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Men’s Track & Field Takes Home Second Place at Horizon League Championships

Story Links YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio – The Milwaukee men’s track & field team closed out action at the Horizon League Championships Sunday. The Panthers finished as runners-up for the sixth consecutive season and won six individual titles on the weekend.   Highlighting the final day of action was the Men’s ARI […]

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YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio – The Milwaukee men’s track & field team closed out action at the Horizon League Championships Sunday. The Panthers finished as runners-up for the sixth consecutive season and won six individual titles on the weekend.
 
Highlighting the final day of action was the Men’s ARI Accelerator Outstanding Running Performer of the Meet Jaelyn Reeves-Lile. He started his day in the 100m dash, securing his first title of the day breaking the program and league championship meet record with a time of 10.24. Reeves-Lile came back for the 200m dash flying to another meet and school record with a championship time of 20.51.
 
“Jaelyn had a great championship meet,” said head coach Andrew Basler. “Sweeping the 100m and 200m with records in both and punching his ticket to the West Prelims.”
 
Anthony Buford was named Horizon League Field Freshman of the Year for his long jump victory yesterday. Today, he placed fourth in the 400m dash with a new career-best performance of 49.19.
 
Dominating the triple jump was Divine Aniamaka, his leap of 15.39m blowing past the rest of the field by over 1.6m and tying the program record in the event. Bryant McLaughlin joined Aniamaka in medaling with a third-place distance of 13.71m, and Bishop Bufford (13.50m) took fourth.
 
Caden Thomas added a runner-up finish for Milwaukee in the high jump, clearing 2.02m to lead the team.
 
Earning one more medal for the Panthers was Jeremiah Johnson in the hammer throw, setting a new career-best with a huge toss of 51.40m to finish third.
 
Lucas Picco represented the Black & Gold with a strong showing in the finals of the 800m run, coming in fourth place at 1:51.93.
 
Liam Richards had the best pole vault performance of his outdoor career, taking fourth place after clearing 4.41m.
 
Richards also ran in the finals of the 110m hurdles, claiming the fifth spot after crossing the finish line in 14.81. Ethan Mitchell was next in with a sixth-place time of 15.24.
 
Will Whiteis was the team’s top finisher in the 5000m run, making his way to the finish in 14:59.53 to take tenth.
 
“I need to shoutout all our 5000m runners for persevering through heat we have not run in this year and battling hard.” Basler added.
 
Overall, the Panthers racked up 141 points across the three-day competition.
 
“The goal is to compete for Horizon League Championships each season and in that sense, we fell short. But that should not take away from the great effort our teams put forth this weekend to claim runner-up trophies.” Basler concluded saying. “The overall energy and support was great and we had a lot of conference champions, all-conference, and end of the year awards. We will continue to find ways to improve as a program to put us in a position to get to the top of the podium.”
 
UP NEXT
 

Athletes who have met the NCAA qualifying standards will advance to the NCAA West Regional Preliminary Rounds, held May 28-31 at Texas A&M’s E.B Cushing Stadium in College Station, Texas.
 





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Southern Illinois Salukis – Official Athletics Website

CARBONDALE, Ill. – Southern Illinois Track and Field will head to the NCAA West Preliminary round on Wednesday, May 28 in College Station, Tex. The men will compete on Wednesday and Friday, and the women will compete on Thursday and Saturday. The Salukis will send nine athletes to the first round: Darrione Williams, Andre Jackson […]

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CARBONDALE, Ill. – Southern Illinois Track and Field will head to the NCAA West Preliminary round on Wednesday, May 28 in College Station, Tex. The men will compete on Wednesday and Friday, and the women will compete on Thursday and Saturday.

The Salukis will send nine athletes to the first round: Darrione Williams, Andre Jackson II, Leah Thames, Teanna Bell, Shane Ashton, Trinity Cleaver, KeyAnn Wilson, Xavier Preston, and Josh Delgado.

RELAYS

The women’s 4×100 relay team, made up of Leah Thames, Teanna Bell, KeyAnn Wilson, and Trinity Cleaver will compete on Saturday, May 31, at 5 p.m. They won the event at the Missouri Valley Conference Championships with a time of 44.62 seconds.

