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Haylie Patterson Of Sheridan HS To Play Volleyball At Rocky Mountain College – Sheridan Media

A Sheridan High School Volleyball player isn’t going far to continue playing the sport she enjoys. Haylie Patterson has signed a written offer of athletic aid to compete at Rocky Mountain College in Billings. This past season as a junior, she helped the Lady Broncs qualify for and finish 3rd at the 4A State Tournament. […]

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A Sheridan High School Volleyball player isn’t going far to continue playing the sport she enjoys.

Haylie Patterson has signed a written offer of athletic aid to compete at Rocky Mountain College in Billings.

This past season as a junior, she helped the Lady Broncs qualify for and finish 3rd at the 4A State Tournament.

It marked the first time in 8 years the team played in the tournament.

She explains what it was that the Rocky Mountain College coaching staff saw in her and adds it’s a relief to get this decision made and out of the way, even though she has 1 more season at the high school level.

“I think I’m a really versatile player. Anything up on the net, I can play it. I’m going to play it tough, I’m going to play it aggressive. I can score when my team needs me to and I can get hype and I can be a good leader. I’m really excited to get to play in college and not have that decision weighing on me in senior year. I’m excited to play without that weight on my shoulders.”

Patterson says she is considering a major in psychology.



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Honor Roll: The News-Gazette’s Boys’ Track and Field Athletes of the Year | Sports

Sawyer Woodard of Tuscola joins the exclusive list this year. YEAR ATHLETE SCHOOL 2025 Sawyer Woodard Tuscola 2024 Josiah Hortin Tuscola 2023 Daniel Lacy Centennial 2022 Kemoni McCullough Centennial 2021 CJ Shoaf Mahomet-Seymour 2019 Hunter Hendershot Mahomet-Seymour 2018 Steven Migut Unity 2017 Nicholas Jackson Champaign Central 2016 Jon Davis Oakwood 2015 Jon Davis Oakwood 2014 […]

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Sawyer Woodard of Tuscola joins the exclusive list this year.

YEAR ATHLETE SCHOOL

2025 Sawyer Woodard Tuscola

2024 Josiah Hortin Tuscola

2023 Daniel Lacy Centennial

2022 Kemoni McCullough Centennial

2021 CJ Shoaf Mahomet-Seymour

2019 Hunter Hendershot Mahomet-Seymour

2018 Steven Migut Unity

2017 Nicholas Jackson Champaign Central

2016 Jon Davis Oakwood

2015 Jon Davis Oakwood

2014 Johnny Leverenz Danville

2013 Ryan Pearce Villa Grove

2012 Steve Schroeder Monticello

2011 Brandon Carrel Urbana

2010 Brandon Noe St. Thomas More

2009 Ian Wells Champaign Central

2008 Tyler Carter Tuscola

2007 Aaron Mathis Urbana

2006 Scott Phelps Monticello

2005 Scott Phelps Monticello





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Oregon track & field legend Bill Dellinger dies at 91

What’s on the track at Hayward Field in 2025? Hayward Field will play host to a wide variety of track and field events in 2025. Bill Dellinger, one of the most influential figures in track and field, distance running and the University of Oregon’s history, died June 27 at the age of 91. Born in […]

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Bill Dellinger, one of the most influential figures in track and field, distance running and the University of Oregon’s history, died June 27 at the age of 91.

Born in 1934 in Grants Pass but raised in Springfield, Dellinger attended UO and had a prolific running career.

At Springfield High, Dellinger won the first OSAA Boys Cross Country championship in 1949.

He was a three-time Olympian and competed in the 5,000 meters in the 1956, 1960 and 1964 games.

After he wrapped up his own running career, Dellinger worked as an assistant coach under Bill Bowerman at his alma mater until the latter’s retirement in 1973.

It was during that time Dellinger coached Oregon running legend Steve Prefontaine and developed a close relationship with the star distance runner.

