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Former Seminole named Brewers Minor League Player of the Month

Former FSU baseball player Marco Dinges has been named the Milwaukee Brewers Minor League Player of the Month for April. Dinges is playing for the Carolina Mudcats, the Single-A affiliate of the Brewers in Zebulon, North Carolina. He hit .400/.523/.620 (20-for-50) with six doubles, one triple, one home run, 17 RBI, and 10 runs over 15 […]

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Former Seminole named Brewers Minor League Player of the Month

Former FSU baseball player Marco Dinges has been named the Milwaukee Brewers Minor League Player of the Month for April. Dinges is playing for the Carolina Mudcats, the Single-A affiliate of the Brewers in Zebulon, North Carolina.

He hit .400/.523/.620 (20-for-50) with six doubles, one triple, one home run, 17 RBI, and 10 runs over 15 games in April. Dinges reached base in all 15 games and had multiple hits in six of the games. He was also named the Carolina League Player of the Week for April 21-27 for his great month.

Dinges was selected by the Brewers in the fourth round of the 2024 MLB draft as a catcher, despite him making just one appearance behind the plate for the Seminoles and spending most of his time as the designated hitter. He has split time at the two positions for the Mudcats, starting 11 games at catcher and five as the designated hitter.

He has made two errors in 89.0 innings behind the plate and has thrown out eight runners attempting to steal. He has not allowed a passed ball and has a 98.1 fielding percentage.Dinges spent just one season with the Seminoles, quickly emerging as one of the top hitters in their historic offense. He hit .321 with a .590 slugging percentage in 61 games at FSU. He recorded 74 hits, 15 home runs, 12 doubles, 67 RBI, and scored 58 runs.Follow us @FSUWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida State news, notes, and opinions.

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Aztecs Receive No. 5 Seed at MW Baseball Championship

SAN DIEGO – San Diego State earned the No. 5 seed in the 2025 Credit Union 1 Mountain West Baseball Championship, set for May 21-24 in Mesa, Arizona. The announcement was made by the league office in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The Aztecs (19-37, 14-16 MW) completed a sweep of Washington State at home this weekend […]

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SAN DIEGO – San Diego State earned the No. 5 seed in the 2025 Credit Union 1 Mountain West Baseball Championship, set for May 21-24 in Mesa, Arizona. The announcement was made by the league office in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

The Aztecs (19-37, 14-16 MW) completed a sweep of Washington State at home this weekend to finish fifth in the Mountain West regular-season standings.

SDSU will open the MW Championship against No. 4 seed UNLV (31-22, 16-14 MW) on Wednesday, May 21, starting at 6:05 p.m. MST/PDT at Sloan Park, the spring training home of the Chicago Cubs.

The Aztecs and Rebels split their season series at three games apiece, with each side posting a sweep on their respective home diamonds.

The SDSU-UNLV clash will be preceded by the other first-round matchup pitting No. 3 seed New Mexico (30-22, 17-13 MW) and sixth-seeded San José State (26-28, 13-17 MW) at 1:05 pm.

If the Aztecs defeat the Rebels, they will face Nevada on Thursday, May 22, beginning at 1:05 p.m. The Wolf Pack (33-21, 19-11) received a first-round bye after claiming the regular-season title.

Meanwhile, second-seeded Fresno State (28-27, 18-12 MW) earned the other first-round bye and will await the winner of the Spartans-Lobos showdown on Thursday at 6:05 pm.

Following Wednesday’s first-round matchups, the 2025 Mountain West Championship enters into a double-elimination format for the remainder of the tournament.

The Aztecs have won the most Mountain West postseason championships, taking home six crowns since the league’s inception (2000, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018). In all, San Diego State has posted a 50-34 record in 22 MW tournament appearances.

Additionally, the Aztecs have three Mountain West regular-season titles to their credit (2000, 2004, 2023).

The Mountain West Network will broadcast every game of the 2025 MW Baseball Championship.

Fans can watch the MW baseball championship for free on their smartphones or connected TVs via the Mountain West app through Apple TV, Android TV, Amazon Fire TV or Roku. Mobile applications are available through the iOS App Store and Google Play.