The men’s 4×400 Relay team, made up of Shane Ashton, Xavier Preston, Josh Delgado, and Andre Jackson II will compete on Friday, May 30, at 8:45 p.m. They won the event at the MVC Championship with a time of 3:06.17.

JUMPS

Darrione Williams will compete in the long jump starting on Wednesday, May 28, at 4:30 p.m. Williams is coming off a stellar weekend at the MVC Championship, where he won the gold medal in the long jump with a jump of 7.55M and the silver medal in the triple jump with a jump of 14.94 meters.

INDIVIDUAL TRACK EVENTS

Leah Thames will pull triple duty this week, competing in the 4×100 relay, as well as the 200M and 400M dashes. Thames dominated at the MVC Championship, claiming four gold medals and the MVC Most Valuable Female Athlete. She set personal best times in the 200M dash (23.38 seconds), and the 400M dash (53.04 Seconds). The 200M dash will take place on Thursday, May 29 at 8:45 p.m.

Teanna Bell will join Thames in the 400M dash. Bell claimed second in the 400M dash at the MVC Championship; she was on the heels of Thames the entire race, finishing with a personal best time of 53.15 seconds. The first round of the 400M dash is on Thursday, May 29 at 7:25 p.m.

Andre Jackson II will look to continue a strong freshman campaign, racing in the 400M dash. Jackson has only gotten faster with every race and will look to continue that trend on Wednesday at 7:25 p.m. At the MVC Championship, he took home the first-place finish with a time of 45.75 seconds, this time set an MVC Record, Facility Record, and a personal best mark in the event.

Shane Ashton will compete in the 400M Hurdles on Wednesday at 8:20 p.m. Ashton defended his crown at the MVC Championship, winning the event with a time of 50.54 seconds.

Follow along with Live Results.

The NCAA West First Round Championship Central page can be found here.

The NCAA West Preliminary Round will be streamed live on ESPN+, and each day can be found below.

 

FOLLOW THE SALUKIS

For the latest updates on the Salukis, follow the team on Twitter (@SIUTrackXC), Instagram (@SIUTrackXC) and Facebook (@SalukiTrackAndField).



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Princeton University

PRINCETON, N.J. – Preparing to compete in 14 events, the Princeton men’s track and field team will head to Jacksonville, Fla. for the NCAA East First Round to be held Wednesday, May 28th through Saturday, May 31st.  16 Tigers were individually selected to compete in 13 events, with Princeton sending a squad for the 4×400 […]

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PRINCETON, N.J. – Preparing to compete in 14 events, the Princeton men’s track and field team will head to Jacksonville, Fla. for the NCAA East First Round to be held Wednesday, May 28th through Saturday, May 31st. 

16 Tigers were individually selected to compete in 13 events, with Princeton sending a squad for the 4×400 relay as well. 

The selections continue an impressive year for Princeton, as the Tigers won the Ivy Outdoor Heptagonal Championship to complete their second-consecutive and 12th all-time Triple Crown earlier this month. 

At Outdoor Heps, Princeton boasted five individual championships as Greg Foster won the long jump and the 110 hurdles, while Jackson Clarke won the 200, Harrison Witt won the 1500, and Casey Helm won the discus. 

Just this season, the Tigers have rewritten the school record books, setting new records in six events while making the top-10 leaderboards with 22 other performances. 

A pair of Tigers qualified for regionals with top-5 marks. Foster ranks first on the NCAA East Qualifying List and third nationally in the long jump with a mark of 8.10m/26-7″ from the Virginia Challenge on April 18. Helm ranks third regionally in the discus after throwing 63.37m/207′ 11″ at the Penn Relays for a new program record. His mark puts him at seventh in the nation. 

Witt, a 2025 Second Team All-American in the indoor mile, ranks 12th in the East and 22nd in the country in the 1500m after running 3:37.22 at the Larry Ellis Invitational. His time set a new program record. 

Seb Clatworthy also ranks 12th regionally in the high jump after clearing 2.16m/7′ 1″ at Outdoor Heps, while Joe Licata ranks 12th in the shot put with a throw of 19.24m/63′ 1.5″ at Penn Relays.

