Sports
how to watch U.S. Open
All Times Eastern Australian Rules FootballAFL Men’s — Round 14Port Adelaide Power vs. Melbourne Demons — FS2, 1:08 a.m. (Sunday)West Coast Eagles vs. Carlton Blues — Fox Soccer Plus, 4 a.m. (Sunday) BasketballBig3Week 1, Allstate Arena, Rosemont, ILLA Riot vs. Miami 305/Detroit Amps vs. Chicago Triplets — CBS, 4 p.m.Houston Rig Hands vs. DMV Trilogy/Boston […]

All Times Eastern
Australian Rules Football
AFL Men’s — Round 14
Port Adelaide Power vs. Melbourne Demons — FS2, 1:08 a.m. (Sunday)
West Coast Eagles vs. Carlton Blues — Fox Soccer Plus, 4 a.m. (Sunday)
Basketball
Big3
Week 1, Allstate Arena, Rosemont, IL
LA Riot vs. Miami 305/Detroit Amps vs. Chicago Triplets — CBS, 4 p.m.
Houston Rig Hands vs. DMV Trilogy/Boston Ball Hogs vs. Dallas Power — Vice, 6 p.m.
Big3 Pregame — CBS, 3 p.m.
Beach Volleyball
AVP League
Week 3, The Wayfair Arena, Miami, FL
Palm Beach Passion vs. Miami Mayhem: Women’s and Men’s Matches — The CW, 8 p.m.
CFL
Week 2
Calgary Stampeders at Toronto Argonauts — TSN1/CBS Sports Network, 4 p.m.
Saskatchewan Roughriders at Hamilton Tiger-Cats — CTV/TSN1/TSN3/CBS Sports Network, 7 p.m.
College Baseball
NCAA College World Series
Bracket 2, Charles Schwab Field Omaha, Omaha, NE
Announcers: Karl Ravech/Ben McDonald/Eduardo Pérez//Dani Wexelman
Murray State vs. UCLA — ESPN, 2 p.m.
Announcers: Mike Monaco/Chris Burke/Kyle Peterson//Kris Budden
LSU vs. Arkansas — ESPN, 7 p.m.
College Track & Field
Men’s
NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field Championships
Day 4, Hayward Field, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR
Women’s Track Finals — ESPN2, 9 p.m.
SEC Storied: Lolo Jones — ESPN2, 11:30 p.m.
CONCACAF Gold Cup
Group Stage
Group A, SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, CA
Announcers — FS1: John Strong/Stu Holden
México vs. Dominican Republic — FS1//Univision/TUDN, 10 p.m.
Gold Cup 2025-From Islands to Icons — FS1, 9 p.m.
Announcers: Rob Stone/Landon Donovan/Maurice Edu/Alexi Lalas
CONCACAF Gold Cup Match Day — FS1, 9:30 p.m.
Dogs
2025 AKC Fastest Dogs USA — ESPN2, 1:30 p.m.
FIFA Club World Cup
Group Stage
Group A, Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, FL
Announcers — TBS/DAZN: Luke Wileman/Brian Dunseth
Al Ahly vs. Inter Miami — TBS/DAZN//Univision/TUDN, 8 p.m.
Fútbol central — Univision/TUDN, 6:30 p.m.
Announcers: Lauren Jbara/Mo Adams/Juan Pablo Angel/Luis Garcia/Brad Guzman
FIFA Club World Cup 2025 Pre-Match Show — TBS/DAZN, 7 p.m.
FIFA Club World Cup 2025 Post-Match Show — TBS/DAZN, 10 p.m.
Formula 1
FIA Formula One World Championship
Grand Prix du Canada, Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve, Montréal, Quebec, Canada
Practice 3 — ESPN2, 12:25 p.m.
Qualifying — ESPN2, 3:55 p.m.
Golf
USGA
U.S. Open, Oakmont Country Club, Oakmont, PA
3rd Round
Host: Trey Wingo
U.S. Open All Access — Peacock, 7:30 a.m.
Host: Mike Tirico
Announcing Teams: Dan Hicks/Kevin Kisner//Terry Gannon/Brad Faxon//Mike Tirico/Notah Begay III//Steve Sands/Gary Koch//Rich Lerner/Curt Byrum//Tom Abbott/Arron Oberholser
Reporters: Curt Byrum/Smylie Kaufman/Jim “Bones” Mackay/Paige Mackenzie/Roger Maltbie/John Wood
Interviews: Cara Banks/Kira K. Dixon
Main Feed — Peacock, 10 a.m.
