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Stanford Football Program Statement from Andrew Luck

After continued consideration it is evident to me that our program needs a reset. In consultation with university leadership I no longer believe that Coach Taylor is the right coach to lead our football program. Coach Taylor has been informed today and the change is effective immediately. A search for new coaching leadership in football […]

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Stanford Football Program Statement from Andrew Luck

After continued consideration it is evident to me that our program needs a reset. In consultation with university leadership I no longer believe that Coach Taylor is the right coach to lead our football program. Coach Taylor has been informed today and the change is effective immediately. A search for new coaching leadership in football has begun, and an acting coach may be named for the 2025 season. Our focus remains on supporting our student-athletes and ensuring they have the best possible experience on the field, in the classroom, and on campus with their peers.
Stanford University is my home, and I am so excited to support our players in competing at the highest level and developing as young adults. We have powerful traditions, incredible student-athletes, and a vision for the future that demonstrates our strong potential as a program. This vision includes an emphasis on a positive, winning, and inclusive culture. I am confident that we will return Stanford to the top echelon of college football.
Andrew Luck
General Manager | Stanford Football
I thank Coach Taylor for his contributions to our team and the hard work he put into the program. I wish him and his family well moving forward.
Since beginning my role as General Manager, I have been thoroughly assessing the entire Stanford football program. It has been clear that certain aspects of the program need change. Additionally, in recent days, there has been significant attention to Stanford investigations in previous years related to Coach Taylor.
I took the role of Stanford Football General Manager with a strong vision for building a new winning era for our football program. Stanford has always set the standard for excellence with our university’s unique leadership in both athletics and academics, and I have no doubt that our program’s best days lie ahead.

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UNT track and field caps outdoor season | Mean Green

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St. Thomas More grad invited to USA Volleyball U23 National Team training

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (WCIA) – A Champaign native could get the chance to play volleyball internationally this summer. Caroline Kerr, a graduate of St. Thomas More, received an invite to train with the 2025 Women’s U23 National Team for the NORCECA U23 Pan American Cup. Advertisement Kerr was an All-American in 2024 as a redshirt sophomore […]

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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (WCIA) – A Champaign native could get the chance to play volleyball internationally this summer.

Caroline Kerr, a graduate of St. Thomas More, received an invite to train with the 2025 Women’s U23 National Team for the NORCECA U23 Pan American Cup.

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Kerr was an All-American in 2024 as a redshirt sophomore at the University of Tennessee. She recorded more than 1,000 assists in the season for the second straight year.

She’s one of just 18 athletes invited to the U23 camp in Anaheim, Calif., from July 18-25.

She looks forward to representing Central Illinois on a big stage, as she has been for years with the Vols.

“I think it’s just really cool to be able to wear that with pride,” Kerr said. “Especially in the SEC there’s not too many Champaign, Illinois out there. So I take a lot of pride in it, being from Illinois and being from Champaign, and credit a lot of my success to the training I’ve been lucky enough to have growing up.”

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12 of the 18 athletes will be chosen to represent the United States July 25-August 2 in Leon, Mexico.

Caroline’s younger sister, Addison Kerr, just wrapped up her senior year with the Sabers and is committed to play college volleyball at Southern Illinois.

Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to WCIA.com.



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Daily Hampshire Gazette – Div. 4 Track & Field: Amherst girls cement place in history, capture first-ever state title

NORTH ANDOVER — It only took a handful of regular season dual meets for Amherst Regional track and field coach Chris Gould to realize just how special his ‘Canes girls team could be in 2025. After blowing out teams throughout the spring, including rival Northampton in early May, Gould tabbed this Amherst girls squad as […]

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NORTH ANDOVER — It only took a handful of regular season dual meets for Amherst Regional track and field coach Chris Gould to realize just how special his ‘Canes girls team could be in 2025. After blowing out teams throughout the spring, including rival Northampton in early May, Gould tabbed this Amherst girls squad as the program’s “best team ever.”

He meant every word when he said it then, and Sunday only further solidified Gould’s statement.

The Hurricanes entered Day 2 of the MIAA Division 4 Outdoor Track and Field Championships in first place by two points, with 12 of the weekend’s 19 events still to come – including all three relays, where Amherst excels. Behind gutsy performances from their stellar senior class, and assistance from a couple of fierce freshmen, the ‘Canes (literally) ran away from their competition.

Amherst finished the weekend in first with 87.5 points, securing its first-ever team title at the MIAA Championships. Melrose finished second with 68 points, Holliston grabbed third (59) while Pembroke (fourth, 48) and Newburyport (fifth, 39) rounded out the top five. Northampton was the lone other Hampshire County program competing, and the Blue Devils slotted into 17th with 18 points.

