Sports
DuBois Minors battle back, win D


ST. MARYS — Ever since the DuBois Minor League baseball All-Stars lost a close, 10-9 contest against St. Marys on June 29th, they’ve been battling — battling to stay alive in the losers’ bracket final against Brookville, which they won 7-1, then again last Thursday, when they fended off St. Marys for a 5-1 victory to force the if-necessary, winner-take-all championship game.
And the battling theme continued for the DuBois boys in that if-necessary game on Monday in St. Marys, as DuBois trailed 5-2 entering the bottom of the fifth inning before — you guessed it — battling back to score six runs in that home half en route to an 8-5 win to clinch the District 10 title and earn a spot at Sectionals.
“It feels good, because we have overcome so much adversity,” DuBois manager Rick Mays said after the game. “We had multiple guys who’ve been injured. We’ve been punched in the mouth by some teams throughout this tournament, and we always stayed strong.
“We bent a couple times, but we haven’t broken. You saw that tonight. We were down until the fifth inning, but when these guys put their minds to it, they are unstoppable. They just stay in the game and battle, battle, battle.”
DuBois’ scoring was limited to just two innings — a two-run first and that impressive six-run fifth that saw the team bat around the order. But after St. Marys managed two runs in the second and three in the third, DuBois blanked the host over the final three frames to secure the win.
Macklin Mays earned the win, pitching 2-2/3 shutout innings to close out the contest, allowing just two hits and fanning five. Wyatt Lee pitched the first three innings, allowing five runs on five hits, and Rory Marshall pitched 1/3 of an inning, walking one and allowing a hit.
Emerson Reiter led the charge at the plate for DuBois, belting a pair of doubles — including one in the fifth that drove home two runs to put DuBois ahead for good. Collin Roman also had two RBI singles, and Krew Liddle added a two-run double in the fifth and a single, while Holden Frederick and A.J. Guerndt each had RBI singles.
St. Marys finished with eight hits — two each by Buddy Wendel and Jude Smith — with Wendel driving in a pair of runs, and Dax Newell belting an RBI triple.
Keegan Smith pitched the first four innings for St. Marys, allowing just two earned runs on six hits and fanning four. Brice Villella was tagged with three runs in the fifth inning, and Grayson Straub allowed the final three on four hits and two walks.
In the top of the first, Brice Villella reached with a one-out single for St. Marys, but a nifty 4-6-3 double play turned by Mays and Reiter got Lee out of the jam quickly.
In the bottom half, DuBois jumped out to a two-run lead, sparked by a one-out single by Liddle to center. Reiter then doubled to deep left-center to put two in scoring position.
After Mays walked with two outs, Roman legged out an infield single to plate Liddle, then Frederick singled through the left side of the infield to push Reiter home and make it 2-0.
St. Marys quickly answered with two in the top of the second to tie the game. Wendel singled, but Luke Gasbarre traded places with him on a fielder’s choice before Newell tripled down the left-field line to plate Gasbarre. Newell scored soon after when Drew Hurd reached on a fielder’s choice, and the game was tied 2-2 through 1-1/2.
Malcolm Orcutt and Liam Hartzfeld both singled with one out in the bottom of the second, then Jude Bowley reached on an error to load the bases, but Smith stranded them both when he fielded a grounder and threw home for the force, then struck out the final batter to end the inning.
Jude Smith sparked a three-run third for St. Marys with a one-out single up them middle to roll the top of the order, then Villella walked with two outs and Keegan Smith was hit by a pitch to load the bases. Wendel then singled to right-center to plate a pair, and when the ball temporarily got away, Smith also scurried home to make it 5-2.
A two-out walk to Mays was the only action for DuBois in the home half, and despite loading the bases with one out in the top of the fourth, St. Marys didn’t manage to score either, as Mays came on in relief and fanned the first two hitters he faced to keep the lead where it was, 5-2.
Frederick reached on an error to open the bottom half of the fourth, but he was quickly stranded, and in the top of the fifth, Jude Smith and Straub managed back-to-back one-out singles, but a popped up bunt saw Mays make a diving catch, then throw to first for a double play to neutralize the threat.
