Connect with us

Sports

Fuseini, Modeste earn superlatives, 12 ETAMU track and field athletes named to all-Southland teams

Twelve student-athletes from the East Texas A&M University track and field teams earned all-Southland Conference recognition following their performances at the SLC Outdoor Championships, including a pair of superlative awards. Highlighting the honors for the Lions are Ibrahim Fuseini (Accra, Ghana), who earned the conference’s Athlete of the Year award to go along with being the Outstanding […]

Published

on


Twelve student-athletes from the East Texas A&M University track and field teams earned all-Southland Conference recognition following their performances at the SLC Outdoor Championships, including a pair of superlative awards.

Highlighting the honors for the Lions are Ibrahim Fuseini (Accra, Ghana), who earned the conference’s Athlete of the Year award to go along with being the Outstanding Running Events performer and the Most Valuable Performer at the outdoor meet, while Armani Modeste (Castries, Saint Lucia) was named the co-Newcomer of the Year.

Fuseini put together an impressive season for East Texas A&M as he went 4 for 4 in winning conference championships at the meet in Houston, being part of two school record and one Southland meet record performance as well. He won the 100 meter dash, 200 meter dash, 4×100 meter relay, and 4×400 meter relay, setting the school record in the 200 meter dash and the 4×100 meter relay, and breaking the Lions’ SLC meet record in the 4×100 meter relay as well.

Modeste ran alongside Fuseini in the 4×100 meter relay and 4×400 meter relay, winning gold in both races, while also scoring points for the Lions in the 200 meter dash (fourth) and the 400 meter dash (seventh).

Along with the individual honors, the conference also announced the all-conference teams, with 12 Lions being named to the three all-conference teams. The Lions finished fourth on the men’s side at the conference championships, while the Lion women finished sixth.

Fuseini earned first team all-Southland honors in the 100 meter dash, 200 meter dash, 4×100 meter relay, and 4×400 meter relay. Joining Fuseini on the first team are Justin Vincent (Agde, France) in the men’s long jump, Veronika Kramarenko (Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine) in the women’s high jump, and Romi Griese (Salzkotten, Germany) in the women’s discus.

The four individual champions on the first team were joined by the 4×100 meter relay team of Fuseini, Modeste, Enoch Fosuhene (Accra, Ghana), and Oguz Uyar (Cannakele, Turkey) and the 4×400 meter relay team of Fuseini, Modeste, Fosuhene, and Philip Krenek (Prague, Czech Republic).

Fosuhene was also named to second team all-Southland in the 200 meter dash, while Jonas Gran (Riehen, Switzerland) earned second team honors in the decathlon.

On the women’s side, the third team all-conference honors were Analice Pursley (Georgetown – East View) in the 400 meter hurdles, Cassandra Rendon (San Antonio – Madison) in the discus, and Blessing Samuel (Ghana) in the long jump.

Southland Conference Outdoor Track & Field superlative awards are nominated and voted upon by the league’s head coaches. Voting for oneself or one’s own athletes is not permitted. All-conference distinction is given to the first-, second- and third-place finishers in each championship event final.

Women’s Athlete of the Year – Samari Finney, Northwestern State
Women’s Outstanding Running Events Performer – Maygan Shaw, Northwestern State
Women’s Outstanding Field Events Performer – Raven-Symone Jarrett, Northwestern State
Women’s Freshman of the Year and Most Valuable Performer – Elizabeth Khatevi, A&M-Corpus Christi
Women’s Newcomer of the Year – Basia Mitchell, SFA
Women’s Phil Olson Coach of the Year – Mike Heimerman, Northwestern State
Men’s Athlete of the Year, Most Outstanding Running Events Performer and Most Valuable Performer – Ibrahim Fuseini, East Texas A&M
Men’s Outstanding Field Events Performer – Marcus Francis, McNeese
Men’s Freshman of the Year – Elkana Kipruto, SFA
Men’s Co-Newcomer of the Year – Emmanuel Ekuma, A&M-Corpus Christi
Men’s Co-Newcomer of the Year – Armani Modeste, East Texas A&M
Leon Johnson Award (Men’s Coach of the Year) – Robert Hansen, SFA