If the Hurricanes weren’t already the greatest team in Amherst Regional history following their win at the Western Massachusetts Championships last weekend, they certainly are now.

“This feels great,” Gould said. “Part of it was convincing the girls to want to win a team title as much as I did. It’s not cool when the coach wants to win more than the athletes do. And they started to increasingly trust each other and their coaches. They totally put it on the line, in every single event, this weekend. I’m so proud of each and every one of them.”

Amherst’s team – numbers-wise – isn’t as large as some of the other teams that competed, but that didn’t stop it. That only meant the Hurricanes had to rely on their athletes to do a little bit of everything.

Senior Moriah Luetjen was one of those who logged a busy afternoon, and it started with a first-place finish in the 400 meters. Luetjen breezed by everyone in the field, finishing over two seconds faster (56.36) than the next finisher – who happened to be sophomore teammate Ololara Baptiste (58.52). Ruby Austin also turned in a strong race in the 400, taking sixth in 1:00.47.

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Luetjen then ran in the 4×800-meter relay alongside Brooke Nedeau, Ella Jamate and Skylar Fox less than an hour later, anchoring the team to a second-place finish with a time of 9:42.50. Austin competed in the 4×100 relay with Claire Fortin, Juliana Albo and Ella Austin, coming in fourth (51.57), as well as the 4×400 relay with Fox, Ella Austin and Baptiste. Baptiste turned in a fantastic anchor leg to help Amherst come in first in what was the final event of the day. Their time of 4:00.36 put a perfect bow on the Hurricanes’ big day.

“This is so rewarding,” Luetjen said of the team’s title. “We’ve all worked so hard for this, and it was not necessarily something that was in the books for us this season. We weren’t really focused on it until [Coach Gould] was talking about us potentially being able to win it. Some of us were kind of on the fence about it, but doing it feels really good for all of us. I’m really proud of everybody for how they pulled through.”

With Amherst holding the slim lead entering Sunday, members of the team knew it was a possibility for them to win the team championship considering many of their strong events were still to come. But the only issue was the order of them, as multiple events that their athletes compete in came one after another later in the day.

Following Luetjen, Baptiste and Austin’s battle in the 400, the trio had about a half hour before the beginning of relays. Fox, Ella Austin and Ruby Austin also competed in two relays with limited time in between.

The ‘Canes knew it would be difficult to stay fresh and mentally prepared for each one, that’s what made the taste of victory so sweet.

“I think we all knew we were capable of it, but with the way the events were ordered, there were a lot of people who had to run back-to-back,” Ruby Austin said. “That made a lot of us really stressed. But we pulled it out, and I’m proud that we all came together to do this.”

Amherst also understood that in order to remain in the team lead, big-time performances in the relays were needed.

“It was definitely a lot,” Fox said. “Moriah did the 400 and the 4×8 almost back-to-back, and I did the 4×8 and the 4×4 back-to-back. And those were two events that we knew we needed to get a lot of points in. For me, that was really stressful, because I knew it wasn’t just my coaches or relay teammates relying on me – it was the whole team. We wanted to have a really strong 4×4 like we always do, so we had to make some sacrifices. In the end it paid off, and it’s rewarding.”

Elsewhere, senior Elizabeth Sawicki won the pole vault on Sunday with a height of 9 feet, a new personal best this season, to go along with her fourth-place mark in the pentathlon and fifth-place finish in the 400 hurdles – both of which she achieved on Friday. Sawicki has experienced the lowest of lows and now the highest of highs during her four years with the program. Going out on top is something she never could have imagined.

“It’s incredible,” Sawicki said. “Freshman year, we were doing pretty good, but the last two years were pretty bad. So to come back this year and have an undefeated season is insane, and just to be a part of that with all these great athletes is incredible. Considering on Friday [Coach Gould] was like, ‘Hey, we’re in first right now,’ and we weren’t sure if it was going to hold, everyone had a lot on their shoulders today and coming out on top is just amazing.”

Freshmen Claire Fortin and Juliana Albo each picked up key points for Amherst, as Albo finished in seventh in the high jump (PR 5 feet), eighth in the long jump (17 feet, 6 3/4 inches) and competed in the 4×100 relay while Fortin also ran in the 4×100 relay. Senior Brooke Nedeau ran the mile, grabbing eighth in 5:22.04.

Jeffries highlights strong weekend from Amherst boys

All spring long, any time Hurricanes senior Miles Jeffries picked up his phone, he’d be greeted with the number ‘49’ plastered as his screen saver. His only goal of the outdoor season was to break 50 seconds in the 400 meters.

