Sports
Tiger Tenacity: A Recap of an Amazing Season

By Ethan Hudson
As the 2024/25 school year comes to an end for Greenwich Country Day School (GCDS), so does the spring 2025 athletic season, one that proved to be very successful for GCDS. With a season that yielded a coveted New England Preparatory School Athletic Council (NEPSAC) championship, GCDS Athletic Director Tim Helstein had high praise for the Tigers, declaring the season as one of the most successful the school has ever had.
The GCDS Boys Varsity tennis team was among one of the most victorious Tiger programs this spring, capturing the Fairchester Athletic Association (FAA) Tournament team championship (the first in program history), regular season tournament championship, and NEPSAC championship. With a 15-0 regular season record, head coach Steve Feder credited the consistent winning to his players’ attitudes, saying, “I am so proud of our team for their commitment to each other. Tennis is usually an individual sport but our players are completely invested in our team’s success.”
Undefeated seasons for the GCDS spring sports programs do not stop there. Joining the Boys Varsity Tennis team with perfect regular seasons are the Boys Varsity Golf team (11-0) and the Boys Varsity Lacrosse team (16-0). The latter ended the season with a FAA regular season championship, the second in the last three years for the Boys Varsity Lacrosse program. The team benefited from strong veteran leadership throughout the season. “Our senior class in particular deserves a lot of credit – they are flat out winners both on and off the field,” said head coach Andrew Copelan.
In addition to the boys varsity team, the GCDS Girls Varsity Lacrosse team capped off an impressive season, qualifying for the FAA semifinal. Senior Ella Wilner made history this season becoming the first player to score a 200th career goal in GCDS Girls Lacrosse history.
Although not all programs were fortunate enough to go undefeated in the FAA, athletes from all respective teams still turned out some impressive performances this spring. Junior Grace Gapen, a member of GCDS’s track and field team won first place at the NEPSAC Track and Field championships, winning both shot put and discus.
Yet the individual accolades for the Tigers do not stop there. After every athletic season, GCDS distributes their “Pride Award” for each sport, one that goes to a student-athlete who has overcome adversity, shown true dedication, and growth throughout the season. For Varsity Baseball, Bryce Hill and Mason Zuniga received the award. For Varsity Softball, Gabby Zarro was the recipient. For Boys Varsity Tennis, Julian Toub received the award. For Girls Varsity Tennis, Brynn Forlizzi and Jane Loverro were the recipients. For Boys Varsity Golf, Brennan Cunnion received the award. For Girls Varsity Golf, Charlotte Datwent was the recipient. For Boys Varsity Lacrosse, Parkin Overbay received the award. For Girls Varsity Lacrosse, Chloe Morris was the recipient. For Varsity Rowing, Cate Auerswald and Sof ia Orr received the award. For Varsity Sailing, Harrison Thompson was the recipient. For Varsity Track and Field, Romell Sarsoza and Annetta Solari received the award. For Girls Water Polo, Fiorella Deus was the recipient
As important as performance is for athletes during games, their behavior after the final whistle is something that GCDS does not take lightly. That’s why, similar to the Pride Award, one student-athlete from every team is selected as the recipient of the “Coaches Award,” which goes to an athlete who demonstrated exemplary sportsmanship throughout the season.
This year, the Tigers truly showed their sportsmanship stripes. In fact, some teams had more than one recipient, such as MD Mutescu and Katherine Salce of the Varsity Rowing team, Liam Kennon, Mia Secko-Thompson, and Charlie Maloney of the Varsity Track and Field team, William Bugbee, Steve Carre, and Griffyn Flood of the Boys Varsity Lacrosse team, Bianca Amen and Ella Wilner of the Girls Varsity Lacrosse team, and Kathryn Byxbee, Talia SandhuZach Cole, Nico Della Pietra, and Austin Nelson of the Girls Water Polo team. Landon Ristau of the Varsity Baseball team received the award, as well as Peter Manuel of the Boys Varsity Golf team, Alex Darwent of the Girls Varsity Golf team, Grant Zucconi of the Varsity Sailing team, Sophia Schwartz of the Varsity Softball team, Felipe Miguens of the Boys Varsity Tennis team, and Abby Greenlatt of the Girls Varsity Tennis team.
Because of so many notable individual seasons this year, GCDS will be graduating 20 senior student-athletes who have committed to play their respective sports at the college level, ranging from NCAA Division I to Division III.