2025 SOUTHLAND CONFERENCE MEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD ALL-CONFERENCE TEAMS

Event First Second Third
100 meter dash Ibrahim Fuseini, East Texas A&M Corin Burns, UTRGV Tavis Wilson, NSU
200 meter dash Ibrahim Fuseini, East Texas A&M Enoch Fosuhene, East Texas A&M Corin Burns, UTRGV
400 meter dash Cameron Chin, Lamar William Achee, NSU Victory Achapoekri, SLU
800 meter run Phillip Jensen e Castro, TAMUCC Tray’Quan Francis, McNeese Luke Parker, Lamar
1,500 meter run Edouard Lecrivain, HCU Fredd Richardson, Lamar Riley Elliott, SFA
5,000 meter run Elkana Kipruto, SFA Griffin Neal, UIW Freddy Richardson, UIW
10,000 meter run Elkana Kipruto, SFA Griffin Neal, UIW Lloyd Sheppard-Brown, Lamar
110 meter hurdles Olufolabo Ogunyemi, SLU Dishawn Lamb, NSU Ashton Munoz-Nieves, HCU
400 meter hurdles Jarvis Anderson, SFA Jaden Powell, McNeese Denzel Hinds, HCU
3,000 meter steeplechase Christopher Daniels, UIW Zephirin Darhan, SFA Ethan Malsich, UIW
4×100 meter relay Oguz UyarEnoch FosuheneArmani ModesteIbrahim Fuseini – East Texas A&M Galen Loyd, Mikkel Johansson, Elijah Rowe, Tavis Wilson — NSU  Christopher Murphy, Madonna Favour, Daryl Bachmann, Darryl George, Jr. – UNO
4×400 meter relay Enoch FosuhenePhilip KrenekArmani Modeste,  Ibrahim Fuseini– East Texas A&M Vincent Granini, Desmond Duncan, Galen Loyd, William Achee – NSU Alejandro Arellano, Jamari Harts, Ricky Young, Derrius Henry –UTRGV
High Jump Elijah Jackson, Lamar Hunter Murphy, SFA Nicholas Grullon, SFA
Pole Vault Brayden Hill, SFA Garrett Savage, SFA Cade Carter, SFA
Long Jump Justin Vincent, East Texas A&M Keamonie Archie, UTRGV Christopher Murphy, UNO
Triple Jump Bryson Williams, SFA Joshua Gillis-Harry, HCU Aaron Cooper, UTRGV
Shot Put Marcus Francis, McNeese Donroy Brown, SLU Emmanuel Ekuma, TAMUCC
Discus Throw Marcus Francis, McNeese Anthony Oliver, Lamar Micah Miller, SLU
Hammer Throw Anthony Oliver, Lamar Gerrit Viser, SLU Tyler Challis, McNeese
Javelin Throw Thomas Knoop, Lamar Gabriel Lim, SLU Alex Del Popolo, TAMUCC
Decathlon Leo Chauchard, UIW Jonas Gran, East Texas A&M Bruce Boon, NSU

2025 SOUTHLAND CONFERENCE WOMEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD ALL-CONFERENCE TEAMS

Event First Second Third
100 meter dash Nayla Harris, UTRGV Sileena Farrell, NSU Kennedy Swann, SFA
200 meter dash Maygan Shaw, NSU Jizzale Davis, UTRGV Samari Finney, NSU
400 meter dash Maygan Shaw, NSU Onyah Onyinye Favour, SLU Samari Finney, NSU
800 meter run Elizabeth Khatevi, TAMUCC Lilliana Guerrero, UTRGV Kailey Salazar, UTRGV
1,500 meter run Elizabeth Khatevi, TAMUCC Eline Mast, HCU Inca Padfield, Lamar
5,000 meter run Elizabeth Khatevi, TAMUCC Inca Padfield, Lamar Alicia Finnis, TAMUCC
10,000 meter run Valentine Jemutai, SFA Ahston Rainey, Lamar Alicia Finnis, TAMUCC
100 meter hurdles Kayli Johnson, Lamar Helen Baugaretn, UNO Raven-Symone Jarrett, NSU
400 meter hurdles Esther Nwaze, SLU Silet Gray, NSU Analice Pursley, East Texas A&M
3,000 meter steeplechase Samantha Gonzalez, UTRGV Oceane Cercueil, UIW Micah Mizell, TAMUCC
4×100 meter relay Samari Finney, Maygan Shaw, Dynia Lewis, Sileena Farrell — NSU Kierra Yarbough, Jada Gibson, Kennedy Swann, Whitenee Teagle — SFA Ahmasia Brown, Kayla Smith, Kayli Johnson, Chantell Brown — Lamar
4×400 meter relay Kahliyah Anderson, Tranasia Jones, Margret Conteh, Samari Finney — NSU Miriam Kauer, Nina Sorapuru, Esther Nwanze, Onyah Onyinye Favour — SLU Aliyah Castillo, Zoe Adams, Trinity Kirk, Jizzale Davis — UTRGV
High Jump Veronika Kramarenko, East Texas A&M Achol Maywin, UTRGV Isabella Gonzalez-Velasquez, UIW
Pole Vault Kalli Knott, NSU Iliana Singh, UIW Kira Van Den Ham, SFA
Long Jump Samari Finney, NSU Kayli Johnson, Lamar Blessing Samuel, East Texas A&M
Triple Jump Jaslyn Smith, NSU Nyadhol Thichoit, TAMUCC Kayli Johnson, Lamar
Shot Put Shakera Williams, NSU Efe Latham, UTRGV Jaslyn Russell, McNeese
Discus Throw Romi Griese, East Texas A&M Shakera Kirk, NSU Cassandra Rendon, East Texas A&M
Hammer Throw Hannah Hilding, UTRGV Breyunna Dowell, TAMUUC Cyan Green, TAMUCC
Javelin Throw Neelie Schiel, Lamar Cecile Bogliolo, Lamar Teodors Samac, NSU
Heptathlon Raven-Symone Jarrett, NSU Basia Mitchell, SFA Mariam Buenanueva-Saleme, Lamar

