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Tufts Athletics Inducts Sixth Hall of Fame Class Friday Night at Gillette Stadium

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Tufts Athletics Inducts Sixth Hall of Fame Class Friday Night at Gillette Stadium

MEDFORD, MA (June 7, 2025) – Eight outstanding individuals and one memorable team were inducted as the sixth class of the Tufts University Athletics Hall of Fame on Friday evening at Gillette Stadium.

The group of honorees represented eight decades and eight sports, as Tufts continues to recognize accomplished individuals and teams from its more than 150 years of athletics history.

The newest class of Tufts Athletics Hall of Fame inductees is:
 
Barrie Bruce, A63 (Golf)
In the early 1960s, Barrie Bruce was both the best individual golfer and led the best teams that Tufts University had ever seen in the sport up to that point. Many of his and the team’s accomplishments from that era still stand. In 1961 he was the medalist at the New England Intercollegiate Golf Association (NEIGA) Championship, shooting 71 at the Metacomet Country Club in East Providence, Rhode Island. That led Tufts to the New England championship, and he would also lead the Jumbos to the Greater Boston League championship that year. Bruce then led Tufts to the New England title again in 1962, and those back-to-back championships stand as the only Tufts wins at the tournament in the 90-year history of the event. He is the only Tufts player ever to win NEIGA Championship medalist honors. Bruce was also an NCAA qualifier in both 1962 and 1963. After Tufts, he was the Massachusetts amateur champion in 1967. His career as a golf teacher has also been highly recognized, including his selection to the Golf Magazine 100 Best Teachers list in 2005.
 
Colleen Hart, E11 (Basketball)
Colleen Hart was head coach Carla Berube’s first major recruit in 2007 and helped lead the start of Tufts’ turn-around into one of the nation’s top programs. She helped the women’s basketball team win more than 20 games in each of her four seasons and play in three NCAA Tournaments. She was a leader of the 2007-08 team that earned the team’s first-ever NCAA berth and made a run to the Elite Eight. That team’s 26-4 record was the best in Tufts history at the time. Hart was All-NESCAC for four straight years and was the NESCAC and D3hoops Northeast Region Rookie of the Year in 2008. She became the program’s all-time leading scorer with 1,422 points (a record that has since been broken). She remains Tufts’ all-time leader in three-pointers with 231 and the single-season three-pointers leader with 83. Hart is also third on the team’s career assists list with 343. A two-year captain of the Jumbos and a 2010 D3hoops All-American, she played professionally in Switzerland. She would later serve as a Jumbo assistant coach, including in 2014 and 2015 when the team made back-to-back NCAA Final Four appearances.
 
Scott Greenwood, A17 (Soccer)
Scott Greenwood was the starting goalkeeper and an emotional leader of the 2014 and 2016 Tufts men’s soccer teams that won NCAA Championships. In 2014 he was named the Most Outstanding Defensive Player of the NCAA Tournament. He made eight saves in the team’s 4-2 win over Wheaton College (Ill.) in the NCAA final for the Jumbos’ first-ever national title. His 0.58 goals against average was the best in NESCAC that year. In 2016 he recorded five shutouts and a 0.16 goals against average during the NCAA Tournament, which included a 1-0 win against Calvin University in the final. In 19 starts for the Jumbos during 2016, Greenwood’s .888 save percentage ranked third in the nation. He was named D3soccer.com’s Goalkeeper of the Year and a first team All-American that season. A four-year starter in his career as a Jumbo (2013-16), Greenwood is the Tufts record-holder for single-season shutouts (12) and career shutouts (32). In 2013 he allowed just eight goals all season, and he holds three of Tufts’ top four shutouts in a season marks.
 
Brooks Johnson, A56 (Track & Field)
Brooks Johnson was an All-American track athlete at Tufts who went on to a Hall of Fame coaching career in the sport. A sprinter, long jumper and high jumper at Tufts, he was a team captain and leader of two straight Eastern Intercollegiate championship teams in 1955 and 1956. During his Tufts career, Johnson tied the national intercollegiate 60-yard dash record of 6.2 seconds in 1955. After Tufts he would set the world record in the event (6.0) in 1960. Three years later, he earned a gold medal with the 400-meter relay team at the Pan American Games. After beginning his coaching career at St. Albans School in Washington, D.C., Johnson was appointed as the first-ever black coach at Stanford University in 1979. He would become head coach of the U.S. Women’s Olympic Track & Field Team, and guided them to 15 medals (seven golds) at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. Also a brilliant student at Tufts who provoked insightful conversations on campus, Johnson was the first Tufts athlete to ever receive the Tufts Presidential Medal in 1985. He was inducted into the US Track & Field Coaches Hall of Fame in 1997.

