Sports
Four Comprise the 2025 WCU Athletics Hall of Fame Class
Cullowhee, N.C. – Three former Catamounts representing baseball, women’s golf, and women’s track & field, as well as honoring the professional achievement of a former athletic trainer, comprise the four-member Class of 2025 slated for induction into the Western Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame scheduled for November
Todd Raleigh (Player,1988-91; Coach, 1993-95 and 2000-07), a former Catamount baseball player and coach, women’s track & field standout Alisha Bradshaw (2012-15), Ashley Hovda Kress (2002-06) from women’s golf, and former athletic trainer L. Ray “Slim” Davis (1980-84) will each be enshrined on Hall of Fame weekend, Nov. 14-15, 2025.
Raleigh is the 25th Catamount baseball player – and the fourth former WCU skipper – to be inducted into the WCU Athletics Hall of Fame. Bradshaw is just the fourth from the Catamount women’s track & field team to receive the honor, while Kress, who was previously inducted as part of the 2002-03 women’s golf team and enshrined back in 2014, is only the second women’s golf individual player to be inducted all-time.
Davis earns an honorary induction for professional achievement, the first for WCU since Gerald Austin was honored back in 2021.
Western Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame – Class of 2025 (Photo Gallery)
This year’s Hall of Fame ceremony is scheduled for Friday, Nov. 14, in the third-floor Grand Room of the on-campus Hinds University Center. The evening event begins with a meet-and-greet social from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m., followed by the ceremony at 7 p.m. All four honorees will be recognized at Saturday’s Catamount football game against ETSU, with kickoff at Noon at E.J. Whitmire Stadium / Bob Waters Field.
Todd Raleigh was a two-time All-Southern Conference selection during his four-year playing career in Cullowhee from 1988 through 1991, collecting second-team plaudits in 1990 and first-team accolades in 1991 behind the plate. He went on to serve as an assistant coach for two seasons in the early 1990s before taking over as the ninth head coach in Catamount baseball history in 2000.
A two-time SoCon Coach of the Year (2002, 2007), Raleigh guided his alma mater to 257 victories, including a pair of regular-season crowns, a tournament championship, and two berths in the NCAA postseason, reaching the regional finals both times. His 257 victories and 132 SoCon wins rank him inside the Top 25 overall and Top 20 in SoCon tallies in league history. Raleigh’s teams turned in five top-three league finishes, scoring 30 or more wins in six of his eight seasons at the helm, with 42 wins in 2007 and 43 victories in 2003 as both squads played in the NCAA postseason. His 2000 squad orchestrated one of the largest single-season turnarounds in league history (+15), while the 2006 club was the only team in the nation to record nonconference road wins over a pair of College World Series teams, winning at both Clemson and Georgia that season.
The 2003 Catamounts ranked 35th in the NCAA in winning percentage (0.672, 43-21), while finished 37th nationally in scoring at 7.5 runs per game (455 total), with 58 home runs (71st, 0.91 per game), and 148 doubles (18th, 2.31 per game), and had 97 stolen bases (58th in NCAA).
Raleigh guided WCU to the Chapel Hill regional final in 2007 after a regular-season Southern Conference championship. The Catamounts posted a winning record against teams in the top 35 of the RPI, and were awarded a rare mid-major at-large bid to the field of 64 for the 2007 NCAA postseason. Western Carolina, which worked itself into a top 40 national RPI slot, was touted by ESPN college baseball analyst Kyle Peterson as featuring an “SEC-style offense,” finishing 11th in the nation with a .323 team batting average, with a program-record tying 148 doubles (7th in the NCAA), 12 triples, 87 home runs (6th in the NCAA), while scoring 520 runs to rank sixth in the NCAA on 725 total base hits. The 2007 team additionally ranked sixth nationally in slugging percentage (.517).
As a player, Raleigh led the Catamounts and the Southern Conference in RBI in 1991 with a program-record 78 runs driven in, a mark that continues to rank him third in WCU’s all-time single-season record books. He also collected Player of the Week plaudits in ’91 on his way to All-SoCon honors. Raleigh legged out a team-best four triples in 1990, tied for the most in the league that season. In a 1989 SoCon tournament game, Raleigh blasted a two-run home run in a 4-2 win over Marshall, adding to his plaudits by throwing out a runner at home plate from the outfield after being forced out from behind the plate by team injuries. He later earned SoCon All-Tournament team accolades in the 1991 postseason event.
Raleigh continues to rank in WCU’s career record books with his 43 career doubles. Defensively, he ranks tied for 12th with a .984 career fielding percentage over 873 career chances (17th), with 746 career putouts, the 19th-most in program history.