Article source and photo credit: lionathletics.com



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

Sports

Men’s Track & Field Athletes Display Skills at U20 Nationals

EUGENE, ORE.- Two athletes from the Bucknell men’s track and field program competed at the U20 National Championships on June 19-20 and recorded successful marks against some of the nation’s best young talent. Will Feddeler and Braiden Pulver more than held their own against elite competition.  Results Feddeler competed in the decathlon, finishing tenth with […]

Published

on


EUGENE, ORE.- Two athletes from the Bucknell men’s track and field program competed at the U20 National Championships on June 19-20 and recorded successful marks against some of the nation’s best young talent. Will Feddeler and Braiden Pulver more than held their own against elite competition. 

Results

Feddeler competed in the decathlon, finishing tenth with 5376 points. His best individual event finishes occurred in the 100-meter dash and shot put where he earned eighth. He ran 11.61 in the 100-meter dash and threw 44-4.25 in the shot put. Feddeler ranks fourth all-time in the decathlon in Bucknell history with 6302 points and the rising sophomore has the trajectory to break the all-time record of 6667 set by Andrew Powell in 2012. 

Pulver placed eighth in the hammer throw. The rising sophomore made the finals, where his best distance of 195-2 arrived in his final attempt. His last two tries fouled out but the mark slotted him sixth in Bucknell history and provided a springboard for the 2025-26 campaign. 

Bucknell men’s track and field returns to collegiate competition in December with the annual Bison Opener. 

 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

BIG SPLASH: Watford coach ‘proud’ after water polo team secures another win

A water polo team based at Woodside Leisure Centre are in need of a larger trophy cabinet after securing yet another momentous win. The silverware continues to flood in at Watford Water Polo, and on Sunday, May 4, there was a chance for the Watford side to collect yet another, in the GoCardless Swim England […]

Published

on


A water polo team based at Woodside Leisure Centre are in need of a larger trophy cabinet after securing yet another momentous win.

The silverware continues to flood in at Watford Water Polo, and on Sunday, May 4, there was a chance for the Watford side to collect yet another, in the GoCardless Swim England Water Polo Open U17 National Age Group Championship Final.

Facing City of Manchester, the tough match went down to a dramatic penalty shootout.

Head coach Adam Page said: “It was nuts…But we always kept our composure. It was a difficult game; we know Manchester are very good.

“And for the penalties I couldn’t watch. I watched a little bit; I couldn’t watch some of it. I looked at the crowd half the time to see what the reactions were – people’s faces. I was bricking it is the right way to put it!”

Lucky for Adam and his Watford side, the boys came out triumphant, snatching the much-deserved trophy after beating the Manchester side 6-5 on penalties.

Adam continued: “We’ve worked so hard for this in the past four of five years… I’m just very proud of them.

“I’m so proud of the boys… I love them to bits!”

Sign up to get weekly local news updates & offers:





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Mitchell volleyball youth summer camp set for July

Jun. 20—MITCHELL — The Mitchell High School volleyball program will hold its summer camp on July 14-15 at the Mitchell High School gym. The camp is open to volleyball players from first grade through seniors in high school. The cost is $45 per player in grades 1-7 and $70 per player in grades 8-12, and […]

Published

on


Jun. 20—MITCHELL — The Mitchell High School volleyball program will hold its summer camp on July 14-15 at the Mitchell High School gym.

