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Lexington boys rip Winchester for 15th straight volleyball triumph – Boston Herald

WINCHESTER – With the sole lead in the Middlesex League title race on the line against rival Winchester, the No. 8 Lexington boys volleyball team picked a good night to set personal records on Monday. Junior outside hitter Nic Sanchez de Rojas posted a career-high 19 kills with nine in the third set, helping the […]

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WINCHESTER – With the sole lead in the Middlesex League title race on the line against rival Winchester, the No. 8 Lexington boys volleyball team picked a good night to set personal records on Monday.

Junior outside hitter Nic Sanchez de Rojas posted a career-high 19 kills with nine in the third set, helping the Minutemen (15-1) overcome late runs from the No. 18 Red and Black to pull out a 3-0 (25-21, 25-16, 25-23) win and extend their program-best 15-game winning streak.

Defense and serving were other major keys against a scrappy Winchester group hosting its 8th Annual Spike Out ALS fundraiser game.

“I didn’t know (I had 19), I feel great,” Sanchez de Rojas said. “Our coach always tells us to maintain the team ego but not have a personal ego, so I think it really helps to boost our morale. Obviously, we see the 15-1, and it makes us feel good. But we just can’t get too cocky.”

Lexington’s talent and depth overwhelmed Winchester in pockets throughout the match. Ale Luciani (11 kills) and Nadav Vachtel (seven kills) each had standout stretches on the attack. Mahin Rajesh and Jake Seigal combined for 37 assists, and middles Alexander Jackson (4.5 blocks) and Kolbey Manuelian (two blocks) played well at the net alongside the three-headed monster of pin-hitters to anchor a strong defensive showing.

That depth turned in a comfortable, 25-16 win in the second set. But in the first, Winchester erupted for a 5-0 run facing set point to challenge in a 25-21 frame. And in the third, a 9-1 run anchored a comeback from down 17-8 eventually forced a 23-23 tie.

The Minutemen, who lost a 3-2 thriller to Wayland in the opener, continued to show their improvement in crunch time by taking the next two points on a kill and block from Manuelian.

“We know that Winchester is always going to give us a battle,” said Lexington head coach Marc Turiano. “It got real competitive down the stretch (in the third). I think our guys have gotten in the habit of winning the tight set. … They’ve been pushed a number of times during this streak, and they’ve shown a pattern of coming through.”

“We practice the (clutch) situations,” added Sanchez de Rojas. “20-20, who can get to 25 first. I think it’s really great to get used to that in practice. … We’re starting to see we’re competing more in those tight situations and winning.”

Sanchez de Rojas had set the stage for the win in that last set with nine kills, adding to yet another showing of depth Lexington has at the pins.

Vachtel had four kills in a standout second set. Luciani had five with four aces in the first.

“It’s incredible we have so many options,” Sanchez de Rojas said.

Despite the loss, Winchester head coach John Fleming was pleased to see such a scrappy fight from his group before heading into a difficult stretch of its schedule before the state tournament starts. More meaningful, though, was a large crowd at a game dedicated to a great cause.

Former player Philip Marks’ father, Rick, was diagnosed with ALS in 2017 and the team started the fundraiser in support of the family. Shortly after, Fleming’s father was diagnosed.

It’s a cause that hits close to home, and the impact of still hosting the successful event, with Rick Marks’ wife, Eileen, and ALS One in attendance, is special.

“(Eileen) comes every year,” Fleming said. “Even a Lexington parent just came up to me and she works at BioGen … they just had a big break through. She and I spoke and she said the awareness is so big. … To have (this) sort of impact still is huge for us. And I think it’s important for high school athletes to sometimes be thinking about something than a match and to think about something as big and life-changing as a disease like this.

“It’s great to have the support from the community, that’s also why we picked Lexington.”



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2025 Southern Arizona Track and Field All-Stars

Share Tweet Share Share Email Katherine McNulty. (Andy Morales/AllSportsTucson) STATE TRACK AND FIELD CHAMPIONS400: Nevaeh Anderson, Pueblo 47.361600: Katherine McNulty, Catalina Foothills 4:52.743200: Katherine McNulty, Catalina Foothills 10:46.39JAVELIN: Isaac Moyle, Salpointe 208-044×400: Buena, 3:17.64: Ricardo Brooks, Armani Ramirez-Sperle, Jayden Thomas, Vijay Carrier STATE TRACK AND […]

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Katherine McNulty. (Andy Morales/AllSportsTucson)

