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Fantasy Baseball Week 10 Waiver

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Fantasy Baseball Week 10 Waiver

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We’re past the point of expecting top prospects to come up from the minors and immediately carry our Fantasy teams. That’s not to say they can’t do it, but the past few years should have recalibrated our expectations and gotten the term “can’t-miss prospect” out of our vocabularies.

But top prospect promotions are still the most exciting thing that can happen on the Fantasy Baseball waiver wire. Because, while it might be true that the likeliest outcome for any given top prospect when they get promoted is that they struggle, that’s also true for the has-beens and/or never-weres who typically populate the waiver wire in most Fantasy leagues. Rather than trying to talk yourself into a random two-week hot stretch from some 27-year-old being meaningful, you should be betting on the upside of the top prospects.

And the latest to get the call is Marcelo Mayer, who ends up beating teammate Roman Anthony to the majors. Not necessarily on the merits of his own performance, but because an opportunity opened up in the infield before one opened up in the outfield, with Alex Bregman suffering a quad injury this weekend. That creates a spot for Mayer to fill for at least a few weeks.

Mayer has been a top prospect for a while, though he’s become overshadowed in the Red Sox system by the development of Anthony and Kristian Campbell. Partially, that’s because those dudes have just taken off like rockets, but it’s also partially because Mayer hasn’t. He missed some time with injury and then just put up solid production when healthy – .307/.370/.480 line at Double-A last season, and then a .271/.347/.471 line at Triple-A before his promotion. There’s nothing wrong with either of those lines, but from a player without a huge walk rate or a lot of impact on the bases, it just doesn’t look quite as exceptional as what Campbell and Anthony did.

But, you see there, I keep comparing him to Campbell and Anthony, and that’s not fair! Those are two of the dozen or so best prospects in baseball; that Mayer is one of the three or so dozen best prospects in baseball shouldn’t be a knock on him. He’s an exciting young player who is going to get a long leash in a very good Red Sox offense, and he’s worth adding in every single league where he wasn’t already stashed. Just in case he takes this opportunity and runs with it.

And if he does that, there really shouldn’t be much playing time concern, even when Bregman is healthy; Campbell and Trevor Story have both been in a deep slump since hot starts in April, so if Mayer forces the issue, he could just push one of them into a smaller role. He has that kind of talent, and now he has that kind of opportunity. Let’s make sure he’s rostered pretty much everywhere after this week’s waiver-wire run.  

Let’s also talk about one more player who hasn’t gotten the call yet but seems like he’s on the verge of forcing his way up: Royals outfielder Jac Caglianone. You might remember Caglianone as a two-way player at the University of Florida, but he’s focusing on making pitchers miserable these days, and he’s doing a great job. 

He has only been at Triple-A Omaha for six games, but he’s already gotten a hit in each one, including a homer in four straight after Sunday’s 459-foot blast. Each of those four homers has been hit at least 107 mph, as he’s putting his plus-plus power on display. Caglianone struggled in his professional debut last season, but he’s torn through Double-A and now Triple-A, hitting .318/.384/.572 before Sunday’s blast. And he’s doing it with a very respectable 20.7% strikeout rate.

I do think strikeouts will be a problem for Caglianone, just like they’ve been for Nick Kurtz in his early career. But he has the power to make up for that, and if he keeps his strikeout rate in the 25% range when he does get the call, he could be an impact bat. Other top prospects’ struggles should keep our expectations in check, but the Royals already have to be looking at the likes of Drew Waters, Michael Massey, Kyle Isbel, and Mark Canha in their lineup most days and wondering if Caglianone isn’t an update for them. He should get the chance to prove it in the next few weeks at this pace.

Before we get into the rest of this week’s waiver-wire targets, a quick housekeeping note: I will be taking an hour from noon to 1 pm ET in the comments of this article Monday afternoon. Click the comment button on the top right to get your questions in beforehand.  

Here’s who else we’re looking to add on waivers ahead of Week 10: 

Week 10 Waiver Targets

Catchers

Gabriel Moreno, Diamondbacks (41%) – Moreno was easy enough to drop when things were going poorly, because there just isn’t that much upside in a guy with a career-high of seven homers. You’re not waiting around through the bad times when the good times are “a decent batting average and not much else.” But when he’s locked in, like hitting .305/.339/.576 since the start of May, he’s well worth rostering, even in one-catcher leagues. 

