at the same time, the decision to go up or down isn’t necessarily made on the field 100%.”

After recovering from his injury, Hintz went to Appleton, Wisconsin, to play Single-A ball. He only lasted through the 2003 season with Seattle before being released.

“A lot of my minor league career was derailed by my surgeries and the way it was handled,” Hintz said. “A lot of unfortunate things happened in my college and minor league career. I definitely would have done things a little bit differently.”

The grind never stops

Life as a minor league baseball player is not easy. Between meager pay, difficult living conditions, grueling travel and a future filled with uncertainty, Lane and Hintz experienced the full gauntlet of what minor leaguers endure.

“You’re staying in Motel 6’s on the road,” Lane said. “You’re at the field at 10 a.m. for a 7 o’clock start. You’re riding buses, even in the California League, sometimes for eight and nine hours, where you went from chartered flights to staying in four- or five-star hotels in college. It’s tough, and I think it was probably meant to be that way in those days to make you go through that mental aspect to see what it’s like.”

Finding a place to live was also difficult. Early in his career, Lane roomed with several teammates, and they did all they could just to survive.

“My first year in Helena, we had an old house in an old area of town,” Lane said. “It was like a three-bedroom house with seven of us living in that house, splitting the rent, and we had mattresses on the floor. We would go find a used couch, and we went and bought like a $300 station wagon that we would drive ourselves back and forth to the park in.”

Hintz had a slightly different living situation, as he was fortunate enough to live with host families. However, there were still times he had to share a room with multiple teammates.

“A lot of organizations had host families, and I was fortunate to have some great host families that put us up for the summer,” Hintz said. “And then there were some situations where it would be four of us in a two-bedroom apartment, sharing rooms because you just didn’t make a lot of money. There were long bus rides all the way across the country. You have to grow up fast. You’ve got to deal with a lot of different situations – people from different states, different teammates from different countries, different coaches – and things like time management. There’s so much that you learn.”

Hintz family/Courtesy photo

Both Lane and Hintz also learned that life as a minor league baseball player is far from lucrative.

“You don’t make a lot of money,” Hintz said. “I think my first paycheck was $850 a month before taxes were taken out. And we used to get like $16 a day per diem to eat three meals.”

Paychecks only come during the season. During the offseason, players had to both stay in shape and find other ways to pay the bills.

“My first year was $700, the second year was $850, the third year, I think I was $1,000 a month,” Lane said. “And that’s only during the season and spring training. And then if you go to instructionals, you get extra. But as soon as the season was over, my wife and I were living in Clovis, and I was working for a contractor as a framer. I would work framing all day to pay the bills, and then when I got off, I would go work out in the gym. Then there was a group of four or five of us who were minor league players that would work out either at Fresno State or at Fresno City, and we would get our workouts in during that time.”

Lane family/Courtesy photo

As if the money, travel and housing challenges weren’t enough, there was also the mental side of life in the minors. Life away from home, paired with the pressures of performance, took its toll. Several times, Hintz had to lean on his work ethic – instilled in him by his father – to get through it.

“There are always some moments during the season where either the team’s not playing well, the chemistry’s not great, and you kind of think guys are just out for themselves or they’re going through the motions,” Hintz said. “You’re like, ‘Is this really the baseball that I want to be a part of?’ But you’ve got to remind yourself, ‘I’m a competitor and I just want to do my job.’ As a starting pitcher, you have your routine. Between your starts you just try to stick to those and do them to the best of your ability, and then when your name’s called to go on the mound, you just compete your butt off. And that’s what I was taught by my dad and my whole family. Whatever you do, put 100% in and then you can live with yourself at the end of the day.”

Stepping away

As much as Lane and Hintz dreamed of donning a major league uniform and having at least one moment in the show, both eventually realized their journeys wouldn’t lead them to the promised land.

“I loved it until I didn’t love it,” Lane said. “I loved it and battled through it because I liked the relationships I had, I liked the challenges I had, and I liked the game. But after my last year with the Padres, I had the opportunity to keep going and play, and in fact, I could get picked up by the Oakland Athletics, but I was going to go to Modesto again. Now I was married, and now I was a little bit older, and I was looking at it like, ‘I don’t know if it’s time for me to move,’ but I knew at the time. In my case, uniquely, it’s like a switch went off, and I knew I was done. I knew I was done mentally. I don’t really know what changed.”

Although Lane’s professional career ended in 1991, many of his friends continued their journeys – and several reached the big leagues. While he was happy to see them succeed, it also left him reflecting on what might have been.

