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Erie SeaWolves Celebrate 30th Season

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Erie SeaWolves Celebrate 30th Season

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During his weekly HBO Max program Last Week Tonight, host John Oliver announced that, after considering applications from 47 minor league baseball games, he would be taking the Erie SeaWolves under his wing and rebranding our 30-year-old team. SeaWolves President Greg Coleman thinks: It’s fun, it’s entertaining, I got a kick out of it.

Thirty years ago, a future Major League All Star playing for the Erie SeaWolves smashed a home run atop the roof of Tullio Arena.

But long before Jose Guillen’s walk-off homer on June 20, 1995, when the SeaWolves played their first-ever game in Erie, Mayor Joyce Savocchio, local and state elected officials, business leaders, and Team Erie volunteers stepped up to the plate to make sure that minor league baseball would remain in Erie and that the team’s sparkling new ballpark would revitalize downtown.

When the SeaWolves celebrate their 30th anniversary on June 20 through 22, the homestand against the Chesapeake Baysox will feature fireworks, 1995 replica blue-and-white pinstripe uniforms, giveaways, nostalgic trivia, and guest appearances by former Erie players.

Just as tantalizing, though, is the teaser about how comedian John Oliver, host of Last Week Tonight on HBO Max, might rebrand the Erie SeaWolves. Will our team really switch to a new name? Change mascots? Pick different colors?

Greg Coleman, Erie SeaWolves president, expects that Oliver’s marketing plan will be revealed by the end of June. But surprise is part of this caper. After all, Coleman was unpacking in Toronto for a Blue Jays game against the Detroit Tigers when he learned by text that on Oliver’s May 18 show, he had selected the SeaWolves out of 47 applicants for rebranding.

“The rest of the world found out before the Erie SeaWolves did. It’s fun, it’s entertaining, I got a kick out of it,” Coleman said.

Coleman invited Oliver to rebrand the Erie team because Oliver had overlooked the SeaWolves on an earlier show highlighting minor league teams with unique names and offbeat promotions.

Coleman sent Oliver an 11-item list touting memorable accomplishments by the SeaWolves, including “Alternative Facts Night” in 2017, when fans got faux championship rings even though Akron had won the Eastern League Championship the previous season; cotton-candy hot dogs on “Sugar Rush Night” in 2018; and in 2021, the reunion of the Wonders band from That Thing You Do!, for the 25th anniversary of Tom Hanks’ Erie-centric film.

“I didn’t want Erie to be left out of the story,” Coleman said. It’s also real news that Erie, a small-market team, did, indeed, win Eastern League championships in 2023 and 2024 and hopes to three-peat this season.

Oliver’s rebrand could play out in the same way that the SeaWolves have become the SnowWolves, the Piñatas, and the Pepperoni Balls on theme nights during the regular season.

But if Oliver pitches “the best thing that ever existed in this world,” there will be serious consideration for his ideas long-term, Coleman said. “We have to go into it open-minded.”

As Oliver researches Erie’s long and storied baseball history, he will learn that change has been a constant for baseball in Erie and also that Erie fans are fully vested in the fate of the SeaWolves. “This is our team,” said Dr. Brad Fox, who has provided physician services to Erie’s baseball teams since 1992. “Fans actually feel that they are part of the team.”

Season ticket holders and staffers make that clear.

Kirk Kinnear, an Army veteran who spent 20 years stationed in Hawaii, is always the first one in line for SeaWolves games, no matter the weather. He also goes on road trips to see “our boys,” he said. The next one will be to Akron on July 5.

LuAn Sheptow, who holds season tickets for both Erie and the Detroit Tigers, said that at Comerica Park, former Erie players always make it a point to ask how “our Erie boys are doing,” she said.

Kinnear describes those associated with the SeaWolves as “one big happy family” and that extends to employees including Beryl Fleming, who began ushering in 1996 during summers off from his job as a history teacher, and Mike Balko, 27, who rose from spinning the prize wheel as a seasonal worker to becoming director of operations.

“I love to see the smiles on the faces of fans,” Balko said. That joy of taking in a ballgame never changes, even though Erie’s team names have changed many times in the past. The current ballpark didn’t even have a name when it opened in June 1995. It became Jerry Uht Park in August that year and then UPMC Park in 2017.

The SeaWolves started as a single-A team and advanced to AA in 2003. The ballpark has been renovated multiple times, and the Stadium Club, which opened in 2021, is a year-round venue.

We teetered on the brink of losing pro ball when team owners bolted and because of Major League Baseball requirements for facility upgrades, which were completed. We were on the chopping block when MLB shrunk the number of minor-league teams in 2019 but then spared Erie.

The baseball business is stable right now. SeaWolves’ owner Fernando Aguirre signed a 10-year lease for UPMC Park with Erie Events in 2021 and a similar agreement was reached to keep Erie’s affiliation with the Detroit Tigers for the same length of time.

