Sports
Recruiting Has Begun for the High School Class of 2027
It’s Opening Day for recruiting for the high school class of 2027! (I don’t want to make you feel old but we’re talking about the college class of 2031.) June 15, 2025, otherwise known as the first day of allowable athletic recruiting for rising high school juniors by NCAA Division I and Division II coaches, […]

It’s Opening Day for recruiting for the high school class of 2027! (I don’t want to make you feel old but we’re talking about the college class of 2031.)
June 15, 2025, otherwise known as the first day of allowable athletic recruiting for rising high school juniors by NCAA Division I and Division II coaches, is finally here. Today, student-athletes in the class of 2027 can both initiate and receive communications –including email, text messages, social media messages, phone calls, and video calls– with college coaches. They can also make verbal commitments for the 2027-28 school year. (NCAA Division III coaches are not constrained by this rule; they can make contact and recruit year-round.)
Contact between coaches and prospective student-athletes, whether off-campus or on-campus (on-campus visits include both official and unofficial visits) may not begin until August 1st.
In the past, the NCAA has published separate recruiting calendars of allowable events for Division I baseball, women’s basketball, men’s basketball, football, men’s golf, women’s lacrosse, men’s lacrosse, softball, women’s volleyball, beach volleyball, and cross country/track and field. Recruiting timelines for all other Division I sports, including swimming and diving, are spelled out in a separate recruiting calendar.
As of today, the NCAA has only published the recruiting 2025-26 calendars for women’s and men’s basketball.
Each of the calendars lists the allowable and non-allowable contact periods for their respective sports. Over the last several years, the NCAA has sought to make the lives of prospective student-athletes and college coaches less stressful by curbing early recruiting (gone are the days when coaches were getting verbal commitments from 8th-graders) and giving coaches a break from year-round recruiting.
Contact Periods Defined
- Recruiting Period: Authorized athletics department staff may make in-person, off-campus recruiting contacts and evaluations.
- Quiet Period: A quiet period is that period of time when it is permissible to make in-person recruiting contacts only on the member institution’s campus. No in-person, off-campus recruiting contacts or evaluations may be made during the quiet period.
- Dead Period: A dead period is that period of time when it is not permissible to make in-person recruiting contacts or evaluations on or off the member institution’s campus or to permit official or unofficial visits by prospective student-athletes to the institution’s campus.
- Recruiting Shutdown: A recruiting shutdown is a period of time when no form of recruiting (e.g., contacts, evaluations, official or unofficial visits, correspondence or making or receiving telephone calls) is permissible.
Following the House vs NCAA settlement, the swimming and diving recruiting landscape will change in significant ways. To begin with, those schools that have opted into the agreement will have roster limits for 2025-26 and beyond. In most cases, this will mean fewer recruiting spots for the 2027-28 school year. On the other hand, the NCAA’s scholarship limits (14.1 per women’s team and 9.9 per men’s team) are no longer in effect and these schools will now be allowed –but not required– to offer full scholarships to every member of the team.
Class of 2027
The phones were likely ringing off the hook this morning for some of the biggest names in the high school class of 2027. Those include Luke Mijatovic, who has been named to Team USA for the upcoming World Aquatics Championships, and prospective members of the World Junior Championships squad: Audrey Derivaux, Brayden Capen, Collin Holgerson, Daisy Collins, Luke Vatev, Rylee Erisman, Shareef Elaydi, Thomas McMillan. In addition, the youngest members of the 2024-25 National Junior team will be on many coaches’ lists: Anthony Dornoff, Colin Jacobs, and Mia Su.
Other top recruits from the cohort include Davis Jackson, Ellis Crisci, Griffin Oehler, Hayden Vicknair, Joey Campagnola, Juan Vallmitjana, and Trent Allen; as well as Abby Chan, Adalynn Biegler, Alyssa Ton, Bianca Nwaizu, Blakely Hammel, Carly Afanasewicz, Chloe Teger, Emily Wolf, Nikki Nixon, Sadie Buckley, Sarah Paisley Owen, and Vivienne Zangaro.
Top 2027 boys, alphabetically:
Athlete | Hometown |
Anthony Dornoff | Cerritos, CA |
Brayden Capen | Lisle, IL |
Colin Jacobs | Bradenton, FL |
Collin Holgerson | Chattanooga, TN |
Davis Jackson | Raleigh, NC |
Ellis Crisci | Lawrence, KS |
Griffin Oehler | Rockville, MD |
Hayden Vicknair | Signal Mountain, TN |
Joey Campagnola | Seminole, FL |
Juan Vallmitjana | Fort Lauderdale, FL |
Luka Mijatovic | Pleasanton, CA |
Luke Vatev | Clarendon Hills, IL |
Shareef Elaydi | Santa Clara, CA |
Thomas McMillan | Saint Charles, IL |
Trent Allen | Carmel, IN |
Top 2027 girls, alphabetically:
Athlete | Hometown |
Abby Chan | Madison, AL |
Adalynn Biegler | Big Lake, MN |
Alyssa Ton | Fountain Valley, CA |
Audrey Derivaux | Haddonfield, NJ |
Bianca Nwaizu | Irvine, CA |
Blakely Hammel | Jacksonville, FL |
Carly Afanasewicz | Pearl River, NY |
Chloe Teger | Villa Park, CA |
Daisy Collins | Chapel Hill, NC |
Emily Wolf | Fishers, IN |
Mia Su | Sunnyvale, CA |
Nikki Nixon | Raleigh, NC |
Rylee Erisman | Windermere, FL |
Sadie Buckley | Fairfax, VA |
Sarah Paisley Owen | Atlanta, GA |
Vivienne Zangaro | Long Beach, NY |
In past years, there was a recruiting dead period during “signing week,” which began on the second Wednesday in November. But with the dissolution of the National Letter of Intent program following the House settlement, it is unclear if there will still be a dead period in November. We can assume the following shutdown periods will remain in place:
Swimming and Diving Recruiting Shutdown Periods
- One week in August
- The final 14 days of December
- The first week of January
- The third and fourth weeks in February during the most popular period for conference championships
(NOTE: If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to [email protected]. Do not leave it in the comments.
Sports
Liberatore Earns Bronze at USATF U20 Championships
Story Links EUGENE, Ore. – Duquesne’s Louie Liberatore earned a bronze medal in the men’s javelin on Thursday to headline three Dukes competing at the USA Track & Field U20 Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. Liberatore recorded a mark of 61.84 meters (202 feet, 10 inches) on his sixth and […]

EUGENE, Ore. – Duquesne’s Louie Liberatore earned a bronze medal in the men’s javelin on Thursday to headline three Dukes competing at the USA Track & Field U20 Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon.
Liberatore recorded a mark of 61.84 meters (202 feet, 10 inches) on his sixth and final attempt to secure third place. It was the second-longest throw of his collegiate career and marked his third consecutive meet with a throw over 200 feet. The rising sophomore recently became the first Duke to qualify for and compete in the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships in the men’s javelin.
Duquesne’s Rose Kuchera (triple jump) is scheduled to compete at 7:30 p.m. ET Thursday, while Colm Matheney is participating in the two-day decathlon, which began Thursday and concludes Friday.
This story will be updated with results.
FOLLOW THE DUKES
Follow Duquesne Track and Field online at GoDuquesne.com, as well as on X, Instagram, and Facebook (@DuqXCTF).
Sports
IRGC launches fifteenth wave of Operation True Promise III
TEHRAN – The Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) launched of the fifteenth wave of Operation True Promise III on Thursday afternoon, marking a new phase in their ongoing military campaign. This latest escalation involves coordinated missile and drone attacks targeting military sites and facilities associated with the military industry in Haifa and Tel Aviv in […]
TEHRAN – The Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) launched of the fifteenth wave of Operation True Promise III on Thursday afternoon, marking a new phase in their ongoing military campaign.
This latest escalation involves coordinated missile and drone attacks targeting military sites and facilities associated with the military industry in Haifa and Tel Aviv in the occupied territories.
According to official sources, the latest phase of this operation included over 100 combat and martyrdom (suicide) drones focusing primarily on anti-missile defense systems in both cities. The IRGC emphasizes that these actions are part of a broader strategy to intensify missile strikes against military and industrial targets, aiming to exert maximum impact.
The situation remains tense as the Zionist regime continues to target Iranian cities, threatening the civilian lives in provinces across Iran.
The Health Ministry in Iran has reported that at least 224 people have lost their lives in the brutal strikes by the Zionist regime.
Sports
Butler Named Winner Of Honda Sport Award For Track & Field
ATHENS, Ga. — University of Georgia junior sprinter Aaliyah Butler has been named the winner of the Honda Sport Award for Track & Field, as revealed by The Collegiate Women Sports Awards (CWSA) Thursday. Butler joins Kendell Williams (2017) as the only two Bulldogs to ever receive this honor. Butler gives the Southeastern Conference four […]

Butler joins Kendell Williams (2017) as the only two Bulldogs to ever receive this honor. Butler gives the Southeastern Conference four straight winners and six winners out of the last eight years.
Since Georgia standout Dasha Vidmanova has already been awarded the Honda Sport Award for Women’s Tennis for the 2024-25 academic year, this gives the Bulldogs’ four instances of having two winners from different sports in a year (Karra Lynn Joyce, swimming; Courtney Kupets, gymnastics – 2006-07; Kim Arnold, gymnastics; Marissa Catlin, tennis – 1997-98; Cindy Schreyer, golf; Lisa Spain, tennis – 1983-84).
The Honda Sport Award has been presented annually by the CWSA for the past 49 years, recognizing the top women athletes in 12 NCAA-sanctioned sports and symbolizing “the best of the best in collegiate athletics.” The recipient of the sport award is now a finalist for the prestigious Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year and the 2025 Honda Cup, which will be presented during the live broadcast of the Collegiate Women Sports Awards Presented by Honda on June 30, at 7 p.m. on CBS Sports Network.
Butler was chosen by administrators from over 1,000 NCAA member schools. Each NCAA member institution has a vote.
“I am so honored to receive this award and have my name mentioned with winners of the past, including the great Bulldog Kendell Williams,” Butler said. “This helps show me the hard work and dedication that I’ve put in is paying off. I want to thank all involved for making me this year’s honoree, and I cannot wait to share this experience with the award winners from the other sports.”
Butler, hailing from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., delivered a standout 2025 season, headlined by her individual national title in the 400-meter dash at last week’s NCAA Outdoor Championships. Her winning time of 49.26 not only set a new school record, but also marked the fifth-fastest performance in collegiate history. Butler also anchored Georgia’s 4x400m relay to victory, securing the program’s first-ever national title in the event and helping propel the Bulldogs to their first NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championship.
Throughout the season, the junior dominated the SEC, sweeping both the indoor and outdoor 400m titles. Her consistent excellence earned her four NCAA First Team All-America honors in 2025 alone, bringing her career total to 11 All-America accolades. A fixture on the Bowerman Watch List with seven appearances, she also excelled academically as a member of the SEC Academic Honor Roll.
A 2024 Olympic gold medalist as part of Team USA’s 4x400m relay squad, Butler continues to affirm her place among the elite in collegiate and international track and field.
“What an outstanding accomplishment for such a well-deserving young woman,” Georgia Director of Track & Field Caryl Smith Gilbert said. “Aaliyah is a unique talent. She has superior talent and teams that with an elite work ethic. Aaliyah doesn’t say much, but her actions on the track, in the classroom and in the rest of her life reflect what sort of student-athlete and person she is becoming during this journey in Athens. She and I, along with the rest of the University of Georgia family, understand what an immense honor this is, and are super appreciative of the recognition.”
The CWSA, now in its 49th year, celebrates the nation’s top NCAA women athletes for their excellence in athletics, leadership, academics, and community service. Since its partnership began in 1986, Honda has provided more than $3.4 million in institutional grants to the universities of award winners and nominees, supporting the growth and success of women’s athletics programs.
About Honda Corporate Social Responsibility and the Honda USA Foundation
For more than 65 years in the U.S., Honda has been committed to making positive contributions to the communities where its associates live and work. The company’s mission is to create products and services that help people fulfill their life’s potential, while conducting business in a sustainable manner and fostering an inclusive workplace. Advancing its corporate social responsibility, Honda and the Honda USA Foundation support this direction through giving focused on education, the environment, mobility, traffic safety, and community.
Learn more at http://csr.honda.com/.
Sports
Davis Set to Represent Track & Field at USATF U20 Championships at Hayward Field
Story Links EUGENE, Ore. – For the third consecutive year, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UTRGV) Vaqueros track & field program will be represented at the USA Track & Field U20 Championships, this year by freshman Jizzale Davis. Davis will compete Friday in the women’s 200-meter dash. The first […]

EUGENE, Ore. – For the third consecutive year, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UTRGV) Vaqueros track & field program will be represented at the USA Track & Field U20 Championships, this year by freshman Jizzale Davis.
Davis will compete Friday in the women’s 200-meter dash. The first round is set for 6:08 p.m. (CT) and Davis will run in the second of three heats. The top three finishers in each heat plus the next three best times will advance to the final, scheduled for 7:45 p.m. (CT).
Earning this opportunity adds to the successful freshman season Davis put together for the Vaqueros. She racked up three medals at conference championship meets and made the finals in both the 200 and 100-meter dashes at the indoor and outdoor championships.
Davis ran her U20-qualifying time of 23.53 – which is a personal record and the No. 2 time in the UTRGV outdoor record books – as she captured the silver medal at the Southland Conference (SLC) Outdoor Championships in May. She also took fourth in the 100 and with the 4×100-meter relay at the event. The conference meet capped a stellar debut season which saw her open the outdoor campaign with a personal record in the 100 and earn two meet wins at the J. Fred Duckett Twilight in April, taking the victory in the 200 and with the 4×100 relay.
Davis already sits atop the indoor record books in two events – she is tied for the top indoor 200 race in program history and set the program record in the 4×400-meter relay with teammates Aliyah Castillo, Zoë Adams and Trinity Kirk. Davis immediately showed her potential just two months into her career as she captured two bronze medals at the SLC Indoor Championships in the 200 and 4×400-meter relay while also taking eighth in the 60-meter dash.
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Sports
Hunt Named Male EIU Athletic Director Award Winner
Story Links EIU Award Winner List Eastern Illinois track and field athlete Ramsey Hunt has been named the EIU Male Athletic Director’s Award Winner for the 2024-25 season. The award was created in 2012 to recognize a top EIU student-athlete based on their career performance in athletics, academics and community service. […]

Eastern Illinois track and field athlete Ramsey Hunt has been named the EIU Male Athletic Director’s Award Winner for the 2024-25 season.
The award was created in 2012 to recognize a top EIU student-athlete based on their career performance in athletics, academics and community service. After not presenting awards during the 2019-20 COVID year, the Male & Female Athlete of the Year was adjusted to recognize the top athletic performance for the year regardless of class. The EIU Athletic Director’s Award was then adjusted to recognize a top Senior Male & Female Athlete based on their career performance in athletics, academics, community service and leadership.
Hunt wrapped up his standout career during the indoor track season winning his third straight Ohio Valley Conference championship in the long jump. He ranked 32nd in the NCAA in the long jump during the season and over the last year was one of the top long jump performers in the nation. During his final outdoor season in 2024, Hunt earned second team All-America honors by placing tenth in the nation in the long jump at the NCAA National Championships. All told he earned eight first team All-OVC honors during his career.
He was named the EIU Male Athlete of the Year in 2023-24 based on his athletic performances. Hunt is active in his local community hailing from Oakland, Illinois (just outside of Charleston). He was one of the team captains and leaders on the track team. He earned his degree from EIU and began work in the late spring.
Hunt was one of five candidates for this award announced at the Panthers end of year awards ceremony (The Billy’s). He was joined by Rodolfo Bolis (basketball), Conner Colston (swimming), Nicholas Oliveira-Chace (football) and Chad Smith (soccer)
EIU will continue the release of its end-of-year awards this week with the Female Athletic Director’s Award set for Friday.
Sports
Big Ten Reveals Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Postseason Awards
ROSEMONT, ILL. – The Big Ten Conference announced the 2025 Big Ten Women’s Outdoor Track and Field postseason individual award recipients on Wednesday, as selected by the conference’s head coaches. The NCAA championship meet was held last weekend at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. Michigan’s Savannah Sutherland won Women’s Track Athlete of the Year, while […]

ROSEMONT, ILL. – The Big Ten Conference announced the 2025 Big Ten Women’s Outdoor Track and Field postseason individual award recipients on Wednesday, as selected by the conference’s head coaches. The NCAA championship meet was held last weekend at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon.
Michigan’s Savannah Sutherland won Women’s Track Athlete of the Year, while Washington’s Hana Moll was selected as Field Athlete of the Year and Illinois’ Melissa Wullschleger was tabbed as Freshman of the Year.
Sutherland claimed the new collegiate record in the women’s 400 meter hurdles with a time of 52.46 to claim first place in the event. She beat gold medalist Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone’s seven-year-old record of 52.75.
Moll, the 2024 NCAA Indoor National Champion, earned first place in pole vault. To do so, she cleared 4.79m (15-8.5) which broke her twin sister Amanda’s record set in the 2025 Big Ten Outdoor Championships. She also beat the defending NCAA Outdoor Champion Chloe Timberg from Rutgers.
Illinois’ Wullschleger made an impressive debut in the NCAA championships, finishing fourth overall in the heptathlon with a score of 5,928 points. The heptathlete performed exceptionally well in the shot put and javelin on her way to a podium finish. In the shot put, she earned fourth place with a mark of 13.61m (44-8) and in javelin she earned third place with a mark of 5.96m (19-6.75). Wullschleger also became the first All-American for Illinois since 1996.
Earlier this month, the Big Ten announced the award recipients for Track Athlete of the Championships, Field Athlete of the Championships and Coach of the Year, as well as the Big Ten Sportsmanship Award honorees.
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