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Head-to-head matchups to watch for at the 2025 SEC outdoor track and field championships

The SEC outdoor men’s and women’s track and field championships is always one of the premier meets in collegiate track and field. 2025’s meet should be no different. The SEC championships are filled with top-ranked teams and loaded with some of the top regular-season performers, creating must-watch matchups. Here’s a look at some of the […]

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The SEC outdoor men’s and women’s track and field championships is always one of the premier meets in collegiate track and field. 2025’s meet should be no different. The SEC championships are filled with top-ranked teams and loaded with some of the top regular-season performers, creating must-watch matchups. Here’s a look at some of the top potential head-to-head matchups to watch. 

Note: At the time of writing (Wednesday, May 7) the start lists for the SEC Championships haven’t been published, meaning athletes listed below may not participate in an event. These aren’t guaranteed because some matchups may need athletes to advance to the finals to happen.

COMPLETE COVERAGE: Updates, schedule and results for the 2025 SEC outdoor track and field championships

Men

100 meters — Israel Okon (Auburn) vs. Kanyinsola Ajayi (Auburn) vs. Jordan Anthony (Arkansas) vs. Jelani Watkins (LSU)

The SEC 100 meters is wide open this year. Auburn’s Israel Okon has run 9.91 (+2.9) and 10.07 in his two races this year, and his teammate Kanyinsola Ajayi has run a wind-legal 9.96 in his lone 100 meters run. 

But this isn’t a competition between solely the Auburn Tigers, as a pair of dual-sport athletes will contest for the 100 meter crown. Arkansas’s Jordan Anthony and LSU’s Jelani Watkins have run 9.98 seconds and 10.01 seconds, respectively. The quartet of sprinters will make the 100 exciting in Lexington this year.

RECORDS: Every track and field record broken in 2025

110 hurdles — Ja’Kobe Tharp (Auburn) vs. Everyone else

Winning a title puts a target on your back and Auburn’s Ja’Kobe Tharp has just that after winning the SEC outdoor 110 hurdles title last year and winning the indoor 60 hurdles NCAA title this year. Tharp will have to defend his SEC title he won this year, with the added pressure of knowing that he hasn’t run the fastest time in the event entering the meet.

Texas’s Kendrick Smallwood leads the nation with his 13.07 (+2.3) while Florida’s Demaris Waters has the top wind-legal time of 13.21 (+0.7). Texas A&M’s Ja’Qualon Scott and LSU’s hurdle duo of Matthew Sophia and Jahiem Stern have also run faster than the defending SEC 110 hurdles champion, who can’t be counted out.

That’s six of the top eight times in the nation all in the SEC. Get your popcorn ready.

400 hurdles — Jevon Williams (Tennessee) vs. Kody Blackwood (Texas) 

Déjà vu? No, it’s just the SEC. That’s what you’ll realize when you see Tennessee’s Jevon Williams and Texas’ Kody Blackwood run the 400 hurdles at the SEC championships.

Williams beat Blackwood in the nation’s fastest 400 hurdles race earlier this year at the Tom Jones Invitational when the duo outpaced a professional Olympian (Trevor Bassitt) as both went sub-49 seconds.

If we get a repeat of this race at the SEC Championships, we’ll be in for a treat.

PAST 2025 MEETS: Penn Relays | Florida Relays | Texas Relays

800 meters — Abdullahi Hassan (Mississippi State) vs. Rivaldo Marshall (Arkansas)

Abdullahi Hassan and Rivaldo Marshall have been two of the best 800 meter runners in the NCAA for multiple years now. The two were both in the Big Ten in 2024 before transferring to the SEC. Now, only 0.2 seconds separate their season’s-best times in 2025, with both athletes ranking in the top four in the 800 nationally. 

Across the last two years, Rivaldo Marshall has finished ahead of Abdullahi Hassan in three of the five races that both have run in. With the high stakes of the SEC, we’ll get another chapter to this rivalry.

