ETHS seniors dressed to impress Friday night, as they headed for one final hurrah of their high school career. Karamot Farsi (from left), Amani Christian, Dillon Woods, Miles Nakamoto, Ryan Rice and Annie Gertz are ready for the big night. Credit: Carrie Jackson Students wore tuxes, gowns, high heels, and big smiles for Senior Prom, […]
ETHS seniors dressed to impress Friday night, as they headed for one final hurrah of their high school career.
Karamot Farsi (from left), Amani Christian, Dillon Woods, Miles Nakamoto, Ryan Rice and Annie Gertz are ready for the big night. Credit: Carrie Jackson
Students wore tuxes, gowns, high heels, and big smiles for Senior Prom, the annual rite of passage held at Navy Pier. The RoundTable caught several groups of students posing for pre-prom pictures, as proud parents looked on.
Julian Duvall (from left) Marcus Frederick, Ralph Zematis, and Molly Fitzsimmons are camera-ready. Credit: Carrie Jackson
The students were excited, but most didn’t have any big plans after the dance. “We’re just going to enjoy the evening and see where it goes,” said Karamot Farsi.
Carrie Jackson is an Evanston-based freelance writer and communications specialist, with a focus on holistic health and fostering sustainable communities. Music and art fill her up, and she enjoys exploring…
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Olson & Barnes Earn First-Team All-American Honors To Cap NCAA’s
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Colorado College wrapped up the 2025 outdoor track and field season with a pair of first-team All-Americans at the NCAA Track and Field National Championships. Junior Rabbit Barnes crossed the finish line in 3:50.01 in the men’s 1,500m finals. Barnes finished fourth overall with the fastest time in the […]
Colorado College wrapped up the 2025 outdoor track and field season with a pair of first-team All-Americans at the NCAA Track and Field National Championships.
Junior Rabbit Barnes crossed the finish line in 3:50.01 in the men’s 1,500m finals. Barnes finished fourth overall with the fastest time in the event in program history. He was just a second behind his school record time of 3:49.04.
Barnes became the second individual athlete for the men’s team to earn All-American honors in the last three years. He joins James Settles who earned All-American honors in 2023 and 2024.
Senior Isabel Olson finished eighth in the women’s 1,500m for her first career track and field All-American nod and the second of her career including cross country. Olson finished with a time of 4:34.93 to join Annabel Arnott (1995) as the only Tigers to finish top eight in the event in program history.
Olson set the program record in the event earlier this season with a time of 4:27.59.
She also reached the finals of the 5K finals and placed 20th overall with a time of 17:15.09.
“It was a great way to wrap up a historical season for the program,” head coach Katie Brescher said. “Rabbit ran a smart and tactical race to get on the podium. Isabel maintained her positioning throughout the race to also be on the podium. Being first-time qualifiers, they handled the pressure well.”
Men’s Water Polo B Playoff. Lerici and Padova, over to you!. Game 3 to follow
A busy weekend for provincial water polo. The highlight of the day is game 3 of the men’s Serie B play-off semifinals: at the ‘Mori’ in Spezia, at 15 pm, the ‘beautiful’ match will be played between the home team Lerici Sport and Plebiscito Padova. After narrowly losing game 1 last Saturday, coach Sellaroli’s Coccodrilli […]
A busy weekend for provincial water polo. The highlight of the day is game 3 of the men’s Serie B play-off semifinals: at the ‘Mori’ in Spezia, at 15 pm, the ‘beautiful’ match will be played between the home team Lerici Sport and Plebiscito Padova. After narrowly losing game 1 last Saturday, coach Sellaroli’s Coccodrilli beat the Venetians on Wednesday, forcing them to a play-off. “It was important to win on a tough pitch like the one in Padova – the coach commented – otherwise we would have already been out of the game. Now we have to take advantage of this last opportunity that we have earned and it doesn’t need any statements: only the facts will count”. Heart and lots of competitive spirit will be the ingredients of this match in front of their home crowd. The club’s women’s team, on the other hand, will take to the field tomorrow, after the setback in the last round against league leaders Project Sport that interrupted the positive streak of Pellegri and her teammates. At 14pm Lerici Sport will be guests at the ‘Cascione’ in Imperia of Rari Nantes, for a challenge between almost equals (only one point separates the two teams in the standings).
“A tough away game against a team that follows us at a short distance – says Sellaroli in the pre-match – in the standings. We must continue to give continuity to the good performance of last Sunday against the first in the standings to consolidate our third position”. The Marina Militare will be aggressive, hunting for one of the two passes available to access the play-offs of the men’s C series. Foti’s boys, fresh from the setback against Varese Olona Nuoto, will not be able to falter against the Bocconi Sport Team, who they will host at the ‘Mori’ today at 17 pm. “We are ready for the last two days of the championship. In the first leg we lost by one playing a match that went badly at the end, our quality is superior to theirs, but maximum attention and we are focused on bringing home the three points” comments the coach, who will have to do without Sisti.