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University of North Texas

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The UNT track and field teams completed competition at the 2025 American Athletic Conference Outdoor Track & Field Championships on Saturday evening, highlighted by individual titles from Jake Parchman and London Culbreath.   Parchman won his second conference championship of the season after having come up short of the podium in each […]

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The UNT track and field teams completed competition at the 2025 American Athletic Conference Outdoor Track & Field Championships on Saturday evening, highlighted by individual titles from Jake Parchman and London Culbreath.
 
Parchman won his second conference championship of the season after having come up short of the podium in each of his first three seasons. After winning the weight throw at the AAC Indoor Championships, Parchman claimed the program’s first ever gold medal in the men’s hammer throw. His winning throw came on his fifth attempt when he launched it 65.13 meters, marking his third-longest throw of the season and his career.
 
Culbreath broke through on Saturday to claim her first career conference title in the 1,500 meters. She posted the best time of her career in the finals, clocking a 4:24.60, which gave her a cushion of over three seconds to the runner-up from Tulane. Culbreath also placed in the 800 meters where she took seventh and finished fifth in the 5,000 meters, totaling a team-high 16 points for the meet across the three events.
 
In total, the Mean Green recorded all-conference honors in 10 events, including eight individual performances and the men’s 4×100 and men’s 4×400-meter relay. The men’s team collected 80 points to finish fifth in the team standings and ended up just three points shy of third place. The women’s team landed in eighth with 66 points.
 
“I’m proud of both the men and women for their resilience this entire weekend,” head coach Doug Marshall said. “We fought hard from start to finish and as a coach that is all you can ask for. We have some improvements to make moving into regionals for those that make it. We will attack recruiting hard this summer and build a complete team to fight for a championship next year. I want to give a special shout out to our amazing administration for all their support.”
 
The men’s team made a consistent push toward the top of the leaderboard throughout the meet, beginning with Parchman on Thursday. Akeel Hanchard also earned a spot on the podium, taking third in the men’s javelin for the second consecutive year. Hanchard and Vitus Hansgaard, who placed fourth, both posted personal bests to become the third and fourth best performers in school history in the event.
 
Derrick Warren added eight points to the men’s score with a runner-up finish in the long jump on Friday. The Sam Houston transfer became the first Mean Green male to earn outdoor all-conference honors in the long jump since Jarrod Stone in 2005.
 
After breaking his own school record in the 110-meter hurdles prelims on Friday with a 13.76, Hendrick Hundl claimed third place in the finals, clocking a 13.85. Chase Lehr also finished on the podium for the second time this season in the 800 meters, taking second with a time of 1:49.76. Finally, both men’s relay teams placed third on Saturday, with the 4×100-meter group clocking a season best 39.84 and the 4×400 team posting the second-fastest time in school history at 3:07.62.
 
On the women’s side, the throwers had an impressive meet with true freshmen Ava Roberts and Bolaji Subair earning all-conference honors. Roberts followed up an incredible indoor conference meet where she placed third in the shot put with an even better outdoor meet, taking second with a personal-best mark of 15.58 meters. Subair placed second in the discus with a school-record throw of 51.55 meters for her first all-conference finish. Mackenzie Kuehl was another female thrower to earn all-conference accolades for the first time, placing third in the javelin with a PR of 48.51 meters.
 
Other notable finishes for the women included the 4×100-meter team taking fourth with the fifth-fastest time in program history, and Aariyana Williams placing fifth in the 400 meters with a 53.16. The nationally ranked women’s 100 meters group combined for six points courtesy of C’Nai Childress and Trezeguet Taylor, who placed fourth and eighth in the finals.
 
In total, the North Texas saw 24 athletes record personal bests at the conference championships. The Mean Green will wait to see who advances to the NCAA West Preliminary Round in College Station May 28-31.
 



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Fouad Messaoudi makes history as Oklahoma State Track & Field wraps up Big 12 Outdoor Championships

LAWRENCE, Kan. – On the final day of the Big 12 Outdoor Championships, Oklahoma State’s Fouad Messaoudi once again proved why he’s one of the greatest middle-distance runners in conference history.  With a dominant performance in the 1,500 meters, Messaoudi became just the second man in Big 12 history to win three conference titles in […]

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LAWRENCE, Kan. – On the final day of the Big 12 Outdoor Championships, Oklahoma State’s Fouad Messaoudi once again proved why he’s one of the greatest middle-distance runners in conference history. 