Main Feed — NBC/Peacock, noon
Live From the U.S. Open — Golf Channel, 8 a.m.
Live From the U.S. Open — Golf Channel, 8 p.m.
U.S. Open Golf Third Round In-Game LIVE Gameday — SportsGrid, 4 p.m.
LPGA Tour
Meijer LPGA Classic, Blythefield Country Club, Belmont, MI
3rd Round — Golf Channel, 3 p.m.
IndyCar
NTT IndyCar Series
Bommarito Automotive Group 500, World Wide Technology Raceway, Madison, IL
Practice 1 — FS1, 11:30 a.m.
Qualifications — FS1, 3 p.m.
High Line & Final Practice — FS2, 5:30 p.m.
IndyNXT
IndyNXT Series
IndyNXT Race, World Wide Technology Raceway, Madison, IL
Practice — FS1, 1 p.m.
Qualifications — FS2, 4:30 p.m.
Mixed Martial Arts
UFC Fight Night
Usman vs. Buckley, State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA
Prelims — ESPN+, 7 p.m.
Main Card — ESPN, 10 p.m.
UFC Fight Night Post Show: Usman vs. Buckley — ESPN+, 1 a.m. (Sunday)
Combat Sports Report — SportsGrid, noon
MLB
American League
Baseball Night in America, Fenway Park, Boston, MA
New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox — Fox, 7:15 p.m.
Fox Saturday Baseball — Fox, 7 p.m.
Anaheim at Baltimore — FanDuel Sports Network West/MASN, 4 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Texas — Chicago Sports Network/Rangers Sports Network, 4 p.m.
Minnesota at Houston — Twins.TV/Space City Home Network, 4 p.m.
Sacramento at Kansas City — NBC Sports California/FanDuel Sports Network Kansas City, 4 p.m.
Cleveland at Seattle — MLB Network (backup)/CleGuardians.TV/Root Sports, 10 p.m.
National League
Baseball Night in America, Chase Field, Phoenix, AZ
San Diego Padres at Arizona Diamondbacks — Fox, 7:15 p.m.
Miami at Washington — MLB Network (backup)/FanDuel Sports Network Florida/MASN2, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs — SportsNet Pittsburgh/Marquee Sports Network, 2:20 p.m.
Colorado at Atlanta — Rockies.TV/FanDuel Sports Network South, 4 .m.
St. Louis at Milwaukee — FanDuel Sports Network Midwest/FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin, 4 p.m.
San Francisco at Los Angeles Dodgers — MLB Network (main)/NBC Sports Bay Area/Spectrum SportsNet LA, 10 p.m.
Interleague
Cincinnati at Detroit — MLB Network (main)/FanDuel Sports Network Ohio/FanDuel Sports Network Detroit, 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at New York Mets — FanDuel Sports Network Sun/SNY, 4 p.m.
Toronto at Philadelphia — Sportsnet/NBC Sports Philadelphia, 4 p.m.
Play Ball — MLB Network, 10 a.m.
MLB Network Breakdown — MLB Network, 10:30 a.m.
Cincinnati Reds vs. Detroit Tigers MLB In-Game LIVE Gameday — SportsGrid, 1 p.m.
MLB esta semana — UniMás, 3 p.m.
MLB Big Inning — MLB Network, 4 p.m.
MLB Tonight — MLB Network, 5:30 p.m.
MLB Tonight — MLB Network, 9:30 p.m.
Quick Pitch — MLB Network, 1 a.m. (Sunday)
MLS
Matchday 19
Free Games
Announcers — English: Callum Williams/Calen Carr//Spanish: Pablo Ramírez/Jesús Bracamontes
Philadelphia Union vs. Charlotte FC — Apple TV, 7:30 p.m.
Announcers — English: Tony Husband/Ross Smith//Spanish: Alejandro Figueredo/Tony Cherchi
Austin FC vs. New York Red Bulls — Apple TV, 7:30 p.m.
Announcers — English: Jessica Charman/Tony Meola//Spanish: José Bauz/Ivan Kasanzew
Chicago Fire vs. Nashville SC — Apple TV, 8:30 p.m.
Announcers — English: Mark Rogondino/Heath Pearce//Spanish: Raul Guzmán/Ashley González//French: Frédéric Lord/Vincent Destouches
Houston Dynamo vs. Montréal Impact — Apple TV, 8:30 p.m.
