Sports
TCU Block T Association Announces 58th Hall of Fame Class
Story Links FORT WORTH – TCU Athletics and the TCU Block T Association has announced the 58th TCU Athletics Hall of Fame Class that will be inducted in the Fall of 2025. The newest class includes a pair of former TCU head coaches and six former student-athletes, to go along with an inductee that was […]


FORT WORTH – TCU Athletics and the TCU Block T Association has announced the 58th TCU Athletics Hall of Fame Class that will be inducted in the Fall of 2025. The newest class includes a pair of former TCU head coaches and six former student-athletes, to go along with an inductee that was deferred from the 2019 Hall of Fame class.
The nine newest members that will be officially inducted into the Hall of Fame on Thursday, Sept. 18, features Julien Brun ’15 (men’s golf), Matt Carpenter ’09 (baseball), Whitney Gipson ’12 (track & field), Preston Morrison ’15 (baseball), Glen Norris ’78 (track & field), Gary Patterson (football), Charles Silmon ’14 (track & field), Richard Sybesma (swimming & diving), and Jason Verrett ’13 (football).
Patterson (former TCU head football coach) and Sybesma (former TCU head swimming & diving coach) will both be inducted as Special Contributors, while Norris will be enshrined as this year’s Vintage honoree. Carpenter, who was elected into the Hall of Fame’s Class of 2019, will officially be inducted this year after deferring to conclude his professional baseball career.
“As we celebrate the announcement of TCU Athletics 58th Hall of Fame class, I’d like to thank our Block T Association membership and screening committee, as well as our executive and advisory boards for the time they all put into this process,” Director of the Block T Association Jill Kramer said. “TCU Athletics’ history is strong, which requires a thorough process to choose each class, and this year was no different. Each member of our 58th class had significant impact on TCU Athletics, whether it be within their own respective teams, throughout TCU’s campus, or waving the TCU flag proudly all over the world following their time as a Horned Frog. We are excited to celebrate each one of them, as well as their legacy.”
Julien Brun, Men’s Golf
Brun is considered one of the most decorated student-athletes in program history after compiling a long list of firsts for TCU men’s golf in his three years on campus. He is the only men’s golfer to be named first-team all-American three times in a career, earning the honor in 2012, 2013 and 2014. He set school records as a freshman for victories in a season and a career (3), as well as for stroke average. He would go onto match or better those marks the very next year as a sophomore and rounded out his career with a school record nine individual titles. Brun was the third Frog to earn reserve-medalist honors at a NCAA Championship, tying for second-place in 2012 at Riviera Country Club.
Matt Carpenter, Baseball
Carpenter had a standout college career with the Frogs, playing primarily as the team’s third baseman from 2005-09. He was a three-time second-team all-Mountain West Conference selection (2006, 2008 and 2009), and left as the school’s all-time leader in games played (241) and at-bats (843). He is now third in games played, and fourth in at-bats. Carpenter went on to have success in the major leagues, becoming a three-time All-Star for the St. Louis Cardinals. He led the MLB in hits, runs scored and doubles in 2013, finishing fourth in MVP voting.
Whitney (Gipson) Bright, Track & Field
Gipson is a two-time NCAA National Champion, having set and still holding the school record in both indoor and outdoor long jump events. She tallied an indoor jump of 22′ 8″ in March 2012 to win the indoor championship and later went onto record an outdoor mark of 22′ 10.5″ in July of that same year to capture the outdoor championship. Her indoor mark tied the NCAA record at the time. She became TCU’s first-ever female track & field athlete to win an indoor and outdoor national championship in the same event. Overall, she earned six all-American honors as a long jumper (three indoor, three outdoor) and also earned an all-American nod as a member of the 2012 4×100 relay team.
Preston Morrison, Baseball
Morrison was a four-time all-American, earning Freshman all-America honors in 2012 and following with third-team (2013), first-team (2014) and second team (2015) all-America selections. He is the only TCU pitcher to throw 400-plus innings in a career and ranks No. 1 all-time with 61 career games started. His 37 career victories rank second to only fellow Hall of Famer Frank Johnstone’s total of 38 (1971-74) and he also ranks second all-time with 322 career strikeouts. A four-time all-conference selection, Morrison was named the league’s Pitcher of the Year in both the Mountain West Conference (2012) and the Big 12 (2014).