Rachel “Polly” (Kimball) Knowlton, J45 (Tennis)
In some of the earliest days of women’s athletics at Jackson College, Rachel “Polly” Knowlton (Kimball) achieved national success in her sport (tennis) that was unheard of at the time. Knowlton had achieved at a championship level before she even arrived on campus, and she would continue to excel at her sport for the rest of her life. Prior to Tufts while she was at nearby Winchester High School, Knowlton was a Massachusetts state doubles champion in tennis. At Tufts she would be undefeated in regular-season matches during her career and twice played in national intercollegiate tournaments. In 1942 and 1943, Knowlton represented Jackson College for Women at the National Women’s Intercollegiate Tennis Championships. In 1942 she teamed with Geneva Underwood of Stephens College to reach the doubles semifinals. In 1943 she reached the singles quarterfinals and teamed with Connie Clifton of Rollins College to reach the doubles final. By today’s standards those results would make her a three-time All-American. Continuing on in the sport, at age 45 she ranked seventh nationally in doubles, and at 75 she ranked 12th nationally in senior doubles.
 
Melissa (Lowe) Edwards, J90 (Field Hockey, Lacrosse)
Coming to Tufts in 1986, Melissa Lowe (now Edwards) was an outstanding multi-sport athlete with success on the Tufts women’s lacrosse and field hockey teams. A three-time All-American in lacrosse, she was the leading scorer of Tufts teams which won three consecutive ECAC New England titles and had a 35-game winning streak from 1987-90 (Tufts teams were not eligible for NCAA play at the time). Her 57 goals during the 1989 season came in just 13 games, and she added 22 assists for 79 points to average more than six points per game. Three times in 1990 she scored seven goals in a game. Edwards graduated as the lacrosse program’s all-time leading scorer with 256 points, and also held the career and single-season goals records with 176 and 57, respectively (records since broken). Her 80 career assists are still third all-time. Playing more of a defensive role on the field hockey field, she was a stalwart on four Jumbo teams including the 1989 squad that won the ECAC New England title in her senior season. As a senior in 1990 she received Tufts’ Rudolph J. Fobert Award for her success in multiple sports and academic achievement.
 
Bob Patz, A87, M91, A24P (Football)
Bob Patz was a major threat to opposing quarterbacks in his junior and senior seasons on the Jumbo football team. He had 12 sacks in eight games in both years, helping the Jumbos establish themselves as the best team in New England during that time. The 12 sacks are still tied for the most in a season in Tufts Football history. His play on defense helped Tufts rise from a team that did not win a game in 1984 into a group that won a NESCAC title and finished as the #1 team in New England for 1986. In the game against Amherst College that year – which was dubbed “The Small College Game of the Year – Patz had six sacks in a 35-23 Jumbo victory. His six sacks that day stand as the Jumbos’ single-game record. Patz finished 1986 with 83 total tackles and a remarkable 24 tackles for loss in eight games, earning him Kodak Coaches’ All-American honors and the NESCAC Defensive Player of the Year award. As ferocious as he was on the field, Patz was as diligent academically. He earned both a National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete Award and NCAA Post-Graduate Scholarship in 1986.
 
Branwen Smith-King (Coach, Administrator 1982-2017)
During 35 years with the Jumbos, Branwen Smith-King became one of the most influential women in Tufts Athletics history. A native of Bermuda, she was an Olympic-level athlete in her own right and brought her spirit of competition to Tufts when she was hired as women’s track & field and cross country coach in 1982. She quickly established the Tufts program on a national level, and her student-athletes would win 13 national championships and earn more than 50 All-American honors. She recruited eight-time NCAA national champion Vera Stenhouse to Tufts. Several of her teams earned top-five finishes at NCAA championship meets, including a third place at the 1989 indoor championship. Smith-King coached Tufts’ first-ever NCAA-qualifying women’s cross country team in 1999. As Senior Woman Administrator from 2000-17, she continued to work tirelessly as an advocate for student-athletes. Among her achievements were promoting wellness to incoming freshmen, working closely with the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee and spearheading many DEIJ initiatives.
 
