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Top Chicago Cubs Pitching Prospect Proves He's MLB Ready in Minor Leagues

The Chicago Cubs got dealt a brutal blow to their starting rotation quickly this season. Left-handed starting pitcher Justin Steele is out for the entirety of the season after making just four starts in which he went 3-1 with a 4.76 ERA. Now about three weeks removed from that news, it has become clear that […]

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Top Chicago Cubs Pitching Prospect Proves He's MLB Ready in Minor Leagues

The Chicago Cubs got dealt a brutal blow to their starting rotation quickly this season.

Left-handed starting pitcher Justin Steele is out for the entirety of the season after making just four starts in which he went 3-1 with a 4.76 ERA.

Now about three weeks removed from that news, it has become clear that the Cubs possess one of the very best lineups in all of MLB.

That’s largely thanks to the dominance of Kyle Tucker, acquired from the Houston Astros in a blockbuster deal over the winter,

With no guarantees that Tucker sticks around past this season, Chicago has a unique opportunity to go all in for a World Series at the same time as they try to extend the window by convincing Tucker to stay.

Steele’s absence from the rotation makes it tough to view the pitching staff as currently constituted as that of a legitimate contender, but president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer has multiple options to change that.

The obvious one is to swing a trade to add another top-of-the-rotation starter, but the Cubs may already have that sort of player knocking on the door of the Big Leagues.

Right-handed pitcher Cade Horton, the team’s seventh overall pick in the first round of the 2022 MLB draft, sure looks like a guy who is ready to come up and show what he can do.

With Triple-A Iowa, Horton entered his start on Sunday with a 1.17 ERA across five starts, striking out 28 batters in 23 innings of work.

The consensus Top 100 prospect delivered another stellar outing on Sunday against the Buffalo Bison, allowing just one run and two hits in six innings.

The University of Oklahoma product is pitching like he has nothing left to prove in the minor leagues, and though it’s likely that Chicago would ideally like to see more of his excellence over a larger sample, they may not have much time to wait.

Horton only threw three innings in spring training, allowing one run while striking out and walking two apiece.

If the Cubs call Horton up now and see what he has against Major League competition, that will provide Hoyer with some much-needed information ahead of the trade deadline.

Either he thrives, and the resources he has earmarked for the deadline can be used elsewhere, or he struggles, and Hoyer will know for certain that his club needs another high-level arm.

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Results from the D4 Track and Field Regionals held at Hillsdale College

ADRIAN ― Four teams from Lenawee County traveled to Hillsdale College looking to punch their respective tickets to the Michigan High School Athletic Association (MHSAA) Boys Track and Field Division 4 state finals. Here is a list of those athletes that qualified for the MHSAA State Finals in Division 4. More: Division 4 Girls Track: […]

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ADRIAN ― Four teams from Lenawee County traveled to Hillsdale College looking to punch their respective tickets to the Michigan High School Athletic Association (MHSAA) Boys Track and Field Division 4 state finals.

Here is a list of those athletes that qualified for the MHSAA State Finals in Division 4.

Addison Panthers

Lucas Morse, Sr. – Morse is the lone Panther to qualify for the state finals, doing so in the pole vault where he took third place with a vault of 11 feet, 6 inches.

Adrian Lenawee Christian Cougars

Brenner Powers, Sr. – Powers is the lone individual athlete representing Lenawee Christian, taking first place in the long jump with a jump of 20 feet, 7 inches, a new personal best.

3,200-meter relay team – Lenawee Christian will be represented at the state finals by the 3,200-relay team of Landon Chadek, Joel Lange, Kaleb Richardson, and Brenner Powers, who finished in third place in a qualifying time of 8 minutes, 45.19 seconds.

Britton Deerfield Patriots

Cayden Allshouse, Soph. – Allshouse will represent Britton Deerfield at the state finals after taking third place in the 100-meter dash in a qualifying time of 11.38 seconds, a personal best.

Jameson Watson, Sr. – Watson finished in second place in the high jump at regionals, qualifying for the state finals with a jump of 5 feet, 11 inches.

Andrew Bunker, Jr. – Bunker qualified in the discus for Britton Deerfield without actually earning a medal. Bunker finished in eighth place overall with a throw of 120 feet, 7 inches. What is interesting is that the MHSAA only medals to sixth place. However, despite not winning a medal, Bunker still qualifies for the finals based on his distance.

400-meter relay team – The team of Watson, John Johnson, Kaiden Lidster, and Cayden Allshouse finished in second place in a time of 45.50 seconds to qualify on to the state finals.