Ben Bilden will be playing soccer at Dartmouth; MD Mutescu will be rowing at Northeastern; Austin Nelson will be playing water polo at George Washington; Eli Rosen will be running track and field at Emory; Ella Larken will be rowing at Villanova; Brianna McDermott will be playing basketball at Holy Cross; Owen Chickering will be sailing at Northeastern; Dylan Kellan will be playing lacrosse at Notre Dame; Wyatt Lupo will be playing golf at Hamilton; Mia Rodgers will be playing golf at Wesleyan; Emily Behr will be swimming at Trinity; Bobby Jones will be playing lacrosse at MIT; Griffyn Flood will be playing lacrosse at Wesleyan; Danielle Braver will be playing soccer at William Smith; Brennan Cunnion will be playing football at Dennison; Luca Corsano Leopizzi will be playing football at Johns Hopkins; Stephen Carre will be playing lacrosse at Sacred Heart; Jackson Anderson will be rowing at Princeton; Elle Price will be playing hockey at Albertus Magnus; Ella Wilner will be playing lacrosse at Clemson. These former Tigers are sure to keep dominating, regardless of the color of their uniforms.
The spring 2025 athletic season resulted in a plethora of medals, trophies, and memories for GCDS student-athletes. Helstein expressed his content with this year’s athletes, saying “It was a pleasure to watch you practice and compete with pride and purpose. It is without question that I can say, ‘You have earned your stripes!’ Go Tigers!”
Sports
Householder Earns Honorable Mention All-America Status from AVCA
Youngstown, Ohio — The circuit of impressive honors continued for Youngstown State’s Abbie Householder on Wednesday as she was named an Honorable Mention All-American by the American Volleyball Coaches Association.
Householder is just the second player in program history to earn All-America status, joining Paula Gursching in 2022. The outside hitter from Canfield, Ohio, was previously named the Horizon League Player of the Year and Offensive Player of the Year, and she was an Honorable Mention AVCA All-Midwest Region selection.
Householder is the Horizon League’s only player to garner All-America honors this season, and Dayton’s Kamryn Hunt is the only other player from Ohio’s 13 Division I institutions or native of the Buckeye State to be on the prestigious list of All-Americans.
“We are so proud of Abbie for earning All-America honors,” said YSU head coach Riley Jarrett. “This is an amazing way to finish up her historic career here at YSU, and to truly leave her mark on our program. A lot of hard work and determination has gone into this recognition for Abbie, and I am so happy for her!”
Even with Youngstown State’s season ending on Nov. 22, Householder still ranks 20th in the country in total kills with 502, and she ranks 22nd in total points with 562.5. She ranks 42nd nationally with 4.22 kills per set, and she is 44th with 4.73 points per set. Each of those statistics led the Horizon League in 2025.
Householder finished her career as YSU’s all-time leader in kills with 1,427, passing the previous mark of 1,408 that had stood since 1999. She also is the career record holder with 4,241 attempts, and she ranks third in digs, fourth in points and sixth in aces. Householder is one of three Division I players who surpassed 1,400 career kills and 1,200 career digs this season.
Sports
Rising Senior Libero Dionii Fraga Joins Alabama Volleyball
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Alabama volleyball announced the addition of Dionii Fraga to its 2026 roster, who will join the Crimson Tide as a rising senior following previous stops at Oklahoma and Fresno State.
Fraga was the starting libero last season at Oklahoma and across two preceding seasons at Fresno State. In 27 matches with the Sooners last year, she led the team with 277 digs (2.61/set), including a season-best 16 win a five-set win over Missouri on Oct. 5. Prior to her arrival in Norman, she played in 63 matches over two seasons at Fresno State, earning All-Mountain West honors each year. She led the Bulldogs with 481 digs (3.91/set) as a sophomore after setting the program’s freshman digs record in 2023 with 544 (4.15/set). Following her breakout freshman campaign, she was named AVCA Pacific South Region Freshman of the Year.
Sports
Volleyball’s M.E. Hargan Garners All-America Honorable Mention
Morehead, Ky. – The honors keep coming for Morehead State Volleyball’s M.E. Hargan. The senior outside hitter from Elizabethtown, Ky., has been named Honorable Mention All-American by the American Volleyball Coaches Association.
“The honor is definitely something I’ve always wanted to achieve,” said Hargan. “Hearing about and seeing these amazing players before me gave me motivation to show up and put in the work in a sport I love. I am so happy and thankful it finally came to be at the end of my collegiate career.”
Hargan becomes the fifth player in program history to earn All-America recognition. She joins Katelyn Barbour (2008), Holly Evans (2010), Ellie Roberson (2012) and Olivia Lohmeier (2020).
“M.E. being named Honorable Mention All-American is a tremendous honor, and very well deserved,” said Morehead State head coach Kyrsten Becker-McBride. “I’m incredibly proud of her season, the way she represents Morehead State University, and the type of student and person she is on daily basis.”
Hargan led the Ohio Valley Conference with 493 kills this season, averaging 4.61 kills per set ranking 16th in the country in NCAA Division I. Her 569 points (5.32 points per set average) ranked 11th in the country.
