Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

Sports

Floréal adds Saatara to Track & Field staff

Published

on


Austin, Texas – Texas Track & Field/Cross Country head coach Edrick Floréal has tabbed Olympic Champion and World Championship medalists coach Mohamad Saatara, who has developed World and NCAA Record holders, as the Longhorns assistant coach for throws, Floréal announced on Friday. A veteran of more than 20 years of collegiate coaching experience and nearly 30 overall, Saatara was an All-American thrower himself. He has coached student-athletes that claimed 43 total All-American honors, four national championships, two NCAA records and a multitude of conference, meet and school records during his time as an assistant coach.

Saatara comes the Forty Acres after spending the last 12 seasons at the University of California-Berkeley, where he joined the track & field program in August of 2013 as assistant coach for throwing events. He also spent three years at Michigan, which followed eight at Northern Arizona during his collegiate coaching career.

“I’m so excited to be adding Coach Saatara to our staff. He is someone I’ve known and followed for a long time and has an incredible reputation in the coaching circles at every level,” said Floréal. “His ability to coach and develop throwers is world renowned and the success his athletes have had on the collegiate and international level is a tribute to the work he pours into them. Mo has coached throwers on the biggest stages – Olympic and World Championship medalists, a world record holder, as well as numerous National Champions and All-Americans – and what really stands out about him is his ability to bring out the best in every one of his throwers. He’s a great coach and person who is a tremendous technician of the throwing events. He absolutely checks all the boxes and is a perfect fit for the Forty Acres.”

“I’m extremely honored and excited to be a part of the Texas Track & Field program and work under the leadership of Coach Floréal, who is one of the best coaches in the world,” Saatara said. “Texas Track & Field has a long and proud history, and Coach Floréal has built a great program. I’m looking forward to joining such an innovative and high achieving team and excited to be a Longhorn.”

As of the end of the 2025 season, Saatara coached 31 USTFCCCA first and second-team All-American performances in his 12 years with the Bears, as well as six Honorable Mention All-American performances. At Cal, Saatara’s throwers reached 10 standing school records across all of the throwing events: men’s discus (Mykolas Alekna, 2022/23/24/25), men’s hammer (Rowan Hamilton, 2024), women’s shot put (Lucija Leko, 2025), women’s discus (Caisa-Marie Lindfors, 2025), women’s hammer (Camryn Rogers, 2021/22), women’s javelin (Carolina Visca, 2023), men’s indoor shot put (McKay Johnson, 2020), men’s weight throw (Rowan Hamilton, 2024), women’s indoor shot put (Caisa-Marie Lindfors, 2024) and women’s weight throw (Camryn Rogers, 2021/22). He coached student-athletes to nine Golden Bear freshman records. Saatara’s throwers produced four National Championships (Rogers, 2019/21/22 hammer throw; Hamilton, 2024 hammer throw), as well as two all-time NCAA records (Rogers, 2021/22 hammer throw; Alekna, 2022/23 discus).

This past season, Alekna was named the 2025 West Region Men’s Field Athlete of the Year by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) and is one of the qualifiers that is a candidate to win the national award. He produced a superb season with the Golden Bears, which included a substantial improvement on his own world record in the discus, as well as three facility records, four meet records, an ACC title and an NCAA runner-up finish. Alekna appeared on The Bowerman Watch List eight times this season, bringing his career total to 23 – third-most by any man in history. He surpassed the 70-meter barrier on four occasions with two of those in Berkeley: a then-ACC-record 70.09m (229-11) at the Brutus Hamilton Invitational, his world-record effort of 75.56m (247-10) at the Oklahoma Throws Series World Invitational, a meet-record 71.29m (233-10) at The 130th Big Meet, and a meet-record 72.12m (236-7) at the NCAA West Regional, which was also a facility record. In all, Saatara had four men’s entries at the NCAA West Regionals, and his men’s athletes collected a total of three medals at the ACC Championships, along with five All-ACC honors. 

Saatara helped five women’s throwers reach Eugene, Ore., for the NCAA Outdoor Championships this season, which was tied for the most of any program nationally. Three of those were in the hammer, which marked the most by any school since 2012. In the discus, Lindfors set a school record and PR at 62.57m (205-3) to finish fourth, which is the second-best finish in Cal history. The program’s first women’s discus thrower to compete at the Olympic Games, Lindfors also represented Sweden in the finals at the 2024 European Championships and won a silver medal at her country’s national championships. In addition to Cal’s discus record, she owns the school’s indoor shot put record and ranks No. 2 on its outdoor list; she also broke the 41-year-old Big Meet record in May with her then-season best of 61.52m (201-10).

