Sports
Europe's Fitness Market Keeps Growing. It's Likely Just Scratching the Surface
The European fitness market just broke membership and revenue records, and a new report suggests there’s still plenty of untapped potential The European fitness market continues to grow, with membership and revenue numbers reaching an all-time high. But Europe might just be scratching the surface of its fitness potential, a new report suggests. European fitness […]

The European fitness market just broke membership and revenue records, and a new report suggests there’s still plenty of untapped potential
The European fitness market continues to grow, with membership and revenue numbers reaching an all-time high. But Europe might just be scratching the surface of its fitness potential, a new report suggests.
European fitness memberships grew to 71.6 million in 2024, up from 67.7 million in 2023, which itself was a record. Total revenue for the European fitness market also increased, reaching €36 billion ($39.8 million) in 2024, up around 10% from 2023.
Those results are according to the European Health & Fitness Market Report 2025, released Wednesday by Deloitte and EuropeActive, the non-profit trade organization representing Europe’s fitness and physical activity sector.
Last year, the groups projected that Europe would have 100 fitness memberships by 2030. They’re sticking to that goal in 2025.
“Based on the growth shown in our research and the outlook for 2025 and beyond as expressed by the operators we interviewed, we are confident to reach EuropeActive’s ambition of getting to 100 million members of health & fitness centres by 2030,” said Herman Rutgers, the report’s co-author and the ambassador to EuropeActive.
The report’s findings were based on data from a variety of sources including online consumer surveys, unaudited data from fitness operators, interviews with market experts and desktop research, according to Deloitte and EuropeActive.
Large European markets including Germany (11.7 million members), the United Kingdom (11.5 million) and Spain (6.2 million) dominated in 2024, per the report.
Overall, there were 64,550 health and fitness clubs in Europe in 2024, a 2% increase from 2023, which comes as several large European gym chains expanded across the continent last year.
The top three European operators in terms of memberships and revenue were identical to last year. In 2024, Basic-Fit had by far the most members of any brand with 4.25 million, followed by PureGym (1.99 million) and RSG Group, which owns Gold’s Gym, McFit and others (1.81 million).
In terms of revenue, Basic-Fit led all operators with €1.2 billion, followed by David Lloyd Leisure (€1.0 billion) and PureGym (€695 million).
Is Europe a Sleeping Fitness Giant?
While Europe might be rivaling the United States in terms of raw membership numbers – a new report from the Health & Fitness Association (HFA) found that there were 77 million Americans with a fitness membership in 2024 – there’s reason to believe the European market still has plenty of untapped potential.
According to the Deloitte/EuropeActive report, Europe’s fitness penetration rate was 8.9% in 2024. While that’s better than 2019’s pre-pandemic rate of 8.1%, it pales in comparison to the gym-crazy U.S. According to HFA, around 25% of Americans had a gym, health club or studio membership in 2024.
“When considering a penetration rate of above 20% in the USA, further growth potential in the European market can be anticipated,” the report’s authors said.

There’s at least some evidence to suggest Europe’s fitness industry can realize its growth potential. According to consumer survey data cited in the report, Europeans are becoming more willing to join gyms and studios as the pandemic fades from memory. The proportion of active Europeans who regularly visit fitness clubs has steadily increased since 2022, the first year EuropeActive and Deloitte began tracking. In 2025, this number eclipsed 50% for the first time.
At the same time, the proportion of active Europeans who regularly include home fitness as part of their workout routine has declined each year since 2022, suggesting that people in Europe are beginning to see gyms as the place to go when they want to get a sweat on.
It’s perhaps no surprise then that an increasing number of major American fitness brands have begun to target Europe. Planet Fitness has made a big push to expand in Spain, while Xponential Fitness, which owns boutique brands including Club Pilates and StretchLab, continues to open new studios in areas including Germany and Scandinavia.
Anytime Fitness, which already has a large presence in Europe, has its eyes on further international expansion under new parent company Purpose Brands.
The arrival of American brands – along with the continued expansion efforts of top European operators like Basic-Fit and PureGym – should bode well for the growth of Europe’s fitness market in the years to come.
