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Ranking The 20 Hottest MLB Prospects

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Ranking The 20 Hottest MLB Prospects


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Jhostynxon Garcia (Photo courtesy of Ashley Green/Worcester Red Sox)

Baseball America’s Hot Sheet ranks the 20 hottest prospects from the previous week. This week’s installment considers how minor league players performed through Aug 3. Contributing this week were BA staffers J.J. Cooper, Josh Norris, Geoff Pontes and Jesús Cano.

The Hot Sheet simply recognizes how the hottest prospects in the minors did in the past week—it’s not a re-ranking of the Baseball America Top 100 Prospects.

We host our weekly Hot Sheet Show on YouTube at 3:30 p.m. ET on Mondays. We’ll also be answering prospect questions in our weekly Hot Sheet chat on Tuesdays at 2 p.m. ET.

1. Jhostynxon Garcia, OF, Red Sox 

  • Team: Triple-A Worcester (International) 
  • Age: 22
  • Why He’s Here: .417/.462/1.083 (10-for-24), 8 R, 4 2B, 0 3B, 4 HR, 13 RBIs, 1 BB, 6 SO, 0-for-0 SB

The Scoop: The Password had a signature week haunting Triple-A Lehigh Valley’s pitching staff. He crushed eight extra-base hits and opened the series by going 3-for-5 with a double, a home run, five RBIs and seven total bases. Over the final four games, Garcia went 7-for-14 with 19 total bases, three doubles and three home runs. He has also homered in three consecutive games. Garcia is handling Triple-A pitching with little problem, hitting .305/.375/.587 with 15 home runs across 54 games. (GP)

2. Walker Jenkins, OF, Twins

  • Team: Double-A Wichita (Texas)
  • Age: 20
  • Why He’s Here: .500/.565/1.050 (12-for-24), 8 R, 2 2B, 0 3B, 3 HR, 5 RBIs, 4 BB, 3 SO, 2-for-3 SB

The Scoop: Amazing what a clean bill of health can do for a player, isn’t it? Jenkins’ career has been marred by a series of injuries that have limited him to just 45 games this season and 153 since turning pro in 2023. Even so, he’s proving more than capable at Double-A as a 20-year-old. This week in particular served as a demonstration of his skills. The three home runs not only upped his season total to five, they also stand as 20% of his career total. (JN)

3. Abimelec Ortiz, 1B, Rangers

  • Team: Double-A Frisco (Texas)
  • Age: 23
  • Why He’s Here: .417/.440/.875 (10-for-24), 5 R, 2 2B, 3 HR, 8 RBIs, 1 BB, 1 SO

The Scoop: Ortiz’s development has somewhat stalled. He had a great year in 2023, hitting .294/.371/.619 between Down East and Hickory, but he’s effectively had the same season two years in a row at Double-A Frisco. Ortiz is showing power (16 home runs in 89 games), but as a first baseman without much defensive versatility, he needs a lot more weeks like this one. (JJ)

4. Steven Echavarria, RHP, Athletics

  • Team: High-A Lansing (Midwest)
  • Age: 19
  • Why He’s Here:  0-0, 0.00 ERA, 2 GS, 10.1 IP, 7 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 HR, 2 BB, 12 SO

The Scoop: So far as a professional, Echavarria’s results haven’t quite matched the hefty $3 million signing bonus the A’s gave him in the third round of the 2023 draft. His performance this week, however, is a step in the right direction. Echavarria sat in the mid 90s and touched 98 mph, pairing his fastball with a firmer mid-80s slider that flashed plus potential. The shape of his breaking ball has improved this year. Command remains a concern, as he often fell behind and struggled to locate his fastball. Still, his loose, athletic delivery and projectable frame give the A’s hope he’ll throw enough strikes to succeed. (JC)

5. Carson Benge, OF, Mets

  • Team: Double-A Binghamton (Eastern)
  • Age: 22
  • Why He’s Here: .450/.476/1.000 (9-for-20), 6 R, 0 2B, 1 3B, 3 HR, 5 RBIs, 1 BB, 1 SO, 1-for-1 SB

The Scoop: When it comes to home runs, Benge has been on a bit of a binge. Since moving to Double-A on June 24, the former Oklahoma State star has been positively molten. This past week was no exception. He crushed three more home runs, bringing his Double-A total to eight in 26 games. That mark is twice the amount he hit in 86 games with High-A Brooklyn. The power boost hasn’t come at the expense of contact, either, considering he racked up more walks (16) than strikeouts (14) in his time with the Rumble Ponies. (JN)