Deep-league target: Carlos Narvaez, Red Sox (11%) – I don’t really buy Narvaez’s hot start, but the Red Sox sure seem to, as they moved him up to the cleanup spot for Saturday’s game. I don’t think he’s likely to stay there forever, but he’s showing enough that it isn’t necessarily unreasonable right now – his .253 expected batting average isn’t anything to write home about, but there might be legitimate pop here, as his .456 expected slugging percentage shows. As a No. 2 catcher, Narvaez has some appeal. 

First Base

Gavin Sheets, Padres (39%) – Sheets just keeps hitting. He homered twice on Thursday and once more on Friday and is now up to nine on the season – six of which have come in the month of May. He sits against most (but not all) lefties, but still plays enough to be fifth on the Padres in plate appearances, so it’s not like he’s killing you in terms of counting stats. Sheets is hitting better than he ever has, so some regression might be expected, but he made some changes to his swing before the season that led to huge numbers in the spring, and he’s now hitting the ball harder than ever, so I’m not inclined to totally write it off – especially when he’s still so widely available. 

Deep-league target: Christian Encarnacion-Strand, Reds (35%) – Encarnacion-Strand began his minor-league rehab assignment a few days ago as he works his way back from a back injury, and while he wasn’t doing much before the injury, I still think there’s some upside worth chasing here. Especially with the Reds still getting little from the DH or 1B spots. Encarnacion-Strand is probably running out of opportunities, but I think he’ll get at least one more when he’s healthy.

Second base

Otto Lopez, Marlins (18%) – Lopez hasn’t done a ton since coming off the IL, but he continues to flash promising skills. For the season he’s now up to a .285 expected batting average and .462 expected slugging percentage, and he stole 20 bases last season, so we know there’s speed here. I’d prefer to add him when he’s hot, but if I need middle infield help, his skill set still looks very useful. 

Deep-league target: Curtis Mead, Rays (5%) – Mead made an adjustment to his batting stance recently and it has resulted in a seven-game hitting streak, including three homers in three days. Mead was one of the best hitters in the league during the spring, but he didn’t carry it over to the regular season. Until now. It’s a very small sample size, but Mead was a productive minor-league hitter (.8776 career OPS), so maybe this tweak can help unlock a bit of upside.

Third base

Matt Shaw, Cubs (70%) – Shaw looked downright overwhelmed in his first stint in the majors, but it looks like the game has slowed down for him since his return last week. Shaw has multiple hits in three of six games and is 9 for 22 overall with just two strikeouts, to go along with five doubles and two steals. Shaw had one of the lowest swing rates in baseball before his demotion, but he’s been much more aggressive early in counts the second time around without sacrificing much in terms of contact skills. Sometimes guys just need a second chance. Shaw should be rostered in just about every league at this point. 

Deep-league target: Brett Baty, Mets (28%) – Baty is on chance No. 7 at this point, roughly, so any hot streak should be taken with a grain of salt. But he has been awesome since his latest return to the majors, hitting .326/.356/.698 in 45 plate appearances since May 7. The Mets are protecting him from most lefties, which limits his Fantasy upside, but he also has a .430 expected wOBA since his return from the minors, the best stretch we’ve ever seen from him. Again, skepticism is reasonable, but we’ve never seen this from Baty before either, so I’m not going to write it off entirely.

Shortstop

Chase Meidroth, White Sox (31%) – Meidroth was one of those prospects who would have looked a lot more interesting if he stole more bases – He hit .293/.437/.400 in Triple-A as a 22-year-old last season, for instance, but with just 13 steals, which made it hard to expect too much from him for Fantasy. Well, in his first 29 major-league games now, Meidroth has stolen eight bases on as many attempts, so now we have to get interested in him. There’s very little power – and pretty limited foot speed here, too – but Meidroth has a good approach at the plate and rarely strikes out, and if we can get a useful batting average and 20-plus steals from him, that’s a useful player in categories leagues. 

Deep-league targets: Ha-Seong Kim, Rays (16%) – Kim will move his minor-league rehab assignment to Triple-A Monday, which is probably the final step in his return from offseason shoulder surgery. He’ll probably still be down there for another week at least, and the nature of his injury means a slow start might be a reasonable expectation. But he’s coming off an 11-homer, 22-steal season in just 121 games, and that’s a very useful player in any category-based league. If you have a roster spot to play with, you can add him now.