Announcers — English: Tyler Terens/Kyndra de St. Aubin//Spanish: Diego Pessolano/Daniel Chapela
Minnesota United vs. San Diego FC — Apple TV, 830 p.m.
Announcers — English: Nate Bukaty/Devon Kerr//Spanish: Sergio Ruiz/Walter Roque
Sporting Kansas City vs. FC Dallas — Apple TV, 8:30 p.m.
MLS Season Pass — Subscription Required
Announcers — English: Neil Sika/Lloyd Sam//Spanish: Jesús Acosta/Carlos Suárez//Fox: Mike Watts/Tony Meola
St. Louis City SC vs. LA Galaxy — Apple TV+/Fox, 4:30 p.m.
Announcers — English: Steve Cangialosi/Danny Higginbotham//Spanish: Bruno Vain/Andrés Agulla
Columbus Crew vs. Vancouver Whitecaps — Apple TV+, 7:30 p.m.
Announcers — English: Chris Wittyngham/Ian Joy//Spanish: Oscar Salazar/Diego Tabares
New England Revolution vs. FC Cincinnati — Apple TV+, 7:30 p.m.
Announcers — English: Max Bretos/Warren Barton//Spanish: Jorge Pérez-Navarro/Marcelo Balboa
Colorado Rapids vs. Orlando City SC — Apple TV+, 9:30 p.m.
Announcers — English: Josh Eastern/Jamie Watson//Spanish: Jesús Acosta/Carlos Suárez
Real Salt Lake vs. D.C. United — Apple TV+, 9:30 p.m.
Announcers: Kevin Egan/Dax McCarty/Bradley Wright-Phillips
MLS Countdown — Apple TV+, 6:30 p.m.
Announcers: Ana Jurka/Osvaldo Alonso/Miguel Gallardo
MLS La Previa — Apple TV+, 6:30 p.m.
Announcers Kevin Egan/Dax McCarty/Gio Savarese/Bradley Wright-Phillips
MLS 360 — Apple TV+, 7:30 p.m.
Announcers: Ramses Sandoval/Osvaldo Alonso/Miguel Gallardo/Gio Savarese/Michele Giannone
MLS 360 en Español — Apple TV+, 7:30 p.m.
NASCAR
NASCAR Xfinity Series
The Chilango 150, Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, México City, México
Announcers: Adam Alexander/Parker Kligerman/Jamie McMurray//Kim Coon//Dillion Welch
Qualifying — The CW app, 10:30 a.m.
Race — The CW, 4:30 p.m.
Host: Carla Gebhart
NASCAR Countdown Live — The CW, 4 p.m.
NASCAR Cup Series
Viva Mexico 250, Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, México City, México
Announcers: Adam Alexander/Dale Earnhardt, Jr./Steve Letarte//Trevor Bayne//Kim Coon//Marty Snider
Practice and Qualifying — Amazon Prime Video, noon
NBA
Betting Above the Rim Pro Basketball Today — SportsGRid, 10 a.m.
NBA Finals Film Room: Game 4 — NBA TV, 7 p.m.
NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs
Stanley Cup Final
Game 5, Rogers Place, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Announcers — TNT/truTV/Max: Kenny Albert/Eddie Olczyk/Brian Boucher//Darren Pang//Jackie Redmond//Sportsnet/CBC: Chris Cuthbert/Craig Simpson//Gene Principe
Florida Panthers at Edmonton Oilers — TNT/truTV/Max//Sportsnet/CBC/TVA Sports, 8 p.m. (series tied 2-2)
Hosts: Jason Altmann/Noah Blankenship
NHL in ASL — Max, 8 p.m.
Announcers: Liam McHugh/Paul Bissonnette/Anson Carter/Wayne Gretzky/Henrik Lundqvist
NHL on TNT Face Off live from Amarant Bank Arena, Sunrise, FL — TNT/truTV/Max, 7 p.m.
NHL on TNT Postgame Show live from Amarant Bank Arena, Sunrise, FL — TNT/trtTV, 10:30 p.m.
Hockey Central live from Amarant Bank Arena, Sunrise, FL — Sportsnet, 7:30 p.m.
Announcers: Brian Boyle/E.J. Hradek/Cory Schneider
NHL Tonight: First Shift — NHL Network/Sportsnet One, 4 p.m.
Announcers: Kathryn Tappen/Jason Demers/Mike Rupp
NHL Now — NHL Network/Sportsnet One, 5 p.m.
