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Trickey &Harvey lead Ripon High graduating class

Logan Trickey and Chetan Harvey knew for quite some time that they were in line for the top two academic spots come graduation. That was before the start of the school year – both were all but certain by January. The two will lead the Ripon High Class of 2025 at Friday’s 7 p.m. commencement […]

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Logan Trickey and Chetan Harvey knew for quite some time that they were in line for the top two academic spots come graduation.

That was before the start of the school year – both were all but certain by January.

The two will lead the Ripon High Class of 2025 at Friday’s 7 p.m. commencement ceremony at Wes Stouffer Field.

Trickey earned the No. 1 spot as class valedictorian based on his 4.45 grade point average. Harvey, who has a 4.4 GPA, is the salutatorian.

Logan Trickey is the son of Kristopher and Cynthia Trickey. He’ll be attending UCLA in the fall to study Aerospace Engineering – the program is ranked among the top 10 in the U.S., according the U.S. News & World Report.

“I’ve always had a fascination with problem solving and with space,” he said.

Trickey, who was also involved in track & field, cross country, and soccer for the Indians, credits his teachers and parents for their support.

“My teachers always pushed me to do extra work while my family was there to provide positive feedback,” he said.

Chetan Harvey is the son of Jack and Anupa Harvey.

His father is Manteca podiatrist Jack Andrew Harvey DPW.

Chetan, like his father, is also leaning towards the medical profession, possibly as a G.I. doctor specializing in the digestive system and its related organs.

But those plans are on hold as he awaits his upcoming two-year mission with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

“I’m still deciding (on colleges) between UCLA and BYU,” said Harvey, who was water polo, swimming, and choir at RHS. For the latter, he was named to the San Joaquin County Office of Education’s High School Honor Choir.

Harvey was part of the Ripon boys water polo team that made a historic run back in November to capture the CIF NorCal Division III title.

He’s thankful for his religious faith – first and foremost – and his family for his successes thus far.

“My parents pushed me to do my best,” said Harvey.

 

 

 

 

 



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McBride Earns First-Team All-America Honors

EUGENE, Ore. – Vanderbilt track and field student-athlete Allyria McBride placed eighth in the 400-meter hurdles and earned first-team All-America honors at the NCAA Outdoor Championships Saturday evening at Hayward Field. “Coming to this championship and having Allyria become a first-team All-American in her third year in the program and second time at this meet […]

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EUGENE, Ore. – Vanderbilt track and field student-athlete Allyria McBride placed eighth in the 400-meter hurdles and earned first-team All-America honors at the NCAA Outdoor Championships Saturday evening at Hayward Field.

“Coming to this championship and having Allyria become a first-team All-American in her third year in the program and second time at this meet means a lot,” director of cross country and track and field Althea Thomas said. “It’s showing the growth of the program.”

After finishing second in her semifinal heat Thursday, McBride returned to the track to clock 56.20 seconds in Saturday’s final. With her eighth-place finish, she scored a point for Vanderbilt, which is tied for 63rd in the team standings.

It is McBride’s first time earning first-team honors but her second career All-America nod. In 2023, she became the program’s first true freshman All-American since 1997 (Amanda Helberg) when she was a second-team selection in the 400 hurdles.

Under Thomas’ direction, the Commodores have boasted eight first-team All-Americans and scored at four consecutive NCAA Indoor or Outdoor Championships, which is the longest streak in school history.

“It shows consistency,” Thomas said. “In our sport, everyone thinks about who’s the fastest, who can jump the highest or throw the farthest, but our sport is really about consistency. It’s showing, not just consistency in one person, but consistency in the program. It’s showing what we’re building.”

The track and field team’s season continues in Eugene when Lily Kriegel and Devyn Parham represent the Dores at the USATF U20 Outdoor Championships Thursday and Friday.





