Sports
Meet the 2025 athletes of the year, first team, honorable m – Butler Eagle
Freeport’s Mackenzie Magness won gold at the WPIAL and PIAA championships this season. Magness has been named Butler Eagle Girls Track and Field Athlete of the Year. Jason Malmont/Special to the Eagle
Excelling as a freshman brings with it expectations. Mackenzie Magness did not wilt under that pressure — she flourished.
In 2024, Magness won a WPIAL Class 2A title in the pole vault. This spring, the Freeport sophomore raised the bar even higher, winning another district crown before earning a state championship May 24 at Shippensburg University with a height of 12 feet.
The campaign yielded a pair of school records for Magness — 12-4 in the pole vault, which won her WPIAL gold, and 17-8¾ in the long jump. Her collective effort made Magness a unanimous pick for Butler Eagle Girls Track and Field Athlete of the Year.
“It was a lot for me to handle at once,” Magness said regarding the flurry of achievements. “But I’m extremely happy with what I was able to do.
“There’s so many talented girls in the county, and I am super-appreciative for this honor.”
Her desire for continued improvement is evident this summer. She recently returned from a pole vault camp at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, will attend a similar camp in Louisville in July and is training for a decathlon, scheduled for August in Ohio.
The pole vault is obviously her best event, but Magness also has potential in the jumping events. She earned WPIAL medals in the long and triple jump this year.
“I got a lot of work in for the jumps during the indoor season over the winter,” she said. “It helped me become more explosive.”
Butler’s boys 4×400-meter relay team (from left: Jace Gratzmiller, Carter Ekas, Aaron Stebick and Regan Peth) set a school record this season with an all-time Butler County-best effort of 3 minutes, 17.49 seconds. The quartet won a WPIAL Class 3A title with a district-record time and placed sixth in the state and is this year’s Butler Eagle Boys Track and Field Athletes of the Year. Submitted Photo
Boys Athletes of the Year
With one performance, Butler’s 4×400-meter relay team reached legendary status.
The scene was the WPIAL Class 3A Championships at Slippery Rock University in May. Up until then, the Golden Tornado had turned in very good times in the event.
Regan Peth, Aaron Stebick, Jace Gratzmiller and Carter Ekas teamed up to rewrite three record books. Their time of 3 minutes, 17.49 seconds broke the school standard, district meet record and Butler County’s all-time record.
The team went on to place sixth at the state meet, the only squad from Western Pa. to medal in the event.
All four runners have been voted Boys Track and Field Athletes of the Year.
“The guys had been running so well throughout the year, but you still want to see improvement every time out,” Butler coach Mike Seybert said. “We were hoping to break the school record, but to get the WPIAL record, too, they exceeded our hopes.”
Gratzmiller was injured for part of the year.
“When he came back, it was good to see and I knew he was going to be strong for us,” said Stebick, the one senior of the group who is headed to compete at Westminster College. “We had a great time this season. It felt amazing to achieve something big with my friends.”
Butler had a bevy of runners to choose from for the relay.
“We had nine kids under 51 seconds in the open 400, which is unheard of,” Seybert said. “It’s the deepest group we’ve ever had at Butler. You literally could have flip-flopped our 4×1 and 4×4 teams.”
Butler’s 4×100 team of Grayden Brown, Logan Ekas, Chris Rubcic and Kevin Shriver also won a WPIAL title with a school-record and all-time Butler County-best effort of 41.85.
Following are the other athletes who made the Eagle’s first team, followed by honorable mentions, listed alphabetically.
Girls First Team
North Catholic’s girls 4×100 relay team (from left: Anna Lazzara, Audra Lazzara, Seava Cresta and Daphne Flerl) won Class 2A gold during the PIAA Track and Field Championships at Shippensburg University. All four have been named Butler County all-stars. Derek Pyda/Butler Eagle
Seava Cresta, sr., sprints, North Catholic
Returned from a torn hamstring suffered during the indoor season to run on North’s 4×100-meter relay team that won WPIAL and PIAA Class 2A titles. The state crown came with a school and Butler County record time of 48.06 seconds. She also earned district medals in the 100 and 200 dash.
