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Twins Minor League Report (4/30)

Twins Video TRANSACTIONSRHP Cole Percival signed and assigned to A+ Cedar RapidsRHP Agustin Campusano assigned to DSL TwinsRHP Michael Ross activated from 7-day IL (A Fort Myers)RHP Will Armbruster assigned to FCL TwinsRHP Matt Canterino re-signed and assigned to they 7-Day IL of AAA St. Paul  So concludes our right-handed pitcher update. Saints SentinelSt. Paul […]

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Twins Minor League Report (4/30)

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TRANSACTIONS
RHP Cole Percival signed and assigned to A+ Cedar Rapids
RHP Agustin Campusano assigned to DSL Twins
RHP Michael Ross activated from 7-day IL (A Fort Myers)
RHP Will Armbruster assigned to FCL Twins
RHP Matt Canterino re-signed and assigned to they 7-Day IL of AAA St. Paul 

So concludes our right-handed pitcher update.

Saints Sentinel
St. Paul 8, Columbus 7 (11 Innings)
Box Score
Andrew Morris: 4 IP, 6 H, 4 ER, 1 BB, 5 K
HR: Mike Ford (5)

Multi-hit games: Ryan Fitzgerald (2-for-5, 2B, 2 R, RBI, BB), Mike Ford (2-for-5, HR, R, 2 RBI), Patrick Winkel (2-for-5, 2B)

The Saints won in extras on Wednesday.

Who cursed Andrew Morris? After starting the season with back-to-back scoreless starts, the righty experienced his second clunker in his last three outings. The damage was immediate and consistent; he didn’t see his first 1-2-3 frame until the 4th, which proved to be his final inning. The good news is that he still struck out five and only walked one.

St. Paul’s offense favored democracy; only two starters went home without a hit, and five batters drove in at least one run. Most potent was the Carson McCusker/Mike Ford/Armando Alvarez run at the lineup’s heart; the three hitters combined for six RBIs, four hits, and three runs. 

Ford sure hits them high.

The Saints and Clippers traded Manfred Man runs in the 10th before St. Paul scored again in the 11th and held their counterparts at bay to win the game.

Rehabbing big-leaguer Royce Lewis went 0-for-5 with two strikeouts. He played nine innings at third base before being lifted for a defensive substitute. 

Rehabbing big-leaguer Michael Tonkin appeared for the first time since April 25th. He threw two innings, allowing a run while striking out two and walking two.

Columbus is the AAA affiliate of the Cleveland Guardians. First baseman C.J. Kayfus—ranked eighth on the team—served as their finest prospect. He homered and singled in five at-bats. 

Wind Surge Wisdom
Wichita 7, Frisco 0
Box Score
Trent Baker: 5 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4 K
HR: Aaron Sabato (2), Kyler Fedko (5)

Multi-hit games: Ricardo Olivar (2-for-2, 2 RBI, 2 BB), Aaron Sabato (2-for-3, HR, 2B, 3 R, RBI, 2 BB)

The Wind Surge smoked their competition on Wednesday.

Already one of April’s top performers, Trent Baker added to his resume with five brilliant innings, punching out four while blanking the RoughRiders. He allowed just three baserunners. It’s hard to make a better organizational impression than Baker, who joined the Twins following four seasons with the Cardinals. He was also a Mankato MoonDog back in 2019!

Baker handed the ball to Mike Paredes, who continued the pitching vibes with three shutout frames of his own. Joel Cesar concluded things to give Wichita their second shutout in five days (the other was also a 7-0 victory.)

Offensively, the Wind Surge scored early and often. Aaron Sabato blasted an opposite-field homer in the 2nd to kick off the festivities, and Andrew Cossetti singled in a run two frames later.

In the sixth, Kyler Fedko launched a moonshot to plate a third run, soon to become four after a Ricardo Olivar RBI knock in the seventh.

The eighth is when things got absurd. Four consecutive walks augured a run, which soon stacked into three with a Tanner Schobel single and Olivar sacrifice fly. 

The 16th-best prospect in MLB, Sebastian Walcott, played shortstop for Frisco on Wednesday and went 0-for-4 at the plate. 