The ACC Champion in the hammer, Giavonna Meeks set a personal best of 68.94m (226-2) for a fifth-place NCAA finish that improved her own No. 4 program mark by over a meter. She was named First-Team All-American for the second time during the year after having also claimed recognition at the 2025 NCAA Indoor Championships, while it was the third time in her career (2024 Indoor). Valentina Savva posted a mark of 66.84m (219-3), missing out on the NCAA final by just one inch but posting the best finish by any Cal freshman in history to earn Second-Team All-America status for the first time in her career. She also finished second at the ACC Championships. Audrey Jacobs, competing in her second NCAA Championships, was named Honorable Mention All-America with a best throw of 63.74m (209-1). In the shot put, Lucija Leko registered a mark of 16.25m (53-3.75), which earned her Honorable Mention All-America after she finished second at the ACC Championships.

In 2024, Saatara’s athletes posted another impressive indoor campaign as Hamilton set the school weight throw record on the way to an NCAA Indoor Championships appearance (the first by a Cal men’s weight thrower) and a Second-Team All-America nod; Lindfors also set a new school record in the women’s indoor shot put. The throws group followed that up with yet another outstanding outdoor season filled with accolades: in the regular season alone, Hamilton and Lindfors respectively re-set the program’s men’s hammer and women’s discus records and combined for three meet records, while Jacobs set the Dutch U23 women’s hammer record. Hamilton was named Pac-12 Men’s Field Athlete of the Week twice during the season, while discus and hammer thrower Jasmine Blair earned the women’s equivalent once. At the Pac-12 Championships, Hamilton set another meet record on the way to the men’s hammer title (the first by a Cal man since 1919), while Jeff Duensing claimed his first conference title in the men’s shot put and Blair and Lindfors took second and third, respectively, in the women’s discus. For the first time in history, Cal sent two male hammer throwers to the NCAA Outdoor Championships (Hamilton and Ivar Moisander); the latter earned Second-Team All-America status, while the former followed up his conference title with an NCAA Championship – Cal’s first in the men’s event since 1922 and its first man to win any outdoor title since 2011. Hamilton also broke his own school record at the NCAA Championships to finish his career at No. 8 in collegiate history and became the first Canadian to win an NCAA men’s hammer title since 1979; he was subsequently named the USTFCCCA West Region Men’s Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year. Duensing also made his second-consecutive appearance at the NCAA Outdoor Championships and picked up a Second-Team All-America nod. Meanwhile, as he redshirted in preparation for the Olympic Games, discus thrower Alekna posted the best season of his career with a new world record, two stadium records and three meet records; the former broke the longest-standing record in men’s track & field.

Four of Saatara’s athletes appeared at the 2024 Olympic Games: Canada’s Rogers (women’s hammer, gold), Lithuania’s Alekna (men’s discus, silver), Canada’s Hamilton (men’s hammer, finalist) and Sweden’s Lindfors (women’s discus, semifinalist); two more of Saatara’s trainees also competed in the women’s discus at the U.S. Olympic Trials (Blair & Elena Bruckner). Several current and former Cal throwers earned additional medals on their respective national and international stages. Alekna took bronze at the European Championships, Rogers and Anna Purchase (UK) each won their national hammer titles and Lindfors claimed silver at the Swedish Championships. Adrianna Coleman also finished off her first year as a Golden Bear with an appearance at the USATF U20 Championships, finishing fourth in the women’s hammer.

After an indoor season that saw Rogers make one final appearance at the NCAA Championships to close out her Golden Bear career, the 2023 throws squad embarked on another historic outdoor campaign. Alekna shattered his own collegiate discus record with a European (and unofficial world) U23 record on the way to a second straight Pac-12 championship and semifinalist nod for The Bowerman; at the end of the year, he was named a semifinalist for the AAU James E. Sullivan Award. Purchase improved her all-time No. 2 British women’s hammer mark, later taking second at the Pac-12 Championships, and ended her collegiate career as the sixth-best hammer thrower in collegiate history. She and Alekna both took third place at the NCAA Outdoor Championships to earn First Team All-American nods – an honor that they shared with shot putter Duensing, who finished eighth. Three additional throwers (Jacobs – hammer; Visca – javelin; Ivar Moisander – hammer) were named Second Team All-Americans after a year in which Jacobs broke the Dutch U20 hammer record and Visca set a new program and freshman javelin record.

