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Former Tigers first

After a stint in the Mexican League, former Detroit Tigers first-round MLB Draft pick Beau Burrows is returning to the U.S. on a minor-league deal with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Burrows, 28, was selected by the Tigers with the 22nd overall pick in the 2015 MLB Draft out of Weatherford High School in Texas. The righty […]

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Former Tigers first

After a stint in the Mexican League, former Detroit Tigers first-round MLB Draft pick Beau Burrows is returning to the U.S. on a minor-league deal with the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Burrows, 28, was selected by the Tigers with the 22nd overall pick in the 2015 MLB Draft out of Weatherford High School in Texas.

The righty made his major-league debut for the Tigers in 2020 and appeared five times during the COVID-shortened season.

A 5.40 ERA in 2020 held Burrows in the minors to open 2021. But after making a brutal 2021 debut in June, Burrows was designated for assignment and claimed off waivers by the Minnesota Twins.

Burrows made five appearances for the Twins that season, including one start, before being sent outright to Triple-A in August.

Over the next three seasons Burrows had stints in the minors with the Los Angeles Dodgers, Atlanta Braves and Philadelphia Phillies.

In June 2024, Burrows joined the Cleburne Railroaders, an independent professional baseball league team, and joined Tecolotes de los Dos Laredos of the Mexican League in April 2025.

Although Burrows’ 9.53 ERA with the Tecos doesn’t look appealing, his fastball is, reportedly, hitting 97-98 mph at the moment.

Players from Dos Laredos have been flocking to MLB teams recently, with third baseman Nick Senzel (Los Angeles Dodgers) and pitchers Cory Abbott (Texas Rangers), Andrew Vasquez (Los Angeles Angels) and Nick Margevicius (Detroit Tigers) all agreeing to minor-league deals.

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Three Medals Guide Track and Field at Big Ten Championships

Story Links EUGENE, Ore. – Rutgers track and field captured three medals and a total of eight podium finishes at the 2025 Big Ten Outdoor Championships. Brian O’Sullivan, Donavan Anderson and Chloe Timberg each secured bronze finishes in their respective events.   The Scarlet Knights earned their first medal of […]

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EUGENE, Ore. – Rutgers track and field captured three medals and a total of eight podium finishes at the 2025 Big Ten Outdoor Championships. Brian O’Sullivan, Donavan Anderson and Chloe Timberg each secured bronze finishes in their respective events.
 
The Scarlet Knights earned their first medal of the meet with O’Sullivan finishing third in the pole vault. He cleared a height of 5.49m (18′ 0″), while Nico Morales added a podium finish in the event as well. Morales cleared an identical height of 5.49m (18′ 0″) to finish fifth, needing three attempts to meet the mark.
 
Steve Coponi placed sixth in the javelin with a throw of 68.68m (225′ 4″) to give Rutgers another podium finish and close out the first day competition.
 
Rutgers wrapped up day three with two medals as Anderson captured bronze in the triple jump with a distance of 15.58m (51′ 1.5″) and Timberg capped her career with a fourth-straight outdoor medal. Timberg, the school record holder in the pole vault, finished third as she cleared a height of 4.38m (14′ 4.5″).
 
The Scarlet Knights also received podium finishes from Paige Floriea, who finished fourth in the long jump with a distance 6.14m (20′ 1.75″) and Faith Bethea in the triple jump with a leap of 12.81m (42′ 0.5″). The 4×400-meter relay team of Bryce Tucker, Lathan Brown, Joshua Babe and Jah’Mere Beasley finished seventh, running a time of 3:08.17.
 
The men’s team collected 21 points to place 15th out of 17 teams, while the women’s squad scored 13 points, finishing 15th out of 17 schools.
 
Rutgers will gear up for the NCAA East First Round beginning on Wednesday, May 28 through Saturday, May 31 at Jax Track at Hodges Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida.
 