Dellinger was promoted to head track and field coach at Oregon after Bowerman retired and served in that role until 1998, winning five NCAA championships.

“Coach Bill Dellinger was one of the greatest coaches ever,” Rudy Chapa, a six-time All-American at UO and member of the Ducks’ 1977 national title-winning cross country team, said in a GoDucks news release. “However, for those of us lucky enough to have been coached by him, what we treasured most was the genuine friendship he gave us long after our running days were over. He gave us so much more than guidance on the track; he gave us his heart.”

“Bill was deeply loved, and he will be profoundly missed by his athletes, the Eugene-Springfield community, and the entire world of track and field,” Chapa said.

Under Dellinger’s guidance, over nearly three decades as Oregon’s cross-country coach and 25 years as its track and field coach, his athletes broke 18 American records, won 12 NCAA titles and made 17 Olympic appearances.

Dellinger was the recipient of USA Track and Field’s Legend Coach Award in 2021 and was inducted in the USTFCCCA collegiate athlete Hall of Fame in 2024.

He is honored in the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame, UO Athletics Hall of Fame, Track and Field Hall of Fame for Coaching, Distance Running Hall of Fame, Drake Relays Hall of Fame and Grants Pass Hall of Fame.

Oregon’s annual cross country meet, the Bill Dellinger Invitational, is named after the legendary coach.

Alec Dietz covers University of Oregon football, volleyball, women’s basketball and baseball for The Register-Guard. You may reach him at adietz@registerguard.com and you can follow him on X @AlecDietz.





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Late switch to rowing sends Henrik Neuspiel to Dartmouth College – OttawaSportsPages.ca

By Martin Cleary Henrik Neuspiel is a natural athlete. Pick a sport and he has likely given it a try and had success in his journey. Sport was a natural avenue to follow as his father Victor competed in three world championships in kayaking and his mother Margaret Nelson Neuspiel played for Canada’s women’s water […]

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By Martin Cleary

Henrik Neuspiel is a natural athlete.

Pick a sport and he has likely given it a try and had success in his journey.

Sport was a natural avenue to follow as his father Victor competed in three world championships in kayaking and his mother Margaret Nelson Neuspiel played for Canada’s women’s water polo squad.

For the past dozen years, he has been recognized as a hockey player in the winter and a flatwater sprint kayaker in the summer. But he’s more than just a two-sport athlete.

During his three years of studying in the High Performance Athlete program at John McCrae Secondary School, he participated in varsity rugby and track and field. In his first two years of high school, he was the top novice (while attending Merivale High School) and junior shot put thrower at the National Capital Secondary School Athletic Association and Eastern Ontario levels. He competed at the 2023 OFSAA championships in boys’ junior shot put.

His performances in track and rugby earned him the school’s top athlete award in each sport in 2023.

As a Grade 9 student-athlete at Merivale, he was selected the junior athlete of the year for his overall efforts.


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Neuspiel also has been known to play on his high school basketball and volleyball teams and compete in cross-country running races in the fall and cross-country skiing events in the winter.

As for hockey, he climbed as high as a U16 AA-level defenceman and played Canada’s national winter sport for 12 years.

His summers were spent at the Rideau Canoe Club, starting in week-long, learn-to-paddle canoe programs before graduating to provincial, national and international championships, where he has won 54 medals, including 30 gold.

But during his last several hockey and kayaking seasons, the 6’5″ 18-year-old was trying to work a new sport into his repertoire – rowing.

For the past four years, he has attended the RBC Training Ground tryout sessions at the University of Ottawa. It’s an opportunity for young athletes to be tested in front of technical recruiters from a variety of Canadian sport governing bodies.

More than 2,000 athletes take part in this athletic showcase and the top 30 are declared RBC Olympians and awarded financial assistance packages with the goal of making a specific national team. While Neuspiel didn’t qualify for the top 30 each year, he attracted some interest from rowing.

