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Women’s Track and Field Sets Tone for NCAA’s With Fantastic Day at MIT Final Qualifier

Story Links CAMBRIDGE, MA (May 15, 2025) – The Tufts University women’s track and field team went all-in at the M.I.T. Final Qualifier with a fantastic performance to lead into the NCAA Division III  Championships next weekend. Jackie Wells landed the biggest performance of the day by breaking the program record […]

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CAMBRIDGE, MA (May 15, 2025) – The Tufts University women’s track and field team went all-in at the M.I.T. Final Qualifier with a fantastic performance to lead into the NCAA Division III  Championships next weekend.

Jackie Wells landed the biggest performance of the day by breaking the program record in the javelin throw. Her career best mark of 42.41 (139′ 1″) broke the previous program record by over nine inches and earned her first place among a field of Division I, II and III opponents.

Makayla Moriarty brought home a fantastic result in the 200m dash, taking fifth place in a competitive field with a new personal best time of 24.95. It was a top mark in the NCAA Division III and just three tenths of a second off of the Tufts program record.

Arielle Chechile set the third best time in Tufts history with a third place finish in the 400m hurdles. Her personal best time of 1:00.64 was just a couple of seconds off of the program record.

Harper Meek brought home a win in the high jump. Her first place mark of 1.65m was just two centimeters off of her personal best, and was a fitting end to her time with the Jumbos. 

Elysse Cumberland continued to shine as she took third place in the long jump. Her mark of 5.70m was enough to earn her a podium among the competitive field of athletes from all levels of the NCAA.

Ceci LaBarge also broke her personal record, tossing a career best hammer throw of 50.12m. It was an improvement of exactly 90 cm, and earned her fifth place in the event. 

The Jumbos will now shift gears to the final meet of the season as they head to Geneva, Ohio for the 2025 NCAA Division III Women’s Outdoor Track and FIeld Championships.

 

–JUMBOS–



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Central York boys’ volleyball sweeps Seneca Valley in PIAA playoff showdown

The Panthers made quick work of the Raiders in a first-round matchup of teams ranked among the state’s best. Ryan Vandersloot  |  For The York Dispatch York Suburban student lives out her childhood dream of wrestling York Suburban wrestler Angela Imorhoa wrestles to claim her spot at the state level tournament in March at the […]

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The Panthers made quick work of the Raiders in a first-round matchup of teams ranked among the state’s best.

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EMIGSVILLE — It was an inevitable truth that one of the best boys’ volleyball teams in the state of Pennsylvania this spring would be suffering a season-ending defeat Tuesday evening.

Fortunately for Central York, the Panthers weren’t that team.

Hosting District 7 (WPIAL) runner-up Seneca Valley in the first round of the PIAA Class 3A playoffs, Central wasted little time taking the upper hand. A stout block, a scrappy defense and a heavy dose of outside hitters Patrick Siewert and John He got the District 3 runners-up off to a good start. While the visiting Raiders — who had a five-plus hour drive from north of Pittsburgh to York — were certainly no pushovers, the visitors were a beat behind throughout the night.

In just over an hour and 15 minutes, the Panthers completed an impressive 25-19, 25-20, 25-23 victory to punch their ticket to the state quarterfinals for the third year in a row.

“We did a lot of film review on (Seneca Valley),” said Siewert, who finished with 10 kills, six digs and two blocks. “We knew where their middles were going to be and they were both very good. They got most of their sets on film, and to be able to adjust to that and get some key blocks, especially in the second and third sets, was huge for us.”

He, a York-Adams League first team all-star this year after earning Player of the Year honors in 2024, showcased his hitting, defensive and service games throughout the contest. He scored a handful of big points in Sets 1 and 2 to set the stage for what would be a very satisfying sweep.

He, however, pointed out that the Raiders, who entered the contest ranked No. 3 in Class 3A by the Pennsylvania Volleyball Coaches Association — Central was ranked No. 5 — helped out with some sloppy play at times.

“They made a bunch of service errors, which helped us,” said He, who finished with 18 kills and eight digs. “That gave us a lot of momentum and it just got us ahead.”

The Seneca Valley defense did start to find an adjustment to He on the outside as the match progressed. Balls that were hitting the floor in Sets 1 and 2 were getting tipped or dug up in Set 3; on one play in particular, He saw a pair of rolls saved by fingertips to keep the point alive for the Raiders.

As He pointed out, those saves only delayed the inevitable.

“I was so glad that we still got that point,” He said with a smile.

The roll, a soft touch over a block that often forces the defense to scramble, has been a nifty add to He’s high-powered attack. Like a changeup in baseball, a well-timed roll can leave opponents shaking their heads when it works.

“The defense is usually back on their heels when you’re taking big swings and swinging hard,” He said. “(The roll) kind of changes things up and makes them have to move.”

While the Raiders are headed home for the season, the Panthers (17-3) will be moving on to Saturday’s quarterfinals against District 1 runner-up Spring-Ford. The location and time have yet to be determined.

Spring-Ford, which defeated District 12 champ Northeast on Tuesday afternoon, is a team the Panthers haven’t seen live in person. That may not be a bad thing, according to Siewert.

“We haven’t played (Seneca Valley) the entire year, so it was kind of questionable what was going to come at us,” Siewert said. “We didn’t know if they were going to switch things around. We’re going to have to prepare to adjust for Spring-Ford, who we haven’t seen all year either. But they’re in the PIAA quarterfinals, so we know that they’re going to be a very tough team.”

Setter Lance Shaffer dished out 32 assists to go with eight digs, while Aden Thompson had seven kills and four blocks from the middle for the Panthers.