Big Ten Championship Finishes
 
Men’s Results
Pole Vault
3. Brian O’Sullivan                                                5.49m (18′ 0″)
5. Nico Morales                                                     5.49m (18′ 0″)
 
Triple Jump
3. Donavan Anderson                                          15.58m (51′ 1.5″)
 
Javelin
6. Steve Coponi                                                     68.68m (225′ 4″)
 
4x400M
7. Bryce Tucker, Lathan Brown
Joshua Babe, Jah’Mere Beasley                          3:08.17
 
Women’s Results
Pole Vault
3. Chloe Timberg                                                   4.38m (14′ 4.5″)
 
Long Jump
4. Paige Floriea                                                      6.14m (20′ 1.75″)
 
Triple Jump
7. Faith Bethea                                                      12.81m (42′ 0.5″)
 



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Sydney school plunged into lockdown

The school where water polo coach Lilie James was murdered has been plunged into lockdown after reports a man had threatened staff. St Andrew’s Cathedral School, located in Sydney’s CBD, was locked down by police on Monday about 9.45am after reports a person had broken into the grounds. Lilie James was murdered at St Andrew’s […]

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The school where water polo coach Lilie James was murdered has been plunged into lockdown after reports a man had threatened staff.

St Andrew’s Cathedral School, located in Sydney’s CBD, was locked down by police on Monday about 9.45am after reports a person had broken into the grounds.

Lilie James was murdered at St Andrew’s Cathedral School. Picture: FacebookLilie James was murdered at St Andrew’s Cathedral School. Picture: Facebook

Lilie James was murdered at St Andrew’s Cathedral School. Picture: Facebook

DEAD BODY SYDNEY CBDDEAD BODY SYDNEY CBD

Police confirmed staff had been threatened. Picture: NewsWire / David Swift

Parents were alerted about the lockdown by text message, the Daily Mail reported.

The man allegedly “threatened staff and then returned to the campus”, a police spokesman told NewsWire.

“The school was placed in lockdown and a search of the building, on the corner of Druitt and Kent streets, was conducted with the assistance of specialist resources,” they said.

Despite “extensive searches”, the man could not be located.

He remains on the run, but the lockdown has since been lifted, according to police.

“An investigation is now under way into the incident, and inquiries continue to locate the man,” police said.

Initial reports from 7News indicate the man was wielding a weapon at the time of the incident, though this has not been confirmed by police.

Ms James was murdered by her former boyfriend. Picture: FacebookMs James was murdered by her former boyfriend. Picture: Facebook

Ms James was murdered by her former boyfriend. Picture: Facebook

Ms James was murdered by Paul Thijssen on the evening of October 25, 2023, when he cornered her inside a bathroom of the prestigious Sydney private school where they were colleagues.

The water polo coach died due to blunt force trauma to the head after being attacked with a hammer by her ex-partner, whom she had broken up with a few days before her murder.

Hours after the murder, Thijssen took his own life at Vaucluse, with his remains found in the rocks at Diamond Bay Reserve two days after Ms James’s murder.



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Rodriguez Claims Silver on Day One of IC4A Championships

Story Links FAIRFAX, Virginia—The Marist men’s track and field team raced on Sunday, day one of the ninth meet of the 2025 outdoor season, the IC4A Championships, which occurred at the GMU Field House in Fairfax, VA. Amari Mathis placed second in the 100-meter dash prelims with a time of 10.62, qualifying […]

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FAIRFAX, Virginia—The Marist men’s track and field team raced on Sunday, day one of the ninth meet of the 2025 outdoor season, the IC4A Championships, which occurred at the GMU Field House in Fairfax, VA.

Amari Mathis placed second in the 100-meter dash prelims with a time of 10.62, qualifying him for tomorrow’s finals.

Miles Chamberlain (11th) raced a PR of 3:55.46 in the 1500-meter run.

Gabriel Rodriguez brought home a silver medal for the men’s team with a time of 32:02.13 in the 10000-meter run, also earning him All-East honors.

ECAC Outdoor Championships

Sunday, May 17, 2025

GMU Field House

Fairfax, Virginia

400-Meter Dash: 19 – Easton Eberwein, 49.26

100-Meter Dash Prelims: 2 – Amari Mathis, 10.62

1500-Meter Run: 11 – Miles Chamberlain, 3:55.46, 18 – Logan Schaeffler, 4:04.89

3000-Meter Steeplechase: 9 – Kevin Cannon, 9:52.13

10000-Meter Run: 2 – Gabriel Rodriguez, 32:02.13



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Wildcats Finish WAC Championship with Men in 5th and the Women in 6th

Story Links ARLINGTON – On a terribly muggy day in Arlington, the Wildcats had a strong start for Day 3 in the field events as Kailey Roskop topped off her ACU career with a 4 th place finish in the discus (to go with her 3 rd place finish in the hammer). […]

