Sports
Cub Tracks' long fly trap
The going is weird. Cub Tracks™ turned pro a long time ago. Cub Tracks™. Where the great ones run away. [embedded content] Colin Rea didn’t start out so well, with the Reds jumping out to a two-run lead, but the defense made it stop and Rea continued to make his pitches. Andrew Abbott, who looks […]


The going is weird. Cub Tracks™ turned pro a long time ago. Cub Tracks™. Where the great ones run away.
Colin Rea didn’t start out so well, with the Reds jumping out to a two-run lead, but the defense made it stop and Rea continued to make his pitches. Andrew Abbott, who looks like a lefty Miles Mikolas, took the mound for the visiting Reds and threw well enough to leave the Cubs hitless until Justin Turner led off the third with a grounder up the middle.
The Reds tacked on a couple more in the fourth on a Tyler Stephenson dinger. It was starting to look bad for the boys in blue. In fact, it got worse. Abbott brought his ‘A’ game and the Cubs were thoroughly stymied.
The Reds’ bullpen, though, is another matter entirely. The Cubs rallied for two in the eighth.
But that was all they wrote. 6-2 Reds. Let’s have a better outcome today, yes?
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Sports
Harding’s Malykhin Earns National Scholar-Athlete Honor; 11 Bisons Earn USTFCCCA All-Academic Awards
Story Links SEARCY – Eleven members of the Harding University men’s track and field team have earned All-Academic Athlete honors from the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) for their outstanding performance both in competition and in the classroom during the recent season. To qualify for the prestigious individual […]

SEARCY – Eleven members of the Harding University men’s track and field team have earned All-Academic Athlete honors from the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) for their outstanding performance both in competition and in the classroom during the recent season.
To qualify for the prestigious individual award, student-athletes must maintain a minimum cumulative grade point average of 3.25 on a 4.0 scale through the end of the semester of competition. Additionally, they must have either finished among the top 50 individuals on the TFRRS descending order lists in their respective events, competed at the NCAA Indoor or Outdoor National Championships, or been a member of a top-35 ranked relay team (or participated in a relay at the national championships).
The 11 Harding Bisons recognized for their academic and athletic achievements are:
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Hayes Cox (Kinesiology & Health Education) – 3.44 GPA, No. 22 in Outdoor 4×100 relay
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Christian Erkert (Management) – 3.25 GPA, No. 50 in Javelin
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Casen Hammitt (Strength and Conditioning) – 3.37 GPA, No. 19 in Javelin
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Spencer Helms (Exercise Science) – 3.65 GPA, No. 14 in Discus
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Anton Kopytko (Kinesiology & Sport Administration) – 3.90 GPA, No. 7 in Outdoor Long Jump
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Vlad Malykhin (Kinesiology & Sport Administration) – 3.62 GPA, Indoor and Outdoor Pole Vault National Champion
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Donald Nwamere (Information Systems) – 3.56 GPA, No. 22 in Outdoor 4×100 relay
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Caledon Ruwende (Civil Engineering) – 4.00 GPA, No. 19 in Outdoor 200 meters
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Derick St. Jean (Management and Business Ethics) – 3.67 GPA, No. 35 in Indoor 400 meters
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Lukas Stiper (Teaching English as a 2nd Language) – 3.58 GPA, No. 14 in Discus
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Luke Walling (Kinesiology & Health Education) – 3.34 GPA, No. 45 in Outdoor 10,000 meters
Notably, Vlad Malykhin was named the 2025 NCAA Division II Men’s Indoor Track & Field National Scholar Field Athlete of the Year. Malykhin, who maintained a cumulative GPA of 3.62, further distinguished himself by winning the pole vault at the 2025 NCAA DII Indoor Track & Field Championships.
In addition to the individual honors, the Harding men’s track and field team earned the USTFCCCA All-Academic Team award, boasting a cumulative team GPA of 3.19. To qualify for this team distinction, programs must maintain a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher.
About the USTFCCCA All-Academic Awards: The USTFCCCA annually recognizes NCAA Division I, II, and III student-athletes and teams for their academic achievements in collegiate cross country and track & field. These awards highlight the commitment of student-athletes to excellence in both their athletic endeavors and academic pursuits.
Sports
Cross Country Releases 2025 Schedule
Story Links SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – The University of San Francisco cross country program and Head Coach Jordan Carpenter have officially announced the schedule for the 2025 season. “We are excited to begin the 2025 cross country season,” Carpenter said. “We wanted to put a significant emphasis on testing ourselves against the best […]