Outfield

Parker Meadows, Tigers (24%) – Meadows is also on the final steps in his recovery from a spring injury, and I’d expect we’ll see him in the next week or two. Meadows flopped out of the gate to start last season, but he was a huge part of the Tigers second-half surge in 2024, hitting .299/.344/.513 with seven homers and six steals in just 45 games after returning from the minors in July. If he can replicate anything like that, he’s a must-roster player in any Roto league. 

Matt Wallner, Twins (28%) – Wallner’s a lot better in OBP leagues thanks to his massive strikeout issues, but he was showing some signs of improving on that before landing on the IL in mid-April, as he was striking out just 28.4% of the time before the injury. Wallner was hitting leadoff against righties and his power and on-base skills make him a good fit there if he can get past this hamstring injury. He could be back in the next few days. 

Will Benson, Reds (34%) – Benson is a player of big extremes. He has plus athleticism that manifests in big power and speed, but he also struck out 39.7% of the time last season. It hasn’t been as big an issue this season, and if he can just be a more normal bad plate discipline guy – a strikeout rate in the 30% range would be fine – he can be a very useful Fantasy option. We just need him to hit .250 instead of .190. 

Trevor Larnach, Twins (37%) – I’ve never been a big believer in Larnach’s, but I know plenty of people in the Fantasy industry really like him. For me, he’s more of a hot-hand play, and Larnach is hitting .298/.353/.553 over the past 12 games entering play Sunday. That’ll play, even if I don’t necessarily think he’s a long-term fit for most teams. 

Denzel Clarke, Athletics (8%) – Clarke, who was called up by the A’s in recent days to try to jump-start a surprisingly cold outfield, is a fascinating player. He’s 6’4″, 220 pounds, and he’s super tooled up. But they seem to have tried to remake him as a contact-first slap-hitting type, with his strikeout rate dropping to 21.8% in his first 31 games at Triple-A this season, while his groundball rate spiked to 68.1%. There’s plenty of raw power here, and Clarke is a patient hitter who will take a walk, so there are plenty of ways for him to impact a game. I’m not convinced this is going to work out, but the A’s do have a success story to point at with a similar type of player in Lawrence Butler, and Clarke is an intriguing enough talent to be worth adding in deeper categories leagues this week. 

Starting pitcher

Eury Perez, Marlins (59%) – Perez got up to 61 pitches in his most recent rehab start at Triple-A, so he’s probably just a few weeks away from making his long-awaited return from Tommy John surgery. There will be limitations and frustrations as he works his way back, but Perez is still one of the most talented young pitchers in the game, and he’ll still be just 22 for the entire season. The last time we saw him, he had a 3.15 ERA and 28.9% strikeout rate in 91.1 innings as a 20-year-old in the majors, and since his injury he has reworked his curveball to be more of a sweeper, which should help him miss even more bats – he needed something that moved more laterally with an arsenal that was otherwise pretty north-south. Perez has “best pitcher in baseball” upside and should be stashed wherever possible now that his return looks imminent. 

Yu Darvish, Padres (64%) – Darvis could be back from his elbow injury next weekend, and his stuff has looked mostly fine in his rehab assignment, with his velocity actually up a bit from last season. It’s been a while since Darvish really pitched like an ace, but he was certainly useful when healthy last season, sporting a 3.31 ERA and 1.07 WHIP with nearly a strikeout per inning. If he can do that again, he’d be a very useful Fantasy option once again. 

Zebby Matthews, Twins (44%) – Matthews hasn’t been bad since his return from Triple-A, but he has been a bit disappointing, in ways that may continue moving forward. He has made it through just seven innings in his two starts so far, mostly due to some inefficiency – but also because the Twins are on the extreme end of the spectrum when it comes to limiting their young starters’ exposure to the third time through the order penalty. That might always be an issue for Matthews, but with 14 strikeouts in those seven innings, he’s also showing that there might be untapped potential here with his velocity increase. Matthews needs to pitch better than he has to be more than a fringe Fantasy option, but the upside is there. 

Hayden Birdsong, Giants (68%) – Stuff has never been an issue for Birdsong, but what makes him so interesting right now is the improved control he has shown so far this season. Birdsong walked 13.7% of opposing hitters last season, but he has that mark down to 8.3% so far, basically a league-average mark. Most of those innings came in relief, but he did make his return to the rotation last week and walked none over five innings of work, which is a promising sign. If he can keep that walk rate on the right side of 10%, he has plenty of appeal with a good team and ballpark backing him up. 