Henrik Neuspiel at RBC Training Ground. Photo: @henrik_neuspiel Instagram

“I hadn’t grown out of kayaking. I love it. But rowing was a really good opportunity for me,” explained Neuspiel about switching sports late in his youth.

While rowing was now on his sports agenda, he didn’t act on it immediately. He wanted to savour the end of his junior kayaking career with some international flavour.

Neuspiel started to tinker with rowing last year by doing some ERG testing, where he was timed over 2,000 metres on a stationary rowing machine. His scores were eye popping and attention grabbing. His sports career is now devoted to rowing.

He has committed to attend Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire for the 2025-26 academic year and will race for The Big Green as a freshman.

Rowing Canada also has seen his potential as well as three other Ottawa Rowing Club teammates, who have been named to represent Canada at the Intercontinental Rowing Challenge on July 15-16 in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Neuspiel will be joined by Max Froeschl, Jack Coulson and Samaya Khosla.

“I have been in contact with Zak Lewis (Ottawa Rowing Club head coach) for quite a while, after he reached out to me three to four years ago,” Neuspiel said. “He accommodated me. I didn’t want to jump in it right away.”

Neuspiel signed off on his youth kayaking career in 2024 by competing for Canada at the World Junior Sprint Canoe Championships in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, and the Canoe Sprint Olympic Hopes Regatta in Szeged, Hungary.

At the Olympic Hopes, he won a silver medal in the K2 500-metre final. At the world juniors, he helped Canada to a sixth-place showing in the boys’ K4 500-metre final, which was the country’s best result in that discipline in 10 years.

Henrik Neuspiel competed for Canoe-Kayak Canada in 2024. Photo: henrikneuspiel.com

While Neuspiel hasn’t started serious racing as a rower, he has taken part in regular ERG ranking sessions. He is considered the top male junior on the Canadian ERG rankings and has a personal-best time of six minutes and seven seconds for 2,000 metres.

At six feet, five inches, Neuspiel has an ideal frame for rowing, is fit from his years of kayaking with a double-bladed paddle and has a powerful engine to cut through the water now with one or two oars.

Rowing also allowed him the valuable tool to chase a university education at an Ivy League school. Ivy League schools offer grant-in-aid rather than full or partial scholarships to its student-athletes and rowing is one of those eligible varsity sports. Kayaking or canoeing isn’t a varsity sport in Canada or the United States.

“I saw more opportunities in rowing. Once I tested (on the ERG), I liked it,” explained Neuspiel, an honours high school student with a high 80s average. “It was a no-brainer not to get into it.”

Neuspiel made the maximum five visits to American universities to study the academics, the campuses and the rowing programs at Princeton, Yale, Brown, Dartmouth and Stanford.

“I was fortunate I could go fast on the ERG,” he added. “It gave me a lot of leverage. I had quite a good number of schools (recruit me). I was fortunate to have a choice.”

(From left) Max Froeschl, Jack Coulson, Samaya Khosla and Henrik Neuspiel of the Ottawa Rowing Club will be racing for the Canadian junior national team on July 15-16 in Michigan. Photo provided

He plans to study either chemical engineering or finance at Dartmouth, whose head coach is Wyatt Allen, an Olympic gold medallist at the 2004 Athens Summer Games and a bronze-medal winner at the 2008 Athens Games in the men’s eights.

“It will definitely be an uphill battle,” Neuspiel said about his freshman rowing season. “The program has 40 to 50 guys. I don’t expect to push the top boats immediately. I want to work hard under their guidance.

“In my first year, I will not be the fastest. In the second, third and fourth years, I want to enjoy the whole process and come out with success through hard work and improvement.”

Neuspiel is in the early days of developing into a rower. He was successful going forward as a kayaker. Now, he wants to do the same, but going backwards.

“Personally, I need to be more comfortable. I’ll start slow. Then, I’ll move up and up to a comfortable racing speed,” he outlined.