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – The University of San Francisco cross country program and Head Coach Jordan Carpenter have officially announced the schedule for the 2025 season.
“We are excited to begin the 2025 cross country season,” Carpenter said. “We wanted to put a significant emphasis on testing ourselves against the best teams in the country. This season will certainly challenge our runners, as we will face multiple top teams from the West region. These high-level opportunities will best prepare the groups as we build towards improved finishes at the conference and national levels for both the men’s and women’s squads.”
The 2025 campaign begins at home when San Francisco hosts the 32nd annual USF Invitational at Golden Gate Park on August 29. Both the men’s and women’s programs earned a sixth-place finish last season, highlighted by Zach Elam securing ninth out of 123 competitors, while Natálie Hluší earned 10th on the women’s side.
Traveling to Davis the following weekend, the Dons compete in the Stump Invitational on September 13 before heading south for the UC Riverside Invitational on September 27.
Returning home to begin the final month of the regular season, the team participates in the SF Invitational at Golden Gate Park on October 10 and then travels to Columbia, Mo., to compete in the Pre-National Invitational at Missouri for the first time in program history on October 18.
Wrapping up the regular season, the Dons travel to the South Bay for their final meet on October 18, when it takes part in the Bronco Invitational, hosted by Santa Clara, at Baylands Regional Park.
Postseason play begins on November 1 when San Francisco competes in the West Coast Conference Championship in Spokane, Wash.
The full 2025 San Francisco cross country schedule can be viewed here.
For more information on the San Francisco cross country and track and field programs, follow @donsxctf on Twitter, @donsxctf on Instagram, and @donsxctf on Facebook.
Sports
Rainbow Wahine beach, indoor volleyball earn academic awards
Reading time: < 1 minute The Rainbow Wahine indoor and beach volleyball teams each earned team academic awards from the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) for the 2024–25 academic year. This marks the fifth time in the last seven seasons that the indoor volleyball program made the list, while the beach program earned the distinction […]

The Rainbow Wahine indoor and beach volleyball teams each earned team academic awards from the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) for the 2024–25 academic year.
This marks the fifth time in the last seven seasons that the indoor volleyball program made the list, while the beach program earned the distinction for the fifth straight season. The women’s indoor team boasted a 3.58 GPA, and the BeachBows had a 3.52 team average.
The AVCA Team Academic Award honors collegiate and high school volleyball teams that displayed excellence in the classroom during the school year by maintaining at least a 3.30 cumulative team GPA.
The indoor team finished the 2024 season 21-10 overall and captured the program’s fifth consecutive Big West title while advancing to the NCAA Tournament for the 31st consecutive time. The beach volleyball team finished the season ranked 19th in the final AVCA poll, continuing its streak of being nationally ranked in every single week of the polls existence.
Read more at Hawaiiathletics.com.
Sports
Aggie Men And Women Named To USTFCCCA All-Academic Teams; Barrett, Shinnick Named All-Academic Athletes
Women’s Track & Field (Indoor) 7/22/2025 12:10:00 PM Story Links DAVIS, Calif. – Both UC Davis track & field men’s and women’s squads were named to the United States Track & Field And Cross Country Coaches Association […]


