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Twins Minor League Report (6/6)

Twins Video CURRENT W-L RecordsMinnesota Twins: 34-29St. Paul Saints: 29-29Wichita Wind Surge: 29-26Cedar Rapids Kernels: 32-22Fort Myers Mighty Mussels: 25-30FCL Twins: 15-9DSL Twins: 0-4 TRANSACTIONSRHP Travis Adams recalled by the Twins; LHP Kody Funderburk optioned to St. Paul.LHP Danny Coulombe was sent on a rehab assignment to St. Paul.RHP Cody Laweryson promoted to St. Paul.RHP […]

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Twins Minor League Report (6/6)

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CURRENT W-L Records
Minnesota Twins: 34-29
St. Paul Saints: 29-29
Wichita Wind Surge: 29-26
Cedar Rapids Kernels: 32-22
Fort Myers Mighty Mussels: 25-30
FCL Twins: 15-9
DSL Twins: 0-4

TRANSACTIONS
RHP Travis Adams recalled by the Twins; LHP Kody Funderburk optioned to St. Paul.
LHP Danny Coulombe was sent on a rehab assignment to St. Paul.
RHP Cody Laweryson promoted to St. Paul.
RHP Jacob Wosinski promoted to Wichita.

SAINTS SENTINEL 
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 5, St. Paul 1
Box Score
SP: Andrew Morris (6 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 3 K)
HR: Carson McCusker (12)

 

Andrew Morris delivered a quality start for the Saints tonight, throwing six innings of two-run ball. He allowed a solo homer in the second inning before giving up a second run in a sloppy fifth inning that featured both an error and a balk by Morris himself. Despite Morris being his own worst enemy that inning, that run goes as unearned.

Morris lowered his ERA to 3.86 and topped out at 97.5 mph tonight. That the Twins had a rotation need and he wasn’t even in the discussion was both justified and a great illustration of the team’s pitching depth. This dude woulda been the No. 2 starter on some of the mid-2010s Twins rotations.

Unfortunately, the only offense the Saints could muster was a Carson McCusker home run in the bottom of the ninth. He now has a dozen homers this season. Payton Eeles and Anthony Prato were both 2-for-4, Prato also stole his 10th base. The Saints were 0-for-9 with runners in scoring position.

Danny Coulombe pitched the first game of his rehab assignment with the Saints tonight. He retired all three batters he faced on nine pitches, seven of them strikes. 

 

WIND SURGE WISDOM
Wichita 8, Northwest Arkansas 2
Box Score
SP: Trent Baker (6 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 1 BB, 5 K)
HR: Aaron Sabato (8)

 

Is Aaron Sabato happening? Well, no matter how you want to look at it as it relates to his long-term outlook, Sabato is undoubtedly on a tear right now, having tallied six extra-base hits in his last two games. After hitting two home runs and an RBI double last night, he hit another homer to go with a pair of doubles tonight. 

In 35 games since rejoining the Wind Surge, Sabato has hit .306/.407/.565 (.972 OPS) with a 26.2 K% and 13.1 BB%. He’s reached base in 24 consecutive games. Tonight was his 220th Double-A game. 

Wichita opened an 8-0 lead through the top of the fourth inning and never looked back. Trent Baker was the beneficiary of all that run support, but he also held up his end of the bargain. Baker, who came over in the minor league portion of the Rule 5 Draft, went six innings and only surrendered two runs on four hits. Baker struck out five batters and walked one. Pierson Ohl earned a three-inning save.

Gabriel Gonzalez was hit by a batted ball while on the bases. He singled to lead off the third inning and advanced to third on a Sabato double. With Noah Cardenas up, Gonzalez was hit with a foul line drive. The trainer came out, but he stayed in the game at that time. He scored on the next pitch and played outfield in the bottom of the inning, but exited in the top of the fourth. 

 

KERNELS NUGGETS
Wisconsin 3, Cedar Rapids 2
Box Score
SP: Chase Chaney (7 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 0 BB, 5 K)
HR: Kyle DeBarge (6)

 

This game was tied 2-2 heading into the bottom of the ninth. With one out, Wisconsin’s Jadher Areinamo lined a ball into left field toward Jay Thomason, a recently-promoted Kernel who has mostly been an infielder. Thomason did an excellent job of aggressively getting to the ball, but his throw in short-hopped Kaelen Culpepper, who couldn’t corral it. Areinamo managed to not only stretch the hit into a double, but he advanced to third on the error. He later scored on a sacrifice fly to walk it off.