STATE TRACK AND FIELD CHAMPIONS
400: Nevaeh Anderson, Pueblo 47.36
1600: Katherine McNulty, Catalina Foothills 4:52.74
3200: Katherine McNulty, Catalina Foothills 10:46.39
JAVELIN: Isaac Moyle, Salpointe 208-04
4×400: Buena, 3:17.64: Ricardo Brooks, Armani Ramirez-Sperle, Jayden Thomas, Vijay Carrier

STATE TRACK AND FIELD SECOND PLACE
1600: Amelia North, Rincon University 4:55.63
110 HURDLES: Jett Merrill, Ironwood Ridge 14.10
DISCUS: Caleb Miller, Mica Mountain 159-04

STATE TRACK AND FIELD THIRD PLACE
200: Nevaeh Anderson, Pueblo 21.84
400: Donovan Davidson, Empire 48.25
800: Noah Macias, Mica Mountain 1:53.47
DISCUS: Shawn Bookman, Buena 158-05
HIGH JUMP: Sean McCarthy, Canyon del Oro 6-06
SHOT PUT: Liz Ugwu, Sahuaro 41-07.75 12.69
TRIPLE JUMP: Cayla Jones, Cienega 37-05.50
4×100: Mica Mountain, 41.18: Jordan Perry, Makhi Prescott, Nathaniel Bryant, Tyree Evans

STATE CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS

TEAM CHAMPION
D-III Mica Mountain Boys

TEAM THIRD PLACE
D-III Salpointe Boys

INDIVIDUAL AND RELAYS CHAMPIONS
D-I Shot Put: Kemeko Daniels, Tucson 40-00
D-II 200: Nevaeh Anderson, Pueblo 21.41
D-II 400: Nevaeh Anderson, Pueblo 48.13
D-II 300 Hurdles: Aliyah Akinbile, Catalina Foothills 42.99
D-II Shot Put: Victoria Williams, Cienega 36-09.25
D-III 100: Nathaniel Bryant, Mica Mountain 10.84
D-III 1600: Hailey Burke, Mica Mountain 5:09.99
D-III 110 Hurdles: Jett Merrill, Ironwood Ridge 14.28
D-III 300 Hurdles: Jett Merrill, Ironwood Ridge 38.79
D-III Triple Jump: Monica Verrett, Amphitheater 34-07.5
D-III Discus: Hannah Lopez, Walden Grove 110-04
D-III Long Jump: Nathaniel Bryant, Mica Mountain 23-00
D-III Javelin: Isaac Moyle, Salpointe 198-06
D-IV 200: Donovan Davidson, Empire 22.01
D-IV 400: Donovan Davidson, Empire 48.23
RELAYS
D-II 4×400: Buena 3:18.46 Ricardo Brooks, Armani Ramirez-Sperle, Vijay Carrier, Jayden Thomas
D-III 4×100: Mica Mountain 41.68 Synzere King, Jordan Perry, Makhi Prescott, Nathaniel Bryant
D-III 4×800: Mica Mountain 9:45.07 Madison Vigil, Mia Parker, Hailey Burke, Alana Alva
D-IV 4×400: Empire 3:20.36 Khari Gurley-Yi, Jacob Stark, Tyler Chamblee, Donovan Davidson

INDIVIDUAL AND RELAYS SECOND PLACE
D-II 1600: Milanni Pedraza, Flowing Wells 5:17.24
D-II Triple Jump: Cayla Jones, Cienega 37-00.25
D-II High Jump: Sean McCarthy, Canyon del Oro 6-04
D-II Long Jump: Cayla Jones, Cienega 18-02.5
D-III 400: Jordan Perry, Mica Mountain 49.73
D-III 800: Noah Macias, Mica Mountain 1:54.94
D-III Javelin: Camila Villalobos, Sahuarita 116-02
D-III Shot Put: JJ Mangrum, Mica Mountain 52-08
D-III Shot Put: Amaris Biancuzzo. Mica Mountain 37-03
D-III Discus: Sabian Moreno, Salpointe 146-06
D-III Long Jump: Jett Merrill, Ironwood Ridge 22-00.5
D-IV 200: Taylor Tatum, Sabino 25.58
D-IV 400: Khari Gurley-Yi, Empire 49.45
D-IV 800: Cameron Kohl, Pusch Ridge 2:15.21
D-IV 800: Milo Mandolini, Sabino 1:55.94
D-IV 1600: Milo Mandolini, Sabino 4:17.64
D-IV 3200: Andrew Smith, Tanque Verde 9:26.49
D-IV Discus: Lilyanne Dawson, Empire 118-03
D-IV Long Jump: James Jerusalem, Catalina 21-08.5
D-V 200: Omar Wright, Santa Rita 22.89
D-V 300 Hurdles: Rayleigh Olsen, Benson 46.84
D-V Pole Vault: Robert Carney, Tombstone 143-02
RELAY
D-III 4×100: Salpointe 42.09 Nasim Pedrego, Kane Collins, Nate Spivey, RJ Gory
D-III 4×800: Ironwood Ridge 9:55.93 Madeline Schultz, Sophia Simmons, Kelsey Konishi, Abigail Schultz