“Overall, the European health and fitness market is set for future growth, driven by an increasing health awareness and activity levels among European citizens as well as further expansion plans of European fitness club owners,” the report concludes.
Sports
High school boys’ volleyball: Saturday playoff results, pairings
SOUTHERN SECTION BOYS VOLLEYBALL PLAYOFFS SATURDAY’S RESULTS POOL PLAY DIVISION 1 #6 Newport Harbor d. #7 Redondo Union, 18-25, 25-18, 26-24, 25-12 SEMIFINALS DIVISION 2 Mater Dei d. St. Francis, 25-17, 25-20, 25-17 Peninsula d. St. Margaret’s, 13-25, 25-23, 25-16, 27-25 DIVISION 3 Tesoro d. North Torrance, 25-17, 25-19, 25-16 Orange Lutheran d. Warren, 25-23, […]

SOUTHERN SECTION BOYS VOLLEYBALL PLAYOFFS
SATURDAY’S RESULTS
POOL PLAY
DIVISION 1
#6 Newport Harbor d. #7 Redondo Union, 18-25, 25-18, 26-24, 25-12
SEMIFINALS
DIVISION 2
Mater Dei d. St. Francis, 25-17, 25-20, 25-17
Peninsula d. St. Margaret’s, 13-25, 25-23, 25-16, 27-25
DIVISION 3
Tesoro d. North Torrance, 25-17, 25-19, 25-16
Orange Lutheran d. Warren, 25-23, 19-25, 25-20, 25-14
DIVISION 4
Santa Barbara d. Corona Santiago, 25-21, 25-16, 30-28
Sage Hill d. Crean Lutheran, 3-0
DIVISION 5
Esperanza d. Newbury Park, 25-12, 25-17, 19-25, 21-25, 16-14
Kennedy d. Vista Murrieta, 25-19, 25-21, 23-25, 25-22
DIVISION 6
Quartz Hill d. Village Christian, 3-2
El Toro d. Laguna Blanca, 3-2
DIVISION 7
Brea Olinda d. San Jacinto, 3-1
Brentwood at San Gabriel Academy, Monday at 4 p.m.
DIVISION 8
Katella d. Lancaster Desert Christian, 25-23, 25-19, 22-25, 25-21
Wildwood d. Avalon, 3-2
DIVISION 9
California Academy of Math & Science d. San Jacinto Valley Academy, 3-2
Beverly Hills at Downey, Monday at 5 p.m.
Note: Finals in Division 1 Friday, May 16 at 7 p.m. at Cerritos College; Finals in Divisions 2-9 May 16 or 17 (sites and times TBA).
Sports
Women’s track and field fourth at MIAC Outdoor Championships with five event victories
Story Links ST. PAUL, Minn. – Led by five first-place finishes and 10 all-conference performances, the St. Olaf College women’s track and field team finished fourth at the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) Outdoor Track & Field Championships on Friday and Saturday at Macalester Stadium. St. Olaf’s five first-place performances […]

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Led by five first-place finishes and 10 all-conference performances, the St. Olaf College women’s track and field team finished fourth at the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) Outdoor Track & Field Championships on Friday and Saturday at Macalester Stadium.
St. Olaf’s five first-place performances were the program’s most since 1999-00, as the Oles took fourth in the 12-team standings with 118 points. St. Olaf finished 13.5 points behind third-place Bethel University and 22 points behind second-place Concordia-Moorhead. Gustavus Adolphus College won the team title with 170.5 points.
Over the course of the two-day meet, St. Olaf had 10 All-MIAC performances (places 1-3) and seven Honorable Mention All-MIAC performances (places 4-6), highlighted by senior Alison Bode sweeping the conference titles in the 5,000-meter run and 10,000-meter run. Bode is believed to be the first Ole to sweep the MIAC outdoor titles in those two events.
In addition to Bode’s two first-place finishes, senior Sophie Abernethy won the 1,500-meter run, junior Isabel Wyatt won the 800-meter run, and St. Olaf won the 4×800-meter relay, with three of the Oles’ five first-place performances coming on Friday.
