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U of U athletics discontinues Beach Volleyball program; sport’s ‘growth stunted’

Image courtesy U of U Athletics. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, April 29, 2025 (Gephardt Daily) — University of Utah athletic director Mark Harlan has announced the Beach Volleyball program will be discontinued after nine years of competitive play. The news comes four days after the U announced the retirement of head beach volleyball coach Brenda […]

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Image courtesy U of U Athletics.

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, April 29, 2025 (Gephardt Daily) — University of Utah athletic director Mark Harlan has announced the Beach Volleyball program will be discontinued after nine years of competitive play.

The news comes four days after the U announced the retirement of head beach volleyball coach Brenda Whicker.

“This was an extremely difficult decision, and we did not arrive at this conclusion without a significant and appropriate amount of thought, consideration and consultation,” Harlan said in a news release.

“We looked at the landscape of intercollegiate beach volleyball and the future opportunities of our student-athletes. Currently, there are only 12 beach volleyball programs among power conference institutions, with little evidence of the sport expanding at this time.

“With the sport’s growth stunted, and without the home facilities with amenities that allow us to host championship-level events, we are not providing the world-class experience that we seek to provide to our student-athletes.”

For the 2025 season that concluded last Friday in the semifinals of the Big 12 Tournament, Utah competed as a member of the Big 12 Conference. Currently, there are only three other Big 12 institutions that sponsor beach volleyball, the release says. With only four sponsored programs in the conference, there is no automatic qualifier to the NCAA tournament for the Big 12 champion. 

“We are mindful of the impact this decision has on the current students in our beach volleyball program, as well as on the incoming student-athletes who committed to Utah,” Harlan said. “. We will work closely with each of our impacted student-athletes to provide them with all of the support they need.

“Should any member of the team decide to remain at the University, their scholarship will be honored through the receipt of their undergraduate degree, and the incoming student-athletes also will have their scholarship offers honored. Should a current or incoming student-athlete elect to pursue their sport at another school, Utah will do all that it can to facilitate the process.

“Scholarship funds previously dedicated to the beach volleyball program will be redirected to our other women’s sports programs.”

With the discontinuation of beach volleyball, Utah will now sponsor 19 intercollegiate sport programs.





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Tait Places Fourth, Earns First Team All-American Honor at NCAA Outdoor Championships

Story Links MORGANTOWN, W. Va. – Graduate student Sarah Tait of the West Virginia University track and field team earned her second career First Team All-American honor at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships on Saturday in Eugene, Oregon. Tait soared to a new personal best time of 9:27.80 in the […]

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MORGANTOWN, W. Va. – Graduate student Sarah Tait of the West Virginia University track and field team earned her second career First Team All-American honor at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships on Saturday in Eugene, Oregon.

Tait soared to a new personal best time of 9:27.80 in the women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase, solidifying her spot at No. 2 all-time in program history. Additionally, she ran 10 seconds faster in the event final than she did in the semifinals on Thursday inside of Hayward Field.

The Edinburg, Scotland, native becomes just the second Mountaineer of all time to earn the First Team All-America accolade in the women’s steeplechase. With the fourth-place finish, she joins her teammate, graduate student Ceili McCabe.

The time was good enough to best the Scottish national record, which has been held by Ellish McColgan since 2013. Tait smashed McColgan’s previous record, 9:35.82, by eight seconds.

With Tait’s finish, the Mountaineers complete the 2024-25 track and field season.

For more information on the Mountaineers, visit WVUsports.com and follow WVUXCTF on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.



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Best girls athlete for the 2024-25 season

VIDEO: Vero Beach’s Jada Mosley captures girls weightlifting state title The Vero Beach High School senior became the eighth lifter in program history to win a state title. School is out for summer. But that doesn’t mean it’s time to move on from the year that was. As our Spring All-Area teams continue to be […]

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School is out for summer. But that doesn’t mean it’s time to move on from the year that was.

As our Spring All-Area teams continue to be revealed this week, the 2024-25 athletic calendar remains the subject of TCPalm’s Summer Celebration series, a weekly poll to vote on who are the area’s best programs, athletes, traditions and more from last year and beyond. 

Last week, we wanted to see who was the area’s best boys athlete from the 2024-25 high school calendar. Vero Beach junior pitcher Sebastian Dimitroff won the poll with 47.47% of the vote.

This week, we ask the same question, this time with the girls. The poll is set to close at 12 p.m. Friday.

Without further ado, it’s time to punch in the votes and continue enjoying the summer.

Hailey Brereton, St. Lucie West Centennial soccer and softball

Year: Senior

Brereton was the backup goalkeeper for an Eagles soccer team that finished with a 10-7 record. However, she’s a nominee because of her work on the softball field. The Murray State signee paced all local pitchers with 227 strikeouts and an .144 opponents batting average.  while boisting a record of an 11-4 record and a 1.74 ERA.

What helped Brereton win TCPalm’s Softball Player of the Year was her strong pitching campaign combined with her work at the plate. After hitting just two home runs through her first three seasons, the senior went deep four times. She added six doubles, two triples, 24 RBIs, batted .429 and compiled a 1.392 OPS.

Emerson Brinn, South Fork cross country and track and field

Year: Junior

Brinn started her junior season by being named TCPalm’s Girls Cross Country Runner of the Year after she claimed eighth in the Class 3A state championship meet with a personal-best time of 18:43.8. She ended her year with an All-Area First Team selection in track and field thanks to winning a district title and third-place state finish in the 1,600-meter run.  

Ivy Cooper, Fort Pierce Central volleyball

Year: Senior

Cooper was not only viewed as the area’s best prospect but her talent has caught the attention of plenty across the state and country. The senior captain was named an AVCA All-American Honorable Mention, which recognizes her as one of the top 250 players in the United States. The Virginia Tech signee put up 355 digs, 75 assists, 39 kills and 39 service aces during the 2024-25 season.  

Kha’Lyah Delva, Fort Pierce Central wrestling

Year: Senior

The Cobras senior capped her career with back-to-back state runner up finishes. Delva started the season at 155 pounds before making the switch to 145 at the start of the calendar year. The change didn’t slow her down as she claimed district and regional titles en route to a 40-2 record. 

Valerie Gomez, Jensen Beach tennis

Year: Senior

When you suffer your first singles defeat at the final match of the season, you’ve had an exemplary campaign. Gomez was comfortably the area’s best player as her performance propelled the Falcons to the Class 3A state championship match. There, she lost to Nease No. 1 Kylie Kochis in straight sets to wrap up her singles season at 14-1.

Gomez had similar success at doubles competition alongside sophomore Domenica Ayleen Monserrate. The duo went 11-1 together, winning their first 10 matches after taking a loss against St. Thomas Aquinas’ top pairing in the state semifinals. She was a state qualifier in both singles and doubles competition after winning District 14-3A titles. Gomez will play collegiate in Pensacola at the University of West Florida.

Ella Gravlee, Vero Beach volleyball

Year: Sophomore

With Cooper off to Virginia Tech, this rising junior will likely talent over the mantle as the area’s best volleyball prospect. Blasting shots from the middle of the floor or any area at the net, the 6-foot-3 Gravlee and her powerful, precise swings made her the area’s most intimidating presence. She used her power and shot variety to lead all local players with 336 kills. Gravlee had six matches of 20 or more kills, including a 23-kill effort during the team’s regional semifinal win over Olympia. 

Jada Mosley, Vero Beach weightlifting

Year: Senior

Mosley was yet another dominant lifter to come out of Vero, becoming the eighth champion in program history after claiming the Olympic title at the 199-pound weight class in the Class 3A state meet. The senior won the crown with total lifts of 385 pounds. She later backed that up with a runner-up state finish in traditional competition. Prior to state, Mosley swept through districts and regionals.

Taylor-Nicole Overton, Vero Beach track and field

Year: Sophomore

Overton concluded her first season in Vero by doing something the program hasn’t seen in 23 years. The sophomore became the program’s first track state champion, winning the 400-meter dash in a personal-record time of 53.19 seconds at the Class 4A state meet. She outpaced Fletcher’s Zyaire Thomas by 0.05 seconds.

Overton wasn’t done as she placed second in the 200 (23.99), 10th in the 100 (12.22) and helped Vero’s 1,600-meter relay team to a fourth-place finish. She swept the four events at districts and regionals.

Adrienne Rivera, Fort Pierce Central flag football

Year: Senior

For the third consecutive season, this Cobras quarterback is TCPalm’s Flag Football Offensive Player of the Year. It’s hard to argue that anyone else was more deserving as Rivera set career highs in completion percentage (68%) and quarterback rating (122.8) while tying her career best of 60 touchdown passes and throwing for a career-low 16 interceptions.

She led the area with 4,524 passing yards while adding 595 yards and 15 more scores through the running game. Following a legendary prep career, Rivera has signed to play collegiately at Keiser.

Ellie Smith, Vero Beach volleyball

Year: Senior 

Starting all four years of her varsity career, Smith saved her finest campaign for her last en route to being named TCPalm’s Volleyball Player of the Year.

The captain and leader of the Treasure Coast’s best team, the 5-foot-7 setter topped the area with 708 assists and averaged 9.8 assists per set. She also added 135 digs, 24 aces and 15 blocks. Smith will play collegiately at Northern Illinois. 

Savannah Tatum, South Fork flag football and soccer

Year: Senior

Tatum was a star for both on a Bulldogs soccer team that captured a district title and a Bulldogs flag football team that enjoyed an eight-game improvement.

On the pitch, she recorded an assist in 14 games to lead the area with 25 assists while pouring in 13 goals. Tatum was even better on the football field as the senior threw for 2,152 yards, 33 touchdowns and 12 interceptions while rushing for 1,309 yards and 17 touchdowns.

Giovanna Waksman, Pine soccer

Year: Sophomore

It wasn’t simply that she ran circles around opponents or that she smashed the Knights’ all-time record books while facing constant double and triple teams, Waksman’s production was elite even by national standards. According to MaxPreps, the sophomore led the country with a whopping 87 goals and 188 points. She appeared in every match, averaging 4.6 goals and 9.9 points per game to lead the program to its first state title game appearance.

Her success directly impacted whether or not Pine went home victorious or in defeat as the Knights were 16-0-1 in matches where Waksman scored and 0-2 in matches she didn’t. Beyond uncanny dribbling skills and tremendous ability to send missiles off either foot, the Brazilian star is a particularly intelligent player willing to deliver beautiful balls to a teammate making a run. The sophomore had a team-best 14 assists.

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Patrick Bernadeau is a sports reporter for Treasure Coast Newspapers. He can be reached at 772-985-9692, on X at @PatBernadeau or via email at pbernadeau@gannett.com. 



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Women’s Track & Field Concludes Outdoor Season with All-Americans

Story Links 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships Results (Day 4) EUGENE, Ore. (June 14, 2025) – Howard University women’s track & field program concluded its outdoor campaign at the NCAA Championships in Euguene, Ore., hosted by the University of Oregon, with outstanding […]

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EUGENE, Ore. (June 14, 2025) – Howard University women’s track & field program concluded its outdoor campaign at the NCAA Championships in Euguene, Ore., hosted by the University of Oregon, with outstanding Bison earning All-American status.
 
Graduates Kailei Collins (Houston) and Marcia Sey (London, United Kingdom), senior Tiffani-Rae Pittman (Bowie, Md.) and sophomore Aiyana Gray-Williams (Winston-Salem, N.C.) began Day Four with a sixth-place finish in the 4×100 relay, clocking in at 43.23. The four Bison earned All-American First Team honors, becoming the first All-American 4×100 relay squad in program history.
 
USC won the 4×100 relay race with a 42.22 mark.
 
Individually, Sey had her best performance in a Bison uniform, winning bronze in the 100-meter hurdles with a 12.93 time. Her third-place finish is the highest in program history. Additionally, the British native received All-American First Team honors.
 
Oregon’s Aaliyah McCormick won the short hurdles, producing a 12.81 mark.
 

Howard Director of Track & Field David Oliver and the Bison wrapped up another success season, winning a pair of MEAC (Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference) crowns during the indoor and outdoor campaigns.
 
HU looks to defend both crowns for the upcoming 2025-26 campaign.
 
For more information, visit the Bison Athletics website at www.HUBison.com.



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Santa Barbara beach volleyball court honors Van Winden, twin | Sports

This is an updated version of a story published by Noozhawk.com at bit.ly/45kMboh and is being re-run with the website’s permission. East Beach may be a playground, but twin sisters Kelly and Lisa Strand had to work their way there a half-century ago. They’d follow their older siblings by riding their bikes for six miles, […]

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This is an updated version of a story published by Noozhawk.com at bit.ly/45kMboh and is being re-run with the website’s permission.

East Beach may be a playground, but twin sisters Kelly and Lisa Strand had to work their way there a half-century ago.

Don of an era

The next level

Beach party



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Shelby Frank stars for Texas Tech track & field at NCAA championships

Two-time NCAA runner-up Shelby Frank on outlook with Texas Tech Shelby Frank was the NCAA indoor championships runner-up in the weight throw in 2023 and 2024. She transferred from Minnesota to Texas Tech for 2025. At the NCAA track and field championships, where points are hard to come by, putting up 10s and 8s — […]

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At the NCAA track and field championships, where points are hard to come by, putting up 10s and 8s — that is, 10 points for first place, eight for second — is key to gaining separation for a really high finish.

The Texas Tech women’s track and field team had only one 8 and no 10s on their latest trip to Eugene, Oregon, and finished 12th — solid, but probably not as well as the Red Raiders had hoped, given their No. 8 national ranking going into the meet.

The four-day competition at Hayward Field concluded Saturday, June 14, with Texas Tech ending up with 22 points.

Shelby Frank delivered 14 with a second-place finish in the hammer throw on Thursday, June 12, and a third-place finish in the discus Saturday. That made the senior transfer from Minnesota an eight-time first-team All-American, status accorded the top eight finishers in each final event at an NCAA championships. Frank threw 233 feet, 1 inch in the hammer and 207-11 in the discus, both personal records.

“What a fabulous weekend Shelby had,” Tech coach Wes Kittley said. “Two school records. Two personal bests.”

Fresno State senior Sierra Jackson threw a meet-record 215-11, and Frank and the throwers right behind her in fourth, fifth and sixth all threw personal bests.

“It’s the most unbelievable discus I’ve ever seen,” Kittley said. “In NCAA history, that was the best competition. It may sound like bad to get third place, but I was so proud of her, nearly throwing 208 feet, just what a great competitor she’s been for us.”

The Red Raiders’ other points came from a pair of fifth-place finishes, by sophomore Temitope Adeshina in the high jump (6-1 1/2) and by senior Victoria Gorlova in the triple jump (wind-legal 44-4 3/4).

Fifth is the lowest Adeshina’s finished in four career appearances at NCAA meets. As a freshman last year, she was fourth at the NCAA indoor, third at the outdoor, and this year she won the title at the NCAA indoor.

Had each Tech athlete competing in Eugene finished exactly as she was ranked going in, the Red Raiders would have scored 27 points, which would have been good for eighth.

Tech’s other entrants Saturday were Tamiah Washington, who got 10th in the triple jump with a mark of 42-10 1/4 into a slight negative wind, and Zoe Burleson, who placed 13th in the discus with a throw of 183-2.

“I felt bad for Temitope and for Victoria and Tamiah,” Kittley said. “They just didn’t have their best day. They weren’t bad. They just weren’t great, and you had to be great today. If we’d have gotten just two to three to four more points out of each one of them, we would have been sixth or so in the country.”

Tech had five entries who competed Thursday and failed to advance to Saturday, led by Fanny Arendt, who was 11th in the 800 meters (2 minutes, 3.13 seconds). In the 100-meter hurdles, Destiny Smith was 14th in 13.18 and Tonie-Ann Forbes was 18th in 13.37, both wind-legal times.

In the 1,600-meter relay, Arendt, Mekenze Kelley, Mercy Umoibang and Vanessa Balde were 20th in 3:35.47.

The Tech women’s top team finishes at the NCAA outdoor were fifth place in 2008, seventh place in both 2022 and 2024 and 10th in 2007. The program’s highest point totals at the outdoor were 36 in 2022 and 32 in 2008.

Arendt, Smith, Washington and Burleson achieved second-team All-America status.

“We got several All-Americans today and scored 22 points,” Kittley said. “That’s not bad. It’s terrible when you feel like 12th is not good, but it’s really good.”



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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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