Sports
Track & Field Competes at the Division III New England Championships Beginning Friday
Story Links Track & Field at the New England Division III Championships Friday, May 2 | 11:45 a.m. Saturday, May 3 | 10 a.m. Nitchman Track | New London, Conn. WHAT TO KNOW • The Babson men’s and women’s track & field teams travel to Coast Guard for New England Division […]

Track & Field at the New England Division III Championships
Friday, May 2 | 11:45 a.m.
Saturday, May 3 | 10 a.m.
Nitchman Track | New London, Conn.
WHAT TO KNOW
• The Babson men’s and women’s track & field teams travel to Coast Guard for New England Division III Championships on Friday and Saturday.
• The Beavers have a total of 20 qualifiers (12 men, 8 women) eligible to compete in a number of events this weekend.
2025 DIVISION III NEW ENGLAND CHAMPIONSHIPS QUALIFIERS
MEN | WOMEN |
Chris McDonough – 100m | Robyn Wilkes – 100m, 200m |
Gerardo Fernandez – 400m | Alexandra Kirkpatrick – 10,000m |
Noa Wong – 400m | Victoria Hart – 100m hurdles |
Julian Ivarra – 5000m, 10,000m | Brooke Jankowski – 100m hurdles, high jump |
Anthony Rodriguez – 5000m, 10,000m | Julia Pike – 100m hurdles |
Nick Yacoub – 5000m, 10,000m | Colleen Corman – 400m hurdles |
Matthew Campbell – 10,000m | Amrit Rehal – high jump |
Jonathan Hanscom – 10,000m | Trista Sicard – triple jump |
Patrick Allardi – 110m hurdles |
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Jackson Adams – 400m hurdles |
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Aithan Bezanson – decathlon, hurdles, long jump, high jump, javelin |
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Matthew Vilela – decathlon |
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2024 NEW ENGLAND DIVISION III CHAMPIONSHIPS HIGHLIGHTS
• Eric Bottern ’24 repeated as the shot put champion and sophomore Chris McDonough finished as the runner-up in the 100-meter dash to help the Babson men score a school-record 29 points on the way to tying for 11th place in the 2024 New England Division III Championships.
• Bottern recorded a throw of 56-feet, 1.25-inches in the shot put, McDonough posted a time of 10.84 seconds in the 100 meters and also teamed up with Demarre Johnson ’24, Michael Agard ’24 and Kainoa Ronquilio in collecting All-New England honors with their third-place showing in the 4×100-meter relay (41.65).
• Junior Trista Sicard recorded the top finish for the Babson women by coming in 10th with a mark of 35-feet, 4.75-inches in the triple jump, while classmate Brooke Jankowski qualified for the finals of the 100-meter hurdles in a time of 15.53.
ABOUT THE BABSON MEN
• The Beavers totaled 79 points on the way to finishing fifth at the NEWMAC Championships last Saturday.
• The weekend was highlighted by the trio of graduate student Anthony Rodriguez, first-year Nick Yacoub and senior Julian Ivarra sweeping the top three spots in the 10,000-meter run last Friday night.
• McDonough earned his second consecutive all-conference honor with a runner-up finish in the 100 meters (10.71), while first-year Matthew Vilela placed fourth overall in the decathlon.
• Rodriguez and Yacoub came in fourth and fifth, respectively, in the 5,000 meters, first-year Jackson Adams placed fifth in the 400-meter hurdles with a time of 57.41, and fellow rookies Dominic Smith and Noa Wong were separated by just 0.26 seconds in the 400 meters to claim sixth and seventh place.
ABOUT THE BABSON WOMEN
• The Beavers totaled their third highest point total in program history (46) on the way to placing eighth at the NEWMAC Championships last weekend.
• First-year Amrit Rehal earned all-conference honors with her runner-up finish in the high jump (5-feet, 3.25-inches), while the trio of first-year Victoria Hart (15.08), Jankowski (15.59) and junior Julia Pike (15.93) finished third, fourth and sixth, respectively, in the 100-meter hurdles.
• Jankowski added a fifth-place showing with a career-best mark of 5-feet, 1.25-inches in the high jump, sophomore Colleen Corman took third with a time of 1:07.10 in the 400 hurdles, and junior Robyn Wilkes came in sixth in the 200 meters (26.15) and seventh in the 100 meters (12.61).
