Sports
Terrier Women, Black Knight Men Lead After Day One of 2025 Patriot League Outdoor Track and Field Championships (5.2.25)
WORCESTER, Mass. – The Army West Point men’s and Boston University’s women’s teams lead their respective fields after the first day at the 2025 Patriot League Outdoor Track and Field Championships at Hart Track, hosted by the College of the Holy Cross.
Colgate’s Cole Blair became the first Patriot League student-athlete to secure four-consecutive titles in the long jump since the League began sponsoring track and field in 1991. Meanwhile, Navy sophomore Helen Emerick set a Patriot League Women’s Outdoor Track and Field record in the pole vault, clearing 4.07m (13’ 4”).
Boston University’s Peace Omonzane established a Patriot League Outdoor Track and Field record in the women’s long jump with a leap of 6.44 meters. To close out the day’s track events, Boston University women’s 4×800-meter relay team of Lily Borin, Olivia Dodds, Maura Woodland-Medenilla and Vera Sjöberg established a Patriot League Women’s Outdoor Championship record with a first-place time of 8:39.22.
The Army West Point men’s team totaled 68 points through the first day of the championship, while Navy sits in second with 56 points. Boston University (39), Bucknell (19) and Lehigh (18) rounded out the top five. Colgate (13), Lafayette (11), Holy Cross (10) and American (0) concluded the men’s scoring totals after day one.
Boston University compiled 59 points to lead the women’s field through day one, while Army West Point sits in second place with 49 points. Navy sits in third with 41 points, trailed by Bucknell with 37 points. Lehigh rounds out the top five with 21 points. Holy Cross (16), Lafayette (7), Colgate (2), Loyola Maryland (2) and American (0) round out the women’s field.
For results from today’s preliminary and semifinal races, please click here.
Patriot League on ESPN+ Coverage
Saturday is the final day of the 2025 Patriot League Outdoor Track and Field Championships. Saturday’s track events for the 2025 Patriot League Outdoor Track and Field Championships will be streamed on ESPN+. Due to anticipated weather on Saturday evening, all events have been moved up by one hour. For an updated schedule of tomorrow’s event start times, please click here.
WATCH DAY TWO ON ESPN+
DAY ONE TRACK EVENT RECAPS
10,000 METERS
Navy’s Murphy Smith won gold in 30:56.08 to earn first-team honors in the event’s opening race. Fellow Midshipman Alexander Kirkland (30:57.87) finished second, while Army West Point junior Anthony Diaz (31:02.90) claimed the bronze medal.
Army West Point junior Charlotte Richman repeated as the gold medalist in the women’s 10,000m with a winning time of 36:55.342. Teammate Louisa Diamond finished as the runner-up for the second consecutive season, finishing stride-for-stride with Richman at 36:55.349. Boston University’s Merem Gabriel-Rodriguez garnered a third-place finish in 37:12.55 to earn six points for the Terriers.
4X800-METER RELAY
Boston University won the men’s 4×800 with a time of 7:29.61 with the quartet of Thomas Cowan, Karsen Vesty, Shamiso Sikaneta and Parker Schneider. Army West Point’s relay team of Jordan Taylor, Ammon Smith, Adam Furman and Kasen Jeitz took home the silver medal with a time of 7:32.04, while Navy’s team of James Partlow, Carson Sloat, Matthew Newell and Luke Nester earned a third-place finish at 7:32.09.
The Boston University women’s 4×800-meter relay team of Lily Borin, Olivia Dodds, Maura Woodland-Medenilla and Vera Sjöberg established a Patriot League Women’s Outdoor Championship record with a first-place time of 8:39.22. Army West Point finished second at 8:39.91 behind strong efforts from Hannah Andrews, Alma Lazo Cazares, Cherokee Chambers and Mikayla Cheney. Lehigh’s quartet of Lauryn Heskin, Amber Barrios, Svea Wickelgren and Abby Klebe logged a third-place time of 8:46.01.
