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Penn State Harrisburg announces Athletics Hall of Fame Class of 2025

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MIDDLETOWN, Pa. — Four alumni will comprise the Penn State Harrisburg Athletics Hall of Fame Class of 2025. The induction ceremony will take place at the Capital Union Building on Oct. 24, as part of Penn State Harrisburg’s annual “We Are Weekend.”

The purpose of the Penn State Harrisburg Athletics Hall of Fame is to commemorate the achievements of those student-athletes, coaches, administrators and staff who have distinguished themselves through excellence in athletic performance and service. 

The 2025 class, which includes a pair of former student-athletes, a former head coach and one alumnus who both competed and coached, represents eight programs. 

The inductees are:

Jim Baker, Class of 1976 — men’s basketball 

A pioneer during the first decade of Penn State Harrisburg athletics, Jim Baker was the catalyst for the earliest period of success for the men’s basketball program. When the college was still a two-year institution, the Harrisburg native led the Lions to a then-program-record 15 victories — the first double-digit-win season in program history — in 1975-76. He was named the team’s MVP after tallying 644 points and 195 rebounds in 1974-75 and he followed it up by averaging 26.5 points per game the following year. As a senior, he scored 41 points in a victory over Spring Garden and added six 30-point games. After completing his playing career as the program’s all-time leading scorer (1,206 points), Baker served as an assistant under former head coach Fred Baker in 1976-77 before being elevated to head coach for two seasons from 1977-79.  

Danielle Lynch, Class of 2024 — men’s and women’s track and field and cross country 

Helming six programs during her time at Penn State Harrisburg, head coach Danielle Lynch built the men’s and women’s indoor and outdoor track and field programs from scratch beginning with club competition in 2013-14, before ushering the programs into NCAA competition in 2014-15. During her eight-year tenure, men’s and women’s track and field athletes earned one NCAA Division III national championship, six U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) All-America honors, 19 NCAA championship qualifications, two USTFCCCA Regional Athlete of the Year awards. and 46 USTFCCCA All-Region honors. Lynch was named the 2018-19 Capital Athletic Conference (CAC) Women’s Indoor Track and Field Coach of the Year, while her athletes racked up eight conference major awards and captured 25 individual conference championships. Following her success at Penn State Harrisburg, Lynch became director of athletics at Haverford College in 2022 before earning her doctorate from Penn State in 2024.

Kaitlyn (Carmo) Mizanin, Class of 2017 — women’s basketball 

One of the most impactful players of Penn State Harrisburg’s Capital Athletic Conference era, Kaitlyn (Carmo) Mizanin, of Palmyra, completed her career as the program’s all-time leading scorer, amassing 1,168 points. She is one of just two players in program history to rack up 1,000 career points and 500 career rebounds. Her 297 free throws stand as a program record and she ranks in the top three all time in multiple career statistical categories, including points scored, scoring average (11.8), total field goals (372) and 3-point field goals made (127). During her senior campaign, she scored a then-single-game program-record 31 points in a win over Southern Virginia University and added a crucial double-double in a victory over University of Mary Washington later that year. 

Cameron Yon, Class of 2019 — men’s track and field 

One of the most consistent and successful student-athletes in Penn State Harrisburg history, Cameron Yon reached the pinnacle of college athletics when he capped his career by winning the NCAA Division III national championship in the discus throw in 2019. The lone national champion in school history, he burst onto the scene as a freshman in 2016 when he finished third in the discus at the NCAA Outdoor Championships that spring, earning his first all-America honor in the process. The Patuxent River, Maryland, native qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships four times and secured three USTFCCCA All-America honors during his career. Thanks to a record-breaking senior campaign, he was named the USTFCCCA Mid-East Regional Athlete of the Year, the Capital Athletic Conference Male Athlete of the Year and the CAC Outdoor Co-Field Athlete of the Year. Yon earned six USTFCCCA All-Region honors, won a pair of CAC championships and earned two ECAC titles during his career. He holds program records in five events, including the indoor shot put (14.65m) and weight throw (16.88m), as well as the outdoor shot put (13.94m), discus throw (56.27m) and hammer throw (51.10m). 



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Samuel, Kosgei Named to Bowerman Preseason Watch List – New Mexico Lobos

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New Mexico’s Habtom Samuel and Pamela Kosgei will begin the 2026 indoor season among the frontrunners for The Bowerman – annually awarded to the top athlete in collegiate track and field – after both were named to the award’s preseason watch list released on Wednesday.

It’s the first time in UNM history in which both a male and female Lobo athlete open the season on the Bowerman Watch List.