But it’s also important to recall that Erie has pluck, as demonstrated by the Erie SeaWolves’ fight song. Two seasons ago, Coleman, who plays guitar, came up with the melody on a drive home from a game, then added lyrics. Professionals polished up the ditty and Jason Dougherty, entertainment director, created the video that plays on the scoreboard during crucial game moments.

“We are home of the fierce and the fun,” the song intones in a catchy rhythm ideal for clapping along. “We dream and we build and we just go out and get another win.” It’s the kind of bold attitude that Erie demonstrates time and again.

“It’s catching steam, especially with the kids,” Coleman said. Listen for yourself on YouTube.

(Clockwise from top left): Second baseman Trei Cruz makes an exciting out as the SeaWolves work their way towards the Eastern League Championship; The yearbook from the inaugural season of the Erie SeaWolves was published for their first game in 1995 – the club celebrates their 30th anniversary this year; UPMC Field was originally christened Jerry Uht Park; The Seawolves celebrated back to back Eastern league championships in 2023 and 2024. (R. Frank Media/Contributed)

 

The first-ever SeaWolves game that featured a dramatic come-from-behind win could have used a fight song. It happened at the SeaWolves’ home opener on June 20, 1995. With Erie tied 2-2 against the Jamestown Jammers in the bottom of the ninth, Guillen, a hot Pittsburgh Pirates prospect, came up to bat and blasted the first pitch to the top of Tullio Arena for a 3-2 win for Erie.

The capacity crowd of 6,300 went wild.

But those who had worked for years to secure a new stadium and minor league team for Erie already knew that they had a winner three days earlier, on Saturday, June 17, when hundreds of people braved high humidity and hot temperatures in the Ballpark-to-Ballpark Home Run (and Walk).

The route took them from beloved Ainsworth Field on West 24th and Cranberry streets, home to Erie’s minor league and amateur teams for decades, to the new ballpark at East 10th and French.

Craig Latimer directed the walk/run race, part of the City of Erie’s 1995 Bicentennial celebration.

“I had a lot of experience putting on races but usually in low-traffic areas in the country or the easier-to-control Presque Isle,” Latimer recalled. “A daytime race from Ainsworth to the new downtown park with a flood of runners, walkers, strollers, and skateboards about to stream through a gaggle of hopefully secured intersections was giving me race-director hives.”

Would there be a train running along the 19th Street tracks through Little Italy? Would the 16th and Liberty intersection be safe for pedestrians? Nevertheless, Latimer called about 800 participants to the starting line and as “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” played, he yelled “Go!” and watched as “the ambulatory dam burst with a tide of folks keen on getting to the new era of Erie baseball.”

Fans eager to check out Erie’s new downtown ball team wanted to pay tribute to Ainsworth Field, which has its own history that should be preserved. This field, owned by the Erie School District, has hosted exhibition games featuring Honus Wagner from the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1906 and then Babe Ruth twice – in 1923, when Ruth’s barnstorming All-Stars beat the Erie Moose Club 15-1, and again in 1932, when Ruth and fellow Yankee Lou Gehrig lost to the Erie Sailors 7-4, as documented in the Mark Vatavuk-Richard Marshall book, Baseball in Erie.

Eric Brookhouser, 56, an Erie SeaWolves season ticket holder, nurtured his love of baseball at Ainsworth. “I was going to Roosevelt Middle School when the Erie Cardinals came, back in 1981. I lived around 36th and Greengarden and could walk from my house and then walk home at night. I probably saw that last game at Ainsworth (when the Sailors were in the independent Frontier League) and I was at the first SeaWolves’ game and saw the famous Jose Guillen game-winning home run.”

Brookhouser is the great-nephew of the late Betty Peebles, who broke ground as a female baseball columnist before becoming society editor of the Erie Times-News. She was part of Team Erie, the volunteer organization that Savocchio credits with being key to Erie landing the SeaWolves franchise.

“So many projects depend on partnerships, not just political partnerships. Team Erie was part of a very significant partnership,” she said. “One thing I’ve learned in being mayor is that if you don’t dream big, you don’t get big.”

Al Swigonski had that can-do attitude as president of Team Erie and facing a daunting task. How do you find millions to construct a new ballpark when you start with only a $30,000 shoestring budget from local fundraisers? “We were pulling teeth. Frankly, it was a painful process. It was five years of purgatory.”

Swigonski became determined to save Erie baseball in 1990, after Erie Daily Times Sports Editor Kevin Cuneo wrote about the poor maintenance of Ainsworth Field. Swigonski had seen his first ballgames there as a kid, with his parents and two brothers. He wrote to Cuneo: “Let’s do something.”

A 1992 feasibility study determined that Ainsworth would not be a good site for a new ballpark and recommended that the stadium be built on the west bayfront, where the Erie Bayfront Convention Center now sits, although the study pointed out that the “smell” from the nearby asphalt plant might offend fans. Erie City Council members also complained that gulls would foul up the field.

But there are no complaints now when gulls occasionally glide over UPMC Park during a game. The birds won’t distract you from a conversation with new usher Orzeko Seneta, 28, a Navy veteran who will go to college in the fall to become a math teacher. He is a “sports nut” who knows more trivia about the team and the ballpark than anyone I’ve ever met.