With a dominant performance in the 1,500 meters, Messaoudi became just the second man in Big 12 history to win three conference titles in the event, doing so in 2022, 2023 and now 2025. His winning time of 3:37.27 added 10 points for the Cowboys, who finished seventh overall with 50 team points. 

Alex Stitt followed close behind in fourth with a time of 3:38.89, contributing five more points in a deep field.  

In the 800 meters, Hafez Mahadi turned in a fifth-place finish with a time of 1:46.65, a personal best that also ranks second in OSU history. Denis Kipngetich delivered another impressive performance, slashing over 10 seconds off his previous outdoor best to finish third in the 5,000 meters with a time of 13:30.95, a mark that now sits eighth all-time in OSU history.  

The Cowboys also picked up five points in the 4×400 meter relay, as Jordon Smith, Will Bynum, Ty Cook and Mason Page combined for a fourth-place finish in 3:05.31. Caio Almeida also earned two more points for OSU with a seventh-place finish in the 400-meter hurdles. 

On the women’s side, freshman Isca Chelangat led the charge, placing second in the 5,000 meters with a time of 15:31.35, the second-fastest performance in school history. The Cowgirls tallied 52.5 total points to finish sixth in the team standings. 

Kaylie Politza added a sixth-place finish in the 800 meters with a personal-best 2:03.13, which now ranks seventh in OSU history. Madi Surber picked up a point in the 1,500 meters, finishing eighth in 4:17.32, while Kileigh Mixon cleared 1.74m in the high jump to add half a point. 

The Cowgirls closed the meet with a seventh-place finish in the 4×400 relay, as Ansley Scott, Annie Molenhouse, Politza and Jinah Mickens-Malik combined for a time of 3:37.93. 

The Cowboys and Cowgirls continue postseason action in two weeks as they travel to College Station, Texas, to compete in the NCAA West Prelims for a chance to punch their ticket to the national championships in Oregon.

For more information on the Cowboys and Cowgirls, continue to check back with okstate.com. 

Men’s Individual Results 

Triple Jump 

9. Rajuan Ricketts – 14.63m/47’10.75″ 

1,500 Meters 

1. Fouad Messaoudi – 3:37.27 

4. Alex Stitt – 3:38.89 

9. Ayden Granados – 3:54.86 

800 Meters 

5. Hafez Mahadi – 1:46.65 

400 Meter Hurdles 

7. Caio Almeida – 51.01 

5,000 Meters 

3. Denis Kipngetich – 13:30.95 

12. Ryan Schoppe – 13:47.28 

22. Jacob Deacon – 14:14.63 

24. Kian Davis – 14:23.35 

31. David Mora – 14:56.81 

32. Oliver Patton – 14:57.40 

33. Will Conway – 15:09.56 

4×400 Meter Relay 

4. J. Smith, W. Bynum, T. Cook, M. Page – 3:05.31 

Women’s Individual Results 

High Jump 

8. Kileigh Mixon – 1.74m/5’8.5″ 

1,500 Meters 

8. Madi Surber – 4:17.32 

800 Meters 

6. Kaylie Politza – 2:03.13 

400 Meter Hurdles 

9. Kalen Goodman – 1:14.44 

5,000 Meters 

2. Isca Chelangat – 15:31.35 

13. Victoria Lagat – 16:20.95 

15. Lauren Ping – 16:26.43 

16. Josphine Mwaura – 16:28.13 

17. Grace Ping – 16:31.33 

22. Gentry Turner – 16:52.29 

25. Colleen Stegmann – 16:56.28 

26. Autumn Michalski – 16:57.21 

28. Mandeep Sangha – 17:01.43 

30. Aubrey O’Connell – 17:04.23 

33. Kevriana Scott – 17:16.48 

4×400 Meter Relay 

7. A. Scott, A. Molenhouse, K. Politza, J. Mickens-Malik – 3:37.93   



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Carlsbad beats Torrey Pines in boys volleyball final; other results – San Diego Union-Tribune

Last season, Roman Payne missed the boys volleyball CIF San Diego Section Open Division semifinals after being invited to play with Team USA’s under-19 team. His Carlsbad team lost in five sets to Cathedral Catholic. Earlier this season, Payne lamented how crushing that was to not be there when it mattered most. Sometimes vindication is […]

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Last season, Roman Payne missed the boys volleyball CIF San Diego Section Open Division semifinals after being invited to play with Team USA’s under-19 team.

