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Multiple Wildcats qualify on final day of NCAA track and field prelims | K-State Sports

Five Wildcats qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championship on Saturday on the final day of the NCAA West Preliminary at E.B. Cushing Stadium in Bryan-College Station, Texas. Senior Shalom Olotu qualified for her second event at nationals in the women’s triple jump, juniors Sharie Enoe and Tamaiah Koonce each earned bids in the women’s high […]

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Five Wildcats qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championship on Saturday on the final day of the NCAA West Preliminary at E.B. Cushing Stadium in Bryan-College Station, Texas.

Senior Shalom Olotu qualified for her second event at nationals in the women’s triple jump, juniors Sharie Enoe and Tamaiah Koonce each earned bids in the women’s high jump and discus, respectively, while fellow juniors Safhia Hinds and Jourdin Edwards collected nods in the women’s 400-meter hurdles.

All five are advancing to the NCAA Outdoor Championship for the first time in their respective careers. Olotu had already qualified in the women’s long jump on Thursday with a new personal-best mark.

With its five national bids on Saturday, Kansas State will send a total of nine athletes in eight events to the NCAA Championship, which is set June 11-14 at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. They will be joined by senior Monique Hardy (women’s hammer), sophomore Riley Marx (men’s javelin), freshman Selva Prabhu (men’s triple jump) and senior Emil Uhlin (men’s decathlon).

For the second time in three days, Olotu posted a personal-best mark to qualify for her second event at the national meet to place 11th and earn one of the 12 qualifying spots in the triple jump. Her leap of 13.45 meters (44 feet, 1 ½ inches) was not only a personal high but ranks as the No. 5 all-time outdoor mark in K-State history. It is the best performance by any Wildcat in the event in four years since Chantoba Bright recorded a jump of 13.53 meters (44 feet, 4 ¾ inches) at the 2021 Guyana Senior National Championships.

Olotu had already qualified in the long jump on Thursday with a new personal-best mark of 6.44 meters (21 feet, 1 ½ inches) to finish ninth. Her performance ranked as the No. 4 best outdoor mark in school history in the event, as she recorded a new personal best in the event for the first time in two years.

Koonce placed sixth in the discus with a season-best mark of 55.99 meters (183 feet, 8 inches). It was her best throw in the event in more than a year since her personal-best toss of 56.14 meters (184 feet, 2 inches) at the 2024 Ward Haylett Invitational. It was also more than 10 feet better than her effort at the 2025 Big 12 Championship (52.88 meters/173 feet, 6 inches) and nearly 3 feet better than her mark at last year’s West Preliminary.

Enoe continued her impressive spring in the high jump, placing fourth in the event with a mark of 1.84 meters (6 feet, ½ inch). She was one of four athletes to hit 1.84m on her first attempt but placed fourth overall due hitting her previous heights of 1.76 meters (5 feet, 9 ¼ inches) and 1.81 meters (5 feet, 11 ¼ inches) on her second attempt. She has now recorded a mark of 1.8 meters in the high jump in all four outdoor meets, including her season-best mark of 1.88 meters (6 feet, 2 inches) to finish as the runner-up at the 2025 Big 12 Championship.

Enoe will look to replicate her First Team All-America honors in the high jump at the NCAA Indoor Championships, where she tied for eighth place with clearance of 1.85m.

Hinds and Edwards each qualified in the women’s 400-meter hurdles with fourth and seventh-place finishes, respectively, while senior Ludivine Aubert placed 19th with a time of 58.38. Hinds recorded a time of 56.34, which was her second-fastest mark of the season and the fastest since winning the 2025 Big 12 Championship in 55.90 seconds. Edwards ran a personal-best time of 56.73, which represented the fourth- fastest time in K-State’s all-time top-10.

The NCAA Championship kicks off June 11 with Marx in the finals of the men’s javelin and Uhlin in the first five events of the decathlon.



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O’Brien Named Great Lakes Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year – Notre Dame Fighting Irish – Official Athletics Website

NEW ORLEANS, La. – Jadin O’Brien was named as the Great Lakes Region Field Athlete of the Year for the 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field season, as announced by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association. The Pewaukee, Wisconsin native finished as the runner-up in the heptathlon at the […]

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NEW ORLEANS, La. – Jadin O’Brien was named as the Great Lakes Region Field Athlete of the Year for the 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field season, as announced by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association.

The Pewaukee, Wisconsin native finished as the runner-up in the heptathlon at the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships last weekend. She posted a personal-record and program-record score of 6256, which put her as No. 12 on the all-time collegiate scoring chart in the event. In May, she captured the ACC Outdoor Track & Field title in the heptathlon with a then-PR of 6220. O’Brien set a meet record in the event and became the first Notre Dame track and field athlete to win the ACC heptathlon crown.