The camp is open to volleyball players from first grade through seniors in high school. The cost is $45 per player in grades 1-7 and $70 per player in grades 8-12, and will feature B.O.M.B.S. volleyball program as special guests

Advertisement

Grades 8-12 will play from 9 a.m. until noon on both days. Players in grades 1-7 will have their camp from 1 p.m. until 3 p.m. The camp will be a mix of both fundamentals and competition-based drills.

Registration can be completed at

kernelcamps.com

. For more information, contact coach Deb Thill at Deb.Thill@k12.sd.us.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Ulmer continues to add international talent, signs Zelenović

Volleyball Kansas Athletics New KU volleyball coach Matt Ulmer speaks at his introductory press conference on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025, at Horejsi Family Volleyball Arena. New Kansas volleyball coach Matt Ulmer has placed a significant emphasis on strengthening […]

Published

on








article image
Kansas Athletics


New KU volleyball coach Matt Ulmer speaks at his introductory press conference on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025, at Horejsi Family Volleyball Arena.



New Kansas volleyball coach Matt Ulmer has placed a significant emphasis on strengthening his team’s roster with international recruits.

Since the Jayhawks wrapped up their first spring with Ulmer at the helm in late April, KU has signed a trio of players from Central Europe, including most recently, and perhaps most notably, Jovana Zelenović on Friday.

Zelenović is a 6-foot-7 opposite hitter from Novi Sad, Serbia. She has won a club title with OK Železnicar and is currently competing for the Serbian national team in the Volleyball Nations League.

“Jovana is an impact player on both sides of the ball,” Ulmer said in a press release. “She has the ability to score at a high level when everyone knows the ball is going to her. Her block is very imposing to the opposition. She has a very sweet personality and she’s very excited about coming to Kansas. Our fans will really enjoy watching Jovana compete as a Jayhawk.”

The addition of Zelenović provides KU some much-needed size at the pin, as she will be the tallest player on the roster, but it also fills a need on the right side, where the Jayhawks would likely otherwise have been relying on players for whom opposite hitter is not necessarily their primary position (returnees Katie Dalton or Ellie Schneider, for example, or even Washington transfer Audra Wilmes).

Ulmer has now added seven players in total, first bringing in a trio of transfers in Wilmes, setter Cristin Cline (Oregon) and defensive specialist/libero Ryan White (Oregon State). He then added highly touted incoming freshman Logan Bell, a 5-foot-11 pin hitter who may play in the back row early in her career, following the example of Ulmer’s previous undersized outside hitter Brooke Nuneviller.

In recent months, he has bolstered KU’s depth and experience considerably with the additions of 6-foot outside hitter Selena Leban from Slovenia and 6-foot-4 middle blocker Aurora Papac from Croatia, as well as Zelenović. All three will be considered freshmen, though Leban and Papac are 20 and Zelenović is 21.

Of Leban, Ulmer said in a release, “Selena is extremely talented in every phase of the game, and we are so excited to welcome her to Kansas. She has competed against some of the best competition in the world and has thrived. Beyond that, Selena has a magnetic personality and great sense of humor which makes her a great fit for Kansas Volleyball.”

Of Papac, he added, “Aurora is a great addition to our program, and she comes to Kansas as one of the best blockers in the world for her age. She has a presence at the net that can have a large impact on a match. She has a great combination of length and quickness plus high-level international experience with her national team.”

The European additions will help flesh out a roster that is headlined by key returnees such as Reese Ptacek, a rising sophomore middle blocker who was the Big 12 freshman of the year, and libero Raegan Burns.

KU’s season begins on Aug. 23 against Vanderbilt, a brand-new team playing its first-ever match, in Lincoln, Nebraska.





PREV POST

Listen: Rock Chalk Sports Talk Live from Hy-Vee






NEXT POST

Ulmer continues to add international talent, signs Zelenović








Author Photo

Written By Henry Greenstein


Henry is the sports editor at the Lawrence Journal-World and KUsports.com, and serves as the KU beat writer while managing day-to-day sports coverage. He previously worked as a sports reporter at The Bakersfield Californian and is a graduate of Washington University in St. Louis (B.A., Linguistics) and Arizona State University (M.A., Sports Journalism). Though a native of Los Angeles, he has frequently been told he does not give off “California vibes,” whatever that means.