Following the 2023 season, Saatara’s athletes continued to post incredible results. Rogers moved up to No. 5 all-time on the world’s women’s hammer list with a new Canadian record and Olympic-qualifying performance in her first pro season, later recording another Canadian title and winning gold at the World Athletics Championships – the first time that any Cal track & field athlete, past or present, has won a world title. Alekna took home the gold medal at the European U23 Championships with his own Olympic-qualifying performance, afterward winning the Lithuanian Championships and earning a bronze medal at the World Championships. For her part, Jacobs took first at the Dutch Championships, while Visca became Italian champion. Purchase and Moisander each earned silver medals at the UK Athletics Championships and Swedish Championships, respectively; the former later went on to make the final at the World Championships, where she finished 11th. Saatara also coached Cal volunteer assistant coach Elena Bruckner to a third-place discus finish at the USATF Outdoor Championships and a World Championships appearance, while redshirt freshman Nick Godbehere also took third in the U20 shot put.

The 2022 track & field season was one of Saatara’s best, as he was named both the Men’s and Women’s USTFCCCA West Region Assistant Coach of the Year after coaching senior Rogers to her third straight national championship (and new NCAA record, No. 9 in the world all-time) in the hammer throw and qualifying five additional athletes (seniors Josh Johnson and Iffy Joyner, junior Purchase, sophomore Moisander and freshman Mykolas Alekna) to the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Alekna (2nd), Joyner (4th) and Purchase (7th) each earned First Team All-American status – the first time since 1922 that four throwers received that honor at Cal – while Johnson finished his senior year as a Second Team All-American. At the Pac-12 Outdoor Championships, Rogers, Alekna, and Johnson (shot put) each won titles in their respective events, with Alekna surpassing the all-dates NCAA discus record for the first time and setting a new world record for a 19-year-old. The outdoor regular season was highly successful for many of Saatara’s athletes, including Purchase, who became just the second British woman in history to throw the hammer over 70 meters, and Amelia Flynt, who set a new Cal freshman record in the women’s shot put to rise to second in school history. Both Rogers and Johnson appeared at the NCAA Indoor Championships earlier that year, with Rogers finishing third in the weight throw after winning the Pac-12 title and setting a new school record to earn herself another First Team All-American nod; Johnson was also named Second Team All-American in the shot put.

Rogers ended the 2022 season with the top 11 hammer throws in NCAA history, while Alekna accumulated 6 of the NCAA’s all-time top 10 discus throws – both were named semifinalists for The Bowerman, with Rogers becoming the first Cal athlete to advance to the pool of finalists. Rogers was also named as the USTFCCCA West Region Women’s Field Athlete of the Year and a Honda Sport Award Finalist, while Alekna earned the USTFCCCA West Region Men’s Field Athlete of the Year, Pac-12 Men’s Field Athlete of the Year, and Pac-12 Men’s Freshman of the Year awards. In total, Saatara’s athletes collected 12 outdoor program Top 10 marks and 5 indoor Top 10 marks on the year.

Following the 2022 NCAA season, Rogers and Alekna went on to earn Canadian and Lithuanian championships in their respective events before each earning a silver medal at the World Athletics Championships. Flynt also made her mark on the postseason circuit, taking first place in the women’s shot put at the USATF U20 Championships to qualify her for the Junior World Championships. In August of 2022, Rogers became the reigning Commonwealth Games women’s hammer champion while Alekna earned his first ever European Championship title; the latter was subsequently named European Athletics’ Men’s Rising Star and Lithuania’s Male Athlete of the Year. Saatara himself was honored with BC Athletics’ High Performance Male Coach of the Year award.

In the 2021 track & field season, Pac-12 champion Camryn Rogers stamped her mark in collegiate history by breaking the all-time hammer record and meet record – twice – at the NCAA Outdoor Championships to earn All-American status, capping off the year with a fifth-place finish at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games, which was the highest-ever finish by a female Canadian hammer thrower; Saatara was subsequently recognized as an Olympic Coach and received an Olympic ring to acknowledge his presence and contribution. Rogers, Cal’s first track & field athlete to be named to The Bowerman Watch List, also qualified for the 2021 NCAA Indoor Championships in the weight throw and earned the first of her two All-American nods that year. On the men’s side, Iffy Joyner took third place in the discus throw at the Pac-12 Championships, eventually making his way to the NCAA Championships and winning himself an All-American spot.

Despite the lack of a 2020 outdoor season, Saatara’s student-athletes still found reason to celebrate. In his final year at Cal, McKay Johnson broke his own indoor shot put record, winning the MPSF Championship title and reaching his third straight All-American appearance. Teammate Josh Johnson finished right behind in the same event, taking second place as well as All-American honors of his own.

