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Gulf Shores hosts national beach volleyball tournament, sparking early summer tourism

GULF SHORES, Ala. — Hundreds of volleyball players and thousands of fans have descended on the beaches of Gulf Shores on Saturday for the National Collegiate Beach Volleyball Championship. The event was supposed to take place in Huntington Beach, California, but due to the wildfires that ripped through the area in January, it was moved […]

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GULF SHORES, Ala. — Hundreds of volleyball players and thousands of fans have descended on the beaches of Gulf Shores on Saturday for the National Collegiate Beach Volleyball Championship.

The event was supposed to take place in Huntington Beach, California, but due to the wildfires that ripped through the area in January, it was moved to the Gulf Coast.

A quick change and an unanticipated economic boost.

On Friday, sixteen teams of the country’s best volleyball athletes began vying for a national title.

The 9th annual, single-elimination tournament is set to wrap up Sunday.

“In light of the ongoing recovery efforts approximately 50 miles up north in Los Angeles County, our focus is currently on ensuring hotel rooms and other resources remain focused on supporting those in need,” Orange County Sports Commission Executive Director Anthony Brenneman said in a prepared statement.

A quick pivot, with just four months to plan.

The relationships that we have with our friends here in Gulf Shores allowed us the ability to make the switch and make it pretty quickly,” NCAA director of championships and alliances Kristin Fasbender said.

The tournament is no stranger to Gulf Shores. It’s been hosted here since the inaugural tournament in 2016.

Kristin fasbender // ncaa director of championships and alliances

“We’ve worked with the folks for 9 championships, 10 years minus our covid year, and you go through a lot,” Fasbender said. “It’s great to be back here on these beaches.”

The tournament kicks off the summer season on the Gulf Coast.

“I know we’ve got a team that has 100 tickets or more, so we have fans coming in from all over,” Fasbender said.

They’re not just watching volleyball.

Michelle Russ// vice president of sales, sports and events with Alabama’s Beaches Sports and Events

“This is a great event for our beaches, not only does it bring in sixteen teams, but they bring in friends and families that travel here and stay overnight,” Sports and Events with Alabama’s Beaches vice president Michelle Russ said. “They spend money in our restaurants and attractions, so it is a great boost for our economy. Especially this time of year, because we’re not quite into summer, so it’s a great early boost in May for our businesses.”

The national championship matchup is set for Sunday morning at 10:30.



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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 […]

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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



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Rutgers Freshman Becomes Tunnel to Towers Student Athlete Advocate

Rutgers University freshman Caitlin Collins hails from a family of firefighters, so when the opportunity came to show support to fallen heroes of September 11th, she threw her hat into the ring. “It’s my way of giving back to the people I know who have served,” Collins told Fox Sports Radio New Jersey a couple […]

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Rutgers University freshman Caitlin Collins hails from a family of firefighters, so when the opportunity came to show support to fallen heroes of September 11th, she threw her hat into the ring.

“It’s my way of giving back to the people I know who have served,” Collins told Fox Sports Radio New Jersey a couple of days before Memorial Day. “I think about sharing the stories of growing up in a firehouse, navigating holidays, birthdays, and graduations around my dad’s firehouse schedule. Growing up around it I learned about the scarifies first responders make every day.”

Collins is the daughter of a firefighter captain, granddaughter of a retired firefighter, and great-granddaughter of a former battalion chief.

This spring, she just completed her freshman season on the Rutgers women’s Lacrosse team and is now the latest member of the Student Athlete Advocate Program through the Tunnel to Towers Foundation.

The Foundation was formed over 20 years ago in honor of the sacrifice made by FDNY Stephen Siller, who laid down his life to save others on September 11, 2001.

The Foundation has supported the nation’s first responders, veterans, and their families by providing mortgage-free homes to the families of fallen heroes.

According to a press release issued by T2T, since 2021, Tunnel to Towers has joined up with the NCAA to provide an opportunity to “connect current student-athletes to the foundation’s mission and ensure young Americans ‘Never Forget’ the sacrifices made by first responders and military members.”

To date, 18 student-athletes and young professionals have collaborated with the foundation to participate in the initiative.

Collins was chosen along with Jack Holl, a senior water polo player at Pennsylvania State University-Behrend, to represent the foundation.

Continued Collins: “I would always see their commercials, and my dad’s fire station has worked with the Foundation in the past. We had a ‘My Cause’ game back in March, and it was a no-brainer to choose Tunnels to Towers. I went to their website, and they had a column for student athletes, and I saw other athletes sharing their stories, and I wanted to be a part of it.”