Women’s Track & Field (Indoor)
DAVIS, Calif. – Both UC Davis track & field men’s and women’s squads were named to the United States Track & Field And Cross Country Coaches Association All-Academic teams, while women Dani Barrett and Maya Shinnick were each named USTFCCCA All-Academic Athletes.
The men’s team posted a 3.13 cumulative GPA for the academic year while the women recorded a 3.40 GPA to achieve All-Academic honors.
Barrett and Shinnick each qualified for the NCAA Track & Field Western Preliminaries with Barrett going in the 10,000-meter run and Shinnick 400-meter dash. Barrett took home the Big West Championship in the 10,000-meter while Shinnick cracked the 400-meter podium in second at the conference championships.
Here is the criteria for a team to be named an NCAA Division I All-Academic Team:
- The cumulative GPA for all student-athletes on the institution’s NCAA Squad List for Indoor and/or Outdoor Track and Field must be 3.0 or higher on a 4.0 scale, including the most recent grading period, certifiable by either NCAA Faculty Rep or NCAA Compliance Coordinator or Registrar’s Office.
- The cumulative GPA of all student-athletes on the institution’s NCAA Squad List for Indoor and/or Outdoor Track and Field must be computed by the following method:
a. Total the cumulative number of semester hours or quarter hours earned for all
student-athletes on the NCAA Squad List including the most recent grading
period;
b. Total the cumulative number of quality points earned by all student-athletes
including the most recent grading period;
c. Divide the cumulative number of quality points earned by the cumulative number
of semester or quarter hours earned. - Institutions utilizing a different GPA scale than 4.0 then must convert the GPA to a 4.0 scale using the standard conversion method [GPA/Scale x 4.0].
Here is the criteria to be named an NCAA Division I All-Academic Athlete:
- Cumulative GPA: 3.25 or higher on a 4.0 scale, including the most recent grading period, certifiable by either NCAA Faculty Rep or NCAA Compliance Coordinator or Registrar’s Office.
- Institutions utilizing a different GPA scale must convert the GPA to a 4.0 scale using the standard conversion method [GPA/Scale x 4.0].
- Athletic criteria for the award can be met in either the indoor season, the outdoor season, or both:
- For the indoor season: must have finished the season ranked in the top 96 in any championship individual event, or in the top 48 in any championship relay event, for the most recent indoor season, certifiable by their place on final season performance lists on TFRRS for Indoor Track and Field (including performances achieved outside the qualifying window during the indoor season).
- For the outdoor season: must have participated in any round of the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships (the Preliminary Championship Competition and/or the Final Championship Competition) or must have finished the season ranked in the top 48 in the East or top 48 in the West for the most recent outdoor season, certifiable by place on the NCAA Division I descending order list on TFRRS for Outdoor Track and Field.
- Must have completed at least two (2) semesters or three (3) quarters at the certifying institution.
Sports
Volleyball Cats Setting Lofty Goals for 2025 – UK Athletics
The Kentucky volleyball team was picked to win the Southeastern Conference title last week, which, if it happens, would be a ninth straight SEC championship. While that remains one of the goals for the 2025 Cats, they have their sights set on even bigger prizes. Kentucky won the SEC’s only national volleyball championship in 2020. […]