PAST SEC OUTDOOR CHAMPIONSHIPS: 2024 | 2023

Women

100 hurdles — Habiba Harris (Florida) vs. Akala Garrett (Texas) vs. Jaiya Covington (Texas A&M) vs. Myreanna Bebe (Tennessee)

The SEC 100 hurdles is loaded as always in 2025. Habiba Harris, Akala Garrett, Jaiya Covington and Myreanna Bebe have four of the top five times (all-conditions) in the country this year and none of 2025’s top four finishers in the SEC 100 hurdles are back this year.

In fact, Jaiya Covington is the only finalist from last year’s SEC championships, where she finished fifth. Of course, since then, the Aggie has added the NCAA indoor 60 hurdles title to her resume. Yet, she only has the third-fastest time of the quartet.

Akala Garrett has run 12.75 (+2.6) this year and has gone sub-13.1 seconds at three of her four meets this year. Habiba Harris has the national lead at 12.69 seconds (+2.1 and is only a freshman. 

Let’s not forget about Myreanna Bebe either. She has the nation’s fastest wind-legal time this year running 12.81 seconds (+1.8) to send a statement open May. 

What has become a fan-favorite event in recent years figures to live up to the hype as these four women race in the 100 hurdles at the SEC Championships.

AWARD WATCH: Here are the Bowerman frontrunners entering May

100 meters — JaMeesia Ford (South Carolina) vs. Camryn Dickson (Texas A&M)

The SEC always has its share of versatile sprinters, and this year, JaMeesia Ford and Camryn Dickson are two of the best. Ford has run 11.02 and Dickson has run 11.04 in the 100 meters, both over the allowable wind.

But wind doesn’t matter when you’re on the track right next to each other. Only beating your opponent. 

And if the 100 meters wasn’t enough, Ford and Dickson also have two of the top-five all-conditions 200 meter times this year. More on that race below.

200 meters — Jasmine Montgomery (Texas A&M) vs. Dejanea Oakley

JaMeesia Ford and Camryn Dickson will be candidates to win the 200 meters at the SEC championships, but they’ll have to get past a pair of intriguing contenders first.

Jasmine Montgomery caught the eyes of plenty when she ran a 22.17 to open May in the 200 meters. However, there was a +3.5 wind, and Montgomery hadn’t run better than 22.59 in her career before.

Then there’s Georgia’s Dejanea Oakley. She has the No. 2 wind-legal time in the country at 22.43 seconds, but that time isn’t in the top five all-conditions this year.

Montgomery and Oakley have both run fast this year, conditions aside. When the two meet on the track in Lexington, they’ll be looking to back up their impressive regular seasons en route to a title.

HALFWAY THERE: 6 midseason superlatives for the 2025 DI outdoor track and field season

400 meters — Aaliyah Butler (Georgia) vs. Kaylyn Brown (Arkansas)

Last year, Aaliyah Butler was the top threat to interrupt Arkansas’ historic group of quarter-milers from titles. This year, Butler remains the top threat to keep a Razorback from holding a trophy, but Arkansas doesn’t have the same amount of heavy hitters as last year.

The Razorbacks still have Kaylyn Brown, though, who’s still searching for her first sub-50 race of the season. Could running against Butler, who owns the national lead in 49.44 seconds, push Brown to a sub-50 pace? Will Butler’s undefeated regular season in the 400 continue? 

This is a great matchup to watch.

400 hurdles — Rachel Glenn (Arkansas) vs. Akala Garrett (Texas)

Three women have run sub-54 seconds in the 400 hurdles this season. Rachel Glenn and Akala Garrett are two of the three that are in the SEC. We got to see the sub-54-second race with all three women running at the Tom Jones Invitational.

Glenn outraced Garrett by 0.25 seconds in Gainesville, but anything could happen in Lexington when the two meet again.

THREES A CHARM: Ranking the top 10 sprint-distance-field trios in NCAA track and field

High jump — Rachel Glenn (Arkansas) vs. Elena Kulichenko (Georgia)

Glenn vs. Kulichenko. We’ve seen this battle multiple times on the NCAA championship stage, and we’ll get to see it again at the SEC Championships. When these two compete, the bar just goes higher and higher.

