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Five Softball Players Named Academic All-District – University of South Carolina Athletics

AUSTIN, Texas – Five South Carolina softball players were named to the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District® Softball team Tuesday (May 27). Sam Gress, Nealy Lamb, Arianna Rodi, Emily Vinson, and Lexi Winters earned the honor that recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the diamond and in the classroom. Vinson […]

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AUSTIN, Texas – Five South Carolina softball players were named to the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District® Softball team Tuesday (May 27). Sam Gress, Nealy Lamb, Arianna Rodi, Emily Vinson, and Lexi Winters earned the honor that recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the diamond and in the classroom.

Vinson earns her third Academic All-District® honor of her career, while Rodi and Winters earned their second.

Gress, Rodi, and Winters were selected as CSC Academic All-America® finalists and will advance to the national ballot to be voted on by CSC members. First-, second- and third-team Academic All-America® honorees will be announced June 17.

The right-handed pitching Gress adds to her season accolades after earning her third NFCA All-Region honor earlier this season. She has a 3.83 GPA while pursuing her graduate degree in sport and entertainment management. She was drafted by the Florida Vibe of the Fastpitch United Pro Series. She was also named to the All-SEC Second Team and the SEC All-Defensive Team. A graduate student, she led the SEC and is 13th in the nation with five saves. She also leads the team with five complete games. Gress is second on the team with 14 wins, 104 strikeouts, and a 2.83 ERA. On the season, she finished with has 44 appearances over 150 2-3 innings with one shutout.

Lamb, a right-handed pitcher, is majoring in public health and has a 4.0 GPA. The sophomore ended her first season with the Gamecocks third on the team with a 10-3 record. She had a 3.26 ERA, striking out 81 batters over 73 innings pitched. She struck out a season-high seven batters in back-to-back games against Saint Francis and Georgia State. Against rival Clemson, she earned the win after tossing five scoreless innings and allowed just two hits and struck out four Tigers.

Rodi adds to her remarkable first season in Columbia after earning NFCA All-Region Second Team honors. The junior first baseman carries a perfect 4.0 GPA while majoring in services management. She set a pair of South Carolina records with 17 home runs and 49 walks, and her 55 RBIs are third all-time.  She hit a home run in five straight games, which is tied for the 14th longest streak in NCAA Division I history. Her 37 game on-base streak was the fourth longest streak in Division I this season.

An outfielder, Vinson is a psychology and has a 4.0 GPA. In her lone season with Carolina, the senior started 60 games. She led the team with nine stolen bases. She batted .202 with 24 runs scored, 11 RBIs, and two home runs. Vinson drove in a season-high three runs in a win over Kentucky.

Winters, a junior catcher, has a 4.0 GPA and majors in economics. She played in all 61 games, starting 59 behind the dish. She previously was named to the NFCA All-Region Second Team. Winters was second on the team with 53 RBIs, which ranks tied for fifth all-time in program history. Her six home runs and .527 slugging percentage are also second on the team. She had a .331 batting average with 13 doubles for the season. Behind the plate she threw out eight attempted base stealers.

For the latest on South Carolina Softball, visit GamecocksOnline.com or follow the team’s social media accounts on Twitter @GamecockSoftbll, Facebook /GamecockSoftball, and Instagram @GamecockSoftball.





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Ranking The Jumpers At 2025 NCAA Track And Field National Championships

The 2025 NCAA Track and Field National Championships are right around the corner and the jumper fields are set. From Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, athletes will compete to take home NCAA Titles in the jumping events. The men’s long jump and pole vault finals will start on Wednesday, June 11 and the women’s on […]

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The 2025 NCAA Track and Field National Championships are right around the corner and the jumper fields are set. From Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, athletes will compete to take home NCAA Titles in the jumping events.

The men’s long jump and pole vault finals will start on Wednesday, June 11 and the women’s on Thursday, June 12. The rest of the events will take place on Friday and Saturday, the final days of competition. 

