Sports
Men’s track and field wins three events in third-place finish at MIAC Outdoor Championships
Story Links ST. PAUL, Minn. – The St. Olaf College men’s track and field team won three events as part of a third-place performance at the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) Outdoor Track & Field Championships on Friday and Saturday at Macalester Stadium. Junior Lance Nemecek, senior Andrew Skemp, and […]

ST. PAUL, Minn. – The St. Olaf College men’s track and field team won three events as part of a third-place performance at the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) Outdoor Track & Field Championships on Friday and Saturday at Macalester Stadium.
Junior Lance Nemecek, senior Andrew Skemp, and St. Olaf’s 4×800-meter relay of first year Jackson bullock, senior Sean Hartney, junior Zach Martin, and first year Austin McInturff accounted for the Oles’ three event victories over the two-day meet. St. Olaf compiled 116 points to finish 26.5 points ahead of fourth-place Concordia-Moorhead. Bethel University edged Saint John’s University by half a point to win the team title with 207 points.
Over the duration of the meet, St. Olaf had eight all-conference (places 1-3) and 10 honorable mention all-conference (places 4-6) performances, including a pair of runner-up showings by junior Ignatius Fitzgerald in distance events. Fitzgerald was second in both the 1,500-meter run and the 3,000-meter steeplechase, breaking the program record in the latter event in the process.
FRIDAY RECAP
Titles from the 4×800-meter relay and Skemp highlighted the opening day of the meet for St. Olaf, which earned 55 points on Friday to sit second in the team standings behind only Saint John’s. The Oles registered four top-two showings in the three track-event finals on the day.
Bullock, Hartney, Martin, and McInturff won the 4×800-meter relay in 7:41.52, edging the Johnnies’ unit by just under one-and-a-half seconds while setting a new facility record by nearly four seconds. The performance marked the first time St. Olaf won the event since posting the meet record in 2016-17 and slotted the quartet in at No. 3 on the program’s all-time list.
In the final event of the night, Skemp, junior Kevin Turlington, and junior Gael Manzur Strandlund recorded a 1-2-4 finish in the 10,000-meter run, which was pushed back a couple of hours due to temperatures in the 80s during the day. After being the runner-up the last two years, Skemp won his first individual conference title in 31:19.19 to give the Oles their second champion in the event in the last three seasons.
Turlington collected All-MIAC honors after being edged out by Skemp at the line by less than half a second in 31:19.66. Manzur Strandlund landed in the honorable-mention spots for the second season in a row in fourth (31:47.42), while first year Cooper Gundersen also scored with a PR of 32:23.89 in eighth.
In the first track event of the day, Fitzgerald was the runner-up in the 1,500-meter run (3:50.97) for the first of his two second-place showings at the meet. Junior Lance Nemecek (1:54.55), junior Cullen Moore (1:55.75), and sophomore Christian Fells (1:55.87) all qualified for the finals of the 800-meter run, with Nemecek posting the top qualifying time of the day.
Sophomore Max Albertson grabbed honorable-mention honors in the long jump for the second season in a row by placing fifth with a mark of 6.86 meters (22′ 6 ¼”) on his first attempt. Senior Andrew Cogley also scored for the Oles in the high jump after taking eighth by clearing 1.87 meters (6′ 1 ½”).
SATURDAY RECAP
Nemecek’s victory in the 800-meter run and Fitzgerald’s school record in the 3,000-meter steeplechase paced the Oles on day two, as St. Olaf wound up third in the team standings. St. Olaf had three top-three and 11 top-six performances on the final day.
Nemecek won his first individual conference title in the 800-meter run, edging Bethel’s Victor Lelinga by less than three-tenths of a second in 1:51.32. That time ranks second on St. Olaf’s all-time list, as Nemecek won the Oles’ first title in the event since Kevin Skrip ’16 in 2015-16. Fells (5th, 1:53.38) and Moore (7th, 1:53.83) were separated by less than half a second in the scoring places as well.
Fitzgerald broke the school record in the 3,000-meter steeplechase set by Will Kelly ’24 by less than one second with his runner-up time of 8:52.30, collecting his second All-MIAC accolade in as many days in the process. The performance also solidified Fitzgerald in qualifying for the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships, as the time ranks seventh nationally.
Junior Jack Deaver rose to seventh on St. Olaf’s all-time list and secured All-MIAC honors with a third-place finish in the 3,00-meter steeplechase (9:10.33) to give the Oles two of the top three in the event. Sophomore Lex Kaye was also in the top five, earning Honorable Mention All-MIAC honors in fifth (9:34.52).
