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NCAA Track And Field Championships 2025 Results & Men’s Finals Scores
It’s the third day of action at the 2025 NCAA Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon at Hayward Field. Friday’s schedule was packed with men’s finals with a few women’s heptathlon events throughout the day. Record-watch was on high alert as the best in the country competed to make history and set themselves apart […]

It’s the third day of action at the 2025 NCAA Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon at Hayward Field. Friday’s schedule was packed with men’s finals with a few women’s heptathlon events throughout the day.
Record-watch was on high alert as the best in the country competed to make history and set themselves apart from the rest with 14 men’s final events. In women’s competition, JaMeesia Ford was a standout on Thursday for the South Carolina Gamecocks, qualifying for finals in each of the four events she ran, including posting the 8th fastest 100m dash time in NCAA history, 10.87, and a historic 21.98 in the 200m.
The men’s final track events saw stunning finishes by Carli Makarawu in the men’s 200m dash and Nathaniel Ezekiel in the 400m hurdles that put them in the NCAA history books.
Saturday will feature women’s finals that wrap up the championship weekend. View the recap and results from Day One or Day Two of the NCAA Track and Field Championships to catch up on what you’ve missed so far.
NCAA D1 Track And Field Championships 2025 Results, Live Updates, Schedule
View the latest updates, results, and highlights below for the 2025 NCAA D1Track and Field Championships. The most recent will be near the top of the page—if you’re looking for more general information about the event, you can find it near the bottom of the page.
How To Stream NCAA Track and Field Championships 2025
The 2025 NCAA Track and Field Championship is streaming live on ESPN+.
Men’s 4x400m Relay Results
South Florida ends the evening with a victory in the 4×400 relay, claiming a new season best time of 3:00.42.
- South Florida – 3:00.42
- Texas A&M – 3:00.73
- Arkansas – 3:01.59
- Iowa – 3:01.61
- Florida – 3:01.88
- Alabama – 3:02.17
- BYU – 3:02.51
- USC – 3:03.18
- Penn State – 3:03.85
Men’s Triple Jump Results
Oklahoma occupies the top two spots in the triple jump with Brandon Green Jr. and Floyd Whitaker adding to the Sooners’ stock.
- Brandon Green Jr. (JR, Oklahoma) – 16.81m
- Floyd Whitaker (SR, Oklahoma) – 16.41m
- Kyvon Tatham (JR, Florida State) – 16.23m
- Luke Brown (JR, Kentucky) – 16.18m
- Selva Prabhu (FR, Kansas State) – 16.09m
- Theophilus Mudzengerere (JR, South Carolina) – 16.09m
- Safin Wills (SR, Oregon) – 16.07m
- Stafon Roach (SO, ULM) – 15.99m
- Abraham Johnson (FR, Eastern Illinois) – 5.96m
- Hakeem Ford (SO, Minnesota) – 15.89m
- Jaren Holmes (SR, USC) – 15.75m
- Alexandre Malanda (SR, Kent State) – 15.69m
- Ryan John (JR, Clemson) – 15.65m
- Kelsey Daniel (SR, Texas) – 15.53m
- Jeremy Nelson (JR, Louisiana) – 15.46m
- Roman Kuleshov (SR, Louisville) – 15.35m
- Xavier Partee (SO, N. Carolina A&T) – 15.32m
- Chris Preddie (JR, Texas State) – 15.20m
- Ledamian Rowell (SR, Jackson State) – 15.15m
- Sir Jonathan Sims (JR, Tarleton State) – 15.07m
- Xavier Drumgoole (FR, Stanford) – 13.06m
Men’s 5000m Results
Brian Musau from Oklahoma State clocks a new season best in the men’s 5000m, just barely beating out opponent Habtom Samuel from New Mexico.
- Brian Musau (SO, Oklahoma State) – 13:20.59
- Habtom Samuel (SO, New Mexico) – 13:20.89
- Marco Langon (JR, Villanova) 13:21.17
- Valentin Soca (JR, CBU) – 13:21.76
- Rocky Hansen (SO, Wake Forest) – 13:22.47
- Matt Strangio (SR, Portland) – 13:23.28
- Ishmael Kipkurui (FR, New Mexico) – 13:25.18
- Fouad Messaoudi (SR, Oklahoma State) – 13:25.48
- Toby Gillen (SR, Ole Miss) – 13:26.74
- David Mullarkey (SR, Northern Arizona) – 13:28.43
Men’s High Jump Results
The men’s field event finals begin to round out as Arvesta Troupe from Ole Miss hauls in a 2.27m jump for a new personal best.
- Arvesta Troupe (JR, Ole Miss) – 2.27m
- Kason O’Riley (SR, Texas State) – 2.20m
- Aiden Hayes (JR, Texas State) – 2.20m
- Kamyren Garrett (SR, Illinois) – 2.20m
- Nathanil Figgers (SO, South Carolina) – 2.20m
- Kyren Washington (SO, Oklahoma) – 2.20m
- Tyus Wilson (SR, Nebraska) – 2.20m
- Eddie Kurjak (SR, Georgia) – 2.15m
- Kuda Chadenga (SR, LSU) – 2.15m
- Kampton Kam (JR, Penn) – 2.15m
- Desire Tonye Nyemeck (FR, Nebraska) – 2.15m
- Elias Gerald (JR, USC) – 2.15m
- Bode Gilkerson (SO, Purdue) – 2.15m
- Antrea Mita (SO, Houston) – 2.15m
- Donald Hatfield Jackson (SR, SE Missouri) – 2.15m
- Miles Grant (SR, Sacramento St.) – 2.10m
- Kennedy Sauder (JR, Miami, FL) – 2.10m
- Channing Ferguson (SR, South Carolina) – 2.10m
- Riyon Rankin (SO, Georgia) – 2.10m
- Tito Alofe (SO, Harvard) – 2.10m
- Osawese Agbonkonkon (SO, Texas) – 2.10m
- Enaji Muhammad (FR, Connecticut) – 2.10m
- Roman Smith (SR, Southern) – 2.10m
Women’s Heptathlon 200m Results
To finish out the women’s heptathlon events for Friday, Izzy Goudros from Harvard seals the deal in the 200m with a time of 23.61.
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 23.61
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 23.86
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 24.00
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 24.02
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 24.09
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 24.11
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 24.13
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 24.27
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 24.35
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (SO, Cincinnati) – 24.56
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 24.62
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 24.64
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 24.64 (24.643)
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 24.65 (24.646)
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 24.68
- Melissa Wullschleger (FR, Illinois) – 24.70
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 24.83
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel (SR, Long Beach St.) – 24.99
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 25.33
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 25.34
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 25.48
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 25.52
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 25.54
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 25.86
Men’s 200m Results
Kentucky junior Carli Makarawu inks a time of 19.84, making him tied for ninth fastest in NCAA history and the seventh fastest performer in history.
- Carli Makarawu (JR, Kentucky) – 19.84
- Makanakaishe Charamba (SR, Auburn) – 19.92
- Garrett Kaalund (JR, USC) – 19.96
- Jordan Anthony (SO, Arkansas) – 20.01
- T’Mars McCallum (JR, Tennessee) – 20.16
- Max Thomas (JR, USC) – 20.23
- Xavier Butler (SO, Texas) – 20.39
- Abdul-Rasheed Saminu (SR, South Florida) – 20.55
- Cameron Miller (JR, Purdue) – 20.56
Men’s 400m Hurdles Results
Nathaniel Ezekiel records a new personal best and a No. 3 all-time NCAA finish at 47.49 seconds.
- Nathaniel Ezekiel (SR, Baylor) – 47.49
- Ja’Qualon Scott (SR, Texas A&M) – 48.29
- Kody Blackwood (JR, Texas) – 48.66
- Oskar Edlund (SR, Texas Tech) – 49.02
- Saad Hinti (FR, Tennessee) – 49.11
- Bryce McCray (SR, Texas A&M) – 49.52
- Johnny Brackins (SR, USC) – 50.15
- Bryce Tucker (SO, Rutgers) – 50.83
- Jarrett Gentles (SR, Coppin State) – 51.50
Men’s 800m Results
Ending with a 53.78 time in the last lap, senior Sam Whitmarsh out of Texas A&M comes around to take the 800m.
- Sam Whitmarsh (SR, Texas A&M) – 1:45.86
- Matthew Erickson (SR, Oregon) – 1:46.32
- Rivaldo Marshall (SR, Arkansas) – 1:46.71
- Samuel Rodman (SR, Princeton) – 1:46.86
- Aidan McCarthy (JR, Cal Poly) – 1:46.88
- Samuel Navarro (SR, Miss State) – 1:47.33
- Christian Jackson (JR, Virginia Tech) – 1:47.42
- Tyrice Taylor (JR, Arkansas) – 1:47.44
- Koitatoi Kidali (FR, Oregon) – 1:52.10
Men’s 400m Results
The SEC strikes again as Samuel Ogazi out of Alabama claims the 400m title. Gabriel Moronta from South Florida was disqualified due to stepping over his lane.
- Samuel Ogazi (SO, Alabama) – 44.84
- William Jones (JR, USC) – 45.53
- Jordan Pierre (SO, Arkansas-Pine Bluff) – 45.75
- DeSean Boyce (JR, Texas Tech) – 45.78
- Joseph Taylor (FR, Duke) – 45.83
- Jayden Davis (SO, Arizona State) – 45.91
- Auhmad Robinson (SR, Texas A&M) – 46.07
- Gabriel Clement II (SO, UCLA) – 46.17
Men’s 100m Results
Star wide receiver for Arkansas Jordan Anthony takes the reins with a 10.07 time in the 100m out of lane nine.
- Jordan Anthony, (SO, Arkansas) – 10.07
- Max Thomas, (JR, USC) – 10.10 (10.091)
- Jelani Watkins, (FR, LSU) – 10.10 (10.092)
- Kanyinsola Ajayi, (SO, Auburn) – 10.13
- Davonte Howell, (SO, Tennessee) – 10.17 (10.166)
- Jaiden Reid, (SO, LSU) – 10.17 (10.170)
- Israel Okon, (FR, Auburn) – 10.18
- T’Mars McCallum, (JR, Tennessee) – 10.24
- Eddie Nketia, (SO, USC) – 10.30
Men’s 3000m Steeplechase Results
James Corrigan of BYU storms in front at the 3000m steeplechase with opponent Geoffrey Kirwa hot on his heels.
