Sports
Swims You Might Have Missed on the Final Day of the 2025 Ft. Lauderdale Pro Swim Series
2025 Pro Swim Series – Fort Lauderdale Whilst there were several swims on the final day at Fort Lauderdale that you won’t have missed thanks to Gretchen Walsh, Katie Ledecky, Regan Smith and Ilya Kharun, the fast swimming didn’t stop there. There were more individual World Records yesterday than in the entire Paris Olympics, and […]

2025 Pro Swim Series – Fort Lauderdale
Whilst there were several swims on the final day at Fort Lauderdale that you won’t have missed thanks to Gretchen Walsh, Katie Ledecky, Regan Smith and Ilya Kharun, the fast swimming didn’t stop there. There were more individual World Records yesterday than in the entire Paris Olympics, and here are some other swims that may have gone under radar.
DAY 4 – SWIMS YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED
Out of the early heats of the women’s 800 free, Michaela Mattes hacked 10 seconds off her best time to drop from an 8:44 to 8:34.76. That ended up ranking fifth after the final heat was swum, and she also now ranks #5 among US women so far this season. She may well have landed herself a place in the final heat at US Trials with this swim.
Jack Harvey, who swims internationally for Bermuda, dropped over a second off his entry time in the 100 backstroke to claim second in the final behind Hubert Kos. He broke his own Bermudan record in the morning with a 54.87, his first-ever swim under 55, and sliced another three-tenths off in to go 54.56 in the evening. His previous mark stood at 55.19, and he is now less than half a second off the World Aquatics ‘A’ cut.
Gavin Keogh took third in the same race, shaving 0.02 of his top-ranked 17-18 time this year to go 54.72. Keogh, an honorable mention in the 2025 recruiting class, will join NC State in the fall, adding to a backstroke group that includes Daniel Diehl, Oleksandr Zheltyakov and Quintin McCarty. McCarty swam the heats of the 100 back here, shaving half a second off his best of 55.73 to go 55.26, before scratching the final in favour of the 50 where he ended up placing third.
Leah Hayes took on a tough double tonight, swimming the 200 breast and 200 IM, placing third in both. In the first of those she set a new best time in both heats and finals, shaving eight-tenths off over the course of the day to end with a time of 2:27.60 and contribute to a Virginia 1-2-3. Hayes swam this event at both ACCs and NCAAs, finishing sixth at the conference championships before adding time at Federal Way to finish 17th. With her IM 2.5 seconds off her best of 2:08.91, she could have far more time to drop when fully tapered.
Julian Koch took a fantastic third place in the 100 fly on the final night in a time of 52.29, a hundredth slower than his prelims time. That had been a 1.42 second drop from his previous best time of 53.70 set in May 2024, and he set a 50 fly best on the first 50 as well. He was out in 23.93, only 0.36 slower than eventual winner Ilya Kharun. Koch has just finished his freshman year at Pitt, and holds a best of 46.76 in yards; if he follows the lead of swimmers like Dare Rose who have previously dropped big in yards after a summer of doing so in long course, he could crack NCAA qualification next year.
Ellen Walshe had already set one Irish record in Fort Lauderdale, and came close to two others on the final day. In the 100 fly she was 58.12, just 0.16 off her own record of 57.96 from 2016, and just 16 minutes later swam 2:11.59 in the 200 IM. She was just under seven-tenths off the record of 2:10.92, again one of hers, but was 1:08.05 on the second half, only behind winner Alex Walsh. It was also over a second faster than she came home when swimming the record, and again showcases the freestyle gains she has made this season.
Aleksas Savickas was the top seed in the 100 breast on Day 2, but didn’t quite pace the heats in the 200 right and slipped to 11th, missing out on the ‘B’ final. He made the most of the clean water there, going 2:10.34 to take the win by over five seconds in a time less than seven-tenths off his best, and was only five-hundredths of Denis Petrashov‘s winning time from the ‘A’ final.
Tolu Young set his third Fijian record in three days here, in a quintessentially Arizona State slate of 50 free, 100 free, 50 fly. He shaved 0.42 off his own 50 free record today in 22.29 in the prelims, before going under the old record again in finals with a 22.53
Sports
DePaul University Blue Demons – Official Athletics Website
CHICAGO – The NCAA announced Thursday afternoon that DePaul Track and Field has a total of 11 athletes with qualifying marks for the NCAA Championships West Preliminary Rounds in College Station, Texas. The total marks a significant jump from last year’s program-record eight qualifiers. The Blue Demons will be represented in sprints, throws, distance, jumps, […]