2014 Men’s Soccer Team
The 2014 Tufts men’s soccer team made an amazing run in the NCAA Tournament to win the program’s first national championship. After they were defeated in the NESCAC playoff quarterfinals, the Jumbos received an at-large berth into the NCAA’s and won six straight games on the road to capture the title. During their run, Tufts defeated three perennial DIII powerhouses (Messiah, Ohio Wesleyan and Wheaton (Ill.)) that had a combined 97 NCAA Tournament appearances and 14 national championships between them. Most notable was a 1-0 win in the quarterfinals over Messiah College, which was the #1 team in the country and had won eight of the last 10 NCAA Championships. The Tufts win ended a 39-game undefeated stretch by the Falcons. Head coach Josh Shapiro’s Jumbos also went undefeated (7-0-3) in the NESCAC regular season. With their 16-2-4 final record, the 2014 team’s victories that season were twice as many as the previous season and were the school record at the time.
 
Brown & Blue Award – Ed Schluntz, A50, AG51
An alumni leader and friend to Tufts Athletics for 70 years now, Ed Schluntz is the 2025 recipient of the Brown & Blue Award. The honor is designed to recognize alumni, donors, benefactors, staff, friends and supporters who have made significant contributions to the success of Tufts Athletics over the years.
Already in the Hall of Fame as a member of the 1950 baseball team that was inducted in 2017, Schluntz also played football and basketball for the Jumbos. Even before graduating, he coached at Tufts to begin what would become a legendary career in athletics leadership. During more than a half-century dedicated to the game of football, he was head football coach and Director of Athletics at Brookline High School in Massachusetts and also coached the freshman team at Harvard University. Among many leadership roles he held in the sport, he served as president of the Football Coaches Association in the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association. In that role he conceptualized and implemented the MIAA’s playoff system and formula for determining playoff teams. Within his many roles and honors received, Schluntz was a distinguished representative of Tufts. He remained loyal to his alma mater as a charter member and eventual President of the Jumbo Club. He was one of the first Jumbo Club Award recipients in 1972. In his leadership roles with the National Football Foundation, he supported national award nominations for Tufts University alumni and was a highly-respected representative of Tufts on a national level.
 

–JUMBOS–
 

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The 2025 Taunton Daily Gazette Girls Volleyball All-Scholastics

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The 2025 Taunton Daily Gazette Girls Volleyball All-Scholastics



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Coastal Bend volleyball standouts named to TSWA all-state team

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Jan. 5, 2026, 4:05 a.m. CT

Three Coastal Bend high school volleyball players were named to the 2025 Class 4A-3A Blue Bell Texas Sports Writers Association All-State volleyball team after putting together strong campaigns during the fall season.

The honorees were London setter Myah Lichtenberger, Calallen setter Grace Martinez and Calallen middle blocker Jadyn Lindgren.

Martinez and Lindgren helped lead Calallen to a district championship and a 36-8 record. The pair also played a vital role in the Lady Cats’ run to the Class 4A Division I regional final.

Lichtenberger helped lead the Lady Pirates to their best season in program history after the team advanced to the Class 3A Division I regional final with a 25-6 record.

Voting was conducted by TSWA members based on nominations from coaches and media members from around the state.



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Tritons Complete North American Challenge

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LONG BEACH, Calif. — UC San Diego men’s volleyball completed its preseason on Sunday with day two of the North American Challenge. The Tritons once again beat Canadian sides Alberta and Calgary in exhibition matches after doing the same on Friday.
 
The Tritons beat Alberta 3-0 before turning around and playing Calgary, winning 3-1. Head coach Brad Rostratter repeated his previous approach of largely using two separate lineups for the two matches. Only four of the 14 Tritons who got playing time on Sunday appeared in both contests.
 
The challenge was hosted by fellow Big West side Long Beach State. On Friday, the Tritons also swept Alberta after beating Calgary 3-2.
 
HOW IT HAPPENED – ALBERTA
The Tritons cruised through the first match of the day, winning 25-16, 25-21, 25-15. They hit .333 while holding Alberta to a .200 clip. The Tritons also had 11 service aces.
 
A balanced offense saw four Tritons finish with seven or more kills. Luke Chandler and Leo Wiemelt had a match-high nine kills, with Wiemelt hitting .667 in the process. Setter Cameron Wurl had 24 assists.
 
HOW IT HAPPENED – CALGARY
Calgary won set one 25-23 before UC San Diego won the next three 25-17, 25-21, 25-21. The Triton offense hit .431, while Calgary converted at a rate of .247.
 
Four Tritons had multiple blocks on the defensive side of the net. Offensively, Josh Ewert and Leo Pravednikov both hit .406. Ewert led the match with 20 kills, while Pravednikov added 17. Setter John Luers had 42 assists.
 