Kyle DeBarge broke a scoreless tie in the sixth inning with his sixth home run of the season, putting the Kernels up 2-0. The lead was short-lived, as Wisconsin responded with a two-run shot of their own in the bottom of the frame.

Chase Chaney provided a quality start, as that two-run homer was the only damage he allowed over seven innings pitched. Brandon Winokur was 3-for-4 with a double. After getting off to a slow first two months of the season, Winokur is hitting .450/.500/.800 in the very early goings in June.

 

MUSSEL MATTERS
Fort Myers 6, Palm Beach 2
Box Score
SP: Michael Ross (4 2/3 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 1 BB, 3 K)
HR: Maddux Houghton (6), Walker Jenkins (1)

Walker Jenkins back active is enough of a sight for sore eyes, that he blasted a go-ahead homer is the cherry on top. Jenkins, who was the DH tonight, got a single up the middle in the third inning, but that’s all the Fort Myers lineup could muster that frame. In the bottom of the seventh, Palm Beach committed an error that resulted in the game being tied at 2-2. That’s when Jenkins put the Mighty Mussels ahead with a beautiful blast.

 

Maddux Houghton, who had homered earlier in the game, added an RBI double in the eighth inning and he later scored on a Ricardo Pena sacrifice fly to provided Fort Myers with some insurance runs.

Michael Ross, the Twins 18th-round pick from last year’s draft, had a solid outing despite not being able to get out of the fifth inning. He topped out at 95 mph. Brennen Oxford, who the Twins signed out of the independent Atlantic League, earned his first win in affiliated ball after pitching two scoreless frames.

 

COMPLEX CHRONICLES
FCL Twins 14, FCL Red Sox 4
Box Score
SP: Teague Conrad (4 IP, 5 H, 3R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 2 K)
HR: Ariel Castro (3), Yilber Herrera (1)

 

The Twins trailed by a run heading into the top of the seventh inning, but their lineup exploded for seven runs. Right fielder Ricardo Paez got things started with a single, then advanced to second base on a balk, and would later score the tying run from second base on a wild pitch. That opened the floodgates.

The Twins landed multiple big blows in the seventh, including a two-run double from Eduardo Beltre, a two-run single from Victor Leal and a solo homer by Ariel Castro. Four Twins batters tallied multi-hit games, including Paez, Beltre, Ramiro Domninguez and Daiber De Los Santos, who also stole a pair of bases.

A couple of former indy ballers were featured on the mound. Teague Conrad, who the Twins signed out of the Frontier League, gave up three runs over four innings as the starter, though only one of those runs was earned. Will Armbruester, also from the Frontier League, finished off the game with three shutout innings. 

 

DOMINICAN DAILIES
DSL Blue Jays 6, DSL Twins 4
Box Score
SP: Santiago Castellanos (2 2/3 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 3 K)
HR: None

 

Right-handed pitcher Santiago Castellanos of Venezuela made his professional debut in this one. He held the Blue Jays scoreless over 2 2/3 innings, limiting them to two hits. He struck out three of the 12 batters he faced and walked two. Per Baseball America, Castellanos touches 97 mph despite still only being 16-years-old. They put a 60 grade on his fastball, meaning they consider that a plus pitch.

The Twins broke a scoreless tie in the top of the fourth inning by scoring all four of their runs. The bullpen couldn’t hold the lead, however, as the Blue Jays scratched across a run in the fifth inning before tallying five more in the sixth.

Jhomnardo Reyes, a 17-year-old from the Dominican Republic, was the only Twin with a multi-hit game. He was 2-for-3, and is 7-for-13 through four games this season (.538 average).

 

TWINS DAILY MINOR LEAGUE PLAYERS OF THE DAY 
Pitcher of the Day: Chase Chaney, Cedar Rapids (7 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 0 BB, 5 K)
Hitter of the Day: Aaron Sabato, Wichita (3-for-5, 2 2B, HR, 2 R, 3 RBI, K)

PROSPECT SUMMARY
Check out the Prospect Tracker for more. 