Kernels Nuggets
Cedar Rapids 4, Iowa 3
Box Score
Chase Chaney: 6 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 3 BB, 2 K
HR: Brandon Winokur (1), Kyle DeBarge (3)
Multi-hit games: Kyle DeBarge (3-for-4, HR, 2 R, RBI), Billy Amick (2-for-4)

The Kernels squeaked out a win on Wednesday.

Starter Chase Chaney’s outing was unique; unique in that starters in April don’t often reach six innings in the minors; unique in that he walked more than he struck out; and unique in that he only needed 78 pitches to do so. We may never see a start quite like this again—and the good news is that he also excelled in run prevention, with only two men scoring against him.

Nate Baez kicked off the scoring with an RBI double in the second, before Brandon Winokur extended the lead with a two-run shot the following frame, his first homer of the year.

The runs portended an extended streak of emptiness from both squads: starting with the fourth inning and running until the eighth, neither team scored, and they only ever mildly threatened to do so. Sometimes a man reached second. That’s as far as he would get. Lonely was the base paths; dull was the adventure. But that would eventually change.

In the eighth, Carter Trice homered for Iowa to knot the game at three, inspiring Kyle DeBarge to respond with an absolute tank. Minor-league cameras are never great, yet they usually at least find some semblance of the ball; good luck seeing where this one went.

Spencer Bengard shut the door in the ninth to cap off a brilliant three-frame outing out of the bullpen. His minor-league ERA over 110 career innings is now 2.05.

The best of the baby Cubs is mostly waiting on the franchise’s AAA squad, but Iowa does enjoy the presence of Jefferson Rojas, the team’s 7th-ranked prospect. He singled and drove in a run in four trips to the plate.

Mussel Matters
Fort Myers 6, Jupiter 5
Box Score
Michael Ross: 2 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 0 BB, 1 K
HR: None
Multi-hit games: Will Holland (2-for-4, 2B, R, RBI), Poncho Ruiz (3-for-3, 2 2B, 3 RBI, 2 BB)

The Mighty Mussels walked off their opponent on Wednesday. 

Given his prolific day at the plate, it was only fitting that Poncho Ruiz was the man to deliver the win for Fort Myers: the catcher reached base all five times he stepped up to the plate, thrashing a pair of doubles and a single while working a pair of walks. Three of the game’s six runs scored thanks to his hits. The final two were ushered home off his game-winning smack deep into the left-center gap.

That was Fort Myers’ first walk-off since Brandon Winokur’s game-ending homer on August 27th, 2024. 

Starter Michael Ross made his second professional appearance on Wednesday, and his first since hitting the IL on April 6th. The Samford product—alma mater of just two big leaguers—worked two inefficient innings with an earned run allowed, displaying the kind of rust expected from a hurler who hadn’t pitched since the beginning of the month. 

Outside of Ruiz, the Mighty Mussels were remarkably balanced offensively: eight of the nine starters reached base at least once, and they took seven walks as a team. Ruiz wasn’t even the only batter to walk twice; Jose Rodriguez accomplished the same feat. 

As a team, Fort Myers went 3-for-17 with runners in scoring position, which is ghastly, but it’s also kind of impressive that they hit 17 times with someone in scoring position. 

The Hammerheads are an affiliate of the Miami Marlins. They employ the talents of the team’s 7th-ranked prospect, outfielder, and former 1st-rounder P.J. Morlando. He doubled and walked in five plate appearances. 

TWINS DAILY PLAYERS OF THE DAY
Twins Daily Minor League Pitcher of the Day – Trent Baker
Twins Daily Minor League Hitter of the Day – Aaron Sabato ft. Poncho Ruiz and Kyle DeBarge

PROSPECT SUMMARY
Here’s a look at how the Twins Daily Top 20 Twins Prospects performed:
#5 – Andrew Morris (St. Paul) – 4 IP, 6 H, 4 ER, 1 BB, 5 K
#7 – Kaelen Culpepper (Cedar Rapids) – 0-4
#8 – Brandon Winokur (Cedar Rapids) – 1-4, HR, R, 2 RBI
#13 – Kyle DeBarge (Cedar Rapids) – 3-4, HR, 2 R, RBI
#15 – Yasser Mercedes (Fort Myers) – 0-4, R, BB, 2 K
#17 – Billy Amick (Cedar Rapids) – 2-4
#18 – Kala’i Rosario (Wichita) – 0-5, 4 K
#19 – Gabriel Gonzalez (Cedar Rapids) – 0-4, K
#20 – Ricardo Olivar (Wichita) – 2-2, 2 RBI, 2 BB

