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High school boys’ volleyball: City Section playoff results, pairings

CITY SECTION BOYS VOLLEYBALL PLAYOFFS MONDAY’S RESULTS DIVISION I First Round #1 Taft, bye #8 Cleveland d. #9 Verdugo Hills, 31-29, 25-18, 26-24 #5 Marquez d. #12 Birmingham, 25-20, 25-18, 26-28, 25-22 #4 South East d. #13 Narbonne, 25-17, 25-14, 25-17 #3 Marshall, bye #6 Kennedy d. #11 South Gate, 25-15, 23-25, 31-29, 25-21 #7 […]

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CITY SECTION BOYS VOLLEYBALL PLAYOFFS

MONDAY’S RESULTS

DIVISION I

First Round

#1 Taft, bye

#8 Cleveland d. #9 Verdugo Hills, 31-29, 25-18, 26-24

#5 Marquez d. #12 Birmingham, 25-20, 25-18, 26-28, 25-22

#4 South East d. #13 Narbonne, 25-17, 25-14, 25-17

#3 Marshall, bye

#6 Kennedy d. #11 South Gate, 25-15, 23-25, 31-29, 25-21

#7 Van Nuys d. #10 Fremont, 25-19, 23-25, 31-29, 25-21

#2 Carson, bye

DIVISION II

First Round

#17 LACES d. #16 Math & Science College, 3-1

#13 Reseda d. #20 Rancho Dominguez, 25-13, 25-22, 25-18

#14 San Pedro d. #19 Jordan, 3-2

#18 Bravo d. #15 Los Angeles, 25-21, 17-25, 15-25, 25-21, 15-13

DIVISION III

First Round

#17 Annenberg at #16 Animo Robinson, 4 p.m.

#20 King/Drew at #13 Stern, 4 p.m.

#19 San Fernando d. #14 Animo De La Hoya, 25-23, 25-15, 25-27, 25-21

#18 Smidt Tech at #15 Animo Bunche, Tuesday at 4 p.m.

DIVISION IV

First Round

#17 Sotomayor d. #16 Jefferson, 3-0

#20 Belmont d. #13 USC Hybrid, 25-21, 24-26, 25-21, 25-18

#19 Animo Watts at #14 Neuwirth Leadership, 25-19, 25-19, 17-25, 25-22

#15 West Adams d. #18 Alliance Bloomfield, 25-12, 25-9, 25-14

DIVISION V

First Round

#17 USC-MAE d. #16 Teach Tech Charter, 25-17, 25-6, 26-24

#13 Community Charter d. #20 Aspire Ollin, 24-26, 25-19, 32-30, 25-13

#14 New West at #19 Alliance Marine-Innovation, 25-17, 25-17, 25-21

#18 Alliance Health Services at #15 Academia Avance, 4 p.m.

Wednesday, May 7

OPEN DVISION

QUARTERFINALS

#8 Grant at #1 Venice, 7 p.m.

#5 Palisades at #4 Granada Hills, 7 p.m.

#6 Eagle Rock at #3 El Camino Real, 7 p.m.

#7 University at #2 Chatsworth, 7 p.m.

Note: Second Round in Divisions II-V, May 8 at 4 p.m. at higher seeds; Quarterfinals in Division I, May 8 at 7 p.m. at higher seeds; Quarterfinals in Divisions II-V, May 12 at 7 p.m. at higher seeds; Semifinals in Open and Division I, May 13 at 7 p.m. at higher seeds; Semifinals in Division DII-V, May 14 at 7 p.m. at higher seeds; Finals in all divisions May 16-17 (sites and times TBD).



