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Men’s track and field’s 4×800-meter relay posts top-15 all-time performance at Drake Relays

Story Links DES MOINES, Iowa – The St. Olaf College men’s track and field team’s 4×800-meter relay ran the 11th-fastest time in NCAA Division III history, as 10 Oles ran in distance events at the Drake Relays on Thursday at Drake Stadium. First year Jackson Bullock, junior Cullen Moore, first […]

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DES MOINES, Iowa – The St. Olaf College men’s track and field team’s 4×800-meter relay ran the 11th-fastest time in NCAA Division III history, as 10 Oles ran in distance events at the Drake Relays on Thursday at Drake Stadium.

First year Jackson Bullock, junior Cullen Moore, first year Austin McInturff, and junior Lance Nemecek fell less than one second shy of the program and Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) record in the 4×800-meter relay with a fourth-place finish in 7:34.14. Individually, three members of the men’s team and three from the women’s team ran distance events in fields that included all three NCAA Divisions, junior colleges, and running clubs.

Bullock, Moore, McInturff, and Nemecek took fourth – behind National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) Cornerstone University (Mich.), National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) Iowa Central Community College, and NCAA Division II Minnesota State University, Mankato – in the 4×800-meter relay, with heir time of 7:34.14 falling just shy of the program and conference record of 7:33.39 set by Jack Henschel ’20, Jacob Eggers ’17, Sean Bjork, ’17, and Joe Coffey ’17 set in 2017. Moore moved the Oles up from ninth to fifth in their heat with a split of 1:52.61 in the second leg before and Nemecek brought it home in 1:52.03.

Seniors Sean Hartney and Olaf Coffey finished 15th and 20th, respectively, in the unseeded 1,500-meter run with times of 3:55.96 and 4:00.05, respectively. Junior Ignatius Fitzgerald took 16th in the 3,000-meter steeplechase in 9:01.70, which ranks in the top 15 in NCAA Division III and second in the MIAC this season.

Junior Lauren Walda had the top finish for the St. Olaf women with a fifth-place performance in the unseeded 5,000-meter run in 17:06.29, which was less than one second off her personal-best time of 17:05.92 that is the top time int eh conference this season. The four runners to finish ahead of Walda were all from NCAA Division I institutions.

Running her second 800-meter race in as many days, junior Isabel Wyatt finished 10th in the unseeded category in 2:12.21, falling .02 seconds shy of her time from the day before that is second on St. Olaf’s all-time list and first in the conference this spring. Senior Alison Bode was eighth overall and first among NCAA Division III runners in the 10,000-meter run in 35:44.49, which marked a near seven-second improvement on her season-best time that entered the day ranked 20th in the country.

St. Olaf’s teams will head to UW-Eau Claire for the Dick & Mary Johnson Invitational starting at 1 p.m. on Saturday, April 26.

 

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USF Track & Field Sets Sights on Another Title Run at AAC Outdoor Championships

Story Links The USF men’s track and field program went back-to-back last season, capturing the American Athletic Conference indoor and outdoor team championships. Earlier this season, the Bulls repeated as AAC indoor team champions. With USF heading to the AAC outdoor championships — set for Thursday through Saturday at Charlotte, N.C. — […]

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The USF men’s track and field program went back-to-back last season, capturing the American Athletic Conference indoor and outdoor team championships.

Earlier this season, the Bulls repeated as AAC indoor team champions.

With USF heading to the AAC outdoor championships — set for Thursday through Saturday at Charlotte, N.C. — an obvious question has emerged:

Can the Bulls go back-to-back … again?

“Winning is hard,” head coach Erik Jenkins said. “There’s nothing easy about it. There are no guarantees in any championship environment. So we have to take advantage of every opportunity presented to us.

“It always comes back to the athletes and putting them in a position to be successful. That means showing up on time, working hard, being available for what’s asked of you and really wanting to be successful. I believe we have a lot of those type of people. Now it’s a matter of showing up and performing.”

The USF men made a powerful statement last season, scoring 217 points (second-most in AAC outdoor championships history) and capturing first-place in 10 events.

Meanwhile, the USF women are hopeful of building toward championship contention. The Bulls finished third in last season’s outdoor championships — the best AAC performance in program history — to improve upon the fourth-place mark in 2023.

By all indications, the USF men are poised for another notable showing. 

The Bulls have the AAC’s top-ranked time or distance in seven events, including the 100 meters (Abdul-Rasheed Saminu, 9.87w); 200 meters (Nathan Metelus, Jaleel Croal and Alexavier Monfries, all at 20.60); 400 meters (Gabriel Moronta, 45.31); 4×100 relay (38.66); 4×400 relay (3:02.13); pole vault (Nikodem Pochopien, 5.22 meters); and the discus (Vincent Ugwoke, 63.72 meters).

