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Hi all, a little fun fact: June 12th is my wedding anniversary! Today, I’ll be celebrating 14 years with my amazing wife. It’s flown by, and I couldn’t ask for a better partner in life. It’s also Father’s Day this weekend, and I hope everyone has a great one! I’m looking forward to seeing my […]

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Hi all, a little fun fact: June 12th is my wedding anniversary! Today, I’ll be celebrating 14 years with my amazing wife. It’s flown by, and I couldn’t ask for a better partner in life. It’s also Father’s Day this weekend, and I hope everyone has a great one! I’m looking forward to seeing my father and the rest of my family this weekend. My dad instilled a love of the game and die-hard Giants fandom (torture though it is) in me from a young age, and I wouldn’t be writing or podcasting about the sport without his influence. Speaking of podcasting, expect this week’s out on Sunday afternoon due to scheduling conflicts between Kyle and myself. All that aside…let’s get right into this week’s recommendations!

Note: all stats current through Tuesday 6/10/25 and all minor league Statcast figures are sourced from TJ Stats.

Dynasty Baseball Pickups – Prospects Live

Mid-Week Pickups

Jaxon Wiggins – 23/SP/CHC/AA

Height/Weight: 6’6”/225 lbs
Throws: R
Fantrax Rostership: 9%

Top 600 Rankings (May 25): 462

PLIVE- (Career): 88
PLIVE- (2025): 95

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 60, Slider: 55, Curveball: 40, Changeup: 50, Command: 40

2024 stats (CPX/A/A+): 59.2 IP, 4.37 ERA, 1.31 WHIP, 28%K, 14.2%BB
2025 stats (A+/AA): 50.2 IP, 1.95 ERA, 1.01 WHIP, 30.0%K, 9.9%BB

Why To Pick Up

I’ve written quite a bit about Wiggins over the past year. I initially highlighted him in my July 18th, 2024, pickups article as a target in leagues of 400+ prospects rostered. At the time, Wiggins was shoving at Single-A after a brutal start to the season at Complex (coming off of TJ), and here is what I had to say:

Wiggins is a fascinating arm who has seemingly taken a big step forward with his control this year. His early-season performance shows the risk, as does his recent injury history, but I’m buying into the Single-A performance based on the stuff. He needs a promotion to High-A before I can go too far, though.

Ironically, he was promoted and made his High-A debut two days after publishing that article. The control evaporated at the new level, and his walk rate more than doubled from 6.3% at Single-A to 13.9% at High-A. His ERA went up over two full runs, and his WHIP went from 0.81 to 1.42.

This offseason, I was tasked with writing his scouting report fantasy blurb. In it, I once again expressed interest in the upside while stating he needed to see improved control:

Wiggins has some exciting stuff but will need to throw more strikes to make it as a starter. He gained some dynasty buzz after posting a 6.3% walk rate in Single-A, but that quickly fell apart upon promotions to High-A and Double-A, leading to a season long 14.2% walk rate. It’s fair to give him a bit of a pass his first season back from Tommy John surgery, and the Cubs’ potentially improved pitching development does provide some hope, but he’ll need to show improvements next year to be anything more than a flier in 500+ prospect leagues. Be sure to add him to your watchlist though just in case.

Wiggins once again struggled with control early on, posting a 15.9% walk rate through his first five appearances, culminating in his first career relief appearance on May 1st, where he walked three in as many innings. Then something happened. Maybe he realized how close he was to being converted to a reliever, or maybe it was something completely different. Whatever it was, his season turned around at that point, beginning with his next start on May 8th, where he threw seven one-run innings without a single walk (his first start with less than two walks). The Cubs must have believed something had been unlocked because they immediately promoted him to Double-A, where he’s made five starts, three of which have featured less than two walks. Overall, Wiggins has just a 5.8% walk rate since his rock-bottom relief appearance, along with a 2.01 ERA (1.91 FIP), 0.89 WHIP, and 30.6% strikeout rate. During the year, his strike-throwing improved significantly. After throwing just 58% of his pitches last season for strikes, that rate has jumped up to 63% this season.