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REMINDER: USA Water Polo Assembly Set For Tomorrow, May 31; Last Chance To Register

Story Links Irvine, CA – May 31 – The 2025 USA Water Polo Assembly is set for tomorrow May 31, 2025 at 11am et/8am pt. The general assembly portion including addresses from USA Water Polo CEO Jamie Davis and USA Water Polo of Directors Board Chair Bill Smith will take place […]

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Irvine, CA – May 31 – The 2025 USA Water Polo Assembly is set for tomorrow May 31, 2025 at 11am et/8am pt. The general assembly portion including addresses from USA Water Polo CEO Jamie Davis and USA Water Polo of Directors Board Chair Bill Smith will take place at 11am et/8am pt at YouTube.com/USAWP (no registration is required). At 11:30am et/8:30am pt, the assembly Q & A will take place via zoom webinar, to register for this portion of the assembly, click here. To submit questions for the Q & A, click here. 



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St. Louis sports-talk radio KFNS ends glorious, volatile run

Dan Caesar | Post-Dispatch For more than three decades, KFNS has taken a wild, rollicking and erratic run as St. Louis’ longest-running sports-talk radio station, one with an alumni roster that includes many of the market’s best-known sports talkers. But 590 AM also has a dark underbelly, and its overall legacy is unrivaled by any […]

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For more than three decades, KFNS has taken a wild, rollicking and erratic run as St. Louis’ longest-running sports-talk radio station, one with an alumni roster that includes many of the market’s best-known sports talkers.

But 590 AM also has a dark underbelly, and its overall legacy is unrivaled by any other local station — likely nationally as well. That all comes to an end this weekend, when it leaves the jock-jabber business for talking about multiple topics and changes its call letters to KLIS (for the “Lou Information Station”).

The raucous ride began in 1993, when KEZK transitioned from music to sports formats and became KFNS a few months after St. Louis’ first all-sports station (KASP) failed. KFNS became so successful that it was sold in 2004 by a group led by Greg Marecek for what sources said was $11.5 million — $8 million more than it was purchased for six years earlier.

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Frank Cusumano was on the air at KFNS longer than anyone, covering three decades, and the early years were special.

“Man, did we land some guests in those days,” he said. “We had coaches like Don Shula and John Wooden. We had football (players) like Jim Brown and John Unitas. We had (basketball’s) Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Rick Barry. We had (boxers) Larry Holmes and Joe Frazier. Back in those days, if you worked at it, you could get basically anybody on your show if you put in the time.”

Ken “Iggy” Strode was a go-getting producer at the station in addition to appearing on the air and booked many high-profile guests. He had four stints at KFNS and said the Marecek era was the best.

“That was the heyday,” he said. “In ’98, there still weren’t a ton of sports radio stations (nationwide), and for me as a producer, it was good because it wasn’t like 200 stations were calling somebody.”

Strode recalls getting New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner on the air, from his hotel room, the day after the Yanks won the 1998 World Series.

“I found out where he was staying, called the hotel, asked for his room and he answered,” Strode said. “He said he had a couple minutes.”

That was normal procedure then.

“We got all those humongous names on the radio with that little, tiny scratchy signal,” Cusumano said.

It was an impressive lineup that now-longtime St. Louis sportscaster Tim McKernan encountered when he was trying to break into the business.

“So many great memories from starting as an intern in 1998 and getting a chance to meet and work with people who were so kind and helpful like Bernie Miklasz, Frank Cusumano, Bob Ramsey, Mike Claiborne, Dave Greene and Jay Randolph Jr.,” said McKernan, who had three stints at the station covering 14 years. “So many talented people have worked there — from the on-air staff to the producers to the sales people.”

While not first locally in the all-sports format, KFNS certainly has been the longest-running of many jock-jabberers that have appeared in the market.

“We really had a lot of talent go through there,” said Ramsey, who had multiple runs at the station covering about two decades. “When you look back and think of all the guys and what they provided on the air, we had some really important contributions because so many of us approached the same story of the same team from all different angles. I think over the course of a broadcast day the listener really got a ton of different perspectives that allowed them, in the end, to make their own decisions.

“From traditional morning shows to afternoon drives and getting people fired up, challenging the establishment to actually becoming part of the establishment with some things, it really came into its own as the destination for hardcore sports fans.“

It was a hodgepodge of approaches from the broadcasters, as no shows sounded the same.

