Sports
Ground control to 'Racer Tom'
Thomas Hart, his two friends and I are riding the Needles Gondola at the base of Snowbasin Resort on a bluebird day in northern Utah. We chat during the 12-minute ride to the top. When Hart tells me his nickname is “Racer Tom,” the David Bowie song “Space Oddity” immediately pops into my head. We […]

Thomas Hart, his two friends and I are riding the Needles Gondola at the base of Snowbasin Resort on a bluebird day in northern Utah. We chat during the 12-minute ride to the top. When Hart tells me his nickname is “Racer Tom,” the David Bowie song “Space Oddity” immediately pops into my head. We laugh as I mention it to the trio.
Ground Control to Major Tom, Ground Control to Major Tom. Take your protein pills and put your helmet on. Ground Control to Major Tom (ten, nine, eight, seven, six). Commencing countdown, engines on (five, four, three, two). Check ignition and may God’s love be with you (one, lift off).
We exit the car — I want to call it a capsule now — to a layer of freshly groomed snow just below craggy Needles and Demoisy Peak, both exceeding 9,000 feet elevation. They kick their boots into the bindings on their skis, while I strap into my snowboard. I feel like I’m holding them up.
Racer Tom is on a mission.
The congenial 64-year-old North Ogden man moves out ahead of the group, effortlessly carving through the crunchy corduroy on a long series of blue runs back to the bottom, covering 2,310 vertical feet. The number is important. We climb into the capsule and do it again and again and again. At the start of one lap, a snowboarder calls out, “Come on, Racer Tom. Get going. You don’t have time to talk.”
And he doesn’t. Not if he’s going to break his own Guinness World Record set in 2023-24 for most vertical distance skied in a year, an astounding 8,513,340 feet. This year he’s going for 10 million. (Vertical feet is measured as the difference from the top elevation to the bottom elevation.)
“I’m not leaving anything on the table this season. Last year, I felt like I left something on the table,” Hart says.
So far this season, he has skied 152 days, covering more than 8.3 million vertical feet, just shy of his current record. If he makes his goal of 10 million feet, he’ll have skied 1,894 miles. It’s the equivalent of 5,630 One World Trade Centers stacked end to end or 345 Mount Everests from summit to base.
A day in the life
A native of Minnesota, his father taught him to ski on wooden skis at age 5. He was scared. Not of skiing but of his 6-foot, 3-inch, 200-pound-plus father who wasn’t a good skier falling on him as he skied between his legs. He survived, and became a lifelong skier. He bought into a time share at Snowbird as he graduated from college, telling people someday he’d live in Utah.
At age 35, with his hair going prematurely gray, he decided he didn’t want to die in Minnesota and made the move. He now sports a white mustache and overgrown soul patch. Wisps white hair peek out from under his ski helmet like wings. He has a kindly demeanor with a polite tone to his voice.
Hart, a retired commercial real estate broker, skis every day, from first chair to last chair, seven hours a day. He packs hard boiled eggs and a peanut-butter-and-honey sandwich to eat on the lift. He waxes his skis almost nightly when he gets home. He’s in bed before 9 p.m. and up at 4 a.m, 5 if he sleeps in.
He started chasing the record in Colorado before Utah resorts opened. Snowbasin is his home mountain. He’s been on its slopes since Nov. 29, save for two days in December when he had an eye problem. He hopes to ski somewhere until May 31.
On a typical day, he’ll make 40, sometimes 50 runs. He records every foot on the Ski Tracks and Ikon apps. He has ridden the Middle Bowl Express lift, a six-minute ride with 1,190 feet of vert, more than 3,350 times. He knows how to avoid chokepoints and crowds on the mountain. If a bunch of people go one direction, he goes the other. Snowy days are the best because everyone goes inside. He hasn’t waited in line longer than five minutes all season.
“Paul McCartney did not envision someone like me when he wrote the song ‘When I’m Sixty Four,’” Hart says without a hint of bragging.
A little help from my friends
Hart says skiing never gets old. He never wakes up and thinks not today. “Oh, I just love to ski. And I love all my friends. I wouldn’t miss a day for anything,” he said.
And he has lots of friends. He’s among a group of 40 or so who call themselves the “first in liners.” They line up at the gondola at 7:30 a.m., 90 minutes before the resort opens. They socialize and tell each other lies as people of a certain age do until the lifts start spinning.
