Sports
Track & Field Eager to Take on NCAA West First Round
Story Links BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION – The next phase of the outdoor season is here for qualifying student-athletes from The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UTRGV) track & field teams. UTRGV will be represented by a program-record eight Vaqueros at the NCAA West First Round at E.B. Cushing Stadium. Action […]

BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION – The next phase of the outdoor season is here for qualifying student-athletes from The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UTRGV) track & field teams. UTRGV will be represented by a program-record eight Vaqueros at the NCAA West First Round at E.B. Cushing Stadium.
Action starts Wednesday as sophomore Keamonie Archie competes in men’s long jump at 4:30 p.m. Also Wednesday, junior Corin Burns and freshman Richard Young will run in the first round of the men’s 200-meter dash at 8:45 p.m.
Thursday will see the women’s student-athletes begin their weekend. At 10 a.m., junior Hannah Hilding will take on the first round of women’s hammer throw. Senior Efe Latham is set for a 6 p.m. start in the women’s shot put first round. Junior Nayla Harris makes her NCAA West debut Thursday at 7 p.m. in the first round of the women’s 100-meter dash.
Attention turns back to the men on Friday. Junior Aaron Cooper will compete in the first round of the men’s triple jump for the second consecutive year starting at 2:30 p.m. If Burns and/or Young advanced, they’ll run in the quarterfinals of the 200-meter dash at 7:50 p.m.
The meet wraps up Saturday in Bryan-College Station. Junior Achol Maywin will compete in the women’s high jump semifinals starting at 3:30 p.m. If Harris advanced, she’ll run in the quarterfinals of the 100-meter dash at 6:35 p.m.
There will be six heats of the running events and 24 student-athletes will move on to the next round. To advance to the quarterfinals, the Vaqueros sprinters will be chasing a top three finish in their respective heats or one of the next six best times. Twelve competitors will move on from the quarterfinals to the NCAA Championship meet – the top three finishers in each heat plus the next best three times.
Field event athletes in the throws, long and triple jumps will only get three attempts to try and record one of the 12 best marks in their event to secure a spot at the championship meet.
UTRGV Schedule
Wednesday, May 28
Men’s long jump first round, 4:30 p.m.
Keamonie Archie (F1)
Men’s 200-meter dash first round, 8:45 p.m.
Corin Burns (H3)
Richard Young (H6)
Thursday, May 29
Women’s hammer throw first round, 10 a.m.
Hannah Hilding (F2)
Women’s shot put first round, 6 p.m.
Efe Latham (F1)
Women’s 100-meter dash first round, 7 p.m.
Nayla Harris (H4)
Friday, May 30
Men’s triple jump first round, 2:30 p.m.
Aaron Cooper (F2)
Men’s 200-meter dash quarterfinals, 7:50 p.m.
TBD
Saturday, May 31
Women’s high jump semifinal, 3:30 p.m.
Achol Maywin (F2)
Women’s 100-meter dash quarterfinals, 6:35 p.m.
TBD
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Sports
Andover Swimming and Water Polo Club girls secure wins
The Andover Swimming and Water Polo Club (ASWPC) girls competed in the Hampshire Ladies League in Winchester and secured two commanding victories. The team, aged between 14 and 16, began the weekend with a 16-2 win against The Channel Islands, showcasing their dynamic offensive play and strong defence. They followed this with a 21-2 victory […]

The Andover Swimming and Water Polo Club (ASWPC) girls competed in the Hampshire Ladies League in Winchester and secured two commanding victories.
The team, aged between 14 and 16, began the weekend with a 16-2 win against The Channel Islands, showcasing their dynamic offensive play and strong defence.
They followed this with a 21-2 victory against Southampton University, demonstrating consistent scoring and solid teamwork.
Their success is even more impressive given their age and the experience of their opponents.
Coach Scott Buchan’s dedication and the players’ fitness and swimming strength have been key to their achievements.
The club recognised the girls’ efforts, stating: “Huge congratulations to the team: Ellie (captain), Abi, Jess, Meg, Kitty, Molly, Aimee, Lucy, and Alice – your club and community are proud.”
The team had already achieved a win and a narrow loss before the weekend’s matches.
They are now looking forward to their remaining fixtures, which will decide their final position in the league.
The club is hopeful of their potential success, given their impressive performance so far.