Additionally, the Bulls will have championship contenders in the 100 meters (Croal, 10.05); 200 meters (Saminu, 20.96); 800 meters (Karim Belmahdi, 1:48.54); 110 hurdles (Markel Jones, 13.66); 400 hurdles (Devontie Archer, 50.25); pole vault (Andreas Kreiss, 5.21 meters, and Noah Bitter, 5.06); triple jump (Javon Brown, 15.42 meters); and the shot put (Jason Nwosu, 17.90 meters)

“I think more people are noticing us since we’re put together some wins here and there, but we aspire to doing it over and over again at the highest level,” Jenkins said. “We want to be here to stay and you do that by controlling what you can do and putting yourself in position to consistently compete for championships.

“When we got here, we talked about competing for championships and building a national presence. We want success at the national level and also the international level. We had a couple of Olympians last summer. But at the end of the day, it’s a track meet, just like it’s a football game or a baseball game. Everything starts at zero. Nobody cares what we did at  indoors or outdoors last year. Every time we step on that track, we’ve got to give our best effort and be the best at competing on that day. It always takes a collective effort.”

The USF women have the AAC’s top-ranked time in three events, including the 400 meters (Rushana Dwyer, 52.30); 100 hurdles (Doris Quainoo, 13.32); and the 4×400 relay (3:29.07).

Other Bulls to watch include Quainoo (100 meters, 11.51); Terren Peterson (200 meters, 23.15, and 400 meters, 52.97); Amenda Saint Louis (800 meters, 2:09.61); Tyra Thomas (100 hurdles, 13.41); Madeline Abega (400 hurdles, 57.78); Chakiya Plummer (400 hurdles, 58.45); 4×100 relay (44.36); Tristen Evatt (long jump, 6.07 meters); and Annalee Harbison (hammer, 54.64 meters).

“Our women have to take the same approach as our men — and I believe they will,” Jenkins said. “Every throw, every step, every jump — it all means something. Indoors, most people didn’t think our women could be in the top half. Well, we finished fourth in a pretty tight finish (first through fourth was separated by 13 points). 

“Now everything starts at zero at these conference meets, no matter what you have done, and we definitely have some young ladies who are capable of performing at a high level.”



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High school scores for May 14

Baseball Barrington 15, Conant 1 Buffalo Grove 6, Elk Grove 2 Carmel 16, Notre Dame 15 Cary-Grove 11, Dundee Crown 1 Chicago Christian 5, Aurora Christian 1 Geneva 2, St. Charles East 1 Hampshire 3, Crystal Lake Central 2 Glenbard West 10, West Chicago 0 Grayslake Central 10, Wauconda 5 Hersey 9, Wheeling 0 Hinsdale […]