Hart does ski fast but he’s cautious and aware of his surroundings. Top speed this season? 77 mph. But, he notes, he speeds down the mountain when he’s first off the lift in the morning and there are no skiers or snowboarders ahead of him. Right now he’s on a pair of all-mountain skis he received from Olympic gold medalist Bode Miller’s Peak Ski Company for anyone with more than 4 million vertical feet in a season. They’re not meant for speed but handle changing conditions from groomers to powder.
On this April day, Hart shares the chairs with Jeff Toone and Scott Harris, two skiers he randomly met on the mountain at different times in the past few years and invited to join him. They’ve become good friends ever since.
Last year in a collision with another person on the mountain, Harris broke some ribs and was knocked unconscious. Hart stayed with him until the ski patrol arrived to take him down on the toboggan, even though he was going for the record.
“He didn’t even get upset when I continually asked him how long I was knocked out,” Harris said. “He’s just a good guy.”
Toone says he was “kind of mesmerized” by Hart’s record and his can-do attitude.
“I’ve skied with him over 2 million vertical feet. I haven’t seen him fall yet,” he said as we ride the gondola once again. “He’s made me a better skier.”
Ticket to ride
In addition to a little help from his friends, Hart has all of Snowbasin behind him. The ski patrol joked that if he gets hurt they’ll pull him in the toboggan to get the record.
“There’s a happy vibe on the mountain,” he said. “It’s great to be part of it.”
People he doesn’t know recognize him and let him go ahead in the lift line. His trademark fist pump is known all over the mountain. He’d probably stay all night if he could. On most days, many skiers and snowboarders are gone by 2:30, leaving just Hart and the lift operators.
“Sometimes at the end of the day I’ll ask the employees that are closing, I say ‘So you’re telling me to go home, are you?’”
“Yes we are,” they’ll reply.
“I’ll be back,” Hart says.
And he will.
As a guitar-playing friend of his wrote: Ground control to Racer Tom, Scanning passes Racer Tom, Check your bindings now, and put your helmet on …
Sports
Track & Field Ready for Memphis Invite Friday and Saturday
Story Links Meet Information Meet Schedule CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. – Southeast track & field heads to Memphis, Tennessee for the Memphis Invitational at the Billy J. Murphy Track and Field Complex Friday May 2 through Saturday May 3. Friday’s field […]

CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. – Southeast track & field heads to Memphis, Tennessee for the Memphis Invitational at the Billy J. Murphy Track and Field Complex Friday May 2 through Saturday May 3.
Friday’s field events begin at 2:00 p.m. CST, with the women’s long jump and the track events are slated for 6:00 p.m. with the women’s 1500m run. Day two of the meet is scheduled for 11:45 a.m., with the women’s 100m hurdles and will finish at 3:30 p.m. with the men’s 4x400m.
Where We Rank
For each individual event the top 48 performances will be accepted into the NCAA regional which is broken up into East and West. For each relay event, the top 24 relay teams will be accepted into the competition. The top 24 performances in the combined events (Heptathlon and Decathlon) are accepted directly into the Championships.
The sport is broken up into nine regions, SEMO is in the Midwest Region which includes all the Division One schools from Missouri, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, South and North Dakota, Iowa, Minnesota, and Illinois.
Southeast has four marks ranked in the top 50 of the country, 28 marks ranked in the top 25 in the midwest, 14 marks ranked first in the OVC, and 49 performances in the top five in the Ohio Valley Conference.
In the high jump, Luke Hatfield Jackson is ranked 24th in the NCAA, sixth in the Midwest and first in the OVC, achieving a mark of 7′ 0.5″ at the Georgia Tech Invitational. In the long jump, Hatfield Jackson ranks eighth in the region and first in the OVC with a distance of 24′ 7.25″ which he achieved at the Crimson Tide Invitational.
Paden Lewis ranks 43rd in the nation, 11th in the region, and first in the conference in the hammer throw with a distance of 212′ 1″ with the mark being achieved at the Pacesetter Sports Invitational. Lewis also ranks 49th in the nation, 12th in the region and first in the OVC in shot put with a mark of 60′ 1″. Lewis ranks 23rd in the region and first in the conference in discus throwing a distance of 177′ 3″.
Anna Thomason ranks 29th in the nation, seventh in the region, and first in the OVC in the heptathlon, getting 5260 points at the Gibson Invitational. Thomason also ranks 13th in the Midwest and first in the Ohio Valley Conference in the 100m hurdles with a time of 13.80.
In the 400m, Sydney Burdine ran a 54.02 to be ranked 10th in the Midwest.
