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High school athletes of the week: June 4, 2025

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The Post-Dispatch Athletes of the Week is compiled by Chris Gove based off stats reported to STLhighschoolsports.com. Please send nominations to cgove@stltoday.com by noon each Monday.







Riley Mathews, Columbia soccer

Riley Mathews, Columbia soccer

The Eagles are back in the Class 1A state tournament for the first time since they won the title in 2019, and Mathews has been a driving reason why. A senior midfielder who was recruited as a center back by Indiana State University, Mathews has helped Columbia (23-2-3) go unbeaten in its last 17. She scored one goal in a 6-1 win over Quincy Notre Dame in the Class 1A Virden North Mac Super-Sectional, bringing her season totals to 36 goals and 18 assists for 90 points, which ranks near the top of the area leaderboard. The Eagles face Williamsville at 5:30 p.m. Thursday in a state semifinal at North Central College in Naperville.

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Danny McAuliffe, SLUH

Danny McAuliffe, SLUH water polo

A senior defender, McAuliffe helped lead the Junior Billikens to their 24th Missouri Water Polo district title with an 11-4 victory against De Smet. McAuliffe scored one goal and provided four assists in the title game. Two days earlier in a 16-5 win over Parkway Central in the district semifinals, McAuliffe had a career-best performance of 14 points with five goals and four assists. For the season, he ranked among area leaders with 130 points on 44 goals and 42 assists. McAuliffe was named MWP’s Blue Conference player of the year. He also was defensive player of the year and first team all-district.







Robby Preckel, Lafayette

Robby Preckel, Lafayette track and field

A senior multi-sport athlete, Preckel earned medals in all three throwing events in Missouri’s Class 5 state meet. He is only the second athlete to earn all-state status in all three throwing events since javelin was added to the Missouri state meet in 2017. Pattonville’s Dakari Streeter was the first in 2018. Preckel finished fourth in javelin, sixth in shot put and eighth in discus; the top eight finishers at state track and field earn medals and all-state status. Signed with Northwestern for football, Preckel was conference, district and sectional champion in javelin and also was fourth in event at state last year.







Jordan Schneider, Parkway South

Jordan Schneider, Parkway South baseball

The Patriots are in the state semifinals for the second time ever and first time since 1999, and Schneider played a big part in getting them in the final four with a leading role in a quarterfinal series sweep at Jackson. A junior center fielder and pitcher, Schneider got the win on the mound in South’s 3-1 victory in Game 1, striking out six and scattering three hits in six innings to pick up the win. In a clinching 2-1 win in Game 2, he was 2 for 4 at the plate and drove in both runs. For the season he is hitting .429 with 31 RBI and 34 runs scored and is 4-2 pitching with 33 strikeouts. South plays Blue Springs South at 4 p.m. Friday in a Class 6 semifinal at Ozark Mountain Sports Complex.







Kyndall Spain, Cardinal Ritter

Kyndall Spain, Cardinal Ritter track and field

A senior who has signed with the University of South Carolina, Spain closed her high school career by sweeping Missouri’s Class 5 state titles in the 100- and 300-meter hurdles for the second successive season, including a third consecutive win in the 300s. Spain set a Class 5 state meet record of 13.37 seconds in the 100 hurdles, and she set an all-classes state meet record of 40.80 seconds in the 300 hurdles. The 300 hurdles record was set in the Class 4 race after standing since 2014, but Spain immediately beat the new mark by .75 of a second. Both performances rank near the top in the nation this season.







Justin Terhaar, Father McGivney

Justin Terhaar, Father McGivney baseball

A senior third baseman who has signed with UMSL, Terhaar has helped the Griffins reach the Class 1A state tournament for the second time in program history and first time since 2021. Terhaar ranks near the top of the area leaderboard in many categories, including his .509 batting average with 48 RBI, 55 runs scored, 36 stolen bases and 24 walks. He was 1 for 2 with two RBI and two walks in a 12-2 victory against Hardin Calhoun in the sectional title game after going 2 for 4 with two RBI and two stolen bases in a 17-2 win over Christ for Rock in the sectional semifinals. Father McGivney plays Pawnee at 1 p.m. Friday in the 1A state semifinals at the University of Illinois.