THURSDAY’S PROBABLE STARTERS
St. Paul @ Columbus Game One (11:05 AM) – RHP Cory Lewis
St. Paul @ Columbus Game Two – RHP Marco Raya
Wichita @ Frisco (6:35 PM) – RHP Pierson Ohl
South Bend @ Cedar Rapids (6:35 PM) – RHP Alejandro Hidalgo
Jupiter @ Fort Myers (5:05 PM) – TBD


Interested in learning more about the Minnesota Twins’ top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!

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USC women finish second at NCAA track and field championships

EUGENE, Ore. — Buoyed by top performances in the hammer throw, high jump and 400 meters, the Georgia women’s track and field squad distanced itself from the opposition and cruised to its first outdoor national championship in team history. Georgia lapped the field with 73 points ahead of runners-up USC (47) and third place Texas A&M (43). […]

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Buoyed by top performances in the hammer throw, high jump and 400 meters, the Georgia women’s track and field squad distanced itself from the opposition and cruised to its first outdoor national championship in team history.

Georgia lapped the field with 73 points ahead of runners-up USC (47) and third place Texas A&M (43). Fourth-year Bulldogs coach Caryl Smith Gilbert also won national titles at USC in 2018 and 2021.

Samirah Moody won the 100-meter dash and Madison Whyte and Dajaz DeFrand went 2-3 in the 200 to lead USC.

USC placed first in the 4×100 relay with a time of 42.22 seconds.

In the 100, Moody took first with a time of 11.14 seconds while teammates DeFrand and Brianna Selby finished seventh and eighth, respectively. In the 200, Whyte, a sophomore who also anchored the 4×400 team, clocked in at 22.23 while DeFrand, a junior, finished at 22.39.

Olympic gold medalist Aaliyah Butler and Dejanea Oakley of Georgia took the first two spots in the 400 meters with Butler posting a 49.26 and Oakley a 49.65. Butler’s time was the fifth best all-time for a collegian and Oakley was eighth.

The Bulldogs expanded their lead when Elena Kulichenko won the high jump for the second straight year after tying for the title last year. The Odessa, Russia, native won with a jump of 6 feet, 5 inches.

Michelle Smith, a freshman, finished third in the 400 meter hurdles at 55.20 to clinch the team title. Skylynn Townsend took sixth in the triple jump at 44-4¼.

Georgia ended the night by finishing first in the 4×400-meter relay with Butler taking the lead in the final leg with a winning time of 3:23.62. The Trojans posted a third-place finish in the 4×400 relay with a time of 3:26.01. UCLA’s team finished seventh at 3:31.14.

The Bulldogs entered Saturday competition in the lead with 26 points after Stephanie Ratcliffe won the hammer throw on Thursday with a nation-leading distance of 234 feet, 2 inches.

Washington and USC shared the lead earlier Saturday night after Washington’s Sophie O’Sullivan won the 1,500 meters and Moody took the 100, but Georgia got 18 points from Butler and Oakley and never looked back.

Georgia also got points in the javelin with a second-place finish from freshman Manuela Rotundo and a fourth-place finish from Lianna Davidson. Senior Keslie Murrell-Ross finished sixth in the shot put.



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Big Red Outdoor Track and Field Athletes Shine at the NCAA Championships

Lincoln, Nebraska— While college baseball crowns its champion locally here in Nebraska, across the country, Husker track and field athletes made their mark at the NCAA Outdoor Championships in Eugene, Oregon, with a wave of All-America performances by both men and women. Men’s Highlights: In the high jump, senior Tyus Wilson capped off his Husker […]

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Lincoln, Nebraska— While college baseball crowns its champion locally here in Nebraska, across the country, Husker track and field athletes made their mark at the NCAA Outdoor Championships in Eugene, Oregon, with a wave of All-America performances by both men and women.

Men’s Highlights:

In the high jump, senior Tyus Wilson capped off his Husker career in style, clearing 2.20 meters (7 feet, 2 1/2 inches) to finish sixth nationally and earn First Team All-America honors.