Originally from Swanton, Vermont, Raleigh signed a professional free agent contract with his longtime favorite baseball franchise, the Boston Red Sox, in 1991, following his WCU career. He played the following summer in the Florida State League before returning to New England, where he earned his start in coaching at the University of Vermont, with the NCAA’s other Catamounts. That opened eight developmental years where he honed his leadership philosophy with five different programs.
Raleigh first parlayed the Vermont position into his return to western North Carolina as an assistant coach in 1993-94 on staff in Cullowhee. In six seasons as either a player or an assistant coach, Raleigh helped lead WCU to four SoCon Championships – two apiece in both roles – and advanced to four NCAA regionals. The 1994 squad led the SoCon with a league-best .295 team batting average.
Raleigh then bounced from Belmont Abbey (NCAA Division II), James Madison, and East Carolina over the next five seasons, before trading in the other two shades of purple and gold of his alma mater in 2000, with his first head coaching opportunity coming at WCU.
In addition to earning league coach of the year accolades, Raleigh was also named the North Carolina Baseball Coaches Association Coach of the Year in 2003. He coached three SoCon Players of the Year in Donovan Minero (2002, media), Alan Beck (2003, coaches), and Kenny Smith (2007, coaches & media). Between 2000 and 2007, a combined 12 Catamount baseball players were drafted, with three others signing as free agents. Of those 15, three – Greg Holland, Jared Burton, and Charles Thomas – each played in the Major Leagues.
Todd Raleigh joins his former head coach, Jack Leggett (inducted in 2001), former teammate and head coach Keith LeClair (inducted in 2002), and his brother Matt Raleigh (inducted in 2004) in the Western Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame.
A two-time graduate of WCU with his undergraduate degree in 1991 and his Master of Science degree in 1994, Raleigh is married to the former Stephanie Deitz of Sylva, N.C., and the couple has four children – Cal, who played collegiately at Florida State and plays in the Majors with the Seattle Mariners; Emma Grace, who played collegiate volleyball at Bradley; Carley, who started her collegiate volleyball career at Mercer and is now at Lincoln Memorial; and Todd Jr., who caught while his father pitched to his brother Cal in winning the 2025 MLB All-Star Game Home Run Derby.
Alisha Bradshaw remains one of the most decorated field performers within a storied Western Carolina University track & field program. The Salisbury, N.C., product was a four-time Southern Conference Most Outstanding Performer, twice earning honors during both the indoor and outdoor seasons in 2013 and 2015. She is one of just two Catamount women’s student-athletes to earn multiple Field Athlete of the Year awards, joining fellow Hall of Famer Laura Tieszen (2004-05).
Her litany of awards includes Southern Conference Outdoor Track & Field Freshman of the Year honors in 2012, collecting All-Freshman honors in four different events – indoor shot and weight throw, outdoor discus, and hammer throw – as a rookie. She was a three-time champion in the weight throw in 2013, 2014, and 2015, and thrice won the SoCon women’s shot-put competition.
Bradshaw’s efforts allowed WCU to win three straight SoCon Women’s Indoor Track & Field Championships from 2013 through 2015, and post a runner-up finish in 2012 indoors. The Catamounts also won the SoCon Outdoor Championships twice in 2013 and 2015, also posting a pair of runner-up team showings in 2012 and 2014.
Bradshaw was a four-time SoCon Field Athlete of the Week from 2012-14, one of just five SoCon student-athletes to collect four or more weekly plaudits in a career. She is also WCU’s only three-time SoCon Outdoor Field Athlete of the Month, earning honors in March 2013, April 2013, and April 2015, one of just two SoCon women to have more than two monthly awards.
Bradshaw continues to hold the Western Carolina indoor track & field records in the shot put (15.04m), set in the 2015 SoCon Championships, and the weight throw benchmark at 19.27m, thrown in Winston-Salem, N.C., in 2014 at the JDL Fast Track. She additionally has WCU’s top mark in the women’s discus throw in the outdoor record books at 49.81m, unleashed at the Florida Relays in Gainesville, Fla., back in 2015. Additionally, in WCU’s outdoor records, Bradshaw holds two of the top five distances in the shotput – third at 14.33m (2013) and fourth at 14.14m (2015) – while also possessing two of the top five distances in the hammer throw – second with a mark of 53.36m and third at 53.08m.
In 2021, Bradshaw was again recognized as she was listed on the prestigious Southern Conference 100th Anniversary team, honoring the greatest student-athletes in the league from 1921 through 2021.