Ella Vaughn, Fort Zumwalt South

Ella Vaughn, Fort Zumwalt South soccer

A freshman defensive midfielder, Vaughn is heading to her second state semifinal in four months. Vaughn has helped the Bulldogs (17-5-1) record seven shutouts in a row heading into their fifth consecutive Class 3 state semifinal appearance. Last week, that included a 3-0 win at Fort Zumwalt East in a district final, then a 4-0 victory at John Burroughs in a state quarterfinal. A first team all-GAC Central selection, Vaughn has seven goals, five assists and three game-winning goals this season. In March, she helped lead Zumwalt South’s girls basketball team finish a program-best third in the Class 5 state tournament.



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Ufodiama Sets Program Record at Rod McCravy Memorial

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LOUISVILLE, Kentucky – East Carolina opened the indoor season with several strong performances at the Rod McCravy Memorial Meet, hosted by the University of Kentucky at the Norton Healthcare Sports & Learning Center, highlighted by a program-record run from Kelly Ufodiama and multiple finals appearances across the two-day competition.

Ufodiama delivered the standout performance of the meet for the Pirates, setting a new ECU program record in the women’s 60-meter dash semifinals with a time of 7.14. The mark further cemented her place atop the record book, as she now holds the top eight performances in program history in the event.  

On the men’s side, East Carolina made a strong statement in the sprints. Tyson Tippett finished runner-up in the men’s 60-meter dash finals, clocking 6.85, while Jace Coleman added a fourth-place finish at 6.89 to give the Pirates two top-four finishes in one of the meet’s deepest events. 

The Pirates also found success in the hurdles, where Kailey Elliott advanced through the rounds to place fourth in the women’s 60-meter hurdles finals with a time of 8.27. Her performance marked one of ECU’s top technical-event finishes of the weekend. 

Abrielle Schweitzer continued her strong indoor campaign with a third-place finish in the women’s mile, crossing the line in 4:52.34. On the men’s side, Alex Sawyer placed ninth in the mile with a time of 4:14.67, while Elliott Kleckner followed closely in 11th at 4:21.33. 

Additional solid efforts came in the 300 meters, where Brianna Clayton finished 13th in the women’s race at 38.70, and in the men’s 600 meters, where Jordan Good narrowly missed the podium with a fourth-place finish in 1:18.34. 

In the field events, Shakiel Dacres led the way for East Carolina with a sixth-place finish in the men’s shot put with 16.66m. Dacres’ performance marked the Pirates’ top result in the throws. 

East Carolina finished strong over the weekend and will look to carry their victories toward the Dick Taylor Challenge, hosted by North Carolina starting January 16. 



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Track & Field Wins Six Events, Topples School Record in Excellent Close to Rod McCravy Memorial – Ole Miss Athletics

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Ole Miss men’s and women’s track & field wrapped their first full meet of the season in superb fashion, winning six event titles and receiving several impressive performances – including a school record – to close out Kentucky’s Rod McCravy Memorial on Saturday.
 
All-American sophomore Jordan Urrutia, fresh off a strong freshman campaign, set right to work on his second season with the Rebels. Urrutia clocked the fastest proper 300-meter race in Ole Miss history (trailing only a converted 300-yard time on an oversized track by Olympian Tony Dees in 1984), finishing second overall in a blistering 33.06 seconds. That time dropped nearly three-quarters of a second off his freshman best 33.71, and trailed only a 32.89 by Indiana’s Trelee Banks-Rose.
 
Fellow sophomore Wesley Todd clocked a PR of his own, finishing 10th at 34.07.
 
The duo were not done there, though, as Ole Miss would close the day with an excellent opening 4×400-meter relay for the 2026 season. The quartet of senior Joshua Knox, Todd, senior Cade Flatt and Urrutia passed the stick in 3:08.85 – which ranks fourth-best in Ole Miss history indoors and is the fastest by any Rebel relay indoors since the 2004 record of 3:06.83.
 