INDIVIDUAL AND RELAYS THIRD PLACE
D-I 800: Amelia North, Rincon/University 2:16.89
D-II 100: Nevaeh Anderson, Pueblo 10.49
D-II 800: Rose Barlette, Cienega 2:16.26
D-II Discus: Shawn Bookman, Buena 154-01
D-II High Jump: Carolina Renteria, Nogales 5-02
D-II 100 Hurdles: Aliyah Akinbile, Catalina Foothills 14.27
D-III 200: Matthew Kroner, Ironwood Ridge 22.26
D-III 400: Alana Alva, Mica Mountain 59.85
D-III 800: Hailey Burke, Mica Mountain 2:18.95
D-III 100: Kane Collins, Salpointe 10.92
D-III 110 Hurdles: Kyler Holthaus, Ironwood Ridge 14.95
D-III Triple Jump: Ryann Odum, Salpointe 34-05
D-IV Pole Vault: Daniel Purcell, Pusch Ridge 13-06
D-IV 1600: Hayley Floyd, Pusch Ridge 5:15.91
D-IV 3200: Hayley Floyd, Pusch Ridge 11:17.95
D-V 400: Jonathan Ochoa, St. Augustine 50.84
D-V 800: Jonathan Ochoa, St. Augustine 1:59.95
D-V Shot Put: Aiden Luna, Tombstone 47-02.5
D-V Discus: Robert Carney, Tombstone 143-02
D-V Pole Vault: Mason Richardson, Bisbee 13-00
RELAYS
D-II 4×100: Catalina Foothills 48.38 Zoe Gardenhire, Sedona Drumm-Lee, Jahmilah Kassire, Aliyah Akinbile
D-II 4×400: Catalina Foothills 3:56.03 Adelyn Sommers, Sedona Drumm-Lee, Katherine McNulty, Aliyah Akinbile
D-III 4×400: Mica Mountain 3:20.95 Makhi Prescott, Noah Macias, Nolan Black, Jordan Perry
D-III 4×800: Salpointe 7:59.42 Cristiano Morales, Nathan Lehrling, Ian Morelock, Aric Accetta
D-IV 4×800: Sabino 8:09.96 Aidan Gerdeman, Milo Mandolini, Nick Moffett, Noah Hymson

SOUTHERN ARIZONA ALL-STARS

RUNNERS OF THE YEAR
Nevaeh Anderson, Sr. Pueblo
Katherine McNulty, Jr. Catalina Foothills

FIELD ATHLETES OF THE YEAR
Isaac Moyle, Jr. Salpointe
Liz Ugwu, Sr. Sahuaro/Cayla Jones, Sr. Cienega

FRESHMEN OF THE YEAR
Ali Diomande, Catalina
Deztany Toyota-Villalobos, Buena

COACHES OF THE YEAR
Matt Penland, Mica Mountain
Scot Burnham, Cienega

100 METERS
Nevaeh Anderson, Sr. Pueblo 10.49
Nathaniel Bryant, Sr. Mica Mountain 10.57
Kane Collins, S0. Salpointe 10.66
Tyree Evans, Sr. Mica Mountain 10.67
Makhi Prescott, Sr. Mica Mountain 10.73

Deztany Toyota-Villalobos, Fr. Buena 11.96
Zoe Gardenhire, Jr. Catalina Foothills 12.03
Zariyah Whitlock, Sr. Sahuaro 12.24
Ayana Wright, So. Sahuarita 12.32
Isabella Robinson, Sr. Ironwood Ridge 12.33

200 METERS
Nevaeh Anderson, Sr. Pueblo 21.40
Jett Merrill, So. Ironwood Ridge 21.84
Tyree Evans, Sr. Mica Mountain 21.85
Donovan Davidson, Sr. Empire 21.90
Matthew Kroner, Sr. Ironwood Ridge 21.93

Deztany Toyota-Villalobos, Fr. Buena 24.93
Aliyah Hatchett, So. Cienega 24.97
Aliyah Akinbile, Jr. Catalina Foothills 25.06
Zoe Gardenhire, Jr. Catalina Foothills 25.36
Sedona Drumm-Lee, So. Catalina Foothills 25.36