Will Warren, Yankees (75%) – Something clicked for Warren a few starts ago. He started throwing his four-seamer a lot less and the rest of his arsenal more, and we’re seeing by far the best stretch of his major-league career as a result. It’s an interesting approach, because it’s not like his four-seamer has even been a bad pitch for him – it has a very strong 27.4% whiff rate and .267 xwOBA with the pitch, but maybe there’s a “less is more” principle at play here. Either way, he’s had at least seven strikeouts in five straight starts and an ERA below 2.50 in his past four, and while I don’t love his matchup against the Dodgers this week, I do think Warren has shown enough here to be worth rostering in pretty much every league moving forward. 

Slade Cecconi, Guardians (9%) – I was pretty skeptical about Cecconi being Fantasy relevant when he got the call, but he’s been pretty impressive so far, striking out 14, walking just two, and allowing four runs in 11 innings in his first two starts. His four-seamer looks better than it did last season, generating an extra couple of inches of induced vertical break, which should help it play up, and he’s introduced a new sinker and cutter to expand his arsenal. The slider and curveball both have whiff rates over 40% so far, and the cutter and changeup have been pretty solid too. I don’t think Cecconi is an ace, or anything, but he looks pretty interesting right now for deeper leagues. 

Noah Cameron, Royals (26%) – We finally saw a bit of strikeout upside from Cameron, who sat down eight Twins by strikeout in Friday’s start, where he allowed just one earned run while pitching into the seventh inning for the third time in as many starts. The results have been excellent so far for Cameron, so I can’t just ignore what he’s doing right now. But I don’t buy it. At all. His fastball is a bad pitch that hasn’t been punished yet, and I don’t believe in the rest of his arsenal to carry him when that inevitably goes south. If you want to play the hot hand with Cameron right now, go for it – he gets another great matchup against the Reds this week! – but I think in the long run he’s going to prove pretty painful to roster. 

Relief pitcher

Justin Martinez, Diamondbacks (61%) – The Diamondbacks didn’t commit to getting Martinez immediately back into the closer’s role now that he’s past his shoulder injury, but I don’t think it’ll take long. He’s a dominant force in the back end of the bullpen when right, and while Shelby Miller did an admirable job in his absence, he’s a clear step down from Martinez as a pitcher. It won’t take long for Martinez to be the unquestioned closer here. 

Daniel Palencia, Cubs (12%) – It sure looks like the Cubs are giving Palencia a chance to be the closer here. He has the team’s last two saves and the last three save opportunities. His 13% career walk rate suggests that Palencia won’t be long for the role, but he has the stuff to get it done, at least, so maybe he can get hot and run with it. If you’re looking for saves, he’s one of the best widely available choices right now. 

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Georgia Tech Student-Athletes Shatter Records in the Classroom – Athletics — Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets

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THE FLATS – Georgia Tech student-athletes collectively had an astonishing Fall 2025 semester academically, highlighted by all 13 of the Yellow Jackets’ programs earning team grade point averages of 3.0 or higher for the first time in history.

In addition to all 13 teams achieving a 3.0 team GPA, Georgia Tech’s 328 student-athletes had a mean GPA of 3.30, which matched Tech athletics’ all-time high for the third-straight semester.

“As the landscape of college athletics changes, one thing that remains constant here on The Flats is the value of a Georgia Tech education and degree,” vice president and director of athletics Ryan Alpert said. “The young people that choose to come to Georgia Tech are truly making a 40-year decision. Therefore, I couldn’t be more proud of how our student-athletes embrace and take advantage of the opportunity through their hard work in the classroom. I’m also incredibly grateful for our academic support staff, our coaches and our partners on campus for all that they do to support our student-athletes’ academic endeavors.”

Other highlights from the fall semester include:

  • 77% of student-athletes (252) posting a 3.0 GPA or higher;
  • 68% (222) earning Faculty Honors or Dean’s Lost recognition;
  • first-year student-athletes achieving a 3.22 mean GPA;
  • nationally ranked golf leading all teams with a 3.68 GPA;
  • NCAA qualifier women’s tennis leading women’s teams with a 3.65 GPA;
  • football shattering its team record with a 3.17 team GPA – prior to this semester, its highest all-time GPA was 3.03 (spring 2025) and its highest in-season GPA was 3.00 (fall 2024);
  • men’s basketball also obliterating its team record with a 3.16 team GPA, surpassing 3.0 for the first time in program history.

Making Georgia Tech athletics’ academic achievements even more impressive is that 84% of its student-athletes major in business (53%), engineering (20%), sciences (7%), design (2.5%) and computing (1.5%).