Also count yourself lucky if you run into Michael and Shannon Barry, military veterans who chose to retire to Erie six years ago from San Diego, because he loves hockey and can root for the Erie Otters and she can cheer for the SeaWolves in her favorite sport, baseball. They had no ties to Erie when they relocated here but are now season ticket holders.

And before John Oliver unveils his rebrand of the Erie SeaWolves, have some fun dreaming up your own new team names. Doc Fox likes the Olivers or the Hazards. I’m partial to the Erie Dinor-saurs.

Liz Allen became an Erie SeaWolves usher in 2016 after retiring from the Erie Times-News. She can be reached at lizerie@aol.com

 

Fun fact

Greg Coleman, Erie SeaWolves president, pioneered the practice of employing temporary team names when he was assistant general manager for sales and marketing for the minor league team in Bowling Green, Kentucky.

The team had rebranded as the Hot Rods but Coleman also liked a goofy name that was rejected before he came on board. He created “What Could Have Been Night,” with the Hot Rods morphing into the Bowling Green Cave Shrimp. It won Minor League Baseball’s promotion of the year.

Help Ainsworth

Al Swigonski, former president of Team Erie, is looking for supporters to help decide the fate of historic Ainsworth Field, which is still used by the Erie High Royals baseball team and other leagues.

“Ainsworth is a living, breathing disgrace. We should be ashamed it’s come to this. Our kids deserve the best,” Swigonski said.

For detailed accounts of Ainsworth Field’s history, consult Baseball in Erie by Mark K. Vatavuk and Richard E. Marshal, and Swigonski’s two books, *Erie Baseball and Softball 360, volumes one and two.

To learn more about preservation and rehab efforts for Ainsworth Field, email Swigonski at alswigonski@aol.com.

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USC Men’s Volleyball Announces 2026 Schedule

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LOS ANGELES – USC men’s volleyball has revealed its 2026 competition schedule and will play 16 home matches in the spring.
 
NONCONFERENCE
The Trojans open 2026 as host to St. Thomas Aquinas College (Jan. 10) and will face the Spartans at Galen Center for a 5 p.m. PT Saturday-night bout. The next week, USC goes to Costa Mesa for its first road test and takes on Vanguard at the Freed Center for Leadership on Jan. 15. The Trojans’ next five matches will be played at Galen Center starting with Princeton (Jan. 16) followed by Fort Valley State (Jan. 24), Ohio State (Jan. 30), Cal State Northridge (Feb. 4), and UC Santa Barbara (Feb. 7). 
 
USC plays a home-and-home with UC Irvine ahead of Valentine’s weekend and visits the Anteaters for a mid-week match on Feb. 11 at 6 p.m. PT at Bren Events Center. UCI then comes to Galen Center for a Friday-night rematch on Feb. 13 set at 7 p.m.
 
To conclude the month of February, USC will take part in a four-team tournament hosted at the Honda Center Feb. 19-20. The Anaheim arena will serve as the volleyball venue for the 2028 Olympic Games and the tournament—which will also feature UCLA from the MPSF and Big West foes Hawai’i and Long Beach State—will award an NIL prize to the winner.
 
USC’s final nonconference regular-season match will be against Penn State. The Trojans host the Nittany Lions for a mid-conference one-off on March 14 at Galen Center.
 
MPSF CONFERENCE
USC—which was picked to finish second in a preseason poll of the league’s head coaches—opens MPSF play with crosstown rival UCLA and will meet the Bruins on March 4 for a 7 p.m. match at Galen Center. The teams then play a second time on March 6 at Pauley Pavilion. Each home team won in last spring’s meetings. The Trojans then head to Concordia to face the Eagles on March 12 in Irvine, Calif. USC plays CUI just once in an unbalanced conference schedule.
 
The Trojans then play their next six MPSF matches at home and host conference newcomer Jessup in back-to-back matches at USC’s North Gym (March 20-21). Menlo will visit Galen Center for matches on March 27 and 28. While the Oaks joined the MPSF for the 2025 season, USC did not face Menlo last spring. Stanford then comes to Galen Center for the Trojans’ first two matches of the month of April. The teams will meet in Friday-Saturday matches (April 3-4) set for 7 p.m. and 5 p.m. respectively.
 
In its first and only out-of-state regular-season competition, the Trojans head to Provo, Utah, to take on BYU (April 10-11) at the Smith Fieldhouse. USC then closes the regular season with 2025 MPSF champion Pepperdine. The Trojans host the Waves on April 16 for Senior Night and then visit Pepperdine for the rematch on April 18 at Firestone Fieldhouse.
 
MPSF TOURNAMENT
BYU and the Smith Fieldhouse will serve as host of the 2026 MPSF Tournament set for April 22-25 in Provo, Utah. Quarterfinal matches will be played on Wednesday (April 22) followed by two semifinal matches on Thursday (April 23). The MPSF championship match is set for Saturday evening, April 25. The winner receives the league’s automatic berth to the NCAA Championship set to be played May 9-11 at UCLA’s Pauley Pavilion.
 