Among the returners are All-American Darius Brown (110m hurdles, 4x100m) who is making his fourth-straight appearance. He is joined by Alex Bernstein (hammer throw) and Jaiah Hopf (triple jump), each earning their third appearance, and Kash Allen (shot put), making her second. The remaining seven Blue Demon athletes are set to make their NCAA postseason debut.
On the women’s side, Jessica Beckman (discus), Jaiah Hopf (triple jump), and freshman Tessa Roe (steeplechase) earned bids, with all three securing top-40 regional rankings behind season-best efforts at either the BIG EAST Championships or the Gary Wieneke Memorial. Additionally, Kash Allen holds the No. 34 regional ranking in the shot put after winning the third BIG EAST title of her career.
Brown is joined on the men’s 4x100m squad by Dominic Cole, Charles Lewis, and Demetrius Rolle, who also qualified individually in the 100m. Dustin Hudak (800m), Jaiden Gary (shot put), and Bernstein round out the men’s qualifiers, with Paul Goins and Amaru Mazibuko traveling as relay alternates.
The NCAA West Preliminary Rounds will take place May 28-31 at E.B. Cushing Stadium on the campus of Texas A&M. The top 12 in each event will advance to the NCAA Championships in Eugene, Ore.
FOLLOW THE BLUE DEMONS
For all of the latest on DePaul Cross Country, Track & Field, stay tuned to DePaulBlueDemons.com and follow the team on Facebook, Instagram, and X.
Sports
Florida Atlantic University Athletics
BOCA RATON, Fla. – Florida Atlantic beach volleyball senior Sydney Schroder sat down with Assistant Coach Kristi Tekavec for this week’s Inside the Owl’s Burrow: Life’s A Beach segment. Coach Tekavec has been an instrumental part of the Sandy Owls’ success over her five seasons in Boca Raton. Tekavec joined Florida Atlantic in […]

Coach Tekavec has been an instrumental part of the Sandy Owls’ success over her five seasons in Boca Raton.
Tekavec joined Florida Atlantic in 2020 as a volunteer assistant before being elevated to Assistant Coach in the fall of 2022.
The Owls have had tremendous success over the past five seasons, winning three conference championships (2021, 2023, 2025), in addition to earning three NCAA Championship appearances, including the program’s first in 2022. FAU has also had three 20+ win seasons during that span, including a program record 23 wins during the 2022 season.
Coach Tekavec also currently competes professionally in the Association of Volleyball Professionals (AVP).
Enjoy getting to know Coach Tekavec on Life’s a Beach presented by Inside the Owls’ Burrow.
FOLLOW THE SANDY OWLS
For updates, follow @FAUBeachVB on X and Instagram, or like FAU Beach Volleyball on Facebook.
Sports
Sailing Completes Three-Peat – Stanford Cardinal
ST. MARY’S CITY, Md. – Stanford sailing won its second national championship of the season on Friday evening, capturing the ICSA Women’s Fleet Race Championship for the third consecutive season. The Cardinal paced a strong 18-team field with 198 points, holding off runner-up Tulane (209 pts) and third-place Harvard (223 pts) through 16 races. Friday’s victory […]

ST. MARY’S CITY, Md. – Stanford sailing won its second national championship of the season on Friday evening, capturing the ICSA Women’s Fleet Race Championship for the third consecutive season.
The Cardinal paced a strong 18-team field with 198 points, holding off runner-up Tulane (209 pts) and third-place Harvard (223 pts) through 16 races.
Friday’s victory marks the program’s seventh overall national championship, as Stanford became the first school to win three consecutive Women’s Fleet Race Championships since the United States Naval Academy from 1979-81.
The Cardinal has been particularly dominant since claiming the program’s first women’s national title in 2023, having now won five of the last six national regattas.
“This championship required a full team’s effort. Our team came together, picked each other up and found a level required to take home hardware,” said head coach Chris Klevan, who has guided the Cardinal to six national team crowns. “This year’s team took the lessons learned watching legends of the past and applied them to the present. That speaks to something more than just two days of hard work and perseverance. Our competition made the challenge harder, but in turn, the victory seemed extra sweet. I could not be more proud.”
Stanford varsity teams have now won 171 national championships overall (77 men, 92 women, 2 coed). This is Stanford’s fourth national team title of the 2024-25 campaign. In addition to Sailing also winning the ICSA Women’s Team Race championship last month, the Cardinal has secured national crowns in Artistic Swimming and Women’s Water Polo.
Action kicked off on Tuesday and Wednesday with the Eastern Semifinals, where the Cardinal outperformed the likes of Cornell, Boston College and Harvard. Over two days of competition, Stanford tallied 69 points and secured four victories, finishing with an 18-point lead over the rest of the field.
Following a rain-shortened Thursday session which featured just three races across both divisions, the Cardinal stood in fourth place in the team standings, trailing leader Tulane by 12 points.
The action continued on Friday as the Cardinal flourished in the final 13 races of the championship, taking a lead it never surrendered after six races. Fueled by six wins in the A division and 10 top-10 placements in the B division, Stanford held strong to secure its third straight Women’s Fleet Race title.
Vanessa Lahrkamp and Alice Schmid led the A division with seven wins and 52 points in 15/16 completed races. Lahrkamp teamed up with Ashtyn Tierney for a fifth place finish in race 7 to put the A division trio at 57 points overall, clearing Harvard’s Cordelia Burn and Margo Silliman by 32 points.
“B” boat duties were handled by a combination of Cardinal duos, starting with Ellie Harned and Kit Harned, who earned 67 points through the first eight races. The remaining eight races were controlled by Sophie Fisher and Piper Blackband with the duo recording 63 points as the Cardinal “B” boat earned an eighth place finish with 130 points overall.
Sports
Hobart, Steffen represent Central on All-American podiums
Story Links PELLA — Friday at the NCAA Division III Track & Field Championships saw a pair of Central College student-athletes secure a spot on the All-American podium. Kale Hobart (sophomore, Mason City) took runner-up honors in the decathlon with 6,916 points. He started day two strong with a time of […]

PELLA — Friday at the NCAA Division III Track & Field Championships saw a pair of Central College student-athletes secure a spot on the All-American podium.
Kale Hobart (sophomore, Mason City) took runner-up honors in the decathlon with 6,916 points. He started day two strong with a time of 14.70 seconds in the 110-meter hurdles, the fastest time in the field. He also had the second-best discus throw with a mark of 127 feet, 7 inches.
Reid Pakkebier (senior, Cedar Rapids, Kennedy HS) also earned second-team All-American honors with an 11th place finish in the decathlon, scoring 6,329 points.
Peyton Steffen (junior, Marion) improved upon her career-best time in the 3,000-meter steeplechase, finishing in fifth place in a time of 10 minutes, 28.78 seconds. She becomes the fourth Dutch female to land on the All-American podium in the steeplechase in the last two seasons.
Olivia Bohlen (junior, Belle Plaine) finished just off the podium in the women’s heptathlon, taking ninth place with 4,840 points. She still clinched second team All-American accolades.
In the men’s 110-meter hurdle preliminaries, Central’s Gunner Meyer (junior, Fairbank, Wapsie Valley HS) qualified for Saturday’s final in fifth with a time of 14.26 seconds. Grant Miller (junior, Norwalk) was 12th in the prelims (14.48 seconds) and earned second team All-American honors.
Central College NCAA Championships schedule of events
Saturday, May 25 (times are EST)
11 a.m. – men’s triple jump (prelims and finals)
2:10 p.m. – men’s 110-meter hurdles (finals)
4:25 p.m. – women’s 5000 meters (final)
Sports
Gianna Bartalo Returns to Denver Volleyball Program as Assistant Coach
Story Links DENVER – University of Denver volleyball coach Megan Pendergast has hired Gianna Bartalo to serve as an assistant coach, Pendergast announced on Thursday. “We’re stoked to bring Gianna Bartalo home,” Pendergast said. “Her love for this program and deep understanding of what makes Denver special is rare, and something we’re […]

DENVER – University of Denver volleyball coach Megan Pendergast has hired Gianna Bartalo to serve as an assistant coach, Pendergast announced on Thursday.
“We’re stoked to bring Gianna Bartalo home,” Pendergast said. “Her love for this program and deep understanding of what makes Denver special is rare, and something we’re incredibly proud to have on staff. Gi went through a competitive interview process and earned this opportunity every step of the way. She’ll lead the defensive side of the ball, where her volleyball IQ and firsthand knowledge of what it takes to win here will be immediately felt across our program.”
Bartalo led Denver in digs starting libero in 2021, 2022 and 2023 and ranks eighth all time in Denver program history with 1,202 career digs. In her final season at Cal, Bartalo posted 468 digs, good for the eighth-highest in a single season and fourth-best in the ACC.
“Returning to the University of Denver as an assistant coach is incredibly meaningful to me,” Bartalo said. “I’ve been watching Denver volleyball since I was 12 years old, and this program has shaped so much of who I am, both on and off the court. To be back at the University that has given me so much is an honor I don’t take lightly. I am very grateful to Megan Pendergast for believing in me and for giving me the opportunity to come back home.”
Visit DenverPioneers.com for complete coverage of all 18 of Denver’s NCAA Division I sports.
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Sports
Wyatt wraps up season with 19th-place national finish in 800-meter run
Story Links GENEVA, Ohio – Junior Isabel Wyatt concluded her standout season for the St. Olaf College women’s track and field team with a 19th-place finish in the 800-meter run at the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships on Friday afternoon at the SPIRE Institute. In her first […]

GENEVA, Ohio – Junior Isabel Wyatt concluded her standout season for the St. Olaf College women’s track and field team with a 19th-place finish in the 800-meter run at the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships on Friday afternoon at the SPIRE Institute.
In her first appearance at the outdoor national meet, Wyatt finished seventh in heat one and 19th overall with a time of 2:16.53. The junior entered the meet as the No. 16 seed in the event with her school-record time of 2:09.44 from the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) Outdoor Track & Field Championships.
Wyatt’s seventh-place finish in the first of the three heats left her with no chance to advance to Saturday’s final, as the top-two finishers in each heat plus the next three fastest times moved on. The junior was St. Olaf’s first outdoor national qualifier in the event since Andrea Gelle ’07 in 2007.
The showing brought an end to a decorated junior season for Wyatt, who was a Second Team All-American in the indoor 800-meter run after placing ninth in the country earlier this year. She was also the MIAC outdoor champion in the 800-meter run both indoors and outdoors and was named the MIAC Women’s Indoor Co-Track Athlete of the Year after adding a conference title in the 1,000-meter run. Between the indoor and outdoor seasons this year, Wyatt broke four school records and one MIAC record.
At the conclusion of the 800-meter run, St. Olaf sat in a tie for 34th in the team standings with two points from senior Alison Bode’s seventh-place performance in the 10,000-meter run on Thursday.
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