6. Samuel Aldegheri, LHP, Angels

  • Team: Double-A Rocket City (Southern)
  • Age: 23
  • Why He’s Here: 0-1, 2.08, 13 IP, 12 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 1 BB, 11 SO, 0 HR

The Scoop: Aldegheri has seen big league time in each of the past two seasons, but he’s looked more at home while getting more seasoning in Double-A. All of his minor league work this year has come in the Southern League, where he’s struggled with command and control. This past week offered a glimpse of him turning things in the right direction. In two starts against Birmingham, the lefthander issued just one walk in 13 innings and put together just the second and third outings of his season with one or fewer free passes. His Sunday start was also his second of the year that saw him complete seven innings. (JN)

7. Andrew Pinckney, OF, Nationals

  • Team: Triple-A Rochester (International)
  • Age: 24
  • Why He’s Here: .292/.357/.833 (7-for-24), 5 R, 1 2B, 0 3B, 4 HR, 10 RBIs, 2 BB, 3 SO, 0-for-0 SB

The Scoop: A fourth-round pick in 2023, Pinckney reached Triple-A by the end of his first full professional season and returned to Rochester to open 2025. Through 93 games, he’s slashing a suboptimal .243/.324/.405 line on the surface, but he’s one of just six minor league hitters with 15+ home runs and 25+ stolen bases. Last week, he flashed his power-speed combo with home runs in four of six games and three or more total bases in five of six. Pinckney boasts plus power (116.6 mph max exit velocity in 2025) and speed, but a passive approach and below-average bat-to-ball skills contribute to a high strikeout rate. He has the tools to contribute as a role player on a contender, though swing-and-miss issues may limit his ceiling as an everyday regular. (GP)

8. Dylan Beavers, OF, Orioles

  • Team: Triple-A Norfolk (International)
  • Age: 23
  • Why He’s Here: .368/.520/.842 (7-for-19), 8 R, 0 2B, 0 3B, 3 HR, 5 RBIs, 6 BB, 3 SO, 1-for-1 SB

The Scoop: Beavers has a strong case as the International League’s best hitter this season. He has hit .302/.418/.498 with 14 home runs and 22 stolen bases, backed by an impressive combination of elite on-base skills (16.1% walk rate) and bat-to-ball ability (6.9% swinging strike rate). Beavers extended his on-base streak to 16 games last week, punctuated by a 3-for-5 performance on Sunday with two home runs, three RBIs and nine total bases. Beavers’ collection of skills should position him for big league success, and he could even earn a late-season audition this year. If not, he has a shot to compete for a job out of camp next spring. (GP)     

9. Brody Hopkins, RHP, Rays

  • Team: Double-A Montgomery (Southern)
  • Age: 23
  • Why He’s Here: 0-0, 0.00, 7 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 10 SO, 0 HR

The Scoop: The Rays’ No. 5 prospect has been excellent this season with Double-A Montgomery and might have pitched his best game of the season on Friday. Hopkins spun seven scoreless innings, striking out 10 while allowing three hits and two walks. Over the course of the outing, Hopkins generated 17 swinging strikes as his mid-90s fastball and trio of secondaries ate all night long. Hopkins is a prospect with a green up arrow as we head into the closing weeks of the 2025 season. There’s an outside chance he debuts with the Rays in the first half of 2026. (GP)

10. Bryce Eldridge, 1B, Giants

  • Team: Triple-A Sacramento (Pacific Coast)
  • Age: 20
  • Why He’s Here: .333/.393/.708 (6-for-21), 5 R, 0 2B, 0 3B, 3 HR, 9 RBIs, 3 BB, 5 SO

The Scoop: Even before he’s reached the big leagues, Eldridge has proved his power will play at a big league park. The future San Francisco slugger swatted three more longballs this past week, bringing his ledger on the season to 10 in 31 games in the Pacific Coast League since moving up from Double-A. Between both levels, Eldridge has 17 home runs in 67 games after his season was delayed by a minor injury late in spring training. It shouldn’t be long before some of his blasts find a landing spot in McCovey Cove. (JN)

11. Luis Cova, OF, Marlins

  • Team: DSL Marlins (DSL)
  • Age: 18
  • Why He’s Here: .318/.375/.682 (7-for-22), 7 R, 2 2B, 0 3B, 2 HR, 4 RBIs, 1 BB, 3 SO, 3-for-4 SB

The Scoop: In his second season in the Dominican Summer League, Cova is cooking. The 18-year-old outfielder—one of the jewels of Miami’s 2024 international signing class—has been piping hot all season, adding a bit of offensive balance to a Marlins group bursting with promising pitchers. He clubbed two more home runs this past week, upping his season total to eight. He has 20 extra-base hits this season, seven more than he accumulated in his pro debut last year. He should be appointment viewing next year in the Florida Complex League. (JN)