Announcers: Jamison Coyle/Brian Boyle/Mike Johnson/Mike Rupp/Cory Schneider/Kathryn Tappen
NHL Tonight: Stanley Cup Final Pregame — NHL Network, 6 p.m.
NHL Tonight: Stanley Cup Final Postgame — NHL Network, 11 p.m.
Edmonton Oilers vs. Florida Panthers Stanley Cup Final Game 4 In-Game LIVE Gameday — SportsGrid, 8 p.m.
NWSL
Matchday 12
Chicago Stars vs. Seattle Reign — Ion, 5 p.m.
Kansas City Current vs. Racing Louisville — Ion, 7:30 p.m.
Angel City FC vs. North Carolina Courage — Ion, 10 p.m.
NWSL on Ion Match Break Show — Ion, 7 p.m.
NWSL on Ion Match Break Show — Ion, 9:30 p.m.
Soccer
Scoreline — CBS Sports Golazo Network, 5 p.m.
ESPN FC — ESPN+, 5 p.m.
Línea de cuatro — TUDN, midnight
El Show del Mundial — TUDN, 1 a.m. (Sunday)
Softball
Athletes Unlimited Softball League
Talons vs. Blaze — ESPNU, noon
Volts vs. Bandits — MLB Network, 7:30 p.m.
Sports News & Talk
Marty & McGee — SEC Network, 7 a.m.
Best of All The Smoke — DraftKings Network, 8 a.m.
SportsCenter — ESPN, 8 a.m.
Fantasy Sports Today Saturday — SportsGrid, 8 a.m.
The Sports Rundown — beIN Sports, 8:30 a.m.
SportsCenter — ESPN, 9 a.m.
Harlem Globetrotters: Play It Forward: Pull the Strings — NBC, 9 a.m.
All The Smoke Unplugged — DraftKings Network, 9:30 a.m.
All The Smoke — DraftKings Network, 10 a.m.
SportsCenter — ESPN, 10 a.m.
Gameday Pregame Live — CBS Sports HQ, 11 a.m.
SportsCenter — ESPN, 11 a.m.
Underdogs — DraftKings Network, 11:30 a.m.
HQ Gameday Scoreboard — CBS Sports HQ, noon
Best of Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz — DraftKings Network, noon
SportsCenter — ESPN, noon
Contacto deportivo — TUDN, noon
SportsCenter — ESPN, 1 p.m.
Gameday Reset — CBS Sports HQ, 2 p.m.
Gameday Scoreboard & Highlights — CBS Sports HQ, 3 p.m.
Pablo Torre Finds Out — DraftKings Network, 4 p.m.
SportsCenter — ESPN, 5 p.m.
The B1G Show — Big Ten Network, 6 p.m.
SportsCenter — ESPN, 6 p.m.
Gameday Reset — CBS Sports HQ, 7 p.m.
Gameday Scoreboard and Highlights — CBS Sports HQ, 8 p.m.
All ACC — ACC Network, 10 p.m.
SEC Now — SEC Network, 10 p.m.
Scoreboard Final — CBS Sports HQ, 11 a.m.
El pelotazo — Telemundo, midnight
Contacto deportivo — Univision, midnight
SportsCenter at Night — ESPN, 1 a.m. (Sunday)
South Beach Sessions — DraftKings Network, 2 a.m. (Sunday)
SportsCenter at Night — ESPN, 2 a.m. (Sunday)
Contacto deportivo — TUDN, 2 a.m.(Sunday)
Best of SportsGrid — SportsGrid, 3 a.m. (Sunday)
Scoreboard Final — CBS Sports HQ, 6 a.m (Sunday)
Tennis
Courtside Live: Boss Open (ATP)/Libema Open (ATP/WTA)/The HSBC Championships (WTA) — Tennis Channel, 6 a.m. (Sunday)
USL Championship
Matchday 15
Indy Eleven vs. Pittsburgh Riverhounds — CBS Sports Golazo Network, 7 p.m.
Las Vegas Lights vs. Monterey Bay FC — CBS Sports Golazo Network, 10:30 p.m.
Volleyball
FIVB Volleyball Nations League
Pool 2-Week 1, Maracanãzinho, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
United States vs. Slovenia — CBS Sports Network, 12:30 p.m.
WNBA
Commissioner’s Cup
Announcers: Lisa Byington/Julianne Viani//Brandon Baylor
Los Angeles Sparks at Minnesota Lynx — CBS, 1 p.m.