She was named the OVC Player of the Year, the sixth Eagle to earn the award, joining Dayle Hammontree (1988. 1989), Amy Almond (2001, 2002), Holly Evans (2010), Roberson (2012) and Lohmeier (2018, 2020).
“Hitting .275 while taking over 1,200 swings is hard to do, especially given that much of her role is managing out-of-system sets,” said Becker-McBride. “She’s made big strides in how she scores in those situations, and her growth over her four years at Morehead State has been rewarding to watch.”
One of Morehead State’s most prolific hitters, Hargan finished her career with 1,488 kills ranking third in program history for the modern era (2008-present when rally scoring changed to 25-point sets). Her 493 kills this season were the third-highest total in the modern era in the Eagle record book. Hargan finished with three seasons in the top 10 in program history for kills.
Her 2,575 total attacks’ tally is the second-highest in the program’s modern era. She also finished with 956 career digs, ranking ninth in the records. Her 98 career service aces and 36 career block solos both rank 10th in the program, as does her 439 career sets played.
In November, the Ohio Valley Conference named Hargan an OVC Scholar-Athlete, the highest recognition awarded by the conference. She is just the fifth Morehead State volleyball player to have earned the award.
“To earn the OVC Scholar-Athlete award and an All-American honor in the same year speaks volumes about who M.E. is and how she truly excels in every area of her life,” said Becker-McBride. “She is a great example of the true meaning of a student-athlete, since her on court accomplishments are accompanied by hundreds of hours of community service, outstanding grades in a challenging pre-vet degree, and great relationships with her teammates.
Hargan was an All-OVC First Team selection the last three seasons becoming the seventh player in program history to be named to the All-OVC First Team at least three years. This season, she was named OVC Player of the Week five times, including a run of three straight weeks (September 8 to September 22).
“M.E. would be the first person to say she can’t accomplish any of this without her teammates, which is why it’s fitting that this distinction also reflects as an honor for our whole program,” said Becker-McBride. “Her contribution to this program and university should highlight what is possible at a university like Morehead State.”
“This season had a lot of good moments on and off the court and I’m very grateful that I’ve gotten to share all of the experiences with amazing people,” said Hargan. “They definitely make it that much sweeter.”
Sports
Deniz Dakak Named an AVCA All-American
WASHINGTON – Deniz Dakak adds an AVCA All-American honorable mention selection to her outstanding sophomore season, announced on Wednesday morning by the American Volleyball Coaches Association. She is the ninth player in program history to receive the honor in addition to her All-Region selection on Dec. 9.
Dakak’s young career was put into the spotlight this season after she led the Patriot League in assists each week of the 2025 campaign. She was the quarterback of AU’s offense, which put up staggering numbers. The Eagles hit .294 at the end of the regular season, ranking 12th in the country before they hit a Patriot League Tournament record .500 in the conference championship match.
The Istanbul, Turkey native averaged 10.53 assists per set this year, and finished the season with over 1,028 after the NCAA Tournament. Dakak was named the Patriot League Player and Setter of the Year, just the third player to ever earn both awards. With two seasons left, Dakak is on pace to finish in the top 10 of AU’s all-time assists list.
AVCA All-American Awards
Keep up With Us
- For the latest on American University Volleyball, stay tuned to AUEagles.com and follow the team on Twitter (@AU_Volleyball), Facebook (/AU.Volleyball) and Instagram (@au_volleyball).
Sports
Skinner, Sheffield Set to Meet in NCAA Volleyball Semifinals – UK Athletics
In Thursday night’s NCAA Volleyball national semifinals, two coaches who are very familiar with one another will square off in the night’s second match. Kentucky head coach Craig Skinner and Wisconsin skipper Kelly Sheffield have a relationship that goes back decades.
Skinner and Sheffield are both from the Muncie, Indiana, area. In 1990, they led a Muncie Burris High School junior varsity team to an undefeated record.
Skinner and Sheffield would go their separate ways before both eventually became Division I head coaches. Skinner was named the head coach at Kentucky in 2004, while Sheffield was the head coach at Albany and Dayton before landing the Wisconsin job in 2012.
The UK head coach had nothing but praise for his counterpart in Thursday’s match.
“Kelly has earned everything he’s gotten,” Skinner said. “He’s come from humble beginnings, both in school and in coaching. He’s been on — coached and packed his car in an evening, had to be in Houston 20 hours later to start his first coaching job probably making about $10,000 a year. I have a lot of respect for someone that earned their way to this point in time.”
Skinner is also appreciative of the Muncie roots that both he and Sheffield have.
“You have to give a lot of credit to the Shondell family and Don Shondell for starting the Ball State program,” Skinner said. “Steve Shondell, the oldest Shondell son, played in and started the Muncie Burris program and Munciana Volleyball Club. When I started coming through Ball State, yeah, I’ll try this coaching thing. I just fell in love with what they were about.