QUOTABLE
“I loved the volleyball we were playing throughout our four matches this weekend,” Rostratter said. “Using four different lineups and finding connections and success in different phases of the game highlighted the depth we have within our team. These were quality opportunities to learn more about what our team has and where we are headed this season. I am excited for the home matches this week on Tuesday, Friday and Sunday!”
 
UP NEXT
The 2026 regular season begins this Tuesday as the Tritons host Jessup at 7:00 p.m. at LionTree Arena. UC San Diego will also have home matches versus Daemen and Rockhurst on Friday and Sunday this week.
 
About UC San Diego Athletics
After two decades as one of the most successful programs in NCAA Division II, the UC San Diego intercollegiate athletics program has begun a new era as a member of The Big West in NCAA Division I. The 24-sport Tritons earned 30 team and nearly 150 individual national championships during its time in Divisions II and III and helped guide 1,400 scholar-athletes to All-America honors. A total of 83 Tritons have earned Academic All-America honors, while 39 have garnered prestigious NCAA Post Graduate Scholarships. UC San Diego scholar-athletes exemplify the academic ideals of one of the world’s preeminent institutions, graduating at an average rate of 90 percent, the highest rate among public institutions in NCAA Division I or II. For more information on the Tritons, visit UCSDtritons.com or follow UC San Diego Athletics on social media @UCSDtritons.
 



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Tyler’s McLean, Hallsville’s Farrell earn Class 5A all-state third-team volleyball honors

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LONGVIEW — Tyler middle blocker Kaelyn McLean and Hallsville outside hitter Kaycin Farrell earned third-team honors on the Blue Bell/Texas Sports Writers Association Class 5A All-State Volleyball Team, the organization announced on Sunday.

Lady Lion outside hitter Ja’lee Flores was voted honorable mention.

Lufkin middle blocker  Chesney McCullough was named a first-team middle blocker.

Area honorable mention players were middle blockers Knlee Smith of Marshall, Kylee Fernandez of Hallsville, and Taryn Stiger of Texas High; outside hitters Lily Holzbauer of Whitehouse, and Akira Smallwood of Lufkin; and setter Aleciara Smallwood of Lufkin.

McLean had 489 kills, 215 digs, 111 blocks and eight aces, while Farrell, the District 15-5A Most Valuable Player, had 402 kills, .371 hitting percentage, 302 digs, 68 aces, 50 blocks and 29 assists.

Class 5A Division II champion Cedar Park earned both top superlatives with the release of the Joy Udoye, who has signed to play for Stanford, was named Player of the Year.  Udoye had eye-popping stats of 581 kills, 364 digs, 34 aces and 30 blocks as Cedar Park finished 39-12 overall.

Lori McLaughlin was voted Coach of the Year.

Voting was conducted by TSWA members based on nominations from coaches and media members from around the state.

Blue Bell/Texas Sports Writers Association

Class 5A All-State Volleyball Team

COACH OF THE YEAR: Lori McLaughlin, Cedar Park

PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Joy Udoye, Cedar Park

FIRST TEAM

Middle blockers: Brooklyn Bailey, Highland Park; Sienna Benavides, Cedar Park; Chesney McCullough, Lufkin

Outside hitters: Joy Udoye, Cedar Park; Kaitlyn Hutchins, Lake Belton; Harper Korenek, A&M Consolidated

Setter: Blair Thiebaud, College Station

Libero/Defensive Specialist: Ann Kruz, Cedar Park

SECOND TEAM

Middle Blockers: Rihanna Bryant, Pflugerville Weiss; Aliah Earls, Red Oak; Zandria Johnson, Brownsville Rivera

Outside hitters: Nadiya Shelby, Friendswood; Sarah Floyd, Highland Park; Mya Cheatum, Cedar Park

Setter: Katelyn Hughes, Cedar Park

Libero/Defensive Specialist: Gigi Whann, Highland Park

THIRD TEAM

Middle Blockers: Jacey Owen, Smithson Valley; Kendall Kruesler, New Braunfels; Kaelyn McLean, Tyler

Outside hitters: Kaycin Farrell, Hallsville; Lexi Anderson, Frisco Centennial; Alexis Elsey, Argyle

Setter: Kingsley Minus, New Braunfels

Libero/Defensive Specialist: Berkeley Bates, Smithson Valley

HONORABLE MENTION

Middle Blockers: Ava Wood, Lake Belton; Knlee Smith, Marshall; Haddie Mock, Abilene Wiley; Kylee Fernandez, Hallsville; Emersyn Fink, Frisco Liberty; Taryn Stiger, Texas High; Kaitlyn McCracken, Belton