Added Tunnel to Towers Media Relations Manager Nick Diamantis: “Caitlin’s background was everything we looked for in building this program. Her long lineage of family and first responder units totally captures what we try to do here to get a younger demographic of people helping out the Foundation, spreading the mission nationwide.”

Collins will take part in the Tunnel to Towers Tower Climb on June 1 in New York City at One World Observatory. The event has been taking place since 2015, and celebrates the life and scarifies of all 9-11 heroes.

“It’s a way to give back and carry on the legacy of others. Seeing other people my age grow up the same way you did is relatable, and it’s fun to be a part of. I was born in 2006, so I only know the post-9/11 world, so it’s important to me to promote that we never forget what families have gone through.”

Michael Cohen is the News and Sports Director at Fox Sports Radio New Jersey and Magic 98.3 FM, as well as a radio production assistant with Fox and Magic in New Jersey. He started his career in Somerset in 2018 initially as a news fill-in at WCTC 1450 AM, and soon moved up to higher responsibilities in the ensuing years, assuming News & Sports Director title in 2021Prior to his time with Fox Sports New Jersey, Michael was play-by-play voice for New Jersey Jackals baseball, and as well as play-by-play and color for the College of Staten Island basketball (men and women), softball and baseball. Michael began his career as a news and sportswriter with the Jersey Journal of Hudson County.



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Women’s Track Star Scatchard, Water Polo’s Pozaric Receive Princeton’s Top Senior Athletic Awards

AWARDS SHOW: Princeton University women’s track and cross country star Mena Scatchard, left, is all smiles as she receives the C. Otto von Kienbusch Award from Princeton Director of Athletics John Mack last Thursday evening at the Gary Walters ’67 Princeton Varsity Club Awards Banquet. The award is given annually to a Princeton senior woman […]

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AWARDS SHOW: Princeton University women’s track and cross country star Mena Scatchard, left, is all smiles as she receives the C. Otto von Kienbusch Award from Princeton Director of Athletics John Mack last Thursday evening at the Gary Walters ’67 Princeton Varsity Club Awards Banquet. The award is given annually to a Princeton senior woman of high scholastic rank who has demonstrated general proficiency in athletics and the qualities of a true sportswoman. During her Tiger career, Scatchard was eight-time Ivy League champion and a 2025 NCAA indoor runner-up in the mile. (Photo provided courtesy of Princeton Athletics)

By Bill Alden

One is a petite, wiry runner from England while the other is a chiseled 6’4 bruiser from Croatia who dominates in the pool.

Coming to Princeton from Europe in 2021, the two athletes, Mena Scatchard and Roko Pozaric, produced stellar college careers. Scatchard established herself as one of the most accomplished distance runners in the 47-year history of Princeton women’s track and field. Pozaric, for his part, ended his Tiger men’s water polo career with the most goals in program history.

Last Thursday evening, Scatchard and Pozaric were honored as the top Princeton senior athletes at the Gary Walters ’67 Princeton Varsity Club Awards Banquet. Scatchard received the C. Otto von Kienbusch Award given annually to a Princeton senior woman of high scholastic rank who has demonstrated general proficiency in athletics and the qualities of a true sportswoman. Pozaric won the William Winston Roper Trophy awarded annually to a Princeton senior man of high scholastic rank who has demonstrated general proficiency in athletics and the qualities of a true sportsman.

Scatchard displayed her quality time and time again as an eight-time Ivy League champion. A 2025 NCAA indoor runner-up in the mile, Scatchard is just the second Tiger woman to place that high at nationals – and she did it while climbing from 10th to second with the fastest final two laps in the entire field.

At the conference level, Scatchard won individual Ivy titles in four events, while winning four 4×800 relay titles. She set four facility records during her championship performances.

Additionally, Scatchard, a native of North Yorkshire, U.K., is a nine-time first team and three-time second team All-Ivy honoree.  Scatchard has rewritten the Princeton record books during her four years. She holds seven program records, including the 800 meters, 1,500, 5,000, 3,000, mile, and as a part of 4×800 and distance medley relays. She also ranks second all-time in the Princeton record books in three other events, while making the all-time top-10 in four more. Scatchard’s performances have landed her in the Ivy League all-time top-10, all-meets in seven events.
A rare middle distance runner who also excels on the cross country course, Scatchard is a two-time

All-Ivy performer and finished second overall last fall to lead the Tigers to their first cross country Heps title in nine years. Scatchard’s individual achievements and leadership have guided Princeton women’s cross country and women’s track and field to new heights this year, helping the program complete its first Triple Crown (Ivy cross country, indoor track, and outdoor track titles) since 2011 and third all-time — two milestones that will be cemented and cherished in the history of the program.

