Sports
New NCAA historical database provides wealth of information on championships
The NCAA has released a historical championships dashboard, a first-of-its-kind resource that includes details on the winners of every NCAA championship.
This interactive dashboard, displayed across several tabs, provides a comprehensive visual catalog of championship sports, individual titles and school-level summaries throughout the NCAA’s history.
The NCAA research, library and championships departments collaborated to create the database, which allows users to view historical championship data by year, division, sport, event and school. Championship data will be updated after the end of the fall, winter and spring sports seasons.
“This new historical championships dashboard is a powerful example of how we’re using data to bring the NCAA’s rich history to life,” NCAA President Charlie Baker said. “It celebrates the achievements of student-athletes across generations and gives fans, alumni and schools a dynamic way to explore our championship history.”
The resource includes data from 1921 through the 2024-25 academic year for over 4,500 team and 23,000 individual championships. Highlights from the database include:
- The first NCAA championship occurred in 1921, with Illinois winning the men’s outdoor track and field championship.
- Several of the first individual champions were World War I veterans, including Kansas State’s Ray Watson, who won the mile in 1921.
- The first NCAA men’s basketball tournament was won by Oregon in 1939.
- The first women’s championships took place in 1981, with field hockey and cross country titles being awarded in Divisions I, II and III in November.
- Southern California (86) holds the most men’s championship titles, while Stanford (67) leads on the women’s side.
The dashboard will assist staff and the membership in their historical research pursuits. For questions, reach out to Lee Rathbun (lrathbun@ncaa.org) in research or Michelle Watsky (mwatsky@ncaa.org) in championships.
Sports
UTEP vs. UNC volleyball score
Updated Dec. 4, 2025, 4:22 p.m. MT
The UTEP Miners volleyball team, playing in its second consecutive NCAA tournament, is looking for its first-ever victory when it takes on North Carolina in Madison, Wisconsin.
UTEP’s 25-4 record and regular-season Conference USA championship earned it a No. 6 seed and the right to play the 21-8 Tar Heels. The NCAA deemed North Carolina one of the last four teams in. It finished fifth in the ACC, a Power 4 conference, with a 14-6 league record.
This is the first of two games Thursday at the Wisconsin Field House, as host No. 3 Wisconsin takes on Eastern Illinois in the second game of the doubleheader. The winner of that match will take on the winner of UTEP/North Carolina at 6 p.m. Friday.
All matches in the first and second rounds are on ESPN+. Check here for live updates.
2nd set: UNC 22, UTEP 11
4:20 p.m. MT: The tone for this set was established early when a string of UTEP errors dug a hole. It never came back together for them. But the match is about to be tied.
– Bret Bloomquist
2nd set: UNC 20, UTEP 10
UNC is hitting lots of shots. They can do no wrong right now. Lots breaking their way.
– Bret Bloomquist
2nd set: UNC 17, UTEP 7
4:17 p.m. MT: Since digging a 10-2 hole it hasn’t gotten worse. But it hasn’t gotten much better either. UTEP came out flat and isn’t climbing out yet.
– Bret Bloomquist
2nd set: UNC 16, UTEP 6
UNC takes double figure lead. UTEP needs a momentum shift.
– Bret Bloomquist
2nd set: UNC 13, UTEP 4
4:08 p.m. MT: UTEP has yet to join the battle in the second set. A number of overpasses have led to Carolina points. Those weren’t happening as much in the first set. It’s enabling UNC to find a rhythm and they are taking advantage.
– Bret Bloomquist
2nd set: UNC 10, UTEP 3
The second set is getting away from UTEP. Miners finally score another point.
– Bret Bloomquist
2nd set: UNC 8, UTEP 2
UNC is taking control of the net. UTEP calls time out.
– Bret Bloomquist
2nd set: UNC 4, UTEP 2
4:08 p.m. MT: Miners with a rash of early errors, looked like they relaxed a bit after the big comeback in the first set. But Lovesee gets a kill!