As I mentioned in my two excerpts above, Wiggins has the stuff to succeed as a high-strikeout starter if he can throw enough strikes for it to matter. Here’s what Rhys had to say about the arsenal in his offseason scouting report:

We are talking about a physically imposing pitcher on the mound who releases the ball from a high three-quarters arm slot. There is less extension than you think for someone with as long of legs as he has, and that could be added to his delivery at some point. The fastball is a plus heater with good shape and life. It is the rising tide that lifts all boats with his arsenal. The slider is a hard gyro slider with good shape that plays well off the over 20 inches of IVB that Wiggins collects off his fastball. It has a nasty late bite, and when he develops more feel for it, there is a chance it is a second-plus offering for the former Arkansas Razorback. The changeup plays well because he does a good job of killing any loft on the offering, allowing the tumble-and-fade to come through. The curveball he currently deploys is nothing more than a get-me-over curveball that he can utilize early in counts to steal a strike.

After topping out at 97 last year, Wiggins has reportedly reached triple digits this year, and between the stuff and the recent performance, there is a lot to like here.

Why To Think Twice

As discussed above, we’ve been down this road before with Wiggins. He looks a lot like the guy we saw last year at Single-A, who sandwiched a rough start at the Complex and a rough finish at High-A. This season, his start at Single-A looks much better than it was (1.86 ERA to 3.87 FIP before his seven-inning gem), thanks mainly to a .209 BABIP. I want to give him the benefit of the doubt, but we’ve seen him have stretches of good control before losing it later in the year.

Final Thoughts

Fool me once; shame on me. Fool me twice, pick him up in all my leagues? That’s not how the saying goes, but it’s certainly what I did with Wiggins. He’s getting a fair amount of buzz right now (as seen with his quickly rising roster rate), but I was able to grab a whopping seven shares in the last few days. He will be a huge riser in our rankings this week, will almost certainly be a top 200 prospect, and may even crack some top 100s. Greg Hoogkamp is leading the PLive hype train on him, and you should jump aboard before it’s too late.

Where to pick up: Leagues with 100+ prospects rostered.

FAAB bid: Moderate (5-10%)


Yohendrick Pinango – 23/OF/TOR/AAA

Height/weight: 5’11”/170 lbs
Bats: L
Fantrax Rostership: 4%

PLIVE+ (Career): 116
PLIVE+ (2025): 147

2024 stats (A+/AA): 474 PA .239/.331/.389, 10 HR, 11 SB, 11.4% BB, 18.8% K
2025 stats (AA/AAA): 228 PA .283/.395/.518, 11 HR, 5 SB, 14.5% BB, 21.1% K

Why To Pick Up

It must have been rough for Blue Jays fans like Kyle and Greg to watch Nate Pearson go from a top pitching prospect to a high-risk relief arm, but maybe they got something positive out of it with Pinango, who was the return when they traded Pearson to the Cubs. Shout out to Nate Rasmussen and Tom Gates, who have been highlighting Pinango all year long on the Double-A portion of the Daily Sheet. I’ve written him up myself, covering him in my 5/2/24 pickups article. In that article, I referenced the fact that Pinango has always had great contact and good raw power but was finally starting to get into that power at High-A:

The skills are there for him to be an excellent fantasy player if the power gains are real, and that has me picking up a couple of speculative shares in deeper leagues. Still, he needs to keep up the power gains and get a promotion before I get too excited. 

At the time, Pinango was posting a .259 ISO at High-A with a 191 wRC+ through the season’s first month. He would get that promotion about a week later, debuting there on May 14th. Pinango couldn’t keep the power gains, and he struggled pre- and post-trade in his first look at Double-A.