“Rowing was always what I wanted to end up doing. It was a little delayed.”

Read More of our 2025 High School Best Series as we tip our caps to top local student-athletes at: OttawaSportsPages.ca/Ottawa-High-School-Best-2025

Martin Cleary has written about amateur sports for 51 years. A past Canadian sportswriter of the year and Ottawa Sports Awards Lifetime Achievement in Sport Media honouree, Martin retired from full-time work at the Ottawa Citizen in 2012, but continued to write a bi-weekly “High Achievers” column for the Citizen/Sun.

When the pandemic struck, Martin created the High Achievers “Stay-Safe Edition” to provide some positive news during tough times, via his Twitter account at first and now here at OttawaSportsPages.ca.

Martin can be reached by e-mail at martincleary51@gmail.com and on Twitter @martincleary.


HELP SHINE A LIGHT ON LOCAL SPORT! You can offer valuable support for our not-for-profit organization to provide a voice for local sport with a tax-deductible charitable donation to the Ottawa Sports Pages Fund via OCF-FCO.ca/Ottawa-Sports-Pages-Fund today.





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Twins Minor League Report (6/27)

Twins Video CURRENT W-L RecordsMinnesota Twins: 40-42St. Paul Saints: 35-41Wichita Wind Surge: 40-33Cedar Rapids Kernels: 42-31Fort Myers Mighty Mussels: 31-40FCL Twins: 24-13DSL Twins: 5-13 TRANSACTIONSRoyce Lewis joined the Saints on a rehab assignment. He suffered a left hamstring strain on June 13. SAINTS SENTINEL St. Paul 6, Louisville 5Box Score   Louisville manufactured a run in […]

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Twins Minor League Report (6/27)

Twins Video

CURRENT W-L Records
Minnesota Twins: 40-42
St. Paul Saints: 35-41
Wichita Wind Surge: 40-33
Cedar Rapids Kernels: 42-31
Fort Myers Mighty Mussels: 31-40
FCL Twins: 24-13
DSL Twins: 5-13

TRANSACTIONS
Royce Lewis joined the Saints on a rehab assignment. He suffered a left hamstring strain on June 13.

SAINTS SENTINEL 
St. Paul 6, Louisville 5
Box Score

 

Louisville manufactured a run in the top of the ninth inning to take the lead but the Saints were ready with a response. Payton Eeles led off the bottom of the ninth with a single, followed by a Jeferson Morales six-pitch walk. Will Holland managed to get a sacrifice bunt down on a 99.5 mph sinker to advance both runners into scoring position. Noah Cardenes didn’t have to do much to get the speedy Eeles in from third.

Cardenes hit a weak grounder toward the shortstop that the third baseman cut off. He was out at first on a bang-bang play, but Eeles scampered home to score the tying run. After Anthony Prato was hit with a 100.6 mph fastball, Edouard Julien lined the second pitch he saw just over the leaping second baseman to give the Saints a walk-off win. 

 

 

It was Julien’s only hit of the night, but he’s been a standout performer in June. He has a .305/.436/.537 line so far this month for the Saints, a .973 OPS.

Also tonight, Cory Lewis had by far his best outing of the season. Not only did he go five innings for the first time in 2025, he only gave up one run on two hits. He walked two batters and struck out six. 

As Cody Christie wrote about yesterday, Lewis has pivoted from a pitcher who mixes in a knuckleball to using that unique offering as his primary pitch. Of his 75 pitches tonight, Lewis threw the knuckler 41 times. Despite a lack of premium velocity, Lewis was able to baffle lower-level hitters without having to rely much on the knuckleball. That’s not been the case in Triple-A, and it’s great to see him finding a new way to be successful. 

Royce Lewis was 0-for-3 with a strikeout as the DH in the first game of his rehab assignment.