The day after finishing 1-2 in the 10,000-meter run, Skemp and Turlington placed fourth and fifth, respectively, in the 5,000-meter run with times of 15:13.04 and 15:13.13. Senior Eh Ler Moo, first year Gavin Vogel, first year Luke Jones, and first year Jakob Eenigenburg added another honorable-mention accolade on the track with a sixth-place showing in the 4×100-meter relay (42.78).
St. Olaf had three other top-six results in the field events, led by a fourth-place finish from first year Kale Kardonsky in the shot put (15.09m, 49′ 6 ¼”). Albertson posted a personal-best mark in the triple jump to take fifth (13.68m, 44′ 10 ¾”), while Cogley was fifth in the javelin throw (53.70m, 176′ 2″), a result that ranks sixth on St. Olaf’s program list.
Sports
Taylor, Bostick & Johnston Make Podium Finishes at MVC Championships
The Murray State Track & Field team highlighted their third appearance at the Missouri Valley Championships with podium finishes for High Jump champion DiamonAsia Taylor and second and third place finishers Faith Bostick in the 100M Dash and Lindley Johnston in the Heptathlon. The 2025 MVC Outdoor event was staged at the Lew Hartzog […]

The 2025 MVC Outdoor event was staged at the Lew Hartzog Track & Field Complex in Carbondale, Illinois.
Taylor already had the best high jump in the MVC at 1.80 (25th NCAA D-I) and ended up with a new PR at 1.81 making it back-to-back champions in the event for the Racers. Meghan Fletcher was the winner a year ago and Taylor took three tries today to match her MSU record 1.84M, but missed on each. Taylor was qualified for the NCAA Regional before this event and will get another chance May 28 when she gets to regional competition.
Bostick placed second in the 100M Dash with a time of 11.56, which is sixth place all-time in the MSU program.
Johnston scored 4879 points to move into the MSU Top-10 in sixth place, after she won the High Jump and placed third in both the 200M Dash and the 100M Hurdles.
Missouri Valley Outdoor Track & Field Championships
Murray State Top-10s
For more information on the Murray State track and field team, visit GoRacers.com or follow @RacersXCTF on Instagram and X.
Sports
Crestwood enjoying run back to postseason – Wilkes-Barre Citizens’ Voice
WRIGHT TWP. — It was 2016 when Crestwood was in the PIAA Class 2A boys’ volleyball state bracket. Under the direction of then coach Mike Williams, the Comets ventured into District 3 land and lost to eventual state champ, Northeastern, in three sets. Yet, in the past few years, Crestwood has fallen onto some hard […]

WRIGHT TWP. — It was 2016 when Crestwood was in the PIAA Class 2A boys’ volleyball state bracket.
Under the direction of then coach Mike Williams, the Comets ventured into District 3 land and lost to eventual state champ, Northeastern, in three sets.
Yet, in the past few years, Crestwood has fallen onto some hard times. Losing the COVID season hurt, and numbers just haven’t been what they once were.
This season, that changed.
With a core group of players that have been playing the sport together since junior high, the Comets are back. Reaching 12 wins for the first time in almost a decade, Crestwood is back near the top of the Wyoming Valley Conference standings, and will enter Tuesday’s District 2 Class 2A bracket as the No. 2 seed.
The Comets will start the postseason at home against No. 7 Valley View. It’s a rematch from a May 3 nonleague game where Crestwood won 3-2 in a match that was decided by a combined 12 points.
“The guys put a lot of work in, and deserve it,” said first-year coach Jeff Stec, who previously served as the JV coach and varsity assistant the previous two years. “It’s great for the program in general, and hopefully, it will charge up some of the young guys to come out and try volleyball and see how fun it is. I want to change that culture, and let people know that boys’ volleyball is competitive, fun and a sport that we can be successful at here at Crestwood.”
Stec knows Williams after coaching with him at the elementary level after Stec asked the former coach if he would volunteer because of the high numbers.
They’ve talked about the past successes at Crestwood
They’ve tried to instill the fundamentals of the sport at the younger level, which in turn, should pay dividends once they reach varsity.
“Talking with him, he’s just as happy as I am. It’s cool to see the winning ways of Crestwood starting to come back,” Stec said. “It was hard to find people who wanted to play volleyball after COVID. The year after that missed season, I think we only had two wins.