Freshman Desire Tonye-Nyemeck also impressed in his NCAA Championship debut, clearing 2.15 meters (7-0 1/2) to land on the Second Team All-America list. The performance hints at a bright future for the young athlete.

Veteran thrower Maxwell Otterdahl showed his versatility by earning All-America Honorable Mention recognition in both shot put and discus. He threw 18.55 meters (60-10 1/2) in shot put and followed it with a 57.07-meter (187-3) effort in discus.

In the javelin, Nebraska placed three athletes in the top 15 nationally.

Keyshawn Strachan, a junior, launched a 76.44-meter (250-9) throw to place fifth overall, securing First Team All-America honors.

Arthur Petersen, a senior from Denmark, claimed seventh place with a throw of 75.50 meters (247-8), also earning First Team All-America status.

Dash Simon, a junior from Walla Walla, Washington, landed in 14th place with a 69.17-meter (226-11) mark, good for Second Team All-America honors.

Women’s Highlights:

The Husker women also shined, particularly in the javelin.

Senior Maddie Harris closed out her collegiate career with a standout performance, finishing fifth in the nation with a 58.36-meter (191-6) throw to earn First Team All-America honors.

Fellow senior Eniko Sara landed on the Second Team All-America list after recording a 52.18-meter (171-2) effort.

In the shot put, sophomore Kellyn Kortemeyer made her NCAA debut memorable, earning All-America Honorable Mention after a 16.58-meter (54-4 3/4) throw.

Senior Kalynn Meyer also claimed Honorable Mention recognition with a 17th-place finish in the same event.

Nebraska’s blend of veteran leadership and rising talent left its mark on the national stage, capping off a successful track and field season.



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let’s get the greatest waterpolo party started!Waterpolo Development World

Dear friends of HaBaWaBa,  Bruno Cufino, President of Waterpolo Development. as president of Waterpolo Development I’m glad to start the 2025 edition of world’s biggest waterpolo event for kids. Also this year, HaBaWaBa International Festival and HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS are bringing little players from all 5 continents to Bella Italia & EFA Village in […]

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Dear friends of HaBaWaBa, 

Bruno Cufino, President of Waterpolo Development.

Bruno Cufino, President of Waterpolo Development.

as president of Waterpolo Development I’m glad to start the 2025 edition of world’s biggest waterpolo event for kids. Also this year, HaBaWaBa International Festival and HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS are bringing little players from all 5 continents to Bella Italia & EFA Village in Lignano Sabbiadoro: we have 147 teams participating, 15 nations are represented. The uniqueness of HaBaWaBa lies precisely in its global nature, here kids can meet, play and make friends with other children who fell in love with waterpolo, coming from different countries. Once again, kids are going to learn that sport is a universal language that breaks down all kinds of barriers.  

I also would like to extend a special greeting to the girls who will participate in the U13 female tournament: Waterpolo Development has worked hard to strengthen this competition and is pleased to have more than doubled the number of participating teams compared to the last edition. Waterpolo needs girls and women in order to grow, IOC has also understand this: at the next Olympic Games in Los Angeles 2028, for the first time the number of women teams will be the same as the number of men teams (12). My hope is that some of our HaBaWaBa girls will be able to participate in the Olympics sooner or later: it has already happened in Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024, where as many as 21 players who had been to HaBaWaBa as children took part. 

We call them HaBaWaBa Stars: thanks to the “game of the ball in the water” they have made their bond with waterpolo indissoluble, their love for the sport has enabled them to enthusiastically walk the long road to becoming world-class athletes. And even if there will be no Olympics in their future, I am sure they are going to experience special moments here at HaBaWaBa: it has already happened to tens of thousands of kids!

Before the show starts, I would like you to thank our sponsors – Turbo, Compact Goals, Ossidabile and All Risk Consulenze Assicurative – and the little players’ families, clubs and coaches who brought them here: without them, HaBaWaBa could not be the magical event that it is.

And now, have fun: HaBaWaBa is finally starting!

 

Bruno Cufino – President of Waterpolo Development

***

 

Click here for further infos about HaBaWaBa

 

 

 



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Masters Concludes Collegiate Career with Sixth All-American Accolade

Story Links Results (PDF) Men’s Recap EUGENE, Ore. – One of the best track and field athletes in Wichita State history wrapped up her collegiate career, claiming her sixth All-American award Saturday at the NCAA Outdoor Championships at Hayward Field. […]

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EUGENE, Ore. – One of the best track and field athletes in Wichita State history wrapped up her collegiate career, claiming her sixth All-American award Saturday at the NCAA Outdoor Championships at Hayward Field.
 