Matt Muthler earns All-American honors and lands on the podium at the NCAA Division II Outdoor Track & Field Championship
By: Trevor Jackson, Graduate Assistant
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NCAA Division II Outdoor Track & Field Championship Central PUEBLO, Colo. – On Friday, Matthew Muthler once again made history, as the senior earned his second All-American honor of the 2024-25 season on day two of the NCAA Division II Outdoor Track and Field Championships […]
NCAA Division II Outdoor Track & Field Championship Central
PUEBLO, Colo. – On Friday, Matthew Muthler once again made history, as the senior earned his second All-American honor of the 2024-25 season on day two of the NCAA Division II Outdoor Track and Field Championships hosted by Colorado State University – Pueblo at the CSU Pueblo Thunder Bowl.
Two-time Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference (PSAC) Champion, PSAC and Lock Haven record holder, and Indoor Track and Field All-American, Muthler earned his second All-American honor this year after finishing in eighth place with 7073 points at the National Championship. Muther entered the second day of the decathlon in ninth place with 3713 points. He then climbed one place to secure his All-American honor and a podium spot on the grandest stage.
He competed in the final five events in the decathlon. His best performance today was in the 1500-meter, where he dominated the decathlon field by finishing at 4:37.66. Muthler started the day with the 110-meter hurdles and finished in the top-ten with a time of 15.25. He kept the top-ten performances going in the discus throw, where he threw for a distance of 120-6. Muthler threw in the javelin, earning him another top-ten finish with a throw of 174-10. In the pole vault, Muthler achieved a new personal best height of 13-1.5.
Next up for The Haven:
Peter Bellomo will throw on the final day of the championship event on Saturday (May 24), beginning at 2:45 p.m. (4:45 p.m. EST).
NATIONAL CHAMP! Richwine Claims Top Spot in 800m at NCAA Champs
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GENEVA, Ohio – Dickinson junior men’s track and field athlete Trevor Richwine put a great big bow on a fantastic 2025 outdoor campaign by claiming the 800m title at the NCAA DIII Outdoor Track and Field Championships on the SPIRE Institute campus on Saturday afternoon. Richwine entered the […]
GENEVA, Ohio – Dickinson junior men’s track and field athlete Trevor Richwine put a great big bow on a fantastic 2025 outdoor campaign by claiming the 800m title at the NCAA DIII Outdoor Track and Field Championships on the SPIRE Institute campus on Saturday afternoon.
Richwine entered the weekend hoping he would take to the track twice once each on Friday and Saturday. In order to guarantee himself an opportunity at Saturday he had to land within the Top-9 of the 22 competitor field. He accomplished step one on Friday by putting up the second fastest time of 1:51.14. Then, on Saturday, Richwine’s magical moment came as his mark of 1:49.99 toppled the field with his next closest challenger Dawit Dean from Emory University hit the line in 1:50.36.
With the win he secured not only the title, but also earned First Team All-American status.
I swam for Ireland at the Olympics, now I’ve thrown myself into a completely different pool sport
HER wrist bears the sign that she is an Olympian. The mental scars are elsewhere. Given Erin Riordan did not have the best Olympics experience, returning to the place where she spent most of her time trying to qualify and prepare for the Games might seem an odd choice. 3 Riordan represented Team Ireland in […]
HER wrist bears the sign that she is an Olympian. The mental scars are elsewhere.
Given Erin Riordan did not have the best Olympics experience, returning to the place where she spent most of her time trying to qualify and prepare for the Games might seem an odd choice.
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Riordan represented Team Ireland in the women’s 4 x 100m freestyle relay at the Paris GamesCredit: Sportsfile
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She’s now turned to a totally different sport
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She hasn’t found the transition to water polo too toughCredit: Inpho
But, so far, it is working for the former swimmer turned water polo player, who helped St Vincent’s win the Irish Senior Cup this month.
The daughter of Irish parents, Riordan was born in Japan and has lived in Switzerland, Hong Kong and the UK.
College brought her back to the ancestral home as swimming kept her there.
Tokyo was targeted and missed. So, too, it seemed, had Paris, when the 4x100m freestyle relay team of which she was a member of came 17th in the World Championships.
Riordan quit but returned when they were bumped up the list because Japan had not met their own national qualifying criteria.
It was a far from ideal build-up to competition.
She reflected: “The few months leading up to Paris were probably the most emotionally strained I’ve been in my life.