“Kevin (Slaten) is yelling at people. Frank is the cheerleader. ‘Claibs’ is the analyst that really breaks it down, the connected guy is Bernie using numbers,” Ramsey said. “They could all be on the same story” but with vastly different angles.

Things were so good that KFNS added an FM station to carry its programming in some western and northern parts of the market where its AM signal was weak.

“For 15 years it really made a difference in the market,” Ramsey said.

The FM station was sold amid KFNS’ significant downturn that eventually reached epic proportions.

“It became the king of the carnival,” said Charlie “Tuna” Edwards, who was on the air in different slots across most of KFNS’ run. “I can say this wholeheartedly: I’ve seen and learned everything about talk radio, and I don’t think there’s anything new I can see after that. I’ve seen fistfights. I’ve seen it all.”

The tumble

KFNS eventually became a shell of itself. Contributing to its massive slide was stiff completion from WXOS (101.1), which entered the sports-talk business in 2009 on the more powerful FM band. That was coupled with the decline of radio in general, and AM in particular, in large part because of growing social media platforms. The station never regained the prominence it once attained.

“There never was any stability in that place once Greg sold it,” Strode said. “It went from one owner to another.”

Slaten, who had six stints at the station covering about two decades and is known for his pointed commentary, has a strong opinion about the station’s stark regression.

“It was the sports station in this town,” he said. “They dominated that part of the market. So the legacy of having that wonderful position in the marketplace is (this): No station probably in history was run in a poorer fashion than that one was by a succession of idiots. It was incredible how one group after another was more incompetent than the previous one. To me that’s a waste, because in its heyday it was really rocking.”

The low point hit in 2014, when utter chaos enveloped 590 — missed payrolls, employees abruptly dismissed, court judgments issued against the company. The flashpoint came when hosts from two stations under the same ownership group and working in a shared building began bad-mouthing other hosts on the air, and it got personal,. The situation became so volatile that a fistfight ensued between broadcaster Brian McKenna (who died in March) and the person running the operation, Dan Marshall, sending the boss to a hospital and the announcer to jail.

Not surprisingly, 590 left the airwaves later that year. The final blow came when Ameren shut off power to KFNS’ transmitter because it was owed about $1,200.

Randy Markel and a partner bought 590 out of bankruptcy about a year later and gave it a go. For a time McKernan was operating KFNS for Markel while also running “The Morning After” show that he co-hosted on the station, with the intent that he would buy 590. But the deal never was finalized.

Markel since has said the station was on track to become profitable in 2020, but the coronavirus pandemic ended that.

“It’s hard to run a sports-talk station with no sports,” he said. “But worse than no sports was no advertising.”

 Markel said he lost millions of dollars owning the station before selling it to Dave Zobrist in a deal that was competed in early 2022.

Markel, a colorful native Texan who formerly owned two Chuck’s Boots stores in the St. Louis market, had no previous radio experience but enjoyed much of the soap-opera melodrama at KFNS despite taking the financial hit.

“I miss it. I miss all the backstabbing, all the dysfunction,” Markel has said. “But I had more fun trying to make that work and dealing with all the different personalities. … It was fun. Every day was a new challenge.”

Zobrist couldn’t make it last long term and in July dropped local talk, going all national, to cut costs as he tried to sell. While Zobrist was widely liked by those working for him, he couldn’t shake the key problem faced by some of his predecessors: lack of advertising.

“Of all the people I’ve worked under there, the only one I respect is Dave Zobrist,” Slaten said. “I have a lot of respect for Dave. … He wasn’t playing games, he treated everybody right, he was fair to everybody. But unfortunately the sales end of it wasn’t up to par.”

Zobrist finally has found a buyer (pending Federal Communications Commission approval) in Big Toe Media, run by longtime St. Louis broadcaster and media executive Dave Greene along with colleague Conrad Thompson. Greene is very familiar with 590, what with three stints there in a variety of managerial and on-air capacities across 12 years.