College: Duquesne
Mars’ Morgan Duker takes third place in the girls 100-meter dash with a time of 12.95 during the Butler County Track and Field Classic on Saturday, April 05, 2025, at Butler High School. Rob McGraw/Butler Eagle
Rob McGraw
Morgan Duker, sr., sprints, Mars
Qualified for the state meet in the 400 by placing fourth in the WPIAL, then earned a PIAA medal in the event with an eighth-place finish. Also medaled in the 200 dash at WPIALs. Finished the season with Butler County’s best time in the 400 at 57.01 seconds and graduated with school records in the 400 and 200 (25.90).
North Catholic’s Daphne Flerl was part of the district and state champion 4×100 team and medaled in the triple jump at WPIALs. Derek Pyda/Butler Eagle
Daphne Flerl, sr., sprints/jumps, North Catholic
A member of the Trojanettes’ 4×100 relay team that won district and state titles, closing the season with a Butler County all-time best effort of 48.06 seconds. Qualified for states by placing fifth in the WPIAL in the Class 2A triple jump. Also helped North place second in the 4×400 relay at WPIALs and fourth in the state.
College: Davidson
North Catholic’s Anna Lazzara won three individual WPIAL medals this season. Rob McGraw/Butler Eagle
Rob McGraw
Anna Lazzara, so., sprints/jumps, North Catholic
Earned a berth in the state meet in three individual events after WPIAL efforts in the 100 (fifth), 200 (fourth) and long jump (third).
Placed third in the state in the long jump and was the anchor of North’s 4×100 relay team that won WPIAL and state titles. Had Butler County’s top time this season in the 100 (12.31) and 200 (25.27).
North Catholic twin sisters, track and field stars Anna Lazzara, left, and Audra Lazzara. Audra won the WPIAL Class 2A 100 hurdles title this season. Derek Pyda/Butler Eagle
Audra Lazzara, so., sprints/hurdles, North Catholic
Won a WPIAL Class 2A title in the 100 hurdles before finishing second in the state. Also qualified for the state meet by placing fifth in the district in the 300 hurdles. Ran a leg on the WPIAL and PIAA championship 4×100 relay. Finished the season with the county’s best time in the 100 hurdles at 14.93.
Seneca Valley’s Jordan Monteleone won the WPIAL Class 3A high jump title and medaled at states. Jason Malmont/Special to the Eagle
Jordan Monteleone, jr., jumps, Seneca Valley
Her best event is the high jump, and she delivered with a WPIAL Class 3A title and fourth place in the state. Finished the year with Butler County’s top height in the event at 5-6. Also earned a WPIAL medal in the long jump.
Slippery Rock’s Aiva Reich, middle, won District 10 Class 3A 100 hurdles gold and medaled in the 300 hurdles. Rob McGraw/Butler Eagle
Rob McGraw
Aiva Reich, sr., hurdles, Slippery Rock
Captured a District 10 Class 3A title in the 100 hurdles with a time of 16.40, which put her in Butler County’s top five for the season. Also medaled at districts with a fourth-place finish in the 300 hurdles and helped the Rockets’ 4×100 and 4×400 relay teams medal in D10.
College: Grove City
Butler’s Aubrey Rock won WPIAL Class 3A gold in the long jump and pole vault. Rob McGraw/Butler Eagle
Rob McGraw
Aubrey Rock, sr., jumps/pole vault, Butler
Closed her high school career with a banner season, winning WPIAL Class 3A titles in the long jump and pole vault. Placed seventh in the state in the pole vault. Her 19-2.5 in the long jump broke the Butler County-area’s all-time record by 4 inches. Was a member of the 4×100 relay team that set a new school standard at 48.92.
College: Westminster
Girls Honorable Mention
Adraya Baxter, sr., hurdles, Butler; Phoebe Brandon, so., sprints/jumps, Karns City; Karlee Buterbaugh, sr., throws, Knoch; Autumn Christie, so., javelin, Slippery Rock; Aubrey Erdos, sr., pole vault, Seneca Valley; Kara Fennell, sr., jumps/pole vault, Knoch; Maddee Fischer, sr., sprints, Seneca Valley; Aubrey Popp, jr., sprints, Seneca Valley; Jocie Slesinski, sr., sprints, Butler; Augelina Williams, fr., sprints, Seneca Valley; Izzy Yuhouse, so., sprints, Seneca Valley
Boys First Team
Karns City’s Griffin Booher won the District 9 Class 2A title in the 800. Rob McGraw/Butler Eagle
Rob McGraw
Griffin Booher, sr., middle distance, Karns City
Won a District 9 Class 2A title in the 800 run, then capped his high school career by going 1:59.96 to crack Butler County’s top five this season. Was named first team all-conference in the event.
