Sports
Ranking The Jumpers At 2025 NCAA Track And Field National Championships
The 2025 NCAA Track and Field National Championships are right around the corner and the jumper fields are set. From Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, athletes will compete to take home NCAA Titles in the jumping events. The men’s long jump and pole vault finals will start on Wednesday, June 11 and the women’s on […]

The 2025 NCAA Track and Field National Championships are right around the corner and the jumper fields are set. From Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, athletes will compete to take home NCAA Titles in the jumping events.
The men’s long jump and pole vault finals will start on Wednesday, June 11 and the women’s on Thursday, June 12. The rest of the events will take place on Friday and Saturday, the final days of competition.
See the top 10 athletes in each jumping event here:
Men’s High Jump
- Riyon Rankin – Georgia – 2.29m
- Arvesta Troupe – Ole Miss – 2.26m
- Tyus Wilson – Nebraska – 2.25m
- Kampton Kam – Penn – 2.25m
- Aiden Hayes – Texas State – 2.25m
- Tito Alofe – Harvard – 2.25m
- Kason O’Riley – Texas State – 2.25m
- Elias Gerald – USC – 2.23m
- Bradford (BJ) Jennings – Texas Tech – 2.22m
- Arthur Chitty – Samford – 2.22m
Women’s High Jump
- Temitope Adeshina – Texas Tech – 1.97m
- Rose Yeboah – Illinois – 1.91m
- Kristi Perez-Snyman – Missouri – 1.90m
- Rachel Glenn – Arkansas – 1.89m
- Elena Kulichenko – Georgia – 1.89m
- Jenna Rogers – Nebraska – 1.88m
- Maria Arboleda – Iowa – 1.88m
- Sharie Enoe – Kansas State – 1.88m
- Cheyla Scott – South Carolina – 1.87m
- Celia Rifaterra – Virginia – 1.86m
- Arienne Birch – North Dakota State – 1.86m
Men’s Pole Vaut
- 1. Aleksandr Solovev – Texas A&M – 5.72m
- 2. Logan Hammer – Utah State – 5.70m
- 3. Arnie Grunert – Western Illinois – 5.65m
- 4. Benjamin Conacher – Virginia Tech – 5.61m
- 4. Ashton Barkdull – Kansas – 5.61m
- 6. Simen Guttormsen – Duke – 5.60m
- 7. Cade Gray – Tennessee – 5.55m
- 7. Bradley Jelmert – Arkansas State – 5.55m
- 7. Scott Toney – Washington – 5.55m
- 7. Dyson Wicker – Nebraska – 5.55m
Women’s Pole Vault
- 1. Amanda Moll – Washington – 4.78m
- 2. Hana Moll – Washington – 4.65m
- 3. Molly Haywood – Baylor – 4.58m
- 4. Marleen Mulla – South Dakota – 4.57m
- 4. Olivia Lueking – Oklahoma – 4.57m
- 6. Anna Willis – South Dakota – 4.52m
- 7. Mason Meinershagen – Kansas – 4.51m
- 7. Tenly Kuhn – Baylor – 4.51m
- 9. Erica Ellis – Kansas – 4.50m
- 9. Chloe Timberg – Rutgers – 4.50m
- 9. Tatum Moku – Washington State – 4.50m
Men’s Long Jump
- Lokesh Sathyanathan – Tarleton State – 8.14m
- Charles Godfred – Minnesota – 8.13m
- Greg Foster – Princeton – 8.10m
- Reinaldo Rodrigues – Arizona – 8.05m
- Chrstyn John Stevenson – USC – 8.02m
- Chris Preddie – Texas State – 8.01m
- Curtis Williams – Florida State – 7.96m
- Jayden Keys – Georgia – 7.95m
- Sir Jonathan Sims – Tarleton State – 7.94m
- Blair Anderson – Oklahoma State – 7.93m
Women’s Long Jump
- Alexis Brown – Baylor – 7.03m
- Anthaya Charlton – Florida – 6.82m
- Alyssa Jones – Stanford – 6.81m
- Sydney Johnson – UCLA – 6.79m
- Tacoria Humphrey – Illinois – 6.73m
- Janae De Gannes – Baylor – 6.72m
- Prestina Ochonogor – Tarleton State – 6.67m
- Shamaya Joiner – Grambling – 6.67m
- Synclair Savage – Louisville – 6.64m
- Aaliyah Foster – Texas – 6.57m
Men’s Triple Jump
- Brandon Green Jr. – Oklahoma – 16.94m
- Hakeem Ford – Minnesota – 16.54m
- Selva Prabhu – Kansas State – 16.49m
- Xavier Drumgoole – Stanford – 16.42m
- Gabriele Tosti – Tarleton State – 16.39m
- Theophilus Mudzengerere – South Carolina – 16.38m
- Kyvon Tatham – Florida State – 16.37m
- Kelsey Daniel – Texas – 16.34m
- Luke Brown – Kentucky – 16.33m
- Floyd Whitaker – Oklahoma – 16.27m
Women’s Triple Jump
- 1. Winny Bii – Texas A&M – 14.01m
- 1. Agur Dwol – Oklahoma – 14.01m
- 1. Shantae Foreman – Clemson – 14.01m
- 4. Victoria Gorlova – Texas Tech – 13.99m
- 5. Emilia Sjostrand – San Jose State – 13.78m
- 6. Daniela Wamokpego – Iowa – 13.67m
- 7. Tamiah Washington – Texas Tech – 13.63m
- 7. Simone Johnson – San Jose State – 13.63m
- 9. Busola Akinduro – Texas Tech – 13.59m
- 10. Ryann Porter – Oregon – 13.55m
About Hayward Field
Hayward Field, which was built in 1919, is no stranger to top-tier track and field events, including the Diamond League and the U.S. Olympic Team Trials.