Announcers: Pam Ward/Rebecca Lobo//Christine Williamson
New York Liberty at Indiana Fever — ABC, 3 p.m.
Seattle Storm at Golden State Valkyries — KUNS/KPIX/KMAX, 8:30 p.m.
Sports
Harvard Track and Field Goes the Distance at NCAA Outdoor Championships | Sports
Harvard’s track and field team capped off an impressive week at the NCAA Outdoor Championships this weekend, earning All-America First Team selections on both the men’s and women’s side. Hungarian sophomore Ferenc Kovacs took home the bronze in the men’s 1,500-meter final with a time of 3:47.42 — becoming Harvard’s highest finisher in the event. […]

Harvard’s track and field team capped off an impressive week at the NCAA Outdoor Championships this weekend, earning All-America First Team selections on both the men’s and women’s side.
Hungarian sophomore Ferenc Kovacs took home the bronze in the men’s 1,500-meter final with a time of 3:47.42 — becoming Harvard’s highest finisher in the event. Then, just two days later, he ran a 3:34.79 in the event at the Portland Track Festival to set a new Ivy League record and put him in a tie for the 14th fastest 1500-meter time in NCAA history. The two races added to Kovacs’ already impressive resume, after he broke the 1,500-meter school record during his freshman campaign.
Alongside Kovacs, seniors Chloe Fair and Izzy Goudros also received first team honors — an award given to the top eight finishers. Fair, who finished sixth in the women’s 400-meter hurdles, becomes just the fourth Harvard women’s hurdler to receive the honor. Goudros finished seventh in the heptathlon after a stellar long jump of 6.39 meters moved her up in the standings from 14th place and earned her a new school record.
The Crimson had an historic performance at the 2024 Outdoor Championships, sending a record 18 athletes and picking up a first-place finish from Maia Ramsden ’24. Still, even though the team did not match last season’s stand-out results, this season marked the third consecutive year the program sent more than 10 athletes to compete, with 15 making the trip.
Fair said that the energy of the meet was palpable — particularly due to its location at the University of Oregon’s Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon.
“Everyone there is actually genuinely fans of track and field,” Fair said. “You look up and the stadium’s almost full, and it’s just absolutely insane.”
Fair, who graduated in May and is now headed to the University of Georgia to continue her track career, said it was “tough” knowing that the meet was her last time competing for the Crimson.
“Being a part of Harvard track and field is the thing I am most proud of from my time at Harvard,” Fair said.
Senior Ben Rosa was one of Harvard’s six athletes to earn an All-America Second Team nod, as the Ivy League 5,000 meter and 10,000 meter champion finished tenth in the 10,000 meters at the NCAA championships. Rosa is Harvard’s first All-American in the event since Crimson star Graham Blanks, who surrendered his remaining NCAA eligibility in December to compete professionally.
Because the race started off slowly, Rosa said he knew “there was going to be a big burn up somewhere in the second half.” But even as the bell lap arrived, the group was still clustered together, and he liked his odds.
“About 600 meters to go, we were still so bunched up. I was saying, ‘shoot, I could win this thing,’” Rosa said. “At that point, I was racing to win.”
With 200 meters to go, the race finally spaced out as Ishmael Kipkurui of New Mexico made a decisive move, gapping the rest of the field. Still, Rosa — who was also participating in the final race of his collegiate career — said he was content with his 10th place finish.
“10th is a little bit far removed from that, but I would not have had it any other way,” he said.
Sophomore Tito Alofe, who was participating in the long jump at the championships for the second straight year, had been battling a nagging knee injury coming into the meet. Just three weeks after winning the Ivy League championships with a personal best jump of 2.25 meters, he aggravated his knee while qualifying for the outdoor championships at regionals.
“When I competed on Friday, I just was not very close to 100%. I actually did better than I expected, to be 100% honest,” Alofe said.
But he will head into the offseason encouraged by his season and motivated for the future.
“While I did not end up getting first team all-American, which was my ultimate goal, I’d say I’ve put myself in a pretty good position to do pretty big things next year,” he said.
On the women’s side, senior Victoria Bossong capped off her decorated Crimson career with a ninth place finish in the 800 meters, earning All-America Second Team recognition.
With the NCAA championships behind them, Harvard’s track and field athletes will now have some time to rest before many return to Oregon for the USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships at the end of July.
—Staff writer Akshaya Ravi can be reached at akshaya.ravi@thecrimson.com. Follow her on X @akshayaravi22.