400 METERS
Nevaeh Anderson, Sr. Pueblo 47.36 (2nd State)
Donovan Davidson, Sr. Empire 47.86
Vijay Carrier, Jr. Buena 48.34
Cristiano Morales, Jr. Salpointe 48.84
Jordan Perry, Sr. Mica Mountain 49.21

Aliyah Hatchett, So. Cienega 57.22
Aliyah Akinbile, Jr. Catalina Foothills 57.51
Rose Barlette, Jr. Cienega 57.99
Sedona Drumm-Lee, So. Catalina Foothills 58.90
Taylor Tatum, Sr. Sabino 59.19

800 METERS
Noah Macias, Sr. Mica Mountain 1:53.47
Milo Mandolini, So. Sabino 1:55.94
Danny Knapp, Sr. Rio Rico 1:57.42
Aric Accetta, Sr. Salpointe 1:57.81
Arian Puig, So. Rio Rico 1:58.17

Katherine McNulty, Jr. Catalina Foothills 2:14.23
Cameron Kohl, Jr. Pusch Ridge 2:15.21
Amelia North, Sr. Rincon University 2:16.89
Sophy Floyd, Fr. Pusch Ridge 2:19.15
Abigail Schultz, Jr. Ironwood Ridge 2:19.77

1600 METERS
Milo Mandolini, So. Sabino 4:17.64
Andrew Smith, Sr. Tanque Verde 4:23.04
Emiliano Caldera, Jr. Catalina 4:24.44
Aric Accetta, Sr. Salpointe 4:26.06
Finnegan Hawes, Jr. Rincon University 4:28.67

Katherine McNulty, Jr. Catalina Foothills 4:52.74 (Best in State)
Amelia North, Sr. Rincon University 4:55.63 (2nd State)
Hailey Burke, So. Mica Mountain 4:59.75
Abigail Kurgat, Sr. Rincon University 5:09.48
Hayley Floyd, Jr. Pusch Ridge 5:09.89

3200 METERS
Andrew Smith, Sr. Tanque Verde 9:19.40
Jose Hernandez, Sr. Rio Rico 9:29.26
Emiliano Caldera, Jr. Catalina 9:39.36
Finnegan Hawes, Jr. Rincon University 9:40.37
Lucas Williams, Sr. Mica Mountain 9:44.20

Amelia North, Sr. Rincon University 10:38.25 (Best in State)
Katherine McNulty, Jr. Catalina Foothills 10:46.39 (2nd in State)
Hayley Floyd, Jr. Pusch Ridge 11:05.01
Hailey Burke, So. Mica Mountain 11:07.75
Abigail Kurgat, Sr. Rincon University 11:12.92

110/100 METER HURDLES
Jett Merrill, So. Ironwood Ridge 14.02 (2nd in State)
Kyler Holthaus, Sr. Ironwood Ridge 14.80
Kevin Bruns, Sr. Tucson 15.05
Nasim Pedrego, Jr. Salpointe 15.12
Ethan Mack, Sr. Cienega 15.41

Aliyah Akinbile, Jr. Catalina Foothills 14.27
Adestra Natale, Sr. Ironwood Ridge 15.67
Samantha Archuleta, Jr. Cienega 16.17
Aleah Soderman, Sr. Empire 16.27
Jadie Gonzalez, Sr. Marana 16.31

300 METER HURDLES
Jett Merrill, So. Ironwood Ridge 37.86
Ethan Mack, Sr. Cienega 39.03
Jayden Thomas, Jr. Buena 39.40
Makhi Prescott, Sr. Mica Mountain 39.75
Nasim Pedrego, Jr. Salpointe 39.83

Aliyah Akinbile, Jr. Catalina Foothills 42.64 (3rd in State)
Storm Ryan, So. Buena 45.18
Rayleigh Olsen, Jr. Benson 46.76
Taylor Tatum, Sr. Sabino 47.01
Aleah Soderman, Sr. Empire 47.03

SHOT PUT
JJ Mangrum, Sr. Mica Mountain 52-11.5
Shawn Bookman, Sr. Buena 50-3.25
Sabian Moreno, Jr. Salpointe 48-8
Jonathan Yates, Sr. Mica Mountain 48-1
Emmanuel Bocharski, Sr. Buena 47-10.25

Liz Ugwu, Sr. Sahuaro 41-9 (3rd in State)
Kemeko Daniels, So. Tucson 41-0.5
Amaris Biancuzzo, Jr. Mica Mountain 38′-9.75
Victoria Williams, Jr. Cienega 37-11.5
Harper Tuffly, Sr. Ironwood Ridge 35-1