See the top 10 athletes in each jumping event here: 

Men’s High Jump

  1. Riyon Rankin – Georgia – 2.29m
  2. Arvesta Troupe – Ole Miss – 2.26m
  3. Tyus Wilson – Nebraska – 2.25m
  4. Kampton Kam – Penn – 2.25m
  5. Aiden Hayes – Texas State – 2.25m
  6. Tito Alofe – Harvard – 2.25m
  7. Kason O’Riley – Texas State – 2.25m
  8. Elias Gerald – USC – 2.23m
  9. Bradford (BJ) Jennings – Texas Tech – 2.22m
  10. Arthur Chitty – Samford – 2.22m

Women’s High Jump

  1. Temitope Adeshina – Texas Tech – 1.97m
  2. Rose Yeboah – Illinois – 1.91m
  3. Kristi Perez-Snyman – Missouri – 1.90m
  4. Rachel Glenn – Arkansas – 1.89m
  5. Elena Kulichenko – Georgia – 1.89m
  6. Jenna Rogers – Nebraska – 1.88m
  7. Maria Arboleda – Iowa – 1.88m
  8. Sharie Enoe – Kansas State – 1.88m
  9. Cheyla Scott – South Carolina – 1.87m
  10. Celia Rifaterra – Virginia – 1.86m
  11. Arienne Birch – North Dakota State – 1.86m

Men’s Pole Vaut

  • 1. Aleksandr Solovev – Texas A&M – 5.72m
  • 2. Logan Hammer – Utah State – 5.70m
  • 3. Arnie Grunert – Western Illinois – 5.65m
  • 4. Benjamin Conacher – Virginia Tech – 5.61m
  • 4. Ashton Barkdull – Kansas – 5.61m
  • 6. Simen Guttormsen – Duke – 5.60m
  • 7. Cade Gray – Tennessee – 5.55m
  • 7. Bradley Jelmert – Arkansas State – 5.55m
  • 7. Scott Toney – Washington – 5.55m
  • 7. Dyson Wicker – Nebraska – 5.55m

Women’s Pole Vault

  • 1. Amanda Moll – Washington – 4.78m
  • 2. Hana Moll – Washington – 4.65m
  • 3. Molly Haywood – Baylor – 4.58m
  • 4. Marleen Mulla – South Dakota – 4.57m
  • 4. Olivia Lueking – Oklahoma – 4.57m
  • 6. Anna Willis – South Dakota – 4.52m
  • 7. Mason Meinershagen – Kansas – 4.51m
  • 7. Tenly Kuhn – Baylor – 4.51m
  • 9. Erica Ellis – Kansas – 4.50m
  • 9. Chloe Timberg – Rutgers – 4.50m
  • 9. Tatum Moku – Washington State – 4.50m

Men’s Long Jump

  1. Lokesh Sathyanathan – Tarleton State – 8.14m
  2. Charles Godfred – Minnesota – 8.13m
  3. Greg Foster – Princeton – 8.10m
  4. Reinaldo Rodrigues – Arizona – 8.05m
  5. Chrstyn John Stevenson – USC – 8.02m
  6. Chris Preddie – Texas State – 8.01m
  7. Curtis Williams – Florida State – 7.96m
  8. Jayden Keys – Georgia – 7.95m
  9. Sir Jonathan Sims – Tarleton State – 7.94m
  10. Blair Anderson – Oklahoma State – 7.93m

Women’s Long Jump

  1. Alexis Brown – Baylor – 7.03m
  2. Anthaya Charlton – Florida – 6.82m
  3. Alyssa Jones – Stanford – 6.81m
  4. Sydney Johnson – UCLA – 6.79m
  5. Tacoria Humphrey – Illinois – 6.73m
  6. Janae De Gannes – Baylor – 6.72m
  7. Prestina Ochonogor – Tarleton State – 6.67m
  8. Shamaya Joiner – Grambling – 6.67m
  9. Synclair Savage – Louisville – 6.64m
  10. Aaliyah Foster – Texas – 6.57m