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Baseball

Barrington 15, Conant 1

Buffalo Grove 6, Elk Grove 2

Carmel 16, Notre Dame 15

Cary-Grove 11, Dundee Crown 1

Chicago Christian 5, Aurora Christian 1

Geneva 2, St. Charles East 1

Hampshire 3, Crystal Lake Central 2

Glenbard West 10, West Chicago 0

Grayslake Central 10, Wauconda 5

Hersey 9, Wheeling 0

Hinsdale Central 8, Oak Park-River Forest 2

Holy Trinity 8, Westmont 0

Huntley 11, Burlington Central 1

Leyden 9, Addison Trail 8

Palatine 12, Hoffman Estates 4

Prospect 3, Rolling Meadows 1

St. Charles North 4, Lake Park 1

Westminster Christian 2, Aurora Central Catholic 1

Wheaton Warrenville South 5, Batavia 0

Softball

Addison Trail 17, Proviso East 1

Aurora Christian 9, Chicago Hope 8

Barrington 7, Fremd 3

Batavia 10, Geneva 6

Benet 7, Nazareth 0

Conant 5, Palatine 2

Crystal Lake South 6, Cary-Grove 1

Downers Grove North 11, Hinsdale Central 0

Glenbard North 4, Lake Park 2

Hampshire 4, Burlington Central 1

Harvest Christian 18, Christian Liberty 12

Hersey 11, Buffalo Grove 1

Huntley 13, Dundee Crown 0

IC Catholic Prep 8, Fenwick 5

Lake Zurich 4, Mundelein 1

LaSalle Peru 6, Kaneland 2

Leyden 2, Morton 1

McHenry 7, Jacobs 3

Montini 6, St. Ignatius 3

Naperville Central 7, Naperville North 0

Neuqua Valley 10, Metea Valley 0

Prairie Ridge 2, Crystal Lake Central 0

Prospect 24, Wheeling 4

Rolling Meadows 7, Elk Grove 6

Schaumburg 10, Hoffman Estates 0

Stevenson 2, Warren 1

St. Charles North 6, St. Charles East 0

St. Francis 15, Trinity 0

Timothy Christian 6, Wheaton Academy 0

Waubonsie Valley 5, Dekalb 3

Wheaton Warrenville South 1, Wheaton North 0

York 18, Proviso West 1

Boys volleyball

Benet d. Neuqua Valley 21-25, 25-17, 27-25

Hinsdale Central d. Lockport 25-22, 25-22

Lake Zurich d. Warren 25-15,19-25, 25-20

Libertyville d. Lake Forest 25-13, 25-10

Mt. Carmel d. Carmel 25-23, 25-22

Mundelein d. Waukegan 25-91, 25-11

Niles North d. Vernon Hills 25-19, 25-16

Stevenson d. Zion-Benton 25-13, 25-23

Streamwood d. Elgin 26-28, 25-12, 25-15

Boys lacrosse

Libertyville 16, Mundelein 1

Boys water polo

IHSA sectionals

Libertyville sectional

Stevenson 27, Warren 4

Mundelein 13, Vernon Hills 10

Boys track and field

at Barrington Mid-Suburban Conference Championships: 1. Barrington 134.5; 2. Prospect 123; 3. Hersey 91; 4. Fremd 72; 5. Palatine 66; 6. Rolling Meadows 64; 7. Hoffman Estates 46.5; 8. Schaumburg 44; 9. Buffalo Grove 20; 9. Wheeling 20; 11. Conant 14; 112. Elk Grove 7

at Chicago Hope Academy Chicagoland Conference Championship: 1. Wheaton Academy 168; 2. Chicago Hope Academy 140; 3. Timothy Christian 89; 4. Chicago Christian 79; 5. McNamara 77; 6. Woodstock Marian 50; 7. Aurora Christian 22; 8. St. Edward 3

at CSL Conference Championship: 1. New Trier 156; 2. Evanston 135; 3. Glenbrook South 80; 4. Glenbrook North 68; 5. Deerfield 65; 6. Maine South 50.

Girls soccer

Lake Zurich 1, Stevenson 0

South Elgin 7, Glenbard South 0

Timothy Christian 3, Montini 1

West Aurora 1, Glenbard East 0

Girls lacrosse

Montini 13, Mother McAuley 8

Naperville Central 15, Minooka 7

Riverside-Brookfield 6, Streamwood 3

Girls water polo

IHSA sectionals

Barrington sectional

Hersey 15, Hoffman Estates 3

Conant 11, Schaumburg 5

Fremd 17, Palatine 3

Prospect 18, Barrington 8

York sectional

York 15, Leyden 2

Fenwick 12, Elk Grove 11

Oak Park River Forest 15, Northside 4

St. Charles Coop 17, Taft 7

Glenbrook South sectional

Evanston 20, Glenbrook North 1

Maine West 14, Glenbrook South 4

New Trier 12, Niles West 3

Maine South 18, Maine East 8

Naperville North sectional

Naperville North 23, Neuqua Valley 6

Hinsdale Central 12, Metea Valley 10

Waubonsie Valley 17, Lockport 8

Girls track and field

IHSA Sectionals

2A Sterling sectional

1. Sterling 97.5; 2. Freeport 74; 2. Sycamore 74; 4. Aurora Central Catholic 60; 5. Sandwich 53; 6. Mendota 39.5; 7. LaSalle-Peru 38; 8. Byron 37; 9. Stillman Valley 37; 10. Rochelle 34; 11. Rosary 31.5; 12. Galena 41; 13. IMSA 28.5; 14. Dixon 24; 15. Pecatonica 16.

3A Downers Grove South sectional

1. Plainfield North 115; 2. Downers Grove North 104.5; 3.Downers Grove South 88; 4. Neuqua Valley 58.5; 5. Oswego East 53; 6. Hinsdale South 43; 7. Benet 38; 8. Plainfield East 35; 9. Naperville Central 34; 10. Bolingbrook 30; 10. Naperville North 30; 12. West Aurora 25; 13. Waubonsie Valley 22; 14. Plainfield Central 16; 15. East Aurora 5; 15. Oswego 5

3A Glenbrook South sectional

1. Prospect 171, 2. Evanston 70, 3. Hersey 58, 4. Palatine 56, 5. New Trier 42, 6. Glenbrook South 39, 7. Deerfield 24, 8. Glenbrook North 17, 9. Loyola Academy 17, 10. Niles West 16, 11. Wheeling 14, 12. Highland Park 8, 12. Fremd 8, 12. Niles North 8, 15. Maine East 6, 16. Buffalo Grove 4

3A Huntley sectional

1. Huntley 159; 2. Hampshire 78; 3. Hononegah 58; 4. DeKalb 56; 5. Guilford 53.5; 6. McHenry 48; 7. Cary-Grove 47.5; 8. Jacobs 44; 9. Harlem 37; 10. Crystal Lake Central 33.5; 11. Rockford Auburn 25.5; 12. Crystal Lake South 23.5; 13. Dundee Crown 16; 14. Rockford East 9; 15. Belvidere North 8; 16. Rockford Jefferon 5.5.

3A Round Lake sectional

1. Lake Zurich 142; 2. Barrington 116.5; 3. Zion-Benton 81; 4. Warren 46; 5. Stevenson 43; 6. Grayslake Central 29; 7. Lake Forest 32; 7. Libertyville 32; 9. Antioch 29; 9. Grant 29; 9. Lakes 29; 12. Vernon Hills 28; 13. Mundelein 21; 14. Wauconda 20; 15. Grayslake North 14.5.