• First-year Annabelle Svenson added a sixth-place finish in the 5,000 meters with a time of 20:38.74, while classmate Kate Henderson finished seventh with a season-best mark of 109-feet, 5-inches in the javelin.
FINISHING ON TOP
• Rodriguez captured his third consecutive title in the 10,000 meters and became the only five-time NEWMAC champion last weekend’s conference meet.
• A two-time NEWMAC Track Athlete of the Year, Rodriguez won the 10,000-meter run four times (2021, 2023-25) and also claimed the 5,000-meter title back in 2023.
AMONG THE NATION’S BEST
• The Babson men enter the weekend with four athletes ranked among the top 50 in Division III in their respective events.
• First-year Aithan Bezanson is 14th in the decathlon with 6355 points, Rodriguez is 15th with a time of 29:43.74 in the 10,000 meters and 43rd in the 5000 meters (14:27.16), and McDonough is 40th with his time of 10.56 in the 100 meters.
NEW ENGLAND RANKINGS
• Rodriguez ranks second in New England in the 10,000 meters and fourth in the 5000 meters, while Bezanson (decathlon) and McDonough (100 meters) are also second in their respective events entering the weekend.
• Bezanson also ranks ninth in the 400-meter hurdles, while Ivarra time of 31:01.28 is eighth in the 10,000 meters.
• On the women’s side, Rehal ranks sixth with a top mark of 5-feet, 5-inches in the high jump, Hart and Jankowski are 13th and 15th, respectively, in the 100-meter hurdles, and Corman is 16th in the 400 hurdles.
UP NEXT
• The Beavers are scheduled to compete at both the Farley Inter Regional at Williams and the NEICAAA Championships at UMass Amherst on May 9-10.
Sports
Gators’ Track and Field Look To Win Outdoor National Title
Florida’s track and field look to go on a championship quest when they start at the NCAA East Preliminaries today in Jacksonville. The preliminaries, hosted by the University of North Florida represents the first round of the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Athletes that advance will qualify to compete in the national championship meet, starting on June […]

Florida’s track and field look to go on a championship quest when they start at the NCAA East Preliminaries today in Jacksonville. The preliminaries, hosted by the University of North Florida represents the first round of the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Athletes that advance will qualify to compete in the national championship meet, starting on June 11 in Eugene, Oregon.
Let's punch some tickets.
![]()
: NCAA Outdoor East Preliminaries
: Jacksonville, Fla.
: Visit Jax Track at Hodges Stadium
: 2:30 p.m.
: https://t.co/pnQKXN4Zut
: (ESPN+) https://t.co/YZyOHA2FSk#GoGators
pic.twitter.com/tgZsaKweId
— Gators Track and Field & Cross Country (@GatorsTF) May 28, 2025
Going For History
The Gator men’s outdoor team will try to defend their title from last year, which was their third in a row. The women’s team looks to get back on top and win their first championship as a team since 2022, after a runner-up finish last season.
Momentum on Their Side
Florida looks to carry the successes they had during the SEC Outdoor Championships into Jacksonville. The Gators won eight medals at the conference championship meet between both squads. Habita Harris won the crown in the 100m hurdles during the last day of the tournament with a time of 12.75. Florida had great success in the discus event on both teams during the meet, with Alida van Daalen and Jacob Lemmon winning gold and bronze respectively.
A STAR IS BORN!!! HABIBA HARRIS IS YOUR SEC 100m HURDLES CHAMPION!
12.75 –
#GoGators
pic.twitter.com/r3MNCc5ZhY
— Gators Track and Field & Cross Country (@GatorsTF) May 17, 2025
On the men’s side, the 4x400m relay team ran 3:03.27, which was good for the bronze medal.
Anthaya Charlton won bronze in the 100m during the conference championship, running an 11.14 to earn 3rd place. She, with Harris, Gabrielle Matthews and Quincy Penn ran 43.46 in the 4x100m relay, finishing in 6th place. The women ended the SEC Championship meet in third place as a team, while the men finished 12th.