Bradshaw gained her start in track & field thanks to her late mother, Glorida Bradshaw, who was a founding member of the Salisbury Speedsters Track Club. She was a three-time individual state champion at Salisbury High as a prep, twice in discus and once in the shot put, which put her on the map and landed her in Cullowhee.
Enshrined along with her teammates on the trendsetting 2002-03 Western Carolina women’s golf team, Ashley Hovda Kress takes her rightful place among the Catamount immortals as an individual inductee into WCU’s Athletics Hall of Fame, celebrating her contributions to laying the foundation for the program’s success.
Kress was a three-time All-Southern Conference selection on the links, earning second-team recognition in 2004 and 2005 before collecting first-team plaudits in 2006. She was also one of just two WCU women’s golfers to earn a trio of SoCon Women’s Golfer of the Month accolades, joining Brandy Andersen (2003-06). During her Catamount career, Hovda recorded 17 Top 10 individual finishes – the third-most in program history – including nine Top Five showings with individual medalist honors three times. She twice won the team’s home event, the Great Smokies Intercollegiate at the Waynesville Country Club, in the fall of 2004 and 2005, while also winning the Elon Sea Trails Intercollegiate in September 2005.
Kress continues to hold WCU’s seventh-best single-season scoring average, averaging 74.81 over 26 seasonal rounds in 2005-06. She additionally has the top and third-best, 36-hole scores in program history with a two-round record of 134 (68-66) in winning the 2005 Great Smokies Intercollegiate, while ranking third with a 138 (68-70) at the Elon / Sea Trails Intercollegiate held in the fall of 2005. Over her outstanding four-year career, Hovda held a 77.38 stroke average over 105 career rounds, tied for the fifth-most rounds representing the Catamounts. She fired five career rounds in the 60s, twice shooting a school-record tying low round of 66, both coming in the fall of 2005.
While an undergraduate, Kress qualified and played in the 2005 Women’s United States Amateur Golf Championship. Also, during the summer of 2003, she scored a runner-up finish in the Ohio Women’s Amateur.
Kress recorded three Top 10 finishes at the Southern Conference Women’s Golf Championship, guiding WCU to a fourth-place showing in 2005 with a career-best runner-up finish individually that marked the second-best placement by a Catamount at the conference champion crowning event. She also finished in fourth place in 2004 and eighth in 2006. She was a part of WCU’s SoCon Championship team in 2003, as well as runner-up finishes in 2004 and 2006 as part of the program’s best four-year run.
Originally from Springfield, Ohio, Ashley Hovda Kress was one of just two Catamount women’s golfers selected to the SoCon’s 100th Anniversary team, joined by Desiree Karlsson (2006-10). She was a two-time Women’s Golf Coaches Association (WGCA) All-American Scholar in 2002-03 and 2003-04, and was a three-year member of WCU’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), serving as the women’s golf representative as a sophomore, the vice-president as a junior, and the committee’s president in her senior year.
Ashley is married to Catamount men’s golf alum Chase Kress (2001-05), and the couple has two sons – Knox and Maxwell.
An athletic training student at Western Carolina from 1980 through his graduation in 1984, L. Ray “Slim” Davis Jr. earned an honorary induction into the WCU Athletics Hall of Fame with the 2025 class. This year’s enshrinement marks his third Hall of Fame nod, selected to the Mid-Atlantic Athletic Trainers Association (MAATA) Hall of Fame in 2022, and in 2015, he was inducted into the North Carolina Athletic Trainers Association (NCATA) Hall of Fame.
Davis received his Bachelor of Science in Health Education at Western Carolina in 1984 before earning his master’s degree in Sports Medicine from the United States Sports Academy in 1986. Following his graduation, he served as an assistant athletic trainer at UNC Charlotte, and served in the same role, as well as a CPR instruction at Washington & Lee University before moving into middle and secondary education, including Apex High (19990-95), West Lake Middle (1995-2008), John A. Holmes High (2008-13), and Southeast Guilford High School (2013-2020), serving as a health science teacher and athletic trainer at Southeast.
His professional training experience also includes the National AAU Junior Olympics, IBM Fitness Center & Marriott Corporation (1988-90), and was the head athletic trainer with the Harlem Globetrotters and Washington Generals (1986-88).
Davis served in a variety of roles within the NCATA and the MAATA, including as the association’s treasurer for the NCATA. Serving 16 years in that role, he performed a remarkable job of overseeing the financial records of the organization and was also elected to assume the same role with the MAATA. He also served as the MAATA Evaluator of the Student Research Committee (2004).