In the bottom of the fifth, DuBois’ bats came to life, but it all started with back-to-back walks to Liam Hartzfeld and Bowley and a hit-by-pitch to Hilliard with Villella pitching.
After St. Marys turned to Straub, Liddle dropped a double down the right-field line to plate a pair and cut the lead to 5-4. Reiter followed suit, belting one over the right-fielder’s head for a two-run double of his own, putting DuBois ahead 6-5.
Marshall then walked to put a pair on the pond, and with one out, Roman singled to right to push Reiter home. After a walk to Frederick loaded the bases, Marshall scored when Guerndt singled through the right side, making it 8-5.
With that, DuBois needed just three outs to seal the win, but the inning started with a free pass to Wendel. Unrattled, though, Mays struck out the next three hitters he saw to close out the 8-5 victory.
Throughout the tournament, DuBois has seen all 12 players coming through with big, timely plays — a strength for them as they move forward.
“There’s not a guy on this team who hasn’t contributed massively over the course of these last few weeks,” Coach Mays said. “Top to bottom, the line-up has hit. If the top wasn’t in, the bottom was in. It’s great when we all hit, of course, but they just support one another. They’re a band of brothers, and they’ve all got each others’ backs. If one guy isn’t doing it, the next guy steps up and does it, and it’s special.”
Up next for DuBois is a trip to Meadville for the Section 1 tournament, which is slated to begin on Saturday.
“We’re going to celebrate tonight, and we’ll be back to the grindstone here in a couple of days,” Mays said. “We’re going to get one of our big-dog pitchers back for Sectionals. We are looking forward to that. We’re deep on the mound, we play defense, and we hit top to bottom, so we like our team.”
DUBOIS 8,
ST. MARYS 5
Scores by Innings
St. Marys 023 000 — 5
DuBois 200 06x — 8
ST. MARYS—5
Grayson Straub ss-p 3010, Brice Villella lf-p 2110, Keegan Smith p-1b 2100, Buddy Wendel eh 2022, Luke Gasbarre 1b-ss 3100, Dax Newell 3b-rf 3111, Maddox Bish cf 3010, Drew Hurd 2b 2001, Eli Reid eh 1000, Ezra Wykoff eh 2000, Mason Reigle c 2000, Jude Smith rf-lf-3b 2120. Totals 27-5-8-4.
DUBOIS—8
Tyson Hilliard 3b-2b 2100, Krew Liddle rf-cf 3222, Emerson Reiter 2b-ss 3222, Rory Marshall cf-p 2100, Macklin Mays ss-p 2100, Collin Roman 1b 3022, Holden Frederick eh-rf-lf 2011, A.J. Guerndt lf-3b 3011, Wyatt Lee p 3000, Malcolm Orcutt c 3010, Liam Hartzfeld eh 1110, Jude Bowley eh 1100. Totals 27-8-10-8.
LOB: St. Marys 8, DuBois 11. Errors: St. Marys 2, DuBois 2. 2B: Emerson Reiter (2), Krew Liddle. 3B: Dax Newell. HBP: Keegan Smith (by Wyatt Lee), Tyson Hilliard (by Brice Villella). SB: Maddox Bish.
PITCHING
St. Marys: Keegan Smith-4 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 4 K; Brice Villella-0+ IP, 0 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 2 BB, 0 K; Grayson Straub-1 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 2 BB, 1 K.
DuBois: Wyatt Lee-3 IP, 5 H, 5 R, 4 ER, 1 BB, 1 K; Rory Marshall-0.1 IP, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K; Macklin Mays-2.2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 5 K.
Winning pitcher: Macklin Mays. Losing pitcher: Grayson Straub.
Sports
Volleyball adds five transfers to 2026 roster
Sports
Saint Francis Men’s Volleyball Falls To BYU During Night One
Men’s Volleyball | 1/9/2026 10:41:00 PM
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
>> Sam Lane led the Red Flash with six kills and a .667 kill percentage.