FRIDAY RECAP
St. Olaf earned 26 of its 64 points on the opening day with a 1-3-4-5-8 finish in the 1,500-meter run to sit in second place, just three points behind Concordia-Moorhead.
In the first event of the meet on the track, Abernethy got the Oles started by leading the 1-3-4-5-8 showing in the 1,500-meter run by winning her first MIAC individual title in 4:38.09, which was over six seconds faster than the runner-up. The senior was St. Olaf’s first conference champion in the event since Megan (Daymont) Thomas ’03 in 2002-03.
Junior Ella Landis, junior Lauren Walda, senior Jules Fromm, and first year Abi Lindquist all joined Abernethy in scoring in the event, with Landis also earning all-conference honors in third (4:46.12). Walda and Fromm grabbed two of the three honorable-mention all-conference spots in fourth (4:47.47) and fifth (4:47.84), respectively, while Lindquist scored in eighth (4:50.03). Fromm’s fifth-place finish was the highest individual finish of her career, while Walda ran the event at the conference meet for the first time.
Bode capped the night by winning the 10,000-meter run, which was pushed back a couple of hours due to the 80-degree temperatures, in 35:35.82. The senior won the event by over three-and-a-half minutes to become the first Ole to win the event since Emma Lee ’13 in 2012-13 and claim the first MIAC individual title of her career. The time also ranks 16th nationally, positioning Bode to qualify for the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships. First year Arabella England earned All-MIAC honors with a third-place finish (39:39.82) to give the Oles two of the top-three finishers in the event.
St. Olaf’s 4×800-meter relay of sophomore Siri Erickson, Fromm, Landis, and Abernethy outpaced second-place Concordia-Moorhead by over eight seconds with a winning time of 9:17.96, which broke the facility record of 9:18.91 established by the College of Saint Benedict in 2015. The quartet’s performance gave the Oles their second consecutive title in the event and their time ranks fifth on St. Olaf’s all-time list.
Wyatt was one of three Oles to qualify for the finals in the 800-meter run with top-nine performances in the prelims. The junior posted the top qualifying time by over five-and-a-half seconds (2:10.25) to better her No. 2 standing on St. Olaf’s all-time list at the time. Sophomores Molly DiNardo (6th, 2:18.33) and Nora Mickelson (7th, 2:18.46) qualified sixth and seventh, respectively, with just over 0.1 seconds between them.
Junior Ashlyn Jore added an honorable-mention performance in the long jump by placing fourth with a mark of 5.36 meters (17′ 7″) on her sixth and final attempt. Senior Emma Johnson moved up to eighth on St. Olaf’s all-time list in the shot put with a seventh-place result (12.01m, 39′ 5″), while first year Erika Nesseth rose to ninth all-time in the pole vault after clearing 3.18 meters (10′ 5 ¼”) to take ninth.
SATURDAY RECAP
After winning the event indoors, Wyatt completed her double in the 800-meter run by breaking the school record of Megan (Daymont) Thomas ’03 by just over three-tenths of a second in 2:09.44. The MIAC title was the second of Wyatt’s career, while her time ranks 14th in the country this season. Wyatt’s win made her the first Ole to win the event since Audrey Weber in 2006. DiNardo (6th, 2:19.40) and Mickelson (8th, 2:21.85) also scored in the event for St. Olaf.
Bode finished off her two-title meet by winning the 5,000-meter run in 17:14.72, which was over eight seconds faster than the rest of the field. The senior became St. Olaf’s first conference champion in the event since Christina Vetter ’00 in 1997-98. Walda gave the Oles two all-conference performers in the event in third (17:33.13).
Sophomore Mara Larson claimed her third MIAC runner-up finish and fourth All-MIAC accolade in as many attempts in the high jump by clearing 1.57 meters (5′ 1 ¾”). Larson had fewer misses than two other competitors to clear 1.57 meters, missing once on 1.54 meters (5′ ½”) and once on 1.57 meters before going out on 1.60 meters (5′ 3″).