Rounding out the Tigers in the region’s top 20, Jackson Shorten comes in at 13th in the 3000m steeplechase. Sam Rodman’s school record-breaking 800m performance of 1:46.85 put him at 14th in the region. 

First-year distance phenom Jacob Nenow ranks 19th in the 10000m after running 28:23.60 at the Sam Howell Invitational, breaking Princeton’s record in his first collegiate competition in the event.

After a dominant outdoor season, the Tigers head to Jacksonville ready to compete for punched tickets to the NCAA finals in Eugene, Ore. next month.

Full list of Tigers competing at the NCAA East First Round:

100m: Jadon Spain

200m: Jackson Clarke

400m: Joey Gant

800m: Samuel Rodman

1500m: Harrison Witt, Connor McCormick

5000m: Myles Hogan

10000m: Jacob Nenow, Nicholas Bendtsen

400mH: Chris Paige

4×400 Relay 

High Jump: Seb Clatworthy

Long Jump: Greg Foster (#1 seed, 8.10m)

Shot Put: Joe Licata

Discus: Casey Helm, Avery Shunneson

Hammer: Asher Robbins

 



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Hallock Wins Serie A1 Title & Euro Cup

Story Links Euro Cup (Final Round, Second Leg) May 24 Pro Recco 12, Radnicki 9 Team USA captain Ben Hallock scored one to help Pro Recco win the club’s first Euro Cup in team history. The Italian giants upended Radnicki 12-9 in the second leg to claim victory over the Serbian […]

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Euro Cup (Final Round, Second Leg) May 24

Pro Recco 12, Radnicki 9

Team USA captain Ben Hallock scored one to help Pro Recco win the club’s first Euro Cup in team history. The Italian giants upended Radnicki 12-9 in the second leg to claim victory over the Serbian squad.

 
 

Serie A1 (Playoffs) May 20

Championship

Pro Recco 9, Brescia 5

7th Place

Roma Vis Nova 10, Ortigia 8

Hallock and Pro Recco claimed the club’s 37th Scudetto with a 9-5 win over Brescia and Max Irving, who scored twice in defeat. Quinn Woodhead and Roma Vis Nova earned a seventh place Serie A1 finish after a 10-8 victory over Ortigia.




 

A1 Ethniki (Final Round) May 21

Olympiacos 13, Vouliagmeni 12

Olympiacos 18, Vouliagmeni 14

Dylan Woodhead and Vouliagmeni lost 13-12 and 18-14 to Olympiacos in the A1 Ethniki championship round to finish the season in second place. Woodhead scored one goal in the final game of the series.


 

Women’s División De Honor (Final Round, Second Leg) May 25

Sabadell 12, Sant Andreu 10

Maggie Steffens and Tara Prentice’s Sabadell based side won the second game of the Women’s Division de Honor Final against Sant Andreu, 12-10. The two teams will now face off in a decisive third game to determine a champion.



 

Women’s A1 Ethniki (Third Place) May 21, 24

Alimos 13, Glyfada 12

Alimos 10, Glyfada 7

Isabel Williams and Glyfada lost the Women’s A1 Ethniki third place series to Alimos after a pair of losses to conclude the year in fourth place of Women’s A1 Ethniki.


 

Here’s a look ahead at some important matches featuring Team USA athletes:

 

Women’s División De Honor (Final Round, Third Leg) May 28

Sabadell vs Sant Andreu

 





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Bears Begin Competition At NCAA West Regionals

The California track & field team’s 26 qualifiers will throw down against hundreds of the best athletes in the nation this week, each ready to put their best effort forward at the NCAA West Regionals in College Station, Texas, to earn a coveted spot at next month’s NCAA Outdoor Championships. The four-day meet at […]

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The California track & field team’s 26 qualifiers will throw down against hundreds of the best athletes in the nation this week, each ready to put their best effort forward at the NCAA West Regionals in College Station, Texas, to earn a coveted spot at next month’s NCAA Outdoor Championships. The four-day meet at Texas A&M’s E.B. Cushing Stadium runs Wednesday-Saturday, with each day’s evening events streamed on ESPN+. Live results will be available at Flash Results.
 
Track athletes will need to advance past two rounds (first rounds and quarterfinals) to book their spots at Oregon’s Hayward Field, where the NCAA Championships will be contested. Field athletes have just one round (a semifinal) to pass. Only 12 individuals per event will move on to Eugene.
 