His Carlsbad team lost in five sets to Cathedral Catholic.

Earlier this season, Payne lamented how crushing that was to not be there when it mattered most.

Sometimes vindication is a slow burn.

Playing with a renewed vigor, Payne refused to let his team lose a year later, leading the way to an epic 25-18, 25-23, 20-25, 15-25, 15-4 win over Torrey Pines on Saturday at Francis Parker that gave the Lancers their third CIF title in program history.

“It feels amazing,” said Payne, who finished with 17 kills and five stuff blocks. “We’ve been working up to this since day one. That was our goal since day one was to win the CIF Championship. We knew we had it in us. We were No. 1 all year. For me to miss last year and come back this year, it’s a very surreal experience.”

Outside hitter Derek Bashford contributed 14 kills and three stuff blocks, and middle Oliver Doty had 13 kills for the Lancers (35-2).

It required a complete team effort to close out the defending Open Division champions, particularly after losing the third and fourth sets.

“I couldn’t be happier,” coach Annette Bashford said. “They really battled. We were challenged in a way that we had to answer. Looking at the season overall, being able to set goals from day one and then to accomplish the goals feels amazing.”

Down 2-0, the Falcons (33-8) stormed back to force a fifth set with a defensive effort led by libero Griffin Dieter.

Torrey Pines was led by Ben Soudak, who had 17 kills and three aces, and Delclan Flanagan, who notched 13 kills.

“It shows the level we can compete at when we’re focused and dialed in and playing well,” Falcons coach Nick Rubacky said. “It’s one of the best teams in the country on the other side of the net and we were putting it on them in sets three and four. We know what we’re capable of.”

Carlsbad, the No. 4 team in the nation, lost its combination of high energy and confidence, only to find it in the fifth. Payne’s stuff block to make it 4-1 came on a play in which he had three blocks. Bashford followed that with a stuff block and had four kills in the set. Doty’s kill in the middle sealed it.

“We’ve faced adversity all year,” Payne said. “All year we’ve been working hard to stay on top.”

Division 2

Clairemont def. La Jolla 25-23, 25-20, 25-27, 25-17: Of Clairemont’s 10 losses this season, six came to Open Division teams.

Battle-tested.

Clairemont showed a championship resolve in defeating La Jolla in the Division II championship match for the first title in program history.

“We came in with a lot of confidence just because we beat them twice, but that’s usually how teams fail when they’re overconfident,” Clairemont coach Sean Alcaraz said. “So we watched film, we studied, we recognized who does what, and they all came out and did their jobs.”

The Chieftains (26-10) advance to next week’s State Championship. They were led by Makoa Miner’s 13 kills and three stuff blocks. Sam Reedholm added nine kills, Grant Schmidt chipped in with eight kills and Sean Sumner had six.

The Vikings (18-23) got a match-high 17 kills from Ben Salmon. Myles Plaskonos added 11 kills and two stuff blocks. Nicolas Bardaro had eight kills and Zepher Smith six. Jake Morrison had five.

Division 4

Fallbrook def. High Tech Mesa 17-25, 26-24, 25-16, 25-16: One of sports’ oldest coach sayings goes something like, it’s not how you start, it’s how you finish.

Fallbrook went down a set and faced three set points in the second as its season hung in the balance.

But the Warriors scratched and clawed their way back, taking the second set and the next two to capture their first CIF title in program history.

“That’s what we struggled with at times this year, but we finished that set,” Fallbrook coach Chip Patterson said. “So we got it, and I knew from there we were going to win. Once you let us in, that’s generally how we play.”

Setter Gabriel Palacios consistently fed juniors Aiden Way, who had a match-high 12 kills, and Joshua Robertson, who added 10 for the Warriors (25-14). Jordan Anicete had six kills.