>> Nicholas Lynch protected the net with three blocks.
>> Saint Francis fell to BYU (25-22, 25-20, 25-18).
TURNING POINT OF THE GAME
After a media timeout, the Red Flash was down 15-8 halfway through the first set. However, BYU made back-to-back errors that gave Saint Francis an opening to go on a 7-1 run. Brady Stump collected three aces in a row to force a timeout call by the Cougars. Kyle Charles ended the run with a clean kill assisted by middle blocker Lane. Although, BYU continued to strike the ball to win all three sets.
FLASH MOMENTS
Saint Francis started the second set with a 3-1 lead. Charles assisted both Lane and Cole Dorn for a kill each. The Red Flash went on a 6-2 run to extend their lead to 13-8. BYU created four errors to increase the score gap. Nathan Zini and Lane both threw down kills that were passed up by Charles.
Lane claimed the first kill of the set thanks to an assist from Charles for the Red Flash. They quickly went on a 5-1 stretch with help from a kill by Dorn and service ace from Lane. BYU continued to make errors as they had another three alone in the run.
FLASH NUGGETS
Stump finished the late night with five kills and three aces.
Lane collected six kills, a hitting percentage of .556, and a kill percentage of .667.
Dorn registered five kills and two assisted blocks.
Lynch recorded three blocks and two kills.
Richard Kaminski had a team high five digs.
Charles tossed in 18 assists during the match.
NEXT ON TAP
The Red Flash will continue round two against the Cougars tomorrow in Utah at 9 PM.
Sports
Washington and Lee Announces 2025 Fall Term Scholar-Athlete Awards
LEXINGTON, Va. – Jan Hathorn, Washington and Lee University’s Michael F. Walsh Director of Athletics, announced that 427 student-athletes earned the W&L Scholar-Athlete Award for achieving a grade-point average (GPA) of 3.5 or higher during the recently completed fall term in December.
The university’s 603 student-athletes combined for an outstanding 3.643 GPA while completing 9,813 credit hours, with 31 student-athletes studying abroad during the fall term.
In the department, 98 Generals earned a perfect 4.0 GPA for the semester. A table featuring these individuals is included below, alphabetized by sport first then last name.
To view a complete listing of the 2025 Fall Term Scholar Athlete award winners, click this link.
| Last Name | First Name | Sport | Grad Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cimballa | John | Baseball | 29 |
| Lagges | Nick | Baseball | 26 |
| Teague | Camdyn | Baseball | 28 |
| Turner | John | Baseball | 26 |
| Brickner | Amanda | Field Hockey | 26 |
| Dreany | Charlotte | Field Hockey | 28 |
| McDonald | Julia | Field Hockey | 26 |
| Zoota | Lauren | Field Hockey | 28 |
| Bodnar | Cip | Football | 29 |
| Cigelske | Burke | Football | 26 |
| Johnson | Henry | Football | 29 |
| Shallcross | Carter | Football / Lacrosse | 28 |
| Hobson | Ari | Men’s Basketball | 28 |
| Ransom | Jackson | Men’s Basketball | 28 |
| Amare | Davis | Men’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 28 |
| Benjamin | Wyatt | Men’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 27 |
| Cooper | Robert | Men’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 27 |
| Kodenski | Jackson | Men’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 27 |
| Mehendale | Raja | Men’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 28 |
| Rush | Keaton | Men’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 26 |
| Blanton | Matt | Men’s Lacrosse | 28 |
| Bryant | Jack | Men’s Lacrosse | 28 |
| Kallen | Gray | Men’s Lacrosse | 29 |
| Lehman | Andrew | Men’s Lacrosse | 26 |
| Reiter | Gabe | Men’s Lacrosse | 28 |
| Smink | Eli | Men’s Lacrosse | 29 |