Morenci Bulldogs

Kylan Lester, Soph. – Lester qualified for the state finals in the 100-meter dash after winning the gold medal in a time of 11.11 seconds.

Kevan Kaufman, Sr. – Kaufman will head to the state finals thanks to his efforts in the 300 hurdles where he finished in second place in a time of 42.88 seconds. Kaufman also earned a trip to the finals in the pole vault, clearing a state qualifying height of 11 feet, 0 inches in his sixth-place finish.

Wyatt Berger, Sr. – Berger qualified for the state finals in the discus with a throw of 131 feet, 9 inches, good enough for second place.

400- and 800-meter relay teams move on to state finals – Morenci’s 400 relay team consisting of Lester, Van Ekins, Kaufman, and Wyatt Berger brought home the gold medal in a time of 45.49 seconds. In addition, the 800-relay team of Kaufman, Ekins, Michael Rising, and Zachary Martinez finished in third place in a time of 1 minute, 35.48 seconds to qualify for the finals.

The Division 4 state finals will take place on May 31 at Baldwin Middle School in Hudsonville.

(Editor’s Note: There is a separate write-up for the girls that qualified out of the Hillsdale College Regionals)

The sports department at The Daily Telegram is in transition right now, so our deepest apologies for the gaps in coverage this spring. Please be assured we are working on our next steps regarding coverage. If you have any questions, comments, or concerns about the stories regarding track and field regionals please email The Daily Reporter Sports Editor Troy Tennyson at ttennyson@thedailyreporter.com.



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Penn-Trafford boys volleyball finishes season strong

Latrobe boys volleyball coach Drew Vosefski said he was concerned about playing Penn-Trafford for a third time. Even though Latrobe had won the previous two section matches, the Wildcats faced a different Penn-Trafford squad in the WPIAL Class 3A quarterfinals May 15 and Vosefski’s worries became reality. The sixth-seeded Warriors rallied to stun the third-seeded […]

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Latrobe boys volleyball coach Drew Vosefski said he was concerned about playing Penn-Trafford for a third time.

Even though Latrobe had won the previous two section matches, the Wildcats faced a different Penn-Trafford squad in the WPIAL Class 3A quarterfinals May 15 and Vosefski’s worries became reality.

The sixth-seeded Warriors rallied to stun the third-seeded Wildcats, 3-2, by the scores of 21-25, 28-26, 25-18, 18-25 and 16-14.

The Warriors (12-7), who lost twice to the Wildcats (16-2) in section play, faced second-seeded Seneca Valley in the semifinals and gave the Raiders a scare before falling 3-2.

They were scheduled to play fifth-seeded Pine-Richland for third place May 23 for a berth in the PIAA playoffs.

Schall said the Latrobe match swung in the second game when his team started to serve better.

“Once we did that, we put them on their heels,” Schall said. “I am really proud of how we played. It was a tough match, and we put everything we had into it. I guess I did too.

“In Game 1, we did not give them much trouble with our serves. We served better starting in Game 2. We had some guys who really served well. We started putting them in some tough spots.”

Latrobe dominated the first game. Penn-Trafford swung the momentum its way in Game 2 early, but Latrobe battled back and tied the score at 25-all.

The Wildcats actually took a 26-25 lead before the Warriors, behind a kill by Caiden McDonald and Nick Laskey, rallied to tie the match, 1-1.

Schall felt Owen Gisi played well up front in all five games with his blocking ability.

The teams split the next two games, Penn-Trafford winning 25-18 and Latrobe answering 25-18, to set up the thrilling Game 5.

“This is playoff volleyball,” Vosefski said. “We had beaten them twice, but there is an old saying is when you get punched to the face, how much do you punch back? They punched back.

“Beating a team for a third time bothered me, but I am not going to make excuses. They played well.”

In the final game, the winner is the first team to 15, win by two. The game was close and went back and forth.

Penn-Trafford took a 12-10 lead, but the Wildcats tied it 12-12. Penn-Trafford went back up 14-12 as Gisi, McDonald and setter Natheniel Rugh started making plays.

Latrobe senior Luke Fiore tied the score 14-all with a service ace, but the next serve sailed long, setting up the final point, and McDonald finished it with a block.

“That was a tremendous team we beat,” Schall said. “They have an excellent setter and hitter. But we stepped up. I knew we would have to be really good, and I thought we’d be in the ballgame.”

Seneca Valley held off a ferocious effort from Penn-Trafford, picking up a 25-20, 22-25, 25-20, 20-25, 15-3 win to reach the WPIAL title game for the fourth time in the past 10 years.

Schall said he was happy with the Warriors’ effort.