The Kentucky volleyball team was picked to win the Southeastern Conference title last week, which, if it happens, would be a ninth straight SEC championship. While that remains one of the goals for the 2025 Cats, they have their sights set on even bigger prizes.
Kentucky won the SEC’s only national volleyball championship in 2020. This year’s UK squad, with returning standouts like Brooklyn DeLeye and Molly Tuozzo, is openly talking about bringing a second title back to Lexington.
“I think it’s a hard thing to do but we’re ready to do it this year,” Tuozzo said on Tuesday. “We’ve already put in so much work and we had the great opportunity to get all of our transfers and freshman here in the spring and we used that time to grow closer to each other and play for each other. We are all so bought into each other and the team that it’s a super exciting year for us. I think we’re not done yet and we just want to keep getting closer and eventually a national championship.”
Sophomore Asia Thigpen said that the Cats don’t regularly talk about a national championship, but it shows in how they practice.
“We don’t talk a lot about winning a national championship,” Thigpen said. “It’s all kind of an underlying goal that we have, so we all go to the gym and we’re all practicing and competing our best to win a national championship.”
Thigpen noted that the Cats are hoping to win multiple titles this season.
“Our expectation this season is to win the SEC championship, both the tournament and the (regular season),” she said. “So, I think you check that off and we want to go for a national championship.”
Thigpen said that last year’s UK team took a lot from former Kentucky All-American Madison Lilley, who led the Cats to that national title in 2020.
“Mads talked to us about what that looked like in practices,” Thigpen said. “She talked about how every day, it was just competing. She stressed the importance of winning every single drill and then everyone’s roles are super important, whether you’re on the blue side or the white side.”
Marquette transfer Molly Berezowitz, the sister of former Cat Maddie Berezowitz, knows that everything will not be perfect. However, she believes that how the team handles adversity will be key.
“We just want to go further this year,” Berezowitz said. “It’s not going to go perfect. There’s going to be setbacks for sure, but how can we come back from that and have that goal in mind, that we want to win the national championship.”
UK head coach Craig Skinner even took a potential national championship run into consideration when he put together the 2025 schedule.
“The decision was, do we schedule tough because we know we have some great players and have a chance to end the year competing for a national championship,” Skinner said. “It is what we typically do, maybe even a little bit tougher, all four of the Final Four teams from last year are on our schedule. But I do not feel like we will get to where we want go if we don’t play these teams.”
The Cats all agree that the pieces are in place to win multiple titles in 2025. And no one is shying away from talking about adding a second national title for UK.
Sports
Andrija Prlainović for B92.sport, announcement of the semi-final WC Serbia – Hungary
That semi-final match is scheduled for 15:35, and the experienced Andrija Prlainović, a former Serbian water polo player who conquered the planet with the national team and won everything there is to win, is sending support and optimism to Uroš Stevanović’s team. One of the best ever in this sport, who has collected a […]

That semi-final match is scheduled for 15:35, and the experienced Andrija Prlainović, a former Serbian water polo player who conquered the planet with the national team and won everything there is to win, is sending support and optimism to Uroš Stevanović’s team.
One of the best ever in this sport, who has collected a total of 33 medals under the cap of Serbia, of which two consecutive Olympic golds, is quite satisfied with how Serbian water polo players look at this global competition.
“We look convincing and safe, it’s a pleasure to watch from the sidelines and cheer. It’s been a long time since the national team looked this good, safe and powerful. Since 2016-2017, I don’t think the national team has looked this good in a tournament. I’m optimistic before the semi-finals and before the continuation of the tournament,” begins Andrija Prlainović’s story for B92.sport.

Peđa Milosavljević/Starsport
On the way to the semi-finals, Serbia recorded two victories against South Africa and Romania, lost to Italy in the group after the penalty shoot-out and captain Nikola Jakšić’s dismissal, and that defeat meant the match was more in the knockout phase, where our team first eliminated Japan (21:14) in the round of 16.
“There were different moments when that 2023 quarter-final with Italy was played, compared to the group game, now we are in a better composition. Neither Mandić nor Ćuk were playing then. Now we are here with both of them and with players who won Olympic gold, who are now full of confidence and that is one of the reasons why we look like this. You can see that the players are playing freely, they do not lack confidence and everything really looks good. It is always good to have a strong the opponent in the group, just to see what the current state of consciousness of the players, of the team is, how the team will react to those difficult moments, phenomena that cannot really be influenced, to the referee’s decisions and to the opponent”, Prlainović is clear.
“Changing the rules? That’s in our favor?”