“Along the way you kind of forget why you’re doing it and it becomes, ‘I want to make the Games, I want to do this’, as opposed to I used to love the sport and I loved getting up at 5am.”
On the qualification reprieve, she said: “I think that I had already grieved the loss.
“I had decided, ‘OK it’s not happening for me, I’m not going to the Olympics’.
Wild scenes in Naples as fans celebrate after Scott McTominay wins Serie A for Napoli
“And then two weeks later it was, ‘Get back to Dublin, you might be going’. It was a big toll on the mind more so than the body.
“It’s not a few months of prep, it’s years and years of prep. We tried to get to Tokyo and didn’t get it.
“I said, ‘I’m sticking it out, I’m doing it again’, trying to get to Paris.
“That was all taken away in one moment and then all given back in one moment, peaks and troughs, and a rollercoaster.”
Ireland finished exactly where their qualification ranking suggested they would — in 16th.
But the overall experience did not exactly live up to the hype.
Riordan, 25, said: “You build it up in your head a little bit and then you get there and you’re like, ‘Oh my goodness the food is not nice, the hotel is not nice’.
“You walk out and you’re like, ‘This is it, this is the moment’. And then you’re also like, ‘Oh this is it?’ Two edges of a sword I guess.
“I got Covid when I was over there. I was not well when I raced.
“I tested negative before I raced and tested positive after I raced so I got sent home immediately.”
NEXT CHAPTER
She got the five-rings tattoo soon afterwards and it was not long before she took up a new sport.
She said: “That was something we worked on with the sport psychologist — a plan for after Paris.
“We knew it was going to be my last race, she advised me, ‘The Olympic blues, you have to be careful. You’re so used to getting all these endorphins from doing sport so if you stop, that’s all going to drain out of you plus you’ve just completed the goal of your life’.
“So she was like, ‘You need to have a plan’. The two sports I was looking at were triathlons or water polo but triathlons don’t seem that fun.
“So I decided to go into water polo which was a weird transition because I’d never done any ball sports, I’d never done team sports.
“It was a bit humbling at the beginning, going from the Olympics to being the very worst on a team that has 14-year-old girls on it but good fun all the same.”
St Vincent’s are based out of the National Aquatic Centre which meant returning to a venue where she put in the hard yards in pursuit of a dream that did not quite live up to expectations.
She said: “It’s fine now but the first time I was walking in I was like, shudders, post-traumatic stress disorder from all the training.
“I didn’t even want to do the swim sessions with the water polo team. I managed to force myself to do it.
“It’s good now, I guess. It’s kind of like home even though I didn’t want to be there for a while. I get a home feeling from it.”
DIFFERENT OUTLOOK
That may in part be down to bumping into former team-mates.
She said: “Yeah every now and then and I’d still keep in touch with them. It’s funny seeing them do their 6km sessions, enjoy!”
Training twice a week nicely dovetails with her full-time job with pharmaceutical firm Grifols, although she is also training for the Lisbon marathon in October.
She said: “Before I used to work my life around my sport, whereas now I’m working sport around my life. It’s a different dynamic for me.
“I started off not being able to catch the ball. There’s a lot of skills you get from doing a lot of sports that are really transferable so I’ve picked it up a lot quicker than most people would pick it up.
“It’s different, even learning tactics and stuff.
“I’ve never really done anything like that, it was just, ‘Swim in a straight line and hope for the best’.
“I ended up getting called up for the Irish Senior Cup team. I had more of a minor role.
“I got a bit of game time but we ended up winning which was great. In the next few seasons I’m going to keep going, see where we go.”
Anderson Concludes Sophomore Campaign at NCAA Division III Outdoor National Championships
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Geneva, Ohio – May 23, 2025 – Springfield College sophomore Mike Anderson (Cromwell, Conn.) represented the Pride at the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field National Championships on Friday afternoon in the 110-meter hurdles at the SPIRE Institute. Anderson, who entered his first career appearance on the national stage seeded […]
Geneva, Ohio – May 23, 2025 – Springfield College sophomore Mike Anderson (Cromwell, Conn.) represented the Pride at the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field National Championships on Friday afternoon in the 110-meter hurdles at the SPIRE Institute.
Anderson, who entered his first career appearance on the national stage seeded 15th in the 110-meter hurdles, clocked a time of 15.12-seconds for 18th overall in the event. Anderson wraps up a very successful sophomore campaign as he broke the school record in the 110-meter hurdles multiple times culminating in a mark of 14.23-seconds which he set at the AARTFC Outdoor Championships back on May 14.
Tomorrow, Samantha Paul will compete in the triple jump at 1:45 pm for the women’s track and field program looking for her second All-America accolade of the 2024-25 year.
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