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NCAA track and field: Lexy Halladay-Lowry paces BYU women with steeplechase runner-up

PROVO — Lexy Halladay-Lowry picked a great way to wrap up her collegiate career. The BYU senior set an all-time school record in the 3,000-meter steeplechase Saturday night, claiming national runner-up honors in 9 minutes, 8.68 seconds at Heyward Field in Eugene, Oregon. Halladay-Lowry, who won a pair of team national championships in cross country, […]

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PROVO — Lexy Halladay-Lowry picked a great way to wrap up her collegiate career.

The BYU senior set an all-time school record in the 3,000-meter steeplechase Saturday night, claiming national runner-up honors in 9 minutes, 8.68 seconds at Heyward Field in Eugene, Oregon.

Halladay-Lowry, who won a pair of team national championships in cross country, finished behind only Alabama sophomore Doris Lemngole — who set a new collegiate and meet record in 8:58.15.

Fast? Blazing fast. Lemngole’s time is just 12 seconds off the current world record set by Kenya’s Beatrice Chepkoech of 8:44.32 in 2023; and the fastest time in a women’s steeplechase in the world this year now belongs to the NCAA cross country champion.

“She’s an incredible competitor,” Halladay-Lowry said of Lemngole. “She’s one of the best in the world. … It’s been a great experience to get to race her and have the opportunity. I’m super happy that I had the opportunity to race with her.”

But the senior from Meridian, Idaho, who also holds the program’s all-time outdoor 5,000-meter record in 14:52.93, as well as the indoor 3,000 in 8:40.60, tallied her second outdoor All-American honor as the only harrier who could keep up.

“It was a great five years,” said Halladay-Lowry, choking back emotion. “I’m really proud of myself for the people I met, the relationships I made. When I came in as a freshman, my first steeple I think I ran 10:06. To end with a 9:08, I’m proud of myself and I’m super grateful for my teammates and my coaches. It’s bittersweet. I’m really excited for the next thing, but I gave my heart to this.”

Halladay-Lowry’s national runner-up paced the Cougars to 18th place overall with 16 points. Georgia won the women’s title with 73 points, followed by USC, Texas A&M, Washington and Illinois.

Utah State sophomore Shelby Jensen finished seventh in the 3,000-meter steeplechase in 9:36.61, and BYU sophomore Taylor Lovell added a top-10 finish for the Cougars with a ninth-place effort in 9:39.43.

The Cougars weren’t done, either.

Meghan Hunter added a third-place finish in the 800, when the senior from Provo clocked a 1:59.03 — just missing her own all-time school record of 1:58.95 set a few weeks ago at the NCAA West preliminary round.

Stanford’s Roisin Willis set a meet record with a winning time of 1:58.13 in the event.

Sami Oblad also claimed All-American honors, finishing seventh in the 400 in 51.57 seconds — the highest finish in a flat sprint (100, 200 or 400) in BYU women’s track and field history, and just under a second off her school-record time of 50.49 set at the BYU Robison Invitational earlier this year.

Jenna Hutchins added 11th in the 5,000 meters in 15:40.87, and Gretchen Hoekstre took 22nd with a discus throw of 50.46 meters (165 feet, 7 inches) for All-America honorable mention honors for the Cougars.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.





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Illinois Women’s Track and Field Places Fifth at NCAA Outdoor Championships, Highest Finish in 29 Years

Story Links Full Results EUGENE, Ore. – The Illinois women’s team placed fifth at the NCAA Outdoor Championships with 29.5 points on Saturday (June 14) from Hayward Field at Oregon. This is the program’s highest finish in 29 years since the 1996 squad placed fourth. It’s only the second […]

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Full Results

EUGENE, Ore. – The Illinois women’s team placed fifth at the NCAA Outdoor Championships with 29.5 points on Saturday (June 14) from Hayward Field at Oregon. This is the program’s highest finish in 29 years since the 1996 squad placed fourth.