The new approach

Big Toe is set to pull 590 out of the sports-intensive format when Saturday night becomes Sunday morning, scheduling shows locally and nationally that will cover an array of topics. Some still will focus on sports, and University of Illinois football and men’s basketball broadcasts will return. But others programs will discuss subjects as diverse as business, the economy, entertainment, food and culture.

Local programming debuts Monday, and one show will be familiar to some listeners to the station before national fare took over last summer — Hot Take Central, with Cardinals television on-field reporter Jim Hayes and former Blues player and part-time broadcaster Cam Janssen. It will be rebranded as “Hot Take Central 2.0” and air from 8-10 a.m. on weekdays.

Hayes has a sense of humor about returning to 590.

“We like ‘Hot Take Central’ as a name and we’re not very creative to come up with another similar name,” he said.

The show’s approach will be similar to Round 1 — a mix of sports and other subjects.

“It was awful before and we plan on keeping it awful,” Hayes said. “I think it had it following and we hope to build on that. … Both of us are big sports fans so that’ll be a big part of it, but as it was before our day-to-day lives might be the biggest influence on what we talk about and what’s going on in St. Louis.”

Edwards, who mostly has done nighttime sports shows on KFNS, will be on from 11 a.m-1 p.m. on weekdays with a show that mixes news and entertainment with athletics talk. He’ll work with Tom Wylie and Joe Davis.

“It will be entertaining, mark my words,” Edwards said.

Longtime St. Louis University basketball radio analyst and local media figure Earl Austin Jr. will have a program at 11 a.m. Saturdays focusing on high school sports.

While there will be a diversity of shows and most subjects are fair game, politics is one that usually won’t.

“Unless it is the big topic of the day we are not” discussing that, Greene said. “There’s plenty of places to get political talk and my whole concept is that you know nobody wants to listen to the same thing over and over and over again.”

Greene and Thompson also are co-owners of Sports Hub STL, which debuted in February and has been billed as the market’s first media outlet to provide video sports content delivered strictly digitally. There can be some overlap of that outlet’s personnel with KLIS broadcasters, with both operating out of the 590 facility in Kirkwood.

Some people working on KLIS will buy their airtime and sell their own advertising, while a few will receive some pay from the company but also be responsible to its bottom line.

“Our content people are all expected to contribute to the sales side,” Greene said. “I always tell stations I take over and operate — ‘Congratulations. You’re all part of the sales marketing and recruitment teams.’ … They do contribute a little bit more when they have some skin in the game.”

He added: “Each of our show agreements is tailored to the creators (broadcasters), but one thing remains consistent: everyone plays a role in identifying local business partners and potential sponsors. Content creators know how to sell themselves, and we expect each of them to contribute by generating leads that our sellers, and I, can follow up on.”

Out with a thud

In this era with many media platforms tied together, the programming airing on 590 also is to be carried on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify and other podcast distributors.

In the end, the once illustrious reputation of KFNS as a major force on St. Louis radio finishes like this: basically as a throw-in to the other platforms KLIS will be on while being sold for what sources said is $250,000 — after once going for $11.5 million. The land near Bethalto on which the station’s transmitter stands is considered more valuable than the station itself.

“We look at this from a business standpoint as a land deal,” Greene has said. “We invested in a piece of property at a good price, and it happens to come with an entity (a radio station) that I have a pretty good idea of how to run.”

So what makes Greene think this can be a success after so many failures with 590?

“We completely bought it right (financially), and we’re going run it right,” he said. “It comes down to the way people consume content these days. Radio is simply one means of distribution. … We’re not relying on people coming to us, that’s the difference here. Digital distribution allows you to push your programming out to people, and if you’re using YouTube and Google correctly, then you are going to reach a lot more people. … That’s how it works these days.”


Steve Savard is returning to St. Louis minus a job. KFNS set to become KLIS: Media Views


Big dose of Chiefs again on St. Louis TV. Not even Blues Game 7 can top 'em: Media Views


Reeling sports radio station KFNS gets a reprieve but likely only briefly

A tornado devastated the St. Louis area on May 16, and much of the following week was spent picking up the pieces. Volunteers turned out and the road to recovery began. View the week in St. Louis through the Post-Dispatch photographers’ lenses. Edited by Jenna Jones.