 

WIND SURGE WISDOM
Springfield 10, Wichita 7
Box Score

Connor Prielipp got knocked around tonight, but his defense also let him down a couple times. Springfield loaded the bases with two outs, but what should have been an inning-ending groundout to third was an error instead. The Cardinals scored two runs on that error, then two more on a liner through the middle. 

Prielipp faced the minimum in the second inning, but gave up a leadoff single followed by a two-run homer in the third inning. While the error in the first inning definitely hurt, there were just a lot of balls in play. Springfield seemed to be seeing the ball well against Prielipp, who only struck out one of the 18 batters he faced tonight.

The Wind Surge lineup battled back to tie the game at 7-7 in the bottom of the fifth. The score remained tied until the Cardinals tallied three runs in the top of the ninth inning. Kyler Fedko had a monster game, going 3-for-4 with two home runs, the first being a grand slam off top Cardinals pitching prospect Tink Hence.

 

Fedko is up to 16 home runs in 64 games played this year after hitting just three in 76 games last season. He also drove in six runs tonight, giving him 44 RBIs. That’s up from just 21 last season. It’s a monster power breakout from Fedko, who is hitting .262/.380/.515 (.895 OPS).

Walker Jenkins reached safely four times, going 2-for-3 with a pair of walks. He also stole his fifth base in 10 games with Wichita.

KERNELS NUGGETS
Game 1: Cedar Rapids 6, South Bend 5
Box Score

This was a continuation of yesterday’s game, which was postponed in the third inning. The Kernels trailed 5-0 at that point. They didn’t take long to erase that deficit today.

The Cedar Rapids lineup put together a great two-out rally in the bottom of the third inning. Misael Urbina drew an eight-pitch walk before singles from Kyle DeBarge and Brandon Winokur. Then Danny De Andrade blasted the first pitch he saw for an opposite-field game-tying grand slam. DeBarge put the Kernels up with an RBI double in the bottom of the fifth inning.

Jose Olivares took over on the mound for the Kernels when the game restarted today and was the only pitcher they needed to finish it off. The 22-year-old right-hander delivered six innings for the second straight outing, and held his opponent scoreless for the fifth time this season. He yielded just three hits, walked two batters and tallied seven strikeouts. 

Things got hairy in the ninth inning. Trying to protect a one-run lead, Olivares walked the leadoff man, then gave up a single. He responded by getting a massive strikeout followed by a ground out to first base and a fly out to left field to end it. 

Game 2: South Bend 12, Cedar Rapids 4
Box Score
Kernels starter Jeremy Lee got off to a very rough start and Wilker Reyes couldn’t help out much as the first man out of the bullpen. The Cubs tallied all 12 of their runs in the first three innings.

Billy Amick was 2-for-4 with a double and was the only Cedar Rapids hitter with a mutli-hit game. Kyle DeBarge stole his 41st base of the season. He’s 41-for-42 on stolen base attempts this season and has a total of 56 steals in 92 games. 

MUSSEL MATTERS
Tampa 5, Fort Myers 3
Box Score

 

Tampa scored all their runs in the first two innings, as Mussels starter Dylan Questad struggled to find the strike zone (again). He walked five batters in his three innings of work, hit another, and threw less than 50 percent of his pitches for strikes.

While the rest of the Fort Myers pitching staff did great — two innings each from Brennen Oxford and Ivran Romero followed by a frame from Zander Sechrist — the lineup couldn’t get much going. Tampa starter Xavier Rivas struck out 13 batters in 5 2/3 innings without issuing a walk.

Byron Chourio and Angel Del Rosario were the only Mighty Mussels with multi-hit games. Del Rosario also stole his 26th base of the season.

 

COMPLEX CHRONICLES
Postponed due to rain. Makeup on July 4.

DOMINICAN DAILIES
DSL Twins 15, DSL Tigers (1) 3
Box Score

Among the methods in which the DSL Twins scored runs were a bases-loaded hit by pitch, two throwing errors and two wild pitches. Dominican Summer League baseball, ladies and gentlemen!