Lane family/Courtesy photo

“The hardest part for me was to watch my friends make it,” Lane said. “Guys that I was good friends with, like Mark Kiefer, a guy who was at my wedding, he was no better than me, but he was a sinkerballer, and he made it to the big leagues. Michael Ignasiak, another one of my good friends and roommates, made it to the big leagues. Eric Karros, one of my good friends, was with the Dodgers, and he made it to the big leagues. So, all those guys, like J.T. Snow, Trevor Hoffman, and Alan Zinter and Chip Hale – those were just all guys that I was friends with from Arizona that made it to the big leagues. Not to mention the guys I played with in the minor leagues, and it was fun to watch them, but it was also sad, I guess.”

For Hintz, the decision was made for him when Seattle released him in 2003. As expected, the release stung, and he was left bitter toward the game.

“At the time, I was maybe 25, and it’s just an age thing,” Hintz said. “You can have an 18-year-old versus a 25-year-old that’s had surgery. I can remember guys in spring training, having a locker next to them, and then all of a sudden you show up and there’s a black garbage bag with their stuff in it. It’s pretty eye-opening for sure.”

Hintz continued, “Coming back and having that rehab year, it was a grind. Then, getting released, I was just pissed off at baseball personally. So I actually went and played golf professionally for three years and then came back and played independent ball for another two and a half, three years. So, when everything happened in college and the first part of my minor league career, I was just kind of done with it. I had the opportunity to pursue professional golf and did that for a handful of years, and I just needed to get away from baseball.”

Hintz family/Courtesy photo

Hintz returned to the mound in 2007 in an independent league, where he played until 2008. Before a game in Canada, he realized it was time to walk away for good.

“My last game pitching was in Edmonton, Canada, and the manager played high school football for my dad,” Hintz said. “He had played for the A’s, played college baseball, just a really good guy. It was just getting harder for me. At the time, I was almost 30 years old, and I was like, ‘What am I doing?’ So we had a conversation, the coach and I, and just decided that that would be my last start of my career, and then I would retire after that and move on. And it was actually a good way to do it because I was able to leave on my own terms.”

Still a love for the game

Lane and Hintz didn’t stay mad at baseball forever. In fact, both transitioned from playing to coaching – and rediscovered their love for the game along the way. For Lane, his time in the minor leagues prepared him not just for coaching, but for a successful career in education as well.

“I think the best thing about baseball that I always looked at and why I never had any regrets was that the life skills that I learned from not only college baseball, but from minor league baseball – on dealing with everyday grinds and dealing with going from one team to the next in the middle of the season and having to learn social skills and to read personalities really quickly – helped me in my career and everything else,” Lane said.

After many years coaching at Bret Harte High School, Lane returned to the Delta College dugout as an assistant coach in 2025, bringing his career full circle. He was just as excited to be there now as he was as a player in the early 1980s.

“It’s just weird the way life works, right?” Lane said. “I thought I was done with baseball when I became an administrator (at Bret Harte). I thought, I’m happy, I’ve watched my kids grow up, I don’t have any desire, and then I got into coaching with those kids, and I loved it. I got the fire for it, and then things worked out with this, and I’ve never enjoyed the game and coaching more than I have this year, being around the kids I have. It makes me feel young, it makes me feel like I’m back in the game that way, so it’s really neat.”

Hintz, too, has found his rhythm in coaching. This past spring, he led Bret Harte to an 18-win season – the program’s best finish since Lane’s 19-win campaign more than a decade earlier. While Hintz is proud to still have baseball in his life, he occasionally reflects on the choices he made as a younger player.

Beau Hintz just finished his first season as Bret Harte High School’s head baseball coach. Guy Dossi/Calaveras Enterprise

“I think the biggest thing that I would do is I probably would have continued to be a position player over a pitcher,” Hintz said. “Because I had improved so much as a pitcher in college, and I was left-handed, I was kind of forced into it, and everyone said left-handed pitching is the fastest way to the big leagues. Well, I let other people determine that, and I wish I would have either transferred or done something different and continued to be a position player more than anything.”

Neither Lane nor Hintz had the professional baseball career they envisioned when they were drafted. But both former pitchers recognize how fortunate they were to have lived out the dream – even if it didn’t end in the major leagues. Through the grind, the travel, and the transitions, one thing never changed: their love and respect for the game.