Outside hitters: Alyssa Todd, Aledo; Ja’lee Flores, Tyler; Lily Holzbauer, Whitehouse; Shaylie Schaefer, New Braunfels; Akira Smallwood, Lufkin; Hannah Baker, Argyle; Danielle Whittier, Prosper Walnut Grove; Kaelee Berkley, Aledo; Jaiden Harris, Frisco Liberty; Zoeh Cereceres, El Paso Chapin

Setter: Madison Bingham, Lake Belton; Aleciara Smallwood, Lufkin; Jill Vinal, A&M Consolidated; Ava Jackson, Pflugerville Weiss; Kyndal Newton, A&M Consolidated; Madison Victoriano, Frisco Centennial; Amelia Albright, Georgetown

Libero/Defensive Specialist: Hayden Jeffers, New Braunfels; Teagan Barnett, Argyle; Haley Nash, College Station; Haley Patton, Friendswood; Ashley Go, Pflugerville Weiss



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Blugolds Downed by #6 Roanoke 26-15

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SALEM, Va. — The University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire narrowly fell to #6 Roanoke College with a final team score of 26-15. 

Sloan Welch delivered a commanding performance at 285 pounds, securing a fall over Nicholas Cook in 3:59. This decisive victory contributed six points to the team’s score.

Preston Carlisle was instrumental in maintaining momentum for the Blugolds, securing decisions in both the 165 and 174-pound weight classes. He overcame Cade Parent 7-4 and later defeated Xavier Preston 10-5. Zak McPhee contributed with a 6-0 decision against Vincenzo Corvetto at 184 pounds. Looking ahead, the team will aim to carry this momentum into their upcoming competitions.

Blugold wrestling’s next competition is the Budd Whitehill Duals on Friday, January 9th and Saturday, January 10th in Williamsport, PA.

Follow the Blugolds all season long at Blugolds.com or on our app, Blugold Sports, and on social media on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. 





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Beach Sweep Calgary, Defeat Alberta On Final Day Of North American Challenge

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LONG BEACH, Calif. — Long Beach State Men’s Volleyball closed out day two of the North American Challenge, an eight-match exhibition tournament, with a pair of impressive victories Friday at the Gold Mine. The Beach opened the day with a commanding 3-0 sweep of Calgary (CAN) (25-18, 25-18, 25-15) before closing the night with a 3-1 win over Alberta (CAN) (25-19, 25-27, 25-13, 25-19).

Against Calgary, Long Beach State was in control from start to finish, hitting .372 as a team while limiting the Dinos to a .123 attack percentage. The Beach dominated the net, posting an 11-2 advantage in total team blocks, and sided out efficiently throughout the match, including an 86% rate in the third set to seal the sweep.

Connor Bloom led all players with 10 kills, adding two service aces and four block assists while hitting .333. Braedon Marquardt followed with seven kills on .583 hitting and a match-high seven block assists, anchoring the Beach defense at the net. Daniil Hershtynovich contributed eight kills and three blocks, while Myles Jordan added four kills on .444 hitting.

Setter Island Doty directed the offense with 25 assists as Long Beach State totaled 39 kills on 78 attempts. The Beach also recorded five service aces and held Calgary to just one ace on the night. After pulling away late in the opening set, Long Beach State applied steady pressure in the second before dominating the third, jumping out to an early lead and never looking back.

In their final match of the day against Alberta, Long Beach State continued to attack efficiently, hitting .377 as a team while holding the Golden Bears to a .132 hitting percentage. The Beach again controlled the net, finishing with 17.5 total team blocks compared to Alberta’s 4.0.

Skyler Varga led the way offensively with 15 kills on .440 hitting, scoring key points in transition throughout the match. Hershtynovich remained highly efficient, tallying six kills on eight swings (.750) while contributing on both sides of the ball. Jackson Cryst was a force defensively, recording 12 block assists and one solo block to anchor the Beach front line.

After taking the opening set comfortably, Long Beach State dropped a tightly contested second set. The Beach responded emphatically in the third, hitting .500 while limiting Alberta to just nine kills, and carried that momentum into the fourth set to close out the match behind consistent side-out play and timely blocking. Long Beach State finished the contest with 43 kills and nine service aces.

With the pair of wins, the Beach wrapped up day two of the North American Challenge showcasing depth, efficiency, and physicality at the net, setting a strong tone the close out the international exhibition tournament as they head into regular season competition.

 

 



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