—Staff writer Cam N. Srivastava can be reached at cam.srivastava@thecrimson.com. Follow him on X @camsrivastava.
Sports
LADY COYOTE VOLLEYBALL STARTS WITH HISTORIC TRYOUTS AT “MIDNIGHT MADNESS”
Home Sports LADY COYOTE VOLLEYBALL STARTS WITH HISTORIC TRYOUTS AT “MIDNIGHT MADNESS” LADY COYOTE VOLLEYBALL STARTS WITH HISTORIC TRYOUTS AT “MIDNIGHT MADNESS” By Pete VasquezPvasquez@cherryroad.com For the first time in program history, the Alice Lady Coyote Volleyball team is launching their 2025 season with a Midnight Madness… Previous Post YOUNG EDINBURG MAN KILLED IN EARLY […]

LADY COYOTE VOLLEYBALL STARTS WITH HISTORIC TRYOUTS AT “MIDNIGHT MADNESS”
Sports
WSU Track and Field cut in half – The Daily Evergreen
On June 16 2025 WSU Athletics informed the men’s and women’s track and field teams that their scope of competitions will be narrowed. Sprinting and hurdle events will be reduced in the future along with field events such as throwing and jumping being cut altogether. “The program will be shifting to a distance-focused approach,” […]

On June 16 2025 WSU Athletics informed the men’s and women’s track and field teams that their scope of competitions will be narrowed. Sprinting and hurdle events will be reduced in the future along with field events such as throwing and jumping being cut altogether.
“The program will be shifting to a distance-focused approach,” WSU Athletics explained in a statement issued on Monday. “This change gives the WSU Track & Field program the best opportunity to remain competitive at the conference and national levels in distance events in cross country, indoor track and field, and outdoor track and field.”
Student-athletes affected by the cuts will still receive their scholarships if they decide to stay at WSU. Should they decide to pursue their career at a different university, transition support and services will be provided.

The new focus on distance events means that athletes like Mason Lawyer will be limited in their opportunities. In the late stages of May when qualifying for the NCAA Division-I Outdoor Track and Field Championship, Lawyer set a school record for the 200m sprint, running it in 20.34 seconds. On the same day, Lawyer along with Bryson Stubblefield, Parker Duskin and Keenan Kuntz set the school record for the 4x100m Relay running it in 39.09 seconds.
These performances punched their ticket to the NCAA Championship hosted by the University of Oregon on June 11-14. Lawyer finished 15th for the 100m, 17th for the 200m and 20th for the 4x100m Relay alongside Stubblefield, Duskin and Kuntz.

This constriction towards distance events also comes off the heels of Evans Kurui receiving All-American recognition. The WSU sophomore competed in his first ever outdoor championship running the 10,000m distance event. He placed fifth with a time of 29:10.91, making him the highest ranking Coug in the championships.
WSU Athletes whose events are cut entirely include:
Women
- Alexandra Gustavel – Freshman – Jumps
- Nana Gyedu – Senior – Throws
- LindiDon Kessinger – Freshman – Throws
- Laura Lindquist – Junior – Throws
- Luceris Suarez Pacheco – Junior – Throws
- Bri Sackman – Freshman – Throws
- Nevaeh Wilson – Sophomore – Throws
- Baylee Wroble – Freshman – Throws
- Eva Lowder – Sophomore – Pole Vault
- Chloe Metz – Freshman – Pole Vault
- Tatum Moku – Sophomore – Pole Vault
- Madisyn Negro – Sophomore – Pole Vault
- Sarah Kovich – Senior – Heptathlon
Men
- Eli Lawrence – Junior – Jumps
- A.J. McGloflin – Junior – Jumps
- Antoni Smith – Sophomore – Jumps
- Mason Andulajevic – Sophomore – Throws
- Caden Hottman – Junior – Throws
- Maxwell Moore – Graduate Student – Throws
- Henry Sheldrup – Sophomore – Throws
- Blake Sturgis – Junior – Throws
- Kai Twaddle-Dunham – Freshman – Throws
- Tristian Webb – Sophomore – Throws
- Cody White – Sophomore – Throws
- Gavin Dimick – Sophomore – Pole Vault
- Seth Nelson – Sophomore – Pole Vault
Athletes who will have their events limited moving forward include:
Women
- Micaela De Mello – Redshirt Senior – Hurdles
- Zakiya Hill – Freshman – Sprints
- Ashley Hollenbeck Willems – Senior – Sprints
- Brooke Lyons – Sophomore – Sprints
- Lahela Ray – Freshman – Sprints
- Zoe Ray – Freshman – Sprints
Men
- Eysias Banks – Senior – Hurdles
- Grant Buckmiller – Sophomore – Sprints
- Milan Cieslak – Freshman – Sprints
- Royal Haley – Freshman – Sprints
- Keenan Kuntz – Redshirt Freshman – Sprints
- Mason Lawyer – Junior – Sprints
- John Parades – Junior – Sprints/Hurdles
- Parker Duskin – Junior – Sprints/Hurdles
No other cuts to athletics have been announced so far. However, as the 2025-2026 school year approaches there may be more realignments as funding is finalized.