In 2025, the Trojans went 21-7, finished second in the MPSF (8-4), and were awarded the second seed into the conference tournament. There, USC finished as runner-up to Pepperdine, which hosted the championship in Malibu, Calif. USC opened the year with a nine-match win streak for its best start to a season since 1991 (28-0) and won 10 matches in a row (Feb. 26-April 3) for the program’s longest win streak since 2012 (18 in a row). It was head coach Jeff Nygaard‘s second 20-win season (20th in program history). USC led the MPSF for many weeks in all statistical categories but aces and finished the season as the NCAA leader in blocks (2.86 bps) with 16 matches in double-digits. The Trojans set a new school record for hitting percentage in a match (.691 vs. Dominican, Feb. 8) and hit better than .300 in 19 matches (plus-.400 in 10 contests). Dillon Klein was named to the AVCA All-America first team and was a first-team All-MPSF choice.
 
For more information on the USC men’s volleyball team and to purchase tickets, please visit USCTrojans.com/MVB. Fans of the Trojans can follow @USCmensvolley on Instagram, X, and Facebook.
 



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Final Four live score updates

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Updated Dec. 18, 2025, 6:23 p.m. ET



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Assistant Volleyball Coach, Girls – IMG Academy

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In order to be considered for this role, after clicking “Apply Now” above and being redirected, you must fully complete the application process on the follow-up screen.

About IMG Academy
Named one of the Best and Brightest Companies to Work For in the Nation in 2024, IMG Academy is the world’s leading sports education brand, providing a holistic education model that empowers student-athletes to win their future, preparing them for college and for life. IMG Academy provides growth opportunities for all student-athletes through an innovative suite of on-campus and online experiences:

  • Boarding school and camps, via a state-of-the-art campus in Bradenton, Fla.
  • Online coaching via the IMG Academy+ brand, with a focus on personal development through the lens of sport and performance
  • Online college recruiting, via the NCSA brand, providing content, tools, coaching and access to a network of 40,000 college coaches

The Assistant Volleyball Coach, Girls is responsible for all aspects of training and coaching student-athletes.

Position Responsibilities:

  • Prepares a training program for all student-athletes.
  • Assesses the skill development of each student-athlete, and partners with school staff and performance coaches to ensure their ongoing comprehensive development.
  • Assists with the psychological preparation of the student-athlete in both pre-game and post-game.
  • Develops motivational approach to practices and games.
  • Interacts with the student-athlete as a mentor and as an educator of the sport.
  • Responsible for delivering a high-quality program that aids in the annual retention of student-athletes.
  • Assists in the college placement of the student-athlete.
  • Supports and maintains a high level of understanding of the four-year model for the Academy program student-athlete.
  • Effectively communicates to student-athletes and their parents/guardians.
  • Partners with the student-athlete’s parent/guardian regarding their overall development.
  • Assists sport advisors in generating new leads and maintaining an accurate pipeline for enrollments.
  • Assures that proper safety is maintained.
  • Travels to tournaments and other events as needed.
  • Adheres to all company policies, procedures and business ethic codes.
  • Performs other duties as assigned.

Knowledge, Skills and Abilities:

  • Experience in coaching and/or playing at the professional and/or collegiate level.
  • Bachelor’s degree in an appropriate field.
  • Proficiency in training and instructional techniques.
  • Strong commitment to student-athletes and their development academically, athletically, and socially.
  • Desire to work collaboratively with colleagues.
  • Excellent written and verbal communication skills.
  • Commitment to comprehensive excellence.

Preferred Skills:

  • Bilingual
  • CPR Certification
  • Valid driver’s license with ability to drive for tournaments, games, travel

Physical Demands and Work Environment:

  • Ability to handle outdoor conditions for a reasonable period of time.
  • Ability to move around campus including gym, turf, fields, etc.
  • Ability to work flexible hours to include nights, weekends and holidays.

#LI-NS1

Background Requirements:

  • Requires a background check upon offer
  • Requires a drug test upon offer
Benefits:
As a full-time member of our team, you will enjoy a comprehensive offering listed below. Connect with your talent acquisition specialist to learn more about benefits for our part-time and seasonal/temporary roles.

  • Comprehensive Medical, Dental and Vision
  • Flexible Spending Account and Health Savings Account options
  • 401k with an Employer Match
  • Short Term and Long Term Disability
  • Group and Supplemental Life & AD&D
  • Gym Discount Program
  • Pet Insurance
  • Wellbeing Program
  • and more!

Don’t meet every single requirement? We are dedicated to building a diverse, inclusive, authentic workplace, so if you’re excited about this role but your past experience doesn’t align perfectly with every qualification in the job description, we encourage you to apply anyway. You may be just the right candidate for this or other roles.