The men’s events are scheduled for Wednesday and Friday while the women will compete on Thursday and Saturday.
 
Eighteen of the Golden Bears’ entries have posted at least one outdoor program top-10 mark this season, which includes a world record from discus thrower Mykolas Alekna. He, along with fellow discus thrower and Olympian Caisa-Marie Lindfors, will look to qualify for their third NCAA Championships (Alekna – 2022-23; Lindfors – 2021, 23).
 
Hammer thrower Giavonna Meeks and pole vaulter Tyler Burns each competed at this year’s NCAA Indoor Championships, with Meeks finishing fourth in the weight throw and Burns 12th in the indoor pole vault. Distance runner Garrett MacQuiddy and hammer thrower Audrey Jacobs both reached the NCAA Outdoor Championships in 2023, with Jacobs earning Second-Team All-American status.
 
Trevor Rogers (long jump) and Valentina Savva (hammer) are Cal’s only two freshmen set to compete this week, following silver-medal performances at the ACC Outdoor Championships earlier this month. Savva is just one of three first-years appearing in the women’s hammer throw and the only one listed in the final flight.
 
NCAA WEST REGIONALS SCHEDULE (All Times PT)
 
Wednesday, May 28
8 a.m. – Men’s Hammer Semifinal (Jared Freeman – Flight 3)
2:30 p.m. – Men’s Long Jump Semifinal (Jason Plumb – Flight 3; Trevor Rogers – Flight 3)
3:30 p.m. – Men’s Pole Vault Semifinal (Tyler Burns – Flight 2; Parker Terrill – Flight 2; Will Siemens – Flight 2)
4 p.m. – Men’s Shot Put Semifinal (Nick Godbehere – Flight 1)
4 p.m. – Men’s 110m Hurdles First Round (Donovan Bradley – Heat 5)
4:30 p.m. – Men’s 1500m First Round (Garrett MacQuiddy – Heat 4)
5:25 p.m. – Men’s 400m First Round (Johnny Goode – Heat 3)
 
Thursday, May 29
8 a.m. – Women’s Hammer Semifinal (Amanda Spear – Flight 2; Adrianna Coleman – Flight 3; Audrey Jacobs – Flight 3; Giavonna Meeks – Flight 4; Valentina Savva – Flight 4)
2:30 p.m. – Women’s Long Jump Semifinal (Asjah Atkinson – Flight 1)
3:30 p.m. – Women’s Pole Vault Semifinal (Ali Sahaida – Flight 2)
4 p.m. – Women’s Shot Put Semifinal (Lucija Leko – Flight 3)
4 p.m. – Women’s 100m Hurdles First Round (Saqqara Ruffin – Heat 2; Asjah Atkinson – Heat 4; Mari Testa – Heat 4)
5:50 p.m. – Women’s 800m First Round (Jayden Hill – Heat 2)
 
Friday, May 30
11 a.m. – Men’s Discus Semifinal (Mykolas Alekna – Flight 4; Jared Freeman – Flight 4)
12:30 p.m. – Men’s Triple Jump Semifinal (Jeremiah Bolaños – Flight 1)
3:15 p.m. – Men’s 1500m Quarterfinal (if qualified – Garrett MacQuiddy)
4:15 p.m. – Men’s 110m Hurdles Quarterfinal (if qualified – Donovan Bradley)
4:50 p.m. – Men’s 400m Quarterfinal (if qualified – Johnny Goode)
 
Saturday, May 31
11 a.m. – Women’s Discus Semifinal (Lucija Leko – Flight 4; Caisa-Marie Lindfors – Flight 4)
12:30 p.m. – Women’s Triple Jump Semifinal (Myla Canty – Flight 3)
4:15 p.m. – Women’s 100m Hurdles Quarterfinal (if qualified – Asjah Atkinson, Mari Testa, Saqqara Ruffin)
5:05 p.m. – Women’s 800m Quarterfinal (if qualified – Jayden Hill)
 
WORLD RECORD RETURNER
Discus thrower Mykolas Alekna is competing for the Bears once again after taking the 2024 season off to prepare for his debut Olympic Games, where he surpassed the previous Olympic record on the way to a silver medal. The 22-year-old phenom stunned the athletics world by breaking track & field’s oldest standing men’s record last April, posting a throw of 74.35m (243-11) at the Oklahoma Throws World Invitational to surpass a mark that had stood since 1986. He then broke it again last month, becoming the first man in history to surpass the 75-meter barrier with a mark of 75.56m (247-10) that also reset his own collegiate and ACC records.
 