Glen Norris, Track & Field
Norris was a two-time all-American running as the first-leg on both 1975 and 1976 4×400 relay teams. His relay team in 1975 was the first TCU relay team to win a Southwest Conference title and that squad would go onto finish fourth at the NCAA Championships. Norris was also a conference finalist in the 100-yard dash in 1975, while his other accolades included being a finalist in the indoor 60-yard dash that same season.
Gary Patterson, Football
Coach Patterson spent 24 years as a TCU coach for the football team, serving as defensive coordinator from 1998-2000, then as head football coach from 2000-21. He set the TCU all-time coaching record with 181 wins – 72 more than Dutch Meyer who ranks second on the list. Patterson won a total of 22 national coach of the year honors and posted 10 seasons with 11 wins or more. He guided the Horned Frogs to six conference championships, while mentoring 263 all-conference selections, 21 first team all-Americans and 55 NFL Draft picks.
Charles Silmon, Track & Field
Silmon was a 2013 NCAA National Champion, winning the 100-meter event with a time of 9.89. He is a five-time all-American honoree overall, earning honors twice in the indoor 60-meters to go along with three outdoor honors. Silmon was the 2012 Mountain West Conference and 2013 Big 12 Conference indoor champion in the 60-meters, as well as the 2012 MWC indoor champion in the 200-meters. He was a four-time conference champion in the outdoor 100-meters, winning the event three straight years in the MWC (2010-12) and in the Big 12 in 2013. He was also a two-time outdoor champion in the 200-meters (MWC, 2011; Big 12, 2012).
Richard Sybesma, Swimming & Diving
Coach Sybesma served as the longest tenured head coach for any sport at TCU when he retired in 2017, serving 38 years at the helm of the swimming and diving program. After arriving at TCU in 1979, Sybesma guided the Horned Frogs in five different conferences (Southwest, WAC, Conference USA, Mountain West and Big 12) over a span of five decades. The Horned Frogs won seven team conference championships and 16 individual league titles under Sybesma. He produced seven national champions, 18 all-Americans and four Olympians. He is a five-time conference coach of the year.
Jason Verrett, Football
Verrett was a two-time all-American for the Horned Frogs in 2012 and 2013. A three-time all-conference selection (2011-13), he was also tabbed the Big 12 Conference’s Co-Defensive Player of the Year in 2013 following a season where he tallied 39 total tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss and a sack. He also led the team and the Big 12 with 14 pass break-ups that season. Verrett was selected in the first round of the 2014 NFL Draft, going 25th overall to the San Diego Chargers. He was the highest TCU defensive player selected in the draft since Bob Lilly was taken 13th overall in 1961.
Sports
Boys’ Volleyball Team Takes On Tough Foes – The Newtown Bee
Published: May 16, 2025 6:55 am Newtown High School’s boys’ volleyball team visited the defending South-West Conference Champion Joel Barlow of Redding Falcons on May 7. The Nighthawks fell in three sets to the Falcons, whom they had defeated in five sets in late April. Then came a 3-0 win at Brookfield on May 8, […]

Published: May 16, 2025 6:55 am
Newtown High School’s boys’ volleyball team visited the defending South-West Conference Champion Joel Barlow of Redding Falcons on May 7. The Nighthawks fell in three sets to the Falcons, whom they had defeated in five sets in late April. Then came a 3-0 win at Brookfield on May 8, a 3-1 loss to visiting Masuk of Monroe on May 12, and a 3-0 setback to host Shelton on May 13.
The Nighthawks kept it close in set one, falling 25-23, before losing 25-8, and 25-18 in the Barlow match.
Against Brookfield, set scores were 25-13, 25-15, 25-20. Noel McLeod had nine kills and six digs; Nate Twitchell had six kills, seven digs, and four of his team’s 13 aces; Warner Bacon registered six kills and seven digs; Cole Sgagliardich had five kills and four blocks; Eli Sullivan logged eight digs; A.J. Zataluskis recorded three kills, six digs, and a trio of aces; and Kade Dearney registered 29 assists to go along with five digs and two aces.
Masuk and Newtown split the first two sets and set three was a tight one throughout. The set scores were 25-18, 20-25, 25-22, and 25-19.
The Panthers won the pivotal third set by three points despite neither team leading by more than just one or two from start to almost finish. Things were tied at 22 apiece before the Panthers got the last three points. Newtown overcame a few late-set, two-point deficits to finally tie things at 21-21 on a Sgagliardich block at the net. Strong hits by Twitchell and a block for a point by Dima Frunza helped keep the set close throughout.
Newtown could not force a decisive fifth set despite taking an early lead and withstanding some Masuk runs. The Panthers responded to a 4-2 deficit with a 5-0 spurt for a 7-4 lead. McLeod’s kill was part of a mini 3-0 Hawk run that tied things at 7-7. The Panthers went ahead 11-7 and eventually 15-8. The teams traded points much of the rest of the match.
Against Masuk, Twitchell finished with 13 kills, two aces, and 15 digs; Zatulskis had eight kills, two blocks, and 16 digs; McLeod logged eight kills and 19 digs; Sgagliardich had four blocks; Bacon had seven kills, four blocks, and five digs; Sullivan racked up 23 digs; Frunza had three blocks and nine digs to go along with 26 assists.
Newtown has a record of 12-5 heading into the final three matches of the regular season, and will look to avenge those setbacks to Masuk and Barlow if the teams meet again in the South-West Conference Tournament.
Sports Editor Andy Hutchison can be reached at andyh@thebee.com.
Eli Sullivan digs the ball to keep it moving in Newtown’s match with visiting Masuk of Monroe on May 12. —Bee Photos, Hutchison
Nate Twitchell hits the ball over the net for a point.
Dima Frunza (No. 8) competes for the Nighthawks.
Noel McLeod, goes one-on-one with Masuk’s Michael Majersky (No. 1).
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Joel Edgerton in Tense Drama of Adolescent Angst
Charlie Polinger opens his thrilling and uneasy directorial debut feature The Plague with an arresting sequence that quickly establishes the haunting undertones of this adolescent psychological thriller. The ambient, muffled sound of sloshing water is set against a shot of the bottom of a pool. One by one, swimmers drop into the massive indoor basin. […]

Charlie Polinger opens his thrilling and uneasy directorial debut feature The Plague with an arresting sequence that quickly establishes the haunting undertones of this adolescent psychological thriller. The ambient, muffled sound of sloshing water is set against a shot of the bottom of a pool. One by one, swimmers drop into the massive indoor basin. Their spindly legs move awkwardly as they try to get in sync. It’s 2003, and these are the middle-school-aged attendees of the Tom Lerner Water Polo camp. From this angle, Polinger and his cinematographer Steven Breckon make these kids look like phantasmic figures.
An eerie sense of unreality runs through The Plague, which premiered at Cannes in the Un Certain Regard sidebar. Working from a screenplay he also wrote, Polinger uses horror conventions to tease out the psychic terror and intimidation of pre-teen social codes. In the age of renewed questions about and considerations of the manosphere, The Plague is a prescient title. Polinger’s film is not as dark as Netflix’s popular miniseries Adolescence, but it does circle similarly unsettling themes — like the way the terms and tenets of masculinity are dictated by arbitrary rules, or the cost of nonconformity among young men.
The Plague
The Bottom Line
A haunting story of boyhood as nightmare.
Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Un Certain Regard)
Cast: Joel Edgerton, Everett Blunck, Kayo Martin, Kenny Rasmussen
Director-screenwriter: Charlie Polinger
1 hour 38 minutes
Key performances carry The Plague and alleviate the occasional strain of overwrought direction. Relative newcomers Everett Blunck (stellar in Griffin in the Summer) and Kayo Martin portray opposite ends of youthful angst with an engaging sincerity and terrifying accuracy. Martin, with the subtlety of his judging expressions, seems especially made for his role as Jake, the resident cool kid who weaponizes his sharp attention to detail. The actor plays well against Blunck, who portrays Ben, a new camper trying to figure out where he fits among the various cliques. An anxiety-inducing sound design (by Damian Volpe) and score (by Johan Lenox), coupled with an appropriately icy visual palette built on grays and blue, help tell Polinger’s nail-biting story.
When Ben (Blunck) arrives at the water polo camp, he quickly notices the hold that Jake (Martin) has on the other boys. The teen with the mess of blonde hair functions as a ring leader and, with his approval, Ben becomes part of the crew. The other boys call Ben, who just moved from Boston, “Soppy” on account of the fact that he garbles the “t” in the word “stop.” One thing Polinger makes clear early on is how closely Jake scrutinizes the other boys — noticing minor characteristics that differentiate them from one another — and uses those observations to mock them. This skill keeps Jake in power, making him an intimidating person to everyone, including the boys’ coach Daddy Wags (Joel Edgerton, in a brief but effective turn).
Ben watches the others too, and he quickly picks up that no one hangs out with Eli (Kenny Rasmussen, also excellent). The quiet child keeps mostly to himself, eating lunch in the locker room and occasionally sleeping there too. According to the other kids, Eli has the plague, a vague disease that allegedly begins with a rash and renders the infected unable to socially function. Jake warns Ben to stay away from Eli and to wash his body should he accidentally get too close. In a clever move, Polinger never establishes if the plague is real because even if it isn’t, the fear it sows is.
The remainder of The Plague follows Ben as he tries to reconcile social acceptance with his own moral code. He understands that people shouldn’t be exiled for their differences and yet the idea of losing his place within the hierarchy keeps him up at night. Blunck deftly portrays Ben’s inner turmoil and the anxiety his journey produces.
Polinger deploys jump scares, intimate close-ups (especially of Jake and Ben staring at one another) and elements of body horror to recast these coming-of-age dilemmas as high-stakes, nightmarish challenges. When the director widens his scope, to survey the broader social behaviors on display, The Plague adopts a primal urgency and the film possesses the feverish energy of William Golding’s Lord of the Flies or Claire Denis’ Beau Travail. In one of those scenes Polinger observes the boys during lunch, excitedly speaking over each other and laughing. The camera ominously cuts (editing is by Henry Hayes) between views of the group and the faces of individual campers. For the most part, they are children having a good time, but if you look closely you can see a flash of panic beneath the cheerful visages.
Sports
Track & Field Ready for SEC Outdoor Championships in Lexington – LSU
BATON ROUGE, La. – The LSU track and field team is kicking off the outdoor postseason this weekend with the SEC Outdoor Championships hosted at the UK Track & Field Complex in Lexington, Ky. Live Results | Meet Schedule | Meet Information LSU will have 46 student-athletes (26 men, 20 women) competing this weekend at the […]

BATON ROUGE, La. – The LSU track and field team is kicking off the outdoor postseason this weekend with the SEC Outdoor Championships hosted at the UK Track & Field Complex in Lexington, Ky.
Live Results | Meet Schedule | Meet Information
LSU will have 46 student-athletes (26 men, 20 women) competing this weekend at the SEC Outdoor Championships.
Live coverage of the SEC Outdoor Track and Field Championships will air on SEC Network+ and the SEC Network. The broadcast talent includes Dwight Stones, Dan O’Brien, Larra Overton and John Anderson.
Thursday: SEC Network+ Stream (10:30 a.m.) | SEC Network+ Stream (4:30 p.m.)
Friday: SEC Network+ Stream (10:00 a.m.) | SEC Network+ Stream (4:00 p.m.)
Saturday: SEC Network+ Stream (1:30 p.m.) | SEC Network Stream (5:00 p.m.)
A total of 23 SEC men’s and women’s track and field teams are ranked among the nation’s top-25 teams, according to the latest national rankings announced Tuesday by the U.S. Track and Field and Cross-Country Coaches Association.
The LSU women won the SEC outdoor title last year in Gainesville, Fla., while the Arkansas men claimed the other title. The Tigers tallied 126 points to win the 53rd conference title for the program, and the 26th overall for the women’s program alone. A total of 14 Lady Tigers contributed to the win, including a team-high 16.5 points from Brianna Lyston in her sophomore season. Six of the 14 scorers returned for this outdoor championship.
What to Watch for this Meet
Women’s 100 Meter
The outdoor season has been one for redemption after a few questionable DQ’s at the end of the indoor season for Tima Godbless. The sophomore ranks third in the SEC with a season-best time of 11.12 seconds in the 100 meter. Godbless holds the third-fastest wind-legal time in the SEC, and also has a No. 5 time in the SEC for the 200 meter. This event is one to watch as she hasn’t reached the Tokyo World Championship standard in it like she has in the 200m. She also is inching closer and closer to the sub-11 second mark and the LSU all-time Top 10. She took fifth in the 100m last year at the SECs with a time of 11.14 seconds.
Men’s 100 Meter
The freshman that has stood out the most this season for the Tigers is the dual-sport star Jelani Watkins. He holds a wind-aided SB of 10.01 seconds from the second outdoor meet of the season, while clocking a legal PR of 10.03 seconds a few weeks back. Watkins ranks fourth in the SEC with his SB, but will likely need to close in on the 9.90 second barrier to win the 100m title in Lexington. It will take a lot, but it wouldn’t be the first time a freshman Tiger took a leap in the postseason to shock the world.
Men’s 200 Meter
Cayman Islands’ finest, Jaiden Reid, has a chance to upset the national leader this weekend in his 200-meter appearance. The sophomore holds a wind-aided SB of 20.33 seconds that ranks fourth in the SEC this season. His personal-best comes from this indoor season where he ran 20.27 seconds, but has been unable to go below 20.65 seconds legally this outdoor season. Reid will likely need to clock 20.25 seconds or below to medal in the loaded 200m field.
Women’s 800 Meter
Michaela Rose enters this meet as a heavy favorite and is currently the only Tiger to rank first in an event in conference. Rose clocked a huge personal-best time of 1:58.12 in the last regular season meet, improving her No. 2 time in collegiate history. The second-fastest runner in conference took fourth in that race, six seconds behind Rose. If she was able to win this week’s 800-meter title, it would be the seventh overall and the sixth 800m SEC title in her career.
Men’s 110-Meter Hurdles
In their second season together, Matthew Sophia and Jahiem Stern have proved to be the best duo in the country this season. Both Tigers rank top 10 in the nation and top 5 in the SEC, with Sophia closing the regular season with a SB time of 13.31 seconds and Stern holding a SB of 13.35 seconds. Neither Tiger has medaled outdoors yet, but Stern closed the indoor season taking bronze in the 60-meter hurdles at the SEC Indoor Championships and fifth at the NCAA Indoor Championships.
Women’s Javelin Throw
Sophomore Trinity Spooner closed her regular season with a SB toss of 53.37 meters (175’ 1”) at the LSU Invitational. Last season she earned bronze at the SEC outdoor meet and is looking to medal again in her second season. Spooner holds a PR of 55.24 meters (181’ 3”), which is likely near what it will take to medal again in a loaded conference field.
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Wilson Falls In First Round At Fullerton – The562.org
The562’s baseball coverage in 2025 is sponsored by the Millikan, Long Beach Poly, and Lakewood baseball boosters.The562’s coverage of Long Beach Wilson Athletics is sponsored by Joel Bitonio, Class of 2009. It seemed like everything was working against Wilson in the first round of the CIF Southern Section Division 3 playoffs on Thursday. Despite winning a […]

The562’s baseball coverage in 2025 is sponsored by the Millikan, Long Beach Poly, and Lakewood baseball boosters.
The562’s coverage of Long Beach Wilson Athletics is sponsored by Joel Bitonio, Class of 2009.
It seemed like everything was working against Wilson in the first round of the CIF Southern Section Division 3 playoffs on Thursday.
Despite winning a share of the Moore League title for the first time since 2017, the Bruins had to go on the road for their postseason opener, their bus was late causing a delay in the start time, and waiting for them was the Empire League champs Fullerton. Or as Wilson coach Andy Hall put it, “We ran into a buzz saw and it’s tough to overcome that in the playoffs.”
Fullerton jumped out to a four-run lead after the first inning and never looked back on its way to a 8-2 win over Wilson.
“It’s a bittersweet way to end the season, but there’s a lot of good things that we can take away from this season and today,” Hall said. “They were just good kids and they pulled for each other and stuck together. It’s really hard to put into words right now. “
Wilson senior Ben Howard got the start and recovered quickly after the first inning. He pitched into the sixth inning while giving up 12 hits and a walk.
Howard was the best pitcher in the Moore League and said after the game that he will remember the entire journey with Wilson baseball.
“I remember that first practice (as a freshman team) at Whaley Park and just growing up (with the fellow seniors),” Howard said. “These four years of high school have been very meaningful. They’ve taught me a lot and they’ve been there for me every step of the way.. Even though we lost, we are Moore League champions.”
Senior first baseman Rudy Carlos has been the catalyst for the offense this season and got Wilson on the board in the fourth inning. He led off with a single and would score on Howard’s RBI single.
“He’s a warrior,” Hall said of Carlos. “He carried this team as the Moore League Co-MVP. One of the things that I really like about Rudy in addition to his offense, is how much better he got defensively over the course of the last two years. He was really good with the glove, especially down the stretch this year. We’re going to miss him. He’s meant a lot to this program in three years on Varsity.”
The Bruins had the bases loaded with one out in the top of the fourth, but Fullerton pitcher Declan Fitzgerald got two strikeouts to escape the jam. The junior pitched six innings while scattering six hits and four walks. He struck out eight.
Fullerton quickly padded its lead in the bottom of the fourth inning to make it 6-1 and Wilson wouldn’t score again until the seventh inning when Adrian Marquez hit a solo home run in his last high school at bat.
It was an emotional postgame talk from the Wilson coaches after the loss, and Carlos was the last one to leave the field.
“I’ll always remember the fun times we had joking around while playing as hard as we can,” Carlos said. “I’m going to miss these guys. These are my boys. We’ve been together for four years and it felt like my whole life. It’s been a great time with them.”
Sports
Govs Conclude Successful Opening Day of ASUN Championships
Story Links JACKSONVILLE – Austin Peay State University’s track and field team concluded its opening day of the 2025 Atlantic Sun Conference Outdoor Track and Field Championships with multiple Governors posting personal bests, Thursday, at Hodges Stadium. The Govs began the day’s events in the field in the hammer throw with […]

JACKSONVILLE – Austin Peay State University’s track and field team concluded its opening day of the 2025 Atlantic Sun Conference Outdoor Track and Field Championships with multiple Governors posting personal bests, Thursday, at Hodges Stadium.
The Govs began the day’s events in the field in the hammer throw with both Emma Tucker and Marcia Dejesus setting personal bests at 44.21 and 40.58 meters, respectively. Both of their marks surpassed their previous record by over two meters.
Later in the evening, Ja’Kyah Montgomery set a personal best in the high jump with a 1.54-meter leap.
Off to the track, Busiwa Asinga qualified for Saturday’s finals in the 400-meter hurdles, while Shaniya Davis set a personal-best in the event with a time of 1:06.85.
Concluding the day’s events in the 200-meter dash preliminaries, Taylin Segree and and Asinga both qualified for the finals after posting personal bests with a 24.21 and 24.40-second marks. Seven Pettus also tallied a PR in the event with a time of 25.12.
The Governors are back in action tomorrow afternoon with Tucker, Dejesus and Chloe Peterson competing the discus toss.
For news and updates throughout the Governors’ postseason stay, follow the Austin Peay track and field team on X or Instagram (@GovsXCTF) or check back at LetsGoPeay.com for the latest news and stories.
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