 

Get to know us better: 

www.imgacademy.com

www.imgacademy.com/careers

 

IMG Academy provides equal employment opportunities to all employees and applicants for employment and prohibits discrimination and harassment of any type without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, national origin, disability status, genetics, protected veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, or any other characteristic protected by federal, state or local laws.



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Tufts Athletics Hall of Fame Inductees Named for 2026

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Eight outstanding individuals and one memorable team will be inducted as the seventh class of the Tufts University Athletics Hall of Fame in April 2026. 

The group of honorees represents five decades and eight sports, as Tufts continues to recognize accomplished individuals and teams from its more than 150 years of athletics history.

This seventh class will be inducted at the Tufts Athletics Hall of Fame induction dinner on April 24 at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. Ticket information will be released in the coming weeks.

Meet the 2026 Tufts Athletics Hall of Fame inductees:

Chance Brady, A17

Football

Chance Brady rewrote the record book and changed the trajectory of the team during his four years playing football for the Jumbos. When Brady arrived at Tufts, the team was mired in a long losing streak. By the end of his career, the team had finished with a 7-1 record in his senior season, which was its best since 1998. 

Brady set or tied 13 team rushing and scoring records. His 1,099 rushing yards in 2016 and 2,692 career total are both Jumbo all-time marks. His 19 touchdowns in 2016 and 35 for his career are also Tufts standards. Brady’s 210 career points scored broke the record of Fred “Fish” Ellis, after whom Tufts’ stadium is named. 

In his final game, Brady had 285 total yards (rushing and receiving) and scored five touchdowns in a 48-35 win at Middlebury College. A two-time NESCAC Player of the Year, he earned New England Football Writers and Gridiron Club Player of the Year awards as a senior.

Mark Buben, A79

Football

After a dominant career on the defensive line at Tufts, Mark Buben was signed as a free agent by the New England Patriots of the National Football League. 

One of just two Jumbos to play in the NFL during the modern era, Buben appeared in 35 games during three seasons in the NFL with the Patriots (1979, 1981) and the Cleveland Browns (1982). In 1981 he had an interception that he returned 49 yards to help set up a touchdown in a 33-17 Patriots victory over the Chiefs. 

At Tufts he was a ferocious defender who intimidated opposing quarterbacks. His 31 career sacks still stand as the most in team history. The 12 sacks he recorded in both 1977 and 1978 remain tied for the most in a single season at Tufts. Buben’s dominant defensive play as the team won the final four games of 1978 helped set the tone for the Jumbos’ subsequent 1979 undefeated season.

Jo Clair, A14

Softball

A leader of two national championship softball teams at Tufts, Jo Clair graduated in 2014 as one of the most prolific hitters in NCAA Division III history. A four-year starter at catcher, Clair was part of the battery with Tufts Hall of Fame pitcher Allyson Fournier that led the Jumbos to NCAA titles in 2013 and 2014. She also helped head coach Cheryl Milligan’s team win three straight NESCAC Championships from 2012-14. 

Clair’s 67 career home runs are third-most in NCAA history, and her 220 runs batted in are eighth-most all-time. The 24 home runs she hit in 2014 led the nation and are tied for the second-most in a single-season ever. 

Her 156 total bases that year are fourth-best for one season in NCAA history. Clair’s 498 career total bases is another NCAA all-time top-10 mark. A three-time NFCA All-American and a four-time NESCAC All-Conference honoree, including Player of the Year in 2014, Clair was also an Academic All-American as a senior.

Fred Hintlian, A76

Men’s Track & Field

Tufts’ first-ever NCAA national champion in any sport, Fred Hintlian was one of the great hurdlers of his era in track & field. At the second-ever NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships in Berea, Ohio, Hintlian won the 440-yard hurdles title with a time of 52.15 seconds in 1975. 

Due to the NCAA switching to metric measurements for race distances in 1976, Hintlian’s 52.15 mark stands in perpetuity as the Division III record for the 440-yard hurdles event. He was also the runner-up in the NCAA 400-meter hurdles in 1976, and had been third for the 440-yard race at the 1974 Nationals, making him a three-time All-American. 

During his career at Tufts, Hintlian won four Eastern Intercollegiate titles in the hurdles and was the New England champion in 1974. A five-time team MVP (indoors and outdoors), Hintlian received Tufts’ Bennett Memorial Scholarship and Frederick Melvin Ellis Prize during his career for academic and athletic excellence. 

Dennis Mink, A75

Men’s Basketball

A 6’7” forward, Dennis Mink was a force in the frontcourt for the successful Tufts men’s basketball teams of the early 1970s. Despite playing just three seasons, Mink graduated in 1975 as the Jumbos’ all-time leading scorer with 1,447 points (currently seventh all-time). 

He is one of just two players in Tufts history to average better than 20 points per game for his career. As a senior in 1974-75, Mink scored 23.4 points per game, including a 40-point game. He was also #2 on the team’s career rebounds list upon graduation with 839 (still fifth).