DISCUS
Shawn Bookman, Sr. Buena 166-2
Caleb Miller, Sr. Mica Mountain 162-7
JJ Mangrum, Sr. Mica Mountain 155-10
Jose Sierra, Jr. Sunnyside 150-4
Kienan Parker, Sr. Empire 148-10

Liz Ugwu, Sr. Sahuaro 133-4
Victoria Williams, Jr. Cienega 122-0
Lilyanne Dawson, Sr. Empire 118-3
Camila Villalobos, Sr. Sahuarita 116-5
Kaley Smith, Jr. Cienega 114-6

JAVELIN
Isaac Moyle, Jr. Salpointe 208-4 (State Best)
Daniel Ortiz, Sr. Palo Verde 156-2
Damien Wallace, Sr. Mountain View 152-11
Aaron Kenworthy, Jr. Pusch Ridge 152-0
Ameer Samain, Jr. Catalina Foothills 151-7

Camila Villalobos, Sr. Sahuarita 119-3
Amaris Biancuzzo, Jr. Mica Mountain 118-6
Regina Garcia, Jr. Salpointe 111-8
Harper Tuffly, Sr. Ironwood Ridge 108-10
Angela Vasquez, Sr. Valley Union 108-0

POLE VAULT
Daniel Purcell, Sr. Pusch Ridge 14-9
Timothy Multhup, Jr. Salpointe 14-0
Mason Richardson, Sr. Bisbee 13-7
Kyler Spicer, Sr. Marana 13-7
Spencer Anthony, Sr. Bisbee 13-6

Maisey Addison, Jr. Ironwood Ridge 9-7
Madalyn Bohlin, Fr. Catalina Foothills 9-3
Luci Dimond, Sr. Mountain View 9-1
Naomi Schoenhage, Sr. Salpointe 8-7
Alexa Martinez, So. Douglas 8-6
Alyssa Alegria, Sr. Sahuarita 8-6

LONG JUMP
Nathaniel Bryant, Sr. Mica Mountain 23-2
Jett Merrill, So. Ironwood Ridge 23-2
James Jerusalem, Sr. Catalina 22-8
Tyree Evans, Sr. Mica Mountain 22-2.25
Isaac Rhonehouse, Jr. Ironwood Ridge 22-1.25

Montana Poe, Sr. Sahuaro 18-8
Cayla Jones, Sr. Cienega 18-2.5
Nami Singer, Sr. Marana 17-10
Zoee Zook, Sr. Marana 17-9.5
Harper Tuffly, Sr. Ironwood Ridge 17-4.75

TRIPLE JUMP
Dezmen Roebuck, Sr. Marana 45-3
Kevin Bruns, Sr. Tucson 44-7
Kristian White, So. Palo Verde 44-2.5
Isaiah Peak, Jr. Marana 43-11
Jaiden Tyrone, Sr. Tucson 43-9.5

Sophronia Okpara, Sr. Mica Mountain 37-8.25
Cayla Jones, Sr. Cienega 37-5.5
Nami Singer, Sr. Marana 36-9
Monica Verrett, Jr. Amphitheater 36-5.25
Adrian Griffin, Sr. Marana 36-1

DECATHLON
Kyler Holthaus, Sr. Ironwood Ridge 5708
Timothy Multhup, Jr. Salpointe 5320
Ion Brin, Jr. Mountain View 4998
Sebastian Lippert, Fr. Marana 3513

HEPTATHLON
Carolina Renteria, Sr. Nogales 3983
Zoee Zook, Sr. Marana 3635
Johanna Simpson, Sr. Nogales 3365
Harper Tuffly, Sr. Ironwood Ridge 3358
Adestra Natale, Sr. Ironwood Ridge 3272

D-III GOLF ALL-STARS

TENNIS ALL-STARS










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California changed rules for a track-and-field meet after a trans athlete’s success. What to know | Sports

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California is opening up its track-and-field championship to more girls after a transgender athlete drew controversy for qualifying for the meet. The California Interscholastic Federation announced the temporary rule change Tuesday after high school junior AB Hernandez’s success drew backlash, including from President Donald Trump. He criticized the athlete’s participation in […]

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California is opening up its track-and-field championship to more girls after a transgender athlete drew controversy for qualifying for the meet.

The California Interscholastic Federation announced the temporary rule change Tuesday after high school junior AB Hernandez’s success drew backlash, including from President Donald Trump. He criticized the athlete’s participation in a social media post Tuesday, though the group said it decided on the rule change before that.

Here’s what to know:

State law lets trans athletes compete

Former California Gov. Jerry Brown signed a law in 2013 allowing students to participate in sex-segregated school programs, including on sports teams, and use bathrooms and other facilities that align with their gender identity.