Saatara mentored Rogers on the way to her first National Championship (and All-American nod) as well as the usurpation of her own school record in the women’s hammer throw in 2019, a year in which she also first set Canada’s U23 record and placed sixth at the Pan Am Games. Rogers also took first place in that year’s MPSF Championships (weight throw) and the Pac-12 Championships (hammer throw). Not to be outdone, teammate Chrissy Glassmann set a school record of her own in the javelin throw. Under Saatara’s coaching, freshman Iffy Joyner took home a silver medal in the men’s discus throw at that year’s NACAC U23 Championship and qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships in that same event, while fellow thrower McKay Johnson broke his own school record in the indoor shot put on his way to a national appearance of his own (as well as a second-place MPSF Championships finish) along with teammate Silviu Bocancea in the hammer throw. Once again, both Johnson and Bocancea notched All-American honors.

In 2018, Saatara coached Rogers to that year’s U-20 World Championship in Finland, where she took gold in the hammer throw. That win was the first world championship at any level for a Cal track & field athlete, as well as the first-ever throwing gold medal for Canada. As a freshman, Rogers broke the school record in the hammer throw and finished third at that year’s Pac-12 Championships, also taking third in the weight throw at the MPSF Championships. On the men’s side, McKay Johnson broke the school record for the indoor shot put under Saatara’s guidance, qualifying for both the NCAA Indoor and Outdoor Championships (the latter for both shot put and discus throw after second-place conference finishes in each event), reaching All-American status in the former. Shot putter Peter Simon also qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships after placing third at the Pac-12 Championships, as did Bocancea in the hammer throw; both later reached All-American status. Two more discus throwers finished third for the Bears at the Pac-12 Championships – Malik McMorris for the men and Amarie Bremel for the women.

Saatara’s 2017 campaign featured a mix of both veteran and newcomer successes, topped by pupil McKay Johnson’s third-place finish in the shot put at the USATF Junior Championships. Simon also impressed once again, winning the Pac-12 men’s shot put title and earning All-American honors, while women Kendall Mader and Destiny Parker shined at the Pac-12 Championships (third in discus throw) and MPSF Championships (second in weight throw), respectively.

2016’s star thrower under Saatara’s tutelage was freshman Peter Simon, who qualified for both the Indoor and Outdoor NCAA Championships that year and earned All-American honors at the former. At the Pac-12 Championships, Simon placed third in the shot put; his teammate Isaac Dan also took home a trophy from that meet, finishing second in the hammer throw.

In 2015, Saatara helped another athlete – Ethan Cochran – qualify for the National Championships in the discus throw after Cochran placed second in the Pac-12 Championships. New addition Ilse Kaaja earned herself a spot on the podium in the Pac-12 women’s hammer throw, placing third at that meet, while the earlier MPSF Championships featured Amaechi’s second-place finish in the weight throw.

Saatara’s inaugural season with the Bears saw two National Championship qualifiers in Amaechi and Derek White. All-American Amaechi, who broke the school record in the weight throw earlier that year, placed first in the weight throw and third in the shot put at the MPSF Championships, while White took second place in the discus throw at that year’s Pac-12 Championships. Shelby Ashe, another thrower taught by Saatara, also reached the podium at the Pac-12 Championships, winning second in the hammer throw.

Saatara came to Berkeley after spending three seasons as an assistant coach at the University of Michigan, where he supervised all field events for the men’s team and specialized in the throws. Under his direction, the Michigan men set seven school records in the indoor and outdoor shot put, weight throw, hammer throw and the decathlon. In addition, they earned four All-Big Ten Honors in Indoor and Outdoor conference championships.

Prior to moving to Michigan, Saatara spent eight seasons at Northern Arizona University, helping the Lumberjacks to 12 Big Sky Conference men’s and women’s team championships. He has coached over 20 Big Sky individual champions, as well as multiple school record holders in the throws. During his career at NAU, he coached a multitude of student-athletes who competed at the NCAA Regional and National Championships, including six NCAA All-Americans and two NCAA Academic All-American awardees.

Saatara has coached and consulted nine Olympians. He has also coached national- and international-level athletes who have set national and international records. Athletes under his care have competed in the Indoor and Outdoor World Championships, USATF National Championships and Olympic Trials, Asian Games and Championships, and CAC Games. He was also retained as a consultant for several national track & field federations and world and Olympic medalists. One of his premier athletes is former Golden Bear and two-time Olympic shot putter Amin Nikfar, who he coached throughout his lengthy career.

Saatara previous served as interim head coach at his alma mater, California State University Los Angeles. He is a former All-American at CSULA where he finished second in the hammer throw at the 1995 NCAA Division II Championships. Saatara holds several national and international coaching certifications and diplomas, including the IAAF/World Athletics Level V Coach (With Distinction), USA Track & Field Level II and III-Throws. He has been a clinician and presenter for the USTFCCCA and other national and international coaching organizations.