Triple jump — Agur Dwol (Oklahoma) vs. Winny Bii (Texas A&M)

Two of the top triple jumpers in the country will go head-to-head for an SEC title. Agur Dwol is coming off an indoor NCAA title and is the only woman to surpass 14 meters during the outdoor season at 14.01m. Winny Bii matched Dwol’s 14.01 meters during the indoor season.

That’s two women capable of jumping beyond 14 meters, but only one conference title for the taking. 

AWARDS: The 2025 Bowerman Watch List for men’s and women’s NCAA track and field

Heptathlon — Sofia Iakushina (Texas A&M) vs. Pippi Lotta Enok (Oklahoma)

The top two heptathletes entering May are from the SEC and their names are Sofia Iakushina and Pippi Lotta Enok. Yet, the two heptathletes are entering the SEC championships with different perspectives. Iakushina is a freshman competing in her first outdoor SEC championships, while Enok is a former NCAA champion, winning the 2023 heptathlon title. 

It’s a classic tale of the rookie vs. the vet at the SEC Championship.



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University of California, Los Angeles, Athletics

LOS ANGELES – UCLA Athletics honored its top scholar-athletes on Monday, May 19 at the annual UCLA Scholar-Athlete Banquet, held at Covel Commons. Swimmer Ana Jih-Schiff and tennis player Alexander Hoogmartens were recognized as Scholar-Athletes of the Year after compiling the highest cumulative GPAs among female and male graduating seniors, respectively.  2024-25 Scholar-Athlete Award Winners […]

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LOS ANGELES – UCLA Athletics honored its top scholar-athletes on Monday, May 19 at the annual UCLA Scholar-Athlete Banquet, held at Covel Commons. Swimmer Ana Jih-Schiff and tennis player Alexander Hoogmartens were recognized as Scholar-Athletes of the Year after compiling the highest cumulative GPAs among female and male graduating seniors, respectively. 

2024-25 Scholar-Athlete Award Winners

Scholar-Athlete of the Year

Awarded to the female and male graduating student-athletes with the highest cumulative GPA.

Ana Jih-Schiff, Women’s Swimming & Diving (3.944, Psychology)

Alexander Hoogmartens, Men’s Tennis (3.967, Economics)

Rose Gilbert Courage and Character Award

Given in honor of Maggie Gilbert, this award recognizes the student-athletes who have shown tremendous growth throughout their academic career at UCLA. These recipients have demonstrated relentless perseverance and commitment to their academic endeavors, and their hard work and determination have allowed them to excel in the classroom.

Emma Malabuyo, Gymnastics

Ido David, Men’s Volleyball

Maggie Gilbert Academic Achievement Award

Awarded to student-athletes who have shown tremendous growth throughout their academic career and demonstrated relentless perseverance and commitment to their academic endeavors.

Carly Hendrickson, Women’s Volleyball

Lazar Stefanovic, Men’s Basketball

Bruin Leadership Award

Through their leadership skills and initiative, the recipients of the Bruin Leadership Award are student-athletes who have gone above and beyond the call of duty to make a significant impact on the UCLA student-athlete experience. They have demonstrated outstanding services to others and within the community.

Anika Roche, Rowing

Oluwafunto Akinshilo, Football

OAE Success Award

This award is a tribute to Rose Gilbert, recognizing her many contributions to the lives of UCLA student-athletes. As a life-long educator, Rose was especially committed to assisting students who were confronted with significant obstacles outside the classroom. The recipients of this award met their challenge with courage, strength, and resiliency and were able to successfully overcome challenges in their personal lives while still excelling academically.

Sydney Johnson, Women’s Track & Field

Trey Doten, Men’s Water Polo

UCLA All-Academic Team

The UCLA All-Academic Team is comprised of the person from each team with the highest cumulative GPA.