A Republican-led effort to block that law failed recently in the Democratic-dominated Legislature. Another proposal that also failed would have required the federation to ban students whose sex was assigned male at birth from participating on a girls school sports team.

Federation announces rule change

The federation said it was launching a “pilot entry process” to allow more girls participate in the championship track-and-field meet.

Under the change, “any biological female student-athlete who would have earned the next qualifying mark for one of their Section’s automatic qualifying entries in the CIF State meet, and did not achieve the CIF State at-large mark in the finals at their Section meet” could compete, the group said.

If a transgender athlete medals, their ranking would not displace a “biological female” student from medaling, the federation confirmed. In high jump, triple jump and long jump — all of the state championship events Hernandez qualified to compete in — a “biological female” who would have earned podium placement will get the medal for that place and will be reflected in the records, the federal said.

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

Experts from organizations including the American Medical Association, American Psychiatric Association and American Psychological Association say gender is a spectrum, not a binary structure consisting of only males and females.

Backlash centers on one student

Hernandez, a trans athlete in Southern California, is at the center of the debate. She won the long jump and triple jump during the division finals and is expected to perform well this weekend. She also set a triple jump meet record at the Ontario Relays earlier this year.

Critics have accused her of having an unfair advantage over other athletes.

Hernandez told the publication Capital & Main earlier this month that she couldn’t worry about the actions of critics, who have called out her participation and heckled her at postseason meets.

“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.

Rule change prompts criticism

The rule change may discriminate against transgender athletes, said Elana Redfield, a policy director at the UCLA School of Law Williams Institute, which researches sexual orientation and gender identity policies.

“The CIF policy creates two sets of rules — one for transgender girls, who must earn a place through traditional measures of competition, and another for ‘biological females,’ some of whom are allowed an extra chance to earn a spot,” Redfield said in an email.

The change seems to “thread a fine needle” by trying to ensure cisgender girls aren’t denied a competition slot while still allowing trans athletes to participate, Redfield said.

Doriane Lambelet Coleman, a professor at Duke Law School, said the change would help ensure that “no female athlete loses a place on a team or in a competition when a trans girl is included.”

“Unlike inclusion policies that ignore sex differences, doing it this way doesn’t gaslight the other girls about their biology,” said Coleman, who has researches subjects including children, sports and law and wrote recently on the evolving definition of sex.

Izzy Gardon, a spokesperson for California Gov. Gavin Newsom, called the rule change “a reasonable, respectful way to navigate a complex issue without compromising competitive fairness” and said the governor thought it was a thoughtful approach. Newsom angered some liberal allies earlier this year when he questioned the fairness of transgender girls participation in girls sports.


Associated Press writer Janie Har in San Francisco contributed.


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

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.





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Army West Point Wins 2024-25 Patriot League Presidents’ Cup

Story Links BETHLEHEM, Pa.  – Army West Point claimed the Patriot League Presidents’ Cup, winning three League Championships during the 2024-25 academic year to finish atop the leaderboard. The Black Knights also topped the women’s standings, while Navy collected the men’s title for the third straight year. Army West Point earned […]

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BETHLEHEM, Pa.  – Army West Point claimed the Patriot League Presidents’ Cup, winning three League Championships during the 2024-25 academic year to finish atop the leaderboard. The Black Knights also topped the women’s standings, while Navy collected the men’s title for the third straight year.

Army West Point earned 150.25 overall points to capture the Patriot League Presidents’ Cup for the fifth time in program history and the first time since the 2004-05 academic year (Presidents’ Cup History), snapping Navy’s record-breaking streak of 10 straight overall titles. Navy finished second with 142.25 overall points, while Bucknell (139.75), Boston University (136.5) and Lehigh (112.25) make up the top five.

The Black Knights claimed the League crown in women’s cross country, men’s swimming and diving and women’s outdoor track and field. They also won the regular-season titles in softball and women’s tennis to help finish with a League-leading 84.25 points in the women’s standings. Boston University compiled 84 points, collecting League titles in women’s indoor track and field, women’s rowing, softball, women’s soccer and women’s tennis. Bucknell (75.25), Navy (75.25) and Lehigh (62.25) round out the closely-contested top five.

The Mids won League titles in men’s cross country, men’s indoor track and field, women’s golf and women’s lacrosse, men’s outdoor track and field and women’s swimming and diving. The Navy team also played for the League title in men’s basketball, helping to accumulate 67 points in the men’s standings. Army West Point (66) finished one point behind. Bucknell (64.25), Boston University (52.5) and Lehigh (50) ranked third, fourth and fifth, respectively, on the men’s leaderboard.