“I’m really proud of the guys,” Schall said. “We were a third-place team in our section. I thought we were pretty good. I’m proud of the guys for the way they fought hard through the match. Unfortunately, we needed to get through that stretch in the fifth set still in the ballgame.”

Penn-Traffird’s biggest challenge was to find a way to handle Seneca Valley’s middle blockers, 6-foot-9 Brandon Suski and 6-5 Jordan Hoover.

Owen Gisi and Nick Laskey hit well for the Warriors.

“We handled their middle guys OK,” Schall said. “(Hoover) had a fantastic fifth game hitting and blocking. We did well enough to take their big guy (Suski) out. They had to put another guy in. We had to serve well.”

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Gallatin girls finish ‘podium year’ with first ever Class AA track and field team title | Prep Track

KALISPELL — Unlike previous years where the 4×400 meters relay decided the team title, Gallatin’s 13-point lead over Helena erased all doubt. Instead, Raptors head coach Chantel Jaeger-Smith told the group to treat the race as “their victory lap.” Junior Izzie Donaghey said the relay was the “cherry on top” for Gallatin. The team of […]

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KALISPELL — Unlike previous years where the 4×400 meters relay decided the team title, Gallatin’s 13-point lead over Helena erased all doubt. Instead, Raptors head coach Chantel Jaeger-Smith told the group to treat the race as “their victory lap.”

Junior Izzie Donaghey said the relay was the “cherry on top” for Gallatin. The team of Donaghey, senior Isabel Ross, senior Claire Rutherford and sophomore Hazel Cooper earned the Raptors a second-place finish in 3 minutes, 58.43 seconds.







•State_Track_Kalispell_25_0069.JPG

Gallatin senior Isabel Ross, center, runs the anchor leg of the girls 4×400 meters relay at the Class AA track and field meet Saturday at Legends Stadium in Kalispell.










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Gallatin seniors Claire Rutherford and Isabel Ross (center) hold the Class AA first place trophy and celebrate with teammates at the Class AA track and field meet Saturday at Legends Stadium in Kalispell.










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Gallatin senior Ava Dierolf competes in the girls javelin at the Class AA track and field meet Saturday at Legends Stadium in Kalispell.










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Gallatin senior Isabel Ross and sophomore Hazel Cooper lead the girls 1,600 meters at the Class AA track and field meet Saturday at Legends Stadium in Kalispell.










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Gallatin junior Izzie Donaghey, center, runs in the girls 100 meters final at the Class AA track and field meet Saturday at Legends Stadium in Kalispell.










•State_Track_Kalispell_25_0051.JPG

Gallatin junior Anita Black, left, and Missoula Big Sky’s Gracelee Banna run in the girls 110-meter hurdles final at the Class AA track and field meet Saturday at Legends Stadium in Kalispell.










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Gallatin senior Jack Murray competes in the boys discus at the Class AA track and field meet Saturday at Legends Stadium in Kalispell.




Bozeman’s Jones earns two sprint medals, Neil siblings place in 1,600







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From left, Kalispell Flathead’s Alivia Rinehart, Gallatin’s Izzie Donaghey and Bozeman’s Scotland Jones run in the girls 200 meters final at the Class AA track and field meet Saturday at Legends Stadium in Kalispell.




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All-America Honors Highlight Successful NCAA Men’s Weekend for CCIW

Story Links GENEVA, Ohio – North Central’s Braden Nicholson earned All-America First Team honors in both the 5,000 meters and 10,000 meters, leading the Cardinals to a 13th-place team finish as one of four College Conference of Illinois & Wisconsin (CCIW) teams to score points at the NCAA Men’s Outdoor Track […]

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GENEVA, Ohio – North Central’s Braden Nicholson earned All-America First Team honors in both the 5,000 meters and 10,000 meters, leading the Cardinals to a 13th-place team finish as one of four College Conference of Illinois & Wisconsin (CCIW) teams to score points at the NCAA Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Championship on Thursday through Saturday in Geneva, Ohio.
 
NCC was 13th with 13 points. North Park placed in a tie for 50th with four points, while Millikin and Illinois Wesleyan were among squads tying for 58th with three points apiece.
 
The CCIW collected five All-America First Team honors. Nicholson was the winner in the 10,000 meters and also placed sixth in the 5,000 meters. IWU’s Evan Lowder was a First-Team All-American thanks to a sixth-place effort in the 400 meters, while Jereme Ombogo of North Park was fifth in the 200 meters and Kyle Hensley of Millikin was sixth in the pole vault.
  