Ole Miss was particularly excellent on the back half, with Flatt dropping a 46.93 third leg and then Urrutia blazing a 45.45 anchor leg.
 
The success on the track did not stop there for the Rebels. Earlier in the day, Patchnalie Compere ran the fastest time ever by an Ole Miss freshman in the women’s 300-meter dash, winning the event overall at an eye-opening 37.40. Olympian and three-time NCAA Champion McKenzie Long set the Ole Miss record in the event at 37.38 in 2023 on Vanderbilt’s oversized track.
 
Senior Cassie Williamson, in her final year of competition this indoor season, took the crown in the women’s 800-meter at an Ole Miss career-best 2:08.51 – which ranks her seventh in school history indoors. Freshman Owen Kelley rounded out the track wins for Ole Miss with a victory in the 3K, clocking in at 8:16.11 in his collegiate debut.
 
Other notable runs on the track included a runner-up finish by senior Chase Rose in the 800-meter (1:49.56), a third-place finish and PR by Samuel Ferguson in the 3K (8:21.18), and a third-place 3K finish by freshman Leah Penick in her collegiate debut (9:45.89).
 
In the field, reigning NCAA Indoor shot put champion Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan began his title defense in earnest. Robinson-O’Hagan – a member of the preseason watch list for The Bowerman, college track & field’s version of the Heisman Trophy – won on a sixth-round blast of 20.76m/68-01.50 for his first win of the season, the best mark by an collegiate shot putter this early into the season (Jan. 10) in available records since at least 2008.
 
Freshman Ashton Hearn began his Ole Miss career with an impressive heave of his own, finishing third at 17.84m/58-06.50 – already good for No. 6 in school history indoors.
 
In the women’s edition, All-American junior Akaoma Odeluga had her best-ever season opening performance as well, winning on a blast of 17.92m/58-09.50. Freshman Natalie Brown also made the final, finishing ninth at 13.71m/44-11.75 in her first college shot put competition.
 
In the men’s triple jump, two key portal additions for the Rebels – juniors Sterling Scott (Missouri) and Kyle Johnson (UConn) – had great opening performances to their Ole Miss careers. Scott, a three-time NCAA qualifier with the Tigers, took runner-up honors at 15.97m/52-04.75 – already making him the sixth-best triple jumper in Ole Miss history indoors. Johnson was fourth at 15.67m/51-5, good for No. 12 in the Rebel record books.
 
Fellow junior Mikoy Holmes made the final as well, finishing eighth at a career-best leap of 14.81m/48-07.25.
 
Ole Miss will next head to Nashville for the Vanderbilt Invitational, which is set to run Jan. 16-17.
 
REBELS IN DAY TWO COMPETITION
 
Women’s 300-Meter Dash
1. Patchnalie Compere – 37.40 – Collegiate Debut, Ole Miss Freshman Record
51. Royannah Farmer – 41.04 – Division I Debut, First Career 300
 
Men’s 300-Meter Dash
2. Jordan Urrutia – 33.06 – PR, Ole Miss Proper 300-Meter Record
10. Wesley Todd – 34.07 – PR
 
Women’s 800-Meter
1. Cassie Williamson – 2:08.51 – Ole Miss Best, No. 7 Ole Miss History Indoors
 
Men’s 800-Meter
2. Chase Rose – 1:49.56
DNF Cade Flatt
 
Men’s Mile
2. John Shoemaker – 4:10.39 – Collegiate Debut
 
Women’s 3K
3. Leah Penick – 9:45.89 – Collegiate Debut
6. Hannah Doyle – 9:55.25 – Collegiate Debut
10. Brooke Preputnick – 10:09.99 – PR
11. Madison Archdale – 10:10.22 – Collegiate Debut
12. Addy Mitchell – 10:11.94 – Collegiate Debut
 
Men’s 3K
1. Owen Kelley – 8:16.11 – Collegiate Debut
3. Samuel Ferguson – 8:21.18 – PR
 