Freeport’s Michael Braun finished with two WPIAL silvers in the 1,600 and 3,200, then did the same at the PIAA championships. Rob McGraw/Butler Eagle
Rob McGraw
Michael Braun, sr., distance, Freeport
Was runner-up in WPIAL Class 2A in the 1,600 and 3,200. Placed second in the state in the 3,200 and third in the 1,600. Broke his own school record in both events this year and ranks third and fourth on Butler County’s all-time honor roll with times of 9:02.25 and 4:11.97, respectively.
College: Penn State
Moniteau’s Ashton Grossman won the pole vault at the District 9 championships. Rob McGraw/Butler Eagle
Rob McGraw
Ashton Grossman, sr., pole vault, Moniteau
Broke his own school record in the pole vault several times this season, graduating with a best effort of 15-3. Won a District 9 Class 2A crown in the event and placed runner-up in the state. Was named first team all-conference.
College: Slippery Rock
Seneca Valley’s Dakari Payne won medals in all three jumping events at the WPIAL championships, including high jump gold. Rob McGraw/Butler Eagle
Rob McGraw
Dakari Payne, jr., jumps, Seneca Valley
For the second straight year, he finished the season ranked in Butler County’s top five in all three jumps, including tops in the high jump at 6-7. Earned three WPIAL medals, including first place in the high jump.
Seneca Valley’s Gavin Skarbek won gold in the 400 in the WPIAL Class 3A championships. Rob McGraw/Butler Eagle
Rob McGraw
Gavin Skarbek, sr., sprints, Seneca Valley
Earned a WPIAL Class 3A title in the 400 with a time of 48.99, the best effort in Butler County this spring. Also placed second in the WPIAL in the 200 and had the county’s best finish in that event at 22.11.
College: Slippery Rock
Boys Honorable Mention
Nicco Baggetta, so., javelin, Butler; Grayden Brown, sr., sprints, Butler; Logan Ekas, jr., sprints, Butler; Austin Friedline, jr., sprints/hurdles, Knoch; Dustin Joyce, sr., jumps, Slippery Rock; Chris Rubcic, sr., sprints, Butler; Kevin Shriver, so., sprints, Butler; Logan Skibinski, jr., sprints, Union/A-C Valley; Zachary Slear, sr., middle distance, Butler; Jack Steineman, fr., distance, North Catholic; Alex Wilson, so., pole vault, Karns City
Sports
Dominique Brown Breaks Longstanding School Record As 31 Spartans Set PR’s at Visit Winston-Salem College Kick Off – University of South Carolina
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – USC Upstate track and field began the indoor season at the Visit Winston-Salem College Kick Off today.
The first meet of the season was a successful one, highlighted by freshman Dominique Brown breaking the school record in the women’s 400m with her time of 57.51. The previous school record has stood for 10 years.
Head Coach Carson Blackwelder said, “This was a great start to the track season. We have a very talented team with a lot of potential ahead of us.” A total of 31different Spartans all set personal records in today’s meet.
In addition to Brown, Jenelda Aristhil earned a top finish in both the weight throw and shot put. Michael Moody placed third in the men’s long jump, going a distance of 7.00m.
Coach Blackwelder continued to praise his team, saying, “The 400m runners did a great job on Saturday, and we saw some of the fastest times in school history. The throwers hit some big marks and achieved PRs all around.”