In the 10,000m, Noah Little ranks first in the OVC with a time of 30:27.11.
Lexie Dockstader ranks 25th in the Midwest with a time of 37:59.39 in the 10,000m.
With a distance of 49′ 7.25″ Kenyon Johnson ranks 11th in the region in triple jump.
Brianna Dixon ranks 14th in the Midwest in the 100m hurdles with a time of 13.82. Dixon is also ranked 25th in the midwest and first in the conference in high jump, clearing a height of 5′ 7.25″.
Marcus Gordon ranks 21st in region in the 400m hurdles with a time of 53.94.
In the 400m hurdles Laila Hardin ran a 59.41 time to be ranked ninth in the Midwest and first in the OVC.
The 4x400m relay team of Primeau, Fuller, Splitt, and Mygatt combined for a time of3:18.77, ranking 21st in the region.
Burdine, Lester, Dwaah, and Hardin ran a 3:48.82 in the 4x400m relay to be ranked 15th in the Midwest region.
Collin Beers cleared a height of 16′ 4.75″ in pole vault, earning 19th in the regional rankings and Sullivan Gleason vaulted over a height of 16′ 2″ for 24th in the region.
19th in the region and first place in the OVC women’s pole vault rankings is held by Clara Billing, who cleared a height of 13′ 4.5″.
Aarion Jackson cleared a distance of 23′ 7.25″ to be ranked 24st in the Midwest in long jump.
Kenyon Johnson ranks 11th in the region in triple jump with a distance of 49′ 7.25″.
Luke Busateri ranks 13th in the Midwest Region in the triple jump with a distance of 49′ 1.75″.
In the hammer throw Makenzie Williams threw for a distance of 189′ 5″ to take 17th in the region and first place in the Ohio Valley Conference rankings. Williams also ranks 19th in the region in discus with a distance of 160′ 11″.
Andreese Ortiz ranks 23rd in the region in discus, throwing a distance of 152′ 8″
Josiah Kilgore ranks 16th in the region and first in the conference in javelin throwing for a distance of 194′ 3″.
Throwing for a distance of 144′ 0″, Kennedy Zgaynor ranks 20th in the Midwest and first in the conference in javelin.
Tayler Gudde ranks 25th in region in the heptathlon with a point total of 4380.
Jake Casey ranks 20th in the region in the decathlon with a point total of 6077.
Team Rankings
The Southeast Missouri men’s track and field team is ranked 152nd in the nation with 1.50 points coming from Luke Hatfield Jackson’s high jump (7′ 0.5″) and Paden Lewis’ hammer throw mark of 212′ 1″ and shot put of 60′ 1″.
The Southeast Missouri women’s track and field team is ranked 157th in the nation with 0.70 points coming from Anna Thomason’s 5260 points in heptathlon.
The men’s team is ranked 18th in the Midwest Region with 103.09 total points and first in the conference with 1,115.14 points, ahead of Little Rock with 1,114.89 points.
The men’s squad teams that are ranked in the top 50 in the nation are the discus team (39th), high jump (33rd), long jump team (35th), and the shot put team (33rd).
The women’s team is ranked 20th in the Midwest Region with 91.76 total points and first in the OVC with 1,081.54 points, ahead of Little Rock in second with 934.87 points.
The women’s squad teams that are ranked in the top 50 in the nation are the hammer throw team (24th), the javelin team (38th), and the shot put team (44th).
Weekly Awards
Laila Hardin earned Female Track Athlete of the Week for the third straight week in a row as she placed seventh out of 53 runners in the 400m Hurdles, running a time of 1:00.53 that ranks sixth all time in SEMO records. Hardin also set a new personal record in the 400m with a time of 55.95 that earned eighth out of 61 runners. Additionally, Hardin was part of the 4x400m team that took second out of 17 running a 3:46.01, a season best time for the team and a time that ranks first in the OVC.
Luke Hatfield Jackson tabbed his third Male Field Athlete of the Week, producing a high jump that took first out of 21 competitors. Hatfield Jackson cleared 7′ 1.75″ in the high jump, which ranks him 15th in the NCAA, first in the OVC, and second all time in SEMO records. Additionally, in the long jump, Hatfield Jackson set a mark of 23′ 4.50″ to take ninth in the event out of 38 competitors.
Kennedy Zgaynor claims her third Female Freshman of the Week of the season, placing fifth out of 29 in the javelin with a throw of 136 ‘0″. This mark ranks Zgaynor first in the OVC in the javelin.