Kaena Kiakona, Baseball

Lazar Stafanovic, Men’s Basketball

Amanda Muse, Women’s Basketball

Jessie Smith, Beach Volleyball

Patrick Curulla, Men’s Cross Country

Annika Salz, Women’s Cross Country

Sam Yoon, Football

Matthew Yamin, Men’s Golf

Tiffany Le, Women’s Golf

Madisyn Anyimi, Gymnastics

Jacqueline Vargas, Rowing

Sam Scott, Men’s Soccer 

Lily Boyden, Women’s Soccer 

Savannah Pola, Softball

Elena Dry, Women’s Swimming & Diving

Alexander Hoogmartens, Men’s Tennis

Mia Jovic, Women’s Tennis

Shawn Toney, Men’s Track & Field

Audrey Allen, Women’s Track & Field

Thiago Zamprogno, Men’s Volleyball 

Brooklyn Briscoe, Women’s Volleyball

Max Matthews, Men’s Water Polo

Sienna Green, Women’s Water Polo

Athletic Director’s Academic Excellence Award

For the student athletes with outstanding academic achievements, maintaining their status on the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll every quarter attended at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Audrey Allen, Women’s Cross Country

Matthew Aziz, Men’s Volleyball

Chase Barry, Football

Lily Boyden, Women’s Soccer

Caroline Canales, Women’s Golf

Jada Cecil, Softball

Devin Delgado, Football 

Angela Devine, Rowing

Riley Dix, Women’s Swimming & Diving

Morgan Hawes, Women’s Swimming & Diving

Alexander Hoogmartens, Men’s Tennis

Reagan Hope, Beach Volleyball

Ana Jih-Schiff, Women’s Swimming & Diving

Sydney Johnson, Women’s Track & Field

Mia Kane, Women’s Cross Country 

Tiffany Le, Women’s Golf

Cheridyn Leverette, Women’s Volleyball

Kathryn Lundh, Women’s Swimming & Diving

Paige MacEachern, Women’s Swimming & Diving

Emma Malabuyo, Gymnastics

Sophia Manos, Rowing

Peyton Marcisz, Women’s Soccer

Emma Matous, Women’s Swimming & Diving

Katie McCarthy, Women’s Volleyball

Tzipporah Moehringer, Rowing

Ella O’Neil, Rowing

Jack Pedersen, Football

Molly Renner, Women’s Water Polo

Giacomo Revelli, Men’s Tennis 

Lazar Stafanovic, Men’s Basketball

Ashley Stenstrom, Women’s Swimming & Diving 

Nicole Struss, Women’s Water Polo

Michael Sullivan, Football

Sonia Virk, Women’s Track & Field

Elise Wagle, Women’s Tennis

 



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WADA Revokes Accreditation For Africa’s Only Testing Lab

The World Anti-Doping Association (WADA) has revoked accreditation of The Bloemfontein Laboratory, Africa’s only accredited sports anti-doping lab. Located in the South African province of Free State, The Bloemfontein Laboratory was placed under analytical testing restriction in 2023 due to the “Gas Chromatography / Combustion / Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS) analytical method.” In March […]

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The World Anti-Doping Association (WADA) has revoked accreditation of The Bloemfontein Laboratory, Africa’s only accredited sports anti-doping lab.

Located in the South African province of Free State, The Bloemfontein Laboratory was placed under analytical testing restriction in 2023 due to the “Gas Chromatography / Combustion / Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS) analytical method.”

In March 2024, WADA suspended the lab for six months, eventually extending the suspension to a year. The organization cited several non-conformities, including technical documents along with the analytical testing restriction.

Now, the lab has no accreditation by WADA or any of its affiliates, effectively ending its ability to work in sports. WADA said that Bloemfontein did not “satisfactorily address” the non-conformities that led to the suspension.

The Bloemfontein Lab did not attempt to challenge the revocation, which was recommended by WADA’s Laboratory Expert Group and approved by its Executive Committee. If it wishes to work in sports in the future, the organization must re-apply for accreditation as a new laboratory.

According to ESPN, transporting athlete samples long distances increases the likelihood that the sample will degrade and therefore be unfit for testing. With no options on the continent, athlete samples in Africa can be sent to labs in Spain, Portugal, Turkey, India, or Qatar.