GEORGIA TECH TEAM GRADE POINT AVERAGES (Fall 2025)
Baseball: 3.35
Men’s Basketball: 3.16
Women’s Basketball: 3.20
Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field: 3.29
Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field: 3.29
Football: 3.17
Golf: 3.68
Softball: 3.28
Men’s Swimming and Diving: 3.24
Women’s Swimming and Diving: 3.46
Men’s Tennis: 3.34
Women’s Tennis: 3.65
Volleyball: 3.44

Fans can celebrate and support the academic success of Georgia Tech student-athletes by participating Alexander-Tharpe Fund’s Fourth Quarter Initiative, which gives supporters the opportunity to receive four A-T Fund priority points for every $100 donated to the Athletic Scholarship Fund through Dec. 31. For more information, visit atfund.org/4th-quarter.

Full Steam Ahead

Full Steam Ahead is a $500 million fundraising initiative to achieve Georgia Tech athletics’ goal of competing for championships at the highest level in the next era of intercollegiate athletics. The initiative will fund transformative projects for Tech athletics, including renovations of Bobby Dodd Stadium at Hyundai Field (the historic home of Georgia Tech football), the Zelnak Basketball Center (the practice and training facility for Tech basketball) and O’Keefe Gymnasium (the venerable home of Yellow Jackets volleyball), as well as additional projects and initiatives to further advance Georgia Tech athletics through program wide-operational support. All members of the Georgia Tech community are invited to visit atfund.org/FullSteamAhead for full details and renderings of the renovation projects, as well as to learn about opportunities to contribute online.

For the latest information on the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, follow us on XFacebook, Instagram and at www.ramblinwreck.com.





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Julia Skari ‘can’t imagine’ not being with Northern State – Jamestown Sun

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JAMESTOWN — Julia Skari has a history with excellence when it comes to athletics.

Northern State University is hoping history keeps repeating itself.

Skari, a Jamestown High School Class of 2025 graduate, is currently training and competing for the Northern State University track and field team.

“I was so excited to go to college and have a little bit of change,” Skari said. “I knew going into college I wouldn’t know anyone since no one from Jamestown went to NSU (Northern State University), so I was a bit scared for that, but I was excited to meet new people. … Within the first week at Northern State it was clear that I made the best academic and athletic decision, I can’t imagine not being there.”

Skari began running track in 2021 as an eighth grader. She is a five-time state placer in the 300 hurdles and a two-time state placer in the 100 hurdles. Skari also competed in triple jump and the sprint relays when she was with the Blue Jays.

In her senior year, Skari was crowned the WDA champion in the 100 hurdles and 300 hurdles at the West Region Track and Field Meet. Skari clocked times of 15.59 and 45.62 seconds, respectively, in her races. The senior sprinter also placed eighth in the 100-meter dash and fifth in the 200.

At State, Skari placed third in the 300 hurdles, posting a season-best time of 45.35 seconds. In the 100 hurdles, the Blue Jay senior finished second 0.38 seconds behind Fargo Davies’ Kate Laqua who crossed the finish line at 14.38 seconds.

Her resume made her a natural recruit target for Northern State’s track coaches. The Wolves announced Skari’s signing via social media in May. Skari is planning to compete in both the 100- and 400-meter hurdles. The freshman said she is also hoping to compete in some relays but is open to wherever her coaches put her.

“It is both nervewracking and exciting to be a freshman,” Skari said. “I have a lot to learn, improve and build on throughout this year and the following years. Being a freshman is nervewracking because I know I have to prove myself to not only coaches but my teammates. It’s exciting because it’s a fresh new start with whole new experiences with a new team, coaches and level of competition. The upperclassmen are so willing to take time, critique my form and give advice.”

Northern State opened the indoor track and field season on Nov. 24 with the school’s Maroon vs. Gold Meet. Skari and the Wolves competed again on Dec. 5 at South Dakota State University’s Holiday Meet.

“Coming into my first collegiate meet I was very nervous,” Skari said. “The thought of competing against not only (Division) two athletes but also (Division) one made the nervous go up more. After I competed in my first event … I had a huge sign of relief realizing it’s not much different then high school, just more teams and more competitive.”

IMG_1640.jpeg

Julia Skari, second from left, is enjoying her first season with the Northern State University track and field team.

Contributed / Julia Skari

In her first meet, Skari competed in the 60-meter hurdles and the 4-by-400 meter relay.