During his illustrious career, Davis was selected to represent North Carolina at the annual Shrine Bowl of the Carolinas football game in 2011, and in 2009, joined the East-West staff in covering the East-West All-Star football game. He was named the Outstanding Teacher of the Year in 1999 at West Lake Middle, and has been recognized by both the NCATA and the National Athletic Trainers Association (NATA) with 25-year Service Awards. He received the NATA Service Award in 2013 and in 2014, was named the Secondary School Athletic Trainer of the Year.
Davis was also a volunteer trainer for the Special Olympics and events such as the Annual Spooktacular Run and the Spring Kiwanis Run. He is currently the MAATA District 3 Director and serves on Western Carolina’s Advisory Board for the College of Health and Human Sciences, representing athletic training.
Founded in 1990, the Western Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame pays tribute to those superior Catamount student-athletes, coaches, administrators, and alumni who have made major contributions to the honor and fame of WCU and Catamount Athletics. Including this year’s induction class, the WCU has enshrined 137 individuals, six athletic teams, 11 Patron Award recipients, and three individuals recognized for career achievements since its creation.
To be considered for induction into the WCU Athletics Hall of Fame, nominations must be submitted in writing to the Hall of Fame committee, where they are kept on file for five years before the nomination needs to be refreshed to remain active. A file for every nominee is kept and includes items such as biographical information and letters of support that the committee considers during the voting process.
Each spring, the committee convenes to vote upon a list of nominees that are approved by the Hall’s executive committee, which vets those nominated against the criteria put forth by the Athletics Hall of Fame Constitution. The appropriate nomination forms are available at CatamountSports.com as an online form and as a PDF.
Western Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame – Current Nomination LIst

Sports
Men’s Volleyball Falls In Season Opener At #3 Long Beach State
LONG BEACH, CA. – The Lindenwood Men’s Volleyball team (0-1, 0-0 MIVA) fell in their season opener on the road at #3 Long Beach State in three sets by scores of 21-25, 16-25, 20-25. Luke Kraft led the Lions in kills with seven in his first game in a Black and Gold uniform while Zach Solomon led the team in assists with 22.
In the first set, both teams went back and forth early. Trailing 6-4, the Lions went on a 4-0 run as Caden Whiteside had a kill during the run to put LU in front 8-6. The Beach responded with an 8-2 run of their own to take control of the first set by a score of 14-10. Amir Grant and Brendan Louthain each had a kill following the LBSU run to cut the deficit to three at 17-14, but the Beach were able to use their run in the middle of the opening set and protect their lead to take the first set by a score of 25-21. In set two, Long Beach State was able to limit the Lions to a hitting percentage of 0.033% and recorded five blocks in the middle set. LBSU won the set by a score of 25-16 and Luke Kraft led the Lions with three kills in the middle frame.
The third set saw the Lions take a 15-13 lead into the media timeout thanks to two kills each from Grant and Kraft. Kraft also had a block assist and solo block in the third set which helped give the Lions the lead in the middle of the set. However, out of the media timeout Long Beach State went on a 7-1 run and took a 20-16 lead. The Beach never gave the lead up after that and went on to complete the sweep over the Lions, winning the final set by a score of 25-20.
Lindenwood will now head to Costa Mesa, CA tomorrow where they will wrap up their first road trip of the season at Vanguard University. First serve is set for 4 p.m. CT.
Sports
Men’s Volleyball Drops Rematch With Loyola Chicago In Four Sets
HONOLULU – The second-ranked University of Hawai’i men’s volleyball team valiantly battled back from an 2-0 deficit before falling in four sets to No. 7 Loyola Chicago Friday to close out a two-match series at Bankoh Arena at Stan Sheriff Center. Set scores were 25-23, 25-22, 24-26, 29-27.
The teams split the season series for the second time in three years after UH took the opener in straight sets on Thursday.
The Rainbow Warriors (3-1) would not fold easily, rallying from a seven-point deficit in Set 3 and fending off five match points in Set 4. Ultimately, the Ramblers pulled off the upset with a block on their seventh match point.
Hawai’i committed 25 attack errors and allowed eight service aces and 15.5 blocks in virtually a repeat of the teams’ 2024 series in which the Warriors won the opener in straight sets and dropped the rematch in five.
Louis Sakanoko recorded his first career double-double with 18 kills and 12 digs along with two service aces and two blocks. Kristian Titriyski added 16 kills before giving way to Kainoa Wade in the third set. Wade finished the match with four kills, one ace, and three digs.