Late Tuesday results

Boys water polo

IHSA sectionals

Maine West sectional

Prospect 17, Maine West 7

Warren sectional

Warren 12, Lake Forest 8

McHenry sectional

McHenry 11, Elk Grove Village 4

Glenbrook North sectional

Glenbrook North 11, Maine East 4

Upcoming

Thursday, May 15

Baseball

Downers Grove South at Proviso East, 4:30 p.m.

Elmwood Park at Streamwood, 4:30 p.m.

Evanston at Maine South, 4:45 p.m.

Fenton at West Aurora, 4:30 p.m.

Fenwick at Aurora Central Catholic, 4:30 p.m.

Geneva at St. Charles East, 4:30 p.m.

Glenbard East at East Aurora, 4:30 p.m.

Glenbard North at Wheaton North, 4:30 p.m.

Glenbard South at Elgin, 4:30 p.m.

Grant at Lakes, 4:45 p.m.

Grayslake North at Woodstock North, 4:30 p.m.

Harvest Christian at Chicago Christian, 4:30 p.m.

Hersey at Hoffman Estates, 4:45 p.m.

Hinsdale South at Morton, 4:30 p.m.

Lake Park at St. Charles North, 4:30 p.m.

Lake Zurich at St. Viator, 4:45 p.m.

Latin at Westminster Christian, 4:30 p.m.

Leyden at Addison Trail, 4:30 p.m.

Libertyville at Huntley, 4:45 p.m.

Lyons at Downers Grove North, 4:30 p.m.

Maine East at Niles North, 4:45 p.m.

Maine West at Vernon Hills, 4:45 p.m.

Marmion Academy at IC Catholic Prep, 4:30 p.m.

Metea Valley at DeKalb, 4:30 p.m.

Naperville North at Neuqua Valley, 4:30 p.m.

Oak Park-River Forest at York, 4:30 p.m.

Parkview Christian at Schaumburg Christian, 6 p.m.

Proviso West at Hinsdale Central, 4:45 p.m.

Ridgewood at Bartlett, 4:30 p.m.

Riverside-Brookfield at South Elgin, 4:30 p.m.

St. Edward at Lisle, 4:30 p.m.

St. Francis at Montini, 4:30 p.m.

Waubonsie Valley at Naperville Central, 4:30 p.m.

West Chicago at Larkin, 4:30 p.m.

Westmont at Chicago Prep Conference Championships Series, TBA

Wheaton Warrenville South at Batavia, 4:30 p.m.

Softball

Antioch at Lakes, 4:45 p.m.

Benet at Nazareth, 4:30 p.m.

Burlington Central at Huntley, 4:30 p.m.

Conant at Hoffman Estates, 4:45 p.m.

Crystal Lake Central at Hampshire, 4:30 p.m.

Crystal Lake South at Jacobs, 4:30 p.m.

Downers Grove North at Downers Grove South, 7 p.m.

Dundee Crown at Cary-Grove, 4:30 p.m.

Fenton at Bartlett, 4:30 p.m.

Geneva at Wheaton North, 4:30 p.m.

Glenbard North at St. Charles North, 4:30 p.m.

Glenbard South at South Elgin, 4:30 p.m.

Glenbard West at Oak Park-River Forest, 4:45 p.m.

Grayslake Central at Grant, 4:45 p.m.

Grayslake North at Elk Grove, 4:45 p.m.

Harvest Christian Academy at St. Viator, 4:30 p.m.

IC Catholic Prep at Bishop McNamara, 4:30 p.m.

Lisle at Yorkville Christian, 4:30 p.m.

Maine South at Highland Park, 4:45 p.m.

Montini at Willowbrook, 4:30 p.m.

Niles North at Maine West, 4:45 p.m.

Niles West at Vernon Hills, 4:45 p.m.

Ridgewood at Elgin, 4:30 p.m.

Riverside-Brookfield at Streamwood, 4:30 p.m.

St. Charles East at Batavia, 4:30 p.m.

Taft at Libertyville, 4:45 p.m.

Wauconda at Round Lake, 4:45 p.m.

West Chicago at West Aurora, 4:30 p.m.

Westmont at Chicago Prep Conference Tournament, TBA

Wheaton Warrenville South at Lake Park, 4:30 p.m.

Boys tennis

Aurora Central Catholic at Lisle, 4:30 p.m.

Barrington, Buffalo Grove, Conant, Elk Grove, Hoffman Estates, Hersey, Palatine, Rolling Meadows, Schaumburg, at Wheeling MSL Conference, 4:30 p.m.

Benet at Carmel Catholic ESCC Championships, 9 a.m.

Cary-Grove, Crystal Lake South, Huntley at Jacobs FVC Championships, 4 p.m.

Downers Grove North, Downers Grove South, Hinsdale South at West Suburban Championship, TBA

Grayslake Central, Grayslake North, Round Lake at Lakes NLCC Conference, 4 p.m.

IMSA at Glenbard South, 4:30 p.m.