The Thunder (16-13) were led by Justin Farmer, who had 11 kills, two stuff blocks and two aces. Jacob Archbold added nine kills, and Jared Cruz and Curtis Wright each had seven.

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Cabrillo, Lakewood, Jordan Athletes Compete At CIF Finals – The562.org

The562’s cross country and track & field coverage is sponsored by Joe Carlson & Debbie Hughes. Five Moore League schools were represented at the CIF track & field finals at Moorpark High School on Saturday, including an athlete from each of Cabrillo, Lakewood, and Jordan. Cabrillo senior Lauren Farr started the […]

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The562’s cross country and track & field coverage is sponsored by Joe Carlson & Debbie Hughes.

Five Moore League schools were represented at the CIF track & field finals at Moorpark High School on Saturday, including an athlete from each of Cabrillo, Lakewood, and Jordan.

Cabrillo senior Lauren Farr started the meet off in the Division 3 girls’ shot put, where she placed second with a 36-6 on her third attempt. It wasn’t a PR for Farr but it was the best she’s done at CIF after competing last year.

“I feel like I’ve been doing this since freshman year trying to get to CIF and get first, and second place is really good,” Farr said.

Farr carries it as an honor to be the only athlete from Cabrillo competing at CIF finals and says that she’s happy to represent.

“At Cabrillo, going to CIF is a big deal,” she said. “It feels good to be appreciated and I feel really happy when I get to school and everyone gives me congratulations. I never really get that so I always feel happy. I wasn’t only doing this for myself but also for the people at Cabrillo.”

Amaya Rice competed in both the girls’ Division 1 100m and 200m for Lakewood. Rice had a solid finish out of Lane 1 in the 100m with an 11.91, just four-hundredths of a second off of her personal-best. 

Rice also finished third in the 200m with a 24.21. She was the top finisher out of Long Beach just two weeks after becoming the 200m Moore League champion. She was just nine-hundredths off of that personal-record set at league finals.

Jordan’s Armani Johnson ran in the girls’ Division 2 100m and finished in sixth place with a 12.27. She ran the exact same time a week ago at the prelims.





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Men’s Track & Field Finishes Fourth at BIG EAST Championships

STORRS, Conn.—Fifth year distance runner Liam Murphy (Millstone, N.J.) won his record-tying 12th conference gold medal and Villanova had four podium finishes on the final day of the 2025 BIG EAST Track and Field Championships presented by JEEP on Saturday afternoon. The Wildcats scored in 16 of the 17 events they entered on the weekend […]

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STORRS, Conn.—Fifth year distance runner Liam Murphy (Millstone, N.J.) won his record-tying 12th conference gold medal and Villanova had four podium finishes on the final day of the 2025 BIG EAST Track and Field Championships presented by JEEP on Saturday afternoon. The Wildcats scored in 16 of the 17 events they entered on the weekend and finished fourth in the team standings with 95 points.
 
In addition to Murphy defending his BIG EAST title in the 1500 meters, sophomore Dan Watcke (Hinsdale, Ill.) and junior Sal Barretta (Whitestone, N.Y.) each made the awards podium by tallying personal bests in their respective events. Watcke finished third in the 800 meters with an outdoor PR of 1:46.63 to earn a bronze medal, while Barretta garnered his first of two All-BIG EAST honors on the day in the 400 meter hurdles. He lowered his PR set earlier this year by nearly three-quarters of a second to finish third in 53.85.
 
The final event of the weekend was the 4×400 meter relay and Villanova finished third to medal in the relay for the third straight year. Barretta led off for a Wildcats lineup which included sophomore Ethan Walls (Ridgefield, Conn.) running second followed by freshman Liam Gluck (Beavercreek, Ohio) and junior Luke Rakowitz (Dallas, Texas) on the final two legs. The group posted Villanova’s fastest 4×400 time in 14 years with a mark of 3:09.25. Gluck and Rakowitz tallied splits of 47.40 and 47.72, respectively, in the second half of the race.
 