Saatara lives with his wife Diane in Vallejo, Calif.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

No. 3 Beach Begin 2026 Campaign with Home Matches Against Lindenwood, No. 15 McKendree

Published

on


LONG BEACH, Calif. — Fresh off a national championship season, No. 3 Long Beach State Men’s Volleyball opens the 2026 campaign at the LBS Financial Credit Union Pyramid with a pair of home matches, beginning with a season opener against Lindenwood on Friday, January 9, followed by a ranked showdown with No. 15 McKendree on Saturday. The opening weekend marks the start of a demanding schedule for the Beach, who enter the season as a Big West preseason favorite and a consensus national contender.

In the Rankings

• After finishing the 2025 season as the National Champion, Long Beach State starts the 2026 season ranked No. 3 in the AVCA National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll. The Beach garnered 460 total points and five first-place votes.

• McKendree is ranked No. 15 in the AVCA National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll. The Bearcats accumulated 167 points.

• The Big West is one of the most competitive Division I Men’s Volleyball conferences as all six Big West schools are nationally ranked, with No. 2 Hawai’i and No 3. Long Beach State sitting in the Top 5.

• This season, Long Beach State will face ten nationally ranked opponents in No. 1 UCLA, No. 2 Hawai’i, No. 4 Pepperdine, No. 10 UC San Diego, No. 11 CSUN, No. 13 Penn State, No. 14 Ohio State, No. 15 McKendree, No. 17 UC Santa Barbara and No. 19 George Mason. Additionally, the Beach will play one team that is receiving votes in Fort Valley State (9).

About The Beach

• No. 3 Long Beach State open the 2026 campaign looking to build on a national championship 2025 season which saw the Beach post a 30-3 overall record. The Beach went 9-1 in Big West action winning their fourth-straight regular season title and fourth national championship title.

• Long time Long Beach State Head Coach Alan Knipe retired after his championship 22nd season. The winningest coach in LBSU Men’s Volleyball program history, Knipe owns a career record of 449-171 for a winning percentage of .724.

 

• Replacing Knipe at the helm is long-time former Associate Head Coach Nick MacRae. MacRae is joined by Assistant Coaches McKay Smith, Amir-Lugo Rodriguez, Matt Prosser and Technical Coordinator Jon Parry. MacRae, a seasoned coach under Knipe, has worked at Long Beach State for the last 13 seasons helping Long Beach State capture three NCAA National Titles, two Big West Championships, and has helped lead the Beach to eight NCAA Final Four appearances.

• The Beach return 12 players from one year ago and welcome five newcomers.

• Senior Skyler Varga and Sophomore Alex Kandev, both returners, were named to the 2026 Big West Preseason Team. Varga returns as one of the nation’s premier attackers. Both earned NCAA All-Tournament Team honors for their performance in the NCAA Championship match. Varga finished the 2025 campaign with 270 kills (2.73 per set) on a .368 attack percentage, while adding 33 service aces, 70 total blocks, and 341 points across 99 sets. In addition to his on-court excellence, Varga also received CSC Academic All-America recognition. Kandev concluded his freshman season with 210 kills (3.23 per set) while hitting .458, and added 21 aces, 36 blocks, and 250 points in 65 sets.

North American Challenge

Long Beach State hosted the North American Challenge, a preseason exhibition tournament, featuring a total of four teams from the United States and Canada.

The tournament took place on Friday, Jan. 2 and Saturday, Jan. 4 with four matches played on day one and four on day two. The tournament was held in both the LBS Financial Credit Union Pyramid and the Gold Mine.

The United States won the tournament after sweeping all eight matches over two days.

The Beach were led by senior outside hitter Skyler Varga who was named MVP of the Tournament.

Big West Preseason Favorite

The Big West released its 2026 Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Poll and Team, and defending Big West regular season and National Champion Long Beach State was selected as the preseason favorite. The Beach garnered 24 total points and four first-place votes from league head coaches, signaling strong expectations for another elite season.

Long Beach State’s status as a national powerhouse was further reinforced in the 2026 AVCA National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll (Dec. 23), where the Beach were ranked No. 3 nationally behind UCLA and Hawai’i.

The Beach also placed multiple student-athletes on the 2026 Big West Preseason Coaches’ Team, as Skyler Varga and Alex Kandev earned preseason recognition following standout performances during Long Beach State’s championship 2025 season.