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ARLINGTON – On a terribly muggy day in Arlington, the Wildcats had a strong start for Day 3 in the field events as Kailey Roskop topped off her ACU career with a 4 th place finish in the discus (to go with her 3 rd place finish in the hammer). Donovan Ramirez finished 5th in the triple jump in his first outdoor championship after missing the entire 2024 with a medical redshirt. Ja’Dasia Sims completed her stellar ACU career with a 2 nd place finish in the high jump. Stone Smith finished his ACU career with a 5 th place finish in the discus. Luize Velmere just made the finals in the triple jump on her 3rd jump and she went on to finish 2nd in a huge personal best (PB) of 41-5.75/12.64 – moving her into the #8 all time on the ACU performance list.

On the track the premier performance came from Kenan Reil, who finished 3 rd in the 400 hurdles with a time of 52.52 in just his 2 nd time to run the event. Placing 6 th were Miguel Hall in the 110 hurdles with a time of 13.91 and Benjamin Cortez in the 800 in a time of 1:53.02. Notching 7 th place finishes were Ethan Krause in the 200 with a time of 21.31 and Andruw Villa in the men’s 5K with a time of 14:59.02. Finishing in 8th place were Hana Banks in the 100 hurdles in a time of 14.27 and Emma Santoro in the 400 in a

57.98.

Note: Late on Friday night, after a 4-hour weather delay ACU had 2 athletes score points in the steeplechase – Peyton Bornstein placed 6 th in the women’s race in a time of 11:18.08 and Mark Barajas finished 7th in the men’s race with a PB time of 9:19.38. To finish up the meet, the men placed 5th in the 4×400 with a time of 3:14.58 – a quartet

composed of Landon Gary, Canaan Fairley, Benjamin Castro, and Ethan Krause. That will give ACU a 5 th place finish in the team race with 56 points. The women’s team finished 5 th in the 4×400 relay with a time of 3:52.38, with Ja’Kaylon Record, Emma Santoro, Gracee Whitaker, and Jess Reyes running. The women’s team finished 6th with

59 points.



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Lobos Win First MW Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Team Title in Program History – University of New Mexico Lobos athletics

CLOVIS, Calif. – New Mexico Track & Field completed a sweep of 2024-25 Mountain West Women’s Cross Country, Indoor and Outdoor Championships with their first outdoor MW team conference title in program history on Saturday night, scoring 153 team points in total. The Lobo men came just shy of an outdoor title of their own […]

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CLOVIS, Calif. – New Mexico Track & Field completed a sweep of 2024-25 Mountain West Women’s Cross Country, Indoor and Outdoor Championships with their first outdoor MW team conference title in program history on Saturday night, scoring 153 team points in total.

The Lobo men came just shy of an outdoor title of their own after scoring 30 points in the 5,000m and holding off Colorado State in the 4x400m final, finishing second in the team score with 171.50 points – the highest-scoring team outing at conference championships since 2011 (177).

The women put some distance between themselves and the second-place Rams in the final two events of the night, scoring 30 points in the women’s 5,000m final before the Lobos won the Women’s 4x400m Relay by nearly two seconds (3:35.54) to tack on 10 more in the final event of the night.

Darren Gauson was named MW Women’s Coach of the Year for the third time this season after leading the Lobos to their first-ever outdoor title, with Mathew Kosgei earning MW Men’s Track Performer of the Meet honors after shattering the steeplechase meet record with a 8:25.56 finish yesterday and contributing five more points on Saturday night with a fourth-place finish in the men’s 5,000 final (13:39.35). Along with teammates Ishmael Kipkurui (1st, 13:26.84), Habtom Samuel (2nd, 13:30.49), Collins Kiprotich (5th, 13:40.93) and Vincent Chirchir (7th, 13:32.09), Kosgei was one of five Lobo men to finish under the previous 5,000m meet record of 13:46.67 set in 2021.

This story will be updated.