Men’s Triple Jump

  1. Brandon Green Jr. – Oklahoma – 16.94m
  2. Hakeem Ford – Minnesota – 16.54m
  3. Selva Prabhu – Kansas State – 16.49m
  4. Xavier Drumgoole – Stanford – 16.42m
  5. Gabriele Tosti – Tarleton State – 16.39m
  6. Theophilus Mudzengerere – South Carolina – 16.38m
  7. Kyvon Tatham – Florida State – 16.37m
  8. Kelsey Daniel – Texas – 16.34m
  9. Luke Brown – Kentucky – 16.33m
  10. Floyd Whitaker – Oklahoma – 16.27m

Women’s Triple Jump

  • 1. Winny Bii – Texas A&M – 14.01m
  • 1. Agur Dwol – Oklahoma – 14.01m
  • 1. Shantae Foreman – Clemson – 14.01m
  • 4. Victoria Gorlova – Texas Tech – 13.99m
  • 5. Emilia Sjostrand – San Jose State – 13.78m
  • 6. Daniela Wamokpego – Iowa – 13.67m
  • 7. Tamiah Washington – Texas Tech – 13.63m
  • 7. Simone Johnson – San Jose State – 13.63m
  • 9. Busola Akinduro – Texas Tech – 13.59m
  • 10. Ryann Porter – Oregon – 13.55m

About Hayward Field

Hayward Field, which was built in 1919, is no stranger to top-tier track and field events, including the Diamond League and the U.S. Olympic Team Trials.

The venue is named after Bill Hayward, who ran the University of Oregon track and field program from 1904 to 1947. Though it originally was intended for Ducks football, many additions and renovations over the century have helped it become a premier destination.

In September 2023, the venue became the first facility outside of Zurich or Brussels to host the two-day season-ending Wanda Diamond League Final, where the year’s 32 overall champions were crowned.

What Schools Won The Team Titles At The 2025 NCAA Division I Men’s And Women’s Outdoor Track And Field Championships?

The Arkansas women took home the outdoor team title in 2024, sweeping the indoor and outdoor championships for the 2023-2024 season.

Florida, led by legendary head coach Mike Holloway, secured the men’s title in 2024, giving the Gators three consecutive outdoor men’s titles. Florida became the first team to three-peat since Texas A&M (2009-2011).

What Schools Have Won The Most Titles At The NCAA Division I Outdoor Track And Field Championships?

The NCAA Division I Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships first was held in 1921. 

USC owns the most men’s titles with 25, while Arkansas is the only other program with 10 or more (10).

The NCAA Division I Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships first was held in 1982. 

LSU has won the most women’s titles with 14. The next-closest is Texas with five.

From FloTrack YouTube

Check out these potential future collegiate stars: Incredible Finish In 8-Year-Old 4×1 National Championship

FloTrack Is The Streaming Home For Many Track And Field Meets Each Year

Don’t miss all the track and field season action streaming on FloTrack. Check out the FloTrack schedule for more events.

FloTrack Archived Footage

Video footage from each event will be archived and stored in a video library for FloTrack subscribers to watch for the duration of their subscriptions.

Join The Track & Field Conversation On Social





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Greenfield Recorder – Tavo Vincent-Warner closes Frontier volleyball career by eclipsing 2,000 career assists

Frontier’s Tavo Vincent-Warner sets the ball against West Springfield during action earlier this season in South Deerfield. STAFF PHOTO/DANIEL JACOBI II The Frontier boys volleyball team is still in its infancy, though coach Sean MacDonald noted a milestone reached in the team’s season finale will take a long time to break.  The Redhawks began their boys […]

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Frontier's Tavo Vincent-Warner sets the ball against West Springfield during action earlier this season in South Deerfield.