1. Walker Jenkins (rehabbing with Fort Myers): 2-for-5, HR (1), R, 2 RBI
6. Kaelen Culpepper (Cedar Rapids): 2-for-5, 2B, R
8. Andrew Morris (St. Paul): 6 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 3 K
9. Brandon Winokur (Cedar Rapids): 3-for-4
11. Kyle DeBarge (Cedar Rapids): 2-for-5, HR (6), R, 2 RBI, K
14. Gabriel Gonzalez (Wichita): 1-for-2, R, K (was hit by a batted ball while running the bases and later exited the game)
16. Eduardo Beltre (FCL): 2-for-6, 2B, SB (9), R, 3 RBI
17. Tanner Schobel (St. Paul): 1-for-4, 2B
19. Carson McCusker (St. Paul): 1-for-4, HR (12), R, RBI, 2 K

TOMORROW’S PROBABLE STARTERS
St. Paul vs. Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, 6:37 pm CT: Darren McCaughan
Wichita at Northwest Arkansas, 6:35 pm CT: Connor Prielipp
Cedar Rapids at Wisconsin, 6:40 pm CT: Alejandro Hidalgo
Fort Myers vs. Palm Beach, 5:05 pm CT: Dasan Hill
FCL Twins vs. FSL Red Sox, 9 am CT: TBD
DSL TWINS vs. DSL Yankees, 9 am CT: 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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Madison Whyte shines at recent NCAA Outdoor Championships, anchors national title relay for USC

The Newport News native and former Heritage High standout continues her rapid rise, helping the Women of Troy finish second nationally. NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — Life keeps moving fast for Madison Whyte—and that’s just how she likes it. The Newport News native and Southern California sprinter made her presence felt in a major way at […]

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The Newport News native and former Heritage High standout continues her rapid rise, helping the Women of Troy finish second nationally.

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — Life keeps moving fast for Madison Whyte—and that’s just how she likes it.

The Newport News native and Southern California sprinter made her presence felt in a major way at the recent NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon. Whyte, a former state champion at Heritage High School, came within a fraction of a second of a national title in the 200 meters, finishing runner-up to South Carolina’s JaMeesia Ford.

But Whyte didn’t leave empty-handed. She played a key role in USC’s 4×100-meter relay team that captured the national championship, adding to her growing list of collegiate accolades. The Trojans finished second overall in the team competition.

“I keep telling myself like ‘freshman Maddie, she was just a little girl…she really didn’t know,'” she joked. “But sophomore Maddie is on such a different level and I will never not be able to see that difference in myself. So I definitely think I fit in my stride and do know that I belong.”

Now wrapping up her sophomore year, Whyte says she’s in a great place—on and off the track. Reflecting on her journey from high school standout to one of the NCAA’s top sprinters, she admits a lot has changed—but the drive to be the best remains the same.

“I really think that I’m the same runner,” she says. “I just wanted to run. I was never a time girl…like I never said I wanted to run this time. I never wanted to complete this. I just went out there and ran.” 

Whyte was asked by the time her career is wrapped up at Southern Cal, she want to, “Have made history for generations to come.”

With each powerful stride, Madison Whyte isn’t just chasing medals—she’s chasing a legacy.



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Men’s Water Polo Release Game Dates for 2025 Season

Story Links EMMITSBURG, Md. (July 2, 2025) – Mount St. Mary’s men’s water polo releases its schedule for the 2025 season. The team is slated to play 30 games for the year, with four home games at the ARCC Swimming Pool.     A full list of games can be found […]

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EMMITSBURG, Md. (July 2, 2025) – Mount St. Mary’s men’s water polo releases its schedule for the 2025 season. The team is slated to play 30 games for the year, with four home games at the ARCC Swimming Pool.  
 
A full list of games can be found on the Mount’s website.
 
Games begin with a trip to Colorado for four matches. All contests are at the Air Force Academy and the campaign kicks off with the Mountaineers battling the host Falcons. Biola, University of Redlands, and Cal also stand on the docket.
 
Further tournaments occur at Princeton, Navy, Bucknell, and in Southern California.
 
Mid-Atlantic Water Polo Conference play starts at Navy on September 12. There are 12 games throughout the year. Four of those contests happen at the ARCC Swimming Pool, beginning October 25 against George Washington. Wagner comes to town on October 31, and Bucknell and Mercyhurst arrive for Senior Day on November 1.
 
Conference championships start on November 21, taking place at Fordham.
 



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Volleyball Announces Schedule for the 2025 Season

Story Links SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – The University of San Francisco volleyball program and Head Coach Diogo Silva have officially announced the schedule for the upcoming 2025 season. “We have a very competitive schedule this season, facing off against some strong programs led by excellent coaches,” said Silva. “We don’t have as […]

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SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – The University of San Francisco volleyball program and Head Coach Diogo Silva have officially announced the schedule for the upcoming 2025 season.

“We have a very competitive schedule this season, facing off against some strong programs led by excellent coaches,” said Silva. “We don’t have as much travel during the non-conference schedule, which gives us a great opportunity to host two tournaments right here at home.”