Following Long Beach State atop the Big West preseason poll, Hawai’i was chosen second with 22 points and two first-place votes, and UC Irvine was tabbed third with 17 points. CSUN, UC San Diego, and UC Santa Barbara rounded out the poll, each earning nine points.

 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

UA beach volleyball to host 3 regular season home tourneys

Published

on


Tucson has several opportunities to catch UA’s beach volleyball team in action at home when the season kicks off in February. 






Arizona beach volleyball will host three regular season home tournaments this year. 




The Wildcats will host three regular-season home tournaments, in addition to their Red-Blue scrimmage and the Big 12 Championship in April. 

First up is the scrimmage at 2 p.m. on Feb. 13, before Arizona heads to Phoenix for Grand Canyon’s Lopes Invitational on Feb. 20-21 to face TCU, GCU, UC Davis and Colorado Mesa. 

The first home tournament, the Cactus Classic, will host UTEP, ASU, Oregon and Georgia State on Feb. 27-28. 

The Cats will head up I-10 to Tempe for the Sun Devil Classic on March 6-7, which will also feature Southern Mississippi, Nebraska, ASU and Arizona Christian. 

A week later, March 13-14, UA will face Cal Poly, CSUN, Santa Clara and UC Davis at Cal Poly’s Mustang Roundup in San Luis Obispo before returning home for the Arizona Invitational, March 20-21, which will include Tarleton State, UTEP, Missouri State and San Francisco. 

People are also reading…

Arizona will close out March in Fort Worth, Texas, for the Big 12 Preview, along with TCU, ASU, Boise State, South Carolina and Florida State. 

The team’s final home tournament, before it hosts the Big 12 Championship April 23-24, will be the Wildcat Spring Challenge on April 3-4 vs. South Carolina, FGCU, Colorado Mesa and Hawaii.

In between the Wildcat Classic and the Big 12 Championship, UA will be New Orleans-bound for the NOLA Classic, hosted by Tulane, April 17-18, to face Tulane, Louisiana Monroe, New Orleans and Florida International. 

This year’s NCAA Beach Volleyball Championships will be in Gulf Shores, Alabama, May 1-3.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Tulane hires new volleyball coach | Tulane

Published

on


Tulane named Derek Schroeder its volleyball coach on Wednesday.

Schroeder, who is 279-234 in 17 years, spent the last three seasons at Jacksonville State after coaching Mercer for six years and Samford for eight, leading Samford to the NCAA tournament in 2011 and 2014. He guided Mercer to its first regular-season championships in 2020 and 2021, earning Southern Conference coach of the year honors in 2021.

He was not as successful at Jacksonville State, inheriting a program that had gone 65-15 the previous three seasons in the Ohio Valley and Atlantic Sun before moving to Conference USA. The Gamecocks went 5-22 in 2023, 10-21 in 2024 and 14-15 in 2025.

Schroeder replaces Jordana Price, who was fired in November after going 40-77 overall and 15-56 in the American during a four-year tenure. Tulane’s last NCAA tournament appearance was in 2008.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Nebraska volleyball setter named finalist for prestigous award

Published

on


Jan. 8, 2026, 6:31 a.m. CT

A Nebraska volleyball player has been named a finalist for another prestigious award. Setter Bergen Reilly, along with Olivia Babcock from Pittsburgh, Eva Hudson from Kentucky, and Mimi Colyer from Wisconsin, are the four finalists for the Class of 2026 Honda Sport Award for Volleyball.

Reilly had a tremendous 2025 season, helping the Huskers to a 33-1 record and a third straight Big Ten Championship. She averaged 10.47 assists per set and 2.70 digs per set with 73 kills, 67 blocks and 19 aces.

The Sioux Falls, S.D. native was a first-team AVCA All-American, AVCA Setter of the Year, Big Ten Player of the Year, Big Ten Setter of the Year, AVCA Region Player of the Year and All-Big Ten First Team. 





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Vikings Begin ‘Process’, Open Indoor Season at Silver & Blue Invitational This Weekend

Published

on


PORTLAND, Ore. — A new year brings with it a new season for the Portland State track & field program as the Vikings open their 2026 indoor season this Friday and Saturday at the Silver & Blue Invitational in Reno, Nev.
 
The season opener brings extra excitement for the Vikings, who enter their first track season under new head coach Joseph Blue. The Vikings’ new coach welcomes that excitement, though is quick to contextualize it as the first step in a long process for his team and his athletes.
 
 “We’re just trying to get our feet wet. There are no expectations. I just want them to go out there and race hard, throw hard and execute the things that we’ve been working on,” Blue said of the team’s season opener.
 