St. Olaf’s 4×400-meter relay of first year Izzi Jaeckle, senior Jules Fromm, junior Rachael Wilson, and senior Emma Storbakken landed the final all-conference accolade in third (3:59.14), while junior Grace Moeller added an honorable-mention, fourth-place showing in the 3,000-meter steeplechase (11:20.68). The time was the fastest of Moeller’s career and bettered her No. 6 time on St. Olaf’s all-time list by less than one second.
After finishing 11th in the event as a first year, sophomore Otelia Lighthill moved all the way up to fifth in the discus throw (39.75m, 130′ 5″) to secure honorable-mention honors and break onto St. Olaf’s all-time list in ninth. St. Olaf’s 4×100-meter relay of first year Sophie Herweijer, Storbakken, senior Zoe Matre, and Jaeckle also posted a top-10 time in program history, slotting in in seventh after placing eighth (49.70).
Sports
No. 21 Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Wins A-R-C Championship
Story Links INDIANOLA, Iowa– The No. 21 Wartburg women’s track and field team won their 25th Outdoor American Rivers Conference Championship with 245 points. Ava Vance won rookie of the year. Wartburg (HC: Marcus Newsom) won the coaching staff of the year. Team Standings: 1 Wartburg 245 2 Loras 161 3 Central 135 4 Nebraska […]

INDIANOLA, Iowa– The No. 21 Wartburg women’s track and field team won their 25th Outdoor American Rivers Conference Championship with 245 points. Ava Vance won rookie of the year. Wartburg (HC: Marcus Newsom) won the coaching staff of the year.
Team Standings:
1 Wartburg 245
2 Loras 161
3 Central 135
4 Nebraska Wesleyan 120
5 Dubuque 91
6 Simpson 73
7 Luther 17
8 Coe 9
9 Buena Vista 6
Event Wins:
Triple Jump
1 Shaniah Johnson 11.80m 38-08.75
Hammer Throw
1 Emma True 55.87m 183-03
800m
1 Haley Meyer 2:11.97
400m Hurdles
1 Sophia Stahle 1:01.88
400m
1 JoJo Tyynismaa 55.48
100m Hurdles
1 Grace Braden 14.51
4x400m
1 Wartburg 3:50.29 (S. Stahle, H. Meyer, R. Decker, J. Tyynismaa)
All-Conference Finishers:
200m
2 JoJo Tyynismaa 24.67
4x100m
2 Wartburg 47.09 (O. Tollari, J. Tyynismaa, A. Schultes, A. Parker)
Javelin Throw
3 Brooke Shafer 38.96m 127-10
5000m
3 Ava Vance 19:14.21
1500m
3 Ellie Meyer 4:34.85
400m Hurdles
3 Ryann Decker 1:02.61
100m Hurdles
3 Ryann Decker 15:11
Notes:
- This is the 26th title in the 800m in program history
- This is the 14th title in the 400m in program history
- This is the 14th title in the 4x400m in program history
- This is the 10th title in the triple jump in program history
- This is the eighth title in the 100m hurdles in program history
- This is the sixth title in the 400m hurdles in program history
- This is the third title in the hammer throw in program history
- This is Tynnismaa’s fifth career outdoor conference title
- This is Tyynismaa’s first career outdoor conference title in the 400m
- This is True’s second career outdoor conference title in the hammer throw
- This is S. Johnson’s first career outdoor conference title
- This is H. Meyer’s first career outdoor conference title
- This is Stahle’s first career outdoor conference title
- This is Braden’s first career outdoor conference title
- At press time, Stahle’s 400m hurdle time stands 10th on the TFRRS list for this season
- At press time, Tyynismaa’s 400m time stands 20th on the TFRRS list for this season
- At press time, H. Meyer’s 800m time stands 23rd on the TFRRS list for this season
- At press time, S. Johnson’s triple jump stands 24th on the TFRRS list for this season
- At press time, Decker’s 400m time stands 24th on the TFRRS list for this season
- At press time, (O. Tollari, J. Tyynismaa, A. Schultes, A. Parker) 4x100m time stands 26th on the TFRRS list for this season
- S. Johnson’s triple jump remains sixth on the program’s top 10 list, but she improves her mark
- Tyynismaa’s 400m time ranks sixth on the program’s top 10 list
- E. Meyer’s 1500m time ranks seventh on the program’s top 10 list
- Stahle’s 400m hurdle time ranks seventh on the program’s top 10 list
- Tyynismaa’s 400m time ranks seventh on the program’s top 10 list
Award Winners
Women’s Rookie of the Year – Ava Vance
Women’s Coaching Staff of the Year – Wartburg
Up Next
A select group will compete at the NCAA Qualifier on May 14 (Wed) – May 15 (Thu) in Rock Island, Illinois.