Silva, entering his fifth season at the helm, led San Francisco to a successful 2024 campaign, ending the season with a 17-13 record—the most wins by the program since 2015—and finishing in fifth place in the West Coast Conference standings at 10-8. The team earned multiple victories over high-end opponents, including a sweep of LMU at home and a five-set thriller against San Diego, marking the first win over the Toreros in 11 years.

Despite a handful of departures from last season’s roster, the Dons welcome five talented transfers: Cagla Bengi (Coastal Carolina), Maeve Bailey (Holy Cross), Hannah Taylor (Saint Mary’s), Hokulani Perez (Arizona State), and Sina Toroslu (Siena), while Emilija Arsic, Andrea Fabikovicová, Kayla Ostovar, Taylor Mendez, and Beata Bohmova join the program as freshmen.

The 2025 campaign features 28 contests, comprising 10 non-conference and 18 West Coast Conference matches, as well as two home tournaments spanning four months of competition. The season begins in Berkeley when San Francisco competes in the California Tournament. The two-day event features contests against San Diego State on August 30 and California on August 30 at Haas Pavilion.

The Dons return home to War Memorial at the Sobrato Center when they host the Battle By The Bay, a three-day tournament with Portland State and Long Beach State. The green and gold take on Portland State in the home opener on September 5, followed by a meeting with Long Beach State on September 6. San Francisco will host its second tournament of the season, the USF Challenge, when San Jose State and CSUN come to the Hilltop for a four-day event on September 17 – 20.  

Returning to the road for the final time in non-conference play, San Francisco travels to Idaho to compete in the Boise State Invitational on September 11 – 13 at Bronco Gym. The team begins the tournament against Idaho State and then takes on host Boise State before finishing with Utah Tech.

Entering WCC play at the end of September, San Francisco travels to Washington State at Bohler Gym and Gonzaga at Charlotte Y. Martin Centre on September 25 and 27, respectively.

October features eight WCC contests, highlighted by home matches against Pepperdine (October 2), Oregon State (October 4), Pacific (October 11), and Gonzaga (October 25). The green and gold will also face Santa Clara, Portland, Oregon State, and San Diego on the road.

The campaign concludes with eight matches in November, with four of the last five to be played on the Hilltop. The Dons begin the month on the road at Pepperdine on November 1 before coming home to take on Santa Clara on November 6. The program returns to the road when it takes on Seattle U for the first time as conference members on November 8.

In the final stretch, San Francisco takes on Saint Mary’s (November 13), LMU (November 15), Seattle U (November 26), and Washington State (November 29) at War Memorial at the Sobrato Center to conclude the regular season.

The full 2025 San Francisco volleyball schedule can be viewed here.

For more information and updates on the University of San Francisco volleyball program, be sure to follow the Dons on Twitter @USFDonsVB, @USFDonsVB on Instagram, and @USFDonsVball on Facebook.

 





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Former athletes sue SFA for Title IX violations | Sports

NACOGDOCHES — Six former female athletes are suing Stephen F. Austin State University for violating Title IX a little more than a month after the school announced it was cutting four sports. The suit filed June 1 in federal court in Lufkin accuses the university of violating a section of law that promises equal protection […]

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NACOGDOCHES — Six former female athletes are suing Stephen F. Austin State University for violating Title IX a little more than a month after the school announced it was cutting four sports.

The suit filed June 1 in federal court in Lufkin accuses the university of violating a section of law that promises equal protection and opportunity for men and women participating in collegiate sports.

SFA announced May 22 that it was cutting golf for men and women along with beach volleyball and bowling, which were women’s sports at the university.

University officials were served with the lawsuit Tuesday, said Damon C. Derrick, general counsel for the university.

“The university takes its Title IX obligations seriously and is prepared to respond through the legal process. As this is an ongoing legal matter, the university will not comment further at this time,” Derrick said in an email.

The suit was publicly announced by California-based attorney Arthur Bryant, who is representing the six former SFA athletes and “others similarly situated.”

“SFA’s elimination of the women’s beach volleyball, bowling, and golf teams is a blatant violation of Title IX,” Bryant said. “We reviewed the facts and the law with the school, asked it to reinstate the teams and agree to comply with Title IX, and it refused. So our clients are doing what SFA is requiring them to do — hold the school accountable in court.”

Attorneys for the plaintiffs and the school met Friday, but SFA refused to bring back the three women’s teams, Bryant said.

The civil complaint tells only one side of the legal argument. SFA had not filed a response in court as of Tuesday.

Plaintiffs in the lawsuit include Sophia Myers, Kara Kay, Ryann Allison, Elaina Amador, Berkelee Andrews and Meagan Ledbetter.