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Track-and-field final in spotlight for rule change after trans athlete’s success

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California’s high school track-and-field state championships starting Friday are set to be the testing ground for a new participation and medaling policy for competitions that include transgender athletes. The California Interscholastic Federation will let an additional student compete and potentially offer an extra medal in three events in which a trans athlete […]

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California’s high school track-and-field state championships starting Friday are set to be the testing ground for a new participation and medaling policy for competitions that include transgender athletes.

The California Interscholastic Federation will let an additional student compete and potentially offer an extra medal in three events in which a trans athlete is competing. The athlete, high school junior AB Hernandez, is the second seed in the triple jump and will also participate in the long jump and high jump.

It may be the first effort by a high school sports governing body to expand participation when trans athletes are participating, and it reflects efforts to find a middle ground in the debate over trans girls’ participation in youth sports.

“The CIF values all of our student-athletes and we will continue to uphold our mission of providing students with the opportunity to belong, connect, and compete while complying with California law,” the group said in a statement after announcing its rule change.

State law allows trans students to compete on sex-segregated sports teams consistent with their gender identity.

President Donald Trump threatened this week to pull federal funding from California unless it bars trans female athletes from competing on girls teams. The U.S. Department of Justice also said it would investigate the state federation and the district that includes Hernandez’s high school to determine whether they violated federal sex discrimination law by allowing trans girls to compete in girls sports.

The meet, which is taking place at a high school near Fresno, will open up the girls triple jump, long jump and high jump to one additional athlete each who would have qualified had Hernandez not participated. Hernandez will compete in the preliminaries Friday for a chance to advance to the finals Saturday.

Under the pilot policy, if a transgender athlete medals, their ranking would not displace a “biological female” student from medaling, the federation said.

The federation said the rule would open the field to more “biological female” athletes. One expert said the change may itself be discriminatory because it creates an extra spot for “biological female” athletes but not for other trans athletes.

The federation did not specify how they define “biological female” or how they would verify whether a competitor meets that definition.

Medical experts say gender is a spectrum, not a binary structure consisting of only males and females.

The two-day meet is expected to draw attention from a coalition of protesting parents and students. Critics have objected Hernandez’s participation and heckled her in qualifying events earlier this month. Leaders from the conservative California Family Council joined Republican state lawmakers Thursday for a press conference blasting the policy change and saying Hernandez shouldn’t be allowed to compete.

“If they have to create special exceptions and backdoor rule changes to placate frustrated athletes, that’s not equality, that’s a confession,” Sophia Lorey, the council’s outreach director, said in a statement. “Girls’ sports should be for girls, full stop.”

CIF Executive Director Ron Nocetti urged participants and bystanders to behave respectfully toward all student-athletes in a message shared in the championship program.

A recent AP-NORC poll found that about 7 in 10 U.S. adults think transgender female athletes should not be allowed to participate in girls and women’s sports at the high school, college or professional level. That view was shared by about 9 in 10 Republicans and roughly half of Democrats. Trump won Fresno County, where the meet will be held, in 2024.

Hernandez told the publication Capital & Main earlier this month that she couldn’t worry about critics.

“I’m still a child, you’re an adult, and for you to act like a child shows how you are as a person,” she said.

She noted that she has lost some of her events, saying that disproved arguments that she can’t be beat.

Hernandez is expected to perform well, particularly in the triple jump, in which she has a personal best of over 41 feet (12.5 meters). That is more than 3 feet (1 meter) short of a national record set in 2019. She’s the fifth seed in the long jump but ranked much lower in the high jump.

California’s state championship stands out from that of other states because of the number of competitors athletes are up against to qualify.

More than 57,000 high schoolers participated in outdoor track and field in California during the 2023-2024 school year, according to a survey by the National Federation of State High School Associations. California had the second-largest number of high school outdoor track-and-field athletes, only behind Texas.