Fast forward to this year, and Pinango again put up great numbers in his first month with a .200 ISO and 176 wRC+ through his first month at Double-A. Sound familiar? Well, he would go on to keep things up in May with a .244 ISO and 163 wRC+, earning a promotion to Triple-A on June 1st. Unlike last season, Pinango’s power and performance didn’t fall off with a promotion. Since his promotion, he’s slashing .200/.333/.500 with three home runs, a 16.7% walk rate, and a matching 16.7% strikeout rate. Don’t let the batting average scare you off, as he’s been very unlucky with a .143 BABIP.

The Statcast data backs up the performance in the early going as both the quality of contact metrics and the contact metrics are off the charts:

The pull rate, in particular, is noteworthy as it’s the main thing separating his current performance from what he’s done in the past. Coming into the year, he had never posted a pull rate over 40%. This year, he’s been significantly over that at Double-A and Triple-A. He’s always made fantastic contact with 80% or higher overall rates at every stop. If he has finally unlocked the game power, there could be a good player here. He needs to be protected on the 40-man this offseason, so the Blue Jays may want to give him a look in the bigs this year to see what they have, particularly with their current collection of mediocre outfield bats (not counting Barger, as you all know he’s a stud).

Why To Think Twice

It’s a tiny sample at Triple-A, and he’s mostly been feasting on fastballs. He’s also not a great defender and can’t play center field, so he will have to hit for power to stick. He’s been extremely passive at both levels, swinging at a career-low rate of 38.0%. However, as I write this, I realize that he’s only shown this level of passivity one other time in his career, which was his successful High-A stretch (38.7%) from last season, which had me buying in before. Those are the only points in his career where it’s been under 47%, so this may be a feature, not a bug.

Final Thoughts

When I last wrote about Pinango, I wasn’t really sure if I was buying it. To be honest, I wasn’t sure when I started this writeup either. After digging in, however, I’m getting more excited about my shares, so you should probably go out and get some of your own.

Where to pick up: Leagues with 250+ prospects

FAAB bid: Minimal (0-5%)

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Good Luck draws crowd at ideas forum

Much about the Good Luck Fund—a private foundation with lofty public goals—remains uncertain. How will it select businesses for the properties it buys? Can those enterprises succeed in a market in which labor is scarce and housing expensive? Will residents open their wallets to support the fund, which could quickly burn through founder Chris Hulls’s […]

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Much about the Good Luck Fund—a private foundation with lofty public goals—remains uncertain. How will it select businesses for the properties it buys? Can those enterprises succeed in a market in which labor is scarce and housing expensive? Will residents open their wallets to support the fund, which could quickly burn through founder Chris Hulls’s initial $15 million donation?

For all the questions surrounding the enterprise, one thing is crystal clear: Point Reyes Station residents want it to succeed. 

Last Wednesday, about 250 of them packed into the former Station House Café building and cheered on Mr. Hulls as he sketched out his vision for the fund, whose mission is to preserve historic downtown properties, attract and retain key businesses and sustain the community’s 20th-century ranch-town vibe.

People spilled out of the building’s dimly lit interior and into the courtyard, where the garden was abloom. Mr. Hulls, a 41-year-old tech entrepreneur whose style is straightforward and self-deprecating, was startled by the size of the crowd.

“We were expecting maybe a couple dozen people,” he said. “I just started preparing for this about five minutes ago, so I’m kind of winging it. The idea was just to get people together and get feedback.”

A procession of people came forward to ask questions and share their ideas for transforming two of the fund’s recent purchases—11180 Highway 1, the former home of the Station House Café, which moved across the street—and the Inverness property that housed Vladimir’s Czech Restaurant, which closed two years ago. 

Attendees’ ideas ran the gamut, from restaurants to a community theater to a plant nursery.

“I have some personal ideas about what to do with Vladimir’s, but not everybody agrees with them,” said Tom Pillsbury, an Inverness resident. “Some of my friends would like it to be a breakfast spot, but I think it would be a perfect Mexican restaurant. That’s my two cents.”

Rich Clarke of Point Reyes Station proposed a community swimming pool, a place that could unite West Marin’s burgeoning elderly population with younger community members. 

“The kids could learn to swim and play water polo, and the adults could do water aerobics,” he said. “The health of our community, at this point in our lives, is dependent upon how active we stay and how much we put into taking care of ourselves.”

Mr. Clarke’s suggestion was greeted with boisterous applause. 

Other people proposed installing a mix of businesses at the former Station House, which sits on a large lot. Lynette Le Mere, who owns a Santa Barbara catering business and recently moved full time to Inverness Park, said the space was big enough to accommodate a variety of food-oriented enterprises.

“For this place, and Vladimir’s, a lot of people with good ideas for food and cooking could come together and participate in community,” she said. “We have lots of delicious ideas.”

Amid all the brainstorming, people also raised questions and concerns.

Michel Venghiattis, a professional food consultant from Nicasio, stressed that small, start-up enterprises might need some sort of economic boost to succeed.

“I’ve been an entrepreneur all my life,” he said. “I went bankrupt once, so I know how tough business can be. I think what you’re doing is wonderful, but I think it’s important to remember that this is a small town, and the amount of income that can be generated from any business is very limited. Somehow, a structure needs to be built so that rents are reasonable so that folks with local businesses can make it.”

Mr. Hulls said the fund would take a businesslike approach to selecting prospective tenants, examining business plans to ascertain their strength and sustainability. While the fund would seek enterprises that could support themselves over the long haul, it might subsidize rents up front. 

Cas Adler-Ivanbrook, an Inverness Park resident, inquired about the structure of the fund and the procedures it would follow moving forward.

“You’ve told us that you’re going to seek out proposals, get feedback and make decisions,” he said. “What is the decision-making process? Who gets a say in what the decision process is going to be? Do you have a structure in mind for that? Would it be just one person or a group of people?”

For now, Mr. Hulls said, the fund is operating as a private foundation in which one person can make quick decisions, but its procedures could evolve moving forward. In addition to soliciting community business proposals, it plans to appoint citizen committees to review ideas that come in, drawing on local expertise to assess them. The details will be ironed out as events unfold.

“My model is, you jump of a cliff, and you build the plane on the way down,” said Mr. Hulls, who grew up in Point Reyes Station and is the founder and C.E.O. of the location-sharing app Life360. “We really don’t have too much of a plan. We’re figuring it out as we go. It’s going to be a little chaotic and messy, but we’re just going for it.”

Other audience members pointed out that the lack of affordable housing has made it difficult for existing businesses to staff their operations, with many employees driving from Petaluma or Santa Rosa. 

Buddy Faure, 23, who grew up in Inverness and would like to spend his life here, asked whether Mr. Hulls had considered building affordable housing.

“It’s important is to recognize how many people end up growing up here and then end up leaving and never coming back,” he said. “It upsets me, you know. I want to stay here my whole life, but it’s very hard to see a way forward.”

Mr. Hulls suggested that housing could possibly be built in conjunction with an enterprise at the former Station House site, which has ample septic capacity and a substantial parking lot out back. But he said that the local community land trust is better equipped to take on housing challenges while the foundation focuses on attracting suitable businesses.

Mr. Hulls said the fund has no fixed notions about what those businesses should be, but he did offer ideas about general characteristics they might have. He pointed to the Old Western Saloon, another fund acquisition and a classic dive bar that caters to ranchers, construction workers and landscapers as wells as the tourists who pass through town.

“To be honest, a little rough and tumble and weird is something I want to preserve,” he said to applause. “It seems like there’s been a lot of support for that. The eccentrics and weirdos make this town.”

Some of the ideas put forward at the meeting would duplicate or compete with existing businesses in town, including new restaurants, a gallery, a nursery and a performance space. Giving the newcomers subsidies could put longtime establishments at a disadvantage, Ken Taymor, an Inverness Park resident, pointed out. “How are you going to make sure you don’t cannibalize existing businesses?” he asked.  

Mr. Hulls said he had conferred with local business owners, some of whom were nervous about the prospect of new competition, but he found that most of them welcomed the fund’s efforts. “The general theme I’ve heard is that vibrancy builds vibrancy, and having half a downtown dead is bad for everybody,” he said.

For more information or to submit ideas, go to https://goodluckfund.org



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Kain Salmond finding success in chuckwagon seat

Salmond will be racing at the Yorkton Exhibition this week. YORKTON – It was been a great season to-date for Kain Salmond in terms of chuckwagon racing. Heading into a huge week where he is scheduled to run three days at the Yorkton, then heading down the road to race Saturday and Sunday in Sheho, Salmond […]

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Salmond will be racing at the Yorkton Exhibition this week.

YORKTON – It was been a great season to-date for Kain Salmond in terms of chuckwagon racing.

Heading into a huge week where he is scheduled to run three days at the Yorkton, then heading down the road to race Saturday and Sunday in Sheho, Salmond was leading the season results in the Eastern Professional Chariot & Chuckwagon Association.

“Last year I was running pretty tough,” he told Yorkton This Week before the first heats in the city Wednesday. “I was sixth overall last year.”

This season Salmond, who hails from the Bertwell area in Saskatchewan, made a change to the team he runs on the wagon.

“I changed one horse. That really set me up,” he said.

Salmond, 22, explained that the new horse is his right lead horse, which of course is a key member of a team, in part because of its ‘smarts’.

“You can get by with a dumb one on the pole. . . A lead horse has got to be a little smarter,” he explained.

The new horse is the final cog in the engine one might say.

That said Salmond noted the other three horses he runs were with him last year, and that means they have experience, and that plays into a solid running team.

“Three of the four are the same . . . they know each other better,” he said.

Familiarity means cohesion in the traces.

Of course once on top the goal is staying there, which Salmond said will not be easy.

“Anyone can beat anyone,” he said.

For Salmond the top spot in the standing is another step in a driving career that was near destiny given his family lineage. His dad Clint has been driving chuckwagons since he turned 16 – the minimum age to drive.

“Grandpa Wayne was driving horses back in the bush logging when he was 11 or 12,” said Kain, adding he has raced for years.

The family experience is something he draws on too, adding he and his Dad often discuss “who we’re hooked up against, or what the track conditions are like.”

A couple of his horses come from Grandpa too.

Salmond said he certainly wouldn’t be at the level he is today without the help and support of what is a very extensive racing family – he expected 10 would race in Yorkton.

It’s the same with sponsors, another key partner in success, said Salmond.

“We wouldn’t make it down the road without them,” he said.

So Kain grew up around race tracks and horses.

“Every summer I travelled with Dad and Mom,” he said, adding he developed an interest at a young age “and here we are I guess.”

Kain started out driving chariots – as most drivers do – and still runs those too. In fact he often runs two teams, using the spare horses he carries on a second hitch as a way to keep them in shape should they be needed on his main chariot or the wagon.

Interestingly his first wagon run came in Yorkton back in 2021.

“Obviously there were more nerves,” he said, adding he just wanted to “get around the track.”

After the race the excitement manifested.

“I’d been waiting a long time to get in the wagon box,” said Salmond.



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North Jackson alum Haynes named Chiefs head volleyball coach | Sports

The North Jackson volleyball program is technically under new leadership, but that new leader is a familiar face at the school. Arielle Haynes, a former three-sport standout and 2022 North Jackson graduate, was recently named the school’s new head volleyball coach. She will be the head coach for both the Chiefs’ varsity and junior varsity […]

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The North Jackson volleyball program is technically under new leadership, but that new leader is a familiar face at the school.

Arielle Haynes, a former three-sport standout and 2022 North Jackson graduate, was recently named the school’s new head volleyball coach. She will be the head coach for both the Chiefs’ varsity and junior varsity teams.

“The goal is to build a competitive and respected program,” Haynes said. “Clear objectives have been set for this year’s team. Our focus this season is to strengthen team culture, establish a strong identity and develop leadership qualities. These goals will help us grow into a more competitive and successful team. I want these girls to succeed both as athletes and as students at North Jackson. I want them to hold each other accountable, compete in every set and take pride in wearing the NJ logo every match.”

Haynes was an all-county basketball player and a state champion softball player for the Chiefs before playing one season at Calhoun Community College. She served as the North Jackson junior high volleyball head coach last season — players from Bridgeport and Stevenson Middle Schools play together under the North Jackson banner at the junior-high level — as the Chiefs went 16-1 and won a Jackson County Tournament championship. 

Haynes also served as a varsity/junior varsity assistant for Melissa Brown, who stepped down as head coach last spring after two seasons. Haynes also is an assistant softball coach for the Chiefs.

North Jackson volleyball competes in Class 4A Area 16 with DAR, Madison County, New Hope and Plainview. 

Haynes said the Chiefs must “demonstrate discipline, consistency, energy and a coachable mindset” and being “team players” and working “well together under pressure” will be pivotal to their 2025 campaign and beyond.

Haynes said coaching at her alma mater is added extra motivation for her.

“Coaching at the school where I once played and graduated from carries a greater responsibility and a deeper emotional connection for me,” she said. “I’m now coaching in the same gym where I played, made mistakes and discovered who I was. Now I have the privilege of teaching and guiding the next generation through that same journey. I understand the culture of North Jackson and the expectations that come with it. I hold myself and this team to a higher standard so that the players can experience the pride and success I once did. I am not just here to coach this volleyball program. I’m here to build teams that stand for something greater. I’ve been blessed with this opportunity and can’t wait for the season to begin. I care deeply about these players, this school and this community and I’m ready to give back to all that North Jackson has given me.”



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Gauchos Historic 2024-25 Athletic Season Capped Off With All-Sport Trophy

Story Links CLEVELAND – UC Santa Barbara Athletics has won its first-ever Division I-AAA Athletics Directors Association (DI-AAA ADA) All-Sports Trophy, tallying 235.00 points to claim the prestigious title for the 2024-25 school year. “What an honor for our UC Santa Barbara campus and department to be recognized with the All-Sport Trophy […]

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CLEVELAND – UC Santa Barbara Athletics has won its first-ever Division I-AAA Athletics Directors Association (DI-AAA ADA) All-Sports Trophy, tallying 235.00 points to claim the prestigious title for the 2024-25 school year.

“What an honor for our UC Santa Barbara campus and department to be recognized with the All-Sport Trophy by the D1-AAA Athletic Directors Association,” said Arnhold Director of Athletics Kelly Barsky. “It is a reflection of the incredible efforts and grit showcased by our Gaucho Student-Athletes, the leadership and expertise of our head coaches, and the incredible service and care provided by our coaches, staff, and community across the board.”

 

According to the DI-AAA ADA, the All-Sports Trophy is awarded to the institution that has the highest point total in all sports in which at least 25% of the eligible I-AAA membership sponsor the given sport. In layman’s terms, this trophy is given to the best all-around Division-I athletics program that does not sponsor Football, of which there are 98 institutions. The 21 sports included in the points total are Baseball, Men’s and Women’s Basketball, Men’s and Women’s Cross Country, Men’s and Women’s Golf, Men’s and Women’s Lacrosse, Men’s and Women’s Soccer, Softball, Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving, Men’s and Women’s Tennis, Men’s and Women’s Indoor Track, Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Track, and Women’s Volleyball.

 

Three Gaucho programs finished atop the DI-AAA ADA standings in their respective sport—Softball, Women’s Tennis, and Men’s Outdoor Track & Field.

 

Overall, the Gauchos were lifted by having five conference-championship teams. Along with Softball and Women’s Tennis, Women’s Soccer, Men’s Swimming, and Women’s Swimming all claimed Big West titles; it was the first time since the 2004-05 school year that four women’s programs won conference championships. Men’s Soccer and Men’s Tennis also earned at-large berths to the NCAA Tournament.

