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Penn State Track and Field Teams Conclude Larry Ellis Invitational – Penn State

PRINCETON, N.J. – The Penn State men’s and women’s track and field teams finished their last away meet of the outdoor regular season after collecting nine personal records marks on Saturday at Princeton’s Larry Ellis Invitational.   TOP PERFORMANCES   While the Nittany Lions competed at the Larry Ellis Invitational, Maddie Pitts competed in the heptathlon at […]

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PRINCETON, N.J. – The Penn State men’s and women’s track and field teams finished their last away meet of the outdoor regular season after collecting nine personal records marks on Saturday at Princeton’s Larry Ellis Invitational.  

TOP PERFORMANCES  

While the Nittany Lions competed at the Larry Ellis Invitational, Maddie Pitts competed in the heptathlon at the Jim Green Invitational at the University of Kentucky Friday and Saturday. Pitts compiled a score of 5,603 to take over the No. 5 spot in program history. Pitts won three out of the seven events: 100-meter hurdles (13.56), high jump (1.65m, 5-5) and 800-meter race (2:16.25).  

The men’s and women’s 200 and 400-meter runner groups dominated on day two of the Larry Ellis Invitational. Zoey Goldstein collected a second-place finish in the 200-meter, clocking in at 24.18. The trio of Lauren Princz, Mimi Duffy and Alexandria North all recorded new PRs. Princz finished third (24.31), Duffy finished in eighth (24.71) and North finished in 10th (24.95) place. 

Goldstein also collected a third-place finish In the women’s 400-meter race, clocking in at 54.35, while North, Duffy and Harriett Healey all set PRs. North finished in fourth (54.81), Duffy finished in ninth (56.07) and Healey finished in 12th (56.80).  

Jake Palermo won both the 200 and 400-meter races. Palermo finished in 21.11 to set a new PR in the 200-meter while he finished in 46.57 in the 400-meter. Three more runners finished within the top 10 in the 400-meter race: Max DeAngelo (second; 47.23), James Onwuka (third; 47.33) and Joshua Stolarski (10th; 48.51).  

Emi Erekosima set a new PR of 15.29m (50-2) in the men’s triple jump after finishing in second.  

TRACK EVENTS 

Women’s 100-meter  

  • Maddie Soderqvist finished in 13th place at 14.94 

Women’s 100-meter Hurdles 

Women’s 200-meter  

  • Goldstein finished in second place at 24.18 
  • Princz finished in third place at 24.31 to set a new PR 
  • Duffy finished in eighth at 24.71 to set a new PR 
  • North finished in 10th place at 24.95 to set a new PR  

 Women’s 400-meter  

  • Goldstein finished in third place at 54.35 
  • North finished in fourth place to set a new PR of 54.81 
  • Duffy finished in ninth place to set a new PR of 56.07 
  • Healey finished in 12th place to set a new PR of 56.80  

Women’s 400-meter Hurdles 

  • Addy White finished in second place at 1:01.50  

Men’s 100-meter  

 Men’s 200-meter 

  • Palermo won the event, clocking in at 21.11 to set a new PR 
  • Onwuka placed seventh in 21.75 
  • Stolarski placed ninth in 21.82 to set a new PR  

Men’s 400-meter  

  • Palermo won the event at a time of 46.57 
  • DeAngelo placed second at a time of 47.23 
  • Onwuka placed third at a time of 47.33 
  • Stolarski placed 10th at a time of 48.51 

Men’s 400-meter Hurdles  

FIELD EVENT SUMMARY   

Women’s Pole Vault 

 Women’s High Jump 

  • Hannah Riolo and Gwen Cudmore tied for seventh place, recording a 1.71m (5-7 ¼) jump 

Men’s Pole Vault 

Men’s High Jump 

  • Robert Allen finished in second place with a 2.05m (6-8 ¾) jump 
  • Timothy Watson finished in 10th place with a 2.00m (6-6 ¾) jump  

Men’s Triple Jump 

  • Erekosima placed second, recording a 15.29m (50-2) jump to set a new PR 

UP NEXT 

The Penn State track and field teams will host their only home meet of the outdoor regular season on Friday, May 9, at the Jim Thorpe Invitational.  