“Even though my actual professional baseball career didn’t end up the way that I envisioned it, I still enjoyed every moment of it because you’re getting paid to play a game,” Hintz said. “A lot of other people would trade spots with you. I think it’s great. It’s just guys getting to chase a dream that not many people get to chase. I enjoy going to minor league games more than big league games a lot of the time. It’s just a great atmosphere, in great little towns that support the teams. It’s really, truly, America’s pastime. Even if you don’t make it, it is what it is, right? You’re playing baseball and you’re still getting paid. So things could be a lot worse.”

Lane added, “It’s romantic, it’s a lifestyle, it’s something that only a limited few people get to experience. You know, every 5-year-old kid has had that dream, and only 3% or 4% of those guys ever get to do that. It’s just an unbelievable feeling.”

Continue Reading

Sports

When it comes to girls sports, what happens in California will not stay there

A teenage competitor who has transitioned from male to female was able to compete in a California state championship as a girl, against girls, over the weekend. The California Interscholastic Federation rule changes last week made it so that the young woman who would have otherwise won first place shared the podium with the transgender […]

Published

on


A teenage competitor who has transitioned from male to female was able to compete in a California state championship as a girl, against girls, over the weekend. The California Interscholastic Federation rule changes last week made it so that the young woman who would have otherwise won first place shared the podium with the transgender athlete (CIF is the governing body for high school sports in California).

When I asked Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office for comment, it quickly responded that the governor didn’t sign AB 1266 (a state law that allows students to play in the sport league of their preferred gender). Gov. Jerry Brown did. It also said Newsom had nothing to do with CIF or the rule changes. 

Yet, when I spoke to insiders in Sacramento, the feeling on the ground was very different. Centrist and level-headed Democrats are terrified to speak up. They feel pressure from the Democratic caucus to sit down and shut up. The statement Newsom released, applauding the CIF rule change, made it pretty clear where he stands, even though he, too, is distancing himself from this issue for now.

Newsom’s office also restated to me what some outlets have reported, that it believes the number of high school athletes who are transgender is in the single digits in the state. Mothers with girls in sports called BS on this when they spoke to me via phone, text, email, and DMs. California does not require student athletes to disclose their gender identity, so how did the governor’s office come up with this number? The mad mamas I spoke to offered up numerous instances of their girls facing biological boys in sports ranging from water polo to volleyball to basketball and even hockey.

A continual thread from the Left is that these parents and “outsiders” are “anti trans.” But in reality, their tone is more about concerns of safety, innocence, and unfairness. These aren’t all parents or students on the religious Right.

Sophia Lorey, outreach director at the California Family Council, a Christian public policy group that advocates religious freedom, parental rights, and fairness in school sports, has attended numerous CIF events. She started doing so at the request of parents and participating athletes. Lorey was removed by a CIF official over the weekend for handing out pink “XX Only” bracelets and pamphlets with her mother.

“As a former CIF varsity and collegiate athlete, I showed up to defend girls’ sports and was escorted out by CIF and police for handing out ‘save girls’ sports’ bracelets and flyers,” she told me. “No one could point to a single policy justifying their actions. Meanwhile, a male athlete was dominating three girls’ events. These girls deserved celebration, not compromise. Watching them share the spotlight with someone who had a biological advantage was painful. We are failing them when we refuse to protect fairness.”

She continued, “Silencing women who speak up for fairness is an attack on the First Amendment and a betrayal of every female athlete who plays by the rules. It is clear that I didn’t disrupt the competition; I disrupted CIF’s narrative.”

Most participants who are pro-girls, pro-girls sports, and pro-girls’ opportunities are confused and frustrated when they show up at tournaments, meets, and competitions to find out that they will be competing against someone with a biological advantage. The meets were confusing and sad when these girls recognized that they wouldn’t make the top nine because of a biological male. They were upset, nervous, and in tears while feeling a sense of disappointment and unfairness before they even competed. 

DOJ THREATENS LAWSUIT OVER CALIFORNIA TRANSGENDER ATHLETE POLICY

CIF isn’t doing these things in a vacuum. It is afraid of radical leftist organizations such as Equality CA and the Trevor Project, whose form 990s boast funding of almost $100 million nationally, coming in and pressuring the Democratic supermajority not to allow CIF to operate as an organization within the state. Worst case scenario, these agenda-driven Democrats create a new state body to regulate school sports that is beholden to the legislature directly. 

The California Family Council has a website with a petition that has garnered over 15,000 signatures demanding that the CIF take the concerns of girls in sports seriously and make rule changes to protect them. I’d urge all concerned athletes and parents to sign it. You may think that this started in California and ends in California, but it is happening everywhere. Our girls deserve better.