Ineligible to play on the varsity team as a freshman due to NCAA rules, Mink was a sophomore on the 1972-73 Tufts team that won 22 games, captured the ECAC New England championship, and was inducted into the Tufts Athletics Hall of Fame in 2023. He averaged 12.4 rebounds that year, the third-best mark in team history. Mink’s 640 career field goals made in three seasons remain fifth all-time at Tufts.

Jessica Stewart, A02

Women’s Volleyball

The Jumbo Volleyball program’s first Tufts Athletics Hall of Fame inductee, Jessica Stuart took the Jumbos to another level with her play during her career from 1998 to 2001. An all-around player, at the time of her graduation Stuart was first on the Tufts career lists for kills (1665) and service aces (214), while also ranking fifth all-time in digs (1390) and ninth in blocks (207). 

She posted two of the top three single-season kills marks, including a program-best 452 kills in 1999. At the time, she was the only Jumbo ever to record 30 kills in one match, doing it twice, including 31 versus Brandeis in 2001. 

She also had two of the top three Tufts career service aces totals, led by the 73 aces she served in 2001. The NESCAC Rookie of the Year in 1998 and then a two-time All-Conference selection (2000 and 2001), Stuart helped lay the groundwork for a Tufts program that would blossom in the 2000s.

Jessica Trombly Rogers, A04

Women’s Soccer / Women’s Track & Field

One of the great multi-sport athletes in Tufts history, Jessica Trombly Rogers was a leading scorer for the soccer team and a national champion hurdler in track & field. 

In her first semester at Tufts, Trombly was an offensive leader on the 2000 women’s soccer team that made a dramatic run to the NCAA championship game. She was NESCAC’s Rookie of the Year that season, a three-time All-Conference honoree overall and finished her soccer career fourth on the team’s all-time scoring list with 58 points (22 goals, 14 assists). 

On the track, she won the 2004 NCAA Outdoor 400-meter hurdles title with a time of 59.98 seconds. Equally impressive, Trombly won five events—200m, 400m, 55-meter hurdles, long jump, 4×400 relay—at the New England Division III Indoor Track and Field championships in 2003. 

A four-time All-American overall, Trombly still holds Tufts records in the 400 meters indoors and the heptathlon outdoors. She received Tufts’ Hester L. Sargent Award as Best Female Athlete in back-to-back years (2003 and 2004).

1985-86 Women’s Swimming & Diving Team

The 1985-86 Women’s Swimming & Diving team, who will be inducted into the Tufts Athletics Hall of Fame for 2025.

Formed in 1974, the Tufts women’s swimming & diving team quickly became one of the best in New England. The program’s early success peaked when head coach Nancy Bigelow’s 1985-86 team won the New England championship and then placed 10th at the NCAA championships. 

With an experienced group of swimmers and divers who had helped the team earn back-to-back undefeated seasons in 1983-84 and 1984-85, the Tufts team then captured the program’s first-ever New England championship in 1985-86. 

The Jumbos defeated rival Williams College for the first time to win the New Englands, with six individuals and three relays winning titles. The team’s top-10 NCAA finish was significant because the AIAW national organization had recently disbanded and the NCAA Division III championship meet remained as the only national competition attended by Division III teams. 

Eight Jumbos earned All-American honors in 10 events at the national championship. All-Americans Kelly Brown, Jane Donahue, Ann Erickson, Laurie Frankel, Ceci Grimm, Beth Harris, Ann McCann, and Amy Moran led the team.

Brown & Blue Award

Included in the bylaws for the Tufts Athletics Hall of Fame is a provision that permits the Selection Committee to present an award designed to recognize alumni, donors, benefactors, staff, friends, and supporters who have made significant contributions to the success of Tufts Athletics over the years.

The name of this very special award is The Brown & Blue Award. This year’s recipient is Mike Skeldon. The outstanding progress that Tufts University has made in improving its athletics facilities over the past 15 years is largely due to the significant contributions of Skeldon. 

As senior project manager of major construction projects for Tufts, he oversaw the construction of the Steve Tisch Sports and Fitness Center, which opened in 2012 as the sparkling new home of Tufts Athletics. 

He also helped develop the Athletics Master Facilities Plan, worked on the Tufts Squash Center, which opened in 2020, was part of early iterations of what would become Sol Gittleman Park for baseball, and was involved in the first round of Aquatics Center work with a prospective design/build team. 

Skeldon was a natural problem-solver who could creatively figure out ways to get things done in an economically common-sense way. He passed away in 2019, but left a legacy of work that invaluably supported Tufts’ varsity, club sport, and intramural/recreation programs. He also trained with the Tufts Marathon Team, under legendary coach Don Megerle, and finished the historic Boston Marathon in 2018.



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Tarleton State Beach Volleyball announces 2026 schedule

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STEPHENVILLE, Texas – Tarleton State Beach Volleyball announced its 2026 schedule on Thursday, a two-month long regular season that starts Feb. 21.
 
Tarleton State will begin its third season in program history at Houston Christian Feb. 21-22, in Houston. The Texans and Huskies have matched up once before, in Tarleton State’s inaugural campaign in 2024, also in Houston.
 