“Luckily, our core group of players started to play in junior high. Our success is really based on that core group starting early, and improving themselves all year. Most of our guys play all year round, so they are really good volleyball people. They take this seriously. Most of our guys, volleyball is the main sport. Their drive and dedication is really pushing the program forward.”
It’s a talented core group.
Libero Luke Joseph is the reigning WVC Defensive Player of the Year.
Junior JJ Stec and senior middle Tommy McLaughlin have formed a good attacking combination. Junior setter Zach Koons has also done a stellar job of running the offense.
Counting nonleague matches, JJ Stec has a total of 323 kills, which ranks him No. 2 in the state, according to MaxPreps. The only person with more kills in the state is Holy Redeemer’s Josh Rocha, who has 772 in 75 sets played.
McLaughlin has 222 kills in 60 sets, and added 101 blocks.
In league play, Crestwood ended with three losses – falling to Wilkes-Barre Area, Delaware Valley and Holy Redeemer. But it was in that WBA match where Jeff Stec saw what kind of team he had. The Comets lost their libero early in the match, but still, fought back to force a fifth set in the 3-2 setback.
“When I saw how much fight we had, and how much we battled when we didn’t have somebody that we rely on, that was the biggest turning point for me. I knew we could do something because we didn’t lay down or give up. Once I saw that, I knew we would get better from there,” Jeff Stec said.
It also allowed the Comets to pick up some good wins throughout the year, including a 3-0 win over Abington Heights to end the season.
“In past seasons, if we were down a set or down a few points, it was almost like the mindset was like, ‘we aren’t going to win this one.’ This year, it’s different. The mentality and drive is different. It doesn’t matter what the score is, or if we are down a few points, they are fighting back and winning games. We really noticed it against Holy Redeemer, which is a really good team. We ended up losing it, but the fight was good for us. You know we aren’t giving up. We are going to fight to the end.”
Holy Redeemer will enter the Class 2A playoffs as the overwhelming favorite to capture the title. The Royals, ranked No. 5 in the latest Pennsylvania Volleyball Coaches Association state rankings, rolled through league play and has Rocha, one of the top players in the state, regardless of classification.
The top two teams from District 2 advance to the state bracket in Class 2A.
Originally Published:
Sports
Chautauqua Lake Volleyball Shines At Presque Isle | News, Sports, Jobs
Pictured, from left to right, are Lucy Ulsh, Tatum Bensink, Alice Scarpine, Kortlyn Fairbank, Kara Feldt, Kinslee Motter, Macy Ulsh and Makennah Ryberg. Submitted photo Two teams of Chautauqua Lake students competed in a 4’s beach volleyball tournament at Presque Isle on Sunday. Both teams finished first in their pools and, after three wins in […]


Pictured, from left to right, are Lucy Ulsh, Tatum Bensink, Alice Scarpine, Kortlyn Fairbank, Kara Feldt, Kinslee Motter, Macy Ulsh and Makennah Ryberg.
Submitted photo
Two teams of Chautauqua Lake students competed in a 4’s beach volleyball tournament at Presque Isle on Sunday. Both teams finished first in their pools and, after three wins in the elimination round, met in the finals. The 4 Amigos (pink jerseys) finished first and the Gold Diggers (black jerseys) finished second out of the 38 teams competing. They were awarded with beach towels and gift certificates.
Sports
Four Track & Field Student-Athletes Qualify for NCAA Division III Outdoor Championships
Story Links INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. – Four Baldwin Wallace University track and field student-athletes have earned the right to continue their season at the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships. The outdoor track and field teams will be represented by junior All-American jumper Kaedan Faggs (Marion / Harding), senior All-American distance runner Hope Murphy (Mogadore), sophomore thrower […]

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. – Four Baldwin Wallace University track and field student-athletes have earned the right to continue their season at the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships.
The outdoor track and field teams will be represented by junior All-American jumper Kaedan Faggs (Marion / Harding), senior All-American distance runner Hope Murphy (Mogadore), sophomore thrower Kitar Olsen (Whitefish, Mont.), and senior All-American jumper Christian Pfeiffer (Amherst).
Faggs qualifies for his first appearance in the outdoor championships. He qualifies for the long jump with his mark of 7.49 meters at the NCAA Division III All-Ohio Outdoor Championships. He was a key contributor to BW winning the championship title that weekend. His mark currently places him fourth in the nation. This season, Faggs earned his fourth career All-Ohio Athletic Conference honor after winning the long jump at the OAC Outdoor Championships. During the indoor season, he earned his first career All-American honor after placing fifth in the long jump at the NCAA Division III Indoor Championships (his first indoor and overall appearance). Additionally, he was awarded the OAC Men’s Outdoor Field Athlete of the Week on April 14 for his third career weekly accolade. This year, Faggs was also named a United States Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) All-Great Lakes region indoor honoree for the long jump.