Frontier’s Tavo Vincent-Warner sets the ball against West Springfield during action earlier this season in South Deerfield.
STAFF PHOTO/DANIEL JACOBI II

The Frontier boys volleyball team is still in its infancy, though coach Sean MacDonald noted a milestone reached in the team’s season finale will take a long time to break. 

The Redhawks began their boys program just four years ago and have had considerable success, winning a pair of Western Mass. titles and reaching the MIAA Div. 2 state tournament each season. 

A lot of that success can be attributed to Tavo Vincent-Warner. Vincent-Warner joined the team his freshman year — the first year Frontier had a program — and struck with it throughout his high school career. He quickly took up the setter position with the Redhawks and held that through this past season. Entering the MIAA Div. 2 state tournament, Vincent-Warner sat at 1,948 career assists and needed a few big matches to join Emily Woodward as the second Frontier volleyball player (and first boy) to eclipse 2,000 assists. 

Against Lynn Vocational in the preliminary round, Vincent-Warner distributed 37 assists in a 3-0 sweep which put him 15 shy of the 2,000 assist mark going into the Redhawks’ Round of 32 contest against Chicopee Comp on Saturday. 

It wasn’t going to be easy to get those 15 against a tough Colt squad but Vincent-Warner prevailed, finishing the match with 19 assists to hit the milestone. 

“Tavo and Will Reading were the last of our co-founders,” Frontier coach Sean MacDonald said, “the ones that saw we had a new team and gave it a try. Tavo started setting not day one but pretty early into his freshman year which freed up other guys to hit and pass more. It’s hard to get to [2,000 assists] unless you played four years and aren’t splitting setting duties with someone else. That’s what Tavo has been doing. He’s a great kid, a great teammate and a great captain. I’ve been here since 2003 and they used to play best of three [sets] so there were less games but we only have one other girls with all the good teams that has gotten over 2,000 which shows what kind of accomplishment this is.” 

MacDonald said he’s seen Vincent-Warner grow tremendously in his four years with the program. Playing volleyball for the first time as a freshman, Vincent-Warner had to learn the sport and the position along with the rest of his teammates. 

As the years have gone on, MacDonald said he’s become comfortable in what he’s doing and has turned into a leader on the team.

“He’s not a big guy but he’s quick and speedy,” MacDonald said. “He makes our passes look better sometimes by tracking them down and making passes from tough places on the court so we have a chance to score. He’s grown with confidence. He was a little too conservative with his setting choices instead of setting quick in the middle or overhead. Now he’s comfortable setting anywhere on the net. His leadership as well, he’s kind of a quiet guy so when he says something, he gets their attention.”

Like in basketball, you can’t get an assist without someone scoring on the other end. MacDonald noted that Vincent-Warner played with a lot of great players these past four years which has helped him reach a milestone that he doesn’t believe will be broken any time soon.

“How do you want to win your games?” MacDonald said. “The girls get a lot of aces so if you get an ace, you can’t get an assist. When we were playing Lynn, we knew Comp was going to be a tough game so we were trying to get the number as low as we could. You need people who can get kills and that’s certainly the guys we had this year, the Carey brothers the last few years, Jesse Kurkolonis, Brady Burch. Without those guys getting kills we don’t get assists and without someone passing them the ball, they don’t get kills. It’s obviously the boy record right now and I think it’s going to be there for a while.” 



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Orange Duo Set for NCAA Championships

A pair of Syracuse track and field runners will conclude their season this week in Eugene, Oregon at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. MEET INFO: Dates: Wednesday, June 11 – Saturday, June 14 Watch: ESPN/ESPN2 Live Results: Here EVENT PREVIEWS Men’s 10,000-Meter Run Final – Wednesday, 9:56 p.m. Sam Lawler will race on […]

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A pair of Syracuse track and field runners will conclude their season this week in Eugene, Oregon at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships.

MEET INFO:

Dates: Wednesday, June 11 – Saturday, June 14

Watch: ESPN/ESPN2

Live Results: Here

EVENT PREVIEWS

Men’s 10,000-Meter Run Final – Wednesday, 9:56 p.m.