The Twins also did some damage with their bats, of course. Cristian Bonifacio, a 17-year-old Dominican, hit his first pro homer. Carlos Taveras reached safely four times, going 2-for-3 with a double and a pair of walks.

On the mound, Santiago Castellanos continued a stellar start to his pro career. The Venezuelan right-hander pitched four near perfect innings while striking out seven batters. He didn’t surrender any hits or walks, but he did hit a couple of batters. Castellanos has a 1.32 ERA, 0.95 WHIP and 17 strikeouts in 13 2/3 innings so far this season.

 

TWINS DAILY MINOR LEAGUE PLAYERS OF THE DAY 
Pitcher of the Day: Jose Olivares, Cedar Rapids (6 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 7 K)
Hitter of the Day: Kyler Fedko, Wichita (3-for-4, 2 HR, BB, 6 RBI, 3 R)

PROSPECT SUMMARY
Check out the Prospect Tracker for more. 

1. Walker Jenkins (Wichita): 2-for-3, 2 BB, 2 R, SB (5), K
4. Kaelen Culpepper (Wichita): 1-for-4, BB, R, SB (1), 2 K
5. Connor Prielipp (Wichita): 3 IP, 8 H, 6 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 1 K
9. Brandon Winokur (Cedar Rapids): 2-for-8, R, K
10. Kyle DeBarge (Cedar Rapids): 3-for-7, 2 2B, BB, SB (41), 2 R, 3 RBI, K
12. Billy Amick (Cedar Rapids): 2-for-8, 2B, R, RBI, 2 K
13. Gabriel Gonzalez (Wichita): 1-for-4, BB, K
17. Cory Lewis (St. Paul): 5 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 2 BB, 6 K
19. Danny De Andrade (Cedar Rapids): 2-for-8, GS HR, R, 4 RBI, 4 K
20. Payton Eeles (St. Paul): 2-for-3, BB, 2 R, K

TOMORROW’S PROBABLE STARTERS
St. Paul vs. Louisville, 4:07 pm CT: Marco Raya
St. Paul vs. Louisville, Game 2: José Ureña
Wichita vs. Springfield, 6:05 pm CT: Darren Bowen
Cedar Rapids vs. South Bend, 6:35 pm CT: Cole Peschl
Fort Myers at Tampa, 5:30 pm CT: Dasan Hill
FCL Twins at FCL Red Sox, 9 am CT: TBD
DSL Twins vs. DSL Marlins, 9 am CT: TBD


Interested in learning more about the Minnesota Twins’ top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!

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2025 All-Area Boys’ Track and Field Athletes of the Year: Woodard steps up | Sports

TUSCOLA — Sawyer and Hunter Woodard have been going back and forth for a few years now. Rather, Sawyer has been catching up with — and even surpassing in some areas — his older brother, giving him more ammo to debate on who had the better high school career. Hunter graduated from Tuscola in 2018. […]

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TUSCOLA — Sawyer and Hunter Woodard have been going back and forth for a few years now.

Rather, Sawyer has been catching up with — and even surpassing in some areas — his older brother, giving him more ammo to debate on who had the better high school career.

Hunter graduated from Tuscola in 2018. He helped lead the Warriors’ football team to a Class 1A runner-up season and won a state shot put title as a senior before going on to have a successful college football career as an offensive lineman at Oklahoma State University.

Sawyer ended his time at Tuscola this past spring by leading the Warriors’ track and field team to a second consecutive 1A state runner-up trophy with the now Tuscola graduate producing a pair of third-place finishes in the discus and shot put. That came after helping the boys’ basketball team to a 29-win season and a fourth straight regional plaque as a senior.

“Seeing how good he was in track and football made me want to accomplish the same things in my sports and pushed me to be the best I could be,” Sawyer said of his brother.