12. Joe Mack, C, Marlins

  • Team: Triple-A Jacksonville (International)
  • Age: 22
  • Why He’s Here: .368/.429/.789 (7-for-19) 5 R, 2 2B, 2 HR, 3 RBIs, 2 BB, 6 SO

The Scoop: Mack had an exceptional April, but has since been relatively quiet. Even this week, his success was extremely concentrated. He went 3-for-5 with a home run on Tuesday and he went 4-for-4 with another home run on Friday. Otherwise he was hitless. Mack’s offense overall has been solid, but when you combine it with his defense, he remains one of the game’s better catching prospects. (JJ)

13. Gabriel Davalillo, C, Angels

  • Team: DSL Angels (Dominican Summer)
  • Age: 17
  • Why He’s Here: .500/.529/1.071 (7-for-14) 4 R, 2 2B, 2 HR, 8 RBIs, 2 BB, 1 SO

The Scoop: The Davalillos are a very successful baseball family. Vic Davalillo remains the patriarch and most successful member of the family, but he has a pair of grandsons in David and Gabriel who are both solid prospects. Gabriel was considered the gem of the Angels’ international class this year, and he’s lived up to expectations in the early going. He’s hitting .314/.415/.554 in his very young pro career. (JJ)

14. Sal Stewart, 2B, Reds

  • Team: Triple-A Louisville (International)
  • Age: 21
  • Why He’s Here: .333/.429/.667 (8-for-24), 6 R, 5 2B, 0 3B, 1 HR, 5 RBIs, 4 BB, 1 SO, 1-for-1 SB

The Scoop: Stewart has become a near-weekly fixture on the Hot Sheet. After dominating at the Double-A level, he earned a well-deserved promotion to Triple-A, where he hasn’t missed a beat. His approach has remained mature and disciplined, allowing him to make a smooth transition against more advanced pitching. Stewart continues to demonstrate a balanced offensive profile—combining a keen eye at the plate with solid contact skills and emerging power. (JC)

15. Jared Thomas, OF, Rockies

  • Team: Double-A Hartford (Eastern)
  • Age: 22
  • Why He’s Here: .476/.542/.762 (10-for-21), 8 R, 0 2B, 0 3B, 2 HR, 5 RBIs, 3 BB, 5 SO, 3-for-3 SB

The Scoop:  Few prospects have climbed the Rockies’ system as rapidly or impressively as Thomas. A second-round pick in last year’s draft, he quickly made his presence felt with a combination of advanced bat-to-ball skills and impactful power at the point of contact. While his approach leans aggressive, Thomas pairs it with solid pitch recognition and a knack for consistently squaring up the ball, projecting average game power as he continues to develop. (JC)

16. Josh Adamczewski, 2B, Brewers

  • Team: Low-A Carolina (Carolina)
  • Age: 20
  • Why He’s Here: .333/.444/.933 (5-for-18), 3 R, 1 2B, 0 3B, 2 HR, 4 RBIs, 3 BB, 2 SO, 0-for-0 SB

The Scoop: Adamczewski was overshadowed on a roster that featured standout talents like Jesús Made and Luis Peña—at least until their recent promotions. But make no mistake: the second baseman has quietly established himself as a steady, reliable presence. He brings a short, efficient swing paired with advanced timing and feel for the barrel, allowing him to drive the ball to all fields with ease. His offensive profile leans heavily on contact, though there’s enough strength and bat speed to project 10-15 home runs, with the occasional uptick.  (JC)

17. Quinn Mathews, LHP, Cardinals

  • Team: Triple-A Memphis (International)
  • Age: 24
  • Why He’s Here: 1-0, 2.70, 1 GS, 6.2 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 1 BB, 9 SO

The Scoop: Mathews’ velocity hasn’t returned to pre-injury levels—he’s sitting about two mph lower than last season—but he’s figuring out ways to make it work. Mathews relied on his slider almost as much as his four-seamer in his start this week. He mixed five pitches well, and generated nine swings and misses off his changeup. Ideally, Mathews will eventually be able to blend this savvy with the stuff he showed last year, but he’s been able to get batters out consistently over the past two months. (JJ) 

18. Brandon Sproat, RHP, Mets

  • Team: Triple-A Syracuse (International)
  • Age: 24
  • Why He’s Here: 1-0, 0.00, 1 GS, 5 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 3 BB, 9 SO.

The Scoop: Sproat will hate that July is over. He was 2-0, 0.67 last month, which included an 18-inning scoreless streak at one point, and he allowed his only two earned runs in a July 25 start against Omaha. Sproat was really cooking with gas this week. He touched 100 mph for the fourth time this season. Almost everything Sproat throws is hard, but his mid-80s sweeper does provide a different look. (JJ)

19. Max Clark, OF, Tigers

  • Team: Double-A Erie (Eastern)
  • Age: 20
  • Why He’s Here: .409/.480/.636 (9-for-22), 3 R, 3 2B, 1 3B, 0 HR, 1 RBI, 3 BB, 4 SO, 0-for-0 SB

The Scoop: Since his promotion to Double-A in early July, Clark has been excellent, slashing .323/.400/.569 over 16 games. Last week, he reached base at least twice in all five games he played. Clark didn’t homer this week but he did collect three doubles and a triple. Clark has a prototypical leadoff profile with excellent bat-to-ball skills, elite approach, speed and enough power to hit 15 or so homers a year. He could one day blossom into one of the best leadoff hitters in baseball. (GP)   

20. Emil Morales, SS, Dodgers

  • Team: Low-A Rancho Cucamonga (California)
  • Age: 18
  • Why He’s Here: .353/.421/.824/ (6-for-17), 5 R, 2 2B, 0 3B, 2 HR, 4 RBIs, 2 BB, 4 SO, 1-for-1 SB

The Scoop: One of the top bats in the ACL this season, Morales earned a promotion to Low-A alongside a wave of rising Dodgers prospects. This week, he offered another glimpse of his considerable ceiling. He has altered his approach to become more aggressive early in counts and hunt fastballs, which has allowed him to tap into his raw power more consistently. While swing-and-miss remains part of his game and he’s firmly a power-over-hit profile, the offensive upside is undeniable. Continued refinement to his approach could help Morales evolve into a true impact bat. (JC)

Helium

Alexander Garcia, RHP, Guardians

Garcia signed with Cleveland out of Venezuela in 2024 and put forth a ho-hum pro debut in the Dominican Summer League. He returned to the level in 2025 and has been one of the best pitchers on the Guardians’ two DSL clubs. He got a chance to showcase his talent in the DSL all-star game and didn’t disappoint. In the league’s midsummer classic, Garcia showed a lively fastball up to 96 mph and complemented it with a sweeping breaking ball and a hard-dropping changeup. Together, the repertoire has helped Garcia strike out 38 hitters in 34.2 innings. (JN)

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Texas A&M’s Emily Hellmuth will join the LSU Beach Volleyball team

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Dec. 26, 2025, 7:37 p.m. CT

The historic Texas A&M volleyball season has concluded, and now the seniors are moving on to pursue other endeavors. For some, it might be entering the job market, while for a few, it might be beginning a professional volleyball career. However, for one Aggie, it’s the restart of another college athletic career.

On Friday, it was announced that senior outside hitter Emily Hellmuth will be transferring to LSU to compete in beach volleyball. Although she is not eligible for indoor sports, beach volleyball is considered a separate sport and is not offered at Texas A&M. That means she would have to transfer, regardless of whether she wants to continue playing. She will be eligible for the spring season and will have two years remaining.

Hellmuth was excellent in her role at Texas A&M, appearing in several crucial moments that helped propel the Aggies to their first national title. Below is the official announcement from the LSU beach volleyball X account.





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All Northeast Indiana Volleyball 2025 | High Schools

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First Team

Alyssa Anderson, Woodlan

Class: Senior

Position: Middle blocker

Statistics: 289 kills (2.9/set), 47 aces, 53 blocks, 119 digs (1.2/set)

Of note: IHSVCA Class 2A All-State second team

Reagan Beitler, South Adams

Class: Senior

Position: Setter

Statistics: 145 kills (1.3/set), 73 aces, 376 digs (3.4/set), 644 assists (5.9/set)

Of note: 1A/2A Senior All-Star

Sydney Blackwell, Concordia

Class: Junior

Position: Middle hitter

Statistics: 360 kills (4.0/set), 47 aces, 57 blocks, 110 digs (1.2/set)

Of note: 3A/4A Junior All-State

Reagan Bollenbacher, South Adams

Class: Senior

Position: Outside hitter

Statistics: 304 kills (2.9/set), 25 aces, 392 digs (3.7/set)

Of note: 1A/2A Senior All-Star

Victoria Crozier, Woodlan

Class: Senior

Position: Setter

Statistics: 56 kills, 27 aces, 32 blocks, 151 digs (1.5/set), 874 assists (8.8/set)

Of note: Signed with Trine

Keira Dommer, Concordia

Class: Senior

Position: Setter

Statistics: 52 aces, 200 digs (2.4/set), 863 assists (10.2/set)

Of note: SAC Glass Spike winner

Sophia Gisslen, Carroll

Class: Senior

Position: Setter

Statistics: 46 kills, 37 aces, 36 blocks, 135 digs (1.6/set), 878 assists (10.5/set)

Of note: IHSVCA Class 4A All-State second team; signed with Quinnipiac

Cala Haffner, Carroll

Class: Sophomore

Position: Defensive specialist

Statistics: 60 aces, 432 digs (4.0/set), 133 assists (1.2/set)

Of note: MaxPreps second-team All-America

Maya Harris, Angola

Class: Senior

Position: Outside hitter

Statistics: 637 kills (6.3/set), 177 aces (1.8/set), 228 digs (2.3/set)

Of note: Ms. Volleyball finalist; led the state in aces

Ellie Hepler, Warsaw

Class: Senior

Position: Libero

Statistics: 73 aces, 555 digs (5.2/set), 99 assists

Of note: Signed with Indiana; IHSVCA Class 4A All-State first team

Elyse Mead, West Noble

Class: Sophomore

Position: Outside hitter

Statistics: 530 kills (5.6/set), 44 aces, 25 blocks, 314 digs (3.3/set)

Of note: IHSVCA Class 3A All-State second team

Elli Oskey, Carroll

Class: Junior

Position: S/RS

Statistics: 194 kills (1.8/set), 21 aces, 58 blocks, 330 assists (3.1/set)

Of note: 3A/4A Junior All-Star

Abbie Powell, Southern Wells

Class: Sophomore

Position: Middle blocker

Statistics: 503 kills (5.1/set), 83 aces, 79 blocks, 350 digs (3.6/set)

Of note: Led state with a 0.564 hitting percentage; ACAC Player of the Year

MaryKate Scheumann, Bellmont

Class: Senior

Position: Outside hitter

Statistics: 508 kills (4.8/set), 30 aces, 434 digs (4.1/set)

Of note: Signed with Purdue

Bailey Sinish, Carroll

Class: Senior

Position: Outside hitter

Statistics: 557 kills (5.4/set), 62 aces (0.6/set), 47 blocks (0.5/set), 219 digs (4.0/set)

Of note: Indiana Ms. Volleyball winner; MaxPreps first-team All-America

Sarah Stegall, Carroll

Class: Junior

Position: Outside hitter

Statistics: 270 kills (2.6/set), 19 aces, 24 blocks, 60 digs

Of note: IHSVCA Class 4A All-State second team

Reagan Edwards, Warsaw, MB

Cece Goode, Warsaw, OH

Braelynn Hodgeman, Bishop Dwenger, RS/S

Delaney Johnson, Lakewood Park Christian, L/OH

Victoria Kim, Canterbury, OH/MB

Reagan Lyons, Homestead, OH/OPP

Lindsay Snyder, Bishop Dwenger, OH

Aspen Sutton, Angola, S/DS/L

Laney Trausch, South Adams, S

KaVeaya Turner, Concordia, MH

Emma Vachon, Norwell, S/DS

Kylie Walz, East Noble, L/DS

Nicolette Watercutter, Bishop Dwenger, OH

Emersyn Weaver, Leo, OH/DS

Also honored

High Honorable Mention

Bellmont: Ella Ross, Taylor Sutter

Bishop Dwenger: Genevieve Renbarger, Claire Shively

Bishop Luers: Taylor Albers, Aubriana Flotow

Blackhawk Christian: Cici Sefton, Lily Stangland

Carroll: Hayden Finefrock, Katelyn Peters, Lauren Peters, Lola Sasse, Addi Shippy

Canterbury: Alexa Coble, Sophia Miller

Churubusco: Kelsee Coil, McKayla Reuter

Columbia City: Elizabeth Blackburn

East Noble: Ava Larson

Eastside: Adelaide Elden

Garrett: Sarah DePew, Kaylee Gaar, Amelia Kesterke

Heritage: Maya Ehrman, Ava Johnson

Homestead: Lyla Tindall, Savannah Walker

Huntington North: Grace Anderson

Lakewood Park Christian: Emilia Crider

Leo: Isabella Hensley

Northrop: Madison Corley

Norwell: Macie Saalfrank

Snider: Lindsay Gonzalez, Oriana Smiley, Arielle Stephens

Warsaw: Madison Branam

Wawasee: Hadley Allen

Wayne: Jasmine Fowlkes, Story Gaines

West Noble: Izzy Beers, Reagan Eash, Ella Limerick

Whitko: Meredith Hindbaugh

Honorable Mention

Adams Central: Katie Summers

Angola: Mady Conrad, Khloe Stanner

Bellmont: Gracie Riggs, Lilly Selking

Bishop Dwenger: Maddie Gephart, Kobi Johnson

Bishop Luers: Vahsti Garcia, Victoria Strack

Bluffton: Konley Ault

Carroll: Paityn Lauck

Central Noble: Katie Forker, Jaylee Slone, Grace Swank, Jalayna Winebrenner

Columbia City: Breana Rumschlag, Sophia Van Buskirk

Concordia: Bella Dellinger, Courtney Inman, Shelby Petersen

DeKalb: Vivian Irk, Lilli VanGessel

East Noble: Alyssa Desper, Izzy Leffers, Carys Shire

Eastside: Lauren Hickey, Rylan Moughler

Fremont: Chloe Verdin

Garrett: Rilyn Flotow, Kaelynn York

Heritage: Alana Gutshall, Lexie Walter

Lakeland Christian: Eva Meza

Leo: Mia Norris, Rhianna Wallace Porter, Leah Shappell

New Haven: Annika Koepke

North Side: Desire Buckhanon, Sieriphoe Luangphaxayachack, Shilin Warren

Northrop: Kalaeh Alexander, Maleah Schmucker, Jersey Webb

Norwell: Izzy Anderson, Autumn Lee, Hope Mitchell

Snider: Ava DeFay, Denny-Lynn Dunton, Jasmine Gates

South Adams: Avery Brown, Reece Beitler

South Side: Na’Kayla Williams

Warsaw: Avary Hoeppner, Maddie Williamson

Wawasee: Jadyn Klenke

Wayne: Lexie Clark, Marlo Schinbeckler

Whitko: Caitlin Beer

Woodlan: Makaila Gruber

– Victoria Jacobsen, The Journal Gazette



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Men’s Basketball Closes Calendar Year at Colgate on Sunday in Non-League Finale

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CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Harvard Men’s Basketball closes the 2025 calendar year at Colgate University on Sunday, Dec. 28 at 2:00 p.m. (ESPN+) at Cotterell Court in Hamilton, New York in the Crimson’s non-league finale.

What to Know

  • Harvard features four double-figure scorers on the year in a group that includes sophomore guard Robert Hinton (16.5 points per game), senior guard Chandler Piggé (13.7), sophomore guard Tey Barbour (11.5), and junior forward Thomas Batties II (10.3).
  • Among the Crimson’s four double-figure scorers, three of them averaged fewer than 7.0 points per game as first-years. Senior Chandler Piggé (1.9 points per game in 2022-23; 13.7 in 2025-26), junior Thomas Batties II (6.8 points per game in 2023-24; 10.3 in 2025-26), and sophomore Tey Barbour (4.8 points per game in 2024-25; 11.5 in 2025-26) have all increased their production over their careers.
  • In the Ivy League rankings, Harvard stands second in free throw percentage (78.5), second in steals per game (7.46), third in scoring defense (68.3), and fourth in field goal percentage (47.0). In the NCAA, the Crimson sits sixth in fewest fouls per game (13.5), ninth in free throw percentage (78.5), and 70th in scoring defense (68.3).
  • Sophomore guard Robert Hinton has averaged 16.5 points, 5.2 rebounds, 1.8 assists, and 1.6 steals per game on the year, while shooting 84.5 percent on free throws. Hinton ranks first in the Ivy League in field goals (79), second in steals per game (1.6), third in points (214), third in free throws (49), third in free throw percentage (84.5), sixth in points per game (16.5), and sixth in minutes per game (31.2). On the year, he has scored in double figures 10 times, netted 20 or more points four times, and eclipsed 30 points twice. He earned Ivy League Player of the Week honors on Dec. 8. Hinton – the 2024-25 Ivy League Rookie of the Year – averaged 14.6 points and 4.1 rebounds per game in 2024-25.
  • Hinton dropped a career-high 35 points on 12-of-22 field goals and 11-of-12 free throws with eight rebounds at UMass (Dec. 3). Hinton poured in 34 points on 13-of-17 field goals, 4-of-5 3-pointers, and 4-of-4 free throws vs. BU (Nov. 22). He totaled 26 points, five rebounds, and five assists at Furman (Dec. 6) and scored 22 points vs. UNH (Nov. 9). Hinton notched 16 points and seven boards vs. Holy Cross (Dec. 20) and contributed 16 points at Army (Nov. 15). He netted 13 points, including the go-ahead free throws with 5.1 seconds left at Marist (Nov. 16) and added 12 points and nine rebounds at BC (Nov. 26).
  • Senior guard Chandler Piggé has posted 13.7 points, 3.6 rebounds, 3.5 assists, and 1.5 steals per game on the year. He ranks fourth in the Ivy League in field goals (70), fourth in assist/turnover ratio (2.2), fourth in steals per game (1.5), fourth in minutes per game (32.4), fifth in assists per game (3.5), seventh in points (178), and ninth in points per game (13.7). He has scored in double figures in 10 games on the year. Piggé – an Honorable Mention All-Ivy selection and CSC Academic All-District honoree last season – notched 13.1 points, 6.7 rebounds, and 2.6 assists per game in 2024-25. He has steadily increased his production over his career, averaging 1.9 points per game in 2022-23, 8.1 points per game in 2023-24, and 13.1 points per game in 2024-25.
  • Piggé totaled 23 points and six assists, while shooting 8-of-11 from the floor vs. UNH (Nov. 9). He dropped 21 points with a career-high nine assists at Penn State (Nov. 19). Piggé posted 16 points and seven rebounds vs. Holy Cross (Dec. 20). He registered 14 points against both Army (Nov. 15) and Marist (Nov. 16), connecting on a game-tying 3-pointer with 35.8 seconds left against the Red Foxes. He netted 15 points against both Northeastern (Nov. 11) and Bryant (Nov. 29).
  • Sophomore guard Tey Barbour has registered 11.5 points and a team-high 5.5 rebounds per game on the year, while shooting 41.0 percent from 3-point distance. Barbour ranks fourth in the Ivy League in 3-pointers made (32), fifth in 3-pointers per game (2.5), fifth in minutes per game (31.5), and 11th in rebounds per game (5.5). He has scored in double figures in nine games on the year. Barbour notched 4.8 points and 1.8 rebounds per game on the year in 2024-25.
  • Barbour scored a career-high 18 points with eight rebounds vs. Holy Cross (Dec. 20), hitting 4-of-5 3-pointers. He posted 15 points and nine rebounds at BC (Nov. 26) after scoring 15 points vs. BU (Nov. 22). He posted 14 points, six rebounds, and a career-high four made 3-pointers vs. UNH (Nov. 9) before netting 12 points on four 3-pointers vs. Northeastern (Nov. 11). He compiled 12 points and seven rebounds at Penn State (Nov. 19). Barbour netted 10 points and hit the game-winning 3-pointer vs. Bryant (Nov. 29).
  • Junior forward Thomas Batties II has registered 10.3 points, 3.5 rebounds, and 2.3 assists per game on the year, while shooting 48.5 percent from the field and 52.4 percent from 3-point distance. He ranks fourth in the Ivy League in 3-point percentage (52.4) and sixth in blocks per game (1.0). He has scored in double figures eight times on the year. In 2024-25, Batties II averaged 11.0 points and 5.0 rebounds per game on the year after registering 6.8 points and 4.2 rebounds per game on the 2023-24 season.
  • Batties II tallied a season-high 17 points, career-high five made 3-pointers, and a career-high six assists at Penn State (Nov. 19). He scored a game-high 17 points against both MIT (Nov. 7) and Army (Nov. 15). Batties II posted 14 points and a career-high six assists vs. BU (Nov. 22) and notched 13 points at BC (Nov. 26) and vs. UMass (Dec. 3). He totaled 12 points and nine rebounds vs. Bryant (Nov. 29).
  • Sophomore guard Austin Hunt has tallied 7.2 points and 3.1 rebounds per game on the year, while shooting 55.1 percent from the field. He ranks sixth in the Ivy League in field goal percentage (55.1). Hunt scored a career-high 19 points on 8-of-9 field goals and 3-of-4 3-pointers vs. Holy Cross (Dec. 20). He notched 13 points, six rebounds, and three assists vs. UNH (Nov. 9) and netted 10 points at Furman (Dec. 6). Hunt averaged 7.8 points and 3.6 rebounds per game in 2024-25.
  • Sophomore guard Ben Eisendrath has notched 5.1 points, 3.0 assists, 1.8 rebounds, and 1.6 steals per game on the year, while shooting 51.1 percent from the field. Eisendrath ranks third in the Ivy League in steals per game (1.6) and 10th in assists per game (3.0). He scored a career-high 15 points on 6-of-7 field goals at Penn State (Nov. 19) and netted 10 points at Furman (Dec. 6). Eisendrath distributed a career-high nine assists vs. BU (Nov. 22).
  • Harvard and Colgate have met 24 times with the Crimson holding a slight lead in the all-time series, 13-11. The Crimson has won the last eight matchups, including a 78-67 home victory last season. 

Next Up

Harvard hosts Dartmouth on Monday, Jan. 5 at 7:00 p.m. (ESPN+) at Lavietes Pavilion in its Ivy League opener.
 



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Iowa City Liberty grad Shelby Kimm stars as a Division II volleyball All-American

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NORTH Liberty, Iowa (KCRG) – A former Iowa high school volleyball star has earned All-American recognition at the college level.

Shelby Kimm, a three-time all-state selection at Iowa City Liberty, was named a Division II All-American this year for St. Cloud State University in Minnesota. The junior led her Husky team this season with nearly 3.4 kills per set.

The Huskies have made it to the round of 16 of the NCAA Tournament each of the past two years, which is tied for the best finish in program history.

After winning a state title at Liberty, Kimm wanted to experience college outside of Iowa.

“We had so many people on our team that were probably their best or one of the best on their high school or club team when you put a lot of those players together it can be a little challenging cause they’re not used to maybe not playing as much,” Kimm said. “You definitely have to work really hard and I think I learned that nothing is guaranteed you have to go into college and work your butt off and hopefully your coaches recognize that and that’s why I try to do.”

Kimm says she’s already excited to get back on the court for her senior season next year.

Three other Iowans are listed on the SCSU roster, including Kimm’s Liberty teammate Asta Hildebrand, Grundy Center alum Carlie Willis and Aplington-Parkersburg alum Kinsey Mohwinkle.



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Men’s Volleyball Picked Second In Preseason AVCA Poll

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LEXINGTON, Ky. – The University of Hawai’i men’s volleyball team was picked No. 2 in the AVCA preseason poll, marking the eighth consecutive year it earned a top 3 preseason ranking.
 
The Rainbow Warriors earned seven first place votes and 473 total points, just eight points behind preseason favorite UCLA, who garnered 12 first place votes. Long Beach State was third with five first place votes and 460 points.
 
UH’s schedule features seven teams ranked in the preseason Top 10 and 11 teams in the Top 20.
 
Hawai’i finished last season with a No. 3 final AVCA ranking after advancing to the NCAA Championship semifinal round. The No. 3 ranking marked the eighth consecutive year with a Top 5 national finish. The Warriors completed the year with a 27-6 mark and captured their fourth Big West Championship title, defeating eventual national champion Long Beach State in the championship match.  
 
Head coach Charlie Wade, who became the program’s all-time winningest coach last season, is entering his 17th season at the helm with a career record of 319-131.
 
UH opens the 2026 season with a two-match series against NJIT, Friday, Jan. 2 and Sunday, Jan. 4.
 
 

#HawaiiMVB

 
 



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Gibbs-Lawhorn Named Raising Cane’s Outstanding Rebel Of The Week

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LAS VEGAS (UNLVRebels.com) – UNLV men’s basketball junior Dra Gibbs-Lawhorn has been named the Raising Cane’s Outstanding Rebel of the Week, the school announced Friday.

Gibbs-Lawhorn has earned the recognition for the first time this season, while it’s also the men’s basketball team’s second of the year.

The award goes to the student-athlete who turned in the best individual performance during the previous week of competition from Monday through Sunday as voted on by the UNLV Athletics Strategic Communications department.

A native of Lafayette, Indiana, Gibbs-Lawhorn led the Runnin’ Rebels to a Mountain West opening 84-72 win over Fresno State. He scored a career-high 28 points, while grabbing seven rebounds, four assists, three steals, and a blocked shot.

Additionally, Gibbs-Lawhorn shot 9 of 15 from the field, made all four of his free throw attempts and shot 60% on 3-pointers (6 of 10).

2025-26 Outstanding Rebel of the Week Award Winners
Sept. 3 – Aamaris Brown, Football
Sept. 11 – Jaida Harris, Volleyball
Sept. 16 – Alondra Alarcon, Volleyball
Sept. 23 – Marsel McDuffie, Football
Sept. 30 – Zi Yu Foong, Women’s Golf
Oct. 7 – Kayden McGee, Football
Oct. 14 – Anthony Colandrea, Football
Oct. 22 – Jaida Harris, Volleyball
Oct. 27 – Ilia Snitari, Men’s Tennis
Nov. 5 – Michelle Madrid, Women’s Soccer
Nov. 12 – Jai’Den Thomas, Football 
Nov. 12 – Meadow Roland, Women’s Basketball
Nov. 18 – Issac Williamson, Men’s Basketball
Nov. 26 – Ilia Snitari, Men’s Tennis
Dec. 3 – Jai’Den Thomas, Football

Dec. 10 – Bryson Huey, Men’s Swim & Dive
Dec. 26 – Dra Gibbs-Lawhorn, Men’s Basketball

-UNLV-



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