MAKING A SPLASH: Princeton University men’s water polo player Roko Pozaric unloads the ball in action this season. Pozaric, who tallied a program-record 281 goals in his Tiger career, was named last Thursday as the recipient of the William Winston Roper Trophy awarded annually to a Princeton senior man of high scholastic rank who has demonstrated general proficiency in athletics and the qualities of a true sportsman.  (Photo by Shelley M. Szwast, provided courtesy of Princeton Athletics)

Pozaric made history of his own for the Tiger men’s water polo team as a four-time All-American and three time conference Northeast Water Polo Conference (NWPC) Player of the Year. He is Princeton’s all-time leading goal scorer with 281 tallies while also ranking second all-time in assists, ranking Pozaric as arguably the best player in program history. Pozaric who hails from Zagreb Croatia, made an immediate impact when he arrived at Princeton, being named the NWPC Rookie of the Year and Rookie of the NWPC Tournament on his way to his first All-American honors.

In 2023, Pozaric had a career year with 76 goals and 47 assists and received recognition as the NWPC Tournament MVP and was named a Cutino Award finalist, an award presented annually by the Olympic Club to honor the nation’s most outstanding Division I male and female water polo athletes.

During his carer, Pozaric has helped transform the program into a national contender as the Tigers have won the conference title four years in a row, making it to the NCAA Final Four in 2023 and earning a program-record 28 wins, finishing ranked fifth in the country the last two seasons and beating two of the water polo “big four,” in Cal and Stanford, during his career. Pozaric is a four-time first-team All-NWPC performer and a 14-time conference Player of the Week.



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Beach magic – Fernandina Observer

By Dickie Anderson Plato said, “The sea cures all ailments of man.” My middle son and his 6-year-old son recently visited. There is only one thing my youngest grandson wanted to do. Go to the beach, and so we did. I should not have been surprised. Raising three boys, we spent lots of time at […]

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By Dickie Anderson

Plato said, “The sea cures all ailments of man.”

My middle son and his 6-year-old son recently visited. There is only one thing my youngest grandson wanted to do. Go to the beach, and so we did. I should not have been surprised. Raising three boys, we spent lots of time at beaches in North Carolina and Delaware. The beach never got old.

It had been a while since I had enjoyed a beach day. It brought back memories of my childhood when my family would travel from Chicago to the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Our simple cottage was right on the ocean, and we spent our days on the edge of the ocean fishing and swimming and just hanging out. We rented the same cottage every year. It was a sad day when we got a call telling us a hurricane had claimed our much-loved cottage.

So the cycle continues. I spread a towel and sat on the beach, wiggling my toes in the sand. Groups of people around me set up their camps with chairs, tents, and coolers. Children of all sizes and shapes gathered at the surf’s edge. Some were building sandcastles, some were jumping in the waves, and mothers were chasing their kids to slather sunscreen on their progeny. My grandson never tired of the ocean and its draw — swimming, riding his boogie board, and making forts with his dad. Who needs Disneyland when you can have a day at the beach?

As I watched all ages enjoying a beautiful Amelia Island day, I noticed a man pushing a wheelchair adapted for the beach to the edge of the surf. I joined the man and his mother and asked about the special chair. I learned that many large oceanside hotels now offer the specialized wheelchairs for their guests’ use. His mother was able to get her feet wet and was clearly comforted by her ability to enjoy the beach.

The chunky-tired chairs have made it possible for families to go to the beach together without leaving a family member with a disability at home.

It turns out Amelia Island is the preferred destination for beach goers with challenges.

Bustling Main Beach Park offers everything — beach volleyball courts, playgrounds, picnic shelters, restaurants, restrooms, a skate park and options for the disabled. There is a boardwalk with a Mobi-mat for wheelchair access that extends roughly halfway to the water. The Atlantic Recreation Center has free beach wheelchairs and one Mobi-chair — which can float in water — that can be rented. A deposit is required and equipment can only be used at city beach accesses.

Much is said about the healing qualities of the ocean. Visiting the beach always leaves me feeling alive and refreshed physically and emotionally. My time out at the beach with son and grandson has triggered a pull to the beach. This writer can’t take the computer to the beach — that is a good thing.