Sports
Notre Dame, Oregon highlight CSU volleyball opponents in 2025
The Colorado State volleyball program is once again set to face a challenging nonconference slate in 2025. The Rams are known for hosting and playing against high-profile opponents and the upcoming season will be no different. CSU is coming off a 20-11 season where the Rams won the Mountain West and made the 2024 NCAA […]

The Colorado State volleyball program is once again set to face a challenging nonconference slate in 2025.
The Rams are known for hosting and playing against high-profile opponents and the upcoming season will be no different.
CSU is coming off a 20-11 season where the Rams won the Mountain West and made the 2024 NCAA Tournament.
In 2025, CSU’s nonconference schedule features four Power 4 opponents (five total matches). The Rams will play Oregon (Big Ten) and Colorado (Big 12) on the road, while hosting Colorado, Washington (Big Ten) and Notre Dame (ACC) at Moby Arena.
CSU faces three teams that made the 2024 NCAA Tournament in Oregon, Washington and Colgate. Oregon made the Sweet 16 and finished last season ranked No. 10 in the nation in the coaches poll. CSU also begins with an exhibition against a Creighton team that made the Elite Eight and finished 2024 ranked No. 6.
The 2025 season is also CSU’s last in the Mountain West. The first MW match of the season is at Wyoming and the final home match for the Rams as a MW member is against Wyoming.
2025 Mountain West volleyball schedule
- Aug. 16: CSU at Creighton (exhibition)
- Aug. 29: Colgate at CSU (regular season opener)
- Aug. 30: Washington at CSU
- Sept. 2: CSU at Northern Colorado
- Sept. 4: CSU vs. Cal State-Northridge (in Portland)
- Sept. 5: CSU vs. Eastern Washington (in Portland)
- Sept. 6: CSU at Oregon
- Sept. 11: East Texas A&M at CSU
- Sept. 12: Notre Dame at CSU
- Sept. 18: Colorado at CSU
- Sept. 19: CSU at Colorado
- Sept. 23: CSU at Wyoming
- Sept. 27: New Mexico at CSU
- Oct. 2: CSU at UNLV
- Oct. 4: CSU at San Diego State
- Oct. 9: Boise State at CSU
- Oct. 11: Utah State at CSU
- Oct. 16: CSU at Air Force
- Oct. 18: CSU at Nevada
- Oct. 23: San Jose State at CSU
- Oct. 25: CSU at Fresno State
- Oct. 30: Nevada at CSU
- Nov. 1: Air Force at CSU
- Nov. 6: CSU at Utah State
- Nov. 8: CSU at Boise State
- Nov. 13: San Diego State at CSU
- Nov. 15: UNLV at CSU
- Nov. 18: Wyoming at CSU
- Nov. 20: CSU at New Mexico
- Nov. 26-29: Mountain West tournament
*All match times will be announced at a later date.
Follow sports reporter Kevin Lytle on X and Instagram @Kevin_Lytle.
Sports
These five Nevada track and field stars will compete for a spot at the NCAA Championships
Five Nevada track and field stars will compete in this week’s NCAA West Preliminary starting Thursday at E.B. Cushing Stadium in College Station, Texas. The selections for the preliminaries are based on the top-48 athletes in each individual event and the top-24 relay teams. The top-12 qualifiers from each Preliminary advance to the NCAA Championships […]

Five Nevada track and field stars will compete in this week’s NCAA West Preliminary starting Thursday at E.B. Cushing Stadium in College Station, Texas. The selections for the preliminaries are based on the top-48 athletes in each individual event and the top-24 relay teams. The top-12 qualifiers from each Preliminary advance to the NCAA Championships in Eugene, Ore., at Hayward Field from June 11-14. The Wolf Pack’s qualified preliminary athletes include Lilly Urban and Isabelle Steerman in javelin; Meekness Dogonayro in triple jump; Magdalene George in the 100- and 200-meter sprint; and Annalies Kalma in the 400. Below is a summation of each athlete and when they will compete at the West Preliminary.
Magdalene George (100, 200 meters)
A sophomore, George returns to the NCAA West Preliminary, qualifying in two events after earning silver medals in the 100 and 200 at the Mountain West Championships. George is the school record holder in the 200 and second all-time in the 100. She is 32nd in the West Preliminary in the 100 (11.34 seconds) and 27th in the 200 (23.12 seconds). She competes in the first round of the 100 at 5 p.m. Thursday and 200 at 6:45 p.m. that day. Quarterfinals are 4:35 p.m. (100) and 5:50 p.m. (200) Saturday.