CCIW in the Final Team Standings
13. North Central, 13 points
T50. North Park, 4 points
T58. Millikin, 3 points
T58. Illinois Wesleyan, 3 points

CCIW Men’s First Team All-Americans

First Team


Illinois Wesleyan

Evan Lowder, 400 Meter Dash (6th, 47.21)

 

Millikin

Kyle Hensley, Pole Vault (6th, 4.95m)

 

North Central

Braden Nicholson, 10000 Meter Run (1st, 29:20.59)

Braden Nicholson, 5000 Meter Run (6th, 14:16.83)

 

North Park

Jereme Ombogo, 200 Meter Dash (5th, 21.32)

 

CCIW Men’s Second Team All-Americans

Augustana


Mike Hudson, Decathlon (10th, 6,331 points)

Joe Langridge, 3000 Meter Steeplechase (12th, 9:18.91)

AJ Banks, 110 Meter Hurdles (14th, 14.54)

 

Carroll

Jimmy Hinkley, Hammer Throw (11th, 58.64m)

 

Carthage

Lucas Leal, Hammer Throw (12th, 58.40 m)

 

North Central

BJ Sorg, 10000 Meter Run (12th, 30:17.57)

 

Wheaton

Ty Bova, High Jump (11th, 2.00m)

 

Follow the CCIW
CCIW on X | CCIW Instagram | CCIW Facebook |
 
The College Conference of Illinois & Wisconsin (CCIW) was founded in 1946 and currently services nine member institutions including Augustana College (Rock Island, Ill.), Carroll University (Waukesha, Wis.), Carthage College (Kenosha, Wis.), Elmhurst University (Elmhurst, Ill.), Illinois Wesleyan University (Bloomington, Ill.), Millikin University (Decatur, Ill.), North Central College (Naperville, Ill.), North Park University (Chicago, Ill.) and Wheaton College (Wheaton, Ill.).





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U.S. Women’s Sitting Team Survives Brazil at 2025 PVPA Zonal

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (May 25, 2025) — The third-ranked U.S. Women’s Sitting National Team withstood a furious rally at the 2025 ParaVolley Pan America Zonal Championship, posting a 3-2 (25-17, 25-17, 24-26, 23-25, 15-11) victory over No. 2 Brazil. The U.S. (2-0) will return to the court later today to face No. 1 Canada at […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (May 25, 2025) — The third-ranked U.S. Women’s Sitting National Team withstood a furious rally at the 2025 ParaVolley Pan America Zonal Championship, posting a 3-2 (25-17, 25-17, 24-26, 23-25, 15-11) victory over No. 2 Brazil.

The U.S. (2-0) will return to the court later today to face No. 1 Canada at 5 p.m. MT/4 p.m. PT. On Saturday, the U.S. defeated Canada in three sets. Matches are live streamed on our event page.

Monique Matthews paced the U.S. with 17 points with a team-high 14 kills in addition to two blocks and an ace. Jillian Williams Coffee (11 kills, two blocks, one ace) had 14 points, and Raelene Elam (nine kills, three blocks and one ace) contributed 13 points.

Lora Webster recorded a match-high six blocks and added two kills to total eight points. Tia Edwards scored 11 points, registering three kills to go with three blocks and a match-best five aces. Kaleo Kanahele Maclay finished with seven points on three kills, three blocks and an ace. Nicky Nieves scored five points on five kills; Whitney Dosty had four points on three kills and an ace, and Lexi Patterson had an ace

“I thought we played well throughout, especially the first two sets,” Hamiter said. “Our error count was under six, which is super good for us. I changed the lineup in set three; we really should have won that. I thought we had our chances. Set four… same thing. Overall, when you’re looking at your second match of the year, I thought we handled things pretty well. A little up and down for us, but some of that is to be expected.

“We really want to get players in,” Hamiter continued. “It’s the first time Raelene (Elam) has played all around quite a bit. She started, and I thought she did a pretty good job. That’s what we have to keep doing, playing those players so they can step up when we need them.”

The U.S. continued its momentum from a sweep of Canada yesterday, cruising to 25-17 wins in each of the first two sets and extending its winning streak to five sets to open the tournament.

Consecutive kills by Matthews gave the U.S. a 19-12 lead in the first set and an Edwards ace closed the opening set. Brazil scored five of the first seven points in the second set before a 14-3 U.S. run, highlighted by three kills and a block from Webster in a 5-1 stretch. A Nicky Nieves kill made it 24-16 and Coffee ended the set with a kill.

Brazil led 18-17 in the third set before a 5-1 run positioned the U.S. to complete a sweep with a 22-19 lead. A Whitney Dosty kill tied the set at 18 and Matthews put the U.S. ahead by one. After falling behind by three, Brazil ran off five consecutive points for a 24-22 lead, eventually winning the set 26-24.