 

“On behalf of our Association, I would like to congratulate UC Santa Barbara for capturing its first-ever DI-AAA All-Sports championship this year,” said Shaney Fink, DI-AAA ADA president and current vice president for athletics at Seattle University.

 

UC Santa Barbara edged out Pepperdine (212 points), Providence (202.5), Creighton (198), and the University of Denver (174.5). For more information about this award, visit nacda.com.

 



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St. John Fisher Lands E8-High 257 Student-Athletes On Spring President’s List

General | 7/2/2025 1:56:00 PM Story Links 2025 Empire 8 Spring Semester President’s List Report PITTSFORD, N.Y. – St. John Fisher University had an Empire 8-high 257 student-athletes named to the conference’s President’s List for the spring 2025 semester, the league office announced on […]

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General | 7/2/2025 1:56:00 PM

PITTSFORD, N.Y. – St. John Fisher University had an Empire 8-high 257 student-athletes named to the conference’s President’s List for the spring 2025 semester, the league office announced on Wednesday. The Cardinals also had 25 teams honored as E8 All-Academic Teams, the second most in the conference behind Nazareth (26).

President’s List honorees include E8 student-athletes who achieved at least a 3.75 grade-point average during the spring semester. Teams that earned E8 All-Academic honors logged a 3.20 GPA or higher. 

A total of 1,660 student-athletes and a league-record 190 teams earned recognition from the E8 for their academic excellence this past semester. 

St. John Fisher All-Academic Teams (25)





























Team Grade-Point Average
Baseball 3.32
Men’s Basketball 3.47
Women’s Basketball 3.27
Cheer 3.50
Women’s Rowing 3.48
Men’s Cross Country 3.49
Women’s Cross Country 3.62
Field Hockey 3.62
Football 3.35
Men’s Golf 3.29
Women’s Golf 3.31
Men’s Lacrosse 3.45
Women’s Lacrosse 3.61
Men’s Soccer 3.55
Women’s Soccer 3.51
Softball 3.42
Men’s Tennis 3.51
Women’s Tennis 3.52
Men’s Indoor Track/Field 3.45
Women’s Indoor Track/Field 3.39
Men’s Outdoor Track/Field 3.45
Women’s Outdoor Track/Field 3.39
Men’s Volleyball 3.58
Women’s Volleyball 3.48
Wrestling 3.66

 



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Orioles Sign Jose Barrero To Minor League Deal

The Orioles announced this afternoon that they’ve added utilityman Jose Barrero on a minor league contract. Francys Romero reported the agreement before the club announcement. He’ll head to Triple-A Norfolk. Barrero elected free agency last week after being waived by the Cardinals. The 27-year-old had been designated for assignment when St. Louis added Garrett Hampson on […]

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Orioles Sign Jose Barrero To Minor League Deal

The Orioles announced this afternoon that they’ve added utilityman Jose Barrero on a minor league contract. Francys Romero reported the agreement before the club announcement. He’ll head to Triple-A Norfolk.

Barrero elected free agency last week after being waived by the Cardinals. The 27-year-old had been designated for assignment when St. Louis added Garrett Hampson on a waiver claim from Cincinnati. Barrero had spent almost two months on the Cardinals’ big league roster but rarely played. He appeared in 22 games, coming off the bench all but eight times, and hit .138 in 29 at-bats.

It marked the fifth season in which the righty-hitting Barrero logged some big league time. He was once a highly-regarded prospect in the Cincinnati system and played parts of four seasons with the Reds. A lack of plate discipline undercut the power and athleticism that had intrigued scouts. Barrero has punched out in 36% of his career plate appearances, leading to a .182/.238/.257 slash at the highest level.

Barrero had been out to a hot start in Triple-A before St. Louis called him up. He’d hit .299/.396/.517 with four homers in 23 games. It was a much better minor league showing than he’d managed a year ago, when he limped to a .188/.277/.345 mark with Texas’ top affiliate. Barrero is athletic enough to play any up-the-middle position and provides a versatile upper minors depth piece for the Orioles.

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