Of the 12 high school athletes who have set national records in the girls triple jump between 1984 and 2019, eight have been from California, according to the national sports governing body.

Davis Whitfield, the national federation’s chief operating officer, called a state championship “the pinnacle” for high school student-athletes.

“It’s certainly a once-in-a-lifetime experience in some cases to participate in a state championship event,” he said.

___

Austin is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Austin on X: @sophieadanna





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Ball State University – Official Athletics Site

MUNCIE, Ind. — Thirteen members of the Ball State Cardinals men’s volleyball team were honored when the Midwestern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association announced its annual Academic All-MIVA list on Friday. The list honors all MIVA student-athletes that own a 3.30 cumulative GPA through the spring semester at their respective institutions. In 2025, there were 110 MIVA student-athletes […]

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MUNCIE, Ind. — Thirteen members of the Ball State Cardinals men’s volleyball team were honored when the Midwestern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association announced its annual Academic All-MIVA list on Friday. The list honors all MIVA student-athletes that own a 3.30 cumulative GPA through the spring semester at their respective institutions.

In 2025, there were 110 MIVA student-athletes from its nine schools that qualified for Academic All-MIVA status. Ball State’s 13 honorees were eclipsed only by Lewis (17) and McKendree (15).

Ball State men’s volleyball players produced a collective 3.265 GPA last semester, contributing to the Cardinals’ program-record 3.46 GPA overall. Men’s volleyball was one of 19 Ball State sports teams to produce a term GPA of 3.0 or better. Ball State’s 13 MIVA All-Academic honorees:

Raje Alleyne

Vanis Buckholz

Marty Canavan

Mason Connor

Nathan Goh

Cameron Gray

Aaron Hernandez

Meteusz Karpow

Ryan Louis

Lucas Machado

William Patterson

Lukas Pytlak

Rodney Wallace

 



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Carpenter named ASUN’s Female Student-Athlete of the Year

Story Links FORT MYERS, Fla. – Jaci Carpenter, a cornerstone of the Florida Gulf Coast University beach volleyball program for the past four years, was named the Atlantic Sun Conference Female Student-Athlete of the Year at the ASUN Awards Ceremony on Thursday night. To be considered for one of the conference’s highest […]

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FORT MYERS, Fla. – Jaci Carpenter, a cornerstone of the Florida Gulf Coast University beach volleyball program for the past four years, was named the Atlantic Sun Conference Female Student-Athlete of the Year at the ASUN Awards Ceremony on Thursday night.

To be considered for one of the conference’s highest honors, a student-athlete must excel in academics, athletics and service. Carpenter’s résumé at FGCU and in the Southwest Florida community is unmatched.

“With the amount of amazing female athletes that our conference has, to be named the Female Student-Athlete of the Year for the ASUN is a tremendous honor,” FGCU head beach volleyball coach Chris Sweat said. “Jaci put in so much work all four years on the sand and in the classroom. She has been a part of so many extracurricular activities. It makes us very happy to see all of her hard work pay off.”

Academically, Carpenter was named the ASUN Beach Volleyball Scholar-Athlete of the Year. She graduated summa cum laude with a perfect 4.0 GPA in communications. She capped her career with two of the highest honors bestowed on an FGCU student-athlete: the Kavanagh Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award and induction into the university’s 2025 Hall of Fame class.

In service, Carpenter was a dedicated volunteer with numerous nonprofit organizations, consistently giving back to FGCU and the local community. After Hurricane Ian struck in 2022, she contributed and coordinated more than 30 hours of volunteer work to assist local students and residents. She also led the bone marrow registration initiative within athletics and across campus and co-founded the “See Her Soar” initiative, which promotes professional development, mentorship and networking for female student-athletes. In 2024, she received the FGCU Athletics Community Service Award. Despite living with Type 1 diabetes, Carpenter consistently prioritized others, logging more than 120 service hours in her senior year and over 300 during her collegiate career.

“I’m so honored to have earned this award,” Carpenter said. “The ASUN Conference is so special and everyone in it provides the opportunities, resources and support for us to be well-rounded athletes and to be high achievers in the classroom, on the court and in the community.”