Men’s 4×400-Meter Relay
1. A Relay: Joshua Knox, Wesley Todd, Cade Flatt, Jordan Urrutia – 3:08.85 – No. 4 Ole Miss History Indoors
11. B Relay: Tarique Wright, Dekell Minor, Jonathan Stock, Chase Rose – 3:18.47
 
Men’s Pole Vault
5. Logan Kelley – 5.00m/16-04.75
 
Women’s Triple Jump
10. Indya Dotson – 11.94m/39-02.25 – PR, No. 15 Ole Miss History Indoors
11. Bayli Major – 11.83m/38-09.75 – Collegiate Debut
FOUL Madison Martinez
 
Men’s Triple Jump
2. Sterling Scott – 15.97m/52-04.75 – Ole Miss Debut, No. 6 Ole Miss History Indoors
4. Kyle Johnson – 15.67m/51-5 – Ole Miss Debut, No. 12 Ole Miss History Indoors
8. Mikoy Holmes – 14.81m/48-07.25 – PR
11. Solomon Finley – 13.96m/45-09.75 – Ole Miss Debut
 
Women’s Shot Put
1. Akaoma Odeluga – 17.92m/58-09.50
9. Natalie Brown – 13.71m/44-11.75 – Collegiate Debut, No. 15 Ole Miss History Indoors
12. Temidayo Owoyemi – 13.27m/43-06.50 – Collegiate Debut
 
Men’s Shot Put
1. Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan – 20.76m/68-01.50
3. Ashton Hearn – 17.84m/58-06.50 – Collegiate Debut, No. 6 Ole Miss History Indoors
26. Caughran Fowler – 10.91m/35-09.50
28. William Numnum – 10.56m/34-07.75 – Collegiate Debut
 
—–
 
REBELS IN DAY ONE COMPETITION
 
Men’s 60-Meter Dash – Prelims
7. Tarique Wright – 6.79q – PR, T-No. 11 Ole Miss History
 
Men’s 60-Meter Dash – Semifinals
11. Tarique Wright – 6.79 – Ties PR
 
Women’s 200-Meter Dash
27. Lizzie Hatton – 25.22 – Indoor PR
 
Women’s 400-Meter Dash
13. Patchnalie Compere – 59.17 – Collegiate Debut
 
Men’s 600-Meter
6. Jonathan Stock – 1:19.51 – PR
 
Men’s 1000-Meter
2. Stone Smith – 2:28.65 – Event Debut
 
Women’s 60-Meter Hurdles – Prelims
35. Bayli Major – 8.90 – Collegiate Debut
40. Carmela Coulter – 9.15 – Collegiate Debut
44. Nyajah Gordon – 9.38
 
Men’s 60-Meter Hurdles – Prelims
12. Caughran Fowler – 8.46q – PR
17. William Numnum – 8.80q – Collegiate Debut
 
Men’s 60-Meter Hurdles – Semifinals
12. William Numnum – 8.66 – PR
17. Caughran Fowler – 8.67
 
Women’s High Jump
NH Carmela Coulter
 
Men’s High Jump
1. Arvesta Troupe – 2.23m/7-03.75 – Indoor PR, No. 3 Ole Miss History Indoor
 
Women’s Pole Vault
5. Lily Beattie – 4.05m/13-03.50
T6. Mary Cate Doughty – 3.90m/12-09.50
11. Katie McFarland – 3.75m/12-03.50
13. Aly Francolini – 3.75m/12-03.50
T14. Rachel Homoly – 3.75m/12-03.50 – Ole Miss Debut, No. 15 Ole Miss History Indoors
NH Katelyn Hulsey
 
Women’s Long Jump
10. Indya Dotson – 5.73m/18-09.75
25. Nyajah Gordon – 5.19m/17-00.50
FOUL Lizzie Hatton
 