Sam Lawler will race on Wednesday evening to get things started for the Orange. He’ll compete in the NCAA final of the 10k. Lawler was eighth in the East semifinal to advance to Eugene. He has the 17th-fastest time in the field this season, a school-record mark he set at the Stanford Invitational earlier this season (28:21.63).

Lawler is in the NCAA final for the second-straight season. It’s an event that Syracuse has consistently been one of the nation’s top programs in. ‘Cuse is one-of-four schools, and the only team in the ACC to have an NCAA finalist in three-straight seasons. The Orange have also qualified at least one man or woman to the NCAA final in the 10k in 12 of the last-14 NCAA Championships.

Washington State’s Evans Kurui has the best time from the regular season (27:37.32).

Women’s 200-Meter Semifinal – Thursday, 9:29 p.m.

Iaunia Pointer races on Thursday in the 200-meter dash, after back-to-back school record breaking performances in the first two rounds of NCAA competition. Pointer will race in the second heat of the event, where the top-two finishers plus next-three fastest times of the three heats advance to the NCAA final on Saturday.

Pointer’s heat has Jasmine Montgomery (22.17 seconds) as the overall favorite. Pointer’s PR from last week is at 22.90 seconds.

The nine qualifiers for the NCAA final will race at 10:37 p.m. on Saturday.

 



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Laguna Beach Recreation Department’s Summer Camps 061025 – Stu News Laguna

Laguna Beach Recreation Department’s Summer Camps start on June 16 With summer just around the corner, the LB Rec Dept. continues to offer a wide variety of youth sports and children’s programs, too numerous to list here. For more information on the activities and the summer camps Laguna’s recreational department offers and to register, click […]

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Laguna Beach Recreation Department’s Summer Camps start on June 16

With summer just around the corner, the LB Rec Dept. continues to offer a wide variety of youth sports and children’s programs, too numerous to list here. For more information on the activities and the summer camps Laguna’s recreational department offers and to register, click here.

Around Town

June 10: AARP Driver Safety Program

June 13 and 14: JG Swim Tests

June 16: First Day of Summer Camps

June 18: Outdoor Movie Night: Moana 2

June 19: City facilities closed for Juneteenth

June 21: Fête De La Musique

June 27: Sawdust Art Festival opens

June 27 and 28: JG Swim Tests

Summer Camps:

Art Adventures. This summer camp is designed to provide kids with a fun, creative, educational and enriched experience through a combination of art/craft projects, games, outdoor adventures and more. Week-long sessions beginning June 16.

Parker-Anderson Camps. Sessions include chess, LEGO® robotics, anime, cartooning and comic creation, jewelry, design and crafts, stop-motion animation, inventor’s workshop, rocket science and astronomy, fine art and sculpture, and Hogwarts Academy. Sessions begin on June 16.

Beach and Ocean Camps. Sessions include advanced youth beach volleyball camp, beach camp Laguna, beginning/intermediate youth beach volleyball camp, junior lifeguards, Laguna Beach surf school, LCVC Beach volleyball, little mermaids and sea cubs, and Paulo’s skim school and skim Laguna. Sessions begin on July 16.

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Photos courtesy of LB Rec Dept.

Junior Lifeguard sessions begin on June 16

Junior Lifeguards. The Junior Lifeguard program provides beach and water safety instruction for boys and girls, ages 8-15. The program offers education in ocean safety, rescue techniques, beach activities, physical fitness and marine safety operations in an environment that emphasizes courtesy, respect and good sportsmanship. Sessions begin on June 16.

New – Artsy Cooking Summer Camp, sessions begin July 14.

Sports Camps. Sessions offered for tennis and swimming, intensive tennis camp, advance swim team, advanced youth beach volleyball, baseball and beach camp, beginning swim team, beginning water polo, beginning/intermediate youth beach volleyball camp, Freddy running club, Pro Touch soccer camp, Skyhawks, splashball and U SK8 Skateboarding. Sessions begin on June 16.