Both athletes are no stranger to the award – Kosgei concluded the 2025 track season as a finalist after sweeping the 5,000m and 10,000m titles outdoors and posting Top-5 all-time collegiate performances in three different events, while Samuel made the watch list multiple times in the last two seasons and made the cut as a semifinalist in 2024. Kosgei was the first Mountain West athlete — man or woman — to be named a finalist.

Samuel and Kosgei both rank among the best in the nation in the indoor 5,000m after strong season-opening marks in Boston in December. Samuel leads the nation with a 13:05.21 clocking, while Kosgei ranks third in the nation with a 15:05.41 time – the duo finished second and third in the event at 2024 NCAA Indoor Championships last March.

Both will be looking to reach the top of the podium for the first time indoors after winning national titles outdoors. Samuel is coming off his first NCAA cross country title after leading the UNM men to a national runner-up team finish in November.

New Mexico gets the spring semester of competition started with the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Invitational Jan. 23-24 at the ABQ Convention Center, with both Samuel and Kosgei expected to compete in the mile. All UNM home meets will be available to stream via FloTrack, with meet day updates, behind-the-scenes content and more at @UNMLoboXCTF on IG and X.

ABOUT THE BOWERMAN
The Bowerman, which debuted in 2009 and is named after former University of Oregon coach Bill Bowerman, is presented annually by the USTFCCCA to the most outstanding male and female athlete in NCAA and NAIA track & field.

Members of The Bowerman Advisory Board produce award watch lists by voting on their current top-10 “who’s who” among collegiate track & field athletes. The “watch list” represents the group’s consensus top 10 for that update. Those “receiving votes” are listed on at least one member’s top 10 but did not garner enough votes to be listed in the consensus top 10. There are a total of eight watch lists during the season.

BOWERMAN RELEASE AND SELECTION SCHEDULE

  • January (first week): Initial meetings of The Bowerman Watch Committees, The Bowerman Men’s and Women’s Preseason Watch Lists published
  • February (first week): First regular-season release of Watch Lists
  • March (post-indoor conference championships): Second regular-season release of Watch Lists
  • March (post-NCAA Indoor Championships): Third regular-season release of Watch Lists
  • April (third full week): Fourth regular-season release of Watch Lists
  • May (first week): Fifth regular-season release of Watch Lists
  • May (post-outdoor conference championships): Sixth regular-season release of Watch Lists
  • June (post-NCAA DI first rounds): Seventh regular-season release of Watch Lists
  • June (post-NCAA DI Outdoor Championship finals): Release of award semifinalists
  • June: Meeting of Bowerman Advisory Board to select three male and three female finalists
  • June: The Bowerman Men’s and Women’s Finalists announced
  • June: The Bowerman ballots delivered to The Bowerman Voters
  • July: The Bowerman voting closes
  • December: The Bowerman winners announced



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Air Force Track & Field Announces 2026 Coaching Staff

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USAF ACADEMY, Colo. – Ryan Cole, Air Force’s director of track & field and cross country, announced several additions to the 2026 coaching staff this morning (Jan. 8), with the hiring of assistant coach Dan Stoll and the return of several familiar faces to the Falcons’ program.
 
Stoll, who will oversee the Falcons’ sprint, hurdle and relay squads, joins the Academy program following a successful athletic and coaching career at the NCAA DIII level. A three-time All-American and 11-time all-conference athlete at Heidelberg University, Stoll coached six All-Americans and 33 all-conference performers during stops at North Park University (assistant coach, 2023-25) and North Central College (graduate assistant, 2022-23).
 
In addition to Stoll, Air Force’s 2026 staff will include two Academy graduates and one former assistant coach. 1Lt Michelle Roca, a 2022 USAFA graduate and the program record-holder in the 400-meter hurdles, will assist with the Falcons’ hurdle squad, while serving at nearby Schriever SFB. 1Lt AJ Kedge (Class of 2023) will continue to serve as the program’s recruiting coordinator and assist with the distance squad. Currently stationed at Hanscom AFB, Kedge will be returning to USAFA this spring. Scott Irving, who oversaw the Falcons’ throwing program for 14 years (1999-2013) and was the coach behind Air Force’s two NCAA titles in the javelin, will rejoin the staff to assist the squad’s current lineup of javelin throwers.
 
The remainder of the Falcons’ track and field staff includes Cole (men’s middle distance, distance), head coach Scott Steffan (jumps, combined events), assistant coach Laura Bowerman (women’s middle distance, distance), and assistant coach Kyle Lillie (rotational throws), while former cross country coach Mark Stanforth will continue to assist with the distance program.
 

 



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Former Maryland AD Dick Dull Passes Away

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Back in athletics 

Dull’s professional fortunes turned around in 1995 when he became athletic director at the University of Nebraska Kearney, a Division II school. In 1998 he took the same position at Moravian College, a Division III school in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. He returned to Division I sports when he became athletic director at Cal State Northridge in May 1999.

Dull worked at Northridge until 2007, when he moved back east to take the athletic director’s job at Belmont Abbey College, a Division III school near Charlotte, North Carolina. He held the job through the summer of 2008. 

Dull never returned to College Park to attend a Maryland basketball game after he resigned as athletic director But he did see the team play in the NCAA Elite Eight at Stanford University in 2001. Then-Maryland Athletic Director Debbie Yow gave Dull tickets to the game. He said he enjoyed seeing old friends, such as broadcaster Johnny Holliday and former Sports Information Director Jack Zane. “You reach a point where you hold resentment and you hurt yourself,” he explained. “I’m a stronger person now because of it. I look at the horizon, and say ‘It can’t get any worse than that.’ ”

Dull tried to return to Maryland as an athletics administrator in 2008 when he interviewed for the position of executive director of the M Club. Nelligan, the long-time women’s gymnastics coach, served on the search committee. “Everybody loved his presentation,” says Nelligan. “And I thought he would have been a very strong candidate to unite that part of the department. But I also felt that he would always have to answer questions about Lenny. His legacy will always be tied to that.”

Dull was not selected. After giving his presentation, Dull stopped by Nelligan’s office and the two old friends talked for about an hour. Dull wanted to know how Nelligan was doing personally and asked for updates on mutual friends. A short time later, Dull sent a letter to Nelligan, thanking him for a tour of Comcast Center and making sure his buddy was OK with the fact that he didn’t get the job. “He’s had to live with this Bias thing for a long time,” Nelligan says. “He does deserve to live with some closure.”

In late 2009, during a phone conversation I had with Dull, he asked when I would write his book, saying that his story has never been told. In  2010, when I decided to write my book about the legacy of Bias–the first person I called was Dull.

When he said he would cooperate I felt invigorated about the project. He had not talked at length about how the death of Bias had impacted him. I trusted his perspective and wisdom and felt he would talk with intelligent, measured introspection about how the Bias death affected his life, and provide insight into how the athletic department dealt with the tragedy. “It’s about time the real story was told,” he told me.

But after we had several discussions on how to proceed, Dull surprised me with an email in May 2010, saying he would not participate, that he needed to continue to put “this saga behind [me].” I was disappointed, but I understood his decision. I knew from brief discussions I had with Dull during the late 1980s and into the 1990s how difficult the transition was for him after Bias died. Dull and I did have a lengthy, but incomplete discussion about the Bias death in 2003 for my first book about Maryland athletics, Tales from the Maryland Terrapins, and those comments are used in the book and in this story.

In August 2010, Dull accepted a position as a project manager in the athletic department at Hood College in Frederick, Maryland, about 45 minutes from College Park. He helped raise funds for new athletic facilities at the school. The man who hired him, Hood athletic director Gib Romaine, was the defensive coordinator for Ross at Maryland and was later a fundraiser there. 

In April 2011, Dull attended a reunion of former Maryland athletic department employees, some of whom had worked with him in the 1980s, at a Ledo Restaurant in College Park. It marked the first time I had seen Dull in about a quarter of a century. Typically, he mingled mostly in the background, quietly chatting with friends. And typically, he offered comfort when I asked him if he was okay with me moving forward with the book. He encouraged me to complete the project. We talked little else about it, preferring to focus instead on positive memories we both shared from our days at Maryland. 

Costello also attended that reunion. This week he recalled fond memories of Dull. “I’m a very type “A’ person, but Dick was always very calm,” he said. As an example, Costello told of how the two approached a conflict differently during a track team practice when Costello was head coach. “We had signs all over the track saying it was closed during our practice,” said Costello. “A guy was jogging in lane 1 and I told him the track was closed. He kept going. I’m getting a little pissed. I said, listen buddy, it’s your last lap. Dick walked up to me and said, ‘calm down, it looks like he’s not going to be running much longer.” Soon after the runner left the track. 

Dull enjoyed photography, often traveling long distances to attend Formula 1 auto races, documenting the trip with his camera. For a time Dull traveled alone annually to Reykjavik, Iceland. He told me once that the city was his favorite place to visit. 

Costello recalled he never once saw Dull wear a pair of jeans. “Even when we went fishing, he’d wear Izod shirts,” he said, with a laugh. Dull worked as a proctor when he lived with other athletes in Ritchie Coliseum. And Costello recalled the time Dull turned him in to coach Kehoe for violating a team rule. “He wasn’t rowdy at all,” said Costello. “And he coached the way he lived. Very technical and smooth.”

The job at Hood College was Dull’s last. Shortly before his wife Sally passed away in 2016, Dull moved back to Charlotte to live near his stepson, Erik, and his family.



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#SVLeague 🇯🇵: ONE TO WATCH FOR WOLFDOGS 🐺 In his first season with Wolfdogs Nagoya 🐺, Aymen Bouguerra 🇹🇳 adds flexibility to the Wolfdogs’ system, with impact at the net and from the back row 💥. One to keep an eye on as they face Tokyo Greatbears 🐻 this weekend. 🗓️ Jan 10 & 11 📺 LIVE on VBTV: https://bit.ly/3Bjc3Ui 🏐 #Volleyball

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#SVLeague 🇯🇵: ONE TO WATCH FOR WOLFDOGS 🐺</p> <p>In his first season with Wolfdogs Nagoya 🐺, Aymen Bouguerra 🇹🇳 adds flexibility to the Wolfdogs’ system, with impact at the net and from the back row 💥. One to keep an eye on as they face Tokyo Greatbears 🐻 this weekend.</p> <p>🗓️ Jan 10 & 11 | 5AM GMT<br /> 📺 LIVE on VBTV: https://bit.ly/3Bjc3Ui</p> <p>🏐 #Volleyball | Volleyball World



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Four Big 12 Track and Field Athletes Named to The Bowerman Preseason Watch List

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BYU’s Jane Hedengren and James Corrigan, Oklahoma State’s Brian Musau and Texas Tech’s Jonathan Seremes were named to The Bowerman preseason watch list by the U.S. Track & Field Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA), ahead of the start of the indoor track and field season.

BYU’s Hedengren became the first freshman named to the men’s or women’s preseason watch list since LSU’s Mondo Duplantis in 2019. The Provo native debuts on the list after running 14:44.79 in the indoor 5,000m, breaking the women’s indoor collegiate record of 14:52.57 set by Alabama’s Doris Lemngole in 2024. Hedengren is the fourth BYU women to make the list.

Corrigan, a semifinalist last season, returns after winning the NCAA outdoor 3,000m steeplechase title. He also earned 2025 USTFCCCA Mountain Region Men’s Track Athlete of the Year.

Musau, a semifinalist from last year, returns to The Bowerman Watch list after winning the NCAA indoor 3,000m and 5,000m titles and the NCAA outdoor 5,000m title. He was also named the 2025 Outdoor USTFCCCA Midwest Region Athlete of the Year.

Texas Tech’s Seremes debuts on The Bowerman Watch list after winning the NCAA indoor triple jump title. He capped his season by representing France at the World Athletics Championships. Seremes becomes the eighth Red Raider man named to the list.

TCU’s Indya Mayberry received votes on the women’s side.

 





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Six Gators Featured on MLV Rosters for the 2026 Season

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Major League Volleyball (MLV) kicks off its 2026 regular season on Thursday, Jan. 8 with six former Gators on a roster across the nine teams.

Carli Snyder and Rhamat Alhassan, both of whom appeared in Florida’s 2017 national championship match, reunite on the Grand Rapids Rise. Former Gator teammates Anna Dixon and Elli McKissock join the Atlanta Vibe, while Marlie Monserez, who led the Vibe’s offense for the past two seasons, signed with the San Diego Mojo for the 2026 season. After making her professional debut with Indy Ignite last season, Isabel Martin will join the Dallas Pulse in its inaugural campaign.

Dixon, McKissock and the Atlanta Vibe host both of their opening-weekend matches, welcoming the Columbus Fury on Thursday before facing Snyder and Alhassan on Sunday, Jan. 10. Snyder and Alhassan will first return to their college state for the Rise’s 2026 debut against the Orlando Valkyries on Friday, Jan. 9.

Monserez makes her Mojo debut on Thursday in Omaha against the Supernovas before returning to her home state on Sunday, Jan. 11 to face the Orlando Valkyries.

Martin faces her former team on Saturday, Jan. 10 in the Pulse’s first-ever match.

MLV’s 2026 schedule can be found here.

Major League Volleyball, entering its third season, is the longest-running formal professional volleyball league for women in the United States. Designed to elevate the sport through world class competition, commercial innovation, and cultural relevance, MLV brings together elite athletes, visionary leadership and global ambition. With alignment to USA Volleyball and a commitment to Olympic development, MLV serves as the premier pathway from professional play to the world stage. For more information, visit ProVolleyball.com.

 

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