It almost feels like a coin flip at first glance. Maybe you give the edge to Hunter because of the state championship, something Sawyer never accomplished. That said, Sawyer got another leg up on his brother last week, and they happened to be right next to each other when he heard the news.

Sawyer Woodard is The News-Gazette’s 2025 All-Area boys’ track and field Athlete of the Year, a title Hunter never held.

“When I got that text, I was with my brother, and I was surprised,” Sawyer said. “I told my brother, he high-fived me and we celebrated. It was just a really exciting moment. I’m never going to let him live this down.”

Hunter couldn’t help but put the sibling rivalry aside and smile.

“I’m extremely proud of him,” Hunter said. “I’ve watched how hard he’s worked and progressed over the last several years, and I know he deserves this award. There are a lot of deserving athletes in the area, but I’m glad to see Sawyer’s hard work has been recognized. He’s always been a great athlete and has developed himself well.”

Sawyer Woodard believed he had the potential to become one of the best throwers in the state when he walked in the door as a freshman, but it came across as more cockiness than confidence. Tuscola athletic director and boys’ track and field coach Ryan Hornaday has known Woodard from a young age, with his son, David, being good friends with him. He said he’s seen “incredible growth” in Woodard over the years.

“His physical attributes speak for themselves, but what the average person doesn’t see is his growth in maturity,” Hornaday said. “As a freshman, he thought he had a lot of stuff figured out, but he decided to listen to some people who knew some things as he came along, and the distances improved from pretty good to outstanding.”

Woodard laughed when he heard that story, but he couldn’t disagree. He swallowed his pride, got himself in better shape and became one of the best teammates and leaders you could ask for in high school sports.

That led him from believing to knowing he could be one of the state’s top throwers.

After the Warriors’ postseason basketball run, Woodard only had two chances to qualify for the indoor state meet. He was able to do that and went on to place sixth in the shot put. He knew he had more in the tank, and he knew discus was his primary event, so he set his sights on a pair of outdoor championships. While he ultimately finished third in both events, he was plenty pleased with his performance.

“I’m definitely not one of those super outgoing leaders, but I push people to be their best,” Woodard said. “Every team needs a leader, and I definitely felt responsible for taking that position this year. Last year, we all relied on Josiah (Hortin) and the distance runners. This year, I knew I had to step up and carry the team with the amount of points I could get, and that ultimately led to us getting second in state.”

Tuscola’s runner-up team finish a year ago was the highest state placement in program history, a foregone conclusion by most accounts with the dream team the Warriors had. Matching that result this year came as a bit of a surprise, and it couldn’t have happened without Woodard’s contributions.

“He’s a big piece of the puzzle to what we do, and he had a lot to do with us winning the sectional and coming home with a state trophy,” Hornaday said. “Not for a second did it cross any of our minds that he’d somehow have a letdown. He’s been so steady. He was always ready to compete with the best in the area, which prepared him to compete with the best in the state.”

Woodard’s state performance in late May at Eastern Illinois University’s O’Brien Field, which will be his next home after committing to EIU earlier that month, also solidified him as the next great Tuscola thrower.

The Warriors have had numerous state medalist throwers in their history, producing at least one seemingly every year. Aiden Weaver joined Woodard on the podium last year, and Chris Boyd was before them. Hunter Woodard carried the torch prior to that, and the list keeps going from Stephen Gibson in the mid 2010s to Jeff Hettinger in the early 1990s all the way back to Earl Parker in 1908 and so many more in between.

“We have a long line of throwers who have been state medalists, and Sawyer is the next big name on that long list,” Hornaday said. “We’ve had a conference track meet for 12-15 years, and the shot put record-holder is Hunter Woodard, and the discus record-holder is Sawyer Woodard. It’s pretty cool that we have both throwing records, but it’s especially unique that they’re brothers. Sawyer’s been great, and he’s right there in the thick of the long list of great throwers we’ve had at Tuscola.”