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LB Recreation Department offers a variety of art classes and camps

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Students participate in a dance class

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Kids Cooking Academy, Artsy Cooking, July 14-18

Mudpies and Masterpieces after school ceramics, April 3-June 15

New – Cool Craft Camp beginning June 23, ages 8-12.

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Girl practices her skateboarding

Magic Steps Music.

Spring session, April 18-June 13

Magic Steps Music, formerly Ladybug Music OC, is a hip-shaking, head-bopping interactive music class for infants, preschoolers and toddlers. This fun program nurtures children’s basic music skills, but it’s also designed for optimal early childhood development.

Bluebird Park, ages 5 and under.

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Magic Steps Music student takes music seriously

Tumbling N Kids

For different programs and age levels, click here.

Youth Sports

Here are a few of the Youth Sports classes, for a complete listing of dates and details (and to register), click here.

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Basketball player focuses on making a basket

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Getting in some practice tennis sessions

Youth Tennis, Laguna Beach Tennis Academy, various levels and ages.

Water Polo – Laguna Beach Water Polo Club.

Currently, Laguna Beach Water Polo Youth Club has age groups 10U, 12U, 14U for boys and girls.

Adults

Adult Fitness: Adult Ballet, Adult Tap, Aqua Blast, Beach Volleyball, Belly Dancing, Better Life Boxing Body and Mind Barre Workout, Latin Dance, Line Dancing Beyond County and Next Step, Lyrical Modern Dance, Mary’s Beginner Line Dancing, Mary’s Fitness Beyond 50, Motus Movement, Nordic Walking, Pickleball, T’ai Chi Ch’uan, Tennis, Yoga Flow and Zumba with Judith.

Art & Enrichment: Acrylic Painting, Adult Beg/Int Drawing & Watercolor, Dog Training, Freehand Drawing, Hortense Miller Garden, Italian Language, Oil Painting, Painting on Silk and Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction

For more information, click here.



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East Grand Forks’ record-breaking trio heads to state track and field meet – Grand Forks Herald

GRAND FORKS — In a hallway of East Grand Forks Senior High school, track and field all-time school records are displayed in a frame. The display needs an overhaul after the year the Green Wave have put together. Jez Jones (triple jump, 4×400 relay), Messi Kalenda (shot put) and Mavrik Martine (discus) have all broken […]

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GRAND FORKS — In a hallway of East Grand Forks Senior High school, track and field all-time school records are displayed in a frame.

The display needs an overhaul after the year the Green Wave have put together.

Jez Jones (triple jump, 4×400 relay), Messi Kalenda (shot put) and Mavrik Martine (discus) have all broken East Grand Forks school records and will now take on the Minnesota Class AA state track and field meet Wednesday and Thursday in St. Michael, Minn.

“It’s just an amazing group of guys,” Jones said. “We push each other every single day. We joke around a lot so that’s what makes the environment fun. Practice can be hard, but when you have boys joking around, it gets you through it day by day.”

Jones broke the school’s triple jump record last season with a jump of 44 feet, 3 inches. This year, the Green Wave 4×400 team broke the school record with the 4×800 school record in its sight, as well.

The 4×400 relay team includes Jones, Weston Mahar, Cooper Hills and Dereon Dadeah.

The 4×800 relay team includes Mahar, Hills, Dadeah and Rylan Slack.

Jones is also eyeing the school record in the 400 meters. He holds the No. 4 time in Class AA this season at 49.7 seconds. Brayden Carlson set the EGF mark in 2024 at 49.63 seconds.

Kalenda,

who became a Green Wave football standout a couple of years after fleeing the Congo

, broke a long-standing EGF record.

Kalenda, who ranks fifth in the shot put in Class AA at 54 feet, 4.5 inches, broke a 46-year-old Green Wave record. Keith Solem held the previous record of 53-4, thrown in 1979.