| Cordova | Aaron | Men’s Soccer | 27 |
| Furman | Miles | Men’s Soccer | 28 |
| Furman | Spencer | Men’s Soccer | 27 |
| Hall | Willy | Men’s Soccer | 26 |
| Jenkins | Matthew | Men’s Soccer | 27 |
| Joseph | Will | Men’s Soccer | 26 |
| Ordway | Christopher | Men’s Soccer | 29 |
| Peterson | Trey | Men’s Soccer | 28 |
| Gray | Aiden | Men’s Swimming | 27 |
| Murphy | Patrick | Men’s Swimming | 26 |
| Pharr | Rhodes | Men’s Swimming | 26 |
| Ramos | John | Men’s Swimming | 27 |
| Tinsley | Cooper | Men’s Swimming | 28 |
| Imorde | Henry | Men’s Tennis | 29 |
| Rao | Sanjheev | Men’s Tennis | 27 |
| Clark | Schuyler | Men’s Track & Field | 26 |
| Heinze | Luke | Men’s Track & Field | 29 |
| Jakubowski-Lewis | Danny | Men’s Track & Field | 26 |
| Capuzzi | Brooke | Riding | 27 |
| Condrell | Jade | Riding | 26 |
| Csatlos | Sophie | Riding | 29 |
| Ghostine | Sarah | Riding | 29 |
| Hammer | Kate | Riding | 29 |
| Martin | Kate | Riding | 26 |
| McClure | Henry | Riding | 28 |
| Miranda | Kaycie | Riding | 29 |
| Sinclair | Ryon | Riding | 29 |
| Debiec | Riley | Volleyball | 26 |
| Mitchener | Grace | Volleyball | 27 |
| Natwick | Caroline | Volleyball | 26 |
| Pierre-Louis | Diane | Volleyball | 26 |
| Trainor | Turi | Volleyball | 27 |
| Lawson | Katie | Women’s Basketball | 26 |
| McGuinness | Quinn | Women’s Basketball | 26 |
| Prechel | Elka | Women’s Basketball | 26 |
| Adams | Hannah | Women’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 27 |
| Brown | Reese | Women’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 27 |
| Engle | Josie | Women’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 29 |
| Harvey | Lydia | Women’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 27 |
| King | Sally | Women’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 29 |
| Nastopoulos | Lily | Women’s Cross Country / Track & Field | 29 |
| Bhatt | Toral | Women’s Golf | 29 |
| Wong | Ella | Women’s Golf | 27 |
| Taylor | Carleigh | Women’s Lacrosse | 28 |
| Andrews | Calla | Women’s Soccer | 27 |
| Bowman | Shay | Women’s Soccer | 27 |
| Espinosa | Julia | Women’s Soccer | 29 |
| Gabriel | Chrysoula | Women’s Soccer | 29 |
| Green | Mary Parrish | Women’s Soccer | 29 |
| Hecker | Ava | Women’s Soccer | 26 |
| McEnroe | Katherine | Women’s Soccer | 28 |
| Mellides | Maura | Women’s Soccer | 29 |
| Watson | Abigail | Women’s Soccer | 27 |
| Attar | Clara | Women’s Swimming | 26 |
| Brame-Goldthwaite | Sophia | Women’s Swimming | 29 |
| Bredehoeft | Celia | Women’s Swimming | 28 |
| Fenton | Frances | Women’s Swimming | 29 |
| Hackman | Dani | Women’s Swimming | 26 |
| Jellig | Maria | Women’s Swimming | 26 |
| Lathrop | Virginia | Women’s Swimming | 29 |
| McBoyle | Paige | Women’s Swimming | 26 |
| Donnelly | Sarah | Women’s Tennis | 28 |
| Kach | Jordan | Women’s Tennis | 26 |
| Long | Lauren | Women’s Tennis | 26 |
| Cholewa | Abigail | Women’s Track & Field | 27 |
| Morante | Mackenzie | Women’s Track & Field | 27 |
| Sawicki | Elizabeth | Women’s Track & Field | 29 |
| Wood | Katie | Women’s Track & Field | 28 |
| Rubin | Ben | Wrestling | 28 |
| Santowski | John | Wrestling | 26 |
| Svetanant | Tharun | Wrestling | 27 |
| Wright | Jacob | Wrestling | 27 |
Nestled in the mountains of Virginia, Washington and Lee University is a proud member of NCAA Division III and the Old Dominion Athletic Conference. Founded in 1749, W&L is the ninth-oldest college in the United States and a top-ranked liberal arts university. With over 500 student-athletes in 24 varsity sports, the Generals have celebrated over 265 conference championships. Learn more about the Blue and White by visiting www.generalssports.com or on social media at @WLUGenerals.