Women’s Weight Throw
1. Akaoma Odeluga – 22.95m/75-03.50 – 5-foot PR, No. 5 Ole Miss History
2. Skylar Soli – 22.21m/72-10.50 – PR, No. 6 Ole Miss History
4. Nyah Edwards – 20.50m/67-03.25 – Ole Miss Debut, 4-foot PR, No. 9 Ole Miss History
9. Natalie Brown – 18.87m/61-11 – Collegiate Debut, No. 13 Ole Miss History
13. Naomi Woolfolk – 17.90m/58-08.75 – PR, No. 15 Ole Miss History
16. Temidayo Owoyemi – 16.66m/54-8 – Collegiate Debut
 
Men’s Weight Throw
2. Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan – 23.78m/78-00.25 – Top Collegiate Finisher
3. Bryson Smith – 22.11m/72-05.50 – PR, No. 2 Ole Miss History
4. Mason Hickel – 21.27m/69-09.50
 



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Streit and Godfred Shine at Minnesota Open

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MINNEAPOLIS – The University of Minnesota track and field team secured 16 event wins at the Minnesota Open on Saturday to kick off the 2026 calendar at the University Fieldhouse. The Maroon and Gold were led by performances from Hadley Streit in the weight throw and Charles Godfred in the 60m against the likes of Northern Iowa, Milwaukee and Augsburg. 

Streit secured her first lifetime best in the weight throw since February of 2025 (Gopher Classic) to finish second on Saturday behind only teammate Anthonett Nabwe (22.82m | 74-10 1/2). Streit, a 2025 weight throw First Team All-American, moved up from No. 5 all-time at Minnesota to No. 4 with the performance and now is No. 3 in the NCAA this season. 

On the men’s side it was Godfred who captured the attention of the crowd with his two runs in the 60m. The two-time Big Ten outdoor long jump champion, running unattached, posted lifetime bests of 6.65 and 6.62 to secure the event win in Minneapolis. Godfred’s previous lifetime best in the event was 6.70 (2024 M City Classic) and would rank the Nigerian inside the top three nationally among men’s NCAA sprinters in 2026. 

The other seven event wins for the in-uniform Gophers on Saturday included: Victory Godah (60m – 7.58), LauBenra Ben (200m – 25.09), Zeal Kuku (400m – 55.68), Kitania Headley (800m – 2:13.00), Charlotte Lange (3000m – 9:54.82), Sofia Condon (Pole Vault – 4.01m) and Nabwe (Shot Put – 16.11m). 

Eight other Minnesota victories on Saturday came from unattached student-athletes. Jordan Dunigan capped the day off with a lifetime best in the weight throw at 20.52m (67-4) while teammates Precious Opinion (Triple Jump – 15.25m), Brooke Moore (Triple Jump – 12.49m) and Waukeem Walters (Long Jump – 7.27m) also picked up wins in field events at the Minnesota Open. On the track Minnesota’s unattached runners won three other events, which included: Joseph Manser (400m – 48.84), Ramy Ayoub (600m – 1:18.37) and Nontokozo Ncube (600m – 1:30.55). 

The ‘U’ will head out to Lincoln, Neb., for the Graduate Classic, the first road meet of 2026, from January 16-17. Minnesota will not return home until January 30, at the Jack Johnson Classic. 

For more information on the Gophers, continue to check back with GopherSports.com. Keep up with the University of Minnesota cross country and track and field team on X.com (Twitter) and Instagram (@GopherCCTF) and on Facebook, so you do not miss any content during the season. 



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Men’s Volleyball Continues Homestand Against Wildcats

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MALIBU, Calif. –  The Pepperdine men’s volleyball team (1-0) plays the second match of the weekend in Firestone Fieldhouse against the Daemen Wildcats (0-1) Sunday afternoon.
 
LAST TIME OUT
•Pepperdine opened the 2026 campaign with a three-set sweep over St. Thomas Aquinas Friday night in Malibu.
• The Waves are coming off an incredible season with the farthest run in the NCAA tournament since 2019, losing to eventual National Champion Long Beach State in the semi-finals.
• Pepperdine finished 4th in the MPSF, making a run in the conference tournament hosted in Malibu, beating higher-seeded USC and UCLA to win the whole thing.
 