The venue is named after Bill Hayward, who ran the University of Oregon track and field program from 1904 to 1947. Though it originally was intended for Ducks football, many additions and renovations over the century have helped it become a premier destination.
In September 2023, the venue became the first facility outside of Zurich or Brussels to host the two-day season-ending Wanda Diamond League Final, where the year’s 32 overall champions were crowned.
What Schools Won The Team Titles At The 2025 NCAA Division I Men’s And Women’s Outdoor Track And Field Championships?
The Arkansas women took home the outdoor team title in 2024, sweeping the indoor and outdoor championships for the 2023-2024 season.
Florida, led by legendary head coach Mike Holloway, secured the men’s title in 2024, giving the Gators three consecutive outdoor men’s titles. Florida became the first team to three-peat since Texas A&M (2009-2011).
What Schools Have Won The Most Titles At The NCAA Division I Outdoor Track And Field Championships?
The NCAA Division I Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships first was held in 1921.
USC owns the most men’s titles with 25, while Arkansas is the only other program with 10 or more (10).
The NCAA Division I Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships first was held in 1982.
LSU has won the most women’s titles with 14. The next-closest is Texas with five.
From FloTrack YouTube
Check out these potential future collegiate stars: Incredible Finish In 8-Year-Old 4×1 National Championship
FloTrack Is The Streaming Home For Many Track And Field Meets Each Year
Don’t miss all the track and field season action streaming on FloTrack. Check out the FloTrack schedule for more events.
FloTrack Archived Footage
Video footage from each event will be archived and stored in a video library for FloTrack subscribers to watch for the duration of their subscriptions.
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Sports
Texas A&M Volleyball Coach guides U.S. U19 Squad to NORCECA sweep
Coach Morrison and the United States win the U19 Pan-American Cup This marks Coach Morrison’s fourth straight international title with the U19’s
They swept Mexico in the final for the win
#GigEm // #AggieVB pic.twitter.com/UL5eNq5kyy — Texas A&M Volleyball (@AggieVolleyball) June 28, 2025 Texas A&M volleyball coach Jamie Morrison is bringing home some […]

Texas A&M volleyball coach Jamie Morrison is bringing home some gold after leading the United States Women’s U19 National Team to a title at the 2025 North, Central America and Caribbean Volleyball Confederation Pan American Cup (NORCECA).
Morrison has long been a mainstay on the international volleyball stage, having been part of three Olympic medal-winning teams, earning gold with the men’s team in 2008, silver with the women’s team in 2012, and bronze with the women’s team in 2016.
In the U19 Pan American bracket, he’s become a consistent medal winner over the past three summers. When the lights dimmed at Queens College in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, Morrison secured his fourth straight title.
Team USA dropped just one set across 16 matches. Mexico, which the team had swept earlier in the tournament, put up a valiant effort in the final. Still, Morrison’s squad completed its fourth sweep of the tournament with a 3-0 win over Mexico (25-21, 25-22, 25-21).
Under Morrison’s leadership, Texas A&M volleyball has taken a significant leap, reaching the Sweet 16 in just his second season. The program also recently secured a commitment from the top setter in the country, setting the stage for a strong 2025 campaign.
We wish the Aggies the best this upcoming season.
Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Jarrett Johnson on X: @whosnextsports1.
Sports
Famous in a Small Town With Several Huskers at ‘Small Town Famous’
Already a popular store, Small Town Famous turned itself into Small Town Huskers for the past week in downtown Hastings. Volleyball Day at STF! Excited the freshmen are here!! Posted by Small Town Famous on Wednesday, June 25, 2025 On Wednesday, June 25, Nebraska volleyball freshmen Teraya Sigler, Ryan Hunter and Campbell Flynn all trekked west […]
Already a popular store, Small Town Famous turned itself into Small Town Huskers for the past week in downtown Hastings.
On Wednesday, June 25, Nebraska volleyball freshmen Teraya Sigler, Ryan Hunter and Campbell Flynn all trekked west to greet eager fans. They signed autographs for much of their appearance, but also found themselves working the soft-serve ice cream machine in the store, which of course was pumping out Husker red ice cream.
The players were commended for their personalities during the visit and how they smiled and greeted all the fans who came to see them. Of course, they heard their fair share of “Go Big Reds” chanted throughout the store.
Then just two days later, “Volleyball Day” turned into “Softball Day” at Small Town Famous. NU standout pitcher Jordy Bahl came out to greet Husker fans, and much like her volleyball counterparts – was put to work.
Bahl also signed autographs, but she quickly got in on the act of making shirts and hoodies. The store said it was “Make Your Own Softball T-Shirt or Hoodie Day” on social media. It quickly turned into “Jordy Bahl Day” when she arrived to a long line of fans looking for autographs and personal interactions. They got all of that and more, and Jordy was tossed onto a screenprinting machine in the process.
Fans in Hastings were able to enjoy a little bit of Lincoln and hour and a half west of the capital city for a week, and as you can tell – they soaked it up!
Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.
Sports
Navy Athletics Finishes 98th out of 365 Schools in the Learfield Directors Cup
Story Links ANNAPOLIS, Md.–Navy Athletics finished 98 out of 365 schools in the NACDA Learfield Directors Cup for the 2024-25 athletic season. The Mids scored 191.8 points, which was the most of any Service Academy, the second-most of any Patriot League school (Boston University finished 73rd with 314.5 points) and the second-most of […]

ANNAPOLIS, Md.–Navy Athletics finished 98 out of 365 schools in the NACDA Learfield Directors Cup for the 2024-25 athletic season. The Mids scored 191.8 points, which was the most of any Service Academy, the second-most of any Patriot League school (Boston University finished 73rd with 314.5 points) and the second-most of any American Athletic Conference school (USF finished 78th with 294.75 points).
The Learfield Directors Cup is given annually by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics to the colleges and universities with the most success in collegiate athletics. Points for the NACDA Directors’ Cup are based on order of finish in various championships sponsored by the NCAA or, in the case of FBS football, the coaches’ poll and bowl wins.
A first-place finish in a sport earns 100 points, second place 90 points, third place 85 points, fourth place 80 points, and lesser values for lower finishes (exact numbers beyond fourth place depend on the sport.
NCAA Division I counts the top 19 sports at each school with the following breakdown: Four sports that must be counted are baseball, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and women’s volleyball. The next highest 15 sports scored for each institution, regardless of gender, will be used in the standings (except men’s water polo, which is the only NCAA sponsored sport that NACDA does not give points for. For FBS Football: the top 25 teams are awarded points based on their final rank in the coaches poll, while 26th place is considered a tie between every non-ranked bowl winner and the next available rank is considered a tie between every non-ranked bowl loser.
Navy scored 72 points in the fall (27 points by men’s cross country, 45 points by football), 85.5 points in the winter (32.5 points from men’s gymnastics and 53 points from wrestling) and 34.3 points in the spring (9.3 points by women’s golf and 25 points by women’s lac
Sports
Basey/Hurst, Kinna/Loreen combinations take first place at AVP Contender Series in Virginia Beach – Daily Press
The teams of Gage Basey/Thomas Hurst and Marine Kinna/Chloe Loreen captured top honors Sunday in the $60,000 Association of Volleyball Professionals’ Contender Series tournament in Virginia Beach. Each of those pairs split $9,750 first-place prizes. People going by 12th Street and Atlantic Avenue on the weekend saw powerful spikes, diving digs and precise sets on […]

The teams of Gage Basey/Thomas Hurst and Marine Kinna/Chloe Loreen captured top honors Sunday in the $60,000 Association of Volleyball Professionals’ Contender Series tournament in Virginia Beach. Each of those pairs split $9,750 first-place prizes.
People going by 12th Street and Atlantic Avenue on the weekend saw powerful spikes, diving digs and precise sets on the sand from players who are looking to break through to the AVP’s top-tier events.
The last player from Hampton Roads in the event was Ayden Keeter of Yorktown, who combined with his Webber International beach volleyball college teammate Carson Barnes of Ocean View, Delaware, to go 3-0 Saturday — 2-0 in pool play before a round-of-16 victory. They split $1,200 after a 21-14, 21-18 quarterfinal defeat to eventual semifinalists Diego Perez and Jeff Samuels.
Basey, from the University of Colorado, and Hurst, from Irvine, California, were seeded fifth. Those 21-year-olds outlasted top-seeded Derek Bradford of Porter Ranch, California, and Evan Cory of Metairie, Louisiana, 18-21, 21-19, 15-12 in the final for their third victory of the day. Bradford and Cory split $5,250.
In the women’s competition, Kinna and Loreen capped a dominant day with three straight-sets victories, beating 15th-seeded Piper Ferch and Hailey Hamlett 21-18, 21-13 for the championship.
Kinna, a 25-year-old from France, played for three colleges, including Division I Loyola Marymount. Loreen, 26, from Seattle, played for Santa Clara and the Washington Huskies.
After a three-set triumph Saturday in their second round of pool play, Kinna and Loreen never came close to losing a set in the elimination bracket.
Ferch, 21, a Cal Poly player, and Hamlett, from TCU, split $5,250. They defeated a pair of higher-seeded teams to reach the title match, including a 15-21, 21-18, 15-13 semifinal thriller over No. 4 Malia Gementera and Taylor Hagenah, a Long Beach State combination.
All of the teams that lost in the round of 16 split $600, the quarterfinal losers divided $1,200, and the semifinalists pocketed $2,700. The finalists earned wild-card berths in the higher-level AVP Manhattan Beach Open in California in August.
Sports
Thanks to YouTube, Hunter Hoopes has a professional baseball career
Thanks to YouTube, Hunter Hoopes has a professional baseball career | The Gazette Skip to content More Stories 0

Sports
2-sport North Allegheny star excited to play college ball at Drake
Whether he was defending passes in football or soaring through the air in track, Nick Humphries left his mark at North Allegheny. Now he’s ready to make the leap all the way to Des Moines, Iowa. The 2025 NA graduate departed in late June for Drake, where he will begin preparation for his first year […]

Whether he was defending passes in football or soaring through the air in track, Nick Humphries left his mark at North Allegheny.
Now he’s ready to make the leap all the way to Des Moines, Iowa.
The 2025 NA graduate departed in late June for Drake, where he will begin preparation for his first year with the Division I FCS football program.
“I’m very excited,” Humphries said. “It’s a new chapter in my life. Closing this one and opening a new one is always good. As a young kid, I always had a dream to play Division I football. This is very big for me, so I’m excited.”
Humphries, who was part of WPIAL champion teams in football and track, was set to leave for Drake on June 26 to start orientation, move into his dorm room and begin summer conditioning.
A lot has changed since Humphries, a 6-foot, 170-pound two-time all-conference defensive back, committed to Drake in October. Former Bulldogs coach Todd Stepsis departed in early December for Northern Iowa, and Joe Woodley, who had led crosstown Grand View to the 2024 NAIA national championship, was hired at Drake on
Dec. 23.
While all of the coaches who had recruited Humphries are gone, he didn’t waver in his commitment to the school.
“When I first heard the news, I was kind of shocked,” he said, “but at the same time, I was firm in my decision with Drake. In my household, academics always come first. Drake has excellent academics. … I knew they were getting good coaches, so it wasn’t really a problem for me.”
Humphries, who carried a 3.5 GPA at North Allegheny, earned an academic scholarship to Drake and plans to major in data analytics at the 4,800-student school. The Bulldogs play in the Pioneer Football League, the only nonscholarship, football-only conference in the FCS. The lone other WPIAL product on the roster is former Canon-McMillan defensive back Chris Davis Jr.
Humphries had attended a football camp at Drake last summer and been offered — his first Division I deal — shortly afterward. He had also looked at Robert Morris and Howard.
“The reason why I picked Drake was, first and foremost, academics,” said “They have very good academics. I liked the people around there. They were very welcoming, and I liked the community and the environment. It was very nice.”
Humphries had a nice career at North Allegheny, lettering four times in track and twice in football.
He led the WPIAL Class 6A runner-up Tigers with 11 pass breakups and returned two punts for touchdowns in his senior football season.
This past spring, he finished third in the long jump at the WPIAL Class 3A Track and Field Championships and anchored the fourth-place 400 relay team that broke a 46-year-old school record with a time of 42.37 seconds.
He also placed second in the long jump at the Baldwin Invitational with a personal-best leap of 23 feet, 3 inches, one of the best marks in school history by anyone not named Ayden Owens.
NA track coach John Neff said Humphries was much more than just a football player using track season to stay in shape.
“Football is definitely his No. 1 sport, but he attacks track and field as if it were his No. 1 sport, too,” Neff said. “He was a great teammate, and he was really interested in the team’s success. I couldn’t have asked for any more out of him.”
Humphries’ track days are over; he’s football-only at Drake. He said the new coaching staff has reached out, and he was encouraged by what he heard from cornerbacks coach Jacob Brown and safeties coach AJ Vasquez.
“They’ve been calling me, texting me and keeping me up to date,” Humphries said. “It’s going good, and I’m very excited to get there and start my new journey, my new chapter, and see how it goes.”
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