Sports
Hagen Smith, Logan Webber advance to semifinals – Daily Breeze
HUNTINGTON BEACH — Born into beach volleyball royalty, Hagen Smith might finally be ready to take the throne. Smith and partner Logan Webber are having one of their best weekends since teaming up three years ago, reaching the semifinals of the AVP Tour’s Huntington Beach Open with a pair of hard-fought three-set victories on Saturday. […]

HUNTINGTON BEACH — Born into beach volleyball royalty, Hagen Smith might finally be ready to take the throne.
Smith and partner Logan Webber are having one of their best weekends since teaming up three years ago, reaching the semifinals of the AVP Tour’s Huntington Beach Open with a pair of hard-fought three-set victories on Saturday.
The 12th-seeded pair will take on top-seeded Miles Partain and Andy Benesh in the first semifinal at 10 a.m. on Sunday.
Smith is the son of Sinjin Smith, widely regarded as one of the greatest beach volleyball players in the history of the sport. Smith was the first to win 100 beach volleyball events before finishing his career with 139 titles.
Hagen Smith, who turned 30 last month, has been competing on the AVP Tour since 2017, but has yet to reach a final of a major event.
“We want to win this,” Smith said. “We’re trying to establish ourselves as one of the dogs.”
Smith showed the type of intensity and emotion that was a trademark of his father’s style.
At one point during the quarterfinal match, Smith ripped off his tank top following a successful spike, drawing a roar from the crowd.
“I tested it and I heard the little rip and I just went for it,” Smith said. “You’ve got to know whether it’s the right time to rip a jersey or not because sometimes it just doesn’t go and then you look like an idiot.”
Watching from beyond one of the end lines in the shadow of the pier was Sinjin.
“I wasn’t strong enough to do that,” Sinjin said of the shirt tear. “He’s good. He knows how to play to the crowd, which is important, I think, for all sports. You want the people to connect with the athletes. It makes them want to come out and watch and cheer.”
Hagen Smith and Webber took on the fifth-seeded pair of Tim Bomgren and Paul Lotman in the first round and lost the first set 20-22 before winning the next two 21-18, 15-11.
The duo then faced the 13th-seeded Brazilian pair of Alison and Alvaro Filho, who had knocked off fourth-seeded Chaim Schalk and James Shaw in the first round, and Smith and Webber advanced with a 22-20, 20-22, 15-13 win.
“It’s really hard to watch because it’s nerve-wracking for me. I know what he’s capable of,” said Sinjin, who turned 68 on Wednesday. “When he does well, it’s not much better. It makes you want to cry as a parent. You feel so good for him.”
Hagen Smith grew up in the Pacific Palisades and was a two-year letterman as a setter and outside hitter for the boys’ volleyball team at Loyola High.
He then followed in his father’s footsteps and went on to play four seasons of indoor volleyball at UCLA, ending his career fourth in program history in assists and sixth in digs.
Smith went through a series of partners during his early years on the AVP Tour before settling on Webber, a Michigan native who stands 6-9.
“Other than the two Olympic teams, we’re the longest-running men’s partnership right now,” Webber said. “We’re always finding new stuff to work on, so it’s fun. We’re very comfortable with each other.”
Sinjin Smith struggled early in his career until teaming with Karch Kiraly, and then another future Hall of Famer, Randy Stoklos.
“I think he and Logan are a good team,” Sinjin said. “You have to play with the right person that complements your style of play.”
Second-seeded Chase Budinger and Miles Evans, the other 2024 Olympic team in the field along with Partain and Benesh, will face third-seeded Taylor Crabb and Billy Allen in the other semifinal at 11 a.m.