It’ll be the first official action for the non-distance runners in the Viking program since last May’s Big Sky Outdoor Championships. The Vikings’ throwers, jumpers, sprinters and hurdlers worked with their new coaches during the fall. Blue said the team trained throughout October together, then three weeks in November.
 
The seven-week training period was shorter than Blue would have liked, but productive. The short period of training means the Vikings will be still looking to build through the early part of their season.
 
“The first half of the season will be us still practicing. As we get through the end of February and we get to outdoor, our team will get more whole. But as we start right now, we’re still in preseason mode,” Blue said.
 
Some of the Vikings will be ready to go from this weekend’s season opener. Blue said Daniel Coppedge, who broke the school records in the weight throw and hammer last indoor and outdoor season, respectively, should be ready to go.
 
Coppedge will compete in the weight throw Friday morning. He set the record in the event with a throw of 56-00.00 (17.07m) at the Riverfront Invitational last season, though that isn’t even a personal best for Coppedge. His personal best came when he was competing unattached at the PSU vs. UP Dual Meet where he threw 56-02.00 (17.11m).
 
Meanwhile, Blue called Tori Forst “the best athlete” across both the men’s and women’s teams at Portland State. Forst should be ready to make noise for the Vikings this weekend. She had her 2025 outdoor season shut down early due to injury, but before then, had entered the top 10 all-time in the indoor 60 meters when she finished in 7.54 seconds at the Big Sky Indoor Championships.
 
Forst also recorded an overall win in the 200 meters at the Oregon Preview during the outdoor season, finishing in a personal best of 24.40 seconds.
 
Forst is entered in the prelims of the women’s 60 meters Friday alongside teammates Sienna Rosario and Aida Wheat. Forst will also run the 200 meters Saturday with Rosario, Savannah Beasley and Ashley Peterson.
 
Some of the Vikings’ distance runners who had strong cross country seasons should also be ready to continue that this weekend. Emma Stolte ranks chief among those after she posted five top 10 finishes this past fall, including a ninth-place finish at the Big Sky Championships to earn all-conference honors.
 
Stolte is entered in the women’s mile Friday alongside Libby Fox and Sam Sharp. She’ll double back in the 800 meters Saturday, an event in which she ranks eighth all-time at Portland State.
 
Amir Ahmed returns to the middle distances after running cross country in the fall. He’ll chase a school record in the 600 meters Saturday, an event in which he ranks third all-time after finishing in 1:20.85 at the UW Preview last season. Nate Boyer set the current 600-meter record at 1:19.48 in 2006.
 
Ahmed will also run in the 1,000 meters Friday. Fellow men’s distance runners Abdinajib Abade, Luke Gillingham and Farhan Ibrahim will also run in the mile Friday.
 
More Vikings will make either their season or career debuts this weekend. Blue cautioned all of them, no matter where they are in their training, to not overextend themselves.
 
“All your best PRs are going to happen when you were confident and relaxed. It’ll never happen by running as hard as you can or trying to throw as far as you can. That’s when bad habits creep in. A lot of our sport is reflex, muscle memory and reactive strength. That’s all it is. And mental. If you can do that and do what you trained, it’ll happen,” Blue said.
 
That can be tough to keep in mind during a season opener when athletes are eager to prove themselves. But no one hits their New Year’s resolutions by the second week of January. If you did, then you chose too easy of a resolution.
 
“I want them to stay in their process. Because [this meet] is not the result. I don’t care what they finish here. It’s cool to see the result, but that result is just part of the process for the year,” Blue said.
 
MEET INFO

Jan. 9-10 – Silver & Blue Invitational – Reno, Nev. (Reno Sparks Convention Center)
 
FOLLOW ALONG
Live Results
 
MEET SCHEDULE
Friday, Jan. 9
Time (PT) – Event (PSU Entries)
10 a.m. – Women’s Weight Throw (Flight 1 of 1 – Fisher)
~11 a.m. – Men’s Weight Throw (Flight 1 of 1 – Coppedge, Green)
2 p.m. – Women’s 60-Meter Hurdles – Prelims (Heat 3 of 3 – Beasley)
2:15 p.m. – Men’s 60-Meter Hurdles – Prelims (Heat 1 of 2 – Johnson, Sweeney)
2:25 p.m. – Women’s 60 Meters – Prelims (Heat 1 of 3 – Forst; Heat 2 of 3 – Rosario, Wheat)
2:40 p.m. – Men’s 60 Meters – Prelims (Heat 3 of 3 – Brost, Mcdonald)
2:55 p.m. – Women’s Mile (Heat 1 of 1 – Fox, Sharp, Stolte)
3:05 p.m. – Men’s Mile (Heat 1 of 1 – Abade, Gillingham, Ibrahim)
3:15 p.m. – Men’s 60-Meter Hurdles – Final
3:20 p.m. – Women’s 60-Meter Hurdles – Final
3:25 p.m. – Men’s 60 Meters – Final
3:30 p.m. – Women’s 60 Meters – Final
3:35 p.m. – Women’s 1,000 Meters (Heat 1 of 1 – Butterfield)
3:40 p.m. – Men’s 1,000 Meters (Heat 1 of 1 – Ahmed)
 