The Patriot League Presidents’ Cup is awarded to the member institution with the highest cumulative sports point total in the Patriot League standings for sponsored men’s and women’s sports. Points are awarded based on a combination of an institution’s regular-season and tournament finishes in each sport.

 

In football, points are awarded based on the final regular-season standings. If there is no regular-season competition and a Patriot League Championship determines the champion, points are awarded based on the final championship standings. If all teams compete in the Patriot League Championship and there is a regular-season competition, points are awarded based on the average of the final regular-season standings and the tournament finish. If all teams do not participate in the Patriot League Championship and a regular-season competition is held, points are awarded based on the average of the final season standings and the tournament finish. For those teams not participating in the Championship, the final regular-season standings will be utilized.

 

Bucknell leads all programs with 18 overall Patriot League Presidents’ Cup titles, followed by Navy with 11 and Army West Point with five trophies. The three schools are the only winners of the overall title in League history.

2024-25 Patriot League Presidents Cup Final Standings

(number of Patriot League sports in parentheses)

OVERALL

1. Army West Point, 150.25 (20)

2. Navy, 142.25 (21)

3. Bucknell, 139.75 (24)

4. Boston University, 136.5 (20)

5. Lehigh, 112.25 (24)

6. Colgate, 94.75 (22)

7. Holy Cross, 85.25 (24)

8. Loyola Maryland, 69 (17)

9. Lafayette, 67.75 (22)

10. American, 57.75 (15)

 

MEN

1. Navy, 67 (10)

2. Army West Point, 66 (10)

3. Bucknell, 64.25 (11)

4. Boston University, 52.5 (8)

5. Lehigh, 50 (11)

6. Colgate, 46 (10)

7. Holy Cross, 44 (11)

8. Lafayette, 32.75 (11)

9. Loyola Maryland, 29.75 (7)

10. American, 27 (6)

 

WOMEN

1. Army West Point, 84.25 (10)

2. Boston University, 84 (12)

3. Bucknell, 75.5 (13)

4. Navy, 75.25 (11)

5. Lehigh, 62.25 (13)

6. Colgate, 48.75 (12)

7. Holy Cross, 41.25 (13)

8. Loyola Maryland, 39.25 (10)

9. Lafayette, 35 (11)

10. American, 30.75 (9)

 

ABOUT THE PATRIOT LEAGUE

The Patriot League is in its fourth decade of academic and athletic achievement, continually demonstrating that student-athletes can excel at both academics and athletics without sacrificing high standards. The Patriot League’s athletic success is achieved while its member institutions remain committed to its founding principle of admitting and graduating student-athletes who are academically representative of their class. Participation in athletics at Patriot League institutions is viewed as an important component of a well-rounded education.

 

 



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Volleyball Unveils 2025 Schedule – Winthrop University Athletics

Story Links Rock Hill, S.C. – Winthrop Volleyball has unveiled their 2025 schedule, head coach Heather Gearhart announced this week. The Eagles have a 24-match regular season schedule, which features a non-conference slate with a power four opponent in Tennessee and top mid-major programs. The first chance to see the […]

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Rock Hill, S.C. – Winthrop Volleyball has unveiled their 2025 schedule, head coach Heather Gearhart announced this week.

The Eagles have a 24-match regular season schedule, which features a non-conference slate with a power four opponent in Tennessee and top mid-major programs. The first chance to see the Eagles will be the season-opener against Davidson on August 29.

The Eagles are coming off a 2024 season which saw them reach the Big South Conference championship match and advance to the National Invitational Volleyball Championship Tournament, both of which occurred for the second straight season.

Winthrop begins their season with a home invitational with Davidson and Charlotte on August 29th and 30th.

The Eagles then hit the road for two straight non-conference tournaments, traveling to Knoxville to take on Samford and Wofford and tournament host Tennessee September 4-5.

The Eagles will then head to Greenville, S.C. to take on North Florida, Alabama, and the host Furman Paladins over three days, September 11-13.

Winthrop will close out their non-conference slate with another home invitational by squaring off with Western Carolina on September 18th and neighboring rival Queens on September 20th.

Big South Conference play will begin September 26th for Winthrop as they host Gardner-Webb. 

The Eagles will hit on the road the next week, facing High Point (Oct. 3) and Radford (Oct. 4).

Winthrop then welcomes USC Upstate (Oct. 10) and UNC Asheville (Oct. 11) before heading to Charleston Southern (Oct. 17) and Presbyterian (Oct. 18).

Winthrop will return to Rock Hill to begin a four-match home stand with Radford (Oct. 24), High Point (Oct. 25), Presbyterian (Oct. 31) and Charleston Southern (Nov. 1).