And get ready to learn the name Brayden Weaver, who finished 16th and 28th in the 1A shot put and discus, respectively, as a freshman. Woodard said Weaver is “going to be amazing.”

Until then, the spotlight will be on Woodard, and he couldn’t have asked for a better way to end his high school career.

“It feels awesome,” Woodard said. “I watched Hunter before being with Chris. I’ve been with great throwers for a while, and seeing what they did, I wanted to accomplish the exact same things. I’d say I have, and that feels great. I’m sure we’re going to have a lot more amazing throwers in the future.”





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Watch: Malta waterpolo women’s U-16 team beat Ukraine for their first win at European Championship finals

MALTA            13 UKRAINE        12 (3-5, 2-1, 4-5, 4-1) The Malta women’s U-16 national team bagged their first win at the European Championship finals when they edged Ukraine 13-12 in a thrilling encounter in Istanbul. It was a spirited performance from Aurelien Cousin’s girls, who had to come from behind to see off their opponents and […]

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MALTA            13

UKRAINE        12

(3-5, 2-1, 4-5, 4-1)

The Malta women’s U-16 national team bagged their first win at the European Championship finals when they edged Ukraine 13-12 in a thrilling encounter in Istanbul.

It was a spirited performance from Aurelien Cousin’s girls, who had to come from behind to see off their opponents and put themselves in a strong position to finish among the top 12 countries in the continental finals.

Malta is now sharing top spot in the group with Romania and will now await the result of Sunday’s clash between the Romanians and Ukraine as a win for the former will see Malta secure a place in the Top 12 phase of the competition.

But whatever happens on Sunday, the win over Ukraine is a major achievement for Cousin’s squad, which is formed by several young players.

One cannot not mention the performance of 11-year-old goalkeeper Mia Clarke Spiteri, the youngest player to be playing in this championship, and Elly Micheli, scorer of four goals.

The result somewhat atones for the tough 14-10 defeat in Friday’s opening group match, where the Maltese girls had also come close to upsetting their more-quoted opponents but came up just short in the final stages of the match.  

“I could not be more prouder of the effort the girls today,” coach Aurelien Cousin told the Times of Malta.

“Yesterday, the girls were very disappointed as they felt that they could have achieved a better result against Romania.  But in the afternoon we regrouped as a team and this morning, they were determined to go out for the win and try and leave everything they had in the pool to achieve their goal.

“As the match progressed, the players started to listen to my instructions more and more and the team spirit was amazing.

“I am very pleased with this result as it shows that all the work we have put in is finally paying off. Winning against Ukraine is a major achievement, as despite all their problems, they are still a much bigger country than us, who boast much more resources and players.

“Ending the group with one win and one defeat is an amazing result, and we now just wait for the result of Sunday’s match between Romania and Ukraine to see if we will progress to the Top 12 or not.

“Whatever happens, we will keep working hard to continue to make Malta proud.”

Ukraine were off to a strong start as they raced into a 5-3 lead by the end of the opening session, with Malta’s goals coming from a brace from Chloe Amato and another from Kaylon Cutajar.

The Maltese girls fought back in the second session, and goals from Micheli and Luisa Borgia enabled them to change ends 6-5 behind.

The third session turned out to be a hard-fought affair with the Ukrainians seemingly gaining a crucial two-goal lead before the final quarter – 11-9.

Amato stood out for Malta when netting a hat-trick with the other goal coming from Nevise Agius.

But the character of the Maltese girls came to the fore in the final session as Micheli scored a fine hat-trick to pull her team level at 12-all to throw the match wide open.

It was the Maltese girls who managed to hold control of their nerves with Agius firing home a brilliant goal to hand the team a fine victory.

MALTA: R. Babiker, L. Borgia 1, K. Portelli, C. Amato 5, H. Camilleri, M. Grech, K. Cutajar, E. Micheli 4, M. Tully, E. Cushing, N. Agius 2, M. Clarke Spiteri





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