Annalies Kalma (400 meters)
Kalma, a junior, set the school record in the 400 at the LSU Alumni Gold with a time of 52.71 seconds. She won bronze in that event at the MW Championship. She was part of Nevada’s 4×400 relay team that reached the NCAA Championships two seasons ago and looks to advance to the quarterfinals for the first time in her career as an individual. Kalma ranks 28th in the West Preliminary in the 400 based on her time at the LSU Alumni Gold. She competes in the first round at 5:25 p.m. Thursday. Quarterfinals are 4:50 p.m. Saturday.
Isabelle Steerman (Javelin)
Steerman, a senior from Oregon, will make her first appearance at the NCAA West Preliminary. Her season best throw of 46.42 meters came at the Fresno State Invitational and qualified her for the NCAA’s first round. She is coming off a near podium at the MW Championship, placing fourth by less than 20 centimeters. She ranks 49th in the NCAA West Preliminary with that 46.42-meter throw. She competes in first round at 12:30 p.m. Thursday.
Lilly Urban (Javelin)
Urban is Nevada’s top nationally ranked athlete in the outdoor this season, sitting seventh in the NCAA West Preliminary and ninth in the nation in the javelin throw at a school-record 56.89 meters, which came during a gold-medal performance at the MW Championship. A sophomore from Germany, Urban broke the school record four times this season and will look to break it once again at the NCAA West Preliminary where she will need a top-12 mark to advance to nationals. She competes in the first round at 12:30 p.m. Thursday.
Meekness Dogonyaro (Triple jump)
A sophomore from Nigeria, Dogonyaro competed last year as a rookie at the NCAA West Preliminary where she finished 26th with a jump of 12.89 meters. She is 15th in the West Preliminary and 21st in the nation with a jump this season of 13.27 at the Stanford Invitational. Dogonyaro won silver at the MW Championship and is second in school history in the triple jump, just eight centimeters shy of the record. She will compete in the first round at 2:30 p.m. Saturday.
The NCAA West Preliminary will be live streamed on the ESPN+ with live results available at Flash Results.
Sports
North Allegheny, Shaler Capture Titles at 2025 WPIAL Boys’ Volleyball Championships
Story Links Pittsburgh, Pa. – The Western Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic League (WPIAL) hosted its championship games for the WPIAL/UPMC Sports Medicine Boys’ Volleyball Championships last Saturday at AHN Arena on the campus of Peters Township High School. After two championship matches, Shaler completed a three-peat by winning the Class […]

Pittsburgh, Pa. – The Western Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic League (WPIAL) hosted its championship games for the WPIAL/UPMC Sports Medicine Boys’ Volleyball Championships last Saturday at AHN Arena on the campus of Peters Township High School. After two championship matches, Shaler completed a three-peat by winning the Class 2A title, while North Allegheny added another trophy to its record haul in Class 3A.
North Allegheny extended its league record of WPIAL boys’ volleyball championships with its 23rd, which is nine more than second-place Homestead. The Tigers have won in 1985, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1999, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, and now 2025.
Shaler has now won three consecutive WPIAL boys’ volleyball titles, winning the first two over the Tigers in Class 3A. The Titans are the 12th different school to win at least three championships, joining Mt. Lebanon, Plum, and Swissvale at that exact number.
With its Class 3A win, North Allegheny swept the WPIAL boys’ and girls’ volleyball championships in 2024-25 – marking the 13th different time that has happened. The Tigers have now accomplished the feat eight times (1993-94, 2008-09, 2013-14, 2017-18, 2018-19, 2020-21, 2021-22, 2024-25), with Baldwin (1995-96), Farrell (1985-86), Mt. Lebanon (1997-98, 2000-01), and North Catholic (2022-23) being the other schools complete the sweep.
The top three teams in both Class 2A and Class 3A have qualified for the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association (PIAA) Boys’ Volleyball Championships, which begin Tuesday, June 3 and conclude with all championship games on Saturday, June 14 at Rec Hall on the campus of Penn State University.
