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Padres minors

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Padres minors

Two big-leaguers took significant steps toward returns on Saturday.

Jackson Merrill went 2-for-3 with a walk and a run scored in his first rehab game with Double-A San Antonio, while Jake Cronenworth went 1-for-3 in a rehab game in the rookie-level Arizona Complex League Padres’ opener.

Merrill played seven innings in center field before he replaced by Wyatt Hoffman. Merrill could return from his hamstring strain as soon as Monday in New York against the Yankees.

Cronenworth also played seven innings, at second base, in his first rehab game. He is aiming to return from his nondisplaced fractured rib on Friday in Denver against the Rockies.

AROUND THE FARM

El Paso (AAA): OF Yonathan Peralta’s 39 hits through Friday were tied for fourth in minor league baseball. The switch-hitter has a .355/.405/.564 batting line in 27 games.

San Antonio (AA): LHP Jackson Wolf is thriving in his second stint in the organization. He had a 6.66 ERA in 102 2/3 innings across stints with El Paso and San Antonio last year, but he’s struck out 31 in 25 innings (3.24 ERA) to start 2025 in the Texas League. Wolf, 26, was included in the August 2023 trade that fetched LHP Rich Hill and 1B Ji Man Choi from the Pirates. The Padres reacquired Wolf before the 2024 season for minor league INF Kervin Pichardo.

Fort Wayne (A+): 3B Rosman Verdugo, 20, hit a career-high 10 homers in 106 games last year and is already at six through 23 games in the Midwest League. Verdugo is hitting .247/.333/.565 with 10 walks and 32 strikeouts.

Lake Elsinore (A): OF Kasen Wells is tied for third in the minors with 20 stolen bases in 21 attempts. The 21-year-old is hitting .305/.416/.421 with one homer, seven RBIs and 14 walks against 21 strikeouts in 24 games to start his career. Wells was selected in the 16th round last year out of Weatherford Junior College in Texas. He did not play after the draft.

ORGANIZATIONAL LEADERS

(Through Friday; Minimum 52 plate appearances or 20 innings)

  • AVG: .356 – OF Bryce Johnson (AAA)
  • OBP: .500 – SS Ryan Jackson (A)
  • SLG: .603 – SS Leo De Vries (A+)
  • HRs: 6 – C Luis Campusano (AAA), 3B Rosman Verdugo (A+)
  • RBIs: 27 – 1B Trenton Brooks (AAA), OF Yonathan Perlaza (AAA)
  • SBs: 20 – OF Kasen Wells (A)
  • Wins: 4 – RHP Garrett Hawkins (A+)
  • ERA: 1.40 – RHP Enmanuel Pinales (A+)
  • Ks: 31 – LHP Jackson Wolf (AA)
  • WHIP: 0.80 – Wolf
  • K/BB: 10.3 – Wolf
  • Saves: 5 – RHP Reiss Knehr (AAA)

Saturday’s scoreboard

TRIPLE-A EL PASO (14-18)

Chihuahuas 4, Oklahoma City 2: LHP Kyle Hart (1.93 ERA) walked five and allowed two runs — one earned — on three hits in 4⅔ innings. He struck out four. RHP Raul Brito (2-2, 7.07 ERA) recorded four outs without giving up a run, RHP Ron Marinaccio (4.15 ERA) struck out two over two scoreless innings and RHP Reiss Knehr (3.60 ERA) saved his fifth game with a scoreless ninth. 3B Mike Brosseau (.716 OPS) hit his third homer. RF Tim Locastro (1.038 OPS), DH Yonathan Perlaza (.954 OPS) and C Cody Roberts (.788 OPS) all had doubles.