After an extremely successful high school career on the tennis courts his first three years of high school, Jeffries chose to join the track team this year. He participated in indoor track in the 2023-24 season and fell in love, so he chose to do it again this past winter. Jeffries enjoyed it so much he gave up his favorite sport, tennis, to run outside this spring.

That decision paid off on Sunday, as Jeffries ran a personal-best time of 49.71 seconds to take home first place in the boys 400. It marked the first time in his career Jeffries broke 50, securing a state title in the process.

Mission accomplished.

“It’s been my goal all year for sure,” Jeffries said. “I look at [the number] 49 every time I check my phone. I’ve just been wanting to do this all season. We’ve had a lot of meets in bad weather, so it’s been hard to show out the way that I’ve wanted to. Today was a pretty nice day out, so I wanted to do it here, and make quitting tennis worth it.”

Jeffries’ first-place finish led Amherst to a fifth-place mark with 45 points, finishing behind Wakefield (74), Pembroke (66), Burlington (53) and Ludlow (53).

Logan Alfandari took second in both the discus (162 feet, 7 inches) and shot put (52 feet, 9¾ inches), and the ‘Canes saw a pair of relay teams crack the top 10 on Sunday. Amherst’s 4×800 relay team of Owen Platt, Calvin Miller, Peter Nedeau and Nico Lisle finished seventh (8:34.37) while the 4×100 relay team of Jose Munnoz Gomez, Tylahn Beckett, Insaf Fazal and Rajahni Conyers finished in ninth (45.42).

Top Northampton finishers from Sunday

Maddalena Figueroa-Starr took fifth place in the 400 with a time of 1:00.32, and joined Katherine Munson, Ella Hoogendyk and Daniela Serlin in the 4×400 relay to take seventh in 4:14.66 to round out the girls competitors on Sunday

The Blue Devils boys were led by Owen LacLachlan’s personal record in the 400, as he turned in a 16th-place finish in 53.59. Northampton also finished 12th in the 4×400 relay with Acer Verson, MacLachlan, Henry Loughrey and Alessandro Agliati and 18th in the 4×800 relay with Pranav Belur, Charlie Sidoti, Xander Lane and Justin Zamura Buri.



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Gophers send two women to NCAA Track & Field Championships

The University of Minnesota women’s track and field team has qualified two events to the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships in June at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. The Maroon and Gold qualified by finishing in the top 12 of their respective events at the NCAA West Regional at Texas A&M in Bryan-College Station at E.B. […]

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The University of Minnesota women’s track and field team has qualified two events to the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships in June at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. The Maroon and Gold qualified by finishing in the top 12 of their respective events at the NCAA West Regional at Texas A&M in Bryan-College Station at E.B. Cushing Stadium on May 29 and May 31.

Ali Weimer was the first Gopher to punch her ticket to NCAAs, earning her first career bid in the 10,000m in a time of 34:09.14 to finish sixth overall. The Big Ten cross country bronze medalist is the first Gopher to qualify for the NCAA 10,000 final since Megan Hasz finished 20th overall and earned Honorable Mention All-America honors in 2019.

Minnesota had a few individuals fall just short of NCAA Championships qualification. Diarra Sow and Zoie Dundon both finished 13th overall in their respective events. Sow matched her season best in the triple jump with a mark of 13.42m (44-0 1/2) and ended in a tie for 12th but due to Oregon’s Ryann Porter having a better second-best mark, Sow was bumped from the top 12. Dundon’s time of 10:05.41 in the 3000m steeplechase also fell short of returning the sophomore to the NCAA Outdoor Championships.

One of the biggest risers of the final month of the season was Dyandra Gray, who punched her first career individual ticket to the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Gray qualified in the 400m hurdles with back-to-back lifetime bests at E.B. Cushing Stadium. Since April 30 Gray has posted five different lifetime best performances, capped off by her 56.86 in the NCAA quarterfinals on Saturday night. Gray now sits at No. 3 all-time in Minnesota 400m hurdles history and will look to move up that list at Hayward Field in June. Gray is the first Gopher to qualify for the NCAA Championships 400m hurdles since 2022 when Abigail Schaaffe earned an Honorable Mention All-America honor.

Women’s Qualified Events (Event, Regional Finish, Qualifying Performance)
Ali Weimer – 10000m (6th. 34:09.14)
Dyandra Gray – 400m Hurdles (10th. 56.86)

(info and stock photo courtesy of Gopher Sports)



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The 2024-25 Marquette Season Ends At NCAA Outdoor Track & Field West First Round

It turns out that the last events of the 2024-25 Marquette athletic calendar were contested this past week. It didn’t have to be the last events, but more events required Marquette’s Danny Olsen and/or Annika Bynum to find their way through tough competition to advance to the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships in a […]

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It turns out that the last events of the 2024-25 Marquette athletic calendar were contested this past week.

It didn’t have to be the last events, but more events required Marquette’s Danny Olsen and/or Annika Bynum to find their way through tough competition to advance to the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships in a couple weeks. As you can tell, that did not happen.

Danny Olsen competed in the 400 meter dash at the NCAA West First Round back on Wednesday. He ran his race with a time of 46.48, not that far off his Big East championship and Marquette program record time of 46.21. However, this is a race with some of the best competitors in the country, so Olsen came in 6th in his heat. The top three in every heat advanced to the quarterfinals in College Station later in the week as well as the next six fastest times. That left Prairie View A&M’s Christion Derrick as the last at-large guy to advance with a time of 46.24, and thus Olsen missed the cutoff and saw his season come to an end. It’s not all a bummer, as Olsen came in with the 47th best time in a field of 48 racers, and he walked away with the 25th best time in the qualifying heats.

Annika Bynum did not quite have as much of an upside to her competition on the campus of Texas A&M on Saturday. She came into the West First Round with the 23rd best high jump mark of 1.80 meters during the outdoor season amongst the competitors. She was unable to pay off that ranking or advance as one of the top 12 competitors as she came up without a cleared jump on the opening height of 1.71 meters. Bynum was one of nine athletes at the West First Round who were unable to post a height at all in the women’s high jump, so at least she wasn’t the only one who struggled. It is worth noting that Bynum would have needed to break the Marquette program record in order to advance to Outdoor Championships in Oregon, as the top 12 competitors all cleared at least 1.81 meters and Bynum’s qualifying jump tied MU’s record.

And that’s it for sports in 2024-25 for Marquette. The next item listed on the calendar on GoMarquette.com is the August 7th women’s soccer exhibition match against Illinois. We’ll have to find something entertain us in the meantime, I guess……


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Head Women’s Volleyball Coach in Dudley, MA for Nichols College

Details Posted: 01-Jun-25 Location: Dudley, Massachusetts Type: Part-time Categories: Coaching Coaching – Volleyball Sector: Collegiate Sports Preferred Education: 4 Year Degree JOB DESCRIPTION: Head Women’s Volleyball Coach DATE: June 1, 2025 DEPARTMENT: Division of Athletics REPORTS TO: Vice President/Director of Athletics JOB SUMMARY: This is a part-time, salaried position charged […]

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Details

Posted: 01-Jun-25

Location: Dudley, Massachusetts

Type: Part-time

Categories:

Coaching

Coaching – Volleyball

Sector:

Collegiate Sports

Preferred Education:

4 Year Degree

JOB DESCRIPTION: Head Women’s Volleyball Coach


DATE: June 1, 2025


DEPARTMENT: Division of Athletics


REPORTS TO: Vice President/Director of Athletics


JOB SUMMARY:


This is a part-time, salaried position charged with coaching and managing the women’s volleyball program. As a head coach for the women’s volleyball teams, this position accepts responsibility of assisting the VP/Director of Athletics in leadership, vision, and supervision of the program. Nichols College, a member of the NCAA Division III, located in Dudley, MA (Central MA) invites applications for a Head Coach for Women’s Volleyball.


DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES:


Identify, attract, and retain outstanding student-athletes. Plan and execute practices and contests. Support current student-athlete academic success. Manage budget and equipment. Scheduling contests and practices. Fundraising and alumni outreach. Ensure compliance with the NCAA and Nichols College. Meet recruiting goals established by the VP/Director of Athletics. Attending departmental and CNE meetings. Attain driving certification with the College. Be an active member of the Division of Athletics KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS, AND EDUCATION REQUIRED:


Bachelor’s degree with experience in collegiate athletics. Genuine understanding and commitment to NCAA Division III intercollegiate athletics philosophy. Solid knowledge and technical skills for the sport of volleyball. Must have leadership and people skills, plus an ability to work with all constituencies of the campus. Strong organizational skills, attention to detail, able to handle a multi-task work environment. Computer proficiency. Valid driver’s license and good driving record. Light lifting. Ability to work extended hours, including evenings and weekends.


ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:


Part-time non-benefited position PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS:


CPR/AED and First Aid certification College coaching experience

https://ncaamarket.ncaa.org/jobs/21379887/nichols-college-head-women-s-volleyball-coach



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