It’s only the second time this century that the team has finished inside the top-10 joining the 2002 team that took 10th. Fifth is now the program’s third-highest finish as the 1995 and 1996 teams each finished in fourth.

This marks the sixth time the Orange and Blue women have concluded the outdoor season inside the top-10. The six All-American’s are also the most the program has seen since the 1996 team had 10.

“I’m immensely proud of what we’ve done,” said director of track, field and cross country Petros Kyprianou. “We did something that no other Illinois women’s track and field team has done in nearly 30 years and that’s place top-5 in the country. Not to mention, we were one and a half points shy of walking out of here with a trophy.’

‘A huge shout out to every one of our All-American’s: Sophia Beckmon, Tacoria Humphrey, Mia Morello, Abria Smith, Melissa Wullschleger and Rose Yeboah. Every single point that they fought for and earned made this fifth-place finish possible. I want to mention the men’s All-American’s too with Kam Garrett and Cody Johnston. I’m proud of their efforts and can’t wait to see how they improve next season.’

‘We are only going to get better. I’m ecstatic to welcome in all our signees to join this already talented and competitive roster. There’s no place like Illinois and we showed that this weekend; we can compete with the best of the best in the nation. Next year we will be bringing a trophy home with us.”

Rose Yeboah is the national runner-up in the high jump leaping a season-beast 1.93m (6-4). She’s the first Illini high jumper to earn All-America honors in consecutive seasons since Stacy Ann Grant achieved this feat in 1996, 1997 and 1998. This is now the school’s fifth high jump All-America honor.

Yeboah completes her senior season with two All-America honors and a Big Ten Outdoor Championships silver medal. The Kumasi, Ghana native is now a NCAA champion, NCAA runner-up, four-time All-American, a Big Ten champion and four-time Big Ten medalist.

Melissa Wullschleger closes her freshman year as an All-American heptathlete with her program record 5,928 points. She’s the program’s first All-American in the event since Carmel Corbett in 1996 and collects the school’s third heptathlon All-America honor.

Wullschleger also placed fourth a month prior at the Big Ten Outdoor Championships with 5,749 points. Additionally, the Olten, Switzerland native improved her program’s third-best javelin to sling her into All-American contention 44.20m (145-0).

Lucie Kienast did not finish the heptathlon today and completes her freshman campaign as a Big Ten silver medalist. Her then-program record heptathlon of 5,851 points was set at the Big Ten Outdoor Championships to earn her that silver medal. In addition, she owns the program’s seventh-furthest javelin, 38.18m (125-3), and sixth-best indoor shot put at 14.65m (48-0 3/4).

STANDINGS

1. Georgia – 73

2. USC – 47

3. Texas A&M – 43

4. Washington – 31

5. Illinois – 29.5

6. Stanford – 29

7. South Carolina – 38

8. Arkansas – 26

9. New Mexico – 25

10. Oregon, Texas – 23

HEPTATHLON

Melissa Wullschleger – Fourth (5,928 points)

  • Placed third in the javelin with the program’s third-best throw, 44.20m (145-0).
  • Placed 10th in the long jump, 5.96m (19-6 3/4).
  • Placed 14th in the 800m (2:18.82).



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Moody, 4x100m Relay Win Event Titles And USC Women Place Second At 2025 NCAA T&F …

Samirah Moody won the 100m dash title and the 4x100m relay team took first to lead USC to a second-place finish at the 2025 NCAA Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Championships being held at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. today (June 14).  USC’s women scored 47 points during the two days, 43 coming on the […]

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Moody, 4x100m Relay Win Event Titles And USC Women Place Second At 2025 NCAA T&F ...

Samirah Moody won the 100m dash title and the 4x100m relay team took first to lead USC to a second-place finish at the 2025 NCAA Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Championships being held at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. today (June 14).  USC’s women scored 47 points during the two days, 43 coming on the final day, with the first four coming in the shot put by freshman Ashley Erasmus on Thursday.