O’Brien swept the 2025 USTFCCCA Region Field Athlete of the Year awards as she also earned the honor after the conclusion of the indoor track & field season.

The full list of USTFCCCA Regional Athletes and Coaches of the Year is available to read by following this link.

 





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Lowndes volleyball looks to build on chemistry and community

Lowndes volleyball looks to build on chemistry and community Published 10:00 am Friday, June 20, 2025 1/3 Swipe or click to see more Campers hold up their “Ls” for Lowndes during a group photo at the Lowndes Volleyball Camp. 2/3 Swipe or click to see more Lowndes head volleyball coach Jesi Thomas leads campers through […]

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Lowndes volleyball looks to build on chemistry and community

Published 10:00 am Friday, June 20, 2025

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Campers hold up their “Ls” for Lowndes during a group photo at the Lowndes Volleyball Camp.

VALDOSTA — As the fall season approaches, Lowndes’ volleyball program is working hard to ensure that all levels of their program remain active during the summer and focused on the fundamentals.

This week, Head Coach Jesi Thomas and her staff welcomed a group of sixth,  seventh, and eighth graders for a developmental camp aimed at building both fundamental skills and a stronger future program. Next week, a younger group of elementary school kids will take the court for their own camp.

The camps, part of Lowndes’ multiple offseason efforts, focused on essential techniques like passing and serving—skills Thomas called “the only way you can start a point.” The players were divided by age across the gym and spent each day learning the structure of organized play, developing muscle control, and participating in guided drills. But beyond the technical training, the camp served a larger purpose: introducing younger athletes to the “Lowndes way” of volleyball.

Thomas said this year’s group has already shown something special.

“The group has really good chemistry this year,” she said during the camp. “Way more than we had at this point last year. That part is interesting—especially since they are younger.”

While the younger athletes learned the basics, they were guided by a lineup of familiar faces. Current JV and varsity players helped with the camp, while two recent graduates, former seniors who played key roles last season, returned to assist. Thomas discussed that the mix of experience levels created a positive environment where the younger campers could look up to players who had walked the same path. It also reinforced one of Thomas’ primary goals: creating continuity between middle and high school programs.

For Thomas, leading the Lowndes volleyball program has become more than a career move—it’s become a calling.

“I love it. It’s literally a dream job that I did not know was my dream job,” said Thomas. “I could not see myself doing anything outside of this. I love the girls.”

That passion translates into the culture Thomas continues to try to build within the team. As the season approaches, she’s focused on preparing a younger but eager group of athletes to step into the roles left by last year’s graduating class. 

Campers will also make an appearance at Crimson and White Night. Set for August 12, the event started last year and offers fans a chance to get an early look at the squad while celebrating the program’s growth. As for the season itself, Thomas said she hopes the community shows up the same way her players have—ready, energetic, and loud.

“Come out. Come out and support. We love having the environment that we have for volleyball,” she said. “It’s like almost a playoff-caliber game every single night.”



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Sun Belt’s Rise Continues with Coastal Carolina’s Run to College World Series Final

Story Links OMAHA, Neb. – When Coastal Carolina baseball takes the field at Charles Schwab Stadium on Saturday to compete for a national championship, it will carry the banner for the Sun Belt Conference, which has undergone a meteoric rise since expanding to its current 14-member configuration ahead of the 2022-23 season.  […]

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OMAHA, Neb. – When Coastal Carolina baseball takes the field at Charles Schwab Stadium on Saturday to compete for a national championship, it will carry the banner for the Sun Belt Conference, which has undergone a meteoric rise since expanding to its current 14-member configuration ahead of the 2022-23 season. 
 
The Chanticleers—proud members of the Sun Belt since the day after winning their baseball national championship in 2016—will be the second Sun Belt program to compete in an NCAA Division I national championship final during the 2024-25 season, following Marshall men’s soccer. With that appearance, the Sun Belt will join the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12 and SEC as 1-of-5 conferences with multiple appearances in NCAA Division I national championship finals this season. 
 
The Sun Belt regular-season and tournament champion Chanticleers have not lost a game since April 22, including an unblemished run through postseason play. Coastal Carolina carried the longest-ever winning streak into the College World Series (23 games) and now into the College World Series national championship round (26 games)—snapping a 77-year-old record 18-game winning streak entering the national championship by USC in 1948 in the process. 
 
Sun Belt Coach of the Year Kevin Schnall summed up the Coastal Carolina run following Wednesday’s national semifinal by saying, “It’s incredible, but it’s not unbelievable.” 
 
That statement could just as easily have been describing the Sun Belt’s rise since the 2022-2023 season. The league has paced all non-autonomy conferences in Bowl Season representation in football for three-straight years—including leading the nation with 12 Bowl Season qualifiers in 2023—and established a conference record with 37 NCAA postseason and Bowl Season berths during the 2023-24 season—when it was a multi-bid league in women’s soccer, men’s soccer, volleyball, football, softball and baseball. 
 
The Sun Belt’s first-ever appearance in the College World Series final comes on the heels of a four-season span in which it has sent 14 teams to NCAA Baseball Regionals, 10 to NCAA Baseball Regional finals and two to NCAA Baseball Super Regionals. That grouping has included four regional hosts and national seeds—No. 13 Coastal Carolina (2025), No. 16 Southern Miss (2025), No. 10 Coastal Carolina (2023) and No. 16 Georgia Southern (2022). 
 
Historically one of the nation’s premier conferences in the diamond sports, the Sun Belt has been a multi-bid league in baseball in 30-of-36 seasons since 1989 and in softball in 11-of-15 seasons since 2010. The conference has produced seven Super Regional and two Men’s College World Series teams in baseball since the current tournament format was adopted in 1999 and eight Super Regional and three Women’s College World Series teams since the conference began sponsoring the sport in 2000. 
 
In the three seasons since reestablishing its men’s soccer conference in 2022, the Sun Belt has sent nine teams to the NCAA Tournament, with two advancing to the Men’s College Cup—Marshall (2024) and West Virginia (2023). That grouping has included five national seeds—No. 13 Marshall (2024), No. 1 Marshall (2023), No. 5 West Virginia (2023), No. 12 UCF (2023) and No. 1 Kentucky (2022)—and the No. 1 overall seeds in 2022 and 2023. 
 
In football, the Sun Belt’s .571 bowl winning percentage during the College Football Playoff era (2014-2024) trails only the SEC (.578), while its .545 all-time bowl winning percentage leads all non-autonomy conferences since the conference began sponsoring football in 2001. 
 
Building upon its own 2016 national championship and the Sun Belt’s sustained rise across a number of conference-sponsored sports, Coastal Carolina baseball will attempt to take the next step for the conference in the College World Series final this weekend. With a championship series victory, the Chanticleers would become the Sun Belt’s second-ever NCAA team national champion, joining Old Dominion women’s basketball (1985). 
 
Regardless of this weekend’s result, Schnall sums up the sentiment for Coastal Carolina baseball and the Sun Belt Conference by stating, “This is not a fluke. This is not a Cinderella deal…and we’re not going away.”  
 
With 14 universities in 10 contiguous states, the Sun Belt has established itself as a power player in NCAA Division I as 1-of-5 conferences with multiple appearances in NCAA Division I national championship finals this season and an opportunity to hoist a national championship trophy this weekend. 
 
The Sun Belt is rising. This is not a fluke. This is not a Cinderella deal…and we’re not going away. 



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A historic year for George Mason Athletics

Body The 2024-25 school year was one for the record books for George Mason University Athletics, delivering five Atlantic 10 Conference (A-10) titles and the most successful run since joining the league 11 years ago.  The Patriots captured A-10 titles or championships in:  Women’s basketball A-10 champions. Photo by Art Pittman/Athletics “This year’s success is […]

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The 2024-25 school year was one for the record books for George Mason University Athletics, delivering five Atlantic 10 Conference (A-10) titles and the most successful run since joining the league 11 years ago. 

The Patriots captured A-10 titles or championships in: 

Women’s basketball A-10 champions. Photo by Art Pittman/Athletics

“This year’s success is a reflection of the passion, resilience, and drive our coaches and student-athletes bring every day,” said Marvin Lewis, assistant vice president and director of athletics. “We’re proud to make history together and a strong sign of what’s possible for George Mason Athletics moving forward.” 

This marked the highest single-school year total in program history, surpassing the previous record of four titles set during George Mason’s inaugural A-10 campaign in 2013–14. It also marked the first time since 1994–95, during the university’s tenure in the Colonial Athletic Association, that the Patriots won five combined regular season and conference championships in one academic year. 

Men’s outdoor track and field. Photo by Rafael Suanes/Athletics

Additional highlights from a banner year: 

  • Men’s soccer Head Coach Rich Costanzo was named A-10 Coach of the Year after guiding the Patriots to their first regular season title, finishing 13-4-1 overall and 6-1-1 in A-10 play—their best conference finish—and earning them a top seed in the A-10 Championship. 

  • Men’s basketball Head Coach Tony Skinn was named A-10 Coach of the Year after leading the team to a share of its first-ever regular season A-10 conference title, a program-tying 27 wins,  and its first National Invitation Tournament (NIT) appearance since 2009. 

  • The women’s basketball team recorded a program-best 27 victories, won its first A-10 Tournament title, and secured its first National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Tournament appearance. 

  • Student-athletes earned a collective 3.32 grade point average (GPA), with a record 78 named Provost Scholars earning a 3.75 GPA or higher, and nearly half securing Dean’s List honors. In total, 18 student-athletes earned all-conference honors or individual titles, and 75 earned weekly conference awards. 