Tarleton State’s first three events will be in Texas, with the next two at Concordia on Feb. 25 in Austin, and at Mary Hardin-Baylor March 6-7 in Belton.
 
The Texans will play at Louisiana-Monroe on March 13-14, the second time Tarleton State will face the War Hawks in Monroe in three seasons.
 
On March 20-21, Tarleton State will make a trip to Tucson, Arizona, to take on the Arizona Wildcats. The two teams matched up last season at the LBSU Invitational in Long Beach, California, with this marking Tarleton State Beach Volleyball’s first trip to the state of Arizona.
 
On March 27-28, Tarleton State will face McNeese for the third straight season. In 2024, Tarleton State’s first matches in program history came at the Cowgirl Beach Bash in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and last year the Texans and Cowgirls faced off in New Orleans. This year, the Texans will return to Lake Charles.
 
Tarleton State’s final regular season road trip will be to Corpus Christi, for an April 3-4 outing at the Islanders. Last year the Texans traveled to Corpus Christi, the Texans started the Islander Classic with a 5-0 sweep of Sam Houston.
 

The Texans will host three regular season matches in Stephenville, between April 9-10. Tarleton State will clash with Howard Payne on April 9, then host both Mary Hardin-Baylor and East Texas Baptist on April 10. These will mark Tarleton State’s first regular season home matches since March 22, 2024, when the Texans hosted a doubleheader against Texas A&M-Kingsville.
 
The Conference USA Beach Volleyball Championship will return to Youngsville, Louisiana, from April 23-26. The Texans have won a match in the conference tournament in each of their first two seasons, defeating Jacksonville State in 2024 and Sam Houston last year.
 
The NCAA Championships will play out in Gulf Shores, Alabama, on May 1-3.
    
The full 2026 schedule for Tarleton State Beach Volleyball can be seen below:
 
















Date Opponent Location
Feb. 21-22 Houston Christian Houston, TX
Feb. 25 Concordia Austin, TX
March 6-7 Mary Hardin-Baylor Belton, TX
March 13-14 Louisiana-Monroe Monroe, LA
March 20-21 Arizona Tucson, AZ
March 27-28 McNeese Lake Charles, LA
April 3-4 Texas A&M-Corpus Christi Corpus Christi, TX
April 9 Howard Payne Stephenville, TX
April 10 Mary Hardin-Baylor Stephenville, TX
April 10 East Texas Baptist Stephenville, TX
April 23-26 C-USA Championship Youngsville, LA
May 1-3 NCAA Championships Gulf Shores, AL

 
Dates subject to change | Home matches in bold
 





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All-Americans, SLC champions highlight Fall 2025 graduating class

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NATCHITOCHES – Several members of Northwestern State’s dynastic women’s track and field program as well as members of the 2025 Southland Conference regular-season soccer champions highlight a group of 43 student-athletes and staff who received degrees during fall commencement ceremonies that concluded Thursday.
 
All-American sprinter Maygan Shaw, who became the first Lady Demon sprinter to earn All-American honors, led six current or former Lady Demon track and field athletes who earned their degrees. The majority of that group were part of a run that has seen the program win five of the six Southland Conference championships across the past three years of indoor and outdoor competition.
 
Shaw, a second-team All-American in the 400 meters this past spring, earned her bachelor’s degree in nursing and was on the honor roll. She is joined by Brea-Baca White (nursing), Tranasia Jones (liberal arts), Shakeria Kirk (psychology), Jaslyn Smith (health and exercise science) and Peyten Ware (child and family studies) as championship-winning track and field competitors who picked up their degrees this week.
 
Two pieces of the 2025 Southland Conference regular-season Northwestern soccer program also had degrees conferred upon them in the past two days. All-Southland goalkeeper Kennedy Rist (biology), midfielder Madison Murphy (communication) were two of four current or former soccer players who earned degrees in the fall. They were joined by Sara Fernandez (nursing) and Kylie Morris (biology).
 
The 2024-25 Southland Conference Women’s Basketball Newcomer of the Year, Mya Blake, earned her general studies degree in the summer.
 
Former All-Southland Conference performers Diamante Gumbs (track and field), Djimon Gumbs (track and field) and Reese Lipoma (baseball) became two-time NSU graduates as all three earned master’s degrees in health and human performance with a concentration in sport administration.
 
Of the 32 current or former student-athletes who took part in the ceremonies, 21 graduated with at least a 3.0 grade point average.
 