Saturday, Jan. 10
Time (PT) – Event (PSU Entries)
10 a.m. – Women’s Shot Put (Flight 1 of 1 – Fisher)
11 a.m. – Women’s 400 Meters (Heat 2 of 2 – Peterson)
11:15 a.m. – Men’s 400 Meters (Heat 1 of 3 – Johnson; Heat 2 of 3 – Payne; Heat 3 of 3 – Cadengo, Jones)
11:30 a.m. – Women’s 800 Meters (Heat 1 of 1 – Stolte)
11:35 a.m. – Men’s 800 Meters (Heat 1 of 1 – Abade)
11:40 a.m. – Women’s 600 Meters (Heat 3 of 3 – Butterfield)
11:50 a.m. – Men’s 600 Meters (Heat 1 of 1 – Ahmed)
11:55 a.m. – Women’s 200 Meters (Heat 2 of 8 – Forst; Heat 4 of 8 – Rosario; Heat 5 of 8 – Beasley; Heat 7 of 8 – Peterson)
~12 p.m. – Men’s Triple Jump (Niyongere)
12:30 p.m. – Men’s 200 Meters (Heat 2 of 8 – Cadengo, Sweeney; Heat 3 of 8 – Jones; Heat 4 of 8 – Payne; Heat 5 of 8 – Mcdonald; Heat 8 of 8 – Brost)
1 p.m. – Women’s 3,000 Meters (Heat 1 of 1 – Fox, Sharp)
1:20 p.m. – Men’s 3,000 Meters (Gillingham, Ibrahim)
 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Seremes named to The Bowerman watchlist

Published

on


NEW ORLEANS– Junior triple jumper Jonathan Seremes was named to the 2026 preseason Bowerman watchlist Thursday afternoon. He is the 8th Texas Tech man to make the watchlist and first jumper to do so since Trey Culver in 2018.

Seremes is in his first season with Tech after transferring from Missouri where he only competed during the indoor season. Despite just one season with the Tigers, Seremes won the 2024 NCAA indoor triple jump crown. The France native leaped 17.04m (55-11), winning the competition by nearly two feet.

This past summer, he represented France at the World Championships where he finished 8th overall bounding 16.82m (55- 2 ¼). He holds a lifetime best jump of 17.08m (56- ½).

The Red Raiders kickoff the 2026 season next weekend hosting the annual Corky Classic Friday and Saturday inside the Sports Performance Center.



Link

Continue Reading
Motorsports4 weeks ago

SoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener

NIL4 weeks ago

DeSantis Talks College Football, Calls for Reforms to NIL and Transfer Portal · The Floridian

Sports4 weeks ago

#11 Volleyball Practices, Then Meets Media Prior to #2 Kentucky Match

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

Stempien to seek opening for Branch County Circuit Court Judge | WTVB | 1590 AM · 95.5 FM

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Nascar legal saga ends as 23XI, Front Row secure settlement

Sports4 weeks ago

Maine wraps up Fall Semester with a win in Black Bear Invitational

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

Princeton Area Community Foundation awards more than $1.3 million to 40 local nonprofits ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news %

Motorsports3 weeks ago

Ross Brawn to receive Autosport Gold Medal Award at 2026 Autosport Awards, Honouring a Lifetime Shaping Modern F1

NIL3 weeks ago

Downtown Athletic Club of Hawaiʻi gives $300K to Boost the ’Bows NIL fund

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Sunoco to sponsor No. 8 Ganassi Honda IndyCar in multi-year deal

Rec Sports4 weeks ago

WNBA’s Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese and Paige Bueckers in NC, making debut for national team at USA camp at Duke

Motorsports4 weeks ago

NASCAR, 23XI Racing, Front Row Motorsports announce settlement of US monopoly suit | MLex

Sports4 weeks ago

Woods, Ogunribido Named CCIW Women’s Indoor Track & Field Student-Athletes of the Week

Sports4 weeks ago

Rock sending small group to Akron Friday night

Sports3 weeks ago

Beach Volleyball Unveils 2026 Spring Schedule – University of South Carolina Athletics

Most Viewed Posts

Trending