- James Corrigan, (JR, BYU) – 8:16.41
- Geoffrey Kirwa, (FR, Louisville) – 8:17.12
- Carson Williams, (SR, Furman) – 8:19.71
- Joash Ruto,(FR, Iowa State) – 8:20.47
- Collins Kiprop Kipngok, (FR, Kentucky) – 8:22.92
- Mathew Kosgei, (FR, New Mexico) – 8:23.70
- Benjamin Balazs, (SO, Oregon) – 8:24.46
- Rob McManus, (JR, Montana State) – 8:25.83
- CJ Singleton, (JR, Notre Dame) – 8:28.93
- Silas Kiptanui, (SO, Tulane) – 8:32.20
- Victor Kibiego, (JR, Texas A&M) – 8:32.33
- Kristian Imroth, (JR, Eastern Kentucky) – 8:49.06
Men’s 110m Hurdles Results
Auburn shows off its talents once again in the men’s 110 hurdles as Ja’Kobe Tharpe inks the top spot with a time of 13.05, a new personal best. Kendrick Smallwood from Texas was disqualified after coming in ninth place.
- Ja’Kobe Tharpe (SO, Auburn) – 13.05
- Zachary Extine, (JR, Arizon) – 13.13
- John Adesola, (SR, Houston) – 13.28
- Jamar Marshall Jr., (SR, Houston) – 13.34
- Demario Prince, (FR, Baylor) – 13.44
- Darius Brown, (SR, DePaul) – 13.50
- Jahiem Stern (JR, LSU) – 13.57
- Jayden Smith, (SR, Davidson) – 13.65
Men’s 1500m Results
The men’s 1500m was a tight race, but Washington junior Nathan Green will take home the first place prize.
- Nathan Green (JR, Washington) – 3:47.26
- Ethan Strand (JR, North Carolina) – 3:47.33
- Ferenc Kovaks (SO, Harvard) – 3:47.42
- Adam Spencer (SR, Wisconsin) – 3:47.50
- Gary Martin (JR, Virginia) – 3:47.58
- Jack Crull (SR, Bradley) – 3:47.61
- Simeon Birnbaum (SO, Oregon) – 3:47.64
- Damian Hackett (SR, Cornell) – 3:47.74
- Brendan Herger (FR, Michigan) – 3:47.88
- Harrison Witt (SR, Princeton) – 3:47.92
- Trent McFarland (SO, Michigan) – 3:47.94
- Martin Segurola (JR, Indiana) – 3:48.71
Men’s 4x100m Relay Results
The Tigers secured victory in the 4x100m relay, but weren’t able to break their own meet record of 37.97. After review, LSU was disqualified.
- Auburn – 38.33
- USC – 38.46
- Arkansas – 38.72
- South Florida – 38.73
- Tennessee – 38.79
- Kentucky – 38.85
- Minnesota – 38.88
- Texas – 39.10
Men’s Wheelchair 100m Results
- Evan Correll – 14.46
- Jacob Allen – 15.33
- Jeffrey Files – 15.47
- Aidan Gravelle – 15.83
- Jason Robinson – 16.11
- Dustin Stallberg – 16.49
- Wyatt Willand – 17.36
- Ethan Burkhart – 18.04
Men’s Discus Results
The results for the first men’s field event of the evening are punched in, and Oklahoma’s Ralford Mullings beat out collegiate record holder Mykolas Alekna from California for the national title by three meters. Mullings inked 69.31 meters while Alekna came in at 66.77 meters. Mullings set a meet record and a new personal best.
- Ralford Mullings (JR, Oklahoma) – 69.31m
- Mykolas Alekna (JR, California) – 66.77m
- Uladzislau Puchko (SO, Virginia Tech) – 63.94m
- Vincent Ugwoke (SR, South Florida) – 63.73m
- Racquil Broderick (SO, USC) – 63.31m
- Michael Pinckney (JR, UCLA) – 61.39m
- Dimitrios Pavlidis (SR, Kansas) – 61.04m
- Aron Alvarez Aranda (SO, Tennessee) – 59.87m
- Christopher Crawford (JR, Alabama) – 59.08m
- Jacob Lemmon (SR, Florida) – 59.07m
- Desmond Coleman (JR, Miami Fl.) – 58.58m
- Youssef Koudssi (SR, Arizona) – 58.32m
- Casey Helm (JR, Princeton) – 57.79m
- Trevor Gunzell (JR, Alabama) – 57.52m
- Christopher Young (JR, Alabama) – 57.23m
- Maxwell Otterdahl (SR, Nebraska) – 57.07m
- Iosif Papa (JR, UMBC) – 56.98m
- Aidan Elbettar (SR, Oregon) – 56.49m
- Paden Lewis (SR, SE Missouri) – 56.27m
- Texas Tanner (JR, Air Force) – 55.76m
- Skylar Coffey (SR, Missouri) – 55.59m
- Oscar Rodriguez (SR, Texas Tech) – 55.20m
- Seth Allen (JR, Auburn) – 54.88m
- Tanner Watson (SR, Ohio State) – 53.92m
Women’s Haptathlon Shot Put Results
Jadin O’Brien continues her path to the top of the leaderboard with a first place showing in the haptathlon shot put.
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 14.44m
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 14.12m
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 13.89m
- Melissa Wullschleger (FR, Illinois) – 13.61m
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 13.48m
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 13.28m
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 13.09m
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 12.86m
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 12.76m
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 12.69m
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 12.60m
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 12.50m
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 12.37m
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 12.32m
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 12.23m
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 12.12m
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 11.62m
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 11.48m
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 11.46m
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 11.33m
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (SO, Cincinnati) – 11.11m
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 10.80m
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel (SR, Long Beach St.) – 10.35m
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 10.10m
Women’s Heptathlon High Jump Results
Destiny Masters from Wichita State soared to the top of the women’s high jump as the best ranked heading into the event, Sofia Iakushina, finished in eighth after an underwhelming performance.
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 1.84m
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 1.81m
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 1.78m
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (SO, Cincinnati) – 1.75m
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 1.75m
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 1.72m
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 1.72m
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 1.69m
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 1.69m
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 1.69m
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel (SR, Long Beach St.) – 1.69m
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 1.66m
- Melissa Wullschleger (FR, Illinois) – 1.66m
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 1.66m
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 1.66m
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 1.63m
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 1.63m
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 1.63m
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 1.60m
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 1.60m
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 1.60m
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 1.60m
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 1.57m
Women’s Heptathlon High Jump Start List
Flight 1
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 5619
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (SO, Cincinnati) – 5698
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 5914
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 5655
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 6258
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 5851
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 5741
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 6231
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 5677
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel (SR, Long Beach St.) – 5698
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 6260
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 5715
Flight 2
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 5733
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 5555
- Melissa Wullschleger (FR, Illinois) – 5749
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 5820
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 5551
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 5751
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 5550
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 5625
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 5817
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 5729
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 5807
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 5698
100m Hurdles Women’s Heptathlon Results
Notre Dame’s Jadin O’Brien leads the way with teammate Alaina Brady in tow to take an early lead in the heptathlon. Brady put up a season best to take second in the section and overall.
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 13.33, 1075
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 13.41, 1063
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 13.48, 1053
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 13.53, 1046
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 13.61, 1034
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 13.65 (13.645), 1028
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (SO, Cincinnati) – 13.65 (13.645), 1028
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel (SR, Long Beach State) – 13.66, 1027
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 13.72, 1018
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 13.74, 1015
- Melissa Wullschleger (FR, Illinois) – 13.75, 1014
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 13.79, 1008
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 13.86, 998
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 13.90, 993
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 13.94, 987
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 13.96, 984
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 14.02, 976
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 14.08, 967
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 14.09, 966
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 14.12, 961
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 14.23 (14.224), 946
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 14.23, 946
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 14.34, 931
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 14.96, 847
Heptathlon Competition Begins Today
Friday’s schedule opens with 100m hurdles, the first of four women’s heptathlon events for the day. Texas A&M freshman Sofia Iakushina leads the rankings heading into the championships, with a chance at opening the heptathlon with a strong performance in the 100m hurdles.
Diane Guthrie holds the current collegiate record for the heptathlon, 6527, set in June of 1995.
Women’s Heptathlon Season Best
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 6260
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 6258
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 6231
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 5914
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 5851
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 5820
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 5817
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 5807
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 5751
- Melissa Wullschle (FR, Illinois) – 5749
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 5741
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 5733
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 5729
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 5715
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 5698
- Claudine Raud-Gum (SR, Long Beach St.) – 5698
- Juliette Laracuente (SO, Cincinnati) – 5698
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 5677
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 5655
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 5625
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 5619
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 5555
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 5551
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 5550
NCAA DI Track Championships 2025 Friday Schedule
All times Eastern.
Track Events
- 8:02 PM – 4x100m Relay, Final, Men
- 8:12 PM – 1500m, Final, Men
- 8:24 PM – 3000m Steeplechase, Final, Men
- 8:42 PM – 110m Hurdles, Final, Men
- 8:52 PM – 100m, Final, Men
- 9:02 PM – 400m, Final, Men
- 9:14 PM – 800m, Final, Men
- 9:27 PM – 400m Hurdles, Final, Men
- 9:37 PM – 200m, Final, Men
- 9:55 PM – 5000m, Final, Men
- 10:21 PM – 4x400m Relay, Final, Men
Field Events
- 5:15 PM – Discus, Final, Men
- 7:30 PM – High Jump, Final, Men
- 8:10 PM – Triple Jump, Final Men
Combined Events
- 2:45 PM – 100 Hurdles, Heptathlon, Women
- 3:45 PM – High Jump, Heptathlon, Women
- 5:45 PM – Shot Put, Heptathlon, Women
- 9:43 PM – 200M, Heptathlon, Women
Day 3
ESPN2 at 8:30 PM ET
https://t.co/zwsHvo2ROb
https://t.co/hVc9vVfRyp#NCAATF pic.twitter.com/xiCssQMYxg
— NCAA Track & Field (@NCAATrackField) June 13, 2025
Georgia Leads The Way In Women’s Team Scores After Thursday
Team Scores after the first day of women’s competition at the NCAA Championship
Georgia leads with big help from Stephanie Ratcliffe’s Hammer Throw win (71.37m).
Georgia also received points from Manuela Rotundo (Jav-2nd), Lianna Davidson (Jav-4th), and Kelsie… pic.twitter.com/hOLqTDAjl7
— FloTrack (@FloTrack) June 13, 2025
NCAA Track And Field Championships Start Lists On Friday
Here are the men’s finals and women’s heptathlon event start lists for all track and field events today.
Combined Events
100 Hurdles, Heptathlon, Women – 2:45 p.m. ET
Section 1 of 6
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 6258
- Juliette Laracuente (SO, Cincinnati) – 5698
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 5807
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 5550
Section 2 of 6
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 5820
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 6260
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 5817
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 5677
Section 3 of 6
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 5741
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 5655
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 5715
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 5914
Section 4 of 6
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 5851
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 5551
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 5729
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 5619
Section 5 of 6
- Melissa Wullschle (FR, Illinois) – 5749
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 6231
- Claudine Raud-Gum (SR, Long Beach St.) – 5698
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 5751
Section 6 of 6
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 5698
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 5733
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 5625
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 5555
High Jump, Heptathlon, Women – 3:45 p.m. ET
Flight 1
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 5619, 1.77m
- Juliette Laracuente (SO, Cincinnati) – 5698, 1.76m
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 5914, 1.83m
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 5655, 1.75m
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 6258, 1.75m
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 5851, 1.69m
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 5741, 1.83m
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 6231, 1.71m
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 5677, 1.72m
- Claudine Raud-Gum (SR, Long Beach St.) – 5698, 1.72m
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 6260, 1.74m
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 5715, 1.85m
Flight 2
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 5733, 1.65m
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 5555, 1.65m
- Melissa Wullschle (FR, Illinois) – 5749, 1.63m
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 5820, 1.71m
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 5551, 1.66m
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 5751, 1.66m
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 5550, 1.55m
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 5625, 1.68m
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 5817, 1.63m
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 5729, 1.68m
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 5807, 1.63m
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 5698, 1.63m
Shot Put, Heptathlon, Women – 5:45 p.m. ET
Flight 1
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State) – 5715, 13.86m
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon) – 5914, 14.51m
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma) – 6258, 12.90m
- Claudine Raud-Gum (SR, Long Beach St.) – 5698, 10.96m
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M) – 6260, 11.85m
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA) – 5741, 10.47m
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame) – 6231, 14.86m
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois) – 5851, 12.99m
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State) – 5655, 11.60m
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State) – 5677, 12.79m
- Juliette Laracuente (SO, Cincinnati) – 5698, 11.21m
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama) – 5619, 12.92m
Flight 2
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State) – 5729, 12.88m
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan) – 5698, 14.67m
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington) – 5817, 11.69m
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville) – 5625, 12.83m
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut) – 5733, 12.29m
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA) – 5820, 12.16m
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue) – 5550, 12.68m
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard) – 5807, 12.06m
- Melissa Wullschle (FR, Illinois) – 5749, 13.74m
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State) – 5551, 11.78m
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State) – 5555, 13.05m
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame) – 5751, 13.08m
200M, Heptathlon, Women – 9:43 p.m. ET
Section 1
- Claudine Raud-Gum (SR, Long Beach St.)
- Kenli Nettles (SR, Ball State)
- Lucie Kienast (FR, Illinois)
- Lucy Fellows (SO, Louisville)
- Maresa Hense (FR, Connecticut)
- Pippi Lotta Enok (JR, Oklahoma)
- Juliette Laracuente (SO, Cincinnati)
- Melissa Wullschle (FR, Illinois)
Section 2
- Sofia Cosculluela (FR, Washington)
- Jadin O’Brien (SR, Notre Dame)
- Sydney Johnson (SR, UCLA)
- Annie Molenhouse (JR, Oklahoma State)
- Izzy Goudros (SR, Harvard)
- Sofia Iakushina (FR, Texas A&M)
- Maddie Pitts (JR, Penn State)
- Jalen Elrod (SR, Purdue)
Section 3
- Destiny Masters (SR, Wichita State)
- Clare McNamara (SR, Michigan)
- Shelby Grover (SO, Kent State)
- Alaina Brady (SR, Notre Dame)
- Ella Spaulding (SO, Fresno State)
- Annika Williams (SR, Oregon)
- Mia Lien (FR, UTSA)
- Katelyn Adel (FR, Alabama)
Field Events
Discus, Final, Men – 5:15 p.m. ET
Flight 1
- Christopher Crawfo (JR, Alabama) – 60.06m 197-0
- Jacob Lemmon (SR, Florida) – 61.80m 202-9
- Trevor Gunzell (JR, Alabama) – 63.88m 209-7
- Desmond Coleman (JR, Miami (Fla.)) – 59.07m 193-9
- Youssef Koudssi (SR, Arizona) – 59.71m 195-10
- Aidan Elbettar (SR, Oregon) – 59.11m 193-11
- Iosif Papa (JR, UMBC) – 59.12m 193-11
- Tanner Watson (SR, Ohio State) – 57.57m 188-10
- Texas Tanner (JR, Air Force) – 63.59m 208-7
- Skylar Coffey (SR, Missouri) – 58.93m 193-4
- Paden Lewis (SR, SE Missouri) – 58.89m 193-2
- Racquil Broderick (SO, USC) – 63.09m 207-0
Flight 2
- Uladzislau Puchko (SO, Virginia Tech) – 63.15m 207-2
- Dimitrios Pavlidis (SR, Kansas) – 63.86m 209-6
- Mykolas Alekna (JR, California) – 75.56m 247-11
- Oscar Rodriguez (SR, Texas Tech) – 59.62m 195-7
- Seth Allen (JR, Auburn) – 60.96m 199-11
- Maxwell Otterdahl (SR, Nebraska) – 59.61m 195-7
- Aron Alvarez Aran (SO, Tennessee) – 61.14m 200-7
- Christopher Young (JR, Alabama) – 61.36m 201-4
- Ralford Mullings (JR, Oklahoma) – 69.13m 226-9
- Casey Helm (JR, Princeton) – 63.37m 207-11
- Michael Pinckney (JR, UCLA) – 60.88m 199-9
- Vincent Ugwoke (SR, South Florida) – 63.72m 209-1
High Jump, Final, Men – 7:30 p.m. ET
- Osawese Agbonkon (SO, Texas) – 2.17m 7-1½
- Nathanil Figgers (SO, South Carolina) – 2.16m 7-1
- Tito Alofe (SO, Harvard) – 2.25m 7-4½
- Tyus Wilson (SR, Nebraska) – 2.25m 7-4½
- Eddie Kurjak (SR, Georgia) – 2.18m 7-1¾
- Kampton Kam (JR, Penn) – 2.25m 7-4½
- Enaj Muhammad (FR, Connecticut) – 2.15m 7-½
- Antrea Mita (SO, Houston) – 2.21m 7-3
- Kason O’Riley (SR, Texas State) – 2.25m 7-4½
- Riyon Rankin (SO, Georgia) – 2.29m 7-6
- Elias Gerald (JR, USC) – 2.23m 7-3¾
- Bode Gilkerson (SO, Purdue) – 2.18m 7-1¾
- Kennedy Sauder (JR, Miami (Fla.)) – 2.18m 7-1¾
- Channing Ferguson (SR, South Carolina) – 2.15m 7-½
- Kyren Washington (SO, Oklahoma) – 2.20m 7-2½
- Aiden Hayes (JR, Texas State) – 2.25m 7-4½
- Desire Tonye Nyem (FR, Nebraska) – 2.17m 7-1½
- Scottie Vines (FR, Arkansas) – 2.17m 7-1½
- Arvesta Troupe (JR, Ole Miss) – 2.26m 7-5
Triple Jump, Final Men – 8:02 p.m. ET
Flight 1
- Chris Preddie (JR, Texas State) – 16.05m 52-8
- Xavier Partee (SO, N. Carolina A&T) – 15.97m 52-4¾
- Viktor Morozov (JR, Illinois) – 15.94m 52-3¾
- Sir Jonathan Sims (JR, Tarleton State) – 15.99m 52-5½
- Ryan John (JR, Clemson) – 15.88m 52-1¼
- Abraham Johnson (FR, Eastern Illinois) – 16.10m 52-10
- Safin Wills (SR, Oregon) – 15.88m 52-1¼
- Stafon Roach (SO, ULM) – 16.20m 53-1¾
- Roman Kuleshov (SR, Louisville) – 15.91m 52-2½
- Hakeem Ford (SO, Minnesota) – 16.54m 54-3¼
- Jaden Lippett (FR, Florida) – 15.94m 52-3¾
- Jeremy Nelson (JR, Louisiana) – 16.01m 52-6½
Flight 2
- Luke Brown (JR, Kentucky) – 16.33m 53-7
- Selva Prabhu (FR, Kansas State) – 16.49m 54-1¼
- Kyvon Tatham (JR, Florida State) – 16.37m 53-8½
- Brandon Green Jr. (JR, Oklahoma) – 16.94m 55-7
- Theophilus Mudzen (JR, South Carolina) – 16.38m 53-9
- Jaren Holmes (SR, USC) – 16.18m 53-1
- Xavier Drumgoole (FR, Stanford) – 16.42m 53-10½
- Kelsey Daniel (SR, Texas) – 16.34m 53-7½
- Alexandre Malanda (SR, Kent State) – 16.09m 52-9½
- Anthony Woods (JR, Alabama State) – 16.04m 52-7½
- Floyd Whitaker (SR, Oklahoma) – 16.27m 53-4½
- Ledamian Rowell (SR, Jackson State) – 15.99m 52-5½
Track Events
4x100m Relay, Final, Men – 8:02 p.m. ET
- Texas – 38.57
- Kentucky – 38.43
- Arkansas – 38.51
- Minnesota – 38.16
- Tennessee – 38.20
- Auburn – 37.97
- South Florida – 38.05
- LSU – 38.14
- USC – 38.41
1500m, Final, Men – 8:12 p.m. ET
- Damian Hackett (SR, Cornell) – 3:36.78
- Gary Martin (JR, Virginia) – 3:33.71
- Simeon Birnbaum (SO, Oregon) – 3:37.02
- Harrison Witt (SR, Princeton) – 3:37.22
- Martin Segurola (JR, Indiana) – 3:39.54
- Ferenc Kovacs (SO, Harvard) – 3:40.08
- Jack Crull (SR, Bradley) – 3:40.51
- Ethan Strand (JR, North Carolina) – 3:33.22
- Adam Spencer (SR, Wisconsin) – 3:34.57
- Trent McFarland (SO, Michigan) – 3:38.45
- Nathan Green (JR, Washington) – 3:35.52
- Brendan Herger (FR, Michigan) – 3:38.72
3000m Steeplechase, Final, Men – 8:24 p.m. ET
- Silas Kiptanui (SO, Tulane) – 8:27.28
- Benjamin Balazs (SO, Oregon) – 8:31.13
- Rob McManus (JR, Montana State) – 8:26.83
- Victor Kibiego (JR, Texas A&M) – 8:32.83
- Geoffrey Kirwa (FR, Louisville) – 8:13.89
- Collins Kiprop Kipn (FR, Kentucky) – 8:22.67
- Carson Williams (SR, Furman) – 8:30.83
- James Corrigan (JR, BYU) – 8:22.20
- Kristian Imroth (JR, Eastern Kentucky) – 8:30.66
- Joash Ruto (FR, Iowa State) – 8:25.42
- Mathew Kosgei (FR, New Mexico) – 8:22.13
- CJ Singleton (JR, Notre Dame) – 8:36.51
110m Hurdles, Final, Men – 8:42 p.m. ET
- Jaden Smith (SR, Davidson) – 13.39
- Jamar Marshall Jr. (SR, Houston) – 13.13
- Zachary Extine (JR, Arizona) – 13.17
- Demario Prince (FR, Baylor) – 13.18
- Ja’Kobe Tharp (SO, Auburn) – 13.14
- Kendrick Smallwood (JR, Texas) – 13.07
- Jahiem Stern (JR, LSU) – 13.29
- John Adesola (SR, Houston) – 13.26
- Darius Brown (SR, DePaul) – 13.37
100m, Final, Men – 8:52 p.m. ET
- Eddie Nketia (SO, USC) – 9.96
- Davonte Howell (SO, Tennessee) – 10.05
- Israel Okon (FR, Auburn) – 9.91
- T’Mars McCallum (JR, Tennessee) – 10.03
- Kanyinsola Ajayi (SO, Auburn) – 9.92
- Jelani Watkins (FR, LSU) – 10.01
- Jaiden Reid (SO, LSU) – 10.02
- Max Thomas (JR, USC) – 9.92
- Jordan Anthony (SO, Arkansas) – 9.75
400m, Final, Men – 9:02 p.m. ET
- Jordan Pierre (SO, Arkansas-Pine Bluff) – 45.44
- Gabriel Clement II (SO, UCLA) – 45.35
- Auhmad Robinson (SR, Texas A&M) – 44.61
- DeSean Boyce (JR, Texas Tech) – 45.15
- Joseph Taylor (FR, Duke) – 44.98
- Samuel Ogazi (SO, Alabama) – 44.43
- Gabriel Moronta (SR, South Florida) – 45.01
- William Jones (JR, USC) – 44.76
- Jayden Davis (SO, Arizona State) – 44.84
800m, Final, Men – 9:14 p.m. ET
- Samuel Rodman (SR, Princeton) – 1:46.27
- Samuel Navarro (SR, Miss State) – 1:45.32
- Rivaldo Marshall (SR, Arkansas) – 1:45.59
- Aidan McCarthy (JR, Cal Poly) – 1:45.53
- Tynice Taylor (JR, Arkansas) – 1:45.23
- Christian Jackson (JR, Virginia Tech) – 1:44.83
- Koitatoi Kidali (FR, Oregon) – 1:45.31
- Sam Whitmarsh (SR, Texas A&M) – 1:45.35
- Matthew Erickson (SR, Oregon) – 1:45.89
400m Hurdles, Final, Men – 9:27 p.m. ET
- Jarrett Gentiles (SR, Coppin State) – 49.78
- Bryce Tucker (SO, Rutgers) – 50.00
- Bryce McCray (SR, Texas A&M) – 48.58
- Oskar Edlund (SR, Texas Tech) – 49.00
- Ja’Qualon Scott (SR, Texas A&M) – 48.85
- Nathaniel Ezekiel (SR, Baylor) – 47.86
- Saud Hinti (FR, Tennessee) – 48.44
- Kody Blackwood (JR, Texas) – 48.78
- Johnny Brackins (SR, USC) – 49.04
200m, Final, Men – 9:37 p.m. ET
- Abdul-Rasheed Sami (SR, South Florida) – 19.95
- Cameron Miller (JR, Purdue) – 20.12
- Max Thomas (JR, USC) – 20.02
- Xavier Butler (SO, Texas) – 20.02
- T’Mars McCallum (JR, Tennessee) – 19.83
- Makanakaishe Charamba (SR, Auburn) – 19.79
- Garrett Kaalund (JR, USC) – 19.85
- Jordan Anthony (SO, Arkansas) – 19.93
- Carli Makarawu (JR, Kentucky) – 19.92
5000m, Final, Men – 9:55 p.m. ET
- Kidus Misgina (SR, Ole Miss) – 13:37.29
- Robin Kwemoi Bera (FR, Iowa State) – 13:26.71
- Toby Gillen (SR, Ole Miss) – 13:26.92
- Jacob White (JR, Wyoming) – 13:27.32
- Ishmael Kipkurui (FR, New Mexico) – 13:09.24
- Ernest Cheruiyot (SO, Texas Tech) – 13:27.89
- Jojo Jourdon (FR, Wake Forest) – 13:46.76
- Luke Grundvig (JR, BYU) – 13:34.63
- Luke Tewalt (SR, Wake Forest) – 13:28.18
- Colton Sands (SR, North Carolina) – 13:31.62
- David Mullarkey (SR, Northern Arizona) – 13:29.55
- Fouad Messaoudi (SR, Oklahoma State) – 13:28.17
- Valentin Soca (JR, CBU) – 13:13.10
- Matthew Forrester (JR, Butler) – 13:30.40
- Habtom Samuel (SO, New Mexico) – 13:05.87
- Justin Wachtel (JR, Virginia) – 13:34.44
- Marco Langon (JR, Villanova) – 13:27.21
- Rocky Hansen (SO, Wake Forest) – 13:22.06
- Ethan Strand (JR, North Carolina) – 13:31.13
- Brian Musau (SO, Oklahoma State) – 13:32.06
- Drew Bosley (SR, Northern Arizona) – 13:17.06
- Will Daley (JR, Virginia) – 13:39.11
- Matt Strangio (SR, Portland) – 13:34.08
- Hunter Christophe (SR, Youngstown St.) – 13:40.08
4x400m Relay, Final, Men – 10:21 p.m. ET
- BYU – 3:03.05
- Florida – 3:01.52
- South Florida – 3:01.52
- Penn State – 3:03.39
- Texas A&M – 3:02.15
- Arkansas – 3:01.82
- USC – 3:02.18
- Iowa – 3:03.14
- Alabama – 3:02.78
“Yes girl, I need some music!”
“Yes girl, I need some music!”
NCAA 3rd-place finisher Nina Ndubusi is only a sophomore and already making noise. Here’s what’s on her playlist
#NCAAOutdoors pic.twitter.com/rZuNnz73u8
— FloTrack (@FloTrack) June 13, 2025
NCAA Division I Track And Field Championship Conference Scoreboard
Only six out of 21 total events have been scored so far.
Men’s Track And Field Scoreboard by Conference
- SEC — 58 points
- Big 10 — 53 points
- Big 12 — 35.5 points
- ACC — 30.5 points
- Mountain West — 25 points
- Big Sky — 7 points
- Sun Belt — 6 points
- Western Athletic — 4 points
- West Coast — 4 points
- Southern — 2 points
- Ivy League — 2 points
- America East — 1 point
Men’s Scoreboard by School
- Minnesota – 23 (Big 10)
- New Mexico – 18 (Mountain West)
- Florida – 18 (SEC)
- Ole Miss – 12 (SEC)
- Kansas – 11.5 (Big 12)
- Texas A&M – 10 (SEC)
- Wisconsin – 10 (Big 10)
- Miami (Fla.) – 10 (ACC)
- Oklahoma State – 8 (Big 12)
- North Carolina – 8 (ACC)
- Arkansas State – 6 (Sun Belt)
- Arkansas – 6 (SEC)
- Iowa – 6 (Big 10)
- Missouri – 6 (SEC)
- Nebraska – 6 (Big 10)
- Texas Tech – 6 (Big 12)
- Georgia – 6 (SEC)
- South Carolina – 6 (SEC)
- Virginia Tech – 5 (ACC)
- Air Force – 5 (Mountain West)
- Iowa State – 5 (Big 12)
- Oregon – 5 (Big 10)
- Duke – 4.5 (ACC)
- BYU – 4 (Big 12)
- Cal Poly – 4 (Big Sky)
- Tarleton State – 4 (Western Athletic)
- Washington State – 4 (West Coast)
- Northern Arizona – 3 (Big Sky)
- NC State – 3 (ACC)
- Wyoming – 2 (Mountain West)
- Furman – 2 (Southern)
- Princeton – 2 (Ivy League)
- Illinois – 1.5 (Big 10)
- Rutgers – 1.5 (Big 10)
- UMass Lowell – 1 (America East)
- Cincinnati – 1 (Big 12)
Women’s Track And Field Scoreboard by Conference
- SEC — 59 points
- Big 10 — 55.5 points
- Big 12 — 36 points
- ACC — 35 points
- Mountain West — 21 points
- Missouri Valley — 8.5 points
- Sun Belt — 6 points
- Big East — 4 points
- Atlantic 10 — 3 points
- West Coast — 2 points
- American Athletic — 2 points
- Western Athletic — 2 points
Women’s Scoreboard by School
- Georgia — 26 (SEC)
- Illinois — 16.5 (Big 10)
- Washington — 16 (Big 10)
- Louisville — 15 (ACC)
- Colorado State — 10 (Mountain West)
- Missouri — 10 (SEC)
- New Mexico –10 (Mountain West)
- Stanford — 8 (ACC)
- Texas — 8 (SEC)
- Texas Tech — 8 (Big 12)
- NC State — 8 (ACC)
- Rutgers — 8 (Big 10)
- Baylor — 6.5 (Big 12)
- South Dakota — 6.5 (Missouri Valley)
- West Virginia — 6 (Big 12)
- TCU — 6 (Big 12)
- Texas State — 6 (Sun Belt)
- Arkansas — 5 (SEC)
- Oklahoma State — 5 (Big 12)
- Kansas — 4.5 (Big 12)
- California — 4 (ACC)
- Nebraska — 4 (Big 10)
- USC — 4 (Big 10)
- Florida — 4 (SEC)
- Georgetown — 4 (Big East)
- VCU — 3 (Atlantic 10)
- Oregon — 3 (Big 10)
- UCLA — 3 (Big 10)
- Alabama — 3 (SEC)
- LSU — 3 (SEC)
- Gonzaga — 2 (West Coast)
- North Dakota — 2 (Missouri Valley)
- Rice — 2 (American Athletic)
- Fresno State — 1 (Mountain West)
- Tarleton State — 1 (Western Athletic)
- Utah Valley — 1 (Western Athletic)
- Wisconsin — 1 (Big 10)
NCAA DI Track Championships 2025 Schedule
All times Eastern.
Friday, June 13
Track Events
- 8:02 PM – 4x100m Relay, Final, Men
- 8:12 PM – 1500m, Final, Men
- 8:24 PM – 3000m Steeplechase, Final, Men
- 8:42 PM – 110m Hurdles, Final, Men
- 8:52 PM – 100m, Final, Men
- 9:02 PM – 400m, Final, Men
- 9:14 PM – 800m, Final, Men
- 9:27 PM – 400m Hurdles, Final, Men
- 9:37 PM – 200m, Final, Men
- 9:55 PM – 5000m, Final, Men
- 10:21 PM – 4x400m Relay, Final, Men
Field Events
- 5:15 PM – Discus, Final, Men
- 7:30 PM – High Jump, Final, Men
- 8:10 PM – Triple Jump, Final Men
Combined Events
- 2:45 PM – 100 Hurdles, Heptathlon, Women
- 3:45 PM – High Jump, Heptathlon, Women
- 5:45 PM – Shot Put, Heptathlon, Women
- 9:43 PM – 200M, Heptathlon, Women
Saturday, June 14
Track Events
- 9:02 PM – 4x100m Relay, Final, Women
- 9:11 PM – 1500m, Final, Women
- 9:24 PM – 3000m Steeplechase, Final, Women
- 9:42 PM – 100m Hurdles, Final, Women
- 9:52 PM – 100m, Final, Women
- 10:02 PM – 400m, Final, Women
- 10:14 PM – 800m, Final, Women
- 10:27 PM – 400m Hurdles, Final, Women
- 10:37 PM – 200m, Final, Women
- 10:55 PM – 5000m, Final, Women
- 11:21 PM – 4x400m Relay, Final, Women
Field Events
- 3:30 PM – Discus, Final, Women
- 8:30 PM – High Jump, Final, Women
- 9:10 PM – Triple Jump, Final, Women
Combined Events
- 6:30 PM – Long Jump, Heptathlon, Women
- 7:45 PM – Javelin, Heptathlon, Women
- 10:43 – 800M, Heptathlon, Women
What Channel Is NCAA Track And Field On?
The NCAA D1 Track and Field Championships will be broadcast on ESPN and ESPN2 from June 11 to 14.
FloTrack Is The Streaming Home For Many Track And Field Meets Each Year
Don’t miss all the track and field season action streaming on FloTrack. Check out the FloTrack schedule for more events.
FloTrack Archived Footage
Video footage from each event will be archived and stored in a video library for FloTrack subscribers to watch for the duration of their subscriptions.
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Fordham USG to Send a Letter to Congress About Trump’s “The One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act” – The Fordham Ram
Fordham University’s United Student Government (USG) plans to send a letter to members of Congress next Monday, June 30, urging them to reject the H.R.1 bill titled “The One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act.” The letter was authored by USG Executive President Lucas Hjertberg, FCRH ’26, and USG Executive Vice President Andrew McDonald, FCRH ’26. It […]

Fordham University’s United Student Government (USG) plans to send a letter to members of Congress next Monday, June 30, urging them to reject the H.R.1 bill titled “The One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act.” The letter was authored by USG Executive President Lucas Hjertberg, FCRH ’26, and USG Executive Vice President Andrew McDonald, FCRH ’26. It condemns the bill, which includes several funding cuts to federal programs, including student financial aid, and calls on members of Congress to oppose the bill.
“We call on you to reject this legislation, to defend the promise of education for all, and to invest in the future of this nation’s students,” the letter says.
“The One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act” is a reconciliation bill that includes $1.5 trillion in spending cuts as well as additional tax cuts. It was introduced to Congress on May 20 and was passed in the House of Representatives on May 22 with a vote of 215-214. Now, it is being considered in the Senate. While it has yet to pass both houses, President Donald Trump is urging Congress members to have the bill on his desk by July 4.
The bill contains a multitude of funding cuts, including to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), Medicare and Medicaid. The bill also includes $330 billion in funding cuts to higher education. Additionally, the bill will terminate subsidized loans for students and will terminate most loan repayment plans. It will also change the qualifications for Pell Grants by increasing the number of credits a student needs to be considered a full-time student from 12 to 15 credits.
The bill “contains a number of devastating cuts to public investment in order to allow for tax breaks to those who really don’t need them,” said Hjertberg. “And to see education included in the firing line, I mean, we’ve worked for so many years to make sure that education is getting the right amount of funding, and it’s still underfunded, and to see that, to see education in the crosshairs, is crushing.”
These funding cuts will impact millions of college students across the country, according to the Center for American Progress. According to a statement sent to members of the Fordham community by USG, 55% of Fordham students will see their federal aid cut or entirely canceled as a result of the bill. The statement further explains the impacts of the bill and calls upon members of the Fordham community to take action.
“We fight for Fordham. We fight for every student chasing a dream they were told they didn’t deserve,” the statement says. “And we fight because faith without action is empty, and justice without courage is impossible. This is our charge. This is our moment. And we will not be silent.”
Hjertberg says not enough people are talking about the impact the bill will have on federal student aid. While some are being very vocal about the impacts on programs like Medicare and Medicaid, they are forgetting about education, according to Hjertberg, which is why he thought it would be beneficial to write a letter to Congress highlighting the impact the bill will have on students.
The letter was written on June 12, after which Hjertberg sent it to the rest of USG and asked people to vote on whether to sign the letter. If USG members voted not to sign the letter, he would sign it from himself and McDonald, rather than from Fordham USG as a whole. But ultimately, with three members not voting and a final vote count of 19-0, USG members voted to sign the letter.
USG Senator Audrey Shooner, FCRH ’28, voted to sign the letter and said it is important for students to use their platforms to speak on topics such as this one.
“I’m against this bill,” Schooner said in an email. “I morally oppose this bill. It would hurt me, and it would hurt the people I care about. If I have the chance to formally oppose it as part of an organization I’m a part of, of course I’m going to do that. It’s my responsibility, both as a person and as a representative in USG, to use the platform I have to stand against harm like this.”
Hjertberg also sent the letter to a group chat via GroupMe that contains student body presidents from universities across the country and sent it to the Jesuit Student Government Alliance in hopes of getting students from other schools to sign the letter. In total, 14 student body presidents across the country, including from the University of Pittsburgh, Santa Clara University, Michigan State University, Rutgers University-New Brunswick and more, also signed the letter.
USG Vice President of health and security Aidan Costella, FCRH ’27 , said including students from other schools in the letter is beneficial to the letter’s success.
“I think if we’re able to gain momentum with other schools as well, I think there’s power in numbers and I think it’s important to show that students don’t agree with what’s going on,” Costella said.
According to Hjertberg, USG plans to send the letter to several Congress members, specifically House members who typically support higher education. They will also send it to Republican House members from New York, including Nicole Malliotakis and Mike Lawler. Further, they will send the letter to all House Democrats from New York and New Jersey in order to further generate discussion among House members about the impact of the bill on higher education.
University President Tania Tetlow, who previously sent an email calling students to take action against the bill, said that she is proud of USG for standing in support of higher education, according to Jane Martinez, director of media relations.
“This is a moment when their voices can have real power, and they can make a difference,” Tetlow said in a statement to The Fordham Ram.
Hjertberg said he hopes the letter can raise awareness among members of Congress and within the Fordham community about the impacts of this bill. Hjertberg fears that if the bill passes, dozens of universities across the country will close due to financial strain, which he says will not only impact students, but the economy as a whole.
“This bill doesn’t only impact higher education or what some see as the ivory tower, it impacts everybody, it impacts the farmer, the guy who works at your local bodega, everybody throughout the chain,” Hjertberg said.
Sports
The history of LSU baseball’s championship-winning gold uniforms
In the 1996 postseason, LSU baseball debuted a brand-new uniform. The team went on to claim a national title that season, birthing the iconic championship golds. On June 22, 2025, LSU claimed its eighth national title with a 5-3 win over Coastal Carolina, and the Tigers wore the gold jersey with white pants. The first […]

In the 1996 postseason, LSU baseball debuted a brand-new uniform. The team went on to claim a national title that season, birthing the iconic championship golds.
On June 22, 2025, LSU claimed its eighth national title with a 5-3 win over Coastal Carolina, and the Tigers wore the gold jersey with white pants.
The first time they wore the new uniforms was in the 1996 postseason when head coach Skip Bertman thought the new attire would boost morale after a disappointing end to the regular season.
After they were introduced, the Tigers won every time they wore the golds, culminating in history.
With two outs and a runner on third base in the 1996 national championship game, LSU was losing 8–7 in the bottom of the 9th inning.
LSU’s Warren Morris came up to the plate and swung at the first pitch he saw. He lined the ball just inches over the right field fence for a game-winning walk-off home run.
Morris’ play is tradition for Tiger fans and effectively cemented the championship golds as a uniform option.
READ MORE: Does LSU baseball perform better in Sunday Gold?
From 1997 to 2007, LSU was plagued by the “modern” uniform epidemic that swept the nation in the early 2000s.
New alternate fonts and black uniforms had many fans disappointed, and they felt that the beloved tradition had vanished.
But in 2008, new head coach Paul Mainieri revamped the uniforms and brought back the championship golds.
Mainieri added them into regular rotation as the team began wearing the jerseys in the third game of a three-game series and important tournament games.
Mainieri continued to set a precedent when, in the 2009 College World Series Finals, LSU wore the championship golds with a chance to claim a national title in Game 3 against Texas. The Tigers defeated the Longhorns to win the program’s sixth national championship.
After the 2021 season, Mainieri retired, and LSU hired Jay Johnson.
Johnson continued the tradition through his tenure at the school, featuring the golds in the third games of a series and championship games.
Johnson competed for two national championships within his first four seasons, and he wore the golds when he claimed both titles in 2023 and 2025.
From Warren Morris to Dylan Crews, the championship golds are tradition and serve as reminders of LSU’s dominance in college baseball.
Sports
Mayfield’s Sharnise Worthams reigns at adidas, several locals compete at New Balance
The push in the calendar toward July 4 typically brings with it a glut of outdoor national track and field meets, and 2025 is no exception. Several News-Herald coverage area student-athletes who just completed their high school outdoor campaigns took part in outdoor national competition recently. There are three: An adidas meet in Greensboro, N.C., […]

The push in the calendar toward July 4 typically brings with it a glut of outdoor national track and field meets, and 2025 is no exception.
Several News-Herald coverage area student-athletes who just completed their high school outdoor campaigns took part in outdoor national competition recently.
There are three: An adidas meet in Greensboro, N.C., a Nike meet in Eugene, Ore. and a New Balance meet in Philadelphia.
At adidas Track Nationals, Mayfield senior-to-be Sharnise Worthams paced the coverage area charge.
2025 News-Herald girls track and field all-stars
Coming off an outdoor campaign for the Wildcats during which she was a Division I 100- and 300-meter hurdles state qualifier and first-team News-Herald girls track and field all-star, Worthams took home gold in 400 hurdles and was 100 hurdles runner-up in adidas’ National Elite division.
Mayfield girls track and field: Sharnise Worthams develops into area hurdles standard bearer
Worthams won 400 hurdles with a meet-record time of 62.84 seconds, .46 ahead of runner-up Shari Jackson. She was second in 100 hurdles in 14.82, behind Kherington Johnson (14.68).
Harvey’s Ethen Eudell was 19th in the Championship 400 hurdles in 57.82.
The bulk of the local contingent competed at New Balance Nationals Outdoor at venerable Franklin Field.
Perry’s Traxton Richards was second in the Freshman pole vault, clearing 14 feet, 7 1/4 inches. The D-II state runner-up for the Pirates earlier this month was second here to a fellow Ohioan, Piqua’s Carson Holtvogt, who went 14-11.
Mentor’s Rapolas Ogorodnikas was 11th in the Freshman 200 (22.13) and 19th in the Freshman 100 (11.03).
Beachwood’s 4×200 quartet of K’Dyn Harris-Tate, Marley Readance, Meena Abdul-Basser and Kyrsten Ginn, coming off winning the D-II state high school title in the event, was 25th in the Championship division with a 1:41.90. The same group of four was 39th in the Championship 4×1 in 48.45.
Abdul-Basser, the 2025 News-Herald girls track and field athlete of the year, was sixth in the Freshman 400 (56.26) and 34th in the Freshman 200 (25.56). Ginn was 17th in the Freshman 200 (25.02) and 24th in the Freshman 100 (12.43).
Chagrin Falls’ Gabby Byrne was 25th in the Freshman mile (5:11.91), and Tommy Mooney was 60th in the Championship 1,500 (3:59.42) and 73rd in the Championship mile (4:17.98).
Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin’s Owen Thomas, competing for Cleveland Youth Running Club, was 34th in the Freshman 3,000 (9:22.42) and 35th in the Freshman two-mile (10:02.08).
Euclid’s boys 4×4 of John Jordan, Mario Seats, Malik Hogan and LaJuan Hamelin, fresh off setting the all-time News-Herald coverage area record in the event at the D-I state meet as they took third, was 37th in the Championship division in 3:18.82.
Mayfield’s Antonio Steele was 46th in the Freshman 110 hurdles (16.25) and 82nd in the Freshman 400 (52.37).
University junior-to-be Thomas Lodowski, who had a breakout performance at state by taking third in the D-I 800 final, was 48th in the Championship open 8 here in 1:52.80. US’ Noah Hope competed in the Freshman shot put, placing 25th (40-11 1/2).
2025 News-Herald boys track and field all-stars
The national middle school shot put title for Mentor incoming freshman Ashlyn McKinney at New Balance is profiled in a separate story.
Originally Published:
College Sports
Everything Coming to Disney+ Plus in July 2025
July on Disney+ is where franchise finales, monster makeovers, and nostalgic throwbacks collide. Marvel closes out Phase 5 with the last three episodes of “Ironheart,” Nat Geo kicks off an expanded SharkFest anchored by the 90-minute documentary “Jaws @ 50,” and Disney Channel’s cult musical series dives into vampire lore with “ZOMBIES 4: Dawn of […]

July on Disney+ is where franchise finales, monster makeovers, and nostalgic throwbacks collide. Marvel closes out Phase 5 with the last three episodes of “Ironheart,” Nat Geo kicks off an expanded SharkFest anchored by the 90-minute documentary “Jaws @ 50,” and Disney Channel’s cult musical series dives into vampire lore with “ZOMBIES 4: Dawn of the Vampires.”
For families, the month is bursting with animation: a brand-new season of “Phineas and Ferb,” eight fresh episodes of “Miraculous Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir,” and the preschool revival “Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+” (introducing Duffy the Disney Bear to U.S. audiences) all arrive before July is out. Meanwhile, the heist-rom-thriller “Suspicious Minds” adds summer-night intrigue, and foodie viewers can sink their teeth into the first “Summer Baking Championship.”
Behind the headlines, Disney+’s Hulu hub quietly drops one of its largest movie libraries to date. Day-one arrivals range from “Alita: Battle Angel” and “Bridesmaids” to “Home Alone,” “I, Robot,” and “Prometheus,” making July 1 a binge-watch bonanza. Sports fans also get a tech-tour of the Bernabéu with “Megastructures: Real Madrid Super Stadium,” while nostalgic viewers can relive three full seasons of “America’s Funniest Home Videos.”
Disney+ in July 2025: Marvel Finales, SharkFest Spectacles, and a Flood of Fan-Favorite Films
Below is the complete, U.S. schedule of confirmed releases for July 2025. (Titles marked Hulu on Disney+ stream inside the Disney+ app’s Hulu tile.)
Full July 2025 Release Schedule
Tuesday, July 1
- Ironheart — Episodes 4-6 (series finale)
- Critter Fixers: Country Vets S6 (12 eps)
- Lost Treasures of Egypt S5 (10 eps)
- Phineas and Ferb — Revival season premiere
- Library movie wave (Hulu on Disney+): Alita: Battle Angel, Bridesmaids, Bride Wars, Country Strong, The Day After Tomorrow, Dirty Dancing 1-2, Easy A, Ford v Ferrari, Home Alone 1-3, I, Robot, Prometheus, Real Steel, Ted 1-2, Wrath of Man, and dozens more
Wednesday, July 2
- Miraculous Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir S6 (8 eps)
- ZOMBIES, ZOMBIES 2, ZOMBIES 3 — Sing-Along Editions
Sunday, July 6 – SharkFest Launch
- Sharks Up Close with Bertie Gregory (special)
- Investigation Shark Attack S1 (6 eps)
- Shark Quest: Hunt for the Apex Predator S1
- Sharks of the North (special)
- Super Shark Highway (special)
Wednesday, July 9
- Ancient Aliens: Origins S1 (12 eps)
- People & Places: Shorts (series debut)
Thursday, July 10
- Summer Baking Championship S1 (8 eps)
- Suspicious Minds S1 (all eps; heist-romance)
Friday, July 11
- ZOMBIES 4: Dawn of the Vampires (original movie)
- Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story (Nat Geo doc)
Thursday, July 17
- America’s Funniest Home Videos S13-15 (67 eps)
- Disneyland Resort P.O.V. Walkthroughs (ride-along series)
Friday, July 18
- Megastructures: Real Madrid Super Stadium (Nat Geo special)
Tuesday, July 22
- Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+ — First 10 episodes
Wednesday, July 23
- Kiff S2 (animated series)
Saturday, July 26
- BBQ Brawl S1-2 (14 eps)
- Theme Song Takeover S4 (6 eps)
- Ultimate Summer Cook-Off S1 (4 eps)
Monday, July 28
- Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time S1 (5 eps)
Wednesday, July 30
- StuGo S1 (full season)
- StuGo: Shorts S1 (6 eps)
- Big City Greens S4 (10 eps)
Thursday, July 31
- Project Runway S21 — Two-episode premiere
- Project Runway Library (S1-4, 51 eps)
Coming in August
Keep an eye out for the MCU animated anthology “Eyes of Wakanda” on August 6, plus more Hulu film drops every Friday.
Key Takeaways
- July brings major Disney+ originals including new “Ironheart” episodes, “ZOMBIES 4,” and the revival of “Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+.”
- The streaming service adds popular films like “Alita: Battle Angel” and “Bridesmaids” alongside new reality and animated content.
- National Geographic offerings expand with “Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time” and sports documentary “Megastructures: Real Madrid Super Stadium.”
Major Original Series Premiering in July 2025
Disney+ is bringing a strong lineup of original content to subscribers this July, featuring Marvel superheroes, musical zombies, and beloved animated characters returning to screens big and small.
Highly Anticipated Series
Marvel’s Ironheart continues its first season run with episodes 4-6 dropping on July 1st. The series follows Riri Williams, a genius inventor who creates the most advanced suit of armor since Iron Man. Fans who enjoyed her introduction in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever can now see her full story unfold.
ZOMBIES 4: Dawn of the Vampires premieres on July 11th, bringing a fresh supernatural twist to the popular musical franchise. Disney is building anticipation by releasing sing-along versions of the previous three ZOMBIES films starting July 2nd.
High Potential, a new drama series about gifted teenagers navigating extraordinary abilities while dealing with ordinary high school problems, debuts mid-month with a three-episode premiere package.
Returning Fan Favorites
Project Runway Season 21 makes its streaming debut this month, bringing high fashion competition to Disney+. This season features guest judges from Marvel films and Disney animated features.
The Academy returns for its sophomore season, continuing the story of performing arts students competing for prestigious scholarships. The show has gained popularity for its realistic portrayal of the pressures young performers face.
Big City Greens drops new episodes weekly throughout July, following the continuing adventures of Cricket Green and his family as they adjust to city life with their country sensibilities.
Animated and Kids Shows
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+ premieres on July 22nd, reviving the beloved preschool series with new adventures. Mickey, Minnie, and their friends return with updated animation and interactive elements for a new generation of viewers.
Kiff Season 2 debuts this month, continuing the adventures of the optimistic squirrel and her bunny best friend. The second season introduces new characters and locations in Table Town.
Miraculous Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir adds Season 6 episodes on July 2nd. The popular superhero series continues to expand its universe with new miraculous powers and villains for Marinette and Adrien to face.
Theme Song Takeover returns with musical shorts featuring supporting characters from Disney animated shows performing their own versions of their shows’ theme songs.
Exclusive Movies and Special Premieres
Disney+ is rolling out an impressive lineup of exclusive films and special presentations this July. Subscribers can look forward to major theatrical releases, unique sing-along experiences, and compelling documentaries that offer behind-the-scenes insights.
Blockbuster Movie Releases
July brings several high-profile movies to the streaming platform. The highly anticipated ZOMBIES 4: Dawn of the Vampires premieres on Friday, July 11th, continuing the popular musical franchise with a vampire-themed twist.
Sci-fi fans will be thrilled by the addition of “Alien: Romulus,” the latest entry in the legendary space horror series. This prequel explores the terrifying xenomorph origins with a fresh cast of characters.
“Ford v. Ferrari,” the acclaimed racing drama starring Matt Damon and Christian Bale, joins the platform mid-month. The film chronicles the rivalry between automotive giants during the 1966 Le Mans race.
Action movie enthusiasts can enjoy “Independence Day” and “28 Weeks Later” as part of the platform’s summer blockbuster collection. These additions provide perfect viewing options for those hot July evenings.
Special Features and Sing-Along Versions
Disney+ is enhancing its musical offerings with special sing-along versions of fan favorites. All three previous ZOMBIES films will be available in sing-along format ahead of the new sequel’s release, allowing fans to prepare for the newest installment.
The platform will also feature “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” with enhanced viewing options, including director commentary and behind-the-scenes features. These extras provide deeper insights into the filmmaking process.
Several classic Disney animated features receive the sing-along treatment this month as well. These interactive versions display lyrics on screen, making them perfect for family movie nights.
A special collection of “Desperate Housewives” episodes with creator commentary arrives, giving fans new perspectives on the beloved series. This marks the first time such special features have been available for the show on streaming.
Documentaries and Biographical Films
Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story premieres this month, exploring Steven Spielberg’s groundbreaking 1975 thriller on its 50th anniversary. The documentary features interviews with cast members and film historians discussing the movie’s lasting impact.
“Sophie and the Baron” offers an intimate look at the unique friendship between photographer Baron Wolman and artist Sophie Kipner, showcasing their creative collaboration across generations.
The powerful five-part series Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time debuts on July 28th. This documentary examines the devastating 2005 natural disaster through previously unseen footage and survivor testimonies.
“Ancient Aliens: Origins” arrives mid-month, investigating theories about extraterrestrial influences on early human civilizations. The documentary features expert interviews and examinations of archaeological mysteries around the world.
Disneyland Resort and Theme Park Celebrations
Disney+ will showcase Disneyland’s historic 70th anniversary with special content in July 2025. The streaming service will offer fans unique ways to experience the magic from home through virtual walkthroughs, celebration highlights, and exclusive behind-the-scenes footage.
70th Anniversary Events
The Disneyland Resort 70th Celebration will be prominently featured on Disney+ this July. Subscribers can look forward to streaming the “70th Celebration Nighttime Spectaculars” starting July 18th, which captures the special evening shows created specifically for this milestone anniversary.
These spectaculars include enhanced fireworks, projection mapping, and drone shows that honor seven decades of Disney storytelling and innovation. The nighttime events feature music and visuals spanning Disneyland’s rich history.
Special programming will also include footage from the celebration’s opening ceremony, celebrity appearances, and exclusive interviews with Disney Imagineers who helped shape the park’s legacy from its beginning to today’s modern attractions.
Attractions and Experiences Featured
Disney+ will highlight iconic attractions across Disneyland Resort in their anniversary celebrations. Beloved rides receiving special attention include Haunted Mansion, Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, and Jungle Cruise – all with enhanced features for the 70th celebration.
The content will also showcase newer areas such as:
- Cars Land with Radiator Springs Racers
- Avengers Campus and its superhero experiences
- Mickey’s ToonTown fresh from its recent renovation
- Pixar Pier featuring the Incredicoaster and Pixar Pal-A-Round
A special two-hour guided tour called “A Story of Celebration” will be available as documentary content, walking viewers through Disneyland’s evolution from opening day attractions to recent additions. The tour explores Main Street, U.S.A., and other lands that have become central to the Disney experience.
Disneyland Resort P.O.V. Walkthroughs and Shorts
The highly anticipated Disneyland Resort P.O.V. Walkthroughs will premiere on July 17th. These immersive first-person experiences transport viewers directly into cinematic ride-alongs of Disneyland’s most iconic attractions.
The walkthroughs use state-of-the-art filming techniques to create an incredibly realistic virtual experience of riding attractions like Indiana Jones Adventure and Soarin’ Around the World. Each video includes ambient park sounds and music to enhance the immersion.
Additionally, a new collection called “People and Places: Shorts” will debut, featuring behind-the-scenes looks at how Cast Members create magic daily. These shorts explore lesser-known areas of the park and highlight special details that casual visitors might miss.
Disney+ will also include special Hollywood Land shorts focusing on the connection between Disney films and their theme park adaptations, showing how movie magic transforms into physical experiences.
Events, Specials, and National Geographic Content
July 2025 brings an exciting lineup of seasonal competitions, nature documentaries, live sports, and special events to Disney+. Subscribers can look forward to summer-themed cooking shows, shark week programming, and exclusive sports coverage throughout the month.
Seasonal Specials and Competitions
The summer heat brings hot competition to Disney+ this July with several cooking and reality shows. BBQ Brawl Seasons 1-2 (14 episodes) arrives on July 26th, bringing grill masters together for smoky showdowns. Food Network’s Ultimate Summer Cook-Off (Season 1, 4 episodes) also drops the same day, featuring chefs creating perfect warm-weather dishes.
Fans of fashion will be thrilled as a brand new season of Project Runway premieres this month. The competitive design show continues to showcase emerging fashion talents creating runway-ready looks under tight deadlines.
For dessert lovers, Summer Baking Championship and I Scream, You Scream bring sweet treats to the platform, challenging bakers to create refreshing summer confections that beat the heat while impressing discerning judges.
National Geographic Premieres
National Geographic delivers impressive documentary content this July. Lost Treasures of Egypt (Season 5, 10 episodes) arrives July 1st, exploring ancient archaeological discoveries and historical mysteries along the Nile.
Shark enthusiasts will enjoy a full lineup including Sharks Up Close with Bertie Gregory, Shark Attack, Super Shark Highway, and Sharks of the North. The comprehensive Shark Quest: Hunt for the Apex Predator follows researchers tracking the ocean’s most formidable hunters.
Megastructures: Real Madrid Super Stadium examines the engineering marvel behind one of soccer’s most iconic venues. Animal lovers can enjoy Critter Fixers: Country Vets (Season 6, 12 episodes) starting July 1st, following veterinarians as they treat animals in rural Georgia.
Live Sports and Event Coverage
Disney+ expands its sports offerings this July with several live events. The WNBA All-Star Game and WNBA Skills Competition showcase the best in women’s basketball, while specific team coverage highlights matchups between the Indiana Fever and New York Liberty.
Golf fans can tune into PGA Tour Live for tournament coverage, while MMA enthusiasts get access to UFC 318 Prelims. The NFL Flag Championships brings youth football excitement to the platform.
These sporting events will be available through the ESPN integration within Disney+, giving subscribers more live content options than ever before. Many events will include pre-show coverage and expert analysis.
Additional New Episodes and Series
July brings several episodic releases and new series to Disney+. Stu-Go premieres this month, along with documentary series People and Places which explores diverse communities around the world.
Paradise, English Teacher, and Suspicious Minds will release new episodes weekly, while Camp Alec provides family-friendly summer-themed content. Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time (Season 1, 5 episodes) arrives July 28th, examining the devastating 2005 natural disaster.
Disney’s documentary series Banana Ball explores the wild variant of baseball gaining popularity across America. These shows join the continuing rollout of Marvel’s Ironheart, which drops episodes 4-6 on July 1st at 6pm PT.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disney+ has an exciting lineup for July 2025 with new movies, series premieres, and returning favorites. Here are answers to common questions about what’s coming to the streaming platform next month.
What new Disney movies can we expect on Disney Plus in July 2025?
The highlight movie release for July 2025 is ZOMBIES 4: Dawn of the Vampires, which continues the popular musical franchise with a vampire twist. This new installment will likely bring back favorite characters while introducing new supernatural elements.
Several catalog movies will also be added on July 1st including Alita: Battle Angel, Bridesmaids, and Country Strong. Fans of musical content can enjoy sing-along versions of the original ZOMBIES and ZOMBIES 2 starting July 2nd.
Are there any new Disney Plus original series debuting in July 2025?
Yes, July brings several exciting new series premieres. Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+ will premiere on July 22nd, reviving the beloved children’s series with new adventures. The first season of StuGo will also debut, though the exact date hasn’t been specified.
Season 2 of Kiff premieres on July 23rd, continuing the animated adventures of the energetic squirrel and her bunny best friend.
Can you provide a list of the new content arriving on Disney Plus for July 2025 in the United States?
The July 2025 lineup includes a mix of original content, returning series, and library additions. Major titles include ZOMBIES 4: Dawn of the Vampires, Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+, and Kiff Season 2.
Library additions include Critter Fixers: Country Vets (Season 6), Lost Treasures of Egypt (Season 5), and BBQ Brawl (Seasons 1-2). Reality TV fans can enjoy a new season of Project Runway and The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives: Season 2 Reunion.
When are the release dates for July 2025 content on Disney Plus?
Content releases are spread throughout July 2025. The month begins with several additions on July 1st including Ironheart Episodes 4-6 releasing at 6 PM PT.
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+ premieres on July 22nd, followed by Kiff Season 2 on July 23rd. Additional content arrives on July 26th and 28th, with Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time (Season 1) releasing on the 28th.
Will there be any exclusive anime series released on Disney Plus in July 2025?
Yes, anime fans can look forward to RWBY: Complete Series arriving on July 1st, available in both subbed and dubbed versions. This represents Disney+’s continued expansion into anime content.