Sports
Southern Utah will have new athletic leadership after embattled AD resigns
CEDAR CITY — Southern Utah University is looking for a new leader of its athletic department. Doug Knuth announced he has resigned from his position as Southern Utah athletic director Tuesday morning three years into a tenure that featured highs and lows for the former embattled administrator at Nevada. Knuth cited a need to be […]

CEDAR CITY — Southern Utah University is looking for a new leader of its athletic department.
Doug Knuth announced he has resigned from his position as Southern Utah athletic director Tuesday morning three years into a tenure that featured highs and lows for the former embattled administrator at Nevada.
Knuth cited a need to be closer to his family in a statement from the university, adding that “it has been a privilege to work with the coaches, staff and student athletes. I couldn’t be more excited for the new opportunities that are coming.”
In a follow-up post from his personal account on social media platform X, Knuth noted the Thunderbirds’ “record fundraising” as well as an “all-time best academic and APR marks” and “new and renovated facilities with more coming soon.”
In three years under Knuth’s leadership, the university achieved its highest-ever APR score with a department-wide average of 985 and five teams earning a perfect 1,000.
The Flippin’ Birds’ gymnastics team won back-to-back MPSF championships following the dissolution of the Mountain Rim Gymnastics Conference, sweeping every major award this past year, and Thunderbird women’s basketball won the WAC regular-season and tournament titles in 2023 to clinch the program’s first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance.
The university also installed a new artificial turf softball field, renovated the basketball and volleyball practice gym, a new soccer stadium, and a “state-of-the-art track throws area” at Eccles Coliseum.
more coming soon, new partnership with healthcare, conference championships, and much more. All of that in 3 years.
I’ve been away from my wife and kids for 3 years. It’s time to be closer to them, and I couldn’t be more excited for the opportunities that are coming soon. DK— Doug Knuth (@DougKnuth) June 17, 2025
But Knuth’s departure is the second resignation from Southern Utah athletics in June, and comes eight days after head volleyball coach Kacey Nady resigned following four years with the school. In a news release, Knuth called the resignation “a great opportunity to identify a coach who can bring a new competitive vision to SUU volleyball,” which won 29 matches in four years.
The third-year athletic director who was under contract through December following stops at Nevada and the University of Utah also had a tumultuous end to his time in Cedar City. The university was under a department-wide Title IX investigation, as first reported by Action Network’s Brett McMurphy — an investigation Knuth publicly denied even as university officials told KSL.com that it “takes all reports seriously” while declining to address any specific allegations.
The investigation followed Knuth’s time in Reno, where he was a central figure in four Title IX investigations at Nevada during a long-term investigation outlined by USA Today, including allegations of disparaging comments about pregnant women and an alleged inappropriate relationship with an assistant cheer coach.
One of Knuth’s top assistants, deputy athletic director and operating officer Marie Tuite, was also involved in several investigations during her time as an administrator in San Jose State, as reported by Sportico.
Among other allegations, the veteran college sports administrator was accused of harboring a serial sexual abuser in the Spartans’ former longtime athletic trainer and retaliating against current and former employees who raised complaints, according to the report.
That complaint led to an investigation and a $1.6 million settlement with the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division. Southern Utah hired Tuite in 2023 following a “thorough vetting process,” according to a school spokesperson.
The school appointed retired Utah fifth judicial district judge Tom Higbee to serve as interim athletic director, beginning July 15.
“We are grateful for Doug’s time and commitment to SUU’s Athletic Department,” said president Mindy Benson in a statement. “We recognize Doug’s accomplishments on fundraising initiatives for facility improvements, strengthening the student-athlete experience, and building a vibrant game-day culture. We wish him well in his future endeavors.”