Looking Ahead
After the Memphis Invite the track team will be split between the Billy Hayes Invite in Bloomington, Ind. and the Arkansas Twilight in Fayetteville, Ark.
Sports
16 teams arrive in Gulf Shores for the 2025 NCAA beach volleyball tournament
MOBILE, Ala. (WALA) – Welcome to the 2025 NCAA beach volleyball tournament. It’s once again calling Gulf Shores home as 16 of the best teams take to the sand. Fans of all teams are excited. “It’s out of this world. The spectacular play that you’ll see, just watch all weekend. It’s just phenomenal. Year after […]

MOBILE, Ala. (WALA) – Welcome to the 2025 NCAA beach volleyball tournament. It’s once again calling Gulf Shores home as 16 of the best teams take to the sand.
Fans of all teams are excited.
“It’s out of this world. The spectacular play that you’ll see, just watch all weekend. It’s just phenomenal. Year after year after year,” Tom Mayer said.
“Outstanding, we were here last year and it was amazing. And this year is going to be too,” USC Fan Tricia Howard said.
And it’s especially important for these fans who have family members in the game and coaching it.
“We just love following him around and the team,” Barbara Mayer said.
“Luckily, we have another son who’s an assistant coach at Cal. Cal is also here. For us, it’s doubly exciting because we get to watch both, and they don’t play each other unless they get to the finals,” Tom Mayer said.
“we’re uncle Tim and aunt Tricia to Ashley Pater. So we have a personal connection, and we’re so excited to see her play again today and to see the team play. Hopefully it’s going to be just a good of a result as last year’s.” Tim Howard said.
And speaking of last year, the returning champs, the USC Trojans, have had plenty of success on this court. They’ve won four straight championships here. And they hope to add another.
“It’s beautiful. Everything is surreal here. And hopefully the win will be surreal too,” Tricia Howard said.
The semifinals will be on Saturday, and the finals will be played on Sunday.
Copyright 2025 WALA. All rights reserved.
Sports
Turlington sets meet record in 5K at Meet of the UnSaintly
Story Links ST. PAUL, Minn. – Junior Kevin Turlington established a new meet record in the 5,000-meter run for the St. Olaf College men’s track and field team at the unscored Meet of the UnSaintly on Wednesday at Klas Field. Running in a field that included 14 NCAA Division I […]

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Junior Kevin Turlington established a new meet record in the 5,000-meter run for the St. Olaf College men’s track and field team at the unscored Meet of the UnSaintly on Wednesday at Klas Field.
Running in a field that included 14 NCAA Division I runners, Turlington trailed four runners from the University of Minnesota for most of the race before pulling away form a near 12-second win in 14:11.84. The junior’s time ranks No. 15 in the country, No. 1 in the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) and No. 2 on St. Olaf’s all-time list, in addition to topping the previous meet record of 14:29.29 set by Team USA Minnesota’s Ryan Rutherford in 2017.
Turlington was one of three Oles in the top 10 in the 48-runner field in the 5,000-meter run, with senior Andrew Skemp in seventh (14:35.59) and junior Gael Manzur Strandlund in 10th (14:44.37). First year Austin McInturff, junior Cullen Moore, first year Jakob Eenigenburg, and junior Lance Nemecek placed second in the 4×400-meter relay (3:18.56) with the second-fastest time in the MIAC this season.
Senior Sean Hartney added a top-15 national time in the 1,500-meter run with his eighth-place finish (3:05.02), a time that ranks second in the MIAC and eighth on the program’s all-time list. Junior Ignatius Fitzgerald also posted a top-five time in the conference this season in the event in ninth place (3:53.17).
In addition to the relay, Moore and Nemecek both ran top-40 national times in the 800-meter run, with Moore taking second (1:51.98) and Nemecek in third (1:52.50). Those times sit second and third, respectively, in the MIAC and fifth and sixth on St. Olaf’s all-time list.
Sophomore Max Albertson added a third-place performance in the long jump (6.92m, 22′ 8 ½”) to match his second-best mark in the event this season.
Senior Andrew Cogley and sophomore Jesse Olson will open the MIAC Decathlon for the Oles at 12 p.m. on Thursday, May 1 at Carleton College’s Laird Stadium. St. Olaf will also host the Ole Open on Saturday, May 3 starting at 12 p.m. at Klein Field at Manitou.