Top Performances (Women):
Dominique Brown – 400m- 57.51 – fifth place (School Record)
Jenelda Aristhil – Weight Throw – 16.96m – fourth place (third all-time in school history)
Shot Put – 12.40m – seventh place (10th all-time in school history)
Paden Bell – 400m – 59.77 (eighth all-time in school history)
Ayla Osterkamp – 400m – 59.85 (ninth all-time in school history)
Aryanna Perez – High Jump – 1.49m (10th all-time in school history)
Jamyllah Handy – Triple Jump – 11.17m (seventh all-time in school history)
Personal Bests (Women)
Brittany Benson– 60m, 200m
Dominique Brown– 60m
Mya Jackson– 60m
Aryanna Perez– 60m Hurdles
Richard’ia Allen– 200m
Paden Bell– 400m
Ayla Osterkamp– 400m
Nia Glover– 400m
Emma Grace Kutilek– 800m
Aryanna Perez– High Jump, Long Jump
Jamyllah Handy– Long Jump, Triple Jump
Jenelda Aristhil– Shot Put, Weight
Saniyah Joyner– Shot Put
Top Performances (Men):
Michael Moody – Long Jump – 7.00m – third place (fifth all-time in school history )
Quintavius James – 60m – 6.83 – fourth place
Jalen Clark – Long Jump – 6.95m – fifth place (sixth all-time in school history)
Collin Bui-Hayes – 60m – 6.88 – seventh place (fourth all-time in school history)
Jeremiah Harris – 200m – 21.53 – seventh place (second all-time in school history)
Shriyaan Krishnaraj – 400m – 48.94 (second all-time in school history)
Elias Harrison – 800m -1:57.98 – 7th place
Pierce Mosley – Shot Put – 14.46m (sixth all-time in school history
Weight – 15.48m – sixth place
Joshua Sterling – Weight- 17.52m – 3rd place (fourth all-time in school history)
Shot Put – 13.68m (10th all-time in school history)
Hunter, Walston, Ruff, Krishnaraj – 4x400m – 2:22.12 – fifth place
Personal Bests
Collin Bui-Hayes– 60m
Evan Daniels– 60m
Jared Isley– 60m Hurdles
ZaCorian Johnson– 200m
Khalif Walston– 200m
Cason McKinney– 200m
Jeremiah Harris– 200m
Shriyaan Krishnaraj– 400m
Chandler Hunter– 400m
Jacob Ruff– 400m
Aidan Kenny– High Jump
Michael Moody– Long Jump
Pierce Mosley– Shot Put
Joshua Sterling– Shot Put
Sam Ketch– Shot Put
Nathaniel Bruce– Shot Put
Tristan Pressley– Triple Jump
Jaylen Pressley– Triple Jump
Up Next for the Spartans
The Spartans resume the season in January, competing at the Tryon International Classic held on the 16th and 17th.
Connect with the Spartans
Facebook.com/UpstateAthletics
Twitter | @UpstateXCTrack @UpstateSpartans
Instagram | @UpstateXCTrack @UpstateSpartans
YouTube.com/UpstateSpartans
INVEST IN CHAMPIONS – Join the Upstate Athletic Fund (UAF) and enjoy enhanced benefits for your support of all USC Upstate programs! Make your gift today, click here!
Sports
Where to stream Kansas State Wildcats vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers NCAA Women’s Volleyball Tournament today
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The Nebraska Cornhuskers look to keep their impressive season going on Saturday night, as they get set to host the Kansas State Wildcats in the second round of the 2025 NCAA Women’s Volleyball Tournament.
Nebraska looked impressive in the first round of the tournament, vanquishing the Long Island Sharks in straight sets.
The Cornhuskers rolled toward another Big Ten championship. Nebraska has been dominant. Not only are they undefeated, but they have also been nearly untouchable. For two months, the team did not lose a set. The team then went on to win its final five matches in straight sets, clinching a third consecutive Big Ten Championship.
Now, the program that has played in every national tournament since the AIAW days has its sights set on advancing to the final four for the fourth time in the past five seasons. Nebraska looks to avenge last year’s disappointing semifinal exit at the hands of the eventual national champions, Penn State.
They take on a Kansas State that had to work hard to upset San Diego in the opening round, winning in straight sets on Friday. The Wildcats, who are playing in the national tournament for the first time in four years, look to grab the biggest of upsets and move on to the regional semifinal for the first time since 2011.