Link

Continue Reading

Sports

All-Metro water polo player of the year

By Greg Uptain | Special to the Post-Dispatch Read about the St. Louis area’s top high school water polo players and their accomplishments from the 2025 season. St. Louis University High water polo coach John Penilla likes to think of Junior Billikens standout Nick Zimmerman as a complete player. “He’s always in the right […]

Published

on



Meet the 2025 All-Metro water polo team

Read about the St. Louis area’s top high school water polo players and their accomplishments from the 2025 season.

St. Louis University High water polo coach John Penilla likes to think of Junior Billikens standout Nick Zimmerman as a complete player.

“He’s always in the right position, so offensively what that means is that he’s in a good position to score all the time and he’s fast, too. He’s one of the fastest guys on the team so you know he’s just this rare combination of speed and size and skill. And he can do it all defensively,” Penilla said. “He’s just he’s the whole package and I think that’s why he got recognized by the coaches as the (Missouri Water Polo) player of the year and now is All-Metro player of the year.”

After a year in which he won a state team championship with the SLUH swimming team in the fall, Zimmerman followed that up with a second successive MWP district title for the Jr. Bills — the program’s 24th overall — and he was named the Doug Hall player of the year, and now, the Post-Dispatch All-Metro player of the year.

People are also reading…

“The last year or so, it’s been a lot of hard work, but it’s really paid off,” said Zimmerman, who just wrapped up his junior year. “It’s really great because we’ve just worked hard all year. It was really great to start seeing things going our way and getting recognition for how much hard work we were putting in.”

Zimmerman tossed in 57 goals and 39 assists for 153 points this season. The point total (ninth) and the assist total (tied for 10th) were on the fringe of the area top 10, but he meant so much more to the Jr. Bills in the pool than just the numbers, including his work on the defensive end.

“I honestly think I’m one of the few true utility players, so a lot of the time this season I ended up in the center (offensively), but then also I was trusted for a lot of center defender work and general defense,” he said. “I think I just end up in a lot of different positions and I think that I’m good when I end up in those different positions.”







SLUH_11_PB.JPGSTL1050114594

Nick Zimmerman (13) of SLUH moves the ball forward against De Smet in the Missouri Water Polo Boys championship match at Lindbergh High School in Sappington on Thursday May 22, 2025.




Zimmerman is all about the team.

He was quick to credit his older brother, Evan, along with other SLUH standouts like Danny McAuliffe, Derek Nester and Luke Gill, for the team’s continued success.

“They work so hard and they’re so talented and this year they were able to get some recognition, but I don’t think any of that will be enough,” Zimmerman said. “They would be the star players on other teams. They’re so humble, being able to do it even while they’re the fifth and sixth players on the team. I think our team’s dominance this year would not have been possible without those guys.”

Nick has been able to mesh so well with Evan over the years at SLUH. They were able to spend three years together in the pool.

“It’s hard to talk about Nick without talking about Evan, just because he obviously looks up to his brother and it’s kind of flip-flopped where the younger brother kind of surpasses his older brother,” Penilla said. “But there’s so many ways in which Evan influenced Nick and it’s really cool.”

The family ties to the pool extend beyond that, as the Zimmermans’ father, Mike, and uncle, Jeff, were also SLUH water polo players.

“It’s just been really cool sort of the following in their footsteps,” Nick said. “My brother and I want to be really good like they were, so it’s just really cool to see the Zimmerman name carrying on the legacy.”

Evan will be off to Boston College in the fall, where he plans to play club water polo, so Nick will be without his sidekick sibling in the pool for the first time in a while.

“I think it’ll be good for both of them,” Penilla said. “Evan was certainly our vocal captain this year, and really the year before even too, so I think we’ll see Nick have to grow into that role. It’s something he’s certainly capable of, and I’m excited to see it and see who will join him in that leadership role.”


Meet the 2025 All-Metro water polo team

Read about the St. Louis area’s top high school water polo players and their accomplishments from the 2025 season.