CLASS 3A RECAP
After dropping the first set, top-seeded North Allegheny bounced back with wins in the next three frames, capturing the Class 3A title with a 3-1 (17-25, 25-15, 25-20, 25-18) victory over second-seeded Seneca Valley this past Saturday.
North Allegheny (15-1, 7-1 Section III) hit .262 offensively compared to the .205 mark from Seneca Valley (14-4, 6-2 Section III), and had six service aces to the Raiders’ three. The Tigers also led in digs, 49-45, but Seneca Valley owned a 12.0-to-10.0 edge in blocks.
North Allegheny was led offensively by xxx Will Robertson, who recorded a team-high 17 kills on a .375 hitting percentage, and added seven digs and four block assists. Xxx Brendan Moore matched Robertson in digs and blocks while providing 10 kills at a .240 clip. Setters Jackson Failla and Elliott Swierczysnki combined for 41 of the team’s 45 assists, respectively tallying 25 and 16. Xxx Matthew LaMay served five of the Tigers’ six aces, Xxx libero Emmett Morris paced all players with 17 digs, and xxx Dominic Laswell had a team-high five block assists.
Xxx Jordan Hoover had a team-high 17 kills at a .382 clip and six blocks (1 solo, 5 assist) for Seneca Valley. Xxx setter Abheek Nelikil nearly posted a double-double, tallying 36 assists, nine digs, and five block assists. Xxx libero Mario Ardolino and xxx Malachi DeGraaf recorded 12 and 11 digs, respectively, with DeGraaf adding eight kills and four block assists.
The Tigers opened the WPIAL Championships with a 3-0 win over eighth-seeded Mt. Lebanon, then qualified for their eighth straight championship game with a 3-0 sweep of fifth-seeded Pine-Richland. Seneca Valley made it an all-Section III affair with a 3-0 win over seventh-seeded Canon-McMillan in the quarterfinals, and a 3-2 triumph against sixth-seeded Penn-Trafford in the semifinals.
Penn-Trafford earned the final PIAA qualifier spot with a 3-1 win over Pine-Richland in the third-place consolation match played last Friday at Gateway High School.
North Allegheny begins PIAA Championships play at home against the District III fifth-place team, while Seneca Valley will get the District III runner-up, and Penn-Trafford faces either the District VI, District VIII, or District X champion. The Tigers are the only school of the three to previously win a PIAA title, leading the WPIAL with nine, with its last coming in 2022.
CLASS 2A RECAP
Top-seeded Shaler continued its recent dominance of WPIAL boys’ volleyball, winning its third straight championship with a 3-0 (25-18, 25-18, 25-16) sweep of second-seeded Ambridge this past Saturday in the Class 2A championship match.
Shaler (16-1, 8-0 Section II) hit an eye-popping .356 offensively and held Ambridge (15-2, 9-1 Section IV) to an .056 hitting percentage defensively. The Titans also had 42 digs to the Bridgers’ 26, and posted 7.0 blocks to the second seed’s 4.5.
Two Shaler players reached double-figure kills with xxx Nate Myers recording 13 on a .471 clip and xxx Adam Hoffman with 10 on a .769 hitting percentage. Xxx setter Aiden Smith dished out 28 assists to go along with four digs and three block assists, and xxx Justin Truong and xxx Jacob Crissman collected 11 and 10 digs, respectively. Xxx Brandon Aryee led all players with four blocks (1 solo, 3 assist).
Ambridge saw xxx Karson Merlina lead all players with 18 kills, while xxx setter Adrien Rotondo recorded 22 assists. Xxx libero Nickolas Henry and xxx Nathan Sheffield netted eight and seven digs, respectively, with Sheffield adding a pair of block assists.
Shaler made it to the championship match with a 3-0 win over ninth-seeded Hopewell in the quarterfinals, and a 3-0 sweep of fifth-seeded South Fayette in the semifinals. Ambridge was a 3-1 winner against seventh-seeded Thomas Jefferson to open the tournament, and defeated sixth-seeded Mars in the semifinals, 3-2.
In the third-place consolation match played last Friday at Gateway High School, South Fayette topped Mars, 3-1, for the final PIAA qualifier spot.