Total Summer 2025 and Fall 2025 Athletic Department Grads: 43
 
Summer 2025 Athletic Graduation List (Participating in Fall 2025 commencement): 10
Baseball (5)

  1. Brandon Carter (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health & Exercise Science; Honors: Magna Cum Laude
  2. Caden Fiveash: Bachelor of Science; College: Business and Technology; Major: Business Administration; Concentration: Management; Honors: Magna Cum Laude
  3. Reese Lipoma (Former Student-Athlete): Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Public Health
  4. Cade Pregeant (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Arts; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: Liberal Arts; Minor: Business Administration; Honors: Honor Roll
  5. Balin Valentine (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Arts; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: Liberal Arts; Minor: Social Science; Honors: Honor Roll

Men’s Basketball (2)

  1. Lado Laku (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of General Studies; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: General Studies; Concentration: Social Science; Minor: Social Science
  2. Jon Sanders (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of General Studies; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: General Studies; Concentration: Social Science; Minor: Social Science; Honors: Honor Roll

Men’s Track & Field (1)

  1. Robert Norton (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of General Studies; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: General Studies; Concentration: Social Science; Minor: Social Science

Volleyball (1)

  1. Teresa Garza (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Sport & Recreation Management; Minor: Business Administration; Honors: Honor Roll

Administration (1)

  1. Jena Williams (Former Graduate Asst./Women’s Basketball): Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Sport Administration

Fall 2025 Athletic Graduation List (33)
Baseball (2)

  1. John Acosta: Bachelor of Science; College: Arts and Sciences; Majors: Biology and Microbiology; Concentrations: Biomedical and Medical & Health Profession; Minor: Chemistry; Honors: Summa Cum Laude
  2. Bryce Johnson: Bachelor of Science; College: Business and Technology; Major: Business Administration; Concentration: Finance; Honors: Honor Roll

Women’s Basketball (3)

  1. Mya Blake (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of General Studies; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: General Studies; Concentration: Social Science; Minor: Social Science
  2. Jordan McLemore (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science; College: Business and Technology; Major: Business Administration; Minor: Hospitality, Management, and Tourism; Honors: Cum Laude
  3. Madison Moles (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health & Exercise Science; Honors: Magna Cum Laude

Football (7)

  1. Matt Broad: Bachelor of Science; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: Biology; Concentration: Natural Science; Honors: Honor Roll
  2. Kody Finley: Bachelor of Science; College: Business and Technology; Major: Business Administration
  3. Cameron George: Bachelor of General Studies; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: General Studies; Concentration: Social Science; Minor: Social Science
  4. Tyler Lewis: Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Sport Administration
  5. Connor Norcross (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health & Exercise Science; Honors: Honor Roll
  6. Danny Sears: Bachelor of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Sport & Recreation Management; Minor: Business Administration; Honors: Cum Laude
  7. Christian Williams: Bachelor of Arts; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: Liberal Arts; Minor: Communication

Soccer (4)

  1. Sara Fernandez (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science in Nursing; College: Nursing & School of Allied Health; Major: Nursing; Honors: Honor Roll
  2. Kylie Morris (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: Biology; Concentration: Biomedical; Honors: Cum Laude
  3. Madison Murphy: Bachelor of Arts; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: Communication; Concentration: Sports Media; Minor: P.E., Sport, and Leisure Management; Honors: Summa Cum Laude
  4. Kennedy Rist: Bachelor of Science; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: Biology; Concentration: Biomedical; Honors: Magna Cum Laude

Men’s Track and Field (4)

  1. Diamante Gumbs (Former Student-Athlete; Current Asst. Track & Field Coach): Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Sport Administration
  2. Djimon Gumbs (Former Student-Athlete; Current Asst. Track & Field Coach): Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Sport Administration
  3. John Klein: Bachelor of Arts; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: Criminal Justice; Concentration: Pre-Law and Paralegal Studies; Honors: Magna Cum Laude
  4. Joshua Moore (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of General Studies; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: General Studies; Concentration: Social Science; Minor: Social Science

Women’s Track and Field (6)

  1. Brea Baca-White (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science in Nursing; College: Nursing & School of Allied Health; Major: Nursing; Honors: Cum Laude
  2. Tranasia Jones (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Arts; College: Arts and Sciences; Major: Liberal Arts; Minor: Social Science
  3. Shakera Kirk: Bachelor of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Psychology; Honors: Honor Roll
  4. Maygan Shaw (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science in Nursing; College: Nursing & School of Allied Health; Major: Nursing; Honors: Honor Roll
  5. Jaslyn Smith (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Exercise Science
  6. Peyten Ware (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Child and Family Studies; Concentration: Child Development & Family Relations

Volleyball (1)

  1. Tessa Gerwig (Former Student-Athlete): Bachelor of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Psychology; Honors: Magna Cum Laude

Administration (6)

  1. Kendrioun Boatman/Football Grad. Asst. Coach: Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Sport Administration (Perfect 4.0 GPA!)
  2. Julia Davis/Athletics Academic Coordinator: Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Sport Administration
  3. Mackenzie Fletcher (Former Graduate Asst./Baseball): Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Sport Administration
  4. Tyrius “T.J.” Hersey/Football Grad. Asst. Coach: Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Sport Administration
  5. McKel Major/Strength and Conditioning Grad. Asst. Coach: Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Sport Administration
  6. Ian Rogers/Strength and Conditioning Asst. Coach: Master of Science; College: Education & Human Development; Major: Health and Human Performance; Concentration: Sport Administration



 
 
 



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