Elisha Krauss is a conservative commentator and speaker who resides in Los Angeles, California, with her husband and their four children. She advocates women’s rights, school choice, and smaller government.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

ROAD TO A HOME WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS BEGINS IN LA SEU FOR AUSTRALIAN CANOE SLALOM TEAM THIS WEEKEND

With 117 days to go until the ICF Slalom World Championships arrive in Sydney, the Australian Canoe Slalom team are preparing to get their 2025 international season underway in Spain, this weekend. Olympic gold medalists Jessica and Noemie Fox headline the 10-strong team that will compete at the 2025 ICF Canoe Slalom World Cup 1 […]

Published

on


With 117 days to go until the ICF Slalom World Championships arrive in Sydney, the Australian Canoe Slalom team are preparing to get their 2025 international season underway in Spain, this weekend.

Olympic gold medalists Jessica and Noemie Fox headline the 10-strong team that will compete at the 2025 ICF Canoe Slalom World Cup 1 in La Seu from Friday 6 June through until Sunday 8 June.

“The main objective that I have my eyes on this year is the World Championships…a home World Championships in a career is very special,” Noemie Fox said. 

“But also the World Cups this year, I’m really looking forward to challenging myself – it’s a bit of a harder schedule with just one run, straight to top 12 and into the final.

“So I think there’s a lot more challenges this year for me, but I’m excited to step up in my slalom events and to maintain my Kayak Cross world rankings and titles,” she said.

It is the first of five World Cup events, with the season set to culminate in Penrith for the 2025 ICF Slalom World Championships.

The World Cup 1 program will start with the men’s and women’s Kayak Heats and Finals on Friday, before the men’s and women’s Canoe Heats and Finals on Saturday, and wrap up with the Kayak Cross on Sunday.

Among the Australians competing this weekend is World Cup and senior national team debutant Ben Ross.

“Debuting on my first senior team is very exciting, and for me it’s all about coming into the Worlds with a performance objective, do as well as I can, but also really lapping up the experience, enjoying the opportunities that being on the senior team provides and just trying to get as much out of the experience as I can.

“I’m racing World Cups 1 and 2, in La Seu (Spain) and Pau (France), and then I’ll be taking a break for World Cup 3 for the U23 World Championships…they’re quite close to each other.

“I went to Seu and Pau for the first time last year, just for training and I was really privileged to be able to do that.

“Seu is quite unique – I’ve watched a lot of my fellow team mates race there in the past and watched a lot of races online, but never myself.

“But I feel like I’m in a good place, I’ve had a bit of training on the course but it’s a really special place in Slalom history, with the 1992 Olympics and to be able to race there will be super exciting,” Ross said.

The 2025 ICF Canoe Slalom World Cup season will be broadcast LIVE on Fox Sports Australia and Kayo Sports.

 

2025 ICF CANOE SLALOM WORLD CUP 1

Friday 6 June

  • 7:30pm AEST | Women’s Kayak Heats
  • 8:29pm AEST | Men’s Kayak Heats
  • 11:05pm AEST | Women’s Kayak Final
  • 11:47pm AEST | Men’s Kayak Final

Saturday 7 June

  • 7pm AEST | Women’s Canoe Heats
  • 7:50pm AEST | Men’s Canoe Heats 
  • 10:04pm AEST | Women’s Canoe Final
  • 10:47pm AEST | Men’s Canoe Final

Sunday 8 June

  • 6pm AEST | Kayak Cross Time Trial
  • 10pm AEST | Kayak Cross Heats
  • 11pm AEST | Kayak Cross Quarterfinals
  • 11:40pm AEST | Kayak Cross Semi Finals
  • 12am AEST | Kayak Cross Finals

 

AUSTRALIAN TEAM

Jessica Fox (Women’s Kayak, Canoe, Kayak Cross)

Noemie Fox (Women’s Kayak, Canoe, Kayak Cross)

Kate Eckhardt (Women’s Kayak, Canoe, Kayak Cross)

Lucien Delfour (Men’s Kayak, Kayak Cross)

Tim Anderson (Men’s Kayak, Kayak Cross)

Ben Pope (Men’s Kayak, Kayak Cross)

Tristan Carter (Men’s Canoe)

Kaylen Bassett (Men’s Canoe)

Ben Ross (Men’s Canoe)

Georgie O’Callaghan (Women’s Kayak Cross)



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending