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St. Louis sports-talk radio KFNS ends glorious, volatile run

Dan Caesar | Post-Dispatch For more than three decades, KFNS has taken a wild, rollicking and erratic run as St. Louis’ longest-running sports-talk radio station, one with an alumni roster that includes many of the market’s best-known sports talkers. But 590 AM also has a dark underbelly, and its overall legacy is unrivaled by any […]

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For more than three decades, KFNS has taken a wild, rollicking and erratic run as St. Louis’ longest-running sports-talk radio station, one with an alumni roster that includes many of the market’s best-known sports talkers.

But 590 AM also has a dark underbelly, and its overall legacy is unrivaled by any other local station — likely nationally as well. That all comes to an end this weekend, when it leaves the jock-jabber business for talking about multiple topics and changes its call letters to KLIS (for the “Lou Information Station”).

The raucous ride began in 1993, when KEZK transitioned from music to sports formats and became KFNS a few months after St. Louis’ first all-sports station (KASP) failed. KFNS became so successful that it was sold in 2004 by a group led by Greg Marecek for what sources said was $11.5 million — $8 million more than it was purchased for six years earlier.

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Frank Cusumano was on the air at KFNS longer than anyone, covering three decades, and the early years were special.

“Man, did we land some guests in those days,” he said. “We had coaches like Don Shula and John Wooden. We had football (players) like Jim Brown and John Unitas. We had (basketball’s) Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Rick Barry. We had (boxers) Larry Holmes and Joe Frazier. Back in those days, if you worked at it, you could get basically anybody on your show if you put in the time.”

Ken “Iggy” Strode was a go-getting producer at the station in addition to appearing on the air and booked many high-profile guests. He had four stints at KFNS and said the Marecek era was the best.

“That was the heyday,” he said. “In ’98, there still weren’t a ton of sports radio stations (nationwide), and for me as a producer, it was good because it wasn’t like 200 stations were calling somebody.”

Strode recalls getting New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner on the air, from his hotel room, the day after the Yanks won the 1998 World Series.

“I found out where he was staying, called the hotel, asked for his room and he answered,” Strode said. “He said he had a couple minutes.”

That was normal procedure then.

“We got all those humongous names on the radio with that little, tiny scratchy signal,” Cusumano said.

It was an impressive lineup that now-longtime St. Louis sportscaster Tim McKernan encountered when he was trying to break into the business.

“So many great memories from starting as an intern in 1998 and getting a chance to meet and work with people who were so kind and helpful like Bernie Miklasz, Frank Cusumano, Bob Ramsey, Mike Claiborne, Dave Greene and Jay Randolph Jr.,” said McKernan, who had three stints at the station covering 14 years. “So many talented people have worked there — from the on-air staff to the producers to the sales people.”

While not first locally in the all-sports format, KFNS certainly has been the longest-running of many jock-jabberers that have appeared in the market.

“We really had a lot of talent go through there,” said Ramsey, who had multiple runs at the station covering about two decades. “When you look back and think of all the guys and what they provided on the air, we had some really important contributions because so many of us approached the same story of the same team from all different angles. I think over the course of a broadcast day the listener really got a ton of different perspectives that allowed them, in the end, to make their own decisions.

“From traditional morning shows to afternoon drives and getting people fired up, challenging the establishment to actually becoming part of the establishment with some things, it really came into its own as the destination for hardcore sports fans.“

It was a hodgepodge of approaches from the broadcasters, as no shows sounded the same.

“Kevin (Slaten) is yelling at people. Frank is the cheerleader. ‘Claibs’ is the analyst that really breaks it down, the connected guy is Bernie using numbers,” Ramsey said. “They could all be on the same story” but with vastly different angles.

Things were so good that KFNS added an FM station to carry its programming in some western and northern parts of the market where its AM signal was weak.

“For 15 years it really made a difference in the market,” Ramsey said.

The FM station was sold amid KFNS’ significant downturn that eventually reached epic proportions.

“It became the king of the carnival,” said Charlie “Tuna” Edwards, who was on the air in different slots across most of KFNS’ run. “I can say this wholeheartedly: I’ve seen and learned everything about talk radio, and I don’t think there’s anything new I can see after that. I’ve seen fistfights. I’ve seen it all.”

The tumble

KFNS eventually became a shell of itself. Contributing to its massive slide was stiff completion from WXOS (101.1), which entered the sports-talk business in 2009 on the more powerful FM band. That was coupled with the decline of radio in general, and AM in particular, in large part because of growing social media platforms. The station never regained the prominence it once attained.

“There never was any stability in that place once Greg sold it,” Strode said. “It went from one owner to another.”

Slaten, who had six stints at the station covering about two decades and is known for his pointed commentary, has a strong opinion about the station’s stark regression.

“It was the sports station in this town,” he said. “They dominated that part of the market. So the legacy of having that wonderful position in the marketplace is (this): No station probably in history was run in a poorer fashion than that one was by a succession of idiots. It was incredible how one group after another was more incompetent than the previous one. To me that’s a waste, because in its heyday it was really rocking.”

The low point hit in 2014, when utter chaos enveloped 590 — missed payrolls, employees abruptly dismissed, court judgments issued against the company. The flashpoint came when hosts from two stations under the same ownership group and working in a shared building began bad-mouthing other hosts on the air, and it got personal,. The situation became so volatile that a fistfight ensued between broadcaster Brian McKenna (who died in March) and the person running the operation, Dan Marshall, sending the boss to a hospital and the announcer to jail.

Not surprisingly, 590 left the airwaves later that year. The final blow came when Ameren shut off power to KFNS’ transmitter because it was owed about $1,200.

Randy Markel and a partner bought 590 out of bankruptcy about a year later and gave it a go. For a time McKernan was operating KFNS for Markel while also running “The Morning After” show that he co-hosted on the station, with the intent that he would buy 590. But the deal never was finalized.

Markel since has said the station was on track to become profitable in 2020, but the coronavirus pandemic ended that.

“It’s hard to run a sports-talk station with no sports,” he said. “But worse than no sports was no advertising.”

 Markel said he lost millions of dollars owning the station before selling it to Dave Zobrist in a deal that was competed in early 2022.

Markel, a colorful native Texan who formerly owned two Chuck’s Boots stores in the St. Louis market, had no previous radio experience but enjoyed much of the soap-opera melodrama at KFNS despite taking the financial hit.

“I miss it. I miss all the backstabbing, all the dysfunction,” Markel has said. “But I had more fun trying to make that work and dealing with all the different personalities. … It was fun. Every day was a new challenge.”

Zobrist couldn’t make it last long term and in July dropped local talk, going all national, to cut costs as he tried to sell. While Zobrist was widely liked by those working for him, he couldn’t shake the key problem faced by some of his predecessors: lack of advertising.

“Of all the people I’ve worked under there, the only one I respect is Dave Zobrist,” Slaten said. “I have a lot of respect for Dave. … He wasn’t playing games, he treated everybody right, he was fair to everybody. But unfortunately the sales end of it wasn’t up to par.”

Zobrist finally has found a buyer (pending Federal Communications Commission approval) in Big Toe Media, run by longtime St. Louis broadcaster and media executive Dave Greene along with colleague Conrad Thompson. Greene is very familiar with 590, what with three stints there in a variety of managerial and on-air capacities across 12 years.

The new approach

Big Toe is set to pull 590 out of the sports-intensive format when Saturday night becomes Sunday morning, scheduling shows locally and nationally that will cover an array of topics. Some still will focus on sports, and University of Illinois football and men’s basketball broadcasts will return. But others programs will discuss subjects as diverse as business, the economy, entertainment, food and culture.

Local programming debuts Monday, and one show will be familiar to some listeners to the station before national fare took over last summer — Hot Take Central, with Cardinals television on-field reporter Jim Hayes and former Blues player and part-time broadcaster Cam Janssen. It will be rebranded as “Hot Take Central 2.0” and air from 8-10 a.m. on weekdays.

Hayes has a sense of humor about returning to 590.

“We like ‘Hot Take Central’ as a name and we’re not very creative to come up with another similar name,” he said.

The show’s approach will be similar to Round 1 — a mix of sports and other subjects.

“It was awful before and we plan on keeping it awful,” Hayes said. “I think it had it following and we hope to build on that. … Both of us are big sports fans so that’ll be a big part of it, but as it was before our day-to-day lives might be the biggest influence on what we talk about and what’s going on in St. Louis.”

Edwards, who mostly has done nighttime sports shows on KFNS, will be on from 11 a.m-1 p.m. on weekdays with a show that mixes news and entertainment with athletics talk. He’ll work with Tom Wylie and Joe Davis.

“It will be entertaining, mark my words,” Edwards said.

Longtime St. Louis University basketball radio analyst and local media figure Earl Austin Jr. will have a program at 11 a.m. Saturdays focusing on high school sports.

While there will be a diversity of shows and most subjects are fair game, politics is one that usually won’t.

“Unless it is the big topic of the day we are not” discussing that, Greene said. “There’s plenty of places to get political talk and my whole concept is that you know nobody wants to listen to the same thing over and over and over again.”

Greene and Thompson also are co-owners of Sports Hub STL, which debuted in February and has been billed as the market’s first media outlet to provide video sports content delivered strictly digitally. There can be some overlap of that outlet’s personnel with KLIS broadcasters, with both operating out of the 590 facility in Kirkwood.

Some people working on KLIS will buy their airtime and sell their own advertising, while a few will receive some pay from the company but also be responsible to its bottom line.

“Our content people are all expected to contribute to the sales side,” Greene said. “I always tell stations I take over and operate — ‘Congratulations. You’re all part of the sales marketing and recruitment teams.’ … They do contribute a little bit more when they have some skin in the game.”

He added: “Each of our show agreements is tailored to the creators (broadcasters), but one thing remains consistent: everyone plays a role in identifying local business partners and potential sponsors. Content creators know how to sell themselves, and we expect each of them to contribute by generating leads that our sellers, and I, can follow up on.”

Out with a thud

In this era with many media platforms tied together, the programming airing on 590 also is to be carried on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify and other podcast distributors.

In the end, the once illustrious reputation of KFNS as a major force on St. Louis radio finishes like this: basically as a throw-in to the other platforms KLIS will be on while being sold for what sources said is $250,000 — after once going for $11.5 million. The land near Bethalto on which the station’s transmitter stands is considered more valuable than the station itself.

“We look at this from a business standpoint as a land deal,” Greene has said. “We invested in a piece of property at a good price, and it happens to come with an entity (a radio station) that I have a pretty good idea of how to run.”

So what makes Greene think this can be a success after so many failures with 590?

“We completely bought it right (financially), and we’re going run it right,” he said. “It comes down to the way people consume content these days. Radio is simply one means of distribution. … We’re not relying on people coming to us, that’s the difference here. Digital distribution allows you to push your programming out to people, and if you’re using YouTube and Google correctly, then you are going to reach a lot more people. … That’s how it works these days.”


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Reeling sports radio station KFNS gets a reprieve but likely only briefly

A tornado devastated the St. Louis area on May 16, and much of the following week was spent picking up the pieces. Volunteers turned out and the road to recovery began. View the week in St. Louis through the Post-Dispatch photographers’ lenses. Edited by Jenna Jones.





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First West Nile case of season confirmed in Yolo County | News

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RTL Group to acquire Sky Deutschland

RTL Group has acquired Sky Deutschland (Germany, Austria, Switzerland), for €150m, creating a media business with some 11.5m subscribers. The deal –  which is subject to regulatory approvals – combines Sky’s premium sports rights, including Bundesliga, DFB-Pokal, Premier League and Formula 1, with RTL’s entertainment and news brands across RTL+, free-to-air and pay TV. It […]

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RTL Group has acquired Sky Deutschland (Germany, Austria, Switzerland), for €150m, creating a media business with some 11.5m subscribers.

The deal –  which is subject to regulatory approvals – combines Sky’s premium sports rights, including Bundesliga, DFB-Pokal, Premier League and Formula 1, with RTL’s entertainment and news brands across RTL+, free-to-air and pay TV. It also unites the streaming platforms RTL+ and WOW.

RTL Group chief executive Thomas Rabe described the deal as “transformational for RTL Group”.

He said: “It will bring together two of the most powerful entertainment and sports brands in Europe and create a unique video proposition across free TV, pay TV and streaming.

“It will boost our streaming business, with a total of around 11.5 million paying subscribers, further diversify our revenue streams and make us even more attractive for creative talent, rights holders and business partners.”

Rabe said the synergies are estimated to be around €250 million per annum within three years after closing, creating “significant shareholder value”.

He added: “Together, RTL and Sky will be in an even stronger position to invest in people, content and technology in Germany and in Europe to compete with the global tech and streaming players. I want to recognise the outstanding work of the Sky Deutschland team, whose strong performance over recent years has laid the foundation for this next phase.”


Rights deals and strategic content partnerships

At the end of 2023, RTL Deutschland and Sky Deutschland struck a two-year partnership for seven Formula 1 races to be broadcast live on RTL in Germany, alongside one game from the English Premier League per match week on RTL+, and three conference broadcasts of the 2nd Bundesliga on RTL.

As part of the commercial agreement, Sky Deutschland received rights to two Europa League or Europa Conference League games per match week, providing subscribers access to premium live sport every Thursday.

At the time, RTL said “sharing live sport and content is the start of a broader partnership between RTL Deutschland and Sky Deutschland, with the ambition of finding further ways to share content in the future”.

And, at the end of last year, RTL Deutschland secured for the 2025/6 Bundesliga season onwards the exclusive free-to-air TV rights to broadcast the Saturday evening games of the 2. Bundesliga, as well as a highlights rights package for Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga on RTL+.

At the time, RTL Deutschland said its portfolio now includes matches of the German national team, the Uefa Europa League and Uefa Conference League and – in cooperation with Sky Deutschland – three live conference broadcasts of the 2. Bundesliga per season, and a top match from the English Premier League per match week.


According to the agreement, RTL Group will fully acquire Sky’s businesses in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, including customer relationships in Luxembourg, Liechtenstein and South Tyrol on a cash-free and debt-free basis. The purchase price consists of €150 million in cash and a variable consideration linked to RTL Group’s share price performance of up to €377m.

Barny Mills, Sky Deutschland CEO, will continue to lead the Sky Deutschland business until the transaction is completed. Stephan Schmitter will stay in his current role as CEO of RTL Deutschland until closing of the transaction and then lead the combined company. RTL Deutschland will remain headquartered in Cologne and Sky Deutschland in Munich.

Dana Strong, Group CEO at Sky, added: “Sky Deutschland has made significant progress over the past three years, delivering strong operational performance and reaching a record number of customers.

“The business is on track to achieve EBITDA break-even, reflecting the success of our turnaround plan. Combining the strength of our brand with RTL builds on that momentum and opens up even greater opportunities. This deal provides a strong platform for long-term success, and ensures Sky continues to share in the growth of the combined business.”





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Four Lion Tracksters named to CSC Academic All-District teams

Story Links CSC Academic All-District Team COMMERCE – The East Texas A&M University track and field team had four scholar-athletes named to the Academic All-District team, as selected by the College Sports Communicators.   On the men’s side, Jonas Gran (Riehen, Switzerland) was selected, […]

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COMMERCE – The East Texas A&M University track and field team had four scholar-athletes named to the Academic All-District team, as selected by the College Sports Communicators.
 
On the men’s side, Jonas Gran (Riehen, Switzerland) was selected, while Romi Griese (Salzkotten, Germany), Veronika Kramarenko (Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine), and Cassandra Rendon (San Antonio – Madison) were honored on the women’s side.
 

All four East Texas A&M honorees advance to the national ballot. The CSC Academic All-America teams will be released on July 15.
 
Gran is a biological sciences major and named to the Southland Conference All-Academic team, SLC Commissioner’s Honor Roll, President’s List and earned the silver medal in the decathlon at the outdoor conference championships this year as well.
 
Griese was named the Southland Women’s Outdoor Student-Athlete of the Year as she also won the discus conference championship this season, while earning SLC All-Academic, SLC Commissioner’s Honor Roll, and President’s List honors. She is also a biological sciences major.
 

Kramarenko won the outdoor high jump crown this spring, the second SLC title of her career, reaching the podium in both the outdoor and indoor high jump this year. She is a health kinesiology & sport studies major, being named to SLC All-Academic team, SLC Commissioner’s Honor Roll, and the President’s List as well.
 
Rendon is a wildlife conservation science major and finished third at the conference championships in the discus this year. She has medaled in the event in each of the past two seasons. Rendon is the current discus school record holder and is also a SLC Commissioner’s Honor Roll and President’s List honoree.
 
The full CSC Academic All-District team can be found HERE.

 

-ETAMU-



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UND athletics will opt in to House settlement – Grand Forks Herald

GRAND FORKS — The UND athletic department officially announced Friday afternoon the university would opt in to the NCAA vs. House settlement, a landmark legal case paving the way for direct payments from schools to athletes. UND athletic director Bill Chaves said UND communicated its intent to opt in with the NCAA on Friday, June […]

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GRAND FORKS — The UND athletic department officially announced Friday afternoon the university would opt in to the NCAA vs. House settlement, a landmark legal case paving the way for direct payments from schools to athletes.

UND athletic director Bill Chaves said UND communicated its intent to opt in with the NCAA on Friday, June 27.

“As an NCAA Division I member, in a non-defendant conference, our thought process has always been to do what is best for our student-athletes and the University of North Dakota,” Chaves said. “With the information that we have today and the requirement to make a decision by Monday, June 30, we felt that this was the most prudent course of action. There was always a chance that when the final settlement occurred that it could be different than what was initially provided by both the plaintiffs’ and defendants’ attorneys and sure enough that was the case.”

The country’s largest schools, those competing in the power conferences such as the Big Ten, must opt in to the House settlement. UND, however, is among those smaller NCAA departments around the country mulling the decision on whether to join the settlement.

Prior to UND’s decision, South Dakota and South Dakota State announced intentions to opt in to House vs. NCAA. North Dakota State has yet to announce a decision with a June 30 deadline.

Chaves told the Herald on June 11 the university was leaning toward opting in after concerns about roster sizes were eased with the ruling’s last-minute language on grandfathering-in athletes impacted by the ruling.

“Given that roster grandfathering can only occur should institutions opt in at this moment of time, we believe that opting in is best for UND,” Chaves said. “Additionally, I believe the opportunity to expand our partnership with our teammates at the UND Alumni Association & Foundation, 1883 Collective and Ralph Engelstad Arena will provide us the best situation possible to our student-athletes this year and beyond. Further, the ability to potentially provide additional support through internal NIL will be intriguing for UND as we traverse this new era of college athletics.”

Roster sizes were an issue because the House settlement calls for a change from scholarship maximums to roster maximums. The terms of the settlement set a roster cap on each sport.

On Feb. 20, 2025, the Herald reported UND would opt out of the settlement in Year 1, with the possibility of opting in later. That stance changed in large part due to the grandfathering-in of impacted athletes.

UND is over the House-capped roster sizes in women’s track and field, softball, soccer and women’s golf. If the settlement had continued as originally depicted, UND would have likely had to cut athletes out of those sports immediately, potentially causing participation numbers to be non-Title IX compliant.

UND is at or under the roster limit in its men’s sports except for hockey, where the midseason addition of emergency goalie Aleksi Huson put UND at 27 players. The House settlement limits men’s hockey teams to 26.

Prior to the case being finalized, Yahoo Sports estimated more than 15,000 athletes across all Division I members could be cut, depending on how many schools opt in to the settlement.

The schools are instructed to use “good-faith efforts” to identify athletes who “were removed or would have been removed from the roster for 2025-26 due to the implementation of the roster limits.”

Those individuals won’t count toward roster limits for the rest of their eligibility. The guideline applies to current athletes, as well as incoming recruits. Schools have until July 6 to identify these athletes.

Tom Miller

Miller has covered sports at the Grand Forks Herald since 2004 and was the state sportswriter of the year in 2019 (NSMA, NDAPSSA), 2022 (NSMA, NDAPSSA) and 2024 (NDAPSSA).

His primary beat is UND football but also reports on a variety of UND sports and local preps.

He can be reached at (701) 780-1121, tmiller@gfherald.com or on Twitter at @tommillergf.





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Volleyball U-13 team showcases talent at nationals

By Anthony Richards A group of young volleyball players represented the area against teams from across the state as an under-13 team from St. Johns Volleyball Club won its division at the 52nd Annual AAU Girls Junior National Volleyball Championships in Orlando on June 13-16. The team experienced adversity early on the first day of […]

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By Anthony Richards

A group of young volleyball players represented the area against teams from across the state as an under-13 team from St. Johns Volleyball Club won its division at the 52nd Annual AAU Girls Junior National Volleyball Championships in Orlando on June 13-16.

The team experienced adversity early on the first day of the event but bounced back in a big way and put the challenging start behind them to win all nine of their games over the final three days.

Held annually at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando, AAU Nationals is recognized as the world’s largest volleyball tournament, drawing more than 6,800 teams and 70,000 youth athletes from across the United States and abroad.

For many clubs, including St. Johns Volleyball Club, it serves as the culminating event of the season.

What makes the team’s performance particularly noteworthy is that many of the players on the team only began playing volleyball within the past year and often compete against teams whose players have been training for two years or longer.

According to club owner and head coach Andor Gyulai, their rapid development reflects the club’s unique coaching model and training environment.

“Our system is designed to accelerate player growth,” Gyulai said. “With our grass court training model, we can set up more courts and create more repetitions and game-like touches for each player. Combined with our best-in-class Superior Coaching Systems, this leads to faster skill development and better long-term results.”

Founded in 2022, St. Johns Volleyball Club continues its rapid growth serving 4th through 8th grades in the Nocatee area and St. Johns County.

Earlier this year, the club expanded into high school beach volleyball with newly opened beach courts in Nocatee, and it also recently broke ground on a state-of-the-art indoor volleyball facility for both middle and high school players, scheduled to open in May 2026.

Tryouts for the 2025-2026 indoor club season will be held in July. More information about the club, programs, and tryout registration can be found at www.SJVClub.com.





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CSUN’s Jay Louison-Roe Earns Academic All-District Honors

Story Links NORTHRIDGE, Calif.—CSUN Track & Field’s junior Jay Louison-Roe received Academic All-District Team honors by the College Sports Communicators (CSC) on June 24.  The CSC academic awards programs recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom. The academic qualifications for the distinction are […]

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NORTHRIDGE, Calif.—CSUN Track & Field’s junior Jay Louison-Roe received Academic All-District Team honors by the College Sports Communicators (CSC) on June 24. 

The CSC academic awards programs recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom. The academic qualifications for the distinction are a minimum 3.50 cumulative grade-point average. Nominated student-athletes must be ranked in the top-50 in the region in a single event (indoor or outdoor). Select Academic All-District honorees advance to the CSC Academic All-America ballot. First-, second- and third-team Academic All-America® honorees in four divisions – NCAA Division I, Division II, Division III and NAIA – will be announced in July. 

Originally from Heathcote, NSW, Australia, Louison-Roe had an outstanding first season with CSUN in 2025 after transferring from the University of Louisiana-Monroe. Louison-Roe would claim the triple jump title at the 2025 Big West Outdoor Championships, earning his first career conference crown of his career. His championship winning leap went for 15.67m (51-5), which set a personal record and ranked as the 10th-best in school history. Louison-Roe qualified for the NCAA West First Round for the first time in his collegiate career where he finished 31st overall with a leap of 15.37m (50-5.25). 

During the indoor season, Louison-Roe was fourth at the MPSF Indoor Championships in February with a leap of 14.72m (48-3.5). He would have a season-best leap in the triple of 15.32m (50-3.25), which ranked seventh-best in program history. 

An Economics major at CSUN, Louison-Roe claimed his first career CSC Academic All-District award this season. 

College Sports Communicators began the distinguished Academic All-America® program in 1952, and since then, has honored more than 38,000 deserving student-athletes from numerous sports across all divisions with these elite Academic All-America® scholar-athlete honors.

#GoMatadors

 



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