Carpenter’s impact extended beyond the court and classroom. She served as president of the FGCU Student-Athlete Advisory Committee and chaired the ASUN’s advisory committee. She was also a mentor through Adaptive Services and represented student-athletes on the university’s Hazing and Prevention Team. She will pursue a master’s degree in recreation and sports management at the University of Tennessee, with aspirations of becoming an athletic director.

“Despite Jaci’s many exceptional accomplishments, I am particularly impressed with her humility and genuine concern for others,” said Dr. Thomas Roberts, FGCU’s faculty athletics representative. “Her overall academic, service, leadership and athletic achievements are profound. She is an engaged and caring leader. Her teammates, fellow students, coaches, professors and administrators revere her.”

On the court in 2025, Carpenter helped lead FGCU to a semifinal appearance in the ASUN Tournament and victories over four ranked opponents. The Eagles upset No. 14 FIU, No. 15 Georgia State and No. 15 Florida Atlantic twice. Carpenter played a key role in FGCU’s rise to a top-20 national ranking. The team finished the season 22-13, peaking at No. 18. Carpenter opened the season with a thrilling win over No. 8 LSU and competed primarily at the No. 2 and No. 3 positions, finishing her senior year with a 21-13 record. She won more than 73 matches in her career—becoming just the fourth player in program history to surpass 70 wins.

“I wouldn’t have been able to achieve this without my FGCU family – the athletes I’m around who inspire me every day, my coach and administrators who give us the space to grow and my friends and family who support me when I need it the most,” said Carpenter.



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Trio of Utah State Women Compete on Second Day of NCAA West First Rounds

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Three women representing Utah State women’s track & field team competed at the 2025 NCAA West First Rounds in College Station, Texas, on Thursday.   The Aggies’ first competitor on Thursday was junior Krysthina Vlahovic, who clocked in at 14.32 in the 100-meter hurdles to finish 46th in the competition. Vlahovic, […]

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COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Three women representing Utah State women’s track & field team competed at the 2025 NCAA West First Rounds in College Station, Texas, on Thursday.
 
The Aggies’ first competitor on Thursday was junior Krysthina Vlahovic, who clocked in at 14.32 in the 100-meter hurdles to finish 46th in the competition. Vlahovic, who made her first career appearance at the NCAA West First Rounds, will now turn her attention to national competition as she qualified for the 2025 Canadian Track & Field Championships, to be held in Ottawa, Ontario, from July 30 through August 3.
 
Senior Emma Thornley and sophomore Brianne Smith raced in the 10,000 meters, where Thornley finished in 35:22.35 and Smith clocked in at 36:45.32 to place 30th and 40th, respectively. Thornley, competing in her second-straight NCAA West First Rounds, improved on her place (37th) and time (35:49.68) from a year ago. Smith, one of just two sophomore women to represent USU at this year’s NCAA West First Rounds, took part in her first career NCAA preliminary race. Thornley will race again on Saturday, competing alongside junior teammate Sarah Ellis in the 5,000 meters.
 
Friday’s competition will shift back to the men’s side, where 10 Utah State athletes will feature across five different events. Senior Nate Franz and sophomore Joseph Turner will begin the day’s action in the discus competition, to be followed by freshman Taite Priestley in the high jump. On the track, the 4×100-meter relay team will begin the evening’s races, to be followed by junior Logan Garnica and sophomore Garrett Woodhouse in the 3,000-meter steeplechase and sophomore Landon Bott in the quarterfinals of the 800 meters. Live coverage will continue from College Station on ESPN+.
 
Fans can follow the Utah State track and field programs on X at USUTF_XC, on Facebook at USUTrack and on Instagram at USUTF_XC. Aggies fans can also follow the Utah State athletic program on X at USUAthletics or on Facebook at Utah State University Athletics.
 
2025 NCAA West First Rounds – Day 2
E.B. Cushing Stadium | College Station, Texas | May 29, 2025
 
USU Women’s Results:
 

 
-USU-





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