The Eagles will wrap up regular season conference play with three matches for the rest of November, traveling to UNC Asheville (Nov. 7) and USC Upstate (Nov. 8).

The final home match and senior night will be November 14th against Gardner-Webb.

The Big South Conference Tournament is scheduled for the week following the completion of the regular season, November 21st – 23rd and will return to High Point University in High Point, N.C. The top six teams will advance to the conference tournament.

For up-to-date information and latest news on Winthrop Volleyball, follow along on X, Instagram, Facebook and Tik Tok.





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Mountain Bruins Wine Tasting event a success | News

The Mountain Bruins hosted their annual Wine Tasting Social on Friday May 23.   Over 70 members of the scholarship program gathered at the charming estate home of Lisa and Brian Cohen for the annual wine tasting event.   This year, the Mountain Bruins are supporting nine local mountain residents in their academic journey at UCLA.  […]

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The Mountain Bruins hosted their annual Wine Tasting Social on Friday May 23.  



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Track & Field Ready for the Four-Day NCAA East First Round in Jacksonville – LSU

BATON ROUGE, La. – The LSU track and field team is kicking off the initial qualifying rounds of the NCAA meets with the NCAA East First Round hosted at North Florida’s Hodges Stadium in Jacksonville, Fla. The four-day meet will be streamed lived on ESPN+. Live Results | Meet Schedule | Meet Information LSU will have […]

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BATON ROUGE, La. – The LSU track and field team is kicking off the initial qualifying rounds of the NCAA meets with the NCAA East First Round hosted at North Florida’s Hodges Stadium in Jacksonville, Fla. The four-day meet will be streamed lived on ESPN+.

Live Results | Meet Schedule | Meet Information

LSU will have 34 student-athletes (20 men, 14 women) competing this week at the NCAA East First Round. The first day of the meet (Wednesday) is set to start at 1:30 p.m. CT for LSU with the men’s javelin throw.

Live coverage of the NCAA East First Round will air on ESPN+, starting at 5 p.m. on Wednesday and Thursday, and 4 p.m. on Friday and Saturday.

Wednesday: ESPN+ Stream (5 p.m.)
Thursday: ESPN+ Stream (5 p.m.)
Friday: ESPN+ Stream (4 p.m.)
Saturday: ESPN+ Stream (4 p.m.)

The Tigers will be represented at next week’s NCAA East First Round by 34 student athletes across 39 entries next week. The women are heading to this year’s meet with 13 less entries and seven less members than last year’s team. The men will have three less entries, but retain the same number of athletes as last year’s team.

To mirror the format of the national meet, the First Round will be contested over four days with alternating men’s and women’s programs. The NCAA West First Round will take place the same weekend at E.B. Cushing Stadium in College Station, Texas. The top 12 in each event advance to Eugene, Ore., for the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships (June 11-14). Listed below are all 39 entries for LSU and more info pertaining the upcoming meets.

Women’s Qualifiers | 18 entries, 14 student-athletes

100 (2) Tima Godbless, Aniyah Bigam
200 (2) Tima Godbless, Aniyah Bigam
400 (1) Ella Onojuvwevwo
800 (1) Michaela Rose
10,000 (1) Edna Chepkemoi
400h (1) Garriel White
4 x 100 Machaeda Linton, Nasya Williams, Aniyah Bigam, Tima Godbless
4 x 400 Ella Onojuvwevwo, Michaela Rose, Aniyah Bigam, Garriel White
PV (1) Johanna Duplantis
LJ (1) Machaeda Linton
TJ (2) Machaeda Linton, Taylor Fingers
DT (2) Princesse Hyman, Leah Acosta,
JT (2) Trinity Spooner, Alexis Guillory

 

Men’s Qualifiers | 21 entries, 20 student-athletes

100 (3) Jelani Watkins, Jaiden Reid, Myles Thomas
200 (2) Jaiden Reid, Jelani Watkins
400 (1) Amal Glasgow
1500 (2) Emedy Kiplimo, Rhen Langley
110h (2) Matthew Sophia, Jahiem Stern
4 x 100 Jahiem Stern, Jaiden Reid, Myles Thomas, Jelani Watkins
4 x 400 Jeremiah Walker, Shakeem McKay, Gregory Prince, Amal Glasgow
HJ (3) Kam Franklin, Kuda Chadenga, Isaac Onuoha
PV (1) Beau Domingue
LJ (1) Jordan Turner
DT (2) Chad Hendricks, Jaden James, Jevan Parara
JT (1) Paul Catalanatto Jr.

 

The complete list of participants is available on the following website.

For more information regarding the NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships, and to purchase tickets, log on to NCAA.com/trackandfield.

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