Metea Valley, Naperville North, Neuqua Valley, Waubonsie Valley at Naperville Central DuPage Valley Conference Tournament, 4 p.m.

Boys volleyball

Antioch at Round Lake, 6 p.m.

Barrington at Libertyville, 6 p.m.

Conant at Schaumburg, 6 p.m.

Downers Grove North at Morton, 5:30 p.m.

Elgin at Streamwood, 5:30 p.m.

Glenbard East at Fenton, 5:30 p.m.

Glenbard South at Elmwood Park, 5:30 p.m.

Grant at Grayslake North, 6 p.m.

Grayslake Central at Lakes, 6 p.m.

Huntley at Lake Zurich, 6 p.m.

Larkin at Bartlett, 5:30 p.m.

Maine South at Deerfield, 5 p.m.

Maine West at Prospect, 6 p.m.

Marist at Glenbard West, 6 p.m.

Metea Valley at Naperville North, 5:30 p.m.

Montini at Providence Catholic, 6 p.m.

Notre Dame Prep at Carmel, 5:30 p.m.

Proviso West at Leyden, 5:30 p.m.

Ridgewood at West Chicago, 5:30 p.m.

Rolling Meadows at Addison Trail, 5:30 p.m.

St. Edward at Wheaton Academy, 5:30 p.m.

St. Rita at St. Francis, 6 p.m.

St. Viator at Lake Forest, 6 p.m.

Timothy Christian at Chicago Christian, 5:30 p.m.

Wheaton Warrenville South at Lincoln Way East, 5:30 p.m.

Boys lacrosse

Benet at St. Viator, 6 p.m.

Deerfield at Lakes, 4:30 p.m.

Fenwick at St. Francis, 6 p.m.

Glenbard North at South Elgin, 5 p.m.

Glenbard West at Lane Tech, 6 p.m.

Hampshire at Dundee Crown, 6:30 p.m.

Huntley at Cary-Grove, 6:30 p.m.

Jacobs at Crystal Lake Central, 6:30 p.m.

Kaneland at Marian Central Catholic, 5 p.m.

Lyons at Hinsdale Central, 7 p.m.

McHenry at Crystal Lake South, 6:30 p.m.

Naperville Central at St. Charles East, 7 p.m.

New Trier at Libertyville, 7 p.m.

Prairie Ridge at Burlington Central, 6:30 p.m.

Prospect at Glenbrook South, 6:30 p.m.

Rolling Meadows at Highland Park, 5:30 p.m.

St. Ignatius at Wheaton Academy, 7 p.m.

Taft at Lake Park, 7 p.m.

Timothy Christian at Wheeling, 5 p.m.

Wheaton Warrenville South at Downers Grove South, 7 p.m.

Boys water polo

IHSA sectionals

Barrington sectional

Palatine vs. Hoffman Estates, 5 p.m.

Barrington vs. Hersey, 6 p.m.

Schaumburg vs. McHenry 7 p.m.

Fremd vs. Conant, 8 p.m.

York sectional

York vs. Morton, 5 p.m.

Oak Park River Forest vs, Taft, 6 p.m.

Fenwick vs. Chicago Northside, 7 p.m.

St. Charles Coop vs. St. Patrick, 8 p.m.

Glenbrook South sectional

New Trier vs. Prospect, 5 p.m.

Glenbrook South vs. Loyola, 6 p.m.

Evanston vs. Glenbrook North, 7 p.m.

Maine South vs. Niles West, 8 p.m.

Naperville North sectional

Naperville North vs. Sandburg 5 p.m.

Neuqua Valley vs. Hinsdale Central, 6 p.m.

Waubonsie Valley vs. Lockport, 7 p.m.

Naperville Central vs. Metea Valley, 8 p.m.

Boys track and field

Addison Trail, Downers Grove North, Glenbard West, Hinsdale Central, Hinsdale South, Willowbrook at West Suburban Conference Championships, 4:30 p.m.

Antioch, Grant, Grayslake North, Lakes, North Chicago, Round Lake, Wauconda at Grayslake Central NLCC Conference, 4:30 p.m.

Bartlett. Elgin, Fenton, Glenbard East, Larkin, West Aurora, West Chicago at Streamwood Upstate Eight Conference Championships, 3 p.m.

Burlington Central, Cary-Grove, Crystal Lake South, Dundee Crown, Hampshire at Huntley Fox Valley Conference Championship, 2 p.m.

Lake Zurich, Libertyville, Mundelein, Warren at Stevenson NSC Championship, 4:45 p.m.

Metea Valley, Naperville Central, Naperville North, Neuqua Valley at Waubonsie Valley DuPage Vallet Conference Championships, 4:30 p.m.

Girls badminton

IHSA State Finals

Girls soccer

Batavia at Glenbard North, 6:30 p.m.

Benet at Marist, 6:15 p.m.

Conant at Crystal Lake Central, 5 p.m.

DeKalb at Waubonsie Valley, 6:30 p.m.

Fenton at Morton, 7 p.m.

Hinsdale Central at Metea Valley, 6:30 p.m.