Since enrolling at Berkeley in Fall 2021, Alekna has compiled an eye-popping résumé that has already elevated him into one of the sport’s legendary figures. The two-time World medalist, three-time Lithuanian Male Athlete of the Year and two-time semifinalist for The Bowerman set his first collegiate record as a freshman, later becoming the youngest-ever European discus champion and youngest World discus medalist in history at just 19 years of age; that year, he was also named a semifinalist for the AAU James E. Sullivan Award and the USTFCCCA West Region and Pac-12 Men’s Field Athlete of the Year.
 

Alekna has claimed a total of five facility records and nine meet records over the past four years, as well as two Pac-12 titles and two First-Team All-American nods. Most recently, he was named the top discus thrower in the world by Track & Field News and recorded his 22nd appearance on The Bowerman Watch List – third-most by any man and more than any thrower in history.
 
PODIUM POWERHOUSES
Cal athletes collected a total of 12 medals at the ACC Outdoor Championships. Mykolas Alekna (discus) and Giavonna Meeks (hammer) led the way with titles in their respective events, while Caisa-Marie Lindfors earned podium spots in two events (discus – silver; shot put – bronze). Both Lucija Leko (shot put – silver) and Johnny Goode (400m – bronze) broke school records on the way to their first conference medals, while Trevor Rogers posted a massive personal best in the long jump on the way to a second-place finish. Garrett MacQuiddy (1500m), Tyler Burns (pole vault) and Valentina Savva (hammer) added to Cal’s group of silver medalists, while Nick Godbehere (shot put) and Jared Freeman (hammer) clinched bronze.
 
ALL-ACC HONOREES
In addition to the medalists listed above, an additional six Bears picked up All-ACC honors as Cal finished with 18 all-conference athletes in a combined 22 events. Riley Knott placed fourth in both the high jump and the long jump while Jared Freeman took fourth in the discus for his second All-ACC selection and Lucija Leko did the same with a sixth-place finish in the women’s contest. Hurdlers Asjah Atkinson (100m hurdles) and Donovan Bradley (110m hurdles) each placed fourth, while teammate Loreal Wilson took sixth in the 400m hurdles. One more trio of throwers – hammer specialists Audrey Jacobs (fifth) and Adrianna Coleman (sixth) as well as discus thrower Charlie Dang (fifth) – rounded out the All-ACC squad.
 
THROW LOUD AND PROUD
Cal’s throws squad – which has set six indoor and 11 outdoor program top-10 marks this season – is putting up another elite year, led by returning Olympic discus throwers Mykolas Alekna and Caisa-Marie Lindfors. Hammer thrower Audrey Jacobs owns the Dutch U23 record and earned All-America status as a freshman in 2023, while Adrianna Coleman, a sophomore, has also reached the USATF U20 Championships in each of the past two years, taking bronze in the hammer in 2023.
 
The Bears also welcomed several top newcomers to the team this year. Cal’s throwing transfer class is headlined by two-time All-American Giavonna Meeks, who won Cal’s first ACC title (weight throw) in March and claimed the ACC hammer title two months later. Other new members of the squad include 2024 World U20 hammer silver medalist Valentina Savva, 2024 European Championships two-way competitor Lucija Leko (discus and shot put) and 2023 European U20 hammer medalist Kai Barham. Meeks (No. 2 weight throw, No. 4 hammer, No. 6 indoor shot put, No. 10 outdoor shot put), Savva (No. 3 hammer, No. 4 weight throw) and Leko (No. 1 outdoor shot put, No. 4 discus, No. 5 indoor shot put) have already recorded marks on Cal’s all-time top-10 lists, while UC Santa Barbara transfer Jared Freeman also now owns program top 10s in the indoor weight throw (No. 2), hammer (No. 7) and discus (No. 10).
 
HERE COME THE HURDLERS
The Golden Bear hurdlers have posted a breakthrough season in 2025, collecting six program top-10 times and four All-ACC nods between the indoor and outdoor campaigns. Asjah Atkinson, who was named All-ACC both indoors and outdoors, now ranks second all-time at Cal in the 60m hurdles and fourth in the 100m hurdles. She is joined on both lists by teammate Mari Testa, who moved into a tie for the program’s No. 5 time in the former and shares the No. 7 time in the latter with teammate Saqqara Ruffin. Donovan Bradley (110m hurdles) and Loreal Wilson (400m hurdles) each made the Outdoor All-ACC team, each posting Cal’s fifth-best time in their respective events at the ACC Outdoor Championships.
 
 
STAY POSTED

For complete coverage of Cal track & field, follow the Bears on X/Twitter (@CalTFXC), Instagram (@caltfxc) and Facebook (@Cal Cross Country/Track and Field).
 





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Nine from Men’s Track & Field named to NEWMAC Academic All-Conference Team

Story Links MARLBOROUGH, Mass.—Nine members of the Babson College men’s track and field program were honored for their hard work in the classroom when they were named to the New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference (NEWMAC) Academic All-Conference team on Tuesday. Graduate student Matthew Campbell (South Easton, Mass.) and seniors Will […]

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MARLBOROUGH, Mass.—Nine members of the Babson College men’s track and field program were honored for their hard work in the classroom when they were named to the New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference (NEWMAC) Academic All-Conference team on Tuesday.

Graduate student Matthew Campbell (South Easton, Mass.) and seniors Will Dean (Belmont, Mass.), Julian Ivarra (Plano, Texas), and Jack Reynolds (Fairfield, Conn.) were named to the Academic All-Conference team for the third time in their careers, and graduate student Ryan Wilson (Mount Sinai, N.Y.), senior Harrison Prucher (Hopkinton, Mass.), and sophomores Jonathan Hanscom (Hadley, Mass.), Coleman Hayes (New York, N.Y.) and Stratton Seymour (Merrimac, Mass.) were honored for the first time.

 

Academic All-Conference honorees must have met the following criteria: earned a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.5/4.0 scale after the 2024 fall semester, achieved second-year academic status, and been a member of the varsity team for the entire semester.

Campbell, a Strategic Management major, competed for Babson for the first time since 2022 and registered career-best times in his last two races. He placed 13th in the 1500 meters in a personal PR time of 4:09.40 at the NEWMAC Championships on April 26, and he finished seventh in the 10,000 meters at the New England Division III Championships with a PR time of 32:44.85. He made his Babson debut with two appearances back in 2019 and also competed in 10 meets in 2021 and 2022.

 

Dean, a Business major, competed in four meets this spring and finished his career with a ninth-place performance in the long jump at the NEWMAC Championships with a mark of 19-feet, 5.25-inches. He earned All-NEWMAC honors in 2024 with a second-place finish in the conference meet in the decathlon, scoring 4,331 points. His javelin throw of 149-feet, 6-inches at the MIT Sean Collier Invitational on April 19, 2024, ranked 29th in the NCAA Division III East Region.

 

Ivarra, a Business Administration major, ran in six track meets this spring after competing in the NCAA Division III cross country championships last fall. He ran a personal-best time in the 5000 meters with a 14:53.27 at the Bryant Black & Gold Invitational in late March and a PR 31:01.28 in the 10,000 meters at the MIT Sean Collier Invitational on April 19. He went on to place third in the 10,000 at the NEWMAC Championships and 13th in the 5000. His career-best time of 14:53.26 in the 5000 ranks seventh-fastest in program history, and his 31:01.28 in the 10K ranks fifth-fastest in program history.

Reynolds, a Business Analytics major, competed in 25 meets in his first three seasons at Babson but did not appear in any meets this spring. He placed fourth in the triple jump at the 2024 NEWMAC Championships with a career-best mark of 42-feet, 8-inches, eighth in the high jump with a leap of 6-feet, 1.5-inches, and 12th in the javelin throw with a mark of 135-feet, 8-inches. He placed third in the high jump (6-feet, 0.75-inches) at the NEWMAC meet in 2022 and fifth in 2023 (6-feet, 2.75-inches).