DAY ONE FIELD EVENT RECAPS
HAMMER THROW
Army West Point junior Robby Manse claimed the outdoor title in the hammer throw with a mark of 64.03m (210’ 1”) to win gold for the Black Knights. Bucknell’s Aiden Tucker secured a silver medal with a mark of 58.26 (191’ 2”) while Holy Cross’ Michael LaFlamme claimed a bronze medal finish on his home turf with a mark of 55.76m (182’ 11”).
In the women’s event, Boston University’s Ellie Roan finished first with a mark of 59.72m (195’ 11”). It was the second straight gold medal for Roan in the event. Kiana Emerson secured a silver medal for Army West Point with a 55.03m (180’ 6”) mark. Lehigh sophomore Avery Dowkus earned a bronze medal with a mark of 51.85m (170’ 1”).
POLE VAULT
Senior Brian McSweeney cleared 5.26m (17’ 3”) to earn 10 points for the Black Knights and earn gold in the event. Navy teammates Brian Schloeder (5.21m | 17’ 1”) and Gunnar Kimball (5.06m | 16’ 7.25”) rounded out the podium, finishing in second and third, respectively.
Navy sophomore Helen Emerick set a Patriot League Women’s Outdoor Track and Field record in the pole vault clearing, 4.07m (13’ 4”). Holy Cross senior Maura Switzer and Boston University’s Alli Lofquist rounded out the podium, both clearing 3.97m (13’ 0.25”).
LONG JUMP
Colgate junior Cole Blair claimed a fourth-straight gold medal in the men’s outdoor long jump with a 7.60m (24’ 11.25”) leap. Blair is the first student-athlete to win four consecutive titles in the long jump in Patriot League history. Boston University seniors Samuel Roszak (7.53m | 24’ 8.5”) and Ryan Rosenberger (7.51m | 24’ 7.75”) earned silver and bronze, respectively, to earn 14 total points for the Terrier men.
Boston University swept the event for the second consecutive season, led by junior Peace Omonzane who established a new Patriot League Women’s Outdoor Track and Field record with a 6.44m (21’ 1.5”) en route to her gold medal. Teammates Asia Hamilton (6.10m | 20’ 0.25”) and Emma Lawrence (6.07m | 19’ 11”) rounded out the podium in second and third.
JAVELIN
Owen Faula earned the first-ever men’s javelin gold medal at the Patriot League Championships in Boston University history. The junior logged a toss of 64.00m (210’) to win the event. Army West Point freshman Collin Torres finished second with a 63.22m (207’ 5”) mark, while Navy senior Caleb Walker finished third with a toss of 62.22m (204’ 1”).
Bucknell’s Evelyn Bliss repeated as the gold medalist with a toss of 53.77m (176’ 5”). The 2024 All-American won the event by nearly 20 feet. Teammate Brylee Tereska earned a silver medal with a toss of 47.92m (157’ 3”) for the Bison, while Navy’s Renny Murphy logged a bronze medal to round out her senior campaign with a mark of 44.98 (147’ 7”).
DAY ONE MULTIS UPDATE
HEPTATHLON
Holy Cross’ Celia Kulis leads the heptathlon after five events. The junior leads the field with 3,181 points, paced by a victory in the 100-meter hurdles. Army West Point senior Zoe Eggleston holds second-place honors after day one with 3,045 points, led by her victory in the 200m. Boston University’s Olivia Hughes won the high jump and ended the day in third place with 3,002 points.
DECATHLON
Steven Franco of Boston University leads the decathlon after winning the 400m and long jump on day one. The senior totaled 3,880 points across five events. Navy’s Thomas Christie won the high jump to pace his 3,631-point total to sit in second, while fellow Midshipman Nicolas Simmons logged a 100m win and 3,609 points, ending the day in third-place position.
Events at Hart Track continue tomorrow to close out the 2025 Patriot League Outdoor Track and Field Championships. Due to anticipated weather on Saturday evening, all events have been moved up by one hour. For an updated schedule of tomorrow’s event start times, please click here.
ABOUT THE PATRIOT LEAGUE
The Patriot League is in its fourth decade of academic and athletic achievement, continually demonstrating that student-athletes can excel at both academics and athletics without sacrificing high standards. The Patriot League’s athletic success is achieved while its member institutions remain committed to its founding principle of admitting and graduating student-athletes who are academically representative of their class. Participation in athletics at Patriot League institutions is viewed as an important component of a well-rounded education.
Sports
Blue Bell/TSWA Class 5A All-State Volleyball Team
Blue Bell/TSWA Class 5A All-State Volleyball Team
Published 9:13 am Sunday, January 4, 2026
LONGVIEW – Division II champion Cedar Park earned both top superlatives with the release of the Blue Bell/Texas Sports Writers Association Class 5A All-State Volleyball Team.
Voting was conducted by TSWA members based on nominations from coaches and media members from around the state.
COACH OF THE YEAR: Lori McLaughlin, Cedar Park
PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Joy Udoye, Cedar Park
FIRST TEAM
Middle blockers: Brooklyn Bailey, Highland Park; Sienna Benavides, Cedar Park; Chesney McCullough, Lufkin
Outside hitters: Joy Udoye, Cedar Park; Kaitlyn Hutchins, Lake Belton; Harper Korenek, A&M Consolidated
Setter: Blair Thiebaud, College Station
Libero/Defensive Specialist: Ann Kruz, Cedar Park
SECOND TEAM
Middle Blockers: Rihanna Bryant, Weiss; Aliah Earls, Red Oak; Zandria Johnson, Brownsville Rivera
Outside hitters: Nadiya Shelby, Friendswood; Sarah Floyd, Highland Park; Mya Cheatum, Cedar Park
Setter: Katelyn Hughes, Cedar Park
Libero/Defensive Specialist: Gigi Whann, Highland Park
THIRD TEAM
Middle Blockers: Jacey Owen, Smithson Valley; Kendall Kruesler, New Braunfels; Kaelyn McLean, Tyler
Outside hitters: Kaycin Farrell, Hallsville; Lexi Anderson, Frisco Centennial; Alexis Elsey, Argyle
Setter: Kingsley Minus, New Braunfels
Libero/Defensive Specialist: Berkeley Bates, Smithson Valley
HONORABLE MENTION
Middle Blockers: Ava Wood, Lake Belton; Knlee Smith, Marshall; Haddie Mock, Abilene Wiley; Kylee Fernandez, Hallsville; Emersyn Fink, Frisco Liberty; Taryn Stiger, Texas High; Kaitlyn McCracken, Belton
Outside hitters: Alyssa Todd, Aledo; Ja’lee Flores, Tyler; Lily Holzbauer, Whitehouse; Shaylie Schaefer, New Braunfels; Akira Smallwood, Lufkin; Hannah Baker, Argyle; Danielle Whittier, Walnut Grove; Kaelee Berkley, Aledo; Jaiden Harris, Frisco Liberty; Zoeh Cereceres, El Paso Chapin
Setter: Madison Bingham, Lake Belton; Aleciara Smallwood, Lufkin; Jill Vinal, A&M Consolidated; Ava Jackson, Weiss; Kyndal Newton, A&M Consolidated; Madison Victoriano, Frisco Centennial; Amelia Albright, Georgetown
Libero/Defensive Specialist: Hayden Jeffers, New Braunfels; Teagan Barnett, Argyle; Haley Nash, College Station; Haley Patton, Friendswood; Ashley Go, Weiss
Sports
NDSU Wrestling Places Four into Semis on Day One of Southern Scuffle
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. – North Dakota State wrestling placed four wrestlers into the Southern Scuffle semifinals on the opening day on Saturday at McKenzie Arena at the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga. 125 Ezekiel Witt, 149 Max Petersen, 174 Max Magayna and 184 Aidan Brenot all went undefeated to earning a spot in the semis Sunday morning.
In the team competition, the Bison sit in second overall out of 28 teams with 79 points. NDSU trails Penn State (82.5) by just 3.5 points headed into the final day.
NDSU has 10 total wrestlers remaining in the event, with six Bison in consolation bracket matches to begin Sunday. 141 Devon Harrison, 157 Gavin Drexler, 165 Boeden Greenley, 184 Andrew McMonagle, 197 Devin Wasley and 285 Drew Blackburn-Forst are all one win from reaching the placing rounds in the consolation bracket.
Brenot led the Bison with three bonus-point victories on Saturday, beginning with a major decision over NC State’s Rylan Breen, before a tech fall against Bellarmine’s Tristin Green and another major decision over Greyson Meak of Penn. In the quarterfinals, Brenot had the only takedown in a win over Dylan Newsome of Virginia to reach the semis.
Witt, Petersen and Magayna also started off with multiple bonus-point victories. Witt started off with a tech fall over Morgan State’s Julian Dawson, before a pin of The Citadel’s Gylon Sims. Witt then recorded a 4-0 win over Chattanooga’s Ty Tice to reach the quarterfinals. The redshirt freshman reached the semis with a win over Navy’s Andrew Binni, but Witt needed sudden victory. In the extra period, Witt recorded a takedown and nearly got the slap of the mat before time expired, recording an 8-1 win.
Magayna also recorded a pin against Colt Campbell of Appalachian State in the quarterfinals. The redshirt freshman started the day with a 13-0 major decision over Chattanooga’s Brody Murray. In the quarterfinal, Magayna picked up another shutout with a 3-0 win over Davidson’s Tyson Sherlock. Magayna did not allow a point from his opposition, outscoring them 19-0 on Saturday.
Petersen started his day with a major decision over Kelly Dunnigan of Penn, before securing a tech fall over Little Rock’s Kyle Lew. Petersen fell behind in the quarterfinal, but stormed back and defeated The Citadel’s Carson DesRosier 14-8 to reach the semis.
Harrison and Drexler also reached quarterfinal matches for the Bison on Saturday. Harrison started off with a tech fall over Presbyterian’s Ryan Luna and then advanced after #8 Aaron Nagao of Penn State medically forfeited out. Harrison recorded the opening takedown in the quarters, but fell to #19 Haiden Drury of Utah Valley 7-3.
Drexler allowed just one point before the quarterfinal, recording a shutout decision over Virginia’s Nate Richards before a 10-1 major decision over Chattanooga’s Alex Hutchcraft. Drexler then won a 2-0 decision over Brown’s Ethan Mojena.
Greenley, McMonagle, Wasley and Blackburn-Forst all dropped their second match of the day but survived and advanced to Sunday with a pair of wins on the back side of the bracket. All four wrestlers responded to defeat with a bonus-point decision, as Greenley and McMonagle had major decisions and Wasley and Blackburn-Forst recorded tech falls. Wasley and Blackburn-Forst also had major decisions in their opening matches.
133 Tristan Daugherty and 141 Michael Olson each recorded two wins before being eliminated, while 285 Shilo Jones had one victory with a pin in his opening match.
125 Ostin Blanchard, 141 Peyton Moore, and 197 Adam Cherne led eight wrestlers who competed at the Soldier Salute in Coralville, Iowa on Saturday. The trio each picked up a victory.
The Bison will be back in action on Sunday, as the Southern Scuffle gets back underway at 9 a.m. CT. The Soldier Salute is set to get underway at 11 a.m. with Bison wrestlers in action, moving to the Silver bracket.
Southern Scuffle Championship Bracket Wrestlers
125 | Ezekiel Witt | 4-0
W over Julian Dawson (Morgan State); TF 20-5
W over Gylon Sims (The Citadel); Fall 6:44
W over Ty Tice (Chattanooga); Dec 4-0
W over Andrew Binni (Navy); SV 8-1
Greg Diakomihalis (Cornell)
149 | Max Petersen | 3-0
W over Kelly Dunnigan (Penn); MD 12-1
W over Kyle Lew (Little Rock); TF 17-1
W over Carson DesRosier (The Citadel); Dec 14-8
Connor Pierce (Penn State)
174 | Max Magayna | 3-0
W over Brody Murray (Chattanooga); MD 13-0
W over Colt Campbell (Appalachian State); Fall 1:15
W over Tyson Sherlock (Davidson); Dec 3-0
Caden Bellis (Penn)
184 | Aidan Brenot | 4-0
W over Rylan Breen (NC State); MD 18-6
W over Tristin Greene (Bellarmine); TF 20-4
W over Greyson Meak (Penn); MD 15-2
W over Dylan Newsome (Virginia); Dec 4-2
#25 Caleb Campos (American)
Southern Scuffle Consolation Bracket Wrestlers
141 | Devon Harrison | 2-1
W over Ryan Luna (Presbyterian); TF 16-1
W over #8 Aaron Nagao (Penn State); MFF
L to #19 Haiden Drury (Utah Valley); Dec 7-3
Kyren Butler (Virginia)
157 | Gavin Drexler | 3-1
W over Nate Rickards (Virginia); Dec 7-0
W over Alex Hutchcraft (Chattanooga); MD 10-1
W over Ethan Mojena (Brown); Dec 2-0
L to Jonathan Ley (Navy); Dec 5-2
Tanner Peake (Davidson)
165 | Boeden Greenley | 3-1
W over Tavian Camper (Chattanooga); Dec 11-6
L to Dylan Elmore (Navy); Dec 8-2
W over Jack Conley (Michigan State); MD 17-4
W over Mason Steffanelli (Virginia); Dec 9-5
Nick Sanko (Virginia)
184 | Andrew McMonagle | 3-1
W over Brant Cracraft (Campbell); SV 10-7
L to #22 Jaden Bullock (Virginia Tech); SV 4-1
W over Jakob Gilfoil (Army); MD 14-5
W over Ryan Boucher (Michigan State); Dec 4-2
Caleb Uhlenhopp (Utah Valley)
197 | Devin Wasley | 3-1
W over Martin Cosgrove (Penn); MD 9-1
L to Payton Thomas (Navy); Dec 4-2
W over Teage Calvin (American); TF 17-1
W over #29 Wolfgang Frable (Army); Dec 5-0
#31 Kael Wisler (Michigan State)
285 | Drew Blackburn-Forst | 3-1
W over Oscar Williams (Maryland); MD 14-2
L to #18 Brady Colbert (Army); MD 12-1
W over John Pardo (Penn); TF 15-0
W over #30 Alex Semenenko (Brown); MFF
Lucas Stoddard (Army)
Southern Scuffle Eliminated Wrestlers
133 | Tristan Daugherty | 2-2
L to Max Leete (American); Dec 8-2
W over Fernando Dominguez (Presbyterian); TF 16-1
W over Kyle Montaperto (Virginia); Dec 4-3
L to Geronimo Rivera (Utah Valley); SV 8-2
141 | Michal Olson | 2-2
L to #22 Tom Crook (Virginia Tech); MD 8-0
W over Joe Fongaro (Appalachian State); SV 4-1
W over Will Anderson (Chattanooga); Dec 4-2
L to Gable Porter (Virginia); MD 8-0
165 | Porter Craig | 0-2
L to Dakota Morris (Army); Dec 10-4
L to Tavian Camper (Chattanooga); Dec 7-5
285 | Shilo Jones | 1-2
W over John Pardo (Penn); Fall 2:35
L to #24 Connor Barket (Duke); SV 9-6
L to Oscar Williams (Maryland); Dec 4-3
Soldier Salute Gold Bracket Results
125 | Ostin Blanchard | 1-2
W over Cameron Stinson (North Carolina); Dec 11-9
L to Mack Mauger (Missouri); MD 8-0
L to Joey Cruz (Iowa); Dec 4-2
125 | Kody Tanimoto | 0-2
L to Hank Benter (Missouri); Dec 7-0
L to Carson Dupill (South Dakota State); MD 13-4
141 | Lawson Eller | 0-2
L to Dyson Dunham (VMI); MD 10-1
L to Jace Roller (Missouri); MD 13-0
141 | Peyton Moore | 1-2
L to Nick O`Neill (North Carolina); Fall 3:29
W over Sam Sutton (Tarleton State); Fall 2:04
L to David Saenz (Wyoming); Dec 9-3
149 | Zytavius Williams | 0-2
L to Scott Robertson (Nebraska); Dec 6-3
L to Kael Voinovich (Iowa); MD 20-7
165 | Dante Hutchings | 0-2
L to CJ Torres (Iowa); Dec 8-4
L to Kyler Knaack (Northern Iowa); Dec 4-2
174 | Luke Hoag | 0-2
L to Leister Bowling (Iowa); Dec 4-2
L to Melton Powe (Iowa State); MD 11-2
197 | Adam Cherne | 1-2
L to Anthony Harris (Oklahoma); MD 12-3
W over Grant Anderson (Bellarmine); MD 11-3
L to Gunner Henry (Wyoming); Dec 2-1
Sports
Hawaii men’s volleyball overwhelms NJIT in season opener
Sports
WBB: Huskies Fall Short 56–52 at UIW
SAN ANTONIO, Tx. – HCU women’s basketball team battled with a late comeback, but UIW held to secure a 56–52 Southland Conference win Saturday afternoon at the McDermott Center.
UIW (6-6, 4-1 SLC) opened the game with an early advantage, but the Huskies answered with points from Jordan Jackson and Grace Booth to keep the score tight early. A three-pointer from Sidney Carr midway through the first quarter brought HCU within one, and the Huskies closed the quarter trailing just 14–12.
The Huskies (4-8, 2-3 SLC) opened the second quarter with Jo Oly scoring twice, while Kamryn McLaurin added a pair of free throws following a drive to the basket. A three-pointer from Tove Caesar late in the half cut the deficit to one possession, but UIW responded to take a 29–25 lead into the break.
The Cardinals gained separation in the third quarter, opening with a pair of baskets and a three-pointer to build momentum. McLaurin scored on a layup early in the period and later added a free throw, but UIW stretched its lead to 43–33 entering the fourth quarter.
HCU responded with its strongest stretch of the game in the final quarter. Dasia Hyams scored on a fast-break layup to open the quarter, and McLaurin followed with consecutive baskets and a free throw to trim the margin. Jackson added a layup in transition and converted two free throws with under two minutes remaining, pulling the Huskies within one point.
With 50 seconds left, Hyams scored inside and converted the ensuing free throw to tie the game at 51–51. UIW answered with a three-pointer on the next possession, then closed the game at the free-throw line to maintain the lead in the final seconds.
McLaurin led the Huskies with 11 points, five rebounds, and five steals. Jackson finished with 10 points and six rebounds, while Caesar added seven points. Hyams and Oly each scored six off the bench, and Booth pulled down four rebounds. Houston Christian totaled 32 rebounds and scored 30 points in the paint.
Huskies continues Southland Conference play on Thursday traveling to Beaumont to face Lamar at 6:30 p.m.
Sports
See who has been named to the All-Metro Volleyball Team | High Schools
FIRST TEAM
Ava Hebert, Teurlings Catholic
Ana-Camille Melancon, Westminster Christian
Marvel Potier, St. Thomas More
Valerie Brown, Notre Dame
Grace Alexander, Lafayette Christian
Amelie Trappey, Catholic-N.I.
Avery Monica, ESA
Eleanor Guidry, St. Thomas More
AC Hebert, Teurlings Catholic
Zsofia Pekar, Southside
Meg Griffin, Ascension Episcopal
Audrey Wheeler, St. Thomas More
Jade Guidry, Northside Christian
Kate Trahan, Notre Dame
Laila Gauthier, Westminster Christian
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Eleanor Guidry, St. Thomas More
COACH OF THE YEAR
Jessica Burke, St. Thomas More
SECOND TEAM
Ava Smith, St. Edmund; Ella Larpenteur, Lafayette High; Aubrey Smith, Iota; Bailey Smith, Rayne; Emmy Habetz, Southside; Demi Barrett, Lafayette Christian; Morgan Dunn, St. Thomas More; Carsyn Fontenot, Teurlings Catholic; Lillian Guidry, Notre Dame; Lauren Conroy, ESA; Kelis Burgess, Southside; Mackenzie Batiste, Catholic-N.I.; Isabella Guy, Westminster Christian-Opelousas, Jr.; Ali Louviere, Highland Baptist; Addison Prejean, Acadiana Renaissance.
Sports
Ohio State football players lead religious revival among Gen Z
Jan. 4, 2026, 6:01 a.m. ET
Like the Great Awakenings of years gone by, a religious revival is emanating from Ohio State’s campus.
The mouthpieces of revival aren’t buttoned-up pastors yelling about fire and brimstone. And they aren’t speaking under tents or at church pulpits.
They are Ohio State football players. Often, their platform is on the field and on social media. And it stays the same, even when they falter on the field, as they did in the College Football Playoff. Their message?
“JESUS WON.”
Mass baptisms spark ‘Buckeye Revival’
The “Buckeye Revival” caught fire on a warm August night in 2024 as hundreds gathered to listen to Ohio State football players TreyVeyon Henderson, Emeka Egbuka and Gee Scott Jr. share their Christian faith.
Judson Overmyer, a northwest Ohio native, made the last-minute decision to drive to Columbus for the event.
He heard Scott, a senior tight end, read the story of the Prodigal Son aloud to the crowd. The Luke 15 parable describes the story of the child of a wealthy man who squanders his inheritance and doesn’t feel worthy to return home.
The son is then welcomed home with open arms.
“He got towards the end, and they started the altar call and it kind of went silent,” Overmyer said. “And then he said, ‘It only takes one.'”
Overmyer doesn’t remember being the first to stand up and walk to the front of the crowd. But that’s what he did, and when he turned around, he saw dozens of people walking up behind him.
Then he was baptized.
“It was the most surreal feeling. The second I hit the water and came back up, I felt weightless. Like the feeling of all the burdens on me that felt like they were physically weighing me down were taken away in that just outward profession of my faith,” he said.
Buckeyes build ‘Jesus hype’
Led by Henderson, Scott, Egbuka, J.T. Tuimoloau and Kamryn Babb, among others, the football team’s spiritual movement became defined by the players sporting T-Shirt bearing the words “JESUS WON,” holding a moment of prayer before each game and voicing outspoken declarations of faith in media interviews and on social media.
“What has taken place in my life and the lives of other people on this team — and I know I’m here to talk about football — but it’s a true testament of the Lord that I serve,” Scott told reporters during a January 2025 press conference.
Through the team’s 2024 national championship run, its march through the 2025 regular season and the first victory against Michigan since 2019, the players created what one Columbus faith leader called “Jesus hype.”
Nick Nye, the executive director of For Columbus, said he heard from a friend on staff at 614 Church that a congregant’s roommate started coming to church out of curiosity driven by the players’ faith.
“When my pastor friend, David, shared this story, he said it in a sense of, ‘Man, I just feel like I’ve heard stories like this happening several times,'” Nye said. “It’s been more than once.”
Even before the movement came into the public eye at the 2024 fall kickoff, the Buckeye Revival was catching fire behind the scenes: off the screens and off the field.
Months prior to Overmyer starting the altar call and being baptized, Scott baptized his teammates, the men who would later lead the movement, in front of his religious home, Gahanna’s One Church.

The reach of the ‘Buckeye Revival’
The revival that has taken over the Ohio State University campus has spread beyond the stadium, the Ohio Union and the Oval.
And it extended beyond the 2024 season and into the 2025 squad.
On Sept. 8, 2025, a panel of Buckeyes told their stories of faith and football for a crowd of nearly 2,000 people. A social media account that shares testimonies from the team’s Christian players said around 75 people were baptized that night.
“Jesus won. I’m good; I’m great. I can lose this game, and I’m still great. I still won. I think that was the biggest thing for me last year. I lost so much anxiety as the season went on. I started playing with peace, started playing for the Lord and just playing anxiety-free,” Styles said at the event, according to a video shared by The Courageous Athlete account.
Social media platforms (not to mention their visibility during nationally televised games) have helped the football-players-turned-evangelists extend their reach.
At the forefront of the movement is a digital platform, The Walk Foundation, led by podcaster and Christian content creator, Kevin Walsh.
Using his personal platform of sports content and Christian ministry, Walsh and his co-host, Jacob Byrd, began interviewing Buckeyes about their faith journeys on the series, “Buckeye Revival,” after the success of the 2024 fall kickoff.
The Walk Foundation, or “accessthewalk,” had more than 54,000 followers on TikTok and 43,000 followers on Instagram as of mid-December.
Clips from his interviews with Scott and Montgomery have 1.8 million and 3.2 million views on Instagram alone, with videos consistently reaching hundreds of thousands of views.
Walsh said the celebrity of the athletes helps spread the Christian message.
“Athletes are idolized so much that it actually points people to what these athletes really care about and where they’re rooted, which is in their faith in Jesus,” Walsh said.
Changing the next generation of athletes
Walsh has been most surprised by the depth of faith of the athletes.
“Football players or athletes get a little bit of a stereotype that they just hit heads on the field and may not be so down to earth or so vulnerable. You look at these guys and they’d be big, masculine, angry guys, but then you see how soft their hearts are,” Walsh said.
The vulnerability is likewise reaching younger generations, both on and off the field.
Like the Buckeyes, a group of players from Bishop Watterson High School pray before they take the field.
Nye recounted a player’s father pointing to the Ohio State athletes’ faith influence as the high school team took home the state title for the second year in a row on Dec. 5.
He said when pastors are intentional about reaching Generation Z or college-aged students, they are seeing upticks in attendance.
“Gen Z and Gen Alpha are now more likely to attend church more regularly than even the boomer generation, and are more interested in Christianity than Gen X, Boomers and Millennials,” he said. “It’s kind of creating this wave, and I think the football players are just the spotlighted version of that.”
Opponents-turned-brothers in faith
Walsh and Byrd now are interviewing athletes from universities around the country with The Walk Podcast’s College Football Series.
They have talked with athletes from Alabama, LSU, Notre Dame and even Michigan. But Walsh said it all started with the Ohio State football team.
“[The other athletes] saw these Ohio State football players sharing about their faith, and they’re like, ‘Wait, we can do that, too,'” Walsh said.
“The catalyst has been here in Columbus. That’s what’s been really cool. From there, it’s actually spreading out, and other athletes are just being encouraged by these Ohio State guys. Then they can build it up and feel confident doing that in their own communities.”
After Ohio State beat Penn State, Montgomery and injured Penn State quarterback Drew Allar prayed together on the field.
“JESUS WON, for both teams,” The Courageous Athlete posted following the game.
In an interview with Michael Taaffe, a Texas Longhorns defensive back, Byrd asked about challenges in Taaffe’s faith and football career.
“You miss a play in front of 10 million fans, and you’re getting humiliated on all social media platforms. It’s like, ‘Why is this happening. This is not what I asked for,” Taaffe said on the Nov. 25 podcast episode.
“. . . I always get reminded that I can’t do this alone. I think the pressure that we get put in as college athletes, the adversity I’ve had to face in my life, nobody can do it alone.”
Walsh said through gaining a peek behind the curtain of the athletes’ lives while leading the storytelling series, he learned that the athletes are “normal people.”
“These are normal guys just like me. They go through the same struggles that I might go through,” Walsh said. “The impact is, ‘I’m not alone.’ And athletes who you might think are on cloud nine, they’re so similar.”
Finding victory in loss: What happens next?
The Buckeyes’ lost twice in the 2024 season: an early conference season road game against Oregon, and a regular season-ending heartbreaker against archrival Michigan.
The 2025 season looked different, as the Buckeyes took down Texas in the season opener and cruised through Big Ten play, defeating Michigan in Ann Arbor on Nov. 29 for the first time since 2019.
Then came the Big Ten championship game. The No. 1 Buckeyes, favorites to win the conference title, fell 13-10 to the Indiana Hoosiers, in a game with eerie similarities to last year’s Michigan loss.
While they entered the College Football Playoff as a No. 2 seed with aspirations for a national championship repeat, the loss to Miami was a big blow to a team considered the country’s best for much of the year.
Still, in the wake of the loss, the Courageous Athlete Instagram page shared a simple message:
“JESUS WON.”
Kindness and religion reporter Sophia Veneziano may be reached at sveneziano@dispatch.com.
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