Kalenda has signed to compete in football and track and field next year at Minot State.

Martine broke a 20-year-old record. His best discus throw of 162-2 feet ranks ninth in Class AA this year and broke the school record of Brady Herndon, who had 158-4 in 2005.

“I wanted to break the school record since I was in eighth grade,” Martine said, “so it’s pretty cool now that it’s my senior year, and I did it.”

All three Green Wave record-breakers have a similar story of 2025 state qualifying redemption after falling short in 2024.

“I needed a 51 (feet), and I threw a 50,” Kalenda said of the shot put.

“I came up 14 inches short,” Martine said of the discus.

“I was 2 inches short of going,” Jones said of the triple jump. “I was a sophomore and really nervous and scratched my first jump, so I started to worry about a lot of things.”

Jones, now a junior, has received college recruiting interest from Concordia Moorhead and West Point. He has high goals for the state meet.

“My goal is to win state in the 400,” he said. “The (school) record is a side piece that would come along with it. I’m low key nervous. Anything can happen, so I have to keep my head level and be myself.”

In the end, the Green Wave record-breakers are happy to have each other to continue to improve.

“I enjoy having (Martine) every day in practice,” Kalenda said. “He pushes me. If it wasn’t for him, I wouldn’t be able to throw as far as I can.”

Top area Minnesota rankings

Area Minnesota athletes ranked in the Top 5 in each state track and field event, per athletic.net

Boys
Class A
Shot put — 2. Jake Borowicz, Roseau, 55-9.75
Class AA
400 — 4. Jez Jones, EGF, :49.70
Shot put — 5. Messi Kalenda, EGF, 54-4.5
Girls
Class A
100 — 1. Ava Phrakonkham, Bagley-Fosston, :11.80
200 — 1. Phrakonkham, Bagley-Fosston, :24.78
Shot put — 4. McKinley Folland, KCC, 39-6.5
Discus — 1. Allison LaVine, Clearbrook-Gonvick, 132-5

Tom Miller

Miller has covered sports at the Grand Forks Herald since 2004 and was the state sportswriter of the year in 2019 (NSMA, NDAPSSA), 2022 (NSMA, NDAPSSA) and 2024 (NDAPSSA).

His primary beat is UND football but also reports on a variety of UND sports and local preps.

He can be reached at (701) 780-1121, tmiller@gfherald.com or on Twitter at @tommillergf.





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Volleyball versus Wisconsin Pre-Sale Opportunity for #MUBB Season Ticket Members

MILWAUKEE – Marquette Volleyball is excited to host Wisconsin at Fiserv Forum on Wednesday, Sept. 17 with first serve set for 8 p.m. Central time. Take advantage of this special pre-sale opportunity for men’s basketball season ticket members to purchase tickets before the general public!  The pre-sale will be available to season ticket members starting […]

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MILWAUKEE – Marquette Volleyball is excited to host Wisconsin at Fiserv Forum on Wednesday, Sept. 17 with first serve set for 8 p.m. Central time.

Take advantage of this special pre-sale opportunity for men’s basketball season ticket members to purchase tickets before the general public!  The pre-sale will be available to season ticket members starting Thursday, June 12.  Tickets will go on sale to all fans June 26.

 

The pre-sale will launch based on priority point rank as of May 31. Tickets will go on sale at the following times:

  • 10am – Thursday, June 12 – #MUBB Priority Point Rank 1-250
  • 2pm – Thursday, June 12 – #MUBB Priority Point Rank 251-500
  • 10am – Friday, June 13 – #MUBB Priority Point Rank 501-750
  • 2pm – Friday, June 13 – #MUBB Priority Point Rank 751-1,000
  • 10am – Monday, June 16 – #MUBB Priority Point Rank 1,000+

Season ticket members will receive an email with their link to purchase prior to each on-sale date and time.
 
For questions email athletics@marquette.edu or call or text the Marquette Ticket Office at 414-288-4668.



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