Adrien Roure added nine kills in 26 errorless attempts, nine digs and five blocks while Ofeck Hazan, who started in place of Trevell Jordan, posted five kills and five blocks. Tread Rosenthal dished out 50 assists along with seven digs and four blocks and Quintin Greenidge tallied 13 digs.
The Ramblers (1-1) were led by Aleksandar Sosa’s match-high 19 kills. Setter Ryan McElligott had five of the team’s eight aces along with 11 digs and four blocks.
Loyola led big early in Set 1 after McElligott fueled an 8-0 run with three aces. UH chipped away and tied it at 22 after an ace by Wade but McElligott’s fourth ace closed out the set. In Set 2, the Ramblers rallied from a 21-19 deficit and out-scored Hawai’i 6-1 to take a 2-0 lead in the match.
UH trailed by as much as seven in Set 3 including 20-13. But again, the Warriors would not go away, scoring four straight, including two kills by Wade and an ace by Sakanoko to tie it at 23. After a Rambler point, UH’s block came alive during a 3-0 run to steal the set.
Hawai’i reeled off five straight points for a 13-11 lead in Set 4. The Ramblers tied it and surged ahead 20-18 after a three-point run before the Warriors tied it at 20. Loyola jumped back ahead but Hawai’i rallied to tie it at 23. From there, the teams traded side-outs until the Ramblers blocked Hazan to end it.
The Warriors will next host a pair of doubleheaders next week against Roberts Wesleyan and Rockhurst, Wednesday, Jan. 14 and Friday, Jan. 16 at Bankoh Arena. Match times are 11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. each day.
#HawaiiMVB
Sports
From Clemson Clinics to Friday Night Lights
As a teenager, Sam Betz used to walk the halls of Danville Area High School into its athletic training room as a curious co-op student. Now he walks in as one of the school’s two certified athletic trainers, responsible for the health and safety of hundreds of student-athletes.
“Every day is different. You never know what’s going to come through the door,” said Betz ’23/25M, a Danville native and Commonwealth University–Lock Haven alumnus. “As a high school athletic trainer, you cover pretty much everything.”
Betz’s responsibilities include injury evaluation and management, game and practice coverage, and handling parts of the registration process, such as tracking physicals. On any given day, the training room fills with athletes from nearly every sport the school offers.
“I really wanted to come back to Danville,” said Betz, who completed Lock Haven’s accelerated three-plus-two athletic training program, finishing his undergraduate work in three years and advancing straight into the two-year graduate program. “This is home, and it’s pretty special to be working with the same person I did my co-op with.”
Discovering Athletic Training
Betz’s interest in athletic training started in the same place he now works, spending afternoons as a co-op high school student in the training room with John Zayas ’12/13M, the athletic trainer and Bloomsburg alumnus who’s now his colleague.
“I got to see what the job really looks like day to day,” Betz said. “I saw how much care goes into it with building relationships with athletes, coaches, and the whole community.”
What impressed him most was watching injured athletes move through the entire process.
“Treating someone, helping them through rehab, and then seeing them come back to the sport they love,” Betz said. “That really stuck with me,”
Majoring in Athletic Training
When it came time to pick a college, Betz toured several schools but kept coming back to Lock Haven. The campus, the town, and especially the athletic training faculty made the decision easy.
“I really liked the professors I met and the curriculum they had,” Betz said. “Lock Haven is a beautiful town, and the sports culture there is strong. Working with all the different teams was great.”
As an undergraduate, Betz took courses in anatomy, physiology, exercise physiology and sports psychology, among others. Those classes, he said, laid the groundwork for graduate study.
“I really enjoyed learning about the body, especially in lab,” Betz said. “Getting that foundational understanding was huge for going into the master’s program.”
Advancing in Athletic Training
In graduate school, Betz said the focus shifted to higher-level skills. Courses in evaluation techniques and functional anatomy were particularly meaningful. Betz points to the cadaver lab as a pivotal experience.
“Being able to see a real human body — muscles, tendons, ligaments, nerves, blood vessels — that’s pretty much everything you’d want to see,” he said. “It made the anatomy we learned in undergrad come to life.”
Betz credits his evaluation techniques courses with shaping him as a clinician.
“Evaluation and assessment are one of the big domains of athletic training,” he said. “Those classes were probably my favorite, because that’s where you really learn how to assess the body.”
Clinical Rotations
Clinical experiences started close to campus. Betz’s first rotation was at Lock Haven, where he worked with football, volleyball, track and field. His second rotation took him to Lycoming College in Williamsport, where he focused primarily on men’s lacrosse, with some time with wrestling and women’s lacrosse.