Dickie Anderson welcomes your questions and/or comments: dickie.anderson@gmail.com





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Mets, David Villar Agree To Minor League Deal

The Mets are in agreement with infielder David Villar on a minor league contract, reports Anthony DiComo of MLB.com. The CAA client had elected free agency after being outrighted by the Giants last week. Villar, 28, joins the second organization of his career. He had been with San Francisco since they selected him in the 11th […]

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Mets, David Villar Agree To Minor League Deal

The Mets are in agreement with infielder David Villar on a minor league contract, reports Anthony DiComo of MLB.com. The CAA client had elected free agency after being outrighted by the Giants last week.

Villar, 28, joins the second organization of his career. He had been with San Francisco since they selected him in the 11th round of the 2018 draft. The right-handed hitter showed some promise during his rookie season three years ago. He hit nine home runs with a .455 slugging percentage in 52 games. He would have needed to improve upon a 32% strikeout rate to find long-term success, though.

The Giants never gave him much of a chance to do so. Villar appeared in 46 games the following season, and he hit just .145 while striking out 32% of the time. That more or less closed the book on his MLB tenure in San Francisco. He has appeared in only 20 big league contests over the past two seasons. Villar has tallied well over 1200 Triple-A plate appearances over the last three years. He’s a lifetime .273/.381/.507 hitter with 61 home runs at the top minor league level.

That minor league production has also come with a decent amount of swing-and-miss. Villar has punched out at a near-26% clip in Triple-A. He has cleared outright waivers twice in the past two months, suggesting every team has trepidation about him making enough contact to produce at the big league level. The Mets already have a decent amount of corner infield talent, so it’d probably take an injury to one of Mark Vientos, Pete Alonso or Brett Baty to open an MLB opportunity.

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New York Mets lead minor leagues in these pitching stats

Not only do the New York Mets rank among MLB’s top pitching staffs statistically in 2025, but their minor league arms are dominating, too. Through May 26, the Mets’ full-season affiliates lead Minor League Baseball in strikeout percentage (27.4%), fastball velocity (93.8 mph), and opponent batting average (.222). This includes Single-A St. Lucie, High-A Brooklyn, […]

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New York Mets lead minor leagues in these pitching stats

Not only do the New York Mets rank among MLB’s top pitching staffs statistically in 2025, but their minor league arms are dominating, too.

Through May 26, the Mets’ full-season affiliates lead Minor League Baseball in strikeout percentage (27.4%), fastball velocity (93.8 mph), and opponent batting average (.222). This includes Single-A St. Lucie, High-A Brooklyn, Double-A Binghamton, and Triple-A Syracuse.

According to MLB Pipeline‘s updated rankings, five of the Mets’ top 15 prospects are starting pitchers. Right-handers Brandon Sproat (No. 2), Nolan McLean (No. 6), and Blade Tidwell (No. 15) are all in Triple-A, Jonah Tong (No. 4) is in Double-A, and left-hander Jonathan Santucci (No. 12) began his professional career in High-A after being drafted 46th overall in 2024.

Early this season, Tong and McLean have been the standouts from that group. The 21-year-old Tong has posted a 2.37 ERA and 1.05 WHIP through eight starts with Binghamton. He owns the highest strikeout percentage (42.2%) of any Double-A arm with at least 30 innings pitched.

McLean, who began the year with Tong in Binghamton, earned a promotion to Triple-A in early May after posting a 1.37 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, and 30 strikeouts over his first 26.1 innings. The 23-year-old has not slowed down since joining Syracuse, registering a 2.00 ERA with an almost identical WHIP and 17 strikeouts across three starts.

The top-ranked Sproat, who was viewed as a call-up candidate amid early-season injuries, has struggled to adjust to the Triple-A level. Through 10 starts, the Mets’ top-ranked pitching prospect is 1-4 with a 6.53 ERA, 1.43 WHIP, and 6.8 K/9 rate. He posted similar numbers in his final seven starts of the 2024 season after dominating hitters in High-A and Double-A.

Fortunately for New York, there is no need to rush the 24-year-old’s development. The Mets’ rotation has excelled in the absence of veterans Paul Blackburn, Frankie Montas, and Sean Manaea, all of whom are inching closer to a return from the injured list.

Read More: How Mets’ Frankie Montas fared in first rehab start

Entering Tuesday’s game against the Chicago White Sox, the Mets’ major league pitching staff had combined for an MLB-best 2.78 ERA. They have also allowed fewer home runs (34) than any team in baseball. The next closest are the San Francisco Giants (40), while the Baltimore Orioles have yielded an MLB-high 84.

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