VSS/UNIQA/Slobodan Sandić
In the quarterfinals, there was a duel with the United States of America, where the Olympic champions safely and smartly secured a triumph (14:9), in which way they advanced towards the four best selections on the planet and scheduled a duel with the Hungarians.
“That game in the round of 16 was quite good for us. It was good for us that we had Japan and we didn’t have free time, but a game that requires seriousness and maximum commitment, and we prepared well for that. We played very well against the USA from start to finish.”
Apart from the additional match in the play-off for the quarter-finals, the new water polo player from Radnički from Kragujevac also points out that the changed rules benefit the Serbian water polo players, who adapted to the new game system quite quickly.
“The players got used to it very quickly. We, our best players, like the smaller pitch and less swimming. I’m thinking of Jakšić, Mandić, Ćuk, and our centers like it, too. Vico, especially, likes the smaller pitch. As for the rule change, I would say that we, as a national team, benefited from it. It certainly didn’t hurt us. And now, what those rules will bring to the average viewer and what the goal of the rule change is, I don’t know. There are no people in the stands, as it looks to people on television – I believe it looks very similar to the way it looked in the early years and the last decade. I don’t see any big changes there, nor will a large number of people start watching water polo because of the change in the rules,” Andrija points out.
The duel with Hungary, which defeated Croatia (18:12) in the quarter-finals and left the current world champion without the opportunity to defend the gold won in Doha 2024, will show whether all the pieces have been put together in the Serbian mosaic.
Uroš Stevanović’s team was preparing for the WC with the Hungarians in Budapest, when Serbia narrowly lost 13:12, and the last time the two teams met in a major competition was at the Olympic Games in Paris, when the northern neighbors were also better (17:13).
“We are the dominant team in today’s water polo”

VSS/UNIQA/Slobodan Sandić
Hungarian shooting rhapsody or Serbian solid defense – Prlainović has no dilemma.
“We are the best there, for sure. The best in the world water polo when it comes to defense, both positionally, probably with one player less, but especially positionally. One on one in the game, we are the dominant team, especially now with Wapenski, who is a returner and who brought great quality and defense in the attack. We are the dominant team in today’s water polo. I expect and believe that we can stop all this the best that Hungary has,” the former Serbian representative points out.
“What you said, you are right, the Hungarians are first of all a shooting team with good swimmers. They solve those situations very quickly with shots from 5, 6, 7 meters. I think they will have a lot of headaches to stop our attacking options. So I really expect us to find ourselves in the final, based on what I have seen. I am optimistic about the semi-finals with, of course, respect for the Hungarian team, which played very well in this tournament, which came close to beating Spain in the group”.

VSS/UNIQA/Slobodan Sandić
“They beat Croatia by a big margin, where they were constantly in the lead from the second quarter. It is a team with a lot of well-coordinated players, who know each other very well. Most of them have been in Ferencvaros for many years. They have won trophies with the club and with the national team. They are not inexperienced players, although the team is quite young, but there are good water polo players among them who have been there for many years in the national team. The opponent for all respect, and also the biggest rival in history. That is why this is really water polo classic. It can’t be more than that,” says Andrija, who was asked if it would be “better” for us to have Croatia on the other side.
“No, it’s more or less irrelevant in the semi-finals. It’s impossible to get to the semi-finals in a competition like this. The four best teams are currently there”.
“Spain is the favorite, but I’m not writing the Greeks off”
Spain and Greece will meet in the first semi-final at 11:35.
“I was expecting Spain, because they are the number one favorite in terms of composition, along with Serbia. The Greeks are a surprise. Of the first seven from Paris, they lack Vlahopoulos and Papanastasi, in my opinion, their two best players. They made a feat here by reaching the semi-finals, and well deserved. They also played quite good two games in the group, although they lost both times, but when they needed to against Italy, they took advantage of the recklessness of the Italian player, the brutality, they separated at the beginning and then they kept it up until the end. They play at a high pace, but I wouldn’t write off the Greeks. They know that they will beat the Spaniards, the role of the favorites is nothing.”
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