USC’s women’s team has finished in the top three at the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships in five of the last eight outdoor seasons, winning the titles in 2018 and 2021.

The women’s team actually scored more points (47) than the men’s team (41) did in earning a share of the team title yesterday, but Georgia ran away with the women’s title, scoring 73 points.  USC’s combined 88 points were the most scored by any program at the outdoor championships and the 74 combined points the Trojans scored indoors were also the most of any program in the country.  USC is the only program in the country which had the men’s and women’s team finish in the top three both indoors and outdoors (Indoors – Men – 1st, Women -3rd; Outdoors – Men – T-1st, Women – 2nd).

  • USC got the day off with a bang as the 4x100m relay team of senior Samirah Moody, junior transfer Dajaz DeFrand, sophomore Madison Whyte and junior Jassani Carter won with a time of 42.22, 0.01 second off the school record.  Its time bettered the quartet’s No. 2 standing on USC’s all-time list and moved them to tied for fifth on the 2025 world list in the event.  USC’s relay team earned 10 points for winning the event.  USC last scored in the event in 2021, when it also won the 4x100m title and has won the event four times.  All four runners earned first-team All-America honors.
  • Moody then won the women’s 100m dash title with a time of 11.14 (-1.4), 0.003 seconds ahead of JaMeesia Ford of South Carolina.  DeFrand placed seventh with a time of 11.23 (-1.4) and freshman Brianna Selby placed eighth with a time of 11.25 (-1.4).  The trio earned USC 13 points in the team competition. Moody became only the second Trojan woman to win the 100m dash title, joining Angela Williams, who is the only four-time winner, taking the crown from 1999-2002.  The Trojans had three athletes score in the women’s 100m final for the first time and all three earned first-team All-America honors.  Selby was the only freshman in the field.
  • Whyte had a time of 22.23 (+1.6) to take second in the women’s 200m final, 0.02 seconds behind the winner Ford of South Carolina.  DeFrand finished strong to take third with a time of 22.39 (+1.6) and Moody placed ninth with a time of 22.86 (+1.6).  Whyte and DeFrand earned USC 14 team points and gained first-team All-America honors in the event.  Moody earned second-team honors in the 200m.  Whyte’s second-place finish and DeFrand’s third-place finish were both the highest in the event by a Trojan since Angie Annelus won the title in 2019.
  • The Trojans closed out the meet and secured second place in the team scoring by taking third in the 4x400m relay with a season-best time of 3:26.01.  USC ran a team of junior Yemi John, Carter, junior Takiya Cenci and Whyte and they moved from eighth to third on USC’s all-time 4x400m relay list.  The Trojans earned six points in the event and all four athletes earned first-team All-America honors. USC last scored in the event when it took fourth in 2023 and the last time it scored higher in the event was when the Trojans placed second in 2021.

 
Final Women’ Top 10 Team Scores:

  1. Georgia – 73, 2.) USC – 47, 3.) Texas A&M – 43, 4.) Washington – 31, 5.) Illinois – 29.5, 6.) Stanford – 29, 7.) South Carolina – 28, 8.) Arkansas – 26, 9.) New Mexico – 25, 10.) Oregon and Texas – 23

 

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Denny Harper Inducted into USA Water Polo Hall of Fame

Denny Harper, the former UC San Diego water polo coach, was inducted into the USA Water Polo Hall of Fame, marking a significant recognition of his 42-year coaching career. During his tenure, Harper led the Tritons to 942 combined wins, overseeing both the men’s (697-496-4 record) and women’s teams, and earning multiple coaching accolades for […]

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Denny Harper, the former UC San Diego water polo coach, was inducted into the USA Water Polo Hall of Fame, marking a significant recognition of his 42-year coaching career. During his tenure, Harper led the Tritons to 942 combined wins, overseeing both the men’s (697-496-4 record) and women’s teams, and earning multiple coaching accolades for his excellence. Under his leadership, the Tritons showcased consistent championship performance, including a historic NCAA Final Four appearance as the first Division III team in 1995. The ceremony highlighted Harper among four other distinguished individuals in water polo, celebrating his legacy in the sport.