With historic wins, academic excellence, and rising national visibility, George Mason is building momentum, positioning the university as a competitive force in the A-10 and across the collegiate athletics landscape. 



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SouthCoast Boys Volleyball Player of the Year for 2025 fan poll

Spring super teams for the SouthCoast are on their way, but before we get there, we need help from our readers.  This year, our readers will help determine our players of the year in every sport. Much like we did with fall and winter sports, our readers will have a say in who our Players […]

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Spring super teams for the SouthCoast are on their way, but before we get there, we need help from our readers. 

This year, our readers will help determine our players of the year in every sport.

Much like we did with fall and winter sports, our readers will have a say in who our Players of the Year are. We’ve cut down the list of the best of the best into an even more elite group (no easy task). 

Vote for our High School Boys Volleyball Player of the Year. Reader votes will make up 25% of the tally, with Sports Editor Laurie Los Lee making up the rest of the vote.

Voting will conclude at 8 p.m. on Thursday, June 26. 

Candidates are listed alphabetically by school. 

Jack Gwozdz, GNB Voc-Tech, Senior

The senior was strong all-around for the Bears, who made their 14th straight playoff appearance. He finished the year with 257 kills, 131 digs, 61 assists and 23 aces. He had a career-high 25 kills against Winchester.

“Jack was the only senior consistently on the court for us,” said GNB Voc-Tech head coach Richie Gomes. 

Nick Rosa, New Bedford, Senior

Rosa had a senior season to remember as he had 314 kills to finish his career with 660, which is just 3 shy of tying Quincy Pope’s school record of 663 set in 2015. The three-year varsity player, who played a mix of opposite and outside hitter, was named a Big Patriot League MVP and All-Star after leading the Whalers to the league championship with a perfect record in its inaugural season. He had a career high 31 kills at Quincy and had the final kill to end set four against BC High.

“Nick’s all-around game evolved drastically over the past year and was one of our top servers, passers in serve receive as well as our top attacker from the front and back row,” said New Bedford head coach Ben Kaeterle. “Developing his jump-serve and back-row attack combined with his variety of swings — aggressive and finesse — put him in the conversation with the other top boys volleyball players in Massachusetts.”



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Turner, Raud-Gumiel Earn Top Big West Honors for Long Beach State

LONG BEACH, Calif. — Long Beach State track and field standouts Rahni Turner and Claudine Raud-Gumiel have been recognized with two of the Big West Conference’s top postseason honors, the league announced Friday. Turner was named the Big West Women’s Track Athlete of the Year, while Raud-Gumiel earned Big West Field Athlete of the Year […]

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LONG BEACH, Calif. — Long Beach State track and field standouts Rahni Turner and Claudine Raud-Gumiel have been recognized with two of the Big West Conference’s top postseason honors, the league announced Friday. Turner was named the Big West Women’s Track Athlete of the Year, while Raud-Gumiel earned Big West Field Athlete of the Year accolades.
 
Turner capped a record-breaking season by defending her Big West title in the 100-meter hurdles with a wind-aided personal best of 13.08 seconds. She advanced to the NCAA West First Round and reset the Long Beach State program record with a wind-legal 13.15, finishing 16th in the quarterfinals.
 
Turner also earned All-Big West honors in the 4×100-meter relay, helping her squad place third with a time of 44.90—the third-fastest in school history. She contributed to the 4×400-meter relay team that finished fifth in 3:43.53, the seventh-fastest mark in program history.
 
Turner’s impressive season also included a victory in the 100 hurdles at the Trojan Invitational (13.20), which earned her Big West Track Athlete of the Week honors on March 25—her third such weekly award. She becomes just the second Long Beach State athlete to be named Big West Track Athlete of the Year, joining two-time honoree Ryley Fick (2022, 2023).
 
Raud-Gumiel earned Field Athlete of the Year honors after capturing the Big West heptathlon title with a school-record 5,698 points, earning Co-Field Athlete of the Meet honors in the process. During the heptathlon, she clocked 13.22 in the 100 hurdles—the third-fastest time in school history—and set personal bests in the high jump (5′ 7¾”), shot put (35′ 11½”), 200 meters (24.57), and 800 meters (2:17.57).
 
In addition to the heptathlon, she placed second in the 100 hurdles, fourth in the high jump, and ninth in the long jump at the conference championships.
 
Raud-Gumiel qualified for the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships in the heptathlon, finishing 21st to earn Honorable Mention All-America honors. She also competed in the 100-meter hurdles at the NCAA West First Round, placing 25th overall.
 
She is the third LBSU athlete to win Big West Field Athlete of the Year, joining Ami Goldhammer (2004) and Riley Cooks (2016, 2017).
 

#LongBeachBuilt



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