“Ball State University started as a teacher’s college. Coaching is teaching,” Skinner said. “The joy and passion and interest in helping players do something better than they have ever have before. You really felt the essence of what coaching is.”
Skinner believes that his early beginnings showed him just how much he really wanted to be a coach.
“I tried to get away from coaching for a while,” Skinner said. “I had an accounting degree, got into banking. It sucked me back in because I love the competition and the teaching aspect. That started in Muncie, Indiana, in 1988 or ‘89 for me.”
For those who want to get into to coaching, starting off the way Skinner and Sheffield did is not rare. But Skinner knows that it has to be something you love.
“I always tell people that if you’re going to get into coaching, don’t get in it because you like it and you can make some money,” he said. “Get into it because you have a passion for helping people go above and beyond where they are. Kelly has demonstrated that for a long time.”
Two coaches who once coached a high school junior varsity team together square off in Thursday’s national semifinals when Kentucky plays Wisconsin. It’s a lesson in how much hard work and dedication can pay off.
Sports
Colyer, Booth earn AVCA All-American honors
Colyer led the way with a First Team All-American award at outside hitter, followed by Booth with a Third Team All-American nomination at the middle blocker position. In head coach Kelly Sheffield‘s tenure, 21 individual athletes have garnered 47 separate All-American honors in 13 seasons.
Colyer joined that group of athletes, putting together one of the most impressive individual seasons in UW history en route to her fourth All-American award of her career. The Lincoln, California, native recently eclipsed the 2,000-kill mark in her career against No. 2 Stanford in the NCAA Regional Semifinal—combining for 50 kills over the Badgers’ pair of matches in Austin, Texas.
The outside hitter broke the school record for most kills in a season, as she enters this week’s National Semifinals with 566. Colyer has accumulated double-digit kill totals in every match except for one this season, as she currently holds a 19-match streak of 10 or more kills, good for the second-longest streak in program history.
In the national ranks, Colyer places third in kills per set at 5.39. No other Badger in the Rally Scoring Era (since 2008) has finished the season with over five kills per set. She also ranks third in points per set at 5.97.
In leading the Badgers to a second-place finish in the Big Ten Conference, Colyer broke the school record for most kills at 345. Sarah Franklin was the only other athlete at UW to surpass 300 kills in the 20-match span.
Colyer excelled on the defensive end as well, recently surpassing the 1,000-dig mark in her storied career. The senior accumulated nine double-doubles in digs and kills in the 2025 season.
Right by her side, Booth strung together another impressive campaign for the Badgers—notching her second-career All-American award.
Offensively, the 6-foot-7 middle blocker has been efficient in her attack, as she is currently on pace to shatter UW’s record for highest hitting percentage in a single season. Booth sits at .454 entering the National Semifinal match, good for second-highest in the country. She has turned in zero errors in 11 matches this year.
The Denver, Colorado, native recently put together her strongest weekend of the season, highlighted by a .700 (14 – 0 – 20) swinging percentage turned in against No. 2 Stanford. Her 14 kills tied a career-best, as she followed it up with 11 more versus No. 1 Texas to help punch the Badgers’ ticket to Kansas City.
The 6-foot-7 middle blocker currently leads the team in blocks (123) and blocks per set (1.17) as well—showcasing her continued physical presence at the net.
Booth and Colyer are set to be teammates next season for the Dallas Pulse of Major League Volleyball, as they were recently selected in the draft less than a month ago.
Badger fans can catch both All-Americans in action on Thursday, Dec. 18, as UW will look to continue their postseason run. The Badgers are slated to face No. 1 Kentucky at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, as first serve will take place 30 minutes after the conclusion of the first National Semifinal between No. 3 Texas A&M and No. 1 Pittsburgh, which is set to start at 5:30 p.m. CT. Both matches will be televised on ESPN.
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoJo Shimoda Undergoes Back Surgery
-
NIL2 weeks agoBowl Projections: ESPN predicts 12-team College Football Playoff bracket, full bowl slate after Week 14
-
Motorsports1 week agoSoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoHow this startup (and a KC sports icon) turned young players into card-carrying legends overnight
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoRobert “Bobby” Lewis Hardin, 56
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoPohlman admits ‘there might be some spats’ as he pushes to get Kyle Busch winning again
-
Sports3 weeks ago
Wisconsin volleyball sweeps Minnesota with ease in ranked rivalry win
-
Motorsports1 week agoDonny Schatz finds new home for 2026, inks full-time deal with CJB Motorsports – InForum
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoIncreased Purses, 19 Different Tracks Highlight 2026 Great Lakes Super Sprints Schedule – Speedway Digest
-
Rec Sports2 weeks agoHow Donald Trump became FIFA’s ‘soccer president’ long before World Cup draw