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Kuszynski, Zuellig Earn CSC Academic All-District Honors

Story Links Simon Kuszynski and Andrin Zuellig from the Portland State men’s tennis team earned Academic All-District honors from College Sports Communicators (CSC). Kuszynski received the award for the second consecutive year, while Zuellig was named an All-District honoree for the first time in his career. To be eligible for nomination, student-athletes […]

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Simon Kuszynski and Andrin Zuellig from the Portland State men’s tennis team earned Academic All-District honors from College Sports Communicators (CSC). Kuszynski received the award for the second consecutive year, while Zuellig was named an All-District honoree for the first time in his career.

To be eligible for nomination, student-athletes must be at least sophomores both academically and athletically, must have competed in at least 70 percent of their team’s matches during the 2025 dual season, and must hold a cumulative GPA of 3.50 or higher.

A junior from Markham, Ontario, Kuszynski qualified for the honor with an impressive 3.96 cumulative GPA as a finance major. He played in all 18 matches for the Vikings this season, primarily competing at No. 6 singles and No. 1 and 2 doubles. Kuszynski finished his junior campaign with a team-high eight singles wins, along with three doubles victories.

 

Zuellig, a senior from Baar, Switzerland, earned the honor as a Data Science major with a 3.63 cumulative GPA. He appeared in all 18 matches for the Vikings during the 2025 dual season, competing at all three doubles positions and primarily at the No. 4 and No. 5 singles spots, finishing the season with a total of six wins across singles and doubles.

FULL LIST OF 2025 MEN’S TENNIS ACADEMIC ALL-DISTRICT HONOREES

 



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Dos Pueblos High School mourns crash victims

The grief at Dos Pueblos High School is quiet, but undeniable. Three students — 18-year-old Jake Curtis, 17-year-old Michael Ochsner, and 15-year-old Alexander Wood — were killed late Sunday night in a multi-vehicle crash on Highway 1, south of Lompoc. All three were beloved by classmates, active in school athletics, and, just hours before the […]

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The grief at Dos Pueblos High School is quiet, but undeniable.

Three students — 18-year-old Jake Curtis, 17-year-old Michael Ochsner, and 15-year-old Alexander Wood — were killed late Sunday night in a multi-vehicle crash on Highway 1, south of Lompoc.

All three were beloved by classmates, active in school athletics, and, just hours before the crash, had completed a junior lifeguard training at Jalama Beach.

The California Highway Patrol says the cause of the crash is still under investigation. But in the classrooms and hallways of Dos Pueblos High School, the weight of the loss is felt.

“It’s just really tragic,” said Seth Phillips, a senior who shared classes with Curtis. “He was always smiling — like a gleam of bright light in everyone’s life. I feel like there should be a celebration of life for him. He definitely had an impact on every senior, at least by name or face.”

Jake Curtis was a senior, just weeks away from graduation. His classmates are now grappling with the absence of a friend who should have been walking across the graduation stage with them.

“I think we should remember him at graduation,” said senior Holden Dicogno, who knew both Curtis and Ochsner. “Keep Jake a part of it, see him as someone who made it.”

Curtis was a member of the varsity swim team. Ochsner ran junior varsity track and cross country. Wood played junior varsity water polo. All three also participated in the county’s junior lifeguard program — a testament to their athleticism, discipline, and love for the water.

“He was a solid guy,” Dicogno said. “Michael was a great [track] teammate, always supportive. Jake, always happy. Always had a smile.”

Lucas Nora, another senior, says the loss is being felt deeply across multiple grade levels.

“It really feels like there’s a hole. Everyone’s just having a hard time trying to process that this really happened,” Nora said. “It’s not just sadness. It’s seeing your friends be that sad, too. It’s everywhere right now.”

The Santa Barbara Unified School District acted quickly, opening a compassion center on campus with support from the county’s Rapid Response Network. Grief counselors were made available to students and staff beginning Monday morning.

“When I went to visit the campus in the afternoon, it was very quiet,” said Superintendent Hilda Maldonado. “That’s not typical for a high school. The feeling was somber all around.”

Maldonado says all three students were deeply involved in the school community, and that plans are already underway to ensure Curtis is remembered at graduation.