Destiny Masters, a senior from El Dorado, Kan., placed 10th in the heptathlon with 5,763 points, good for Second Team All-America status. She became the first Shocker in history to earn All-America status in back-to-back NCAA heptathlons and gave Wichita State its eighth All-American award in the event.
 
“To have Destiny finish her final NCAA Championship in 10th for her sixth NCAA All-American performance is really meaningful, and I couldn’t be prouder of her and all of her accomplishments,” head coach Steve Rainbolt said. “This was certainly a highlight, probably second only to her sixth-place finish at the indoor championship a year ago in the pentathlon.”
 
She finished her career ranked second all-time in Wichita State track and field history, male or female, in All-America honors with six, behind Shocker Hall of Famer and Olympian, Aliphine Tuliamuk, who earned 11 in her track and field career.
 
“It was a highlight because Destiny did struggle this year to find her a game, but she kept fighting, kept competing, made it all the way to this meet and then found some of the magic that has made her such a fabulous Shocker for the last six years,” Rainbolt said.
 
Masters opened day one of the heptathlon by running 14.23 in the 100-meter hurdles to start the competition in 22nd place.
 
Moving to the second event, Masters, a three-time All-American in the open high jump (indoor/outdoor), cleared the highest bar of the day, jumping a season-best 1.84m/6’0.5″ to jump all the way up into second place overall.
 
On her first shot put attempt, the senior threw 13.48m/44’2.75″, the fifth-best throw of the day, to maintain her position overall.
 
In the final event of day one, Masters ran a 25.54 in the 200 meters, 23rd in the event, to finish the first day of competition in third place.
 
Masters opened day two of competition by jumping 5.79m/19’0″, the 16th-best mark of the event and dropped to sixth place overall heading to the sixth event.
 
In the javelin, she had a clutch third attempt throw of 44.45m/145’10”, the second-farthest throw of the competition, to move back up into fourth place with one event to go. Masters ran 2:33.30 in the 800 to give her a 10th-place finish overall in the heptathlon.
 
Her 5,763 points was a personal best and ranks third all-time in program history.
 
“I have to say that in today’s world of the transfer portal and the way it seems like athletes move from program to program, it really means a lot to me that Destiny spent her entire career as a Shocker,” Rainbolt said. “I really admire that, and I have told her how much I appreciate it, so today was truly the end of one of the great careers in the history of the Wichita State track and field program. We will certainly miss Destiny Masters.”
 



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Cincinnati Track and Field Notches a Program Record Five Individual All-Americans at the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships

By: Zac Swain Story Links EUGENE, Ore. — University of Cincinnati track and field graduate student Amanda Ngandu Ntumba (Discus) notched First Team All-America honors, while sophomore Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (Heptathlon) secured Second Team All-America recognition on Saturday to close out the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships.   The Bearcats achieved […]

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EUGENE, Ore. — University of Cincinnati track and field graduate student Amanda Ngandu Ntumba (Discus) notched First Team All-America honors, while sophomore Juliette Laracuente-Huebner (Heptathlon) secured Second Team All-America recognition on Saturday to close out the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships.
 
The Bearcats achieved a program milestone with five Individual All-America honors at the national championships, punctuated by standout final-day performances from both Laracuente-Huebner and Ngandu Ntumba.
 
Ngandu Ntumba strengthened her hold on the discus school record with a personal-best throw of 60.77m, securing fifth place at nationals. The Saint-Étienne, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes native became the first Bearcat in program history to earn First Team All-America honors in the discus. Only one other Bearcat has earned All-American status in the discus – Macklin Tudor, who received Second Team All-America recognition in 2017.
 
Following two days of intense competition, Laracuente-Huebner established a new program record in the heptathlon while earning her All-America recognition.
 
After scoring 3,474 points through the first four events on Friday, the Marengo, Ohio, native scored 2,229 points in the last three events to reach a point total of 5703 to claim 11th overall.
 