A third rotation exposed him to multiple settings in quick succession. He spent time at Bald Eagle High School, rode along with an EMS crew, and observed at a chiropractor’s office that emphasized sports patients. He also participated in an industrial athletic training day at the Frito-Lay facility in Williamsport.
“In the industrial setting, you’re working with people in factories, doing a lot of ergonomics and injury prevention,” Betz said. “It’s a different world, but it’s good to know those options exist. Amazon and other companies hire athletic trainers for those roles.”
High-Level Immersion at Clemson
The capstone of Betz’s clinical training was his immersion experience — a full-semester internship that serves as the fourth and final clinical rotation in the graduate program. Betz headed south to Clemson University and joined the track and field sports medicine staff for five months. The internship sharpened skills in three key areas, he said.
“First was rehab,” Betz said. “Really understanding how to program rehab. My preceptor (internship mentor) emphasized how important that is.”
Second was preparation.
“I didn’t travel much with the team, but I helped pack before trips,” Betz said. “You make sure you have everything — rehab equipment, electrical stimulation units, medications, foam rollers, cupping sets. You may not need all of it, but if you do, it has to be there.”
The third lesson was about balance.
“Athletic training is a serious job, because you’re responsible for people’s health,” Betz said. “You need to build relationships, ask athletes how school is going, what their goals are. Crack a joke once in a while. That makes a difference for them.”
High-impact Experiences
Across his clinical rotations, Betz saw athletes from a wide range of sports and levels. That variety, he said, is essential for athletic training students.
“Different sports come with different injury patterns,” he said. “In swimming and baseball, you see a lot of upper extremity injuries like shoulders and elbows. In track and cross country, you see a lot of lower extremity injuries. Football adds more acute injuries like ankle sprains and contusions.”
Prepared for the Profession
Looking back, Betz says Lock Haven’s athletic training program gave him both the technical skills and the confidence he needed.
“The professors were really supportive in the classroom, with clinical placements, and with helping you figure out your goals,” Betz said. “The curriculum prepared me to pass the board exam and to do my job day to day.”
That preparation shows up every time an athlete walks in with a new injury.
“There are moments where I’m doing an evaluation and I can remember sitting in class learning the exact technique,” Betz said. “It’s a good feeling to know that what you learned translates directly to helping someone in front of you.”
Sports
Hoosiers Close Day One From Rod McCravy
“The first meet back from break really tests how much work athletes put in while away,” said assistant coach Megan Tomei. “Training without proper facilities, a coach present, or training partners isn’t easy, but those challenges aren’t excuses. The work still has to get done.”
“I’m proud of how this group showed up and competed against strong competition. A lot of PRs on the board. We’re excited to see how the rest of the season unfolds.”
The day started with the high jumps, with all Hoosiers finishing in the top 15. Kaselle Davis (7th), Taylor Schoonveld (T-8th), Chayla Rankin (T-8th), and Josie Page (11th) all recorded a height of 1.70m/5-7 in the women’s competition. Lee Martin earned a fifth-place finish with his height of 2.03m/6-8.75. Jay Hmurovich also placed 11th with a height of 2.00m/6-6.75.
The day started with the jumps group. Lee Martin led the men’s side with a fifth place finish in the high jump (2.05m/6-8.75. He was followed by Jay Hmurovich with his mark of 2.00m/6-6.75.
In the long jump, Elle Knepp set a new personal best with her jump of 5.54m/18-2.25. Alex Smith followed in the men’s jump with a season best mark of 7.00m/22-11.75 to finish ninth.
Indiana continued to show bright spots with the throwers in the weight throw. Hannah Alexander put up a personal best to finish fifth with a distance of 19.99m/65-7. On the men’s side, Hunter Smith (20.81m/68-3.25), Nikolaos Sidirenios (20.00m/65-7.5), and Michael Neuenroth (19.39m/63-7.5) all saw top 10 finishes.
The field events finished with season best marks in the women’s pole vault. Kailen Kramer (3.90m/12-9.5) and Isabel German (3.75m/12-3.5) placed 10th and 11th, respectively with their best marks of the early season.
It was a great first day on the track for the cream and crimson, starting with the sprints.
Aliyah Johnson and Jasiah Rogers ran qualifying times for tomorrow’s 60-meter finals. Tyler Tarter and John Colquitt will also be advancing the 60-meter hurdle finals after earning automatic qualifying times.
In the 400m, Keira Davis earned the first event win of the weekend, running a time of 53.50 that ranks third in IU history. Ava Olomajeye earned also earned a fifth place finish with her time of 55.71. in the men’s race, Kalen Sargent took home a fourth place finish in a time of 48.07.