DOUBLE-A SAN ANTONIO (13-13)

Missions 4, Corpus Christi 1: RF Joshua Mears (.586 OPS) hit his third homer. 3B Devin Ortiz (.803 OPS) went 2-for-4 with an RBI and a run scored and C Anthony Vilar (.735 OPS) went 2-for-4 with a stolen base. LHP Jagger Haynes (4.74 ERA) struck out nine and allowed on run on two hits and a walk in 4 ⅔ innings in the start. RHP Stephen Jones (1-0, 1.69 ERA) struck out two while recording four outs for the win. RHP Manuel Castro (0.77 ERA) saved his second game with a scoreless ninth.

HIGH SINGLE-A FORT WAYNE (15-11)

TinCaps 2, Dayton 0: RHP Isaiah Lowe (1-2, 6.59 ERA) struck out five while scattering one hit and three walks over five scoreless innings in the win. LHP Harry Gustin (2.33 ERA) saved his second game with four strikeouts over four no-hit innings. RF Jacob Campbell (.651 OPS) went 2-for-3 with his first homer and two RBIs. 1B Addison Kopack (.572 OPS) hit a triple and SS Brandon Butterworth (.774 OPS) hit a double.

LOW SINGLE-A LAKE ELSINORE (10-16)

Inland Empire 6, Storm 2: RHP Bryan Balzer (0-2, 6.75 ERA) allowed four runs in 4 ⅔ innings in the loss. CF Alex McCoy (.741 OPS) went 2-for-4 with a double and an RBI. C Lamar King Jr. (.800 OPS) and LF Kaden Hollow (.822 OPS) also both had doubles.

ROOKIE ACL PADRES (0-1)

Rangers 4, Padres 3: RHP Kannon Kemp (6.75 ERA) walked five and allowed three runs on one hit in four innings in his professional debut. SS Yimy Tovar went 2-for-4 with two runs scored. Entering the game as a pinch-hitter, Kale Fountain went 1-for-1 with a walk and an RBI in his pro debut.

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910Preps Fayetteville’s high school volleyball all-stars 2025

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Dec. 23, 2025, 4:03 a.m. ET

Gray’s Creek’s Taylor Baggett’s senior season was one for the record books.

The Bears’ outside hitter and defensive specialist capped her high school career with a dominant final season that helped Gray’s Creek get to put together a ground-breaking year as the first high school volleyball team in school and county history to make it to an NCHSAA Final Four.



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St. Olaf records second-highest fall finish in Learfield Directors’ Cup

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CLEVELAND, Ohio – St. Olaf College recorded its second-highest-ever finish in the fall standings of the Learfield Directors’ Cup by placing 15th out of 429 NCAA Division III institutions, as the standings were announced on Tuesday by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA).

St. Olaf accumulated 241.0 points – its second-highest total ever in the fall – to rank 15th out of the 178 NCAA Division III institutions who earned points this fall. The initial release of the standings included all of the fall results except for the championship game of the NCAA Division III Football Championship. Neither of the institutions competing in the football title game can surpass St. Olaf regardless of the outcome of that game.

The Learfield Directors’ Cup is a program that honors institutions maintaining a broad-based athletics program, awarding points based on each institution’s national finishes in the NCAA Championships. This fall, St. Olaf’s men’s cross country, women’s cross country, men’s soccer, and women’s volleyball teams contributed to St. Olaf’s point total.

Men’s soccer earned 83 points by advancing to the national semifinals for the second time in program history. Men’s cross country collected 63 points thanks to its 13th-place finish at the NCAA Division III Cross Country Championships. Volleyball added 50 points with its second-round appearance in the NCAA Division III Women’s Volleyball Championship, while women’s cross country picked up 45 points after placing 29th nationally.

This year marked the sixth consecutive fall that St. Olaf has finished among the top 30 institutions in NCAA Division III, with the 15th-place finish being one spot shy of the t-14th finish in 1996-97 for the highest in school history. It was also St. Olaf’s sixth top-20 and eighth top-25 fall finish in the history of the Learfield Directors’ Cup, which first included NCAA Division III in 1995-96.



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Spencer McLachlin Named Women’s Volleyball Head Coach

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LA JOLLA, Calif. – UC San Diego Director of Athletics Andy Fee has announced the hiring of Spencer McLachlin as the Tritons’ new women’s volleyball head coach. McLachlin becomes the eighth head coach in program history. The 2026 season will mark UC San Diego’s final in The Big West before the program transitions to the West Coast Conference prior to the 2027 campaign.
 
“Spencer brings exactly what we need at this moment. He’s helped build winning programs, developed All-Americans, and knows how to compete at the highest level,” Fee said. “His playing career at Stanford and coaching experience at Hawaii, Cal, UCLA, Indiana, and USC give him a deep understanding of what championship volleyball looks like in major conferences. But what really stood out was his approach to the whole scholar-athlete experience. He gets what we’re building here at UC San Diego as we establish ourselves in Division I and look ahead to the West Coast Conference. Our scholar-athletes are going to love playing for him, and I’m confident he’ll have this program competing for championships.” 

McLachlin recently completed his third season as an associate head coach for the USC women’s volleyball program. He helped lead the Women of Troy to 25 wins, a fourth-place finish in the ultra-competitive Big Ten, and an NCAA second round appearance. The 2025 team placed six on all-conference teams. In 2024, the Trojans advanced to the second round of the NCAA tournament for the third straight year and finished 22-10 overall with a 13-7 mark in the Big Ten (tied for sixth). Setter Mia Tuaniga was named to the AVCA All-America third team. In his first season with the Women of Troy, McLachlin helped USC go 19-13 with a 12-8 mark in Pac-12 matches for a fifth-place finish. Outside hitter Skylar Fields was honored with AVCA All-America first-team recognition.

 

“I am thrilled to join UC San Diego as the Head Coach of the women’s volleyball program,” McLachlin said. “This is an incredible opportunity for my family and me to be part of an historic and beautiful university and build a program with great potential. I want to thank Andy Fee for trusting my family and me with this role, for his commitment to supporting the future of Triton athletics, and for his vision of the volleyball program specifically. His leadership and commitment to excellence make this an exciting time to be part of the UC San Diego athletic department. Go Tritons!”

Previously, McLachlin served as the associate head coach at Indiana in 2022 where he was responsible for coordinating the defense and blocking. The Hoosiers were 16-16 and went 9-11 in the Big Ten to finish eighth in the conference standings. IU’s nine conference victories were its most since 2010 and the team had its highest finish since the Big Ten expanded to 14 teams (2014).

 

Prior to Indiana, McLachlin was an assistant coach for the UCLA men’s volleyball program for four years, from 2018-2021. He has also had experience coaching at the international level with the U.S. men’s national team where he was on staffs for squads which competed in the Pan American Cup and NORCECA Champions cup.

 

Before he joined the UCLA men’s program, McLachlin spent two seasons (2016-17) as an assistant coach at California for the Golden Bears’ women’s team. In 2017, he was named to the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) Thirty Under 30 list, an honor presented to up-and-coming coaching talents across all levels of volleyball. McLachlin got his start in coaching as an assistant for the men’s volleyball program at Hawai’i. During his time with the Warriors, the team earned a bid to the NCAA tournament for the first time in 13 seasons.

 

As a student-athlete, McLachlin competed at Stanford from 2008-11 as an outside hitter. He won a national championship with the Cardinal in 2010 and finished his career among the program’s all-time leaders in kills with 1,288. McLachlin was a senior captain, an All-MPSF second team selection, and received MPSF all-academic team recognition three times.

 

McLachlin graduated from Stanford with a degree in political science in 2011 and completed a Master of Education in 2012 while serving as a club coach for the Bay-to-Bay Volleyball Club.

 

As a professional athlete, McLachlin was an outside hitter for Mas NIKI Aiginio in Greece for three years from 2012 to 2014.

 

McLachlin and his wife Diane have three children: daughters Leila and Malia, and a son, Koa.