Sports
Southern Illinois Salukis – Official Athletics Website
CARBONDALE, Ill. – Southern Illinois Track and Field will travel to the Jim Green Invitational on Friday, May 2, at 2:30 p.m., in Lexington, Ky. This meet is the final official meet of the season before the MVC Championship on May 17 in Carbondale, Ill. Southern Illinois will face off against Asbury, Bellarmine, Butler, Eastern […]

Southern Illinois will face off against Asbury, Bellarmine, Butler, Eastern Kentucky, Harvard, Indiana, Kentucky State, Louisville, Michigan State, Milwaukee, Morehead State, Penn State, Purdue, Transylvania, Union (Ky.), and Western Kentucky.
The Jim Green Invitational is a two-day event. Day one will begin at 2:30 p.m., with the heptathlon, and the women’s hammer throw. Track event will begin at 4:30 p.m.
Day two will see the conclusion of the heptathlon at 11:30 a.m., field events will begin at noon with women’s discus, men’s shot put, and women’s high jump. Track event will close the event, beginning at 12:40 with the 4x100M relay events.
Follow along with Live Results.
Sports
Ruth Arino Ruiz: The legend beneath the waves | Sports
Senior Ruth Arino Ruiz was named Golden Coast Conference Player of the Year for the second season in a row. Photo via LMU Athletics LMU women’s water polo returned to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2012 after securing the Golden Coast Conference (GCC) Tournament title last Sunday at the Burns Aquatics Center, […]

LMU women’s water polo returned to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2012 after securing the Golden Coast Conference (GCC) Tournament title last Sunday at the Burns Aquatics Center, their home pool. The Lions defeated Santa Clara University on April 25, San Diego State University on April 26 and continued the three-game weekend victory against Fresno State University on April 27. The team is currently 7-0 in the GCC standings, making them the conference leaders. They are undefeated in conference play and are ranked No. 8 by the Collegiate Water Polo Association.
The Lions celebrated their regular season triumphs with high spirits and big smiles at the Burns Aquatics Center, but perhaps with the biggest smile of all was senior team captain and NCAA tournament MVP Ruth Arino Ruiz.
Senior attacker Ruiz has spent the last four years with the Lions, and the conclusion of this season will mean the conclusion of her time in the pool. However, she is not quite ready to hang up her swimsuit as the team prepares for the upcoming NCAA Tournament.
“Every time I think about my last game as a Lion, I just get super sad because the time has literally just flown by,” said Ruiz. “When the team and I had tough moments throughout the year, we really tried to sort it out because I didn’t want my last season and the other seniors’ seasons to end on a bad note. We get to decide how this ends.”
Hailing from Barcelona, Ruiz began playing water polo when she was 13. She grew up competing against older swimmers, which helped her develop extensive experience in the water.
Traveling from her country where water polo is a mainstream sport, Ruiz longed to bring her water polo skills and knowledge to America’s culture of water polo. Since her redshirt freshman season in 2022, Ruiz’s impact was immediate. She led the team with 69 points, tallying 40 goals and 29 assists. Her ability to read defenses and create opportunities set her apart early as a born leader.
Ruiz was named GCC Player of the Year for the second consecutive season, finishing with a league-leading 102 goals and lead in conference assists with 64. Ruiz, without question, is a beast.
This year, Ruiz continued to make big splashes. She leads the GCC in all three categories: points, goals and assists. As of April 2025, she claims 36 steals to her name. But beyond her accolades, Ruth is a motivator, a fierce competitor and a friend.
“I hope my teammates remember me as a person that leads by example and that they are inspired by me to not be afraid of speaking your mind, always with respect, but no one should tell you what to say or what not to,” said Ruiz.
As graduation nears and her time as a Lion winds down, Ruiz is not just playing to win — she’s playing to remember and to leave a lasting legacy. So, in her final season, Ruiz is doing just that.
“The most emotional moment was this past weekend. The final 10 seconds of the game when you already know that it’s kinda done,” said Ruiz. “We were already winning by two and we had possession of the ball and we started celebrating but our coaches started screaming, ‘No, no, no, the game isn’t over just yet.’ It was all so emotional.”
Ruiz is defined by her unwavering dedication and leadership. Her journey from a promising freshman to one of the most accomplished players in LMU history is a testament to her passion for the game.
“It’s been a really, really long journey but it is just so rewarding to see everything you do and all the work you put in as a team and individually come together,” said Ruiz.
Ruiz and the entire LMU women’s water polo team will continue to tread water as they face No. 2 seed University of California, Los Angeles on May 9 in first round of the NCAA Tournament.
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Wigan Athletic FC – Vacancy
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