Sports
Track and Field Begins 2026 Strong at TCNJ Lions Invitational
NEW YORK – Columbia track & field opened the 2026 indoor season with multiple podium finishes, personal bests, and program marks at the TCNJ Lions Invitational on Friday inside the Armory.
FIELD EVENTS
Columbia turned in a strong showing across the field events. In the women’s pole vault, Jessica Thompson led the Lions with a third-place finish after clearing a personal best mark of 3.80m and is currently at the 64th spot in the nation. Seraiah Bruno and Lucy Markow each cleared 3.50m, with Bruno recording a season best.
On the men’s side of the pole vault, Liam Wright delivered a runner-up finish with a clearance of 4.55m, while Gavin Holcombe placed fifth at 4.40m.
In the high jump, Collin Moore led Columbia with a third-place finish in the men’s competition after clearing 1.95m. On the women’s side, Norina Khanzada and Fiona McKenna each cleared 1.50m, finishing fourth and fifth, respectively.
Zayna Flynn represented Columbia in the women’s shot put, placing ninth with a mark of 8.17m. In the men’s shot put, Adam Jaros finished 10th with a throw of 10.27m.
RUNNING EVENTS
Columbia delivered a strong performance on the track. In the men’s sprints, Matthew Mazero captured the 200m title with a time of 21.85, earning the 84th spot in the nation while Zach Willen followed closely in second at 21.98. The duo returned to the track in the 60m finals, where Mazero placed third with a time of 7.02, and Willen added a personal best with a 7.12 race effort.
The men’s 40 relay quartet of Evan Singleton, Caden Cutchall, Zach Willen, and Matthew Mazero sped past the competition, finishing second with a time of 3:20.79. Cutchall also impressed in the 500m, placing third in the 50 competition with a personal-best 1:04.99, while Haydn Brotschi posted a personal best time of 33.98 to finish second in the 300m.
On the women’s side, Columbia placed third in the 4×400 relay, crossing the line in 4:10.82 behind a strong effort from Kylie Castillo, Jayla Johnson, Olivia Dada, and Roya Amirhamzeh. Castillo also added a fifth-place finish in the 200m with a time of 26.16, while Olivia Sterling finished sixth in the 60m finals at 8.00.
In the middle-distance events, Roya Amirhamzeh clocked 1:21.85 in the 500m, while the Lions continued to post solid depth performances in the 300m, led by Kylie Castillo, who ran 41.23.
UP NEXT
The Lions are heading to Yale for an Ivy competition against Yale and Dartmouth on Saturday, January 17, with field events scheduled at 11 am and running events scheduled at 2:30 pm
Stay up to date on all things Columbia track & field by following the Lions on Twitter (@CULionsXCTF), Instagram (@culionsxctf) and on Facebook (@ColumbiaAthletics).
Sports
Buffs Building Towards Opener – University of Colorado Athletics
BOULDER — Head coach Ann Elliott Whidden and her Colorado lacrosse team returned to the field inside the Ford Practice Facility on Thursday, officially marking the start of the 2026 season.
The Buffaloes enter their 13th season in 2026, all under the direction of Whidden, who has compiled a 130-75 record.
“It is great to be back with this team,” Whidden expressed. “This group is highly focused and motivated to get to work and we have had a great start to our spring practices. The intensity and competitiveness they bring everyday has been great to see.”
Colorado played seven fall warm-up games, including a pair against the team’s season-opening opponent, Northwestern. The Buffs also played exhibition games against Canada’s U20 National Team, Marquette, Denver, and Stanford before their annual scrimmage against CU alums.