She started day two of the heptathlon by leaping 5.93m in the long jump, scoring 828 points and placing 11th overall in the section. Laracuente-Huebner followed up that performance by recording a mark of 31.73m in the javelin and added 509 points to her total.
 
The multi-athlete rounded out her day, placing 10th in the 800m section with a time of 2:15.07, adding 892 points, which eclipsed the school record and secured her All-American status.  
 
In total, she placed inside the top 15 in five of the seven events, including finishing fourth in the high jump (1.75m), seventh in the 100m hurdle (13.65), 10th in the 100m, (24.56) 10th in the 800m (2:15.07) and 11th in the long jump (5.93m).
 
// RACKING EM UP! ALL-AMERICA X 5
Laracuente-Huebner (Heptathlon) and Ngandu Ntumba (Discus) joined Fred Moudani-Likibi (Shot Put), Ryan Rieckmann (Javelin), and Macaela Walker (400m Hurdles) as All-America honorees, bringing Cincinnati’s total to five All-Americans for the season — the most in program history for either indoor or outdoor competition.
 
The achievement marks a historic milestone for the Bearcats, surpassing any previous single-season total of individual All-Americans in the program’s indoor or outdoor track and field history.
 
On Wednesday, Moudani-Likibi and Rieckmann earned All-America recognition, while Walker earned All-America honors on Thursday.
 
Moudadni Likibi earned his fourth First Team All-America award, joining an elite group as just the fifth Bearcat to earn at least four First Team All-America honors alongside program legends – Adrian Valles, Al Lanier, Annette Echikunwoke, and Loretta Blaut.
 
Rieckmann became the first Cincinnati javelin thrower in program history to earn All-American honors, placing 13th overall in the competition. The Cheney, Wash., native concluded an impressive 2025 campaign, where he claimed the UC javelin school record with a throw of 71.02m at the Texas Relays.
 
Walker, an Oxford, Pa., native, delivered an impressive 57.75 performance in the 400m hurdles to claim 16th place and secure second-team All-America recognition. Her achievement marks a historic double first for the Bearcats program. She became both the first Cincinnati athlete to qualify for nationals in the 400m hurdles and the first to earn All-America honors in the event
 
// FOLLOW & SUPPORT THE BEARCATS
For all the latest information on Cincinnati Track and Field/Cross Country, please visit GoBEARCATS.com and follow @GoBearcatsTFXC on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
 
To support the Bearcats Track and Field program click HERE.
 










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Women’s Track and Field Finish 20th at NCAA Championships

Story Links EUGENE, Ore. – University of Missouri women’s track and field added two All-Americans on the final day of the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, where it ended the year in 20th place, its third-best finish in school history, on Saturday at Hayward Field.  This marks the Tigers’ highest […]

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EUGENE, Ore. – University of Missouri women’s track and field added two All-Americans on the final day of the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, where it ended the year in 20th place, its third-best finish in school history, on Saturday at Hayward Field. 

This marks the Tigers’ highest result at the NCAA Championship meet since 2018, where it finished 11th. All three of the program’s top-20 placements have come in the last eight seasons. 

“It was an outstanding week for the Tigers,” head coach Brett Halter said. “I’m really proud of everyone’s efforts and appreciate the support that we’ve had through our season. It’s been a collective effort – high-level performances take a village to achieve, and this staff did an incredible job of helping us reach that goal. The credit goes to the kids in the arena for sticking to the plan and achieving a historical season.”

Missouri ended the year in the women’s high jump, where Kristi Perez-Snyman capped off her career with a sixth-place finish after jumping 1.87m (6-1.5). This earned the Cape Town, South Africa, native her top NCAA Outdoor Championship result and her first All-America first-team recognition. 

By taking 11th, Claudina Diaz was named a second-team All-American after a jump of 1.84m (6-0.5).

 






SATURDAY, JUNE 14 – NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS – DAY FOUR

Field Events

Place-Athlete-Mark | Notes (PR = personal record)

High Jump (W)

6th – Kristi Perez-Snyman: 1.87m (6-1.5)

11th – Claudina Diaz: 1.84m (6-0.5)


FOLLOW THE TIGERS

For all the latest on Mizzou Cross Country and Track & Field, stay tuned to MUTigers.com and follow the teams on Facebook, Instagram and X (MizzouTFXC).



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