The U.S. fell behind 8-2 in the fourth set but went on a 12-4 run to take a 14-12 lead. Edwards served a pair of aces to even the set at 12 before a Webster block gave the U.S. the lead. A Coffee kill put the U.S. ahead 23-22, but Brazil evened the match by scoring the last three points.

Two kills and a block by Elam helped the U.S. take a 6-1 lead in the deciding set. Brazil twice cut the lead to two points (7-5 and 11-9), but two errors gave the U.S. a late four-point advantage, 13-9. A kill from Coffee made it 14-10 and an Elam kill sealed the match.

Hamiter said he relies on his players to find the motivation they need to win.

“That’s up to the players,” he said. “My job is to let them know what’s going on, what they need to do, the technical and tactical parts we need to execute on. They stayed calm and played the game.”

Brazil held a slight edge in kills (52-50), while finishing with a 19-13 advantage in blocks and 11-7 in aces. Janaina Petit Cunha led all players with 21 kills and 26 points.

Full Match Stats (PDF)

Schedule/Results

May 24
USA def. Canada, 3-0 (25-21, 25-22, 25-15)

May 25
USA def. Brazil, 3-2 (25-17, 25-17, 24-26, 23-25, 15-11)
USA vs. Canada, 5 p.m. MT/4 p.m. PT

May 26
USA vs. Brazil, 5 p.m. MT/4 p.m. PT

May 27
Gold medal match, 1 vs 2 at 3 p.m. MT/2 p.m. PT

Roster

No Name (Position, Height, Hometown)
1 Lora Webster (MB, 5-11, Point Lookout, N.Y.)
Bethany Zummo (L, 5-3, Dublin, Calif.)
Lexi Patterson (S/L, 5-4, Waseca, Minn.)
Monique Matthews (MB/OH, 6-0, Ardmore, Okla.)
Whitney Dosty (OH/OPP, 6-3, Tucson, Ariz.)
Tia Edwards (OH/MB, 5-7, Skiatook, Okla.)
11 Jillian Williams-Coffee (MB/OPP/OH, 5-10, Odem, Texas)
12 Emma Schieck (OH, 5-7, Statesville, N.C.)
14 Kaleo Kanahele Maclay (S, 5-6, Oklahoma City, Okla.)
15 Kendra Hall (5-7, Westfield, Ind.)
16 Nicky Nieves (MB/OH, 5-10, Kissimmee, Fla.)
18 Courtney Baker (OH, 5-9, Crofton, Ky.)
22 MaKenzie Franklin (OH, 6-0, Red Wing, Minn., North Country)
24 Raelene Elam (OH, 6-1, St. George, Utah, Northern California)



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Whitefish girls prevail, Corvallis boys complete three-peat quest

KALISPELL — Hunter Loesch’s first javelin throw proved to be enough to win the event and help his team earn a third straight team title. The Corvallis senior, the owner of the best javelin mark in the nation, threw for 209-04 on his first launch, the best mark of the day, earning 10 points for […]

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KALISPELL — Hunter Loesch’s first javelin throw proved to be enough to win the event and help his team earn a third straight team title.

The Corvallis senior, the owner of the best javelin mark in the nation, threw for 209-04 on his first launch, the best mark of the day, earning 10 points for his team as the Blue Devils fended off Frenchtown by one point and wrapped up a three-peat at the Class A state track and field meet at Legends Stadium in Kalispell.

The Blue Devils finished with 76 points to Frenchtown’s 75. Laurel took third place with 64 points followed by Columbia Falls (55) and Whitefish (40).

Corvallis also got a first-place finish from Brennan Stuart in the 110 hurdles (14.53) and preserved the win with a victory in the 1,600-meter relay.

In the girls meet, Whitefish picked up its first team title since 2022 thanks to a pair of sprinting victories from Rachel Wilmot, who won the 100 (12.47) and 200 (25.05). Grace Sliman also delivered a victory for the Bulldogs with a mark of 5-4 in the high jump. Ginger Bergland contributed 16 points with a pair of second-place victories in the 100 hurdles (15.63) and 300 hurdles (45.79).

Havre took second place with 60 points, Hamilton came in third with 56, Miles City took fourth with 47 and Laurel was fifth with 40.

Miles City’s Peyton Frame won her second event after winning the 1,600-meter run on Friday as she delivered a first-place finish in the 800 with a time of 2.12:35, setting a Class A record.

The Polson boys also saw one of its own set a Class A record in the shot put. Senior Astin Brown threw for 64-07.75 on his first toss, shattering the previous record of 60-9.5 by nearly four feet.





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