– Bret Bloomquist
2nd set: UNC 3, UTEP 0
UNC off to quick start.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 26, UNC 24
4:01 p.m. MT: Miners with the answer! Washington with a kill to stave off set point, a Tar Heels error, then a Pustahija kill to win it. Miners hit .071 but find a way with their defense.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 26, UNC 24
UTEP wins first set.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UNC 24, UTEP 24
UTEP ties it up.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UNC 24, UTEP 23
3:58 p.m. MT: UTEP has led most of the way but back-to-back blocks have given UNC a set point. UTEP, one of the best offensive teams in the country, is hitting .027
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UNC 24, UTEP 23
UNC gets first lead of the set. UTEP timeout.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 23, UNC 22
UTEP back on top.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 22, UNC 21
3:55 p.m. MT: A big Tar Heels block completes a 6-1 run and ties the first set. But then a service error and UTEP is back up.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 21, UNC 19
UTEP scores again.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 20, UNC 18
UTEP serve error. UNC also gets a UTEP net violations.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 19, UNC 15
4:49 p.m. MT: Another Tar Heels hitting error and UTEP has a lead as it gets to winning time of the first set. Braziel and Pustahija each have three kills, the rest of the Miners have two. The four aces loom large.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 18, UNC 15
4:49 p.m. MT: Lovesee has been out since early in the set. UTEP may have to do this without her. Pustahija will need to take over. And speaking of, she forces a net violation with a big hit.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 17, UNC 14
Miners back on top with three straight scores.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: TIMEOUT: UTEP 14, UNC 13
4:45 p.m. MT: Inevitably UNC has improved its hitting. Tar Heels have four straight points and are back in it. UTEP still struggling to hit. They are now at .053 while UNC has headed up to .222. UTEP’s passing hasn’t been great the last few points.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 14, UNC 13
UNC is on a 5-0 run. Close in on UTEP.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 14, UNC 7
3:41 p.m. MT: UTEP looks to have settled in. A big kill from Pustahija is just their fourth as a team but they have four aces and have let Carolina make some errors.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 13, UNC 8
After 6-0 run, UNC scores.
– Bret Bloomquist
Another ace for UTEP
3:39 p.m. MT: Miners were trailing 6-4, but are now on a 7-1 run to force a timeout. Miners hitting just .111 but have three aces from three different players.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 11, UNC 7
UTEP gets hot. Pulls ahead. UNC tries to regroup with a timeout.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UTEP 7, UNC 7
UTEP has back-to-back aces to brief take the lead.
– Bret Bloomquist
1st set: UNC 4, UTEP 4
3:35 p.m. MT: Right now more errors than kills as both teams are expectedly a bit tight. But Sekita ties it win an ace.
– Bret Bloomquist
First serve
3:32 p.m. MT: Lovesee is going to start. She’s on the back row but will rotate to the front on the first side-out.
– Bret Bloomquist
Pregame introductions
3:27 p.m. MT: All sorts of videos before they start introductions. Both teams are lined up on the baselines watching. North Carolina brought a fair sized contingent of fans.
– Bret Bloomquist
8 minutes on pregame clock
3:15 p.m. MT: Miners are now back in their locker room as UNC holds the floor. Volleyball has structured pregames that give both teams exclusive use of the floor for a stretch.
– Bret Bloomquist
NCAA volleyball tournament format
4:10 p.m. MT: Volleyball’s format is best-of-5 sets, so the first team to three sets wins the match. A set is first team to 25 and you have to win by two points. So if it’s tied at 24-24, the match will go on.
– Bret Bloomquist
24 minutes to first serve
3:59 p.m. MT: Warmups continue, if the clock is accurate this match will start early, but that clock is when lineups are announced, etc. Lovesee definitely looks game to try playing. UTEP has six cheerleaders here.
– Bret Bloomquist
36 minutes to first serve
3:48 p.m. MT: Lovesee is hopping around on the ankle and doesn’t look too bad. Big difference between that and leaping as high as you can go, but she’s going to try to gut it out.
– Bret Bloomquist
52 minutes to first serve
Torrance Lovesee, who has a sprained ankle, is stretching with the team, though noticeably limping. Coach Ben Wallis said she is going to try to go and noted that great sports stories are often told through a player overcoming an injury in the biggest moment.
– Bret Bloomquist
What channel is the NCAA volleyball tournament on?
All games in the first two rounds will be streamed on ESPN+.
Carolina volleyball vs UTEP: How do they match up?
North Carolina is led by 6-1 outside hitter Safi Hampton, a first-team all-ACC selection after finishing with a team-high 377 kills. Libero Maddie May, a 5-10 senior, led the team with 422 digs while being named second-team all-conference. Chelsea Thorpe, a 6-3 junior outside hitter, has 299 kills and 83 blocks.
UTEP is led by Torrance Lovesee, who is questionable for this game with an ankle injury, and Sara Pustahija offensively, as they have 320 and 253 kills, respectively. Setters Kalia Kohler and Mattie Gantt quarterback the two-setter offense.
Where is the NCAA volleyball Final Four in 2025?
The Final Four of the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament will be held at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City.
NCAA volleyball tournament rounds schedule
- Second round: Dec. 5-6
- Regionals: Dec. 11 and 13 or Dec. 12 and 14
- Semifinals: Thursday, Dec. 18
- National championship: 3:30 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 21
NCAA volleyball tournament schedule: First round
All times Mountain. Games listed in bracket order
Kentucky Quadrant
- No. 1 Kentucky (25-2) vs. Wofford (17-13), 5 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 8 UCLA (18-12) vs. Georgia Tech (16-13), 2:30 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 5 BYU (22-8) vs. Cal Poly (25-7), 6 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 4 USC (24-6) vs. PrinceTon (18-6), 8:30 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 3 Creighton (25-5) vs. Northern Colorado (17-15), 6 p.m., Thursday
- No. 6 Northern Iowa (25-5) vs. Utah (15-14), 3:30 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 7 Tennessee (20-7) vs. Utah State (23-7), 4:30 p.m., Thursday
- No. 2 Arizona State (26-3) vs. Coppin State (23-11), 7 p.m. MT, Thursday
Texas Quadrant
- No. 1 Texas (23-3) vs. Florida A&M (14-16), 6 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 8 Penn State (18-12) vs. South Florida (17-12), 3:30 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 5 Colorado (22-8) vs. American (24-4), 1 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 4 Indiana (23-7) vs. Toledo (23-10), 3:30 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 3 Wisconsin (24-4) vs. Eastern Illinois (24-7), 6 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 6 UTEP (25-4) vs. North Carolina (21-8), 3:30 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 7 South Dakota State (23-4) vs. Arizona (16-12), 5:30 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 2 Stanford (27-4) vs. Utah Valley (16-10), 8 p.m. MT, Friday
Pitt Quadrant
- No. 1 Pitt (26-4) vs. UMBC (13-11), 4:30 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 8 Xavier (26-4) vs. Michigan (21-10), 2 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 5 Iowa State (22-7) vs. St. Thomas (21-9), 3:30 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 4 Minnesota (22-9) vs. Fairfield (25-5), 6 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 3 Purdue (24-6) vs. Wright State (21-10), 5 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 6 Baylor (17-9) vs. Arkansas State (22-8), 2:30 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 7 Rice (21-9) vs. Florida (15-11), 3 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 2 SMU (25-5) vs. Central Arkansas (18-11), 5:30 p.m. MT, Friday
Nebraska Quadrant
- No. 1 Nebraska (30-0) vs. LIU (20-8), 6 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 8 San Diego (25-4) vs. Kansas State (17-3), 3:30 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 5 Miami (26-5) vs. Tulsa (25-6), 3 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 4 Kansas (22-10) vs. High Point (18-9), 5:30 p.m. MT, Thursday
- No. 3 Texas A&M (23-4) vs. Campbell (23-6), 5:30 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 6 TCU (20-10) vs. Stephen F. Austin (23-7), 3 p.m. MT, Friday
- No. 7 Western Kentucky (27-5) vs. MarquMTte (17-10), 2 p.m. MT,
- No. 2 Louisville (24-6) vs. Loyola Chicago (17-15), 4:30 p.m. MT, Friday
Bret Bloomquist can be reached at bbloomquist@elpasotimes.com; @Bretbloomquist on X.
Sports
Track & Field Hosting Elm City Classic to Begin Indoor Season
Waterville, Maine – The Colby Men’s and Women’s Track & Field teams are ready to kickoff the 2025-26 indoor season hosting the Elm City Classic beginning Friday, December 4th and concluding the following day Saturday, December 5th. On top of the two-day event, distance runners will also compete at Boston Univerisity’s Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener on that Saturday.
In the Elm City Classic, the Mules will compete alongside Thomas, UMaine – Farmington, and Saint Joseph’s with some individuals from the University of Southern Maine.