Sports
Bradley senior qualifies in 1500
Bradley runner Jack Crull is headed to the national finals. The fifth-year senior earned a spot in the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships, set for June 11-14 in Eugene, Oregon. He is one of 24 qualifiers in the men’s 1,500-meter run, with a time of 3 minutes, 47.31 seconds. Crull is the first BU track athlete […]

Bradley runner Jack Crull is headed to the national finals.
The fifth-year senior earned a spot in the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships, set for June 11-14 in Eugene, Oregon. He is one of 24 qualifiers in the men’s 1,500-meter run, with a time of 3 minutes, 47.31 seconds.
Crull is the first BU track athlete to qualify for nationals since Tiana LoStracco made the women’s 800 field in 2023. He is the first men’s athlete headed to Eugene since Daniel Gagne made the 1500 in 2017. He and Gagne are BU’s only NCAA outdoor finalists since 1955.
Crull advanced after his performance last week at the NCAA West First Round in College Station, Texas. He finished second in the first round heat and then fifth in the quarterfinal heat to advance — lunging to the line to defeat the next runner by .09 and earn the final spot in the semifinals.
Crull’s next race is the national 1,500 semifinals, scheduled for 6:21 p.m. CT on June 11. The finals are 7:12 p.m. on June 13.
Six other Bradley athletes competed in the first round at College Station, but did not advance beyond their first race: Jaxson Copelin (men’s 800) Jamie Phillips (men’s 800), Abigail Hancock (women’s 1500), Kaitlyn Sheppard (women’s 1500), Trixie Wraith (women’s 1500) and Nadia Potgieter (women’s 5000).
Sports
ICE defends arrest of Milford High School student, though teen was ‘not the target’
Despite a Milford High School student not being the intended target of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents over the weekend, federal officials on Monday defended the decision to arrest the teenager. “He’s 18 years old. He’s unlawfully in this country, and we had to go to Milford to look for someone else, and we […]

Despite a Milford High School student not being the intended target of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents over the weekend, federal officials on Monday defended the decision to arrest the teenager.
“He’s 18 years old. He’s unlawfully in this country, and we had to go to Milford to look for someone else, and we came across him, and he was arrested,” said acting ICE Boston Office Director Patricia Hyde at a June 2 press conference at the John J. Moakley Courthouse in Boston.
Hyde was joined by Todd Lyons, acting director of ICE, along with U.S. Attorney Leah Foley and ICE Boston spokesperson James Covington, where the officials announced nearly 1,500 people were detained by ICE in Massachusetts over the course of May.
Marcelo Gomes Da Silva, 18, was picking up some of his volleyball teammates on Saturday morning when four vehicles driven by ICE representatives surrounded his car. Agents jumped out and detained Gomes, his girlfriend told NBC Boston.
That “someone else” who Hyde mentioned the ICE agents were actually looking for was Gomes Da Silva’s father, said Lyons.
ICE had “intelligence” on Gomes Da Silva’s father “from a local law enforcement agency,” Lyons said, and ICE agents stopped the car Marcelo Gomes Da Silva was driving to volleyball practice that morning because it was his father’s.
The Milford Police Department had no part in assisting the detainment of Gomes Da Silva and did not make notifications to the agency about the location of his father’s car, Police Chief Robert Tusino said.
Lyons told reporters on Monday, “We were looking for his father — obviously, he’s the father of the year, because he brought his son up here illegally as well.”
Reporters challenged Lyons on the decision to arrest a high school student and asked what danger the teenager — who was about to play in the graduation ceremony band the next day — was to his community.
Lyons deflected by asking reporters questions back.
“I‘ll put it back on you: What about an 18-year-old who was stopped for a traffic violation by Mass. State Police? … would you be asking that same question to the Mass. State Police for not arresting him?” he asked.
“I didn’t say he was dangerous. I said he’s in this country illegally, and we’re not going to walk away from anybody,” Lyons said.
Gomes Da Silva’s attorney filed a writ of habeas corpus petition within the U.S. District Court of Massachusetts on Sunday, and a judge has ordered the teenager to remain in the state.
However, Gomes Da Silva is being held in Burlington, Vermont, even with the judge’s 72-hour order and his attorney’s request for his immediate release, according to reports from WCVB. His attorney told the outlet the teenager came to the U.S. on a student visa from Brazil with his family in 2012 and has since lived in Milford.
When asked about Gomes Da Silva’s rights to due process, Lyons promised the teenager “will go in front of an immigration judge” and “have the opportunity to post bond.”