By the Numbers

  • 42 years coaching UC San Diego water polo
  • 942 total victories (men’s and women’s teams combined)
  • 17-time ACWPC National Coach of the Year
  • 19-time WWPA Coach of the Year
  • 15 NCAA Championship appearances for the Tritons

State of Play

  • UC San Diego transitioned to NCAA Division I in 2020, enhancing its competitive landscape.
  • The Tritons have maintained a strong academic record, graduating at an average rate of 91% among scholar-athletes.

What’s Next

As a Hall of Fame inductee, Harper’s influence may continue to inspire current and future coaches and players in water polo, potentially increasing interest and participation in the sport at various levels. His legacy contributes to UC San Diego’s reputation, potentially attracting talent and resources to strengthen the program further.

Bottom Line

Denny Harper’s induction into the USA Water Polo Hall of Fame cements his impact on the sport, representing decades of dedication and achievement that not only shaped his teams but also the broader landscape of water polo. This recognition serves as a powerful reminder of the lasting contributions made by educators and coaches in fostering athletic excellence.





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Morgan Earns Second-Team All-American Accolades

Track & Field | 6/14/2025 11:38:00 PM Story Links EUGENE, Ore. – The 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships at the University of Oregon’s Hayward Field ended on Saturday with junior North Carolina A&T Spirit Morgan proving she is one of the 10 best high jumpers in the nation. […]

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Track & Field | 6/14/2025 11:38:00 PM

EUGENE, Ore. – The 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships at the University of Oregon’s Hayward Field ended on Saturday with junior North Carolina A&T Spirit Morgan proving she is one of the 10 best high jumpers in the nation.

The second day of competition at the NCAA nationals included the women going after event national championships, which included two Aggies. Morgan competed in the high jump, and junior teammate Olivia Dowd competed in the triple jump.

On Saturday, Morgan finished in a ninth-place tie with Southern Utah’s Aja Hughes at 6 feet, ½ inches. For her efforts, Morgan will earn second-team All-American honors. It tops off a fantastic season for the University of Cincinnati transfer. Before coming to A&T, Morgan qualified for the NCAA Division I East Preliminary Round twice at Cincinnati.

She came to A&T and won the 2025 Coastal Athletic Association (CAA) indoor title in the high jump by jumping 5 feet, 10 inches. She jumped into the top five nationally during the outdoor season when she jumped 6 feet at A&T’s Aggie Invitational at Marcus T. Johnson Track on April 19. A month later, she won the CAA outdoor high jump title with a personal record of 6 feet, ¾ inches.

On Saturday, Georgia’s Elena Kulichenko won the national title in the high jump, clearing the bar at 6 feet, 5 inches. Morgan joins men’s 400-meter hurdler Xzaviah Taylor as the only two Aggies to earn second-team All-American honors after NCAA nationals.

Meanwhile, Dowd, the first A&T women’s track and field athlete to qualify for outdoor nationals in the women’s triple jump, placed 23rd on Saturday with her best leap measured at 40 feet, 10 ½ inches. After a foul on her first jump, Dowd went out to 39 feet, 7 ¾ inches before her final jump.

Two weeks ago, she jumped a personal-record 43 feet, 4 ½ inches at East Prelims to qualify for nationals. Dowd also won the CAA outdoor triple jump title in May at Marcus T. Johnson Track. The Aggies completed a season where the men won the CAA indoor and outdoor track and field championships. The men’s and the women’s programs combined to qualify 24 student-athletes for the East Prelims before qualifying 11 for NCAA nationals.

The women also had some first. They qualified for two student-athletes for throw events at the East Prelims for the first time in program history. They had a thrower – Julieth Nwosu – qualify for two throwing events at regionals for the first time in program history.





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