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Boys Will Bully Boys in a Stylish if Schematic Summer-Camp Psychodrama

The idea of adolescence as a horror story is not new, but it’s given a splashy workout in Charlie Polinger’s queasily stylish debut feature, in which the swimming pools, lockers rooms and bunk-bed dormitories of a boys’ water polo camp are a puberty petrie dish livid with sinister bacteria. Drawn from experience and benefiting from […]

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The idea of adolescence as a horror story is not new, but it’s given a splashy workout in Charlie Polinger’s queasily stylish debut feature, in which the swimming pools, lockers rooms and bunk-bed dormitories of a boys’ water polo camp are a puberty petrie dish livid with sinister bacteria. Drawn from experience and benefiting from some standout performances among its well-selected young cast, “The Plague” has a familiar coming-of-age narrative, but stranger, subtler undercurrents of creeping dismay at the men these boys will become when, at this formative age, cruelty chlorinates the water they swim in.

Sensitive, 12-year-old Ben (Everett Blunck) comes to the Tom Lerner Water Polo Camp in the summer of 2003 as an outsider twice over. He’s not only joining after the second session has started, he’s also a new arrival to the area. And, as we understand from an early conversation with his affable but ineffectual coach (Joel Edgerton, who also produces) a reluctant one: there’s hurt in the studied neutrality of his tone when he describes how his mother uprooted their lives to be with her new lover. Perhaps the wrenching change-up of father figure fuels Ben’s anxiety to fit in, but also maybe that’s just the way he is. When one of the kids’ endless games of would-you-rather makes him choose between “not fucking a dog but having everyone think you did, or fucking a dog and no one knows,” Ben opts for, well, screwing the pooch.

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In any wolf pack, the Alpha is obvious and even among these cubs, Jake (a superb Kayo Martin) is easily identifiable as the ringleader. Deceptively cherubic beneath a shock of tousled strawberry blonde hair, and wearing a surprisingly adult expression of skeptical watchfulness, Jake is initially friendly enough to the newcomer — at least once Ben begins answering to the nickname “Soppy,” devised after Jake picks up on his very minor speech impediment.

There’s an easier target for Jake’s lazy but keen-eyed ridicule. Eli (Kenny Rasmussen) was presumably already an oddball — into magic tricks and solo flailing dance moves and lurching non-sequitur conversation — even before he developed a disfiguring skin complaint. The angry-looking rash that covers his arms and torso is probably some sort of eczema or contact dermatitis, but the boys are still of an age to be fascinated by lepers and curses and so Jake declares it “the plague.” Eli is ostracized, to the point that all the kids dive for another cafeteria table if he so much as pulls up a chair.

Good-natured Ben, in the throes of a panicky uncertainty that from the outside is sweetly poignant, if only because it will be gone in a year or a month or a minute, feels for Eli’s predicament— possibly more than the quite contentedly peculiar Eli does for himself. But as he barely has enough social capital to guarantee his own acceptance into Jake’s circle, Ben befriends the outcast cautiously, away from prying eyes. It’s fine to make taboo transgressions if nobody knows about it.

DP Steven Breckon punctuates “The Plague” with interludes of woozy underwater photography, in which the boys’ bodies dagger into the pool and then tread water, resembling so many headless sea horses. Sometimes, while Johan Lenox’s excellent, ’70s horror-inflected, nightmare-choir score reaches a bombastic crescendo, the girls of the synchronized swimming class who share the pool and fire the boys’ crude erotic imaginings, are shown inverted, so they appear to be dancing floatily across the water’s underside surface. These subaquatic symphonies give a touch of the phantasmagoric to a milieu that’s otherwise cleverly recreated from the banal remembered details of an early noughties childhood: the Capri-Suns, the pop tunes, that brief phase where kids believe that smoking kitchen-cupboard nutmeg will get them high.

Perhaps too the subjective nature of Polinger’s memory of a time when the peer-group dynamic was so much more influential than any peripheral authority figure, accounts for why these kids are so often unconstrained by adult supervision. Jake naturally takes advantage of that freedom to continue his offhand reign of terror, one he can maintain without ever really lifting a finger. Almost all of the violence in “The Plague” is self-inflicted and therefore easily disavowed by this tweenaged tyrant – a character so vivid that it’s tempting to imagine a more provocative movie told from the bully’s perspective. But as “The Plague” ramps up to an impressively eerie, body-horror-styled finale, it takes a rather more expected turn toward a significant, if hardly triumphal moment of personal growth for unhappy camper Ben. Teetering on the brink of adult society with its own bewilderingly insidious notions about masculinity and conformity, you can dive in or you can be pushed, and it’s only then you can know if you’ll sink or swim.

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