 
GAME NOTES
• This season marks the 56th and final season with Firestone Fieldhouse as the home for Pepperdine Men’s Volleyball
• Pepperdine will move into the Mountain at Mullin Park for the 2026-27 season.
• The Mountain is a new 3,600-seat arena that will give Pepperdine a state-of-the-art competition venue, complete with a 360-degree high-definition scoreboard, VIP and hospitality spaces, and custom team locker rooms.
• Owning 5 NCAA titles and 18 MPSF titles, with the most recent being earned last year, the Waves are no stranger to what it takes to put together a championship-level team.
• With one of the toughest schedules in the NCAA, Pepperdine is setting the season up for success with a NCAA quarterfinal rematch against Loyola Chicago, a semifinal rematch with Long Beach State and a trip to the islands, taking on No. 2 Hawai’i in March.
• Opening No. 4 in the AVCA preseason poll, the Waves are only behind LBSU, Hawai’i, and conference-foe UCLA.
Ryan Barnett, James Eadie, Cole Hartke, and Jacob Reilly all return as All-Americans for the Waves.
• Barnett, Hartke, and Reilly all played on some level of the national team this summer.
Ryan Barnett earned a silver medal with the U23 team at the Pan American Cup while also playing on the senior USA team with Jacob Reilly in the Pan American Cup.
Cole Hartke earned a bronze in the FIVB World Championship with the U21 team, the farthest the USA has ever gotten in the tournament.
• Redshirting last season, Grant Lamoureux is a player to keep an eye out for on this star-studded roster.
• Named the Junior Male Indoor Athlete of the Year this past year, the redshirt freshman brings plenty of experience regardless of never logging collegiate minutes.
• This summer, Lamoureux was a captain of the U19 World Championship squad with team USA where he led the team in kills nearly every time out.
• Redshirt Ford Harman transferred into Pepperdine from national-champion Long Beach State.
• This summer, Harman earned a Silver medal at the 2025 Men’s Beach Collegiate Challenge for team USA.
• Harman is originally from Santa Barbara, playing at Santa Barbara HS before college.
• Outside of the United States, the Waves represent three other countries in Cuba, Serbia, and Switzerland.
Andrej Polomac, a transfer from Purdue Fort-Wayne, is the sole Serbian on the squad, brings elite experience as a setter with an average of just under 9 aces per set last season.
• The Waves add even more international experience next year with two of the three commits coming from overseas, bringing another Serbian to Malibu as well as a middle blocker from the Czech Republic.
• In his fourth year at the helm, Winder is coming off his most successful season last year with a run to the final four in the NCAA tournament.
• Last season, Winder led the Waves to an MPSF title, the program’s first since 2019.  
• As the ninth coach at the helm, Winder is an alum of the program himself, earning a National Title with Pepperdine in 2005.
 
SERIES HISTORY WITH DAEMEN
• In two matches against the Wildcats, Pepperdine holds the 2-0 advantage.
• Two seasons ago, in the most recent meeting between the squads, Pepperdine took the 3-0 victory in Firestone Fieldhouse.
• The only other matchup came in 2020 on the road, where the Waves swept them 3-0.
 
SCOUTING THE WILDCATS
• Daemen dropped the opening match of the 2026 season against No. 10 UC Irvine 3-1.
• Last season, the Wildcats went 15-13, including 4-4 in conference play.
• The Wildcats are back-to-back Northeast Conference champions, winning their tournament as the three seed last season.
• Daemen has four All-conference players returning in Maverick O’Neill, Billy Wieberg, Kyle Zelasko, and Jariel Giraud
 
First serve is scheduled for 3 p.m. The game can be streamed on B1G+ (subscription required) with live stats available on pepperdinewaves.com
 
ABOUT PEPPERDINE MEN’S VOLLEYBALL
Pepperdine men’s volleyball boasts one of the richest histories in collegiate volleyball, with five NCAA National Championships. Four of those championships came under the direction of Hall of Fame coach Marv Dunphy who totaled 612 victories in 34 seasons at the helm. With 19 NCAA Appearances and 63 All-Americans, the program has consistently been a destination for top talent across the country. Under current head coach Jonathan Winder, the Waves reached the NCAA Final Four in his third season at the helm in 2025.
 