Wilson, a Finance major, returned for his final year of eligibility for the Beavers as a middle-distance runner. He finished 11th in the 1500 meters in a time of 4:08.54 at the NEWMAC Championships and finished in 16th place in the 800 meters in 2:05.02. He ran a career-best 15:41.84 to place sixth in the 5000 meters at the Alan Connie Shamrock Invitational back on March 21 in Myrtle Beach, S.C. Wilson previously placed eighth in the 1500 meters at the NEWMAC Championships back in 2022 and fifth in the 1500 in 2023.

Prucher, a Finance major, competed in the high hurdle events in 18 meets in his first three seasons at Babson but did not appear in any meets this spring. He finished 11th in the 110 hurdles with a time of 15.76 at the NEWMAC Championships in 2023, and placed fifth in the event with a career-best time of 15.53 at the NEWMAC meet in 2024.

Hansom, a Finance major, appeared in two meets this spring as a distance runner. He ran a career-best time of 32:43.11 in the 10,000 meters to take ninth place at the Bryant Black & Gold Invitational on March 28, and finished seventh with a time of 33:17.85 in the 10K at the NEWMAC Championships on April 25. He was also 11th in the 10,000 meters at the 2024 NEWMAC meet in 34:15.89.

Hayes, a Finance major, competed in five events this spring as a thrower for the Beavers. He placed seventh in the shot put at the NEWMAC Championships with a career-best mark of 42-feet, 6-inches; finished 13th at the NEWMAC meet in the discus with a mark of 109-feet, 6-inches; and placed 14th in the hammer throw with a career-best mark of 117-feet, 7-inches. He was also seventh in the discus (career-best 119-feet, 2-inches) at the 2024 NEWMAC meet and eighth in the shot put (39-feet, 8.75-inches).

Seymour, a Business Administration major, competed in four events this spring for the Beavers. He finished 11th in the 400-meter hurdles at the NEWMAC Championships this spring in a time of 59.70 seconds. He set the program record in the 400 hurdles three times in 2024, the third time coming at the MIT Final qualifier with a clocking of 56.52 seconds.

The Beavers finished in fifth place at the conference championships with 79 points, third-most in program history.

 



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Inside Sixpack: A Play Inspired by Hmong Volleyball

The Bump Local playwright Katie Ka Vang is no stranger to weaving her life’s stories into her work. “It’s the way I understand the world, and it helps me make sense of myself,” she says. Everything from her cancer diagnosis to stories about immigration and displacement is on the table. But until recently, she’d never […]

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The Bump

Local playwright Katie Ka Vang is no stranger to weaving her life’s stories into her work.

“It’s the way I understand the world, and it helps me make sense of myself,” she says.

Everything from her cancer diagnosis to stories about immigration and displacement is on the table. But until recently, she’d never been able to figure out how to write about her passion for Hmong volleyball—one of the largest sports in the Twin Cities that many have never even heard of. The competitive, cutthroat—but loyal and love-filled—world of Vang’s 20s is the setting for her newest work, Sixpack, opening May 31 at the Jungle Theater.

The Set

Hmong volleyball is similar to standard volleyball, but with more specific rules around faults and certain hits. Volleyball was wildly popular in Thai refugee camps, where many Hmong people were displaced during the Secret War, and its popularity grew as Hmong communities settled elsewhere.

“It reminds us of our stateless home,” Vang says.

Vang grew up playing and competed with teams around the country in her 20s. But she always saw Minnesota as the center of it all.

“Every year, thousands travel to St. Paul for the Hmong International Freedom Festival, where there’s a big tournament,” she says. “Even when I didn’t live here, we would make the trip. I was so scared of these Minnesota Hmong girls because they were so tough and ruthless—and then they recruited me to play for their team, Sixpack, and I became one of them.”

The Spike

The team showed her another way to be a Hmong woman—one that was a little louder and more assertive, and one that made her feel more like herself.

“They showed me so much I never thought I’d get to have,” she says. And even though Vang doesn’t play as much now, as is clear in Sixpack—an homage to the community and the relationships formed within it—her passion for the sport persists.

May 31–June 29, Jungle Theater, 2951 Lyndale Ave. S., Mpls., 612-822-7063





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