In the individual events earlier in the afternoon, Barretta and junior Ronan O’Neill (Wilmette, Ill.) combined for a 3-4 finish in the hurdles. Barretta’s time of 53.85 lowered the identical personal best times that both he and O’Neill had recorded in the same race at Princeton just two weeks earlier. For his part, O’Neill nearly bested the effort as well with a time of 54.63 in Saturday’s final. It is the sixth time in the last seven outdoor BIG EAST meets that the Wildcats have had two or more scorers in the 400 meter hurdles, but the first time since 2015 that Villanova had two of the top four finishers in the event.
 
The field of competitors for the 800 meters this week was a particularly strong one and Watcke was one of four runners who beat the previous facility record in Saturday’s final. He was already in strong position to qualify for the NCAA East Preliminary in the 800 meters for the second straight year, but his time of 1:46.63 boosted Watcke into a top 10 time on the East Region descending order list. The only faster times of his career were marks of 1:46.32 and 1:46.46 during the indoor season earlier this year, with the latter of those times also coming in a BIG EAST final. Freshman Ben Thomas (Sydney, Australia) scored two points in the 800 meters with a seventh place finish in 1:50.25.
 
Sophomore sprinter Parker Turner (Los Angeles, Calif.) scored in the final of both the 100 meters and the 200 meters after he had matched or set new personal bests in each event in Friday’s preliminaries. Turner was fifth in the 100 meters in 10.65 and came in sixth in the 200 meters with a time of 21.51. It is the first time in his career he advanced to the final of two individual events at the BIG EAST Championships after nearly doing so indoors in the 60 meters and 200 meters. He earned All-BIG EAST honors indoors with a third place finish in the 200 meters and had the fastest time that did not make the final in the 60 meter dash.
 
Villanova posted a time below 3:10 in the 4×400 meter relay for the first time since May 8, 2011 when a lineup of Nicoy Hines, Carlton Bowers, Christopher Kearney and Samuel Ellison finished second at the BIG EAST Championships in 3:09.89. Saturday’s crew of Barretta, Walls, Gluck and Rakowitz had the fastest time by a Wildcats 4×400 squad since Elvis Lewis, John Wilsman, Carl Hansen and Drew Eckman ran 3:08.80 on May 27, 2006 at the NCAA East Regional meet.
 
A lineup of redshirt freshman Kai Mitchell-Reiss (Portland, Ore.), Murphy, redshirt freshman CJ Sullivan (Milton, Mass.) and senior Devon Comber (Ambler, Pa.) finished fourth in the 4×800 meter relay in 7:28.82. Murphy had the team’s fastest split at 1:50.36 on the second leg of the race while Comber anchored the relay in 1:52.15 on the final leg. Sullivan split 1:50.72 on the third leg and came home in 55.74 on his second lap, one day after he closed in 57.08 in the final lap of the 5000 meters to earn an individual silver medal.
 
Villanova had a successful day in the field events on Saturday, highlighted by a sixth place finish in the discus from fifth year collegian Temi Ajirotutu (Queens, N.Y.) in his second career BIG EAST meet. Ajirotutu, who has been a four-year offensive lineman on the Wildcats football team, took up throwing as a hobby last year and made his collegiate debut at the 2024 BIG EAST Championships when he competed in both the shot put and the discus. He extended his marks in those events in each of two outings this Spring.
 
It was Saturday’s performance in the discus that stood out. Ajirotutu threw 42.67 meters to lead three Wildcats with a sixth place finish out of 14 competitors. He had previously thrown 37.09 meters at the Larry Ellis Invitational two weeks ago, but he easily topped that mark on each of his first four throws Saturday. Ajirotutu began the day with a mark of 40.12 meters in the first round of attempts and increased the distance to his best mark of the day (42.67m) on his second throw. He was in fifth place at that point in the competition and never fell further than sixth the rest of the way.
 
Sixth year collegian Kelechi Eziri (Charlotte, N.C.) came in sixth in the triple jump with a mark of 14.08 meters and redshirt freshman thrower Aiden Shay (Selinsgrove, Pa.) placed seventh in the javelin with a personal best mark of 47.56 meters to round out the Villanova scorers for the day.
 
Selections for the NCAA East Preliminary meet in Jacksonville, Fla. will be announced this Thursday. The competition will take place the following week from May 28-31 at Hodges Stadium on the University of North Florida campus.

 





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