Head Track & Field Coach Dave Cusano will once again lead the team now entering his 11th season with the Mules. He is assisted by Troy Irvine who has been with the team since the 2019-2020 season. The Track & Field distance runners will be led by Head Coach Jared Beers ’01 in his 21st season coming off an excellent cross country campaign. Beers is assisted by Seth Hasty who joined the program this fall.
Colby Track & Field is coming off a historic year, claiming two NCAA Division III National Championship titles with the women’s indoor 4x400m relay and Levi Biery’s outdoor 400m hurdles performance. 11 individuals were added to the All-American board combined from the indoor and outdoor seasons. As a group the Mules totaled a whopping 22 new school records which they will look to break once again this season.
The annual Elm City Classic will begin at 4:00pm Friday afternoon and continue on Saturday starting at 10:00am. Fans can follow alongside the action using the live video (Saturday only) and live results links as well as check out the schedule tab to catch the Mules when they come to a location near you.
Sports
Watch Wisconsin volleyball in NCAA tournament tonight; time, TV
Dec. 4, 2025, 11:46 a.m. CT
The surging Wisconsin volleyball team begins its NCAA tournament run in a familiar and comfortable setting.
The third-seeded Badgers play Eastern Illinois in a first-round match on Thursday, Dec. 4, at the UW Field House. It’ll follow the matchup between the Texas-El Paso and North Carolina.
As a top-four seed, it’s the seventh straight year, not counting the 2020 COVID season, that coach Kelly Sheffield’s team is hosting the first two rounds of the tournament. And that means good things.
Wisconsin hasn’t lost in these rounds at home during this stretch and is 28-2 all-time at the UW Field House in the NCAA tournament. Overall, for the last 12 seasons under Sheffield, the Badgers have advanced out of the opening weekend and into the regional semifinals every year.
Watch Wisconsin volleyball vs Eastern Illinois on ESPN+The Badgers (24-4), who lost in the reginal finals last season to Nebraska, are also playing their best volleyball of the season over the last month. Since a loss to the No. 1 Huskers on Oct. 31, Wisconsin has won its last nine matches, seven of them sweeps. The Badgers will be playing in their 29th NCAA tournament.
Eastern Illinois (24-7), the Ohio Valley Conference champion, is making just its third trip to the tournament, but the second in three years. And the Panthers are getting familiar with teams from Wisconsin in the tournament. They lost in the first round to Marquette two years ago.
Here’s how to watch and listen to the Wisconsin-Eastern Illinois match in the first round of the 2025 NCAA tournament:
What channel is Wisconsin volleyball vs Eastern Illinois on tonight? TV, livestream
Wisconsin volleyball vs Eastern Illinois time tonight
- Date: Thursday, Dec. 4
- Time: It’s 30 minutes after the 4:30 p.m. first-round match between Texas-El Paso and North Carolina
How can I listen to Wisconsin volleyball vs Eastern Illinois on the radio?
Wisconsin NCAA volleyball tournament schedule
Here’s the schedule for the NCAA volleyball tournament if the Badgers win:
- Dec. 5: Second-round match at UW Field House, 7 p.m. CT
- Dec. 11-14: Regional semifinals and finals at highest-seeded teams, dates and times TBD
- Dec. 18: National semifinals at Kansas City, Missouri
- Dec. 21: National championship match at Kansas City, Missouri
Wisconsin volleyball bracket
Here are the top eight seeds in the Badgers’ region and their first-round opponents. The top four seeds host first- and second-round matches. If the seeds hold after the first two rounds, Wisconsin will play second-seeded Stanford in the regional semifinals.
- Texas, vs. Florida A&M
- Stanford, vs. Utah Valley
- Wisconsin, vs. Eastern Illinois
- Indiana, vs. Toledo
- Colorado, vs. American
- UTEP, vs. North Carolina
- South Dakota State, vs. Arizona
- Penn State, vs. South Florida
2025 NCAA tournament bracket
Nebraska, Kentucky, Texas and Pittsburgh are the No. 1 seeds in the 2025 NCAA tournament.
Here’s the full bracket of the NCAA volleyball tournament
Sports
Wride sisters highlighted as Beaver women’s track and field picked 11th
MINOT, N.D. – The Minot State women’s track and field team was picked to finish 11th at the NSIC Indoor Track and Field Championships later this winter, as the NSIC released its 2025-26 NSIC Women’s Indoor Track & Field Preseason Coaches’ Poll today.
The NSIC also named its Preseason Track and Field Athletes of the Year, and highlighted track and field athletes to watch this season from each team, with Minot State sisters Bailey and Afton Wride being named the Beavers’ track and Beavers’ field athletes to watch, respectively.
“The women’s team should have a nice balance across the sprints, middle distance, jumps, and throws to be competitive at the conference level,” Minot State head coach Jordan Aus said. “We have some upperclassmen with a lot of experience that should be competing at the top of the conference in their respective events.
“I look forward to watching the hard work pay off for this group.”
Minot State, which received 64 points in the poll, opens the indoor season this weekend, competing Saturday at the Mike Thorson Open hosted by the University of Mary. The NSIC Indoor Track and Field Championships will be hosted by Minnesota State, Mankato, on February 28 and March 1.
The host Mavericks were picked to win their 7th straight indoor title.
Two-time NSIC indoor champion Bailey Wride was named the track athlete to watch for the Beavers as the junior from Kalispell, Montana, won the 600 meters in 2024, and the 1,000 meters in 2025.
“Bailey is the returning indoor conference champ in the 1,000 meters, and she will look to continue to be at the top of the conference in the middle-distance events,” Aus said. “Bailey has put in the work this fall and she is ready to have another strong season in the middle-distance events.”
Her younger sister, Afton, a sophomore, was named the Beavers’ field athlete to watch and comes in holding the No. 2 mark in Minot State’s NCAA era in the indoor triple jump (35 feet, 11.25 inches). Afton also was ninth in the triple jump at the NSIC Outdoor Championships last spring with a mark of 37-0.5.
“Afton is coming off a strong outdoor track season in which she made the finals in the triple jump at the conference meet,” Aus said. “She should continue to build off of her strong freshman season and should look to be very competitive at the conference level in the triple jump.”
While the Mavericks were a heavy favorite to win the NSIC title with 14 first-place votes and 196 points, Mary was picked 2nd with one first-place vote and 181 points.
Augustana was picked 3rd with 164 points, Winona State 4th with 150 points, Sioux Falls 5th with 147 points, Northern State 6th with 135 points, Minnesota Duluth 7th with 125 points, Minnesota State Moorhead 8th with 92 points, Southwest Minnesota State 9th with 79 points, Concordia-St. Paul 10th with 68 points, Minot State 11th with 64 points, Bemidji State and Wayne State tied for 12th with 56 points, Jamestown was 14th with 37 points, and St. Cloud State was 15th with 27 points.
Minnesota State’s senior sprinter and hurdler Ashanti Harvey, an NCAA All-American in the 100-meter hurdles outdoors last season, was named the NSIC Track Preseason Athlete of the Year, and the Mavericks’ senior All-American pentathlete, Miranda Lauvstad, was named the NSIC Field Preseason Athlete of the Year.
| RANK | TEAM | POINTS |
| 1 | Minnesota State (14) | 196 |
| 2 | Mary (1) | 181 |
| 3 | Augustana | 164 |
| 4 | Winona State | 150 |
| 5 | Sioux Falls | 147 |
| 6 | Northern State | 135 |
| 7 | Minnesota Duluth | 125 |
| 8 | Minnesota State Moorhead | 92 |
| 9 | Southwest Minnesota State | 79 |
| 10 | Concordia-St. Paul | 68 |
| 11 | Minot State | 64 |
| t12 | Bemidji State | 56 |
| t12 | Wayne State | 56 |
| 14 | Jamestown | 37 |
| 15 | St. Cloud State | 27 |
Sports
Lions announce 2025-26 Track and Field Schedule
COMMERCE – East Texas A&M University has released the 2025-26 track and field schedule on Thursday morning, the first season for the Lions as full members of NCAA Division I.
The Lions are slated to take part in four indoor meets before the Southland Conference Championships and then take part in the NCAA Indoor Championships for the first time in the Division I era. The outdoor season sees the Lions participate in six meets prior to the postseason, which includes the SLC Championships, the NCAA West Regional Championships, and the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
The first meet of the year comes on January 16 at the Owen Hewett Invitational in Norman, Oklahoma, hosted by Oklahoma. The next two meets for the Lions are in College Station with the Ted Nelson Invitational on January 23-24 and then Charlie Thomas Invitational on February 6-7.
The final meet before the conference championships during the indoor portion of the schedule is the Arkansas Qualifier in Fayetteville, Arkansas, on February 25.
The Southland Indoor Championships return to Birmingham, Alabama, on February 25-26. The top qualifiers around the country will advance to the NCAA Indoor Championships, which take place on March 13-14 in Fayetteville.
The Lions begin the outdoor season on March 20-21 at the TCU Alumni Invite in Fort Worth. The annual trip down I-35 is next as the Texas Relays take place in Austin on April 1-4 and the Bobcat Invitational is held in San Marcos on April 2-4.
Another trip down to College Station is next for the 44 Farms Team Invitational on April 9-11, followed by the J. Fred Duckett Twilight on April 25 in Houston, and the final regular season outdoor meet comes on May 8 at the Arkansas Twilight in Fayetteville.
The Southland Outdoor Championships are hosted by SFA in Nacogdoches this year on May 14-16.
Top qualifiers in the western half of the country following the conference championships will advance to the NCAA West Regional Championships in Fayetteville on May 27-30, with the best performers punching their tickets to the NCAA Outdoor Championships held at the historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, on June 10-13.
2025-26 LION TRACK & FIELD SCHEDULE
| DATE | MEET | LOCATION | HOST INSTITUTION |
| Jan. 16 | Owen Hewett Invitational | Norman, Okla. | Oklahoma |
| Jan. 23-24 | Ted Nelson Invitational | College Station | Texas A&M |
| Feb. 6-7 | Charlie Thomas Invitational | College Station | Texas A&M |
| Feb. 20 | Arkansas Qualifier | Fayetteville, Ark. | Arkansas |
| Feb. 25-26 | SLC Indoor Championships | Birmingham, Ala. | Southland Conference |
| March 13-14 | NCAA Indoor Championships | Fayetteville, Ark. | NCAA |
| March 20-21 | TCU Alumni Invite | Fort Worth | TCU |
| April 1-4 | Texas Relays | Austin | Texas |
| April 2-4 | Bobcat Invitational | San Marcos | Texas State |
| April 9-11 | 44 Farms Team Invitational | College Station | Texas A&M |
| April 25 | J. Fred Duckett Twilight | Houston | Rice |
| May 8 | Arkansas Twilight | Fayetteville, Ark. | Arkansas |
| May 14-16 | SLC Outdoor Championships | Nacogdoches | Southland Conference |
| May 27-30 | NCAA West Regional Championships | Fayetteville, Ark. | NCAA |
| June 10-13 | NCAA Outdoor Championships | Eugene, Ore. | NCAA |
-ETAMU-
Sports
WSU Track Heads to Boston Opener
BOSTON, Mass. – Washington State Track will start its indoor season at the Boston Opener on Saturday, December 6th. The meet will be held at the Boston University Track and Tennis Center. The four runners for each team will look to start the year strong against the elite field competing at this event.
Evans Kurui, Solomon Kipchoge will race in the Men’s Elite 5k at 3 pm ET, 12 pm PT. Kutoven Stevens will compete in the Men’s 5000-meter race at 7:10 pm ET, 4:10 pm PT. Zenah Cheptoo, Rosemary Longisa, Nicole Bissell, and Caroline Jepkorir will race in the Women’s 3k at 1 pm ET, 10 am PT. Zenah will also run in the Women’s 5k race beginning at 4:30 pm ET, 1:30 pm PT.
Tickets are $12 and can be purchased at the door or in advance on the Boston University website.
For up-to-date information, follow WSU Track and Field on social media.
-
Rec Sports1 week agoFirst Tee Winter Registration is open
-
Rec Sports1 week agoFargo girl, 13, dies after collapsing during school basketball game – Grand Forks Herald
-
Sports2 weeks agoVolleyball Recaps – November 18
-
Motorsports1 week agoCPG Brands Like Allegra Are Betting on F1 for the First Time
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoF1 Las Vegas: Verstappen win, Norris and Piastri DQ tighten 2025 title fight
-
Sports1 week agoTwo Pro Volleyball Leagues Serve Up Plans for Minnesota Teams
-
Sports1 week agoUtah State Announces 2025-26 Indoor Track & Field Schedule
-
Sports1 week agoTexas volleyball vs Kentucky game score: Live SEC tournament updates
-
Sports1 week agoSycamores unveil 2026 track and field schedule
-
Motorsports1 week agoRedemption Means First Pro Stock World Championship for Dallas Glenn