Murphy makes her fifth appearance to the outdoor championships. She qualifies for the 800-meter run with her record-breaking time of 2:07.77 at the Harrison Dillard Twilight, hosted by BW. With her time, which currently places her ninth in the country, she broke her own outdoor record (originally set at 2:09.03 in 2023). Murphy has qualified for every outdoor national meet throughout her illustrious career. Overall, this is her eighth appearance at the national meet (indoor and outdoor). Her last outdoor championship appearance, she earned her fourth career All-American honor after placing eighth in the 1500-meter run. At the OAC Outdoor Championships, she was crowned the OAC Champion in the 1500-meter run. Additionally, she earned All-OAC honors in the 800-meter run and 4×400-meter relay after finishing second and third, respectively. Murphy’s phenomenal season led her to being named the Most Outstanding Distance Runner at the OAC Outdoor Championships. Throughout her career, she has racked up 18 All-OAC honors. This season, she was also named a USTFCCCA All-Great Lakes region indoor honoree for the 800-meter run.
Olsen qualifies for his first appearance to the outdoor championships. He qualifies for the hammer throw with his qualifying mark of 58.62 meters at the Midwest Twilight Final Qualifier, hosted by Augustana (Ill.) College. His mark currently places him 19th in the nation. Olsen is the first BW thrower (either gender) in two years to qualify for an appearance at the national meet.
Pfeiffer makes his third appearance to the outdoor championships. He qualifies for the high jump with his qualifying height of 2.10 meters at the OAC Outdoor Championships, where he won the high jump for the third consecutive year. His mark currently ties him for fourth in the country. During the indoor season, Pfeiffer earned his third career All-American honor with his record-breaking high jump of 2.11 meters after placing third at the NCAA Division III Indoor Championships (his third indoor and fifth overall appearance). He broke his own record of 2.10 meters (set in 2024) with his phenomenal jump. This year, Pfeiffer was also named a USTFCCA All-Great Lakes region indoor honoree for the high jump.
The NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships will be co-hosted by the North Coast Athletic Conference (NCAC) and SPIRE Institute from May 22-24 in Geneva, Ohio.
Sports
SJU track and field athletes qualify for nationals
Four Saint John’s University individual athletes and one relay team will compete in this week’s NCAA Division III outdoor national track and field championships in Geneva, Ohio. The qualifiers for the national field were announced Friday night. The top 22 marks/times in individual events, and the top 16 times in the relays, made the cut. […]


Four Saint John’s University individual athletes and one relay team will compete in this week’s NCAA Division III outdoor national track and field championships in Geneva, Ohio.
The qualifiers for the national field were announced Friday night. The top 22 marks/times in individual events, and the top 16 times in the relays, made the cut.
The national meet begins Thursday and concludes Saturday at the SPIRE Institute track and field complex.
Senior Kevin Arthur will compete in the men’s 100 and 200-meter dash, as well as being part of SJU’s 4×100 relay team. Freshman Matt Reis will also be part of the 4×100, as well as competing in the 100 and long jump.
Senior Max Lelwica will compete in the decathlon and classmate Jackson McDowell will compete in the high jump.
Arthur – who has won MIAC titles in both the 100 and 200 the past four seasons – enters the meet ranked second nationally in the 100 and third in the 200. Reis is ranked 14th nationally in the long jump and 21st in the 100. The 4×100 entered the meet ranked No. 8 nationally.
Lelwica is ranked fourth nationally in the decathlon and McDowell is ranked eighth nationally in the high jump.
The top eight finishers in each event earn first team All-American honors.
Check out full coverage on gojohnnies.com.
Sports
Jumbos Advance in National Competitions
Tufts student-athletes are on a roll, as teams and individuals advance in post-season (and in some cases, post-graduation) competition. Men’s Lacrosse The top-ranked Jumbos played one of their best games of the season on May 18 in the NCAA Division III men’s lacrosse semifinals, exploding for 26 goals to knock off No. 5 Bowdoin College […]

Tufts student-athletes are on a roll, as teams and individuals advance in post-season (and in some cases, post-graduation) competition.
Men’s Lacrosse
The top-ranked Jumbos played one of their best games of the season on May 18 in the NCAA Division III men’s lacrosse semifinals, exploding for 26 goals to knock off No. 5 Bowdoin College on Bello Field, and now head to the national title game for the third consecutive season.
Tufts (21-0) will take on No. 17 Dickinson College (17-5) in the NCAA championship game on May 25 at 7 p.m. at Gillette Stadium, the first time Tufts has played a title game in Foxborough. It is the first meeting of the two teams.
In the quarterfinals Tufts beat No. 7 Gettysburg College 17-8 on May 17, also on Bello Field.
Women’s Lacrosse
The women’s lacrosse team narrowly edged No. 7 Salisbury, 8-7, after initially taking an 8-5 lead early in the fourth quarter of the NCAA women’s lacrosse quarterfinals at Bello Field on May 18.
With the victory, the No. 1 ranked Tufts (20-1) returns to the NCAA Final Four for the third time in program history and the first since 2022. They will take on No. 6 Gettysburg College on May 23 at 7 p.m. at Kerr Stadium on the campus of Roanoke College in Salem, Virginia.
Tuftsand Gettysburg have played just once before, when the Jumbos defeated the Bullets 16-9 in Gettysburg on May 23, 2022.
Men’s Tennis
The Jumbos picked up a resounding 4-1 win against RPI on May 11 to advance to the NCAA Division III men’s tennis championship quarterfinals in Claremont, California against No. 6 Emory. It is their fourth straight season at the NCAA finals site, and their third straight match against a ranked opponent.
The Jumbos enter the quarterfinal round with a 22-2 record and were ranked No. 3 in the most recent Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) poll. Both Vuk Vuksanovic and Javier Gonzalez will compete later in May in the NCAA individual championships in singles and doubles.
Women’s Track and Field
The women’s track and field squad has eight entries in the NCAA Division III outdoor track and field championships on May 22-24 at the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio.
Arielle Chechile (400-meter hurdles), Makayla Moriarty (400-meter dash), Harper Meek (high jump), Elysse Cumberland (long jump, triple jump), Jordan Andrew (long jump, triple jump), and Jackie Wells (javelin) will compete on behalf of Tufts.
Men’s Track and Field
The Jumbos picked up a trio of entries in the NCAA outdoor men’s track and field championships on May 22-24 at the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio.
Amokrane Aouchiche will compete in the 10,000-meter run; Josh Wilkie will take on the 400-meter hurdles; and Sahr Matturi will be in the long jump competition.
Women’s Rowing
The Jumbos received an automatic berth into the NCAA DIII women’s rowing championships after winning the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) championship race on May 11 for the second straight year.
The NCAA championships will be held May 30-31 at Mercer Lake in West Windsor, New Jersey. Eight teams were selected for the 2025 DIII rowing championships, with each team consisting of two boats (first varsity and second varsity). Tufts is the defending NCAA champion, winning its first national title last year in Bethel, Ohio. This is Tufts’ seventh berth into NCAAs overall, and second straight as an automatic qualifier.
Men’s Rowing
For the fourth year in a row, the men’s rowing team has earned an at-large berth into the Intercollegiate Rowing Association (IRA) Division III national championship regatta coming up May 30-31 on Cooper River in Camden, New Jersey.
The IRA national championship first included a DIII championship in 2022. Tufts has qualified for all four subsequent IRA DIII championships. The Jumbos were one of seven teams that earned the inaugural DIII berths in 2022 and finished as the national runner-up, with only the first varsity competing. At the last two IRA championships, both first and second varsity eights have raced. The Jumbos placed fifth in 2023 and tied for second in 2024.
Women’s Sailing
The women’s sailing team earned an at-large berth into the 2025 Intercollegiate Sailing Association (ICSA) Fleet Race national championship, which will be hosted by St. Mary’s College (Maryland) May 20-23.
Thirty-six teams will compete at the event, first in a pair of 18-team semifinal regattas. The top nine teams from each semifinal will advance to a two-day final.
Coed Sailing
The Jumbos received an at-large selection into the 2025 Intercollegiate Sailing Association (ICSA) Fleet Race national championship. The ICSA Open championship will be hosted by St. Mary’s College (Maryland) May 24-27.
Thirty-six teams will compete at the national championship regatta, first in a pair of 18-team semifinal events. The top nine teams from each semifinal will advance to a two-day final.
Tufts will be one of 13 schools representing the strong New England Intercollegiate Sailing Association at the national championship. The Jumbos had a 10th-place finish at the 2025 New England Fleet Race championship April 19-20 in Rhode Island.
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