TICKETS
For more information and to purchase tickets to upcoming home events, visit here.
 
FOLLOW
To stay up-to-date on the latest Pepperdine women’s soccer news, follow the Waves on social media @PepperdineMVB_ .
 



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Muir and Hopkins Record Career-Highs In Season Opener Loss

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FORT WAYNE, Ind. – The Purdue Fort Wayne men’s volleyball team dropped the season opener to Missouri S&T in five sets (25-21, 23-25, 20-25, 25-23, 15-13) on Saturday (Jan. 10).

Logan Muir and Hunter Hopkins both set new career highs in the match. Muir tied his career high of total attempts (46) to record a new high of 28 kills. Hopkins set his career-high mark in assists, totaling 63 of the Mastodons’ 71 kills.

The Miners used their one-game warm up to jump out to an early lead in the first set. The ‘Dons were able to string together a 4-0 run to bring the score back to 7-5. Owen Banner tallied six total points in the first frame, putting away four kills and two aces. Missouri S&T used their .571 hitting percentage to claim the set 25-20.

The second set was highly contested, neither side owning a lead larger than three points. Purdue Fort Wayne managed to outlast the Miners and win 25-23, as the ‘Dons hit .440 in the frame to even the set score.

The Mastodons opened up the third set with a 4-0 run, jumping out to a 7-2 lead. However, Missouri S&T went on their own run taking the lead at 9-8. The ‘Dons held the Miners to a .120 hitting percentage and forced a timeout at 22-18 before eventually winning the set 25-20. Muir carried the offensive load in the set, tallying nine kills. 

The fourth set was a roller-coaster of runs between the two teams. Purdue Fort Wayne claimed the first, with a 4-0 run for a 5-3 lead. Missouri S&T took the lead at 10-8 after a 5-1 run and then extended their lead to 16-13 on another 5-1 run. The Mastodons failed the close in on that lead and dropped the fourth set 25-23. Both teams hit over .400 in the frame. 

The Miners claimed a lead for the entirety of the fifth set, taking the match after a 15-13 finish.

Hopkins finished with a double-double, recording 11 digs to go along with his career-high assists. Muir added eight digs and three aces with his career-high kill number. Banner finished with 18 kills on a team-high .469 hitting percentage in his first game as a Mastodon.

Purdue Fort Wayne falls to 0-1. Missouri S&T moves to 1-1. The Mastodons will take on (RV) NJIT in the Gates Sports Center on Sunday (Jan. 11) at 5 p.m.

~ Feel the Rumble ~



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Carson Caraway is Gatorade player of year in MS

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Jan. 10, 2026, 1:04 p.m. CT

  • Carson Caraway of Jackson Academy was named the 2025 Gatorade Mississippi Volleyball Player of the Year.
  • Caraway led the Raiders to the MAIS 4A Division I state championship match.

Jackson Academy’s Carson Caraway has been named the Gatorade Mississippi Volleyball Player of the Year for the 2025 season.

Gatorade announced its winners of all 50 states on Jan. 9, with Caraway being the fourth volleyball player to win the award from Jackson Academy since 2020.

“Carson was a threat the entire game,” Brandon coach Kelsa Walker said in a press release. “Her back-row attack is just as deadly, if not more than, her front-row attack. She’s able to run so many things from the front row that you really have to be disciplined defensively.”

The award, which celebrates the nation’s top high school athletes for excellence on the court, in the classroom and in the community, distinguishes Caraway as Mississippi’s best high school volleyball player.

The 6-foot-2 junior outside hitter was credited with 625 kills and 343 digs this season, leading the Raiders (32-9-1) to the MAIS 4A Division I state championship game. Jackson Academy fell to Madison-Ridgeland Academy 3-0 (25-17, 25-17, 26-24).





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