“It is truly sad and disappointing that we have to sue SFA to make it comply with Title IX, provide women with equal opportunities, and preserve our teams,” Myers said. “But we have to stand up for our rights and fight what is right, including the gender equity Title IX requires.”

Myers was a member of the beach volleyball program and has one year of eligibility remaining.

Kay is an incoming senior who was on the bowling team. The suit alleges that her credit hours at SFA would not transfer to other schools.

Allison is an incoming redshirt junior, who says in the suit that transferring would impede her academic progress and ambitions to attend medical school. She said she has chosen to give up beach volleyball if SFA does not restore the team.

Amador will be a senior this fall. She was a member of the beach volleyball program and said its elimination had caused her “considerable sadness, frustration and anxiety.”

Andrews will also be a senior this fall. Andrews was born without her left hand. When she joined SFA, she became the first ever Division I adaptive beach volleyball player and she has aspirations of playing beach volleyball at the Paralympics. Ledbetter is an incoming senior who said she’s been negatively impacted by the elimination of beach volleyball.

In the 2022–23 school year, SFA reported to the U.S. Department of Education that it had 7,832 undergraduate students — 4,961 were women and 2,871 were men, according to the suit. That means about 63.3% of undergrads were women. However, only 46.7% of the students on SFA’s sports teams were women — 212 women compared to 242 men, the suit says.

To follow Title IX rules, SFA needs to offer more sports opportunities for women, Bryant said. Eliminating the sports affected 40 women and 11 men, which makes the university even further away from meeting Title IX requirements.

Title IX requires that men and women have an equal opportunity to participate in college sports. Doing this would require SFA to add 218 spots for women in sports, Bryant said.

John Clune and Ashlyne Hare of Hutchinson Black and Cook in Boulder, CO, and James L. Sowder and Ellen Platt of Thompson, Coe, Cousins & Irons, LLP, in Dallas, are co-counsel for the women athletes.



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Women's Basketball Trio to Compete for National Teams

Story Links FIBA Women’s Asia Cup – New Zealand FIBA U20 Women’s Eurobasket – Italy HONOLULU — Three members of the University of Hawai’i women’s basketball program have been selected to compete for their countries in international tournaments this summer. Sophomore center Ritorya Tamilo and freshman guard Bailey Flavell will play for New Zealand’s national team […]

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Women's Basketball Trio to Compete for National Teams

HONOLULU — Three members of the University of Hawai’i women’s basketball program have been selected to compete for their countries in international tournaments this summer.
 
Sophomore center Ritorya Tamilo and freshman guard Bailey Flavell will play for New Zealand’s national team in the FIBA Asia Cup set for July 13-20 Shenzhen, China. Freshman center Fiamma Serra will play for Italy’s Under 20 women’s national team in the FIBA U20 Women’s Eurobasket Aug. 2-4 in Matosinhos, Portugal.
 
Tamilo and Flavell were among 12 players named to New Zealand’s roster for the Asia Cup. Tamilo was named the Big West Freshman of the Year last season after averaging 7.3 points and 5.0 rebounds per game while setting the UH freshman record with 41 blocked shots. The Asia Cup will mark her third FIBA event with the Tall Ferns. She averaged nine points and 8.7 rebounds in the FIBA Women’s Basketball World Cup Pre-Qualifying Tournament in Mexico last summer.
 
Flavell made her debut with New Zealand’s senior national team last year, playing with Tamilo in the pre-qualifying tournament in Mexico, and posted 5.5 points per game. Her 2024 schedule also included the FIBA U17 Women’s Basketball World Cup in which she averaged 18.9 points, 4.6 rebounds and 3.3 assists over seven games.
 
Serra was previously a member of national and regional championship teams at the U17 and U19 levels in Italy and will make her debut for the national program in the U20 Women’s Eurobasket. Italy will be in Group D along with Czechia, Poland and the Netherlands.
 
Bailey Flavell and Ritorya Tamilo (New Zealand)
FIBA Women’s Asia Cup 
July 13-20 | Shenzhen, China
Schedule
July 13: vs. South Korea, 7:30 p.m. (HT)
July 14: vs. Indonesia, 7:30 p.m. (HT)
July 16: vs. China, 1:30 a.m. (HT)
July 17-20: Classification, Bracket games
 
Fiamma Serra (Italy)
FIBA U20 Women’s Eurobasket
August 2-10 | Mantosinhos, Portugal
Schedule
Aug. 2: vs. Poland, 9:30 a.m. (HT)
Aug. 3: vs. Czechia, 7:00 a.m. (HT)
Aug. 4: vs Netherlands, 2:00 a.m. (HT)
Aug. 7-10: Classification, Bracket games
 

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