The 2025 Buffs finished 8-8 overall and 4-1 in Big 12 play, earning the No. 2 seed in the inaugural Big 12 Tournament. Returning defender Jess Peluso scored Nike Lacrosse Media All-America honorable mention honors last season and was the Big 12’s Defensive Player of the Year.
Sophomore goaltender Elena Oh won four Big 12 Goalkeeper of the Week awards last year and was selected to the Big 12 All-Newcomer Team. She led the Big 12 and ranked 18th in the NCAA with a 9.81 goals-against average in her freshman season. Oh was also third in the conference with a .399 save% and made 5.93 saves per game (5th Big 12).
Also returning in 2026 are All-Conference selections Maddie Shoup and Lily Assini. The offensive duo finished second and third on the team in points last season, respectively. Shoup totaled career-highs in goals (30) and assists (13) for 43 total points. Assini totaled 16 goals and a career-high 23 assists for a career-best 39 points.
Colorado scored 178 total goals in 2025 and returns 57% of its scoring from a year ago.
“We are so excited for the spring and the challenges we have on our schedule,” Whidden added. “We are looking forward to taking the next few weeks to lock in on ourselves and just focus on getting better everyday so we are prepared for those opportunities. This is a great group and I’m just really looking forwarding to seeing what we can do this season!”
Nine true freshmen will look to compete for some key roles this spring. Whidden added newcomers Rowan Edson, Georgia Rios and Sophia Yeskulsky to the attack, Charlotte Yeskulsky, Alison Stevens, Julia Etu and Parker Lemm to the middles and Hailie Abrams and Ryann McLeod to the defensive corps. Jillian Kane joins the goalie depth chart, having played her first two seasons at Colby College.
The season gets underway with a trip to Evanston, Ill., to play national runner-up Northwestern on Feb. 9. The Buffs’ first home game is set for Feb. 15 against Cornell.
For more information on Colorado Lacrosse, please visit cubuffs.com/wlax. Fans of the Buffs can follow @cubuffswlax on Instagram, X, TikTok, and Facebook.
Sports
Jenkins Adds Marinkovic to 2026 Transfer Class
A native of Belgrade, Serbia, Marinkovic joins the 49ers from NC State where she spent her freshman season, appearing in one match and tallying one kill. Before college, she attended Gimnazija “Branko Radičević” Stara Pazova where she earned first team All-Region honors. Academically, she earned a diploma for excellent achievement. The outside hitter finished first in all pioneer, cadet and junior competitions while playing club.
“I really loved the energy I felt watching the games,” said Marinkovic. “I’ve heard great things about how kind and supportive the coaches, staff, and players are, and how hard everyone works. It also means a lot to me to have my former teammate, Jovana, going through this process with me.”
During the 2020-21 club season, she placed third in the Serbian Prva Liga with OK Omladinac and went on to finish first the following year. At the 2024-25 Servia SuperCup, she placed second with Jedinstvo Stara Pazova.
-
Sports2 weeks agoBadgers news: Wisconsin lands 2nd commitment from transfer portal
-
Rec Sports1 week agoFive Youth Sports Trends We’re Watching in 2026
-
Sports3 weeks agoIs women’s volleyball the SEC’s next big sport? How Kentucky, Texas A&M broke through
-
Sports2 weeks agoKentucky VB adds an All-American honorable mention, loses Brooke Bultema to portal
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoDr. Patrick Staropoli Lands Full-Time O’Reilly Ride with Big Machine Racing
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoNBA, Global Basketball Community Unite for World Basketball Day Celebration
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoNASCAR, IndyCar, and F1 Share These Race Days in 2026
-
Sports2 weeks agoTexas A&M volleyball’s sweep of Kentucky attracts record viewership
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoBigRock Motorsports Retains Its Championship Title At ISRL Season 2 Grand Finale In Calicut
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoBangShift.com IHRA Acquires Historic Memphis Motorsports Park In Millington Tennessee. Big Race Weekend’s Planned For 2026!