There’s also Miraculous Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir (Season 6, 8 episodes) releasing on July 2nd, which while not strictly anime, features an anime-inspired animation style popular with similar audiences.
What are the major Disney Plus releases scheduled for summer 2025?
The summer 2025 lineup is headlined by ZOMBIES 4: Dawn of the Vampires and the finale of Marvel Television’s Ironheart, with episodes 4-6 releasing in early July.
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+ marks a significant revival of the classic children’s series. The continuation of popular series like Kiff with its second season premiere also represents an important part of Disney+’s summer programming strategy.
Sports
Twins Minor League Report (6/28)
Twins Video CURRENT W-L RecordsMinnesota Twins: 40-43St. Paul Saints: 36-42Wichita Wind Surge: 40-34Cedar Rapids Kernels: 42-32Fort Myers Mighty Mussels: 31-41FCL Twins: 25-13DSL Twins: 5-14 TRANSACTIONSCedar Rapids Kernels activated RHP Logan Whitaker from the 7-day injured list.St. Paul Saints activated C Diego Cartaya.St. Paul Saints placed 2B Ryan Fitzgerald on the 7-day injured list. Right hamstring […]


Twins Video
CURRENT W-L Records
Minnesota Twins: 40-43
St. Paul Saints: 36-42
Wichita Wind Surge: 40-34
Cedar Rapids Kernels: 42-32
Fort Myers Mighty Mussels: 31-41
FCL Twins: 25-13
DSL Twins: 5-14
TRANSACTIONS
Cedar Rapids Kernels activated RHP Logan Whitaker from the 7-day injured list.
St. Paul Saints activated C Diego Cartaya.
St. Paul Saints placed 2B Ryan Fitzgerald on the 7-day injured list. Right hamstring strain.
SAINTS SENTINEL
Game 1: St. Paul 3, Louisville 7
Box Score
What looked like a promising afternoon unraveled fast for the Saints in the sixth, undone by a Blake Dunn no-doubt grand slam that punctuated a five-run frame and flipped the script at CHS Field.
Marco Raya looked sharp through five, limiting the Louisville Bats to two runs and giving St. Paul a chance to settle in. But the baton passed to Anthony Misiewicz in the sixth, and the inning went sideways quick: two singles, a sac bunt, a walk, a sac fly, another walk—and then Dunn unloaded on a first-pitch fastball, sending it over the left-field wall and sucking the air out of the ballpark.
Yunior Severino did what he could to keep things close, launching a 450-foot missile to straightaway center for a two-run homer in the bottom half of the inning. He drove in all three of St. Paul’s runs on the night, but the damage had been done.
Peyton Eeles and Jeferson Morales each tallied a pair of hits, while Royce Lewis, continuing his rehab assignment, led off and went 0-for-2 with a walk. Not much to show in the box score, but the timing and health continue to trend in the right direction.
The Saints fall, but Severino’s power show remains a highlight—and a reminder of what could be waiting in the wings.
Game 2: St Paul 5, Louisville 4
Box Score
Anthony Prato, better known for his uncanny ability to wear pitches than to launch them, flipped the script in the nightcap of the Saints’ double-header. The franchise’s resident hit-by-pitch magnet turned enforcer in the sixth, unloading a two-run shot that put St. Paul momentarily in front.
https://x.com/StPaulSaints/status/1939136270812242322
But the good vibes were short-lived. Jarrett Whorff, called upon to close it down, served up a game-tying two-run homer in the top of the seventh. Of course, baseball being baseball, Whorff would ultimately be rewarded with the win after backup catcher Noah Cardenas—hitting below the Mendoza Line entering the night—turned on a 99 mph fastball and parked it in the bullpen to walk it off.
Pitcher wins? Still irrelevant.
Peyton Eeles stayed hot, tacking on two more singles, while Pierson Ohl gave the Saints four solid innings (3H, 2ER, 6K) and now carries a shiny 1.95 ERA across three levels.
WIND SURGE WISDOM
Springfield 12, Wichita 6
Box Score
The bats showed up late for the Wind Surge, and by the time they did, Springfield had already built an 8-0 cushion. Wichita clawed back to 9-5 before the Cardinals tacked on insurance in the 8th, sealing a 12-6 loss.
Kyler Fedko—currently leading the Texas League in slugging—continued his wrecking ball ways, lacing a ground-rule double with the bases loaded. Kaelan Culpepper racked up a three-hit day, and Walker Jenkins launched his first Double-A home run: a 386-foot rocket into the bullpen off a 96 mph heater. Since his promotion, Jenkins has reached safely in 9 of 10 games and continues to look every bit the fast-tracked future piece.
KERNELS NUGGETS
Cedar Rapids 4, South Bend 5
Box Score
The Kernels held a narrow 4-3 lead into the seventh, powered by a clutch ground-rule double from Kyle Hess that brought home Billy Amick and Misael Urbina. But the edge didn’t last. Jacob Kistling surrendered a two-run homer in the bottom half, and just like that, South Bend flipped the script.
Kyle DeBarge continues to be a one-man wrecking crew. The infielder went 2-for-5, swiped his league-leading 42nd base of the season, and added his 47th RBI for good measure. The stat line keeps stacking, and so does his case as one of the most dynamic players in the Midwest League.
MUSSEL MATTERS
Tampa 7, Fort Myers 4
Box Score
The day’s spotlight was on Dasan Hill, the lean, left-handed arm with upside and velocity to match. He navigated traffic through his first two innings before running into trouble in the third, allowing a pair of runs. That frame had everything: Brian Sanchez swiped two bags, there was a wild pitch, a balk, and—just for good measure—a pickoff/caught stealing to end the inning. Hill threw 65 pitches in total, the most of his pro career.
The Mussels got some help from the Tarpons’ infield circus in the fifth. What looked like a routine Dameury Peña grounder turned into two runs after airmail throws from both corners of Tampa’s defense—first from third, then first—and Peña ended up standing on third without needing to flash any wheels.
Caleb McNeely put together a solid day at the plate, finishing 2-for-3 with a double. But Tampa’s running game ran wild, swiping eight bags against the Fort Myers battery in what became a track meet on dirt.
COMPLEX CHRONICLES
FCL Twins 6, FCL Red Sox 5
Box Score
Trailing 5-0 and facing win probability odds that screamed “not your day,” the FCL Twins rallied back behind a flurry of timely hits and bullpen dominance.
Rafael Escalante knocked in two with a single in the sixth, while Ricardo Paez’s sac fly in the seventh evened things up. Carlos Silva drove home the eventual winning run in the eighth on a fielder’s choice, completing the comeback.
Teague Conrad tossed three scoreless frames to slam the door and grab the win.
Yes, Daiber De Los Santos struck out three times. Yes, he still leads the league with 57 punchouts.
DOMINICAN DAILIES
DSL Marlins 6, DSL Twins 3
Box Score
It was a shaky start on the mound for the DSL Twins. Starter Rainer Marin and reliever Aaron Carranza combined to issue eight walks over 4.2 innings, and as is often the case, those freebies came back to bite—four of them eventually came around to score.
Still, there were bright spots. Teilon Serrano stayed locked in at the plate, collecting two hits and crossing home for one of the Twins’ only two runs. Haritzon Castillo continues to be one of the most consistent bats in the DSL, roping an RBI single—his 14th run driven in this season.
Castillo’s line now sits at a scorching .346/.453/.558 through 64 plate appearances, good for second in the league in RBIs.
TWINS DAILY MINOR LEAGUE PLAYERS OF THE DAY
Pitcher of the Day: Pierson Ohl, 4 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 6 K
Hitter of the Day: Walker Jenkins, 2-for-3, HR, 2 R, RBI, 2 BB
PROSPECT SUMMARY
Check out the Prospect Tracker for more.
1. Walker Jenkins (Wichita): 2-for-3, HR, 2 R, RBI, 2 BB
4. Kaelen Culpepper (Wichita): 3-for-5, R, RBI
6. Dasan Hill (Fort Myers): 3 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 2 K
9. Brandon Winokur (Cedar Rapids): 0-for-5
10. Kyle DeBarge (Cedar Rapids): 2-for-5, RBI
11. Marco Raya (St. Paul): 5 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 4 K
12. Billy Amick (Cedar Rapids): 1-for-3, R, BB
19. Danny De Andrade (Cedar Rapids): 0-for-3, BB
20. Payton Eeles (St. Paul): 4-for-6, 3 R
TOMORROW’S PROBABLE STARTERS
St. Paul vs. Louisville, 2:07 pm CT: Randy Dobnak
Wichita vs. Springfield, 1:05 pm CT: Christian MacLeod
Cedar Rapids vs. South Bend, 1:05 pm CT: Alejandro Hidalgo
Fort Myers at Tampa, 11:00 am CT: Christian Becerra
Interested in learning more about the Minnesota Twins’ top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!
Sports
Morrison Leads United States to Gold at U19 Pan American Cup – Texas A&M Athletics
ONTARIO, Canada – Texas A&M volleyball head coach Jamie Morrison led the United States women’s U19 national team to a gold-medal winning performance at the North, Central America and Caribbean Volleyball Confederation Pan American Cup after sweeping Mexico in the final Saturday evening. Morrison secured his fourth-straight international title after his teams’ fourth sweep […]

Morrison secured his fourth-straight international title after his teams’ fourth sweep of the tournament versus Mexico in the championship round. His group dominated from start to finish at the Pan-American Cup, finishing with a 397-322 point differential over the five matches to outscore their opponents by 75 points.
The United States hit the ground running in the pool play of the championships, going a perfect 3-0 and dropping only one frame. The group swept their opening two fixtures versus Venezuela and Mexico before facing Puerto Rico, where the Red, White and Blue went down 1-0 after the opening frame but responded by winning the next three to sweep their pool and advance to the semifinals.
Morrison and his squad carried their momentum into the penultimate round, once again putting on a dominant showing versus the Dominican Republic to capture their third sweep of the tournament. The win advanced the team to the gold-medal match.
The group closed the championships with a competitive three-set victory over Mexico for the second time at the tournament. Morrison’s squad played with a lead for the majority of the match, trailing in just nine of the 139 total points played in the fixture.
FOLLOW THE AGGIES
Visit 12thMan.com for more information on Texas A&M volleyball. Fans can keep up to date with the A&M volleyball team on Facebook, Instagram and on Twitter/X by following @AggieVolleyball.
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