“The school has received an outpouring of support from neighboring districts and community members,” Maldonado added. “It just speaks to the power of this community. How we come together in moments of deep tragedy.”

As the school continues final exams and graduation preparations, friends of the victims say the best way to honor them is to live more like they did: joyfully, openly, and kindly.

“Spend time with those who are important to you,” Nora said. “There’s no reason to not show love. Life’s too short for anything else.”





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Beukers, Perkins Earn CSC Academic All-District Honors

Story Links The Portland State women’s tennis team placed two student-athletes on the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District Team. Senior Nika Beukers earned the honor for the third consecutive year, while sophomore Scarlett Perkins received the recognition for the first time in her career. To be eligible for nomination, student-athletes must […]

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The Portland State women’s tennis team placed two student-athletes on the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District Team. Senior Nika Beukers earned the honor for the third consecutive year, while sophomore Scarlett Perkins received the recognition for the first time in her career.

To be eligible for nomination, student-athletes must be at least sophomores both academically and athletically, must have competed in at least 70 percent of their team’s matches during the 2025 dual season, and must hold a cumulative GPA of 3.50 or higher.

Perkins, a sophomore marketing major from Marlow, England, earned CSC All-District honors in her first year of eligibility for the award. She holds a 3.94 cumulative GPA and recorded four wins in both singles and doubles play for the Vikings this season. 

Beukers, a senior from Den Bosch, Netherlands, has excelled both on and off the court throughout her four-year career with the Vikings. A marketing major, she carries an impressive 3.96 cumulative GPA. During her senior season in 2025, she appeared in all 16 matches, competing at the No. 1 spot in both singles and doubles. An Honorable Mention All-Big Sky selection in doubles, she recorded six singles victories and a team-leading six wins in doubles play.

FULL LIST OF 2025 WOMEN’S TENNIS ACADEMIC ALL-DISTRICT HONOREES

 



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JSerra hires Ethan Damato, a 9-time CIF champion coach, for girls water polo – Orange County Register

Support our high school sports coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe now JSerra has hired former Laguna Beach water polo coach Ethan Damato, a nine-time CIF-SS champion, as its girls water polo coach, JSerra principal Eric Stroupe said Tuesday. “Yes, we have hired Ethan,” Stroupe stated in an email. Damato didn’t immediately return a message […]

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JSerra has hired former Laguna Beach water polo coach Ethan Damato, a nine-time CIF-SS champion, as its girls water polo coach, JSerra principal Eric Stroupe said Tuesday.

“Yes, we have hired Ethan,” Stroupe stated in an email.

Damato didn’t immediately return a message seeking comment.

The school announced the hiring in an email to “Girls water polo parents” on Tuesday morning.

Damato resigned as Laguna Beach’s girls coach following the 2021-22 season and transitioned to a newly-created position as the head coach of USA Water Polo’s girls Olympic Development Program Academy.

At Laguna Beach, Damato helped build a powerhouse girls program that captured six CIF-SS championships, including five in Division 1.

Laguna Beach’s girls also won two CIF Southern California Regional titles and 18 in-season tournaments under Damato.

His resume with the Laguna Beach girls includes a 361-56 record,13 league titles in his 14 seasons and mentoring future Olympic gold medalists Annika Dries and sisters Aria and Makenzie Fischer.

Damato guided Laguna Beach’s boys to three section titles.

At JSerra, he takes the reins of a program that reached the CIF-SS Division 1 quarterfinals this past season and finished as the Division 1 runner-up in 2024.

JSerra captured the CIF-SS Division 3 crown in 2023 and was the Division 5 runner-up in 2022.

The Lions compete in the Trinity League with CIF-SS Open Division contenders Orange Lutheran and Mater Dei.

On paper, JSerra could return first-team all-league selections Sloane Paulson, Maddie Weston and Kamryn McCord (Arizona State commit). All three are juniors.

The Lions also could return second-team all-league selections Sayre Duran and Kylin Barnes.

Please send water polo news to Dan Albano at dalbano@scng.com



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