 

About UC San Diego Athletics

After two decades as one of the most successful programs in NCAA Division II, the UC San Diego intercollegiate athletics program has begun a new era as a member of The Big West in NCAA Division I. The 24-sport Tritons earned 30 team and nearly 150 individual national championships during its time in Divisions II and III and helped guide 1,400 scholar-athletes to All-America honors. A total of 83 Tritons have earned Academic All-America honors, while 38 have garnered prestigious NCAA Post Graduate Scholarships. UC San Diego scholar-athletes exemplify the academic ideals of one of the world’s preeminent institutions, graduating at an average rate of 90 percent, the highest rate among public institutions in NCAA Division I or II. For more information on the Tritons, visit UCSDtritons.com or follow UC San Diego Athletics on social media @UCSDtritons.

 



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Hawaii men’s volleyball ranked No. 2 to start season

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JAMM AQUINO / APRIL 26
                                Hawaii men’s volleyball coach Charlie Wade guided the Rainbow Warriors to 27 wins and a Big West Conference championship last season.

JAMM AQUINO / APRIL 26

Hawaii men’s volleyball coach Charlie Wade guided the Rainbow Warriors to 27 wins and a Big West Conference championship last season.

The Hawaii men’s volleyball team will open its 2026 season in 10 days ranked No. 2 in the country according to the AVCA National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll released today.

The Rainbow Warriors, who finished 27-6 last season and won a Big West championship before losing in the semifinals of the NCAA Championship, received seven of 25 first-place votes and was eight points behind No. 1 UCLA, which ended Hawaii’s season in a three-set sweep in Columbus, Ohio in May.

Defending national champion Long Beach State received five first-place votes and is ranked No. 3 going into the season, ahead of Pepperdine and No. 5 Southern California, which earned the final first-place vote.

The other Big West teams in the top 20 include No. 6 UC Irvine, No. 10 UC San Diego, No. 11 Cal State Northridge and No. 17 UC Santa Barbara.

UH’s nonconferene schedule includes home matches on Jan. 6 and 8 against No. 7 Loyola Chicago and road trips at No. 9 Stanford and No. 13 Penn State.

Hawaii also hosts the fourth-ranked Waves and will play No. 12 Lewis and the top-ranked Bruins in the Outrigger Invitational.

A four-team NIL Tournament in currently scheduled for Feb. 19 and 20 in the Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif., and will feature four of the top five teams in the poll.

Hawaii lost starters Kurt Nusterer and ‘Eleu Choy to graduation last season but return its top four leaders in kills as well as junior setter Tread Rosenthal.

Rosenthal was named to the All-Big West first team along with returning sophomores Adrien Roure and Kristian Titriyski.

UH opens the season against NJIT on Friday, Jan. 2, 2026, at 7 p.m. at Bankoh Arena at Stan Sheriff Center.




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Wisconsin lands at No. 8 in Fall Learfield Directors’ Cup

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MADISON, Wis. – The National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics and LEARFIELD released its Fall Division I Learfield Directors’ Cup standings this Tuesday, with Wisconsin placing eighth after a another successful fall season.

The Badgers finished the season with 236.00 points, within 10 points of Georgetown, Colorado and BYU who finished in seventh, sixth and fifth, respectively. North Carolina finished as the top program with 359.00 points.

This is the third straight fall season where the Badgers have finished within the top-ten schools. UW also was the Big Ten’s top finisher, edging out Washington at No. 10 overall with 228.00 points

Wisconsin’s point total was bolstered this fall by a final four appearance from the volleyball team, led by AVCA All-American Mimi Colyer. The team made its third final-four appearance in the past five seasons, compiling a 28-5 overall record, including a 13-1 stretch in its last 14 matches. Wisconsin finished as the third-ranked volleyball team in Learfield standings, coming up with 83 points.

The men’s cross country team contributed the second most points with 55, after a third place NCAA regional placement led to a 19th place finish at the NCAA Championships in Columbia, Missouri. Liam Newhart led the team with 29:28.5 time at the 10K Gans Creek Cross Country Course.