FOLLOW THE NITTANY LIONS  

Follow along with the team on our social media pages on Facebook (PennStateTFXC) and X/Instagram (@pennstatetfxc). 



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Paracanoe programme and quotas confirmed for Paralympic Games LA28

Courtesy canoeicf.com The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) has confirmed 10 medal events in the Paralympic Games LA28 programme.  The International Canoe Federation has welcomed the IPC Governing Board’s decision that will see gender equality achieved again in terms of medal events and athlete quotas. Medals will be up for grabs in six kayak and four […]

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Courtesy canoeicf.com

The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) has confirmed 10 medal events in the Paralympic Games LA28 programme. 

The International Canoe Federation has welcomed the IPC Governing Board’s decision that will see gender equality achieved again in terms of medal events and athlete quotas.

Medals will be up for grabs in six kayak and four va’a events, with 100 athlete quotas — 50 male and 50 female — on offer for LA28.

Programme  

  • Men: KL1, KL2, KL3, VL2, VL3
  • Women: KL1, KL2, KL3, VL2, VL3

The move comes after the resounding success of Paris 2024, where five men’s and five women’s events made it the biggest Paracanoe programme at a Paralympic Games.

The continuity shows the global nature of Paracanoe, with all five continents featuring on the medals table of the Paralympic Games for the first time at Paris 2024.

Among the many firsts in Paris was the victory of Algerian Brahim Guendouz, who stormed to the men’s KL3 gold medal in France, a first at the Games for the African continent.

Joining Algeria in a first medal at the Games was China’s Yongyuan Zhong, who claimed bronze in the women’s VL3.

The ICF Canoe Sprint and Paracanoe World Cup in Poznan, Poland, last month saw the return of Paracanoe more than eight months after the Paralympic Games.

The integration of Paracanoe with Canoe Sprint at ICF events not only recognises the excellence of athletes with disabilities but also increases awareness and exposure, especially with the extensive TV coverage on offer.

“I’m pleased that the IPC has agreed to affirm the existing 10 medal event programme we had at the 2024 Paris Games,” John Edwards, Chair of the ICF Paracanoe Committee, said.

“Of course, we had asked for inclusion of the VL1 events which they have declined to include, and this is a disappointment.

“We must continue to expand our participation in our ICF competitions so that the IPC is persuaded to add more events for the 2032 Games in Brisbane.”

LA28 will be Paracanoe’s fourth successive appearance at the Paralympic Games after successful showings at Rio 2016, Tokyo 2020, and Paris 2024.

Paracanoe events at LA28 will be held at the Marine Stadium, Long Beach.



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Five Chargers medal; two selected to Team USA at USA Shooting National Championship

Story Links   Ten Chargers represented Hillsdale in the USA Shooting National Shotgun Championship held at Hillsdale College’s own Halter Center from May 21 through June 1. The event both determined national champions in Olympic Trap and Skeet and selected USA Shooting Teams which are eligible to represent the nation at competitions […]

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Ten Chargers represented Hillsdale in the USA Shooting National Shotgun Championship held at Hillsdale College’s own Halter Center from May 21 through June 1. The event both determined national champions in Olympic Trap and Skeet and selected USA Shooting Teams which are eligible to represent the nation at competitions across the world.
 
International Skeet was the first event of the match. Rising junior Madeline Corbin broke 232/250 targets, the 5th highest score of any woman in attendance. Once finals were concluded, she earned the silver medal in the Junior Women’s category. Hillsdale athletes swept the Collegiate podium for this discipline with senior Jordan Sapp, Corbin, and senior Kyle Fleck taking 1st through 3rd respectively. Senior Davis Hay’s combined performance at this match and this past Spring’s selection match earned him a spot on the US Junior National Team.
 
In International Trap, junior Ava Downs had an incredible week. She tied for the 3rd highest score of any woman at the match with 217/250 targets broken. When the dust settled, she was crowned the 2025 Junior Women’s National Champion as well as taking home the bronze in Open Women. She was selected to both the US National Team and Junior National Team. Senior Sophia Bultema earned the silver medal in the Para Trap category.
 
 
 
Skeet results: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1XqGnqOcHIX6powkBsv2FHq24S_k-yJS9/edit?gid=1675220492#gid=1675220492
 
Davis Hay – Selected to USA Junior National Team
Madeline Corbin – 2nd Junior Women
Jordan Sapp – 1st Collegiate
Madeline Corbin – 2nd Collegiate
Kyle Fleck – 3rd Collegiate
 
 
Trap: results https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1nRTsF88tWU3lMbZ3-GsrcYXbr355_DE6/edit?gid=1675220492#gid=1675220492
 
Ava Downs – Selected to USA National Team, Junior National Team
Ava Downs – 1st Junior Women
Ava Downs – 3rd Open Women
Sophia Bultema – 2nd Para
 



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Introducing Athlete Ally – Brandeis University

Story Links This story was originially published in February of 2025, but we wanted to spotlight Athlete Ally once again during Pride Month! Over the past five years or so, student-athlete advocacy in the NCAA has grown by leaps and bounds. At Brandeis, the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), which has been […]

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This story was originially published in February of 2025, but we wanted to spotlight Athlete Ally once again during Pride Month!

Over the past five years or so, student-athlete advocacy in the NCAA has grown by leaps and bounds. At Brandeis, the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), which has been an active part of student-athlete life for decades, has seen an increase in affinity groups. These smaller subsets of the SAAC enable student-athletes with shared experiences to have a place to grow within those groups and discuss issues that affect them. In addition to Student-Athletes of Color (SAOC) and Athletes Without Borders for international students, this year, Brandeis Athletics is sponsoring an Athlete Ally chapter for LGBTQ student-athletes.

The idea to bring an Athlete Ally chapter to Brandeis started in earnest during the spring of 2024 when Steven Bunson ’82 and his wife, Joy, who sits on the board of directors for the national Athlete Ally organization, reached out about a Brandeis student-athlete attending Athlete Ally’s annual Athlete Activism Summit.  Rani Balakrishna ’25 of the softball team, who currently serves as President of the Brandeis Student Union, eagerly accepted. 

For two-and-a-half days at the Summit in Louisville, Kentucky, last summer, Rani met with student-athletes, coaches and administrators from around the country and from all levels of the NCAA. 

“We brainstormed ideas and listened to speakers,” Rani said, including Dr. John Carlos, the bronze-medal-winning 200-meter runner from the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, known for his raised-fist protest along with gold medalist Tommie Smith on the podium. 

“We talked about how to be inclusive of queer folks through sports. One of the most important things I learned about being queer in collegiate athletics is that it doesn’t look like one thing at all.”

Inspired by her time at the summit, and with financial help from the Bunsons and other generous donors, and the on-the-ground assistance of staff members Dempsey and baseball coach Derek Carlson ’91. 

“I wanted to be involved with Athlete Ally because I think it is important for LGBTQIA+ athletes to compete as their authentic selves,” said coach Carlson. “It’s also important for us as coaches, administrators, and teammates to demonstrate the importance of inclusivity in sport.”

With a full plate on campus already, Rani worked diligently to find like-minded student-athletes who could help her start an Athlete Ally chapter at Brandeis.  Among those she enlisted were classmates and softball teammates Fiona Doiron ’25 and Anna Kolb ’25, and a pair of incoming first-years, Elle Yung ’28 of the track and field team and Jordan Wallace ’28, also of the softball team. 

Elle had been involved with advocacy at the Trinity School in New York City, serving as president of Trinity’s Gender Sexuality Alliance, where she was able to help educate the entire student body about her experiences living life as a queer person. She was also inspired by meeting another trans track student-athlete, Artemis Reynolds ’24. Jordan was drawn to Brandeis because of the level of acceptance she felt at Brandeis as a whole, through the University’s Gender and Sexuality Center. 

“Coming into college as a trans athlete, I felt the need to have a platform to educate people,” Elle said. “Not only that, considering the political climate we are in, queer athletes and queer people in general needed a support group and a sense of community in order to talk and get through the hard times.”

Since getting started last fall, Athlete Ally has focused on finding representation in the organization from all 19 of Brandeis varsity teams as well as the 22 club sports so that smaller moments can start to feel bigger and bigger.  The organization will hold its first big event on Friday, February 7, when it hosts a Pride Night during Brandeis’s basketball doubleheader against University Athletic Association rivals Washington University. The men face the Bears at 5:30 pm and the women at 7:30 pm. Both teams will be sporting rainbow tape on their uniforms and shoes. There will be raffles and food for all those in attendance as well as stickers with a Pride-themed version of Athletics’ new ‘B’ logo. Triskelion, the University’s long-time queer affinity group, and Intersection, the more recent group for queer people of color, will have informational tables.

“I view this as a huge visibility opportunity for Athlete Ally,” Elle said. “We can create more dialogue with students, starting with ‘Oh, that Pride game was cool.'”



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UNC Track & Field: Seven Tar Heels qualify for NCAA Championships

As a whole, the 2024-25 college sports season is coming to an end. However, there are still a couple sports going. We of course have the NCAA Baseball Tournament getting into crunch time, with the Diamond Heels advancing to super regionals against Arizona. However next week in Eugene, Oregon, we’ll have the NCAA Track & […]

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As a whole, the 2024-25 college sports season is coming to an end. However, there are still a couple sports going. We of course have the NCAA Baseball Tournament getting into crunch time, with the Diamond Heels advancing to super regionals against Arizona. However next week in Eugene, Oregon, we’ll have the NCAA Track & Field championships taking place.

As a team, the North Carolina Tar Heels men’s or women’s track teams aren’t likely to compete for the overall team championships, but there are several Heels that will compete in individual events. Ahead of the action kicking off on June 11th, let’s take a look at the Carolina T&F athletes headed to Eugene.

On the men’s side of things, runner Ethan Strand has made arguably the biggest waves of any UNC T&Fer in recent years. Back during the indoor season, he won the national championship in the 3000m, while setting records both in that event and the mile.

Not surprisingly, he will also be in the running — pun somewhat intended — in some events at the NCAA outdoor championships. Strand has qualified for both the men’s 1500m and 5000m events. He will be joined in the 5000 by fellow Heel Colton Sands, who just snuck into the event as the final qualifier for the championships.

The other Tar Heel man headed to Eugene will be Tommy Kitchell. Having won the ACC Championship in the shot put, Kitchell has set school records this season, and will now look to continue that with a good performance at NCAAs.

On the women’s side of things, UNC’s biggest hope is probably runner Makayla Paige in the 800m. Having won the national championship in the indoor version of the 800, Paige qualified for the championship meet with the fourth best time for the outdoor version.

At the very next distance, senior Taryn Parks is into the prelims at the 1500m. Sydney Masciarelli is the ninth seed in the 3000m steeplechase, having finished third in the ACC this year. In the field events, Katie Joyce will compete in the finals of the javelin throw, having also won Bronze at ACCs.

Track and Field at the NCAA level features not only the best in up and coming American T&F athletes, but also a lot of the best from around the world. Winning the national title will be a difficult task for any of the Tar Heels headed out to Eugene, but we wish the best of luck yo all of them.



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2025 Midland Roundtable Montana All-Star Volleyball Classic

BILLINGS — The Midland Roundtable on Tuesday announced the team designations for its 2025 Montana All-Star Volleyball Classic. The fourth annual intra-state match will be held Friday, June 13, at 6 p.m. at Lockwood High School in Billings. The 18 participants were originally announced on April 10. Following are the team breakdowns for the upcoming […]

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BILLINGS — The Midland Roundtable on Tuesday announced the team designations for its 2025 Montana All-Star Volleyball Classic.

The fourth annual intra-state match will be held Friday, June 13, at 6 p.m. at Lockwood High School in Billings. The 18 participants were originally announced on April 10.

Following are the team breakdowns for the upcoming event:

Blue Team

Roster: Addie Falls Down, Billings Senior (MSU-Northern); Avaree Thompson, Billings Senior (Dickinson State); Taylor Speake, Gallatin (Central Washington); Sofia Kimmel, Bozeman (Carroll College); Juliana McFarland, Belgrade (Dordt, IA); Jaycee Cleveland, Butte (Dickinson State); Claire Hoadley, Missoula Big Sky (Rocky Mountain College); Ellie Reinertson, Gardiner (Montana Tech); Cadence Lundgren, Gallatin (Kansas State).

Coach: Aubrey Beaumont, Rocky Mountain College

Red Team

Roster: Ella Goeltz, Florence-Carlton (Providence); Taiya Guptill, Hardin (Miles Community College); Birdie Heuiser, Helena (Carroll College); Kennedie Noseep, Billings Skyview (Central Wyoming); Morgan Jones, Bozeman (Southern Illinois); Gianna Ruprecht, Columbus (Rocky Mountain College); Hope Gonsioroski, Baker (Lubbock Christian, TX); Lauren Fox, Bozeman (Carroll College); Nora Dominick, Shields Valley (Montana Western).

Coach: Maureen Boyle, Carroll College





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West Coast Conference Announces 2025 Men’s Water Polo Schedule

Story Links SAN BRUNO, Calif. – The West Coast Conference announced its 2025 men’s water polo conference schedule on Tuesday. The conference slate will run from Thursday, Oct. 2 to Friday, Nov. 14, with each team playing six conference contests.   The West Coast Conference was ranked as one of the top men’s […]

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SAN BRUNO, Calif. – The West Coast Conference announced its 2025 men’s water polo conference schedule on Tuesday. The conference slate will run from Thursday, Oct. 2 to Friday, Nov. 14, with each team playing six conference contests.
 
The West Coast Conference was ranked as one of the top men’s water polo conferences in the RPI last fall with six of the seven teams ending the year ranked in the final coaches poll.
 
Pacific, the 2024 West Coast Conference regular season champions, will host Air Force on Thursday, Oct. 2, to open conference play. West Coast Conference Tournament champion California Baptist will open the Conference slate at home against Pepperdine on Thursday, Oct. 9. 
 
The 2025 West Coast Conference Tournament will take place on the campus of the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo., Nov. 21-23.
 
Official dates are as of June 3 and subject to change.
 
2025 West Coast Conference Men’s Water Polo Conference Schedule
 
Oct. 2
Air Force at Pacific
 
Oct. 3
LMU at San José State
 
Oct. 5
Pacific at Santa Clara
 
Oct.9
Pepperdine at California Baptist
 
Oct. 11
San José State at Pacific
 
Oct. 12
California Baptist at Air Force
 
Oct. 16
Santa Clara at California Baptist
 
Oct. 17
Air Force at LMU
Pacific at Pepperdine
 
Oct. 18
Santa Clara at San José State
 
Oct. 19
Pacific at LMU
Air Force at Pepperdine
 
Oct. 24
Pepperdine at San José State
LMU at Santa Clara
 
Oct. 30
California Baptist at LMU
 
Nov. 2
California Baptist at Pacific
San José State at Air Force
 
Nov. 8
LMU at Pepperdine
San José State at California Baptist
Santa Clara at Air Force
 
Nov. 14
Pepperdine at Santa Clara
 



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