NCAA WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT
Second Round
Kansas State Wildcats vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers
When: Saturday, December 6
Time: 8 p.m. ET
Where: Bob Devaney Sports Center (Lincoln, Neb.)
Stream: ESPN+
Sports
Jane Hedengren Obliterates the NCAA 5K Record in Boston
Two weeks after finishing second at the NCAA Cross-Country Championships, freshman Jane Hedengren shattered the collegiate record in the 5,000 meters.
On Saturday, December 6, the Brigham Young University standout won the women’s elite race in 14:44.79 at the BU Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener. With a huge surge in the second half of the race, Hedengren improved on the previous indoor collegiate record (14:52.57) set by Doris Lemngole of Alabama at the same meet in Boston last year.
Hedengren also broke the combined collegiate record (indoor and outdoor track), 14:52.18, set by Parker Valby at the 2024 NCAA Outdoor Championships. Hedengren is now No. 2 on the U.S. all-time list and No. 11 on the world all-time list in the event, indoors.
“This season, there’s been a lot of growth, and I think there’s still so much to build on, lots of gratitude approaching this race and this season, and I’m excited to keep working,” Hedengren told Nia Gibson on the FloTrack broadcast after the race.
Hedengren showed her dominance early at Boston University’s indoor facility. From the gun, Hedengren and Pamela Kosgei of New Mexico both positioned themselves behind pacesetter Ellie Leather through the first mile in 4:48, on pace for a 14:55 finish. By the 2K split, both athletes had pulled ahead of the chase pack by 50 meters.
That gap continued to grow heading into the halfway mark as the cross-country rivals dueled for the lead. Just after the 3,000-meter split, which the pair covered in 8:59, Hedengren surged ahead of Kosgei and never looked back.
For the last 2,000 meters, Hedengren knocked off blazing 34 to 35-second splits for each lap until throwing down an impressive 66-second close for the final 400 meters. Her teammate, Riley Chamberlain, battled for second-place in 14:58.97, a 25-second personal best. Kosgei finished third in 15:05:41.
Before she graduated from Timpview High School in Provo, Utah, last spring, Hedengren broke nine national records on the track—including the 5,000 meters in April when she became the first high school girl to go sub-15 for the distance.
At 19 years old, Hedengren has already emerged as an NCAA leader in her first season running for the Cougars. In October, she dominated the Pre-National Invitational and shattered the course record in her collegiate cross-country debut. She went on to win the Big 12 Championships and NCAA Mountain Region Championships by huge margins.
In late November, Hedengren was competing for the win at the NCAA Cross-Country Championships but couldn’t match the closing speed of Lemngole, the defending champion. With a surge in the last kilometer of the race in Columbia, Missouri, the junior from Kenya claimed the 6K title in 18:25, about 13 seconds ahead of Hedengren.
In a quick turnaround to the track season, Hedengren earned a form of redemption in Boston. She is the most recent athlete in the last several years to break the collegiate record at the indoor season opener, which many elite athletes utilize as a final push of fitness before the holidays. Lemngole—and Valby prior to her—set the indoor record at the same meet.
Taylor Dutch is a writer and editor living in Austin, Texas, and a former NCAA track athlete who specializes in fitness, wellness, and endurance sports coverage. Her work has appeared in Runner’s World, SELF, Bicycling, Outside, and Podium Runner.
Sports
Gophers volleyball wins NCAA Tournament opener, avoids St. Thomas matchup
Minnesota volleyball opened NCAA Tournament play on Friday at Maturi Pavilion with a dominant sweep over Fairfield University. It marks the 11th straight year that the Gophers have won a first-round game.
And we dance on 💃 pic.twitter.com/k5zoEO1vPU
— Minnesota Volleyball (@GopherVBall) December 6, 2025
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The Gophers were seeded fourth in their region after a 22-9 regular-season campaign. The other game in their Minneapolis pod was five-seed Iowa State against in-state foe St. Thomas, which played its first-ever game in the NCAA Tournament on Friday. The Cyclones won a five-set battle before Minnesota’s game.
“I’m proud of our team for playing our brand of volleyball. Serving, blocking and playing really clean. Tomorrow will be a big challenge. Iowa State is a great team in a lot of facets, especially defensively,” Minnesota head coach Keegan Cook said after the game.