“The whole due process thing — ICE doesn’t just scoop people off the street and remove them. Everyone gets due process, and that is what the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the immigration courts are for,” Lyons said.
ICE blames sanctuary cities
Officials also blamed sanctuary cities — communities that decline to cooperate with federal immigration authorities — for ICE’s presence throughout the state.
“Sanctuary policies put us in a position to go out into communities and look for people,” Hyde said. “When jurisdictions don’t cooperate with ICE and we don’t arrest people, in custodial arrests, then we must go out into the community. And when we go out into the community and we find others who are unlawfully here, we are going to arrest them.”
Lyons shared the same sentiment. “… if sanctuary cities would change their policies and turn these violent criminal aliens over to us, into our custody instead of releasing them into the public, we would not have to go out to the communities and do this.”
Community, officials push back
As the press conference unfolded Monday, Gomes Da Silva’s classmates led a walkout at Milford High School, reports from Channel 7 showed.
This followed a massive protest on Sunday at the Town Hall, where hundreds of people — including students in caps and gowns from graduation — marched to demand Gomes Da Silva’s immediate freedom.
Gov. Maura Healey is also demanding answers after Gomes’ arrest.
“I’m disturbed and outraged by reports that a Milford High School student was arrested by ICE on his way to volleyball practice yesterday,” Healey said in a statement Sunday morning. “Yet again, local officials and law enforcement have been left in the dark with no heads up and no answers to their questions.”
The governor is pressuring ICE to provide information about why the student was arrested, where he is now and “how his due process is being protected.”
Milford High’s boys volleyball coach Andrew Mainini said he assumed some of his players had overslept when they didn’t show up to practice on Saturday, according to the Boston Globe. A half-hour later, Mainini said a student texted him saying their group had been stopped by immigration agents and that one of them had been detained.
The high school student wasn’t detained on school grounds, Milford Public Schools Superintendent Kevin McIntyre said. A number of Milford parents have also been arrested by federal immigration officers in recent weeks, McIntyre said.
“The Milford Public Schools play no part in immigration enforcement and support all of our students and families, including those who are immigrants to the United States. They are members of the community, students in our classrooms, athletes that compete representing Milford, musicians, artists, friends, and neighbors,” McIntyre’s statement read.
Sports
Miami Monday – Miami University RedHawks
Story Links WELCOME BACK TO MIAMI MONDAY Thank you for checking out Miami Monday! In addition to this update, continue to stay up-to-date with Miami Athletics via MiamiRedHawks.com and our social media platforms. In conjunction with Miami Athletics, Missy Friede, (513) 255-0193, missysellsohio@gmail.com is proud to bring you this edition of Miami […]

WELCOME BACK TO MIAMI MONDAY
Thank you for checking out Miami Monday! In addition to this update, continue to stay up-to-date with Miami Athletics via MiamiRedHawks.com and our social media platforms.
In conjunction with Miami Athletics, Missy Friede, (513) 255-0193, missysellsohio@gmail.com is proud to bring you this edition of Miami Monday. Missy Friede, a licensed realtor with Keller Williams Seven Hills Realty, would like to be your hometown connection for all your real estate needs in Oxford, Cincinnati and everywhere in between in Butler and Hamilton County.
Miami Monday will pause for the summer months with one additional June edition and one July edition. It will resume a normal weekly schedule in early August.
MIAMI SWEEPS REESE AND JACOBY TROPHIES!
For just the fourth time in school history, the Miami University Athletics Department finished atop both the Reese and Jacoby All-Sport standings. This is the 26th time Miami has captured the Reese Trophy (top MAC men’s athletic program), and it’s the seventh Jacoby Trophy (top MAC women’s athletic program). Miami last won both trophies in the same year in 2019. In all, Miami captured a school-record 10 championships from football, baseball (x2), men’s swimming (Missouri Valley Conference), field hockey (x2), softball (x2) and tennis. Miami’s synchronized skating team added a collegiate national championship for the 23rd time in program history as well.
READ MORE | FRONT ROW FEATURE: BACK ON TOP
SCALLY ADVANCES TO NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS
Ella Scally finished 10th in the long jump at last week’s NCAA East First Round to qualify for the Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Ore. Allie Melchiorre (47th place, javelin), Ella Rigel (25th place, hammer), Adam Smith (34th place, discus) and Abby Suszek (40th place, 400m) also competed for the RedHawks in Jacksonville, Fla. Scally advances to represent the RedHawks at the national championships on Thursday, June 12 at 8:40 p.m. ET.