The Hoosiers continued to gain top 10 finishes. Amelia Dodds (1:28.76) and Ciara Kepner (1:33.89) finished second and seventh, respectively, in the 600-meter run. Daquan Tate and Cameron Mullens followed in the men’s race, placing third and eighth, respectively.
The Day finished with the women’s 1,000-meter run where another school record was broken. Lily Myers finished in a record time of 2:43.32 to become the second Hoosier this season to become a record holder (Trelee Banks-Rose; 300m).
The final day of competition will start tomorrow, Jan. 10th, at 10:30 am with the men’s shot put.
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Sports
Track & Field Opens Strong at Day One of Rod McCravy Memorial – Ole Miss Athletics
Senior and reigning NCAA Outdoor men’s high jump champion Arvesta Troupe was in midseason form in his first collegiate competition since claiming his national crown last June. Troupe already had the competition won with his first clearance at 2.13m/6-11.75, as no other jumpers in the field were able to clear any higher than 2.05m/6-08.75.
From there, Troupe got to work, passing to 2.20m/7-02.50 and clearing on his first attempt, and then passing again to 2.23m/7-03.75, which he cleared on his third and final attempt. That height stands as an indoor PR and improves upon his spot at No. 3 in the Ole Miss record books indoors.
Troupe went on to take three attempts at 2.26m/7-5 – one quarter-inch off his career-best 2.27m/7-05.25 that won his national title last year – but was unable to convert in today’s season debut.
Ole Miss also got straight to work with two powerful performances in the weight throw competitions, particularly in the women’s edition.
Junior Akaoma Odeluga unleashed a five-foot PR on her sixth and final attempt of the day to win at 22.95m/75-03.50, moving her to No. 5 in that stacked section of the Ole Miss record book. Fellow junior and reigning SEC silver medalist Skylar Soli had a career day as well, finishing runner-up at a PR of her own at 22.21m/72-10.50 to improve upon her spot in sixth all-time at Ole Miss.
Ole Miss also received two powerful debuts from newcomers Nyah Edwards and Natalie Brown. Edwards, a senior transfer from East Carolina, uncorked a four-foot PR in the third round to finish fourth at 20.50m/67-03.25, good already for ninth in school history. Brown – a freshman from Matthews, North Carolina – began her college career with a ninth-place finish and a finals appearance, topping out at her second-round effort 18.87m/61-11 to already rank 13th in school history.
In the men’s weight, All-American senior Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan began his final collegiate season with an impressive opening performance. Robinson-O’Hagan – a member of the preseason watch list for The Bowerman, college track & field’s version of the Heisman Trophy – was the top collegiate finisher in second place at 23.78m/78-00.25.
Fellow senior Bryson Smith was right behind him in third place, tossing a career-best heave of 22.11m/72-05.50 that ranks second in school history behind Robinson-O’Hagan. Senior Mason Hickel rounded out the Rebel men in competition, finishing fourth at a strong opener of 21.27m/69-09.50.
Sophomore Lily Beattie, the defending silver medalist in the SEC women’s pole vault outdoors, began her second campaign with the Rebels above the four-meter line. Beattie was the fifth-place finisher at 4.05m/13-03.50.
On the track, sophomore Tarique Wright had a superb beginning to his 2026 season. Wright shaved half a tenth off his prior best in the 60-meter dash, finishing seventh in the preliminary round before running that same exact time in the semifinal, where he finished 11th overall. That time moves him into a tie for 11th in Ole Miss history.
Elsewhere on the track, Ole Miss received solid performances from Stone Smith in the men’s 1000-meter (second, 2:28.65; event debut), Jonathan Stock in the men’s 600-meter (sixth, 1:19.51; PR), multi athletes Caughran Fowler (8.46, PR) and William Numnum (8.66, PR) in the men’s 60-meter hurdles, and Lizzie Hatton in the women’s 200-meter dash (27th, 25.22; PR).
Competition resumes for Ole Miss at 9:30 a.m. CT with the women’s shot put.