Riley Nelson takes charge for Edwardsville: All-Metro spring softball player of the year


Clayton’s Noah Gou made a strong impression: All-Metro boys tennis player of the year


De Smet’s Massey had championship pedigree: All-Metro boys volleyball player of the year


Zimmerman brothers propel SLUH to 24th Missouri Water Polo district title


Kerber cousins help Marquette top Kirkwood to repeat as girls water polo district champion


Meet the 2024 All-Metro water polo team



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Taking Stock: How Arizona Wildcats volleyball is looking under Rita Stubbs

The offseason is here, with all of Arizona’s sports done for 2024-25 season and the 2025-26 campaigns still a little ways away. Which makes this a great time to step back and see how all of the Wildcats’ programs are doing and how they’ve handled the move from the Pac-12 to the Big 12 Over […]

Published

on


The offseason is here, with all of Arizona’s sports done for 2024-25 season and the 2025-26 campaigns still a little ways away.

Which makes this a great time to step back and see how all of the Wildcats’ programs are doing and how they’ve handled the move from the Pac-12 to the Big 12

Over the next few weeks we’ll take a look at each of the UA’s men’s and women’s athletic programs to see what shape they’re in and what prospects they have for the near future. We’ll break down each team and evaluate how it is performing under its current coaching staff, looking at the state of the program before he/she arrived and comparing it to now while also evaluating how that program fits into its new conference.

First up: Rita Stubbs’ volleyball program

How it looked before

After the retirement of former head coach Dave Rubio in January of 2023, Stubbs has since led the program. Her first season was one that most would like to forget.

The Wildcats finished with an 8-23 overall record and 3-17 in their final season in the Pac-12.

Inconsistency in serve receive as well as setting doomed Arizona for most of the season. One of the few highlights came from star senior Sofia Maldonado Diaz who led the team with 396 kills. Maldonado Diaz would transfer to Louisville for her final season.

Stubbs would fill the leadership vacancy by combining the experience of another senior in Jaelyn Hodge as well as bringing in the number one overall recruit in Carlie Cisneros.

Going into its first season in the Big 12 with so many unanswered questions and unknowns was not ideal, yet Stubbs took the opportunity by the horn.

Where things stand now

This past season started off strong with a perfect non-conference record at 11-0. However, reality hit when the Wildcats went on the road to Baylor and TCU, where they took back to back losses.

It was an uneven start to the Big 12. Arizona secured a home win against No. 20 BYU, but would then lose its next four ranked matchups. It was part of a five-game losing streak.

Then, Arizona would catch lightning in a bottle. After a key win against No. 8 Kansas at home, the Wildcats would end the regular season on a seven-game winning streak.

This gave Arizona a small chance at earning a spot in the NCAA tournament. Unfortunately, those dreams would not come to fruition.

The Wildcats did manage to make the National Invitational Volleyball Championship (NIVC). They would also be a host team for the tournament.

After wins against Pacific, Wyoming, and Northern Colorado, Arizona would host Bowling Green for the tournament championship.

Going the distance, Arizona would pull off the win in five sets, giving Stubbs her first postseason championship as the Wildcats’ head coach.

Arizona’s season started and ended in 11-game win streaks.

Looking ahead to this upcoming season, two of the three leaders in kills come back for the Wildcats. This includes Cisneros, as well as senior Jordan Wilson, who led Arizona last season.

Arizona also brings back the four-time Big 12 rookie of the week in setter Avery Scoggins.

Big 12 vs. Pac-12

It may be too early to tell, but just from the first season in the Big 12, it seems as though Arizona has a brighter future ahead.

After winning just 17 of 60 Pac-12 conference games in the previous three seasons, the Wildcats posted a 9-9 record in the inaugural season in the Big 12.

This included upset wins at home against No. 20 BYU and No. 8 Kansas.

For the most part, Arizona beat who they were supposed to beat, outside of a surprising loss to Colorado at home.

Where the improvement and step-up may show is when the ranked matchups are played. Arizona went 2-6 in ranked Big 12 matchups last season.

Going .500 in those types of games, while also beating who they are supposed to beat, may just put Arizona in the NCAA tournament next season.

One big question

Can Arizona win big games and make it back to the NCAA tournament? If Stubbs can get her team in the NCAA tournament, it would be the first time since 2018 that Arizona would be in the tournament. Safe to say it would be a huge accomplishment for both Stubbs and the program as a whole.

One thing that kept Arizona out last season was a weak nonconference schedule. Stubbs has addressed that this offseason with trips to Washington and Nebraska.

Overall, Arizona is 30-29 in NCAA tournament games, with the last win coming in 2016. The furthest Arizona has ever gone in the tournament was the Final Four in 2001.

Arizona may not get to the Final Four anytime soon, but if Stubbs can continue the gradual improvements that her program is making, they might just strike gold one season.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending