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Three Sign with the Pack for the 2026 Season

RALEIGH, N.C. – NC State softball head coach Lindsay Leftwich picked up three commitments from the transfer portal as Kadie Becker (South Carolina), Sarah Johnson (Gaston College), and Maia Townsend (LSU) have signed with the Pack for the 2026 season.   Becker and Johnson join the Pack with two years of eligibility remaining while Townsend […]

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RALEIGH, N.C. – NC State softball head coach Lindsay Leftwich picked up three commitments from the transfer portal as Kadie Becker (South Carolina), Sarah Johnson (Gaston College), and Maia Townsend (LSU) have signed with the Pack for the 2026 season.
 
Becker and Johnson join the Pack with two years of eligibility remaining while Townsend has one.
 
Kadie Becker | RHP | Granite Falls, N.C. (South Carolina/Charlotte)
Becker owns a career earned run average of 5.30 and 3-1 record in the circle. She made 12 appearances during both her freshman and sophomore campaigns. During the 2025 season at South Carolina, she struck out a pair of batters against Georgia State and LSU.
 
Sarah Johnson | OF | Charlotte, N.C. (Gaston College/McLennan CC)
Johnson joins the Pack after spending last season at Gaston College. The outfielder owned a .500 batting average and .825 slugging percentage during the 2025 campaign. She recorded 103 hits on the season, including a season high four hits against both Florence-Darlington Technical College and Pellissippi State.
 
Maia Townsend | OF | Morris, AL (LSU)
Townsend heads to Raleigh after spending the last three-years of her career at LSU.  The senior native appeared in 72 games and scored 22 runs over the course of her career. During her sophomore campaign, she recorded a career high 10 runs throughout the season.
 



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While modern college football is transactional, Justin Wilcox makes the case for why coaching cannot follow suit

Whether we like it or not, or can agree or no, the introduction of both NIL and the transfer portal flipped college athletics in a number of ways, but perhaps none more obvious than the transactional environment both changes have brought along with them. If players don’t like where they are on the depth chart? […]

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Whether we like it or not, or can agree or no, the introduction of both NIL and the transfer portal flipped college athletics in a number of ways, but perhaps none more obvious than the transactional environment both changes have brought along with them.

If players don’t like where they are on the depth chart? Transfer. 

If they don’t like where they’re at with NIL earning opportunities? Shop around, then transfer.

An industry built on developing relationships through recruiting and genuine connection has now being taken over by decisions primarily of a transactional nature.

Cal’s Justin Wilcox was asked about the transactional nature of college football today and if it has made his job harder as a head coach of an ACC program, and he provided an interesting answer.

“I think the natural response, when you see some of this movement, is to get defensive and say, ‘Well this is just transactional now, and I’m just going to put up a shield.'”

“But they are still young guys that are 17-23 years old. They need coaching. They need mentorship. This is our job now as coaches. Yes. There are going to be guys that leave, and that might sting but you still have to go all-in to them. Because if you make it transactional, and there is no relationship, that doesn’t work in college. They need that.”

“Is it the same that it used to be? No. If you don’t like that as a coach, then you don’t have to work here. You don’t have to do this job. But this is our job now, and sure it’s tough at times, but you’ve got to continue to pour into them because once it feels like there is no relationship, and it’s 100% transactional, that does not help your team.”

Hear more from Wilcox in the clip.





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Herd Softball Finalizes 2026 Staff

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. – Marshall Softball Head Coach Morgan Zerkle announced the additions of Riley Blampeid, Olivia Bruno, and Drew Calloway to the Thundering Herd coaching staff.   “I am excited to welcome some amazing people to our program who have a strong passion to coach, and I know they can’t wait to experience how special Marshall […]

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HUNTINGTON, W.Va. – Marshall Softball Head Coach Morgan Zerkle announced the additions of Riley Blampeid, Olivia Bruno, and Drew Calloway to the Thundering Herd coaching staff.  

“I am excited to welcome some amazing people to our program who have a strong passion to coach, and I know they can’t wait to experience how special Marshall University is,” Zerkle said. “Drew has learned from one of the best pitching minds in the country and will be crucial in continuing to develop our bullpen. Riley, an amazing player herself, will bring versatility to our coaching staff, just as she has on the field, and Olivia, a high level two-way player will be able to help out in every area, as well.” 

Blampied, a 2024 graduate of the University of South Carolina, had a successful academic and athletic career for the Gamecocks. She was a two-time CSC Academic All-District member while becoming the 11th player in South Carolina history to drive in 100 RBI and score 100 runs. The native of Cordele, Georgia most recently served as a graduate assistant at her alma mater. She is currently playing professionally with the New York Rise professional softball team. 

Bruno will serve as a graduate assistant for the Herd, with her playing career ending with the Kansas Jayhawks in 2025. The two-way player from Topeka, Kansas was a Second Team All-Big 12 honoree, leading the team with a 2.91 ERA while also knocking 45 hits in 2025.   

Calloway will serve as the Herd’s pitching coach, coming to Marshall from his hometown Arizona Wildcats. The former collegiate baseball pitcher was a graduate assistant in 2025, branching from Coach Christian Conrad, who has served with USA Softball and Athletes Unlimited. Arizona posted a team ERA of 2.60 in 2025, second best in the Big 12.    

For all the latest information about Marshall softball, follow @HerdSB on Twitter and Instagram.

To follow all Thundering Herd sports and get live stats, schedules, and free live audio, download the Marshall Athletics App for iOS or Android!

—HerdZone.com—





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Be Bold

Anyone paying attention to the fight for women’s sports already knows that Riley Gaines isn’t backing down. And as the nation starts to wake up, she’s no longer alone. The 12-time All-American swimmer and tireless women’s advocate has become a household name by doing something simple but radical: she’s speaking the truth. Now, Gaines is […]

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Be Bold

Anyone paying attention to the fight for women’s sports already knows that Riley Gaines isn’t backing down. And as the nation starts to wake up, she’s no longer alone.

The 12-time All-American swimmer and tireless women’s advocate has become a household name by doing something simple but radical: she’s speaking the truth. Now, Gaines is teaming up with XX-XY Athletics, the only athletic brand unapologetically championing biological women, to launch a collaboration that’s as bold and brave as she is. 

The retro-inspired Be Bold collection is infused with red, white, and blue to showcase unapologetic pride in this nation. But the brand and the styles aren’t just fashion — they represent a cultural pushback. And according to XX-XY founder Jennifer Sey, the timing couldn’t be more perfect.

“The first drop launched on June 23rd, the anniversary of Title IX. So it’s a celebration of all that Title IX represents, the opportunity it presented for women and girls across the country,” Sey told The Daily Wire in an exclusive interview. “And it sort of highlights the fact that we need to continue to fight to uphold it. We’re not going backwards.”

Not long before the collection’s June release, the Department of Education ruled that the University of Pennsylvania violated Title IX by allowing a biological male to compete on the women’s swim team, therefore robbing female athletes of records, awards, and their dignity. 

The school was forced to apologize and restore honors to athletes like Gaines. Shortly after, the Supreme Court announced it would hear two landmark cases involving men competing in women’s sports. Sey said it’s all proof that the cultural tide is turning, and that this collection will help capture that truth.

“The world is shifting under our feet,” she said. “That’s in large part due to Riley’s work.”

Sey has a background in standing up for what’s right. A former elite gymnast and the first whistleblower in her sport to expose abuse, she spent decades at the helm of major brands like Levi’s before founding XX-XY Athletics in 2023 with a singular mission: to stand up for real women.

“I looked around at all the big brands pretending to champion female athletes, and none of them really did. They make money off of it, but behind the scenes, they treat women with astonishing disregard,” she said.

With Be Bold, Sey is hoping to turn that hypocrisy on its head.

The collection wasn’t just inspired by Gaines. It was built with her.

“She was totally involved,” Sey said of the line of fitness apparel. “The red, white, and blue color scheme? That’s all her. The name Be Bold? That’s how she signs her books. We leaned into her favorite pieces and her signature style.”

Cropped performance tank

XX-XY Athletics

Gaines’s go-to item is the cropped performance tank, Sey says, stressing that all the pieces both make a statement and support real athletes who need their sportswear to work as hard as they do. These are high-quality items designed for female athletes who have both principles and high standards.

Another standout from the collection is the oversized concert tee, a nod to both Gen Z-approved oversized street style and old-school Americana. The back of the tee features the 37 words of Title IX, a fashionable protest.

Title IX tee

XX-XY Athletics

And for the non-athletes, there are plenty of options for a more casual look, like a vintage-inspired velour tracksuit straight out of 1972.

“When I was on the national team in the very early 80s, velour tracksuits were our dress sweats that we wore to march out at major international competitions,” Sey recalled. “So we definitely allude to them with some of the styling…we definitely use 1972 as a grounding point.”

Velour trackuit

XX-XY Athletics

This collection isn’t just about Riley, nor is it just a fashion statement. It’s about offering a platform to female athletes who’ve been abandoned by major brands and sports teams too afraid to take a side.

“One of the things we pride ourselves on is we scoop up athletes that no one else will touch. We will platform and empower the female athletes,” Sey said. “So they don’t feel so alone. Oftentimes they’re the only ones on their team or in their community [speaking up]. But when they realize there’s this network of women across the country who are doing the same thing, it’s incredibly powerful to have that.”

leggings and tank

XX-XY Athletics

Sey says Gaines will continue working closely with the brand to identify and support more athletes who have the courage to speak up.

“At the end of the day, we’re all about supporting female athletes. I mean, that’s what it comes down to,” she said.

XX-XY’s gear isn’t just for show. A runner recently completed the Boston Marathon in under three hours wearing one of their tanks. That same style shows up in the new Be Bold collection, but this time reimagined in patriotic hues.

The idea behind Be Bold is simple but subversive: give everyday Americans an easy way to express support for truth, fairness, and biological reality without having to say a word.

“The reason I started the brand, or at least part of it, was I felt like if we could create something really cool that was also world-class products, we could give people an easy way to sort of rep their advocacy,” Sey said. “The mainstream brands do this. Why can’t we do it?”

Sey, who’s been targeted by critics and called every name in the book. But she says the backlash isn’t stopping her. 

“Noisy doesn’t mean right,” she said. “You’ve got to screw up your courage and stand by women and girls.”

The Gaines collaboration is just the beginning. Sey teased more limited-edition drops on the horizon, plus a deeper partnership with Riley that goes beyond just appearing in ads.

Gaines group

XX-XY Athletics

When asked where she dreams of seeing pieces from the Be Bold collection show up, Sey didn’t hesitate.

“We would love to see someone wear any item atop a podium at an NCAA championship,” she said, “Or walking into the Supreme Court wearing a Title IX tee, that would be amazing, right?”

As the legal battles heat up, broader cultural beliefs continue to influence how this topic is perceived in the general public. Sey says the silent majority is finally starting to speak up. 

“You know, I think this movement for common sense is sort of billed as right-wing by the mainstream media. But the fact is, it’s not. It’s a really broad-based coalition. You can’t have 80% of Americans [agreeing] and have it only be the right. It’s just regular people.”

The Be Bold collection is available now at xxxyathletics.com.

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2025 Oklahoma State Cowboy Baseball Season Superlatives

• Oklahoma State ended the season with 30-25 record.  • The Cowboys earned a 12th consecutive NCAA Regional berth. It’s the nation’s fourth-longest current streak behind only Vanderbilt (19), Florida (17) and LSU (13).   • OSU’s NCAA Regional berth was the 50th in program history, which is tied for the third most in NCAA history.   […]

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• Oklahoma State ended the season with 30-25 record. 

• The Cowboys earned a 12th consecutive NCAA Regional berth. It’s the nation’s fourth-longest current streak behind only Vanderbilt (19), Florida (17) and LSU (13).

 

• OSU’s NCAA Regional berth was the 50th in program history, which is tied for the third most in NCAA history.

 

• OSU advanced to the NCAA Athens Regional finals. It marked the eighth time in 12 Regional appearances under Josh Holliday that the Cowboys have reached the Regional finals.

 

• OSU came in at No. 44 in the final NCAA RPI; it ranked 13th nationally in strength of schedule.

 

• Cowboy Baseball raised its total number of All-America honors to 152.

 

Harrison Bodendorf earned All-America Second Team honors from the NCBWA. He was also named to the ABCA/Rawlings All-America Third Team.

 

Harrison Bodendorf was a semifinalist for the Dick Howser Trophy and the College Baseball Foundation Pitcher of the Year.

 

• Two Cowboys were named ABCA/Rawlings All-Central Region, with Harrison Bodendorf making the first team and Colin Brueggemann selected for the second team.

 

Kollin Ritchie (OF), Nolan Schubart (OF) and Brayden Smith (2B) were named to the NCAA Athens Regional All-Tournament Team.

 

• OSU had seven players garner All-Big 12 accolades. Starting pitcher Harrison Bodendorf was named to the All-Big 12 First Team while Sean Youngerman earned spots on the All-Big 12 Second Team as both a starting pitcher and relief pitcher.

 

Colin Brueggemann, Ian Daugherty, Mario Pesca, Nolan Schubart and Brayden Smith were All-Big 12 Honorable Mention selections.

 

Harrison Bodendorf was named the Big 12 Co-Newcomer of the Year. He is the sixth Cowboy to claim the award.

• The Cowboys collected seven Big 12 Conference weekly awards on the season. Harrison Bodendorf tied a league record also held by four others by being named Big 12 Pitcher of the Week four times.

 
Nolan Schubart was on the Golden Spikes Award Midseason Watch List.
 
Sean Youngerman was on the NCBWA Stopper of the Year Midseason Watch List.
 
• OSU mashed 98 home runs, a total that ranked 22nd nationally. The Cowboys’ 1.78 homers per game led the Big 12 and was 15th in the NCAA. Three Pokes – Nolan Schubart, Colin Brueggemann and Kollin Ritchie – recorded at least 15 homers on the season.
 
• OSU ranked prominently in the Big 12 and nationally in several pitching categories, including: 
Shutouts: 5 – 2nd in Big 12, 21st nationally
Strikeout-to-Walk Ratio: 2.66 – 2nd in Big 12, 17th nationally
Strikeouts Per Nine Innings: 9.7 – 3rd in Big 12, 23rd nationally
 
Harrison Bodendorf recorded 102 strikeouts, becoming the 17th Cowboy pitcher to record 100 Ks in a season. The feat has now been accomplished 23 times in program history.  
 
• Bodendorf’s 100-strikeout milestone marked the fifth consecutive season the Cowboys have had a pitcher record at least 100 Ks, which is a program record.
 
Harrison Bodendorf won 10 games, becoming the first OSU pitcher since 2019 to record double-digit wins in a season.
 
Harrison Bodendorf tossed a 10-inning complete game in a win at Arizona. It was the longest outing by a Big 12 pitcher since 2009. Bodendorf became just the eighth conference pitcher to work 10-plus innings in a game since 2003.
 
Harrison Bodendorf ranked second in the Big 12 in opponent batting average (.204), third in ERA (3.30) and fifth in strikeouts (102).
 
Nolan Schubart ranks prominently in several offensive categories following his three seasons in a Cowboy uniform. He is fourth all time with 59 home runs, averaging a homer every 10 at-bats, is ninth with a .705 slugging percentage and ranks 10th with 199 RBIs. He also owns a career 1.169 OPS.
Brayden Smith posted a 19-game hitting streak, the longest by a Cowboy since the 2021 season and tied for the 10th longest in program history.
 
Drew Culbertson led the Big 12 and ranked 14th nationally with 12 sacrifice bunts. That total tied for the ninth most in a single season in program history.  
 
• OSU ranked led the Big 12 and ranked 15th nationally in average home attendance at 4,688 fans per game. In its 22 home dates, O’Brate Stadium counted 103,156 fans, which was 25th in the nation.
 
• The Cowboys had five players selected in the 2025 Major League Baseball Draft.
    • Nolan Schubart, OF, 3rd round, pick 101 – Cleveland Guardians
    • Sean Youngerman, RHP, 4th round, pick 131 – Philadelphia Phillies
    • Gabe Davis, RHP, 5th round, pick 137 – Chicago White Sox
    • Harrison Bodendorf, LHP, 10th round, pick 312 – Cleveland Guardians
    • Brayden Smith, 2B, 13th round, pick 394 – Baltimore Orioles
 
• OSU had three picks in the first five rounds of the MLB Draft for the third consecutive season, which marked the ninth time in program history three or more Cowboys were selected in the first five rounds.
 
• OSU had 10 players earn Academic All-Big 12 honors. Making the list were Kyle Bade, Drew Blake, Colin Brueggemann, Charlie Carter, Ian Daugherty, Landry Kyle, Donovan LaSalle, Nolan Schubart, Beau Sylvester and Ryan Ure.
 
Nolan Schubart earned CSC Academic All-America Second Team honors for the second consecutive year. He became just the second Cowboy in program history to be named an Academic All-American twice, joining Brad Beanblossom (1988-89).
 
• Five Cowboys were named to the CSC Academic All-District Team – Drew Culbertson, Ian Daugherty, Nolan Schubart, Ryan Ure and Hunter Watkins.
 
• OSU earned the ABCA Team Academic Excellence Award for the sixth consecutive year. The award honors teams with a cumulative 3.00 or higher grade point average.
 



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Westfield native, Purdue transfer safety 'sets the tone' with new Oregon football teammates

An All-American season as a freshman immediately raised Dillon Thieneman’s profile. A coaching change at Purdue led him to the transfer portal and a perennial playoff contender.Those in Las Vegas for Big Ten media days spoke highly of their new Ducks teammate.LAS VEGAS — Before former Purdue football safety Dillon Thieneman became a Duck, Oregon’s […]

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Westfield native, Purdue transfer safety 'sets the tone' with new Oregon football teammates


An All-American season as a freshman immediately raised Dillon Thieneman’s profile. A coaching change at Purdue led him to the transfer portal and a perennial playoff contender.Those in Las Vegas for Big Ten media days spoke highly of their new Ducks teammate.LAS VEGAS — Before former Purdue football safety Dillon Thieneman became a Duck, Oregon’s coaching staff labeled him a snake.

That’s the designation Dan Lanning and company put on their upcoming opponents’ best players. They assigned Thieneman to that portion of the animal kingdom prior to last season’s Oct. 18 game at Ross-Ade Stadium.

Thieneman’s five tackles did not stand out in the 35-0 Oregon victory. By a more analytical measure, Thieneman’s only PFF grades lower than that night’s 51.2 came in the blowout losses to Notre Dame and Indiana.

Lanning, though, was eager to add the Westfield grad. He fit a need on a perennially playoff-caliber roster. He also checked off the same intangibles which made him a leader at Purdue.

“When you really get to know Dillon, that’s when you fall in love with Dillon,” Lanning said Wednesday at Big Ten media days. “What kind of worker he is, what he does. Those are the things that tape don’t tell, but you can figure it out quickly through the relationship — hop on the phone, having the guy to visit, being around his family.”

Lanning said his staff maintains a “heightened awareness” of players performing well across college football. That awareness increases when those players enter their name in the NCAA transfer portal. He likened it to the NFL free agency dynamic.

Thieneman’s performance and credentials over his first two seasons made him one of the highest-profile defensive players available. Regardless, once he committed, he still needed to prove himself all over again to a new group of teammates.

Relive Purdue basketball’s Final Four run with our commemorative book.

As the Ducks tell it, he accomplished that by simply picking up where he left off as the hardest worker on the Boilermaker roster.

“That dude sets the tone, whether it be off the field, or getting extra treatment, extra reps in,” Oregon linebacker Bryce Boettcher said. “It’s an all-the-time mindset. And he is one of the guys that comes downhill, flies to the ball and plays with a lot of effort. That’s what you want from any guy on your defense, especially safety — a dude that can cover from the rook and set the tone on someone early.”

Tight end Kenyon Sadiq said Thieneman’s technique and football knowledge showed up during spring practices. He only got around to those attributes, though, after mentioning Thieneman’s work ethic and diligence to be the first to arrive and the last to leave.

“It’s rare you see something like that — especially from a person of his caliber, if that makes sense,” Sadiq said. “He’s very level-headed and a very nice person.”

Those descriptions of Thieneman’s demeanor and commitment align with the reputation he built over two Purdue seasons.

Thieneman represented more than merely another home-grown talent pried away by one of the sport’s elite. His freshman All-American season portended a building block for a bright future. He completed a family trilogy of Boilermaker safeties who arrived under the radar and graduated at the top of the depth chart.

Now, the best thing Purdue can say about the end of Thieneman’s career is — unlike tight end Max Klare at Ohio State or punter Keelan Crimmins at Illinois — they aren’t scheduled to play against him.

The Ducks, though, see him as a potential key piece in their pursuit of a repeat Big Ten Conference championship.Get IndyStar’s Purdue coverage sent directly to your inbox with our Boiler Update newsletter.

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Baseball Earns ABCA Team Academic Excellence Award

MANHATTAN, Kan. – The K-State baseball team was honored for its academic success by the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA), as the Wildcats received the Team Academic Excellence Award for the 2024-25 season.   The award, established in 2016, recognizes high school and college teams coached by ABCA members that achieve a cumulative team GPA […]

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MANHATTAN, Kan. – The K-State baseball team was honored for its academic success by the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA), as the Wildcats received the Team Academic Excellence Award for the 2024-25 season.
 
The award, established in 2016, recognizes high school and college teams coached by ABCA members that achieve a cumulative team GPA of 3.0 or higher on a 4.0 scale during the academic year. This year, 440 college programs and nearly 300 high school programs were recognized for their academic achievement.
 
The Wildcats posted a 3.24 team GPA for the 2024-25 academic year, while four student-athletes – catcher Bear Madliak, outfielder Keegan O’Connor, and pitchers Ty Ruhl and Lincoln Sheffield – earned perfect 4.0 GPAs during the spring semester.
 
K-State was one of nine Big 12 schools to earn the award, marking the program’s second time receiving the honor and the first since the 2016-17 season.
 

The American Baseball Coaches Association has a long tradition of recognizing the achievements of baseball coaches and student-athletes. The ABCA/Rawlings All-America Teams are the nation’s oldest, founded in 1949, and the ABCA’s awards program also includes the ABCA/Rawlings All-Region Awards, the ABCA/Diamond Regional & National Coaches of the Year and several other major awards such as the ABCA Hall of Fame and the Ethics in Coaching Award.
 
Under seventh-year head coach Pete Hughes, the Wildcats concluded the 2025 season with an overall record of 32-26, including a record-breaking 17 conference victories. K-State advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutive year, marking the program’s first back-to-back appearances since 2010–11.
 



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