REBELS IN DAY ONE COMPETITION
Men’s 60-Meter Dash – Prelims
7. Tarique Wright – 6.79q – PR, T-No. 11 Ole Miss History
Men’s 60-Meter Dash – Semifinals
11. Tarique Wright – 6.79 – Ties PR
Women’s 200-Meter Dash
27. Lizzie Hatton – 25.22 – Indoor PR
Women’s 400-Meter Dash
13. Patchnalie Compere – 59.17 – Collegiate Debut
Men’s 600-Meter
6. Jonathan Stock – 1:19.51 – PR
Men’s 1000-Meter
2. Stone Smith – 2:28.65 – Event Debut
Women’s 60-Meter Hurdles – Prelims
35. Bayli Major – 8.90 – Collegiate Debut
40. Carmela Coulter – 9.15 – Collegiate Debut
44. Nyajah Gordon – 9.38
Men’s 60-Meter Hurdles – Prelims
12. Caughran Fowler – 8.46q – PR
17. William Numnum – 8.80q – Collegiate Debut
Men’s 60-Meter Hurdles – Semifinals
12. William Numnum – 8.66 – PR
17. Caughran Fowler – 8.67
Women’s High Jump
NH Carmela Coulter
Men’s High Jump
1. Arvesta Troupe – 2.23m/7-03.75 – Indoor PR, No. 3 Ole Miss History Indoor
Women’s Pole Vault
5. Lily Beattie – 4.05m/13-03.50
T6. Mary Cate Doughty – 3.90m/12-09.50
11. Katie McFarland – 3.75m/12-03.50
13. Aly Francolini – 3.75m/12-03.50
T14. Rachel Homoly – 3.75m/12-03.50 – Ole Miss Debut, No. 15 Ole Miss History Indoors
NH Katelyn Hulsey
Women’s Long Jump
10. Indya Dotson – 5.73m/18-09.75
25. Nyajah Gordon – 5.19m/17-00.50
FOUL Lizzie Hatton
Women’s Weight Throw
1. Akaoma Odeluga – 22.95m/75-03.50 – 5-foot PR, No. 5 Ole Miss History
2. Skylar Soli – 22.21m/72-10.50 – PR, No. 6 Ole Miss History
4. Nyah Edwards – 20.50m/67-03.25 – Ole Miss Debut, 4-foot PR, No. 9 Ole Miss History
9. Natalie Brown – 18.87m/61-11 – Collegiate Debut, No. 13 Ole Miss History
13. Naomi Woolfolk – 17.90m/58-08.75 – PR, No. 15 Ole Miss History
16. Temidayo Owoyemi – 16.66m/54-8 – Collegiate Debut
Men’s Weight Throw
2. Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan – 23.78m/78-00.25 – Top Collegiate Finisher
3. Bryson Smith – 22.11m/72-05.50 – PR, No. 2 Ole Miss History
4. Mason Hickel – 21.27m/69-09.50
Sports
T&F Set To Start At Clemson Invitational
The one-day meet will take place at the Rock Norman Track & Field Complex, providing the Bulldogs with their first of two trips to Clemson’s campus this season.
When Do The Bulldogs Start?: The Bulldogs will open competition in the men’s pole vault with Alon Rogow, Maximus Tucker and Romet Vahter at 10 a.m. on Saturday. The women will start action in the long jump at 12 p.m. with Toni Birden, Ava Kitchings, Chelsi Williams and Ella Rush competing.
Where To Catch The Action: There will be ESPN streaming coverage of the Clemson Invitational starting at 11:45 a.m. on Saturday.
ESPN+ Info:
Clemson Invitational – Saturday, January 10
ESPN+ – https://gado.gs/dxl
Live Results: For results on Saturday, please visit: https://gado.gs/dxm
Coach Caryl’s Comments: “The beginning of January is always an exciting time for those of us involved in collegiate track and field, and that level of excitement is even more elevated this year in Athens. We are coming off 2025 indoor and outdoor seasons that saw us have three top two national team finishes, including the women winning the NCAA outdoor title, we have more than 45 newcomers with unlimited potential and we are getting the opportunity to practice and compete on our brand new Spec Towns Track. The energy level is extremely high and I can’t wait to get going in Clemson. Go Dawgs!”
A Look Back At The 2025 Indoor Season: Georgia posted matching second-place finishes on the men and women’s side at the 2025 NCAA Indoor Championships after the Bulldog women finished fourth at last year’s SEC indoor meet and the men took ninth. UGA opened at the Ted Nelson Invitational in College Station, Texas, last year.
Where This Season Will Take The Dogs: Following Saturday’s meet, the Bulldogs will head to Albuquerque, N.M., for the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Collegiate Open on Jan. 23-24. Georgia will have another four regular season meets before opening the postseason at the SEC Indoor Championships on Feb. 26-28 in College Station. The NCAA Championships will be held two weeks later as the indoor season wraps in Fayetteville, Ark., on March 13-14.
Where To Find Bulldogs News: Results and recaps from the Bulldogs’ indoor season will be found at georgiadogs.com. News and updates from Georgia’s track & field and cross country teams are always located on X/Instagram at @UGATrack.
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