Hinsdale South at Bolingbrook, 6:30 p.m.

Lincoln Park at Leyden, 7 p.m.

Mundelein at Wauconda, 6:15 p.m.

Oak Park-River Forest at Downers Grove South, 5 p.m.

Proviso West at Glenbard West, 6 p.m.

St. Charles East at Wheaton Warrenville South, 6:30 p.m.

St. Charles North at Geneva, 6:30 p.m.

Stevenson at Carmel, 6:30 p.m.

Warren at Deerfield, 7 p.m.

Wheaton North at Lake Park, 7 p.m.

Girls lacrosse

Deerfield at Warren, 6:30 p.m.

DePaul College Prep at Rosary, 4:30 p.m.

Elk Grove at Regina Dominican, 5 p.m.

Glenbard West at Downers Grove North, 7 p.m.

Hinsdale Central at Benet, 6:30 p.m.

Lake Zurich at Schaumburg, 7 p.m.

Libertyville at Palatine, 6:30 p.m.

Northside College Prep at Buffalo Grove, 6:30 p.m.

St. Viator at Evanston, 6 p.m.

Stevenson at Glenbrook North, 5:30 p.m.

Girls water polo

IHSA sectional

Libertyville sectional

Stevenson vs. Wheeling, 5 p.m.

Mundelein vs. Warren, 6 p.m.

Libertyville vs. Lake Forest, 7 p.m.

Vernon Hills vs. Deerfield, 8 p.m.

Girls track and field

IHSA Sectionals

St. Charles North’s Jordyn McBride connects for a homer against St. Charles East on Wednesday May 14,2025 in St. Charles.



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Kylie Griffin Named to Third Academic All-ASUN Team

Story Links CONWAY, Ark. – It’s award season for ASUN softball, and the conference gets things kicked off with the league’s Academic All-ASUN Team. The Bears had one member on the list, senior Kylie Griffin.   Graduating with a cumulative grade point average of 3.98 in Exercise Science, Griffin was named […]

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CONWAY, Ark. – It’s award season for ASUN softball, and the conference gets things kicked off with the league’s Academic All-ASUN Team. The Bears had one member on the list, senior Kylie Griffin.
 
Graduating with a cumulative grade point average of 3.98 in Exercise Science, Griffin was named to her third Academic All-ASUN Team this year. The third baseman was a shining example of how to maintain quality grades in the classroom while still being a leader on the field. She becomes the eighth ASUN player in conference history to be named to the list three times in her career.
 
“Kylie has always been such a good role model for her teammates. She puts in so much time to getting better on the field, but that never overshadows what has to happen in the classroom,” Head coach Jenny Parsons said. “For her to be on this team three times, I think it’s very well-deserved, because she puts so much time and effort into making sure she’s doing what she needs to be doing, and I’m proud of how she’s handled her college career.”
 
Griffin led the ASUN and ranked in the top-25 in the nation in total hits during the regular season (72), and finished the year third in the ASUN in triples (5), and had the eighth-best batting average among all ASUN hitters (.385). She had 22 games of multiple hits, including seven games of three or more hits. Her .987 fielding percentage was the second-best among players with 90 or more assists.
 
Behind the Greenbrier’s leadership, the Bears earned a top-three seed for the fourth-straight season, and bowed out in the ASUN Championship after two games last week.
 



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Long Beach State men’s volleyball team celebrates national championship win with parade – Press Telegram

The party continued for Long Beach State’s national champion men’s volleyball team as they participated in a “Victory Drive” along Pine Avenue, in downtown, on Wednesday, May 14. The No. 1 Long Beach State men’s volleyball team returned victorious on Tuesday from the NCAA Tournament in Columbus, Ohio, after defeating No. 3 UCLA in the […]

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The party continued for Long Beach State’s national champion men’s volleyball team as they participated in a “Victory Drive” along Pine Avenue, in downtown, on Wednesday, May 14.

The No. 1 Long Beach State men’s volleyball team returned victorious on Tuesday from the NCAA Tournament in Columbus, Ohio, after defeating No. 3 UCLA in the national championship match.

This is Long Beach State’s fourth national title in program history. Long Beach won all three of its matches against UCLA this season, beating the Bruins twice in February before Monday’s title match. The Beach swept two-time defending champions UCLA in the NCAA Tournament finals, a year after the Bruins beat them to win the title at the Walter Pyramid.

This year’s victory sparked pride and celebrations throughout the university campus, as well as across the city.

Downtown Long Beach was painted in black and gold – the university’s colors – as scores of people converged along Pine Avenue waiting for the team to arrive for their Victory Drive. People were holding up signs and waving pom poms.

“We’re super excited to support; it was a spur of the moment,” said Jamie Peacock, a Long Beach resident and 2019 alumna. “Long Beach has always been known to have a good volleyball team, so it’s really cool that our school is known for it nationally.”