Southern Utah also finds itself in the middle of one of the latest waves of conference realignment, with the Western Athletic Conference soon to be down to just five member schools — SUU, Utah Tech, Abilene Christian, UT Arlington and Tarleton State — when Utah Valley joins the Big West next July.
Tarleton, which has openly stated ambitions of moving to the Football Bowl Subdivision of NCAA Division I, is also reportedly a leading candidate to join Conference USA if several expected waves continue to hit college sports, including the Pac-12’s reported heavy interest in Texas State out of the Sun Belt, according to ESPN and others. Louisiana Tech from CUSA is seen as the leading candidate to replace the Bobcats in the Sun Belt.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
Sports
12 student-athletes earn national academic honors
Reading time: < 1 minute Twelve University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa student-athletes were chosen for the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic At-Large All-District Team. Honorees ʻEleu Choy – Men’s Volleyball Anson Cabello – Men’s Golf Josh Hayashida – Men’s Golf Tyler Ogawa – Men’s Golf Dane Watanabe – Men’s Golf James Whitworth – Men’s Golf […]

Twelve University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa student-athletes were chosen for the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic At-Large All-District Team.
Honorees
- ʻEleu Choy – Men’s Volleyball
- Anson Cabello – Men’s Golf
- Josh Hayashida – Men’s Golf
- Tyler Ogawa – Men’s Golf
- Dane Watanabe – Men’s Golf
- James Whitworth – Men’s Golf
- Varnika S. Achanta – Women’s Golf
- Sarah Burton – Beach Volleyball
- Alana Embry – Beach Volleyball
- Daisy Logtens – Water Polo
- Roni Perlman – Water Polo
- Jordan Wedderburn – Water Polo
In order to be eligible, a student-athlete must be a starter or important reserve with at least a 3.50 cumulative GPA. While all student-athletes who meet the requirements can be named to the at-large all-district team, schools are limited to just six male and six female honorees.
Candidates came from a pool of more than a dozen of UH Mānoa’s NCAA-sponsored sports, including men’s volleyball, women’s beach volleyball, women’s water polo and men’s and women’s golf.
For more on the honorees, visit Hawaiiathletics.com.
Sports
Singapore Unveils New Aquatics Arena for 2025 World Championships
The 2025 World Championships officially have a pool with the new World Aquatics Championships Arena (WCH Arena) being unveiled yesterday in Singapore at the Singapore Spots Hub. The facility will be home to a few large aquatics events in the coming months, and the World Championships will not be the first event hosted in the […]

The 2025 World Championships officially have a pool with the new World Aquatics Championships Arena (WCH Arena) being unveiled yesterday in Singapore at the Singapore Spots Hub.
The facility will be home to a few large aquatics events in the coming months, and the World Championships will not be the first event hosted in the new pool. Later this week, the Southeast Asian Age Group Championships will christen the facility from June 20th-27th.
Mark Chay, the co-chair of the Singapore 2025 organizing committee said “Young aquatics athletes from Southeast Asia will inaugurate the WCH Arena, followed by the professional athletes competing in the World Aquatics Championships and our Masters athletes participating in the World Aquatics Masters Championships.
At 4,800 permanent seats, the arena comes in just under the permanent capacity of some of the recent World Championships sites. The Duna arena in Hungary and the Hamad Aquatic Centre in Doha both have 5,000 permanent seats.
Swimming fans will also be pleased to read that the pool has a depth of 3 meters which matches World Aquatics’ recommendation when it comes to pool depth. This should assuage any concerns about pool depth which was a major conversation during the 2024 Olympics due to La Défense Arena’s depth of 2.15 meters.
Paris Olympians will see one familiar site with the starting blocks, which are the exact same model that was used at the Games last year.
- via World Aquatics Championships 2025 Singapore
Only Swimming and Artistic Swimming competitions will be held in the new arena. The rest of the events will be evenly spread out between Palawan and the OCBC Aquatic Centre
Sport by Sport Competition Schedule:
Sport | Venue | Dates |
Water Polo | OCBC Aquatic Centre, Singapore Sports Hub |
July 11-24 2025 |
Open Water Swimming | Palawan Beach, Sentosa | July 15-20 2025 |
Artistic Swimming | WCH Arena, Singapore Sports Hub | July 18-25 2025 |
High Diving | Palawan Green, Sentosa | July 25-27 2025 |
Diving | OCBC Aquatic Centre, Singapore Sports Hub |
July 26 to August 3 2025 |
Swimming | WCH Arena, Singapore Sports Hub | July 27 to August 3 2025 |
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