The top four seeded teams in the women’s draw also reached the semifinals.
Top-seeded Kristen Nuss and Taryn Brasher will face fourth-seeded Kelly Cheng and Molly Shaw in the first women’s semifinal at noon, and second-seeded Terese Cannon and Megan Kraft will take on third-seeded Brandie Wilkerson and Melissa Humana-Paredes in the second semifinal at 1 p.m.
Cheng is a former El Dorado High and USC star who teamed with Sara Hughes at the 2024 Olympics, but Hughes is sidelined with a calf injury.
Cannon starred for the USC women’s beach volleyball team from 2016-19, and Kraft from 2021-24.
Sports
Indiana University Athletics
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — The Indiana Department of Athletics honored 120 graduates on Saturday, May 10, upon commencement from Indiana University. “Congratulations to the Indiana University Class of 2025! Commencement is a special day, and I am particularly excited for our student-athletes who can now call themselves Indiana University graduates,” said IU Vice President and Director […]

“Congratulations to the Indiana University Class of 2025! Commencement is a special day, and I am particularly excited for our student-athletes who can now call themselves Indiana University graduates,” said IU Vice President and Director of Athletics Scott Dolson.
“I look forward to welcoming them back as alumni and lifelong fans of IU Athletics and this great university. They have committed the time, effort, and energy to make this day possible, and I congratulate each of them, as well as their families and loved ones who are here to celebrate this remarkable accomplishment.”
Indiana Student-Athletes Eligible for Graduation in May 2025
Baseball
Matthew Bohnert
Tyler DeMartino
Will Eldridge
Stephen Gilley
Bennett Grable
Anthony Gubitosi
Grant Holderfield
Josh Pyne
Gavin Seebold
Jacob Stadler
Deron Swanson
Men’s Basketball
Shaan Burke
Jackson Creel
Luke Goode
Langdon Hatton
Anthony Leal
Myles Rice
Women’s Basketball
Karoline Striplin
Field Hockey
Sofia Arrebola Garcia
Maggie Carter
Meredith lee
Arabella Loveridge
Yip van Wonderen
Football
Lanell Carr, Jr.
James Evans
Matt Hohlt
Zach Horton
Eli Jochem
Camden Jordan
Isaiah Jones
Terry Jones, Jr.
Ryan Miller
Alejandro Quintero
Carter Smith
Tyler Stephens
Kaiden Turner
Jailin Walker
Ke’Shawn Williams
Men’s Golf
Robert Bender
Kieran Hogarth
Clay Merchant
Women’s Golf
Caroline Smith
Beatriz Junqueira
Rowing
Abbey Armstrong
Maggie Cheever
Lilly Gintert
Jania Hackett
Lily Haupt
Clare Hunsberger
Phoebe Inall
Yael Kiser
Chelsie Lindauer
Mikayla Messinger
Women’s Soccer
Ava Akeel
Olivia Albert
Lauren Costello
Jamie Gerstenberg
Camille Hamm
Costa Liapis
Shea O’Malley
Hope Paredes
Softball
Brianna Copeland
Taylor Minnick
Kinsey Mitchell
Men’s Swimming and Diving
Luke Barr
Brian Benzing
Finn Brooks
Jackson Carlile
Mason Carlton
Alejandro Kincaid
Rafael Miroslaw
Lucas Piunti
Kai van Westering
Gavin Wight
Benson Wong
Women’s Swimming and Diving
Katie Carson
Morgan Casey
Kabria Chapman
Brearna Crawford
Ching Hwee Gan
Elyse Heiser
Skyler Liu
Kacey McKenna
Cat Minic
Anna Peplowski
Sydney Turner
Men’s Tennis
Michael Andre
Women’s Tennis
Lara Schneider
Men’s Track and Field
Trelee Banks
Camden Marshall
Sean Mockler
Tyler Reyna
Martin Segurola
Hunter Smith
Women’s Track and Field
Taylor Fox
Olivia Gee
Jania Hodges
Mahogany Jenkins
Morgan Snow
Mariah Wehrle
Volleyball
Mackenzie Dafinee
Camryn Haworth
Delayne Maple
Carly Mills
Mady Saris
Water Polo
Grace Hathaway
Skylar Kidd
Sarah Lolli
Portia Sasser
Sophia Sollie
Olivia Stark
Claire Witting
Wrestling
Mason Alley
Jacob Bullock
Derek Gilcher
Robert Major
Jacob Moran
Angelo Rini
Roman Rogotzke
DJ Washington
#NeverDaunted
Sports
No. 12 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Wins A-R-C Championship
Story Links INDIANOLA, Iowa– The No. 12 Wartburg men’s track and field team won their 13th Outdoor American Rivers Conference Championship with 233.25 points. Wartburg (HC: Marcus Newsom) won the coaching staff of the year. Team Standings: 1 Wartburg 233.25 2 Dubuque 176 3 Loras […]

INDIANOLA, Iowa– The No. 12 Wartburg men’s track and field team won their 13th Outdoor American Rivers Conference Championship with 233.25 points. Wartburg (HC: Marcus Newsom) won the coaching staff of the year.