Shaler starts PIAA Championships play at home against the District X runner-up, Ambridge will play the District VIII champion, and South Fayette gets the District X champion. The Titans and Bridgers have both won PIAA titles in their histories, with Shaler serving as the reigning Class 3A champion and Ambridge claiming Class 2A in 2009.
PIAA PREVIEW
Start Date: Tuesday, June 3
Number of Champions from WPIAL: 33 (31 in Class 3A, 2 in Class 2A)
– Previous Champions: North Allegheny (9), Homestead (7), Monessen (4), Penn Hills (4), Derry (3), Deer Lakes (2), Munhall (1), Ambridge (1), Plum (1), Shaler (1)
Last Class 3A PIAA Champion from WPIAL: Shaler (2024)
Last Class 2A PIAA Champion from WPIAL: Deer Lakes (2011)
#WPIAL
Sports
Newport Harbor quartet helps Team USA Cadet women’s water polo team earn gold
Four Sailors earned water polo gold over the weekend in South America. Newport Harbor High School freshman Caroline Daniel scored a team-best four goals in the title match, helping the U.S. Cadet Women’s National Water Polo Team earn a 18-7 win over Canada at the Pan Am Aquatics Championship in Medellin, Colombia. Harbor freshman Addison […]

Four Sailors earned water polo gold over the weekend in South America.
Newport Harbor High School freshman Caroline Daniel scored a team-best four goals in the title match, helping the U.S. Cadet Women’s National Water Polo Team earn a 18-7 win over Canada at the Pan Am Aquatics Championship in Medellin, Colombia.
Harbor freshman Addison Ting scored twice in the final for Team USA, with sophomore Madison Mack adding a goal. Harbor sophomore defender Kennedy Fahey also contributed.
Mater Dei freshman Paige Segesman, who scored three goals in the final, earned title match MVP honors. The team also featured Monarchs freshman Campbell Pence, a recent transfer from Newport Harbor.
Team USA finished with a 7-0 record in the tournament.
The U.S. Cadet Men’s National Team earned bronze , topping host Colombia 21-9 for third place.
Sports
Southern Illinois Salukis – Official Athletics Website
CARBONDALE, Ill. – Southern Illinois athletics is down to one competing team this school year after baseball finished its season at the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament. Track and field will send nine athletes to the NCAAs this upcoming week. Track and Field Nine track and field members are ready to compete at the NCAA West […]

Track and Field
Nine track and field members are ready to compete at the NCAA West Preliminary Round in Bryan-College Station, Texas, which start on Wednesday, May 28, and run through Saturday, May 31. Leah Thames, Teanna Bell, Trinity Cleaver, and KeyAnn Wilson will compete in the women’s 4×100-meter relay, while Thames will also compete in the 200- and 400-meter dash; Bell is participating in the 400-meter dash too. On the men’s side, Xavier Preston, Andre Jackson II, Josh Delgado, and Shane Ashton will race in the 4×400-meter relay. Darrione Williams will compete in the long jump while Jackson is in the 400-meter dash, and Ashton is in the 400-meter hurdles event.
Baseball (37-18, 16-11)
Baseball participated in the MVC Tournament this past week, but first, the MVC revealed its All-MVC Team list and six Salukis found their way onto the list. Third baseman Matt Schark and relief pitcher Sam Frizzi were named to the First Team while shortstop Tim Simay and catcher John Lemm made the Second Team. Honorable Mentions were outfielder Jordan Bach and relief pitcher Dylan Petrey.
SIU then began its run at the MVC Tournament on Wednesday with a 19-17 loss to #4 UIC. The Salukis broke the MVC Tournament and school record with their 10 home runs in the game as Michael Mylott hit three, and Lemm and Cecil Lofton both added two.
Southern’s tournament run and season came to an end on Thursday with a 10-5 loss to #1 Murray State, the eventual tournament champions. Simay launched a homer while Lofton led the team with two RBIs.
After the conclusion of the season, baseball sits with a 37-18 overall record and a 16-11 mark in conference play.
Follow the Salukis
Keep up with all the latest news and information on the Salukis by following the team on X at @SIUSalukis, on Instagram at @siusalukis, and on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/SalukiAthletics/. Fans can also download the “Salukis” Mobile App on the App Store or Google Play Store.
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