WOMEN’S JACKSONVILLE RECAP | MEN’S JACKSONVILLE RECAP
NCAA MEET CENTRAL
KICK TIMES ANNOUNCED FOR SIX FOOTBALL GAMES
The Mid-American Conference office announced six kick times for the 2025 Miami football season. The RedHawks open by visiting Wisconsin (9 p.m. ET on Aug. 28, Big Ten Network) and Rutgers (3:30 p.m. on Sept. 6, Peacock). Home games at Yager Stadium include Sept. 27 vs. Lindenwood (3:30 p.m. on ESPN+) and Nov. 12 vs. Toledo (7 p.m.). MACtion trips to Ohio (Nov. 4) and Buffalo (Nov. 19) will both kick off at 7 p.m. The rest of the 2025 kick times will be announced at a later date.
READ MORE
BANN, DENYSIEWICZ-SLOWEK EARN MAC MEDAL OF EXCELLENCE; CONDIT INDUCTED INTO MAC HALL OF FAME
Zach Bann (swimming and diving) and Catherine Denysiewicz-Slowek (tennis) were recognized last week with the MAC Medal of Excellence. The Medal of Excellence is presented annually to one male and one female student-athlete from the graduating class of each of the 12 Conference member institutions. Former volleyball head coach Carolyn Condit also was inducted into the MAC Hall of Fame last week as part of a five-member class.
READ MORE ON BANN; DENYSIEWICZ-SLOWEK | READ MORE ON CONDIT
ADDITIONAL NEWS AND UPDATES
Miami Baseball concluded its season with losses to Tennessee and Wake Forest in the Knoxville Regional of the NCAA Tournament last week; Miami finishes the year at 35-23 after advancing to the NCAA regionals for the first time in 20 years.
Five Miami Softball student-athletes earned Academic All-MAC recognition: Mckenna Campbell, Shelby Kunkel, Chloe Parks, Madie Patton and Erin Pinter.
Miami Golf announced its complete 2025-26 schedule. The RedHawks will host three team events next year, including the Moraine Intercollegiate, the Sweetens Cove Intercollegiate and the Muirfield Shootout.
REDHAWK FOOTBALL ROAD SHOW
Cincinnati – Saturday, June 7
Join Miami Football and head coach Chuck Martin as they host the final RedHawk Road Show in Cincinnati! This event is scheduled to run from 6-9 p.m. There is no cost to attend, but RSVPs are required if you plan to check out the RedHawk Road Show!
RSVP Cincinnati
SECURE YOUR 2025-26 SEASON TICKETS TODAY!
Don’t miss a minute of the action in 2025-26; secure your season tickets for next year now! Volleyball season tickets are on sale now for $40 per ticket ($28 for faculty/staff). Football season tickets are available for as low as $156 per ticket; renew online or purchase new through the Miami Athletic Ticket Office. Hockey season tickets are available for as low as $336; renew online or purchase new through the Miami Athletic Ticket Office. Deposits to secure men’s basketball and women’s basketball can also be placed. For $56 per ticket, you can secure your season tickets for men’s basketball. For $31 per ticket, you can secure your season tickets for women’s basketball. The momentum is strong, so act now!
VOLLEYBALL 2025 SEASON TICKETS
FOOTBALL 2025 SEASON TICKETS
HOCKEY 2025-26 SEASON TICKETS
MEN’S BASKETBALL 2025-26 SEASON TICKET DEPOSIT
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL 2025-26 SEASON TICKET DEPOSIT
UPCOMING EVENTS
June 12 – Track & Field at NCAA Championships (Eugene, Ore.), 8:40 p.m. ET
Home games noted in bold
Dates, times, locations tentative and subject to change; Access MiamiRedHawks.com for updated schedule information
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
BB: Miami Comeback Falls Short Against Wake Forest in NCAA Regional
BB: RedHawks Open NCAA Regional by Dropping to Tennessee
GF: Miami Golf Announces Schedule For 2025-26
SB: Five RedHawks Earn Academic All-MAC
Sports
ICE defends arrest of high school student driving to volleyball practice
Federal immigration officials are defending the arrest of a high school student who was detained on his way to volleyball practice. Todd Lyons, acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Boston field office, said the 18-year-old was taken into custody Saturday because he is in the country illegally. “We were looking for his father,” […]

Federal immigration officials are defending the arrest of a high school student who was detained on his way to volleyball practice.