The Badgers were rewarded 50 points from their women’s soccer team after clincing their third straight NCAA Tournament appearance. Wisconsin took down three top-10 ranked teams on its way to a 14-6-2 record, peaking with a 3-2 overtime victory over Western Michigan in NCAAs. The Badgers finished the season as the 17th ranked women’s soccer program in the standings.

Additionally, the women’s cross country competed at the NCAA Championships in their fifth consecutive appearance in the final meet of the season. The unit finished in 26th place, providing 48 points to round out the scoring for the Badgers.

The Learfield Directors’ Cup was developed as a joint effort between the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) and USA Today. Points are awarded based on each institution’s finish in NCAA Championships.

Wisconsin’s history in the LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup can be viewed here.

 



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Lauren Lee’s Volleyball Journey to 5,000-Assist Milestone Started at the Beach

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Lauren Lee’s journey to an unprecedented 5,000 career assists for the Hope College volleyball team began on the beach.

The standout Hope setter often traveled to sandy courts with her family as a child. Lee did not need to look far for inspiration to pick up the sport — or to decide where she wanted to play.

“I started playing volleyball because my dad played at the University of Michigan. He was a setter on their men’s team,” Lee said of her father, Dr. Stan Lee, an orthopaedic spine surgeon at Lucent Spine, PLLC, Specialists in Spine Surgery, in the Detroit area. “I grew up watching him play beach volleyball with his friends. I became a setter because of my dad’s passion for the position and the game. He showed me all the tricky things you can do as a setter and how impactful the position can be.”

Lee, a biology major, closed an outstanding four-year career for the Flying Dutch that included numerous individual achievements:

  • 5,001 career assists over 129 matches, a school record;
  • four All-America selections from the American Volleyball Coaches Association;
  • four All-MIAA First Team honors, including Most Valuable Player as a senior and Freshman of the Year in 2022;
  • one AVCA Freshman of the Year award.

Lee played a central role in an exceptional four-year stretch for Hope volleyball.

The Flying Dutch finished as national runner-up in 2023, reached the national semifinals in 2024 and advanced to the national quarterfinals in 2022. Hope earned three consecutive MIAA regular-season championships for the second time in program history and captured back-to-back MIAA Tournament titles for the first time.

 

Setting the Table

In all, Lee set the table for the Flying Dutch’s success, head coach Becky Schmidt said.

“I’m super proud of Lauren — 5,000 assists is absolutely huge,” Schmidt said. “She’s an incredible setter and just does so much for us. It’s been so much fun to watch.”

Schmidt believes Hope benefited greatly from Lee playing for the Flying Dutch.

“If she were four or five inches taller, she’d be playing in the Big Ten and doing really great things,” Schmidt said. “I am so thankful for her contributions over her four years. She has done really great things.”

Lee is grateful she chose Hope four years ago as well. While the team’s accomplishments have been rewarding and the individual accolades and milestones bring pride, she said they happened because of the people she played with.

“I am super proud of myself, but more importantly, I am thankful for the help of my team for the past four years,” Lee said. “The primary reason I have been able to reach 5,000 assists is because of the amazing hitters who have put the ball away, the passers who have handled serves and swings so that I can have full offensive autonomy, and the coaching staff who has helped us extend our season as long as possible every year.

“I am humbled and grateful to receive the credit and praise, but this milestone is truly a product of a team effort.”

The journey to 5,000 collegiate assists — and so much more — started with logging countless hours on the beach as a young fan.

Like her father, Lee has shown others how to set and assist teammates on the court. It’s a shared family passion.

“I just love the feeling of chasing down the ball and fixing plays,” Lee said. “When it’s perfect, I love setting others up for success because I know I can’t hit the ball as hard as Kamryn Burbridge or Ella Contant. It’s so awesome to see someone hit the ball as hard as possible.”

 



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