“For my first meet I knew I just had to get my nervousness out of the way so my standards weren’t very high besides I just wanted to get my first meet done and get the feeling of how the meets feel,” Skari said. “My time in the 60-meter hurdles was almost my PR (personal record) in high school which means I only plan on getting faster.”

Skari’s continual progression is a testament to how hard she trains with her team.

Skari said as a team, the Wolves train Monday through Saturday with days switching either from a hurdles to sprinting to cross-training on her own time. The team lifts on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays.

“I train hurdles on Monday and Thursday,” Skari said. “Tuesday is normally a sprinting workout which is our hard workout. On Wednesday and Saturday we train on our own and on Fridays we switch from sprinting or either hurdle work again. We normally practice around three or three and a half hours a day when we lift and practice.

“Workouts became more intense than high school, so it definitely was a good change,” she said. “College track differs from high school track because practices started back in the beginning of September and it lasts til May. It takes more time than any of my other sports did because it is a bigger commitment.”

The Wolves’ next indoor meet is scheduled for Jan. 15 against the University of Jamestown.

Northern State’s conference indoor track and field season will conclude at the end of February. The NCAA Division 2 Indoor Championships will be held March 13-14. The outdoor season will begin with a three-day invite in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.

“No matter how I do (this season), I know I can always get better but I think my main goal is to just train hard, believe in myself and give it my best effort,” Skari said. “I think that’s would make me have a successful first year of colligate track and field athlete. In order for me to be at my best I need to have a positive mindset and be willing to do the hard stuff.”

Katie Ringer

Katie Ringer is a sports reporter for the Jamestown Sun. Katie joined the Sun staff in the summer of 2019 after graduating from the University of Wisconsin Eau Claire with a degree in journalism. She can be reached by email at kringer@jamestownsun.com or by phone at 701-952-8460.





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Former Penn State setter Izzy Starck announces transfer to Pitt | Penn State Volleyball News

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Izzy Starck has found a new home.

The former Nittany Lion will stay in the Keystone State as she has transferred to Pitt.

Starck was Freshman of the Year, an All-American and won a national championship in her lone full season with the blue and white.

Starck will now face Penn State at least once a season with the Panthers, in the annual Keystone State Rivalry match.

MORE VOLLEYBALL COVERAGE


Penn State women’s volleyball drops out of final AVCA rankings

It’s a rare occurrence for Penn State in the rankings.

If you’re interested in submitting a Letter to the Editor, click here.



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Setter Isabelle Hoppe flips from Pittsburgh to Wisconsin volleyball

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Dec. 24, 2025, 5:15 a.m. CT



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Patriots volleyball makes return to state tournament

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The Homewood High School volleyball team finished as one of the top eight teams in Class 6A this fall, making its appearance at the state volleyball tournament Oct. 28 at the Birmingham CrossPlex.

The Patriots matched up with a stout Saraland team in the opening round of the tournament, falling in three sets to close the season with a 25-20 record.

Homewood was in the state tournament for the first time since 2021. The Patriots won three straight matches in the North Super Regional Tournament last week to advance.

“I’m so grateful for our community, our kids and for this to be the new standard; to expect to be here and want to be here,” Homewood head coach Grace Burgess said. “The kids worked so hard with that in mind the whole season, but without talking too much about it. They believe in themselves and they’re confident kids.

Saraland won the state tournament match in straight sets: 25-20, 25-21, 27-25. The Spartans put forth a tremendous rally to draw even late in the third set and eventually prevailed.

For Homewood, Mary Ellis Jarmon led the offense with 12 kills, adding a pair of aces. Walker Binkley added seven kills and four blocks. Kamryn Coleman directed things with 34 assists, also compiling eight digs and four aces. Sarah Johnson nearly had a double-double, finishing with nine kills and nine digs. Addison Wood had six digs and an ace as well.

The Patriots will conclude their season as the only team from Alabama to knock off 7A favorite McGill-Toolen. They also defeated 6A semifinalist Saraland during the year. They won the area championship, finished runner-up at regionals and advanced to the gold bracket in all but one of their tournaments this year.

“The season was up and down, but they never stopped working when things weren’t going well,” Burgess said. “They didn’t listen when people said they couldn’t accomplish anything. The fact it worked out for them makes me really happy for them.”





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Wisconsin Badgers volleyball transfer portal tracker 2025-26

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The University of Wisconsin volleyball program saw significant transfer portal action as soon as the Badgers’ season ended.

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Contact Jim Polzin at jpolzin@madison.com.



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