Minnesota already beat St. Thomas three sets to one in a nonconference game in August, but an NCAA Tournament clash in the Tommies’ first season eligible would’ve felt like a huge contest. Ultimately, Iowa State will face the Gophers on Saturday night at 7 p.m. CT at Maturi Pavilion with a trip to the Sweet 16 on the line.
The Cyclones had an impressive 22-7 regular-season campaign, and a 12-6 mark in the Big 12. Saturday’s showdown should be a great contest between two of the better college volleyball programs in the Midwest.
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Sports
Elliot and Thuotte Highlight Men’s Indoor Track and Field Season Opener
BOSTON, Mass. — Regis College men’s track and field kicked off their indoor season today at the Reggie Lewis Center, competing in the Suffolk Relays and setting two new program records.
Senior Brady Elliot (Charlestown, N.H.) made an impressive debut for the Pride, placing second in the men’s high jump with a leap of 1.85 meters, establishing a new indoor program record. Elliot also competed in the long jump, finishing 12th with a distance of 6.06 meters. Joseph Doughty (Woburn, Mass.) added a seventh-place finish in the high jump, clearing 1.70 meters.
Justin Thuotte (Lebanon, Conn.) earned three top-ten finishes. His best came in the shot put, where he took third with throw of 12.82 meters to set a new personal best. Thuotte also placed fifth in the long jump, setting a new indoor program record with a leap of 6.65 meters, and finished seventh in the weight throw with a mark of 13.28 meters. Ryan Sweeney (Lynn, Mass.) joined Thuotte on the shot put leaderboard, finishing fourth with a toss of 12.65 meters. Sweeney also set a personal best in the weight throw with an 11.28 meter toss.
Jalen Jones (Everett, Mass.) claimed fifth place in the triple jump with a mark of 11.94 meters. Meanwhile, DJ Marks (Medford, Mass.) and Luc Willems (Belchertown, Mass.) rounded out the top ten finishers in the high jump and men’s 1000m, respectively. Marks cleared 1.60 meters in the high jump, and Willems crossed the line in 3:18.18 in the 1000-meter run.
In the men’s 1600 sprint medley relay, the team of Zach Olaywole (Marlborough, Mass.), Jones, Elliot, and Nathan Thomas (Medford, Mass.) finished 13th overall with a time of 4:13.28.
The Pride will quickly turn around as they head to UMass Boston tomorrow for the Beacon Season Opener.
Sports
No. 25 Women’s Volleyball Falls to No. 3 Texas in NCAA Second Round – Penn State
AUSTIN, Texas – No. 25 Penn State’s 45th-straight appearance in the NCAA Tournament came to an end in the second round Saturday with a 3-0 (25-16, 25-9, 25-19) loss to No. 3 Texas at Gregory Gymnasium. The Nittany Lions close the season at 19-13 overall, while the Longhorns move on with a record of 25-3.
The loss snapped Penn State’s seven-match NCAA Tournament winning streak, which included six victories on the way to last year’s national title. The Nittany Lions remain second in the nation with eight national titles, trailing only Stanford’s nine.
Kennedy Martin tallied 16 kills for Penn State and has now recorded double-digit kills for the 83rd-consecutive match when she plays at least three sets. Caroline Jurevicius finished with seven kills, while Emmi Sellman chipped in with five.
Gillian Grimes wrapped up an outstanding collegiate career with a team-high 11 digs. She leaves Penn State as a two-time All-Big Ten honoree, making the first team this season and the second team as a junior last season. She now turns her attention to the pro ranks, where she will play for the San Diego Mojo of Major League Volleyball. Grimes was recently picked by the Mojo in the third round of the MLV Draft.
Torrey Stafford led Texas to the win, hitting .556 with 21 kills. Abby Vander Wal joined her in double-digits with 10 kills, while Cari Spears was next with nine.
Penn State now holds an 11-10 lead in the all-time series with Texas. The teams are knotted at 2-2 in NCAA Tournament matchups against each other.
Saturday’s matchup featured the past three national champions as Texas won back-to-back titles in 2022 and 2023 and Penn State took home the trophy last season.
The 2025 Penn State women’s volleyball season is presented by Musselman’s.
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