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The National Championship trophy at the Altar Society during the community celebration after the “Victory Drive” parade for the 2025 National Champions Long Beach State men’s volleyball team along Pine Ave. in Long Beach on Wednesday, May 14, 2025. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Orange County Register/ SCNG)

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The parade started around 11 a.m. from Fifth Street and Pine Avenue, with fire trucks blaring their sirens to let fans know the team was on its way. Some of the volleyball players were atop a fire engine from Station 22.

Behind them was a caravan of cars – one with Fourth District Councilmember Daryl Supernaw, followed by university administrators – and the last fire truck had more team members waving at the crowd and holding up the national championship trophy.

People cheered and chanted “Go Beach” as the team drove by. Cars stopped in traffic and honked their horns in support. The crowd grew larger as more people joined, and bystanders also cheered on as they found out in the moment of the team’s accomplishment.

The team also threw towels, small volleyball-shaped stress balls and pins that said “Go Beach” into the crowd.

“We went to a couple of games this year and they were unbelievable,” said Lakewood resident Terry Prowell, who was at the parade with his wife, Juanita. “It’s a really good vibe here today.”

The Lakewood couple are among a group of fans who don’t have a personal connection with the university but still want to support their local university volleyball team. Prowell said they arrived at the parade route an hour early because of how “fired up” they were to join the celebration.

The Beach community followed the parade down Pine Avenue toward the Altar Society, where there was a community celebration with food, drinks, music and opportunities to get pictures with the national championship trophy and the team.

City leaders also attended the celebration, including Supernaw, Councilmember Mary Zendejas and Vice Mayor Roberto Uranga.

“I’m super excited and super proud of our Long Beach State University men’s volleyball team,” Zendejas said in an interview. “It makes us so proud of them. They were able to show the world what excellence is, on and off the court. It’s super exciting to host them in downtown, the heart of the city; it’s the most appropriate place to celebrate with the whole city.”

Students were also proud of their university’s volleyball team.

“We’re having a great time; it’s super exciting to support them,” said Malia Irwin, a graduating nursing student at Long Beach State. “We’re graduating, so it’s a great way to end it all.”

Irwin attended games throughout the season with her friend Selima Zida, also a graduating nuring student, and both said they were impressed with the team’s hard work.

“We’re so proud of you,” Zida said she would tell the team. “Let’s do nationals again next year.”

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Grant House Got Involved With Lawsuit to ‘Open Up The Doors’

Grant House Got Involved With NCAA Lawsuit to ‘Open Up The Doors,’ Not Deny Opportunities When he became associated with the lawsuit that would later bear his name, Grant House had no idea of the wide-ranging implications for college sports that would result over the next several years. He never expected to be the individual […]

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Grant House Got Involved With NCAA Lawsuit to ‘Open Up The Doors,’ Not Deny Opportunities

When he became associated with the lawsuit that would later bear his name, Grant House had no idea of the wide-ranging implications for college sports that would result over the next several years. He never expected to be the individual his fellow swimmers would blame for losing their opportunities to swim in college. Rather, House thought he was working for a brighter future for college athletes, with a focus on those in non-revenue sports such as swimming. He believed his accomplishments swimming for Arizona State and for the United States at international competitions would help the movement gain legitimacy.

“They thought I checked off all the boxes, and I was the ideal candidate for this. And what I didn’t know at the time was getting involved in,” House said. “I think a lot of people think this is just about tearing down college sports, and it’s really about rewriting the rules so Olympic sport athletes and swimmers, especially, have something they can build on their own.”

Over the weeks and months following his initial involvement, House realized that the group with which he had involved himself had more landscape-altering goals than he initially realized, leading to the eventual settlement expected to be adopted in time for the 2025-26 season. That settlement will allow direct payments to athletes and eliminate scholarship maximums for universities in Power Conferences and other conferences who opt in but institute strict roster limits for each sport, with swimming and diving maxed at 30 spots per gender.

With coaches and university officials expecting the House settlement to be in place for next season, hundreds of swimmers across the country have been cut from their teams and forced to seek new swimming homes via the transfer portal. The resulting financial changes are expected to create a discrepancy between well-funded swim teams and those who lose funding while their athletic department redirects money toward revenue-generating sports like football and basketball. Further schools will simply cut their swim teams, citing the new legislation.

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Grant House — Photo Courtesy: Peter H. Bick

Not at all what House had in mind when he initially signed on, but even now, he insists he has no regrets. The former Sun Devil swimmer originally from the Cincinnati area believes that this latest transformation can build off the introduction of name, image and likeness (NIL) rights for college athletes four years ago, providing swimmers a chance to build their own brands and extend their careers.

“This lawsuit, this process, opens up the doors,” House said. “It’s opened up doors for athletes to now have that ability to create on their own, not just perform, but to actually create going forward, instead of just compete. And I think that’s a really big aspect that always spoke to me. Whenever I was done in college, whenever I’m done with the sport, really setting a platform for all Olympic sport athletes to have more foundation and support and resources to compete as long as they want.”

The roster limits, likely to be the most crippling aspect of the settlement relating to swimmers’ opportunities on the college level, were never part of the equation House expected when the process began. He does not understand their necessity and remains frustrated with the NCAA’s position on their implementation.

Claudia Wilkins, the federal judge overseeing the case, has denied final approval for the House settlement because of the potential for lost opportunities. She has suggested a compromise that would allow current student-athletes an exemption from roster caps and have a phased implementation of the new restrictions, but the NCAA has responded they will not force universities to keep already-cut athletes on their rosters.

“I think it shows the true nature of the NCAA,” House said. “I think the lawyers continuously not acknowledging the request of Judge Claudia Wilkins, and continuously over three processes now, with the final hearing included, not making any revisions or amendments really to her request of the roster limits shows how they value NCAA athletes and college athletes, and to amend the college roster limits, even just to grandfathering them.

“She’s not even asking them to eliminate them completely. It seems like she may want to, but just to have a compromise and middle ground, they’re not willing to budge at all, other than to most recently say, ‘Oh, we’re going to leave it up to the colleges.’”

House remains optimistic that his fellow swimmers will be able to overcome these changes, even if they are initially cut from their rosters or lose a chance to compete for their first-choice school. He hopes that swimmers will be able to find new swimming homes that “very well may be better suited for them, where they get better attention, energy and care and compassion from the coaching staff, rather than being one of the lower rungs of ladder at a bigger place.”

The most notable program to be cut so far has been Cal Poly, and House has met with swimmers from that team to offer his support, although the team still has an ambitious financial goal to attain in hopes of saving the program.

He realizes that many in the swimming community blame him for the massive upheaval surrounding the sport on the college level, but House still wants the public “to understand I’m not pulling the strings.” His aims to provide a brighter future for college swimmers turned into a paradigm-shifting wave that House, perhaps naively, could never have anticipated.

“I quite frankly don’t know these things that happen along the way. I’m not informed. I’m simply the lead plaintiff. I’m not making these decisions. I don’t wish this upon anyone. I wasn’t involved in the discussions for roster limits when it’s happening. I didn’t even know that was in the cards when these negotiations were going on, and so I’m really advocating for them.”



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Shoeless Joe Jackson reinstated to MLB, now eligible for Hall of Fame

AI-assisted summary Former MLB player “Shoeless” Joe Jackson has been removed from the league’s permanently ineligible list. This decision by Commissioner Rob Manfred potentially paves the way for Jackson’s Hall of Fame induction. The Greenville native played 13 years in the MLB and is remembered locally with a statue and museum. Greenville native and former […]

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Shoeless Joe Jackson reinstated to MLB, now eligible for Hall of Fame

  • Former MLB player “Shoeless” Joe Jackson has been removed from the league’s permanently ineligible list.
  • This decision by Commissioner Rob Manfred potentially paves the way for Jackson’s Hall of Fame induction.
  • The Greenville native played 13 years in the MLB and is remembered locally with a statue and museum.

Greenville native and former pro baseball player “Shoeless” Joe Jackson has returned to good favor with Major League Baseball. He and 16 other deceased players have been officially removed from the league’s permanently ineligible list.

His reinstatement is the first step to Jackson potentially being inducted into the national baseball Hall of Fame.

This decision was made by MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred on May 13, referring to the change as a “policy decision” and marking an end to Jackson’s 104-year ban.

Jackson is joined by 16 other former MLB players who were posthumously reinstated by Manfred’s decision, including legendary names such as Pete Rose, Lefty Williams, and William Cox.

Joseph "Shoeless Joe" Jackson is shown in action during his heyday in an undated photo. The museum named in his honor has started an online petition to clear Jackson from the Major League Baseball ineligible list.

“Obviously, a person no longer with us cannot represent a threat to the integrity of the game,” said a letter from Commissioner Manfred to Pete Rose’s lawyers on May 13. “It’s hard to conceive of penalty that has more deterrent effect than one that lasts a lifetime with no reprieve.”

Shoeless Joe Jackson

Who is Shoeless Joe Jackson and why was he banned by the MLB?

The MLB banned Jackson after the 1919 Black Sox scandal, which resulted in him and seven other teammates being found guilty of taking money from gamblers and throwing games during the World Series.

Because of his participation, Jackson was added to the permanently ineligible list in 1921. At the time of his ban, he had hit for more than 50 home runs and finished with a batting average of .356, which was the fourth highest in league history at the time.

The Upstate native played 13 years in the MLB, according to Baseball Reference, a data base with baseball statistics.

Greenville Drive Fluor Field in Greenville, S.C.

Jackson was born in Pickens County but grew up around the Brandon Mill area in West Greenville, where he earned his nickname from batting and running bases in socks, compelling a crowd member to call him a “shoeless son of a gun.”

In Greenville, “Shoeless” Joe Jackson is memorialized with a statue near Fluor Field at the West End and a museum and library.

– A.J. Jackson covers business, the food & dining scene and downtown culture for The Greenville News. Contact him by email at ajackson@gannett.com, and follow him on X (formally Twitter) @ajhappened. This coverage is only possible with support from our readers.Sign up today for a digital subscription. 

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