Todd Lyons, acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Boston field office, said the 18-year-old was taken into custody Saturday because he is in the country illegally.
“We were looking for his father,” Lyons said at a news conference Monday. “Obviously, he isn’t father of the year. He brought his son up here illegally as well.”
Lyons said officers initiated a traffic stop on a vehicle the teen was driving and determined he was in the U.S. unlawfully. He emphasized that ICE agents have the authority to detain individuals who are in the country illegally.
RELATED STORY | 36 Chinese and Taiwanese nationals arrested in Los Angeles nightclub raid, officials say
“I didn’t say he was dangerous. I said he’s in this country illegally, and we’re not going to walk away from anybody,” Lyons told reporters.
He added that his agency has taken in nearly 1,500 immigrants into custody in Massachusetts in May.
The teen will appear before an immigration judge and will have the opportunity to post bond, Lyons said. The teen’s father has not turned himself in, he added.
RELATED STORY | Students, immigration attorneys worry about pause on student visa appointments
Friends told NBC News that the student was born in Brazil and has attended school in the district since the age of 6.
The arrest has sparked backlash in the community, with protests erupting and local officials demanding answers.
“I’m disturbed and outraged by reports that a Milford High School student was arrested by ICE on his way to volleyball practice,” Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey said in a statement. “Local officials and law enforcement have been left in the dark with no heads-up and no answers to their questions.”
Sports
WAC Track And Field Representatives To Compete At 2025 NCAA Division I Championships
Story Links ARLINGTON, Texas – A total of eight individual student-athletes and two relay teams from WAC member institutions will compete at the 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships. The national meet is set to take place from June 11-14 at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. Championship coverage will […]

ARLINGTON, Texas – A total of eight individual student-athletes and two relay teams from WAC member institutions will compete at the 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships. The national meet is set to take place from June 11-14 at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. Championship coverage will air on the ESPN networks beginning at 4 p.m. PT on June 11 (ESPN), 4 p.m. PT on June 12 (ESPN), 5 p.m. PT on June 13 (ESPN2) and 6 p.m. PT on June 14 (ESPN2).
The competitors representing the WAC advanced following the first round NCAA West region preliminary meet on May 28-31 in College Station. A total of four men’s student-athletes and four women’s student-athletes are on the national meet entry list, along with five eligible athletes in both the men’s and women’s 4×100-meter relay.
WAC Outdoor Track & Field Athletes Qualified For 2025 NCAA DI Championships
June 11-14
Hayward Field | Eugene, Oregon
WAC Entries
Wednesday, June 11 at 4:05 p.m. PT | Men’s 4×100-Meter Relay Semifinal
#17. Utah Valley (Gavin Stafford, Cameron Franklin, Kade Thompson, Gabe Remy, Gunner Stepp) – 39.13
Wednesday, June 11 at 5:40 p.m. PT | Men’s Long Jump Final
#4. Lokesh Sathyanathan, Tarleton State – 7.87m
Wednesday, June 11 at 6:14 p.m. PT | Men’s 400-Meter Hurdles Semifinal
#20. Cameron Wilmington, Grand Canyon – 50.12
Thursday, June 12 at 4:05 p.m. PT | Women’s 4×100-Meter Relay Semifinal
#18. Tarleton State (Hanna Dudley, Lauren Roy, Amandine Estival, Victoria Cameron, Prestina Ochonogor) – 43.66
Thursday, June 12 at 5:15 p.m. PT | Women’s Javelin Final
#2. Kelsi Oldroyd, Utah Valley – 57.72m
Thursday, June 12 at 5:25 p.m. PT | Women’s 100-Meter Dash Semifinal
#7. Victoria Cameron, Tarleton State – 11.01
Thursday, June 12 at 5:40 p.m. PT | Women’s Long Jump Final
#2. Prestina Ochonogor, Tarleton State – 6.66m
Friday, June 13 at 5:10 p.m. PT | Men’s Triple Jump Final
#16. Sir Jonathan Sims, Tarleton State – 15.97m
Friday, June 13 at 6:55 p.m. PT | Men’s 5000-Meter Run Final
#2. Valentina Soca, California Baptist – 13:26.58
Saturday, June 14 at 5:30 p.m. PT | Women’s High Jump Final
#18. Ajia Hughes, Southern Utah – 1.81m
–WAC–
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