Team Standings:
1 Wartburg 233.25
2 Dubuque 176
3 Loras 136
4 Central 101
5 Nebraska Wesleyan 86.25
6 Simpson 73.25
7 Buena Vista 21
8 Luther 16.25
9 Coe 15
Event Wins:
Pole Vault
1 Carson Collet 4.85m 15-11.00
5000m
1 Tyler Schermerhorn 14:59.83
400m Hurdles
1 Deyton Love 51.78
All-Conference Finishers:
1500m
2 Nathan Kinzer 3:49.71
3 Sam Schmitz 3:50.63
Javelin Throw
2 Trent Polley 61.33m 201-02
400m
2 Jensen Clapp 47.90
4x100m
2 Wartburg 40.98 (A. Gruver, J. Weispfenning, A. Wright, E. Bond)
5000m
3 Seth Bailey 15:08.62
800m
3 Rylan Martin 1:52.20
4x400m
3 Wartburg 3:12.22 (J. Clapp, I. Neyens, J. Oestreicher, H. Edney)
Notes:
- This is the program’s 16th conference title in the 5000m
- This is the program’s sixth conference title in the 400m hurdles
- This is the program’s third conference title in the pole vault
- This is Love’s seventh career outdoor conference title
- This is Love’s third career outdoor conference title in the 400m hurdles
- This is Collet’s first career outdoor conference title
- This is Schermerhorn’s first career outdoor conference title
- At press time. Love’s 400m hurdle time stands third on the TRRRS list for this season
- At press time, Deyton Love’s 110m hurdle time (14.25) stands 15th on the TFRRS list for this season
- At press time, (J. Clapp, I. Neyens, J. Oestreicher, H. Edney) 4x400m time stands 16th on the TFRRS list for this season
- At press time N. Kinzer’s 1500m time stands 21st on the TFRRS list for this season
- At press time, (A. Gruver, J. Weispfenning, A. Wright, E. Bond) 4x100m time stands 28th on the TFRRS list for this season
- Collet’s pole vault remains first on the program’s top 10 list, but he improves his mark
- N. Kinzer’s 1500m time ranks fifth on the program’s top 10 list
- (J. Clapp, I. Neyens, J. Oestreicher, H. Edney) 4x400m time ranks fifth on the program’s top 10 list
- (A. Gruver, J. Weispfenning, A. Wright, E. Bond) 4x100m time ranks fifth on the program’s top 10 list
- Clapp’s 400m remains sixth on the program’s top 10 list, but he improves his time
- Clapp’s 200m (21.75) remains seventh on the program’s top 10 list, but he improves his time
- Schmitz’s 1500m time ranks ninth on the program’s top 10 list
- Martin’s 800m time ranks ninth on the program’s top 10 list
- Solomon Zaugg’s 1500m time (3:50.90) ranks 10th on the program’s top 10 list
Award Winners
Men’s Coaching Staff of the Year – Wartburg
Up Next
A select group will compete at the NCAA Qualifier on May 14 (Wed) – May 15 (Thu) in Rock Island, Illinois.
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