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Loaded Schedule Awaits Men’s Water Polo in 2025

The Santa Clara University men’s water polo team has announced its challenging 2025 schedule, featuring 11 home games and six West Coast Conference (WCC) matchups. The Broncos will compete against top rivals, including Pacific and Pepperdine, while also hosting prominent non-conference games against ranked teams like UC Davis and Stanford. The season opens on August […]

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The Santa Clara University men’s water polo team has announced its challenging 2025 schedule, featuring 11 home games and six West Coast Conference (WCC) matchups. The Broncos will compete against top rivals, including Pacific and Pepperdine, while also hosting prominent non-conference games against ranked teams like UC Davis and Stanford. The season opens on August 30 with two matches and includes participation in high-profile tournaments, including the Princeton Invitational and the MPSF Invite. Coach Keith Wilbur emphasizes the daunting nature of this season’s schedule, which he describes as their toughest yet. The WCC Tournament will take place from November 21-23, culminating with the NCAA Championship at Stanford in December.

By the Numbers

  • 11 home games scheduled for 2025.
  • 3 marquee tournaments planned, including the annual Julian Fraser Memorial tournament.

State of Play

  • Coach Keith Wilbur highlights the competition strength as unprecedented for the program.
  • Broncos will face top-ranked teams in critical early season matchups.

What’s Next

As they prepare for the season, the team will focus on strategic training to meet the elevated competition level. Upcoming games are anticipated to be a significant benchmark for growth and performance assessment.

Bottom Line

The 2025 season’s loaded schedule presents an opportunity for Santa Clara to test its mettle against top-tier opponents and elevate the program’s profile nationally.





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Holland Christian volleyball wins five-set comeback in quarters

SPARTA – Sam VandeWege began the game sitting on the bench. But the Holland Christian junior ended the game with his teammates chanting “MVP! MVP!” As he walked off the court. “I didn’t play the first two (games today),” said VandeWege, who was out for three weeks with a high-ankle sprain. “Sitting on the bench […]

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SPARTA – Sam VandeWege began the game sitting on the bench. But the Holland Christian junior ended the game with his teammates chanting “MVP! MVP!” As he walked off the court.

“I didn’t play the first two (games today),” said VandeWege, who was out for three weeks with a high-ankle sprain. “Sitting on the bench the past three postseason games in the tournament, it was so stressful for me. It felt good to play again and be helpful.”

Holland Christian rallied to beat Grand Rapids Christian in five games in a Division 2 boys volleyball state quarterfinal on Tuesday at Sparta High School. 

“I’m really proud of how the team stepped up when it mattered,” Holland Christian coach Mark Walraven said. “We’ve struggled with slow starts all season and today was no different. They dug deep.”

Holland Christian advances to the state semifinals at 1 p.m. on Friday at Hudsonville. The state title game is Saturday at 1 p.m. also at Hudsonville.

When the Maroons lost the first two games 25-21 and 25-19 on Tuesday, they had to do something or their season would be over. 

So Coach Walraven looked down his bench and asked VandeWege if he could play.

“He didn’t warm up much because we weren’t sure if we were going to play him,” Walraven said. “We weren’t going to use him, but we were falling behind. He’s obviously a big contributor to the team. He did a great job and made a difference for us.”

VandeWege was exited to yank off his warmup and get on the court.

“Coach asked me If I could play,” he said. “I looked back at my parents and they said ‘go for it!’ If my parents were good with it then I was gonna play for my team.”

He was the spark the Maroons needed. They would rally to win the next two games 25-11 and 25-18 to force a fifth game.

“This was the first Game 5 of the year for us,” senior Grant VanderZee said. “The first two sets were a killer. We were down on ourselves. Once the ball started to go down we took a big lead in the third. It was a good rally and we came out with the win.”

VanderZee, who was named the state’s first-ever Mr. Volleyball Award winner last week, had a booming spike to clinch the win in the fifth game.

“A lot of people knew it was gonna go to me,” he said. “It means a lot. We’ve got one of the best setters in the state in Spencer Walraven.”

VanderZee isn’t going to play college volleyball. He plans to just be a student when he heads to Grand Canyon University in Phoenix. But he’s heard the school might start a beach volleyball team. And he plans to try out.

VandeWege had to laugh when he was shaking hands with Grand Rapids Christian after the game.

“I play club volleyball with Jack (Scholten),” he said of the Eagles sophomore. “When I was going through the hand-shake line, they told me they were disappointed that I came in for that third game.”



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2025 Montana All-Star Volleyball Classic rosters

BILLINGS — Organizers believe this year’s Midland Roundtable Montana All-Star Volleyball Classic is going to be the best yet. Now in its fourth year, the match will be played on a Friday as a standalone event for the first time. Previously the all-star volleyball match was played on a Saturday before the Montana-Wyoming All-Star boys and […]

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BILLINGS — Organizers believe this year’s Midland Roundtable Montana All-Star Volleyball Classic is going to be the best yet.

Now in its fourth year, the match will be played on a Friday as a standalone event for the first time. Previously the all-star volleyball match was played on a Saturday before the Montana-Wyoming All-Star boys and girls basketball games.

This year’s all-star volleyball match, sponsored by Scheels, is Friday, June 13, at 6 p.m. at Lockwood High School. Warm-ups begin at 5:30 p.m.

“I think it was a great idea for the fact that I think it’s a long time for people to come to the games, when it starts at 3 o’clock and ends at 10 o’clock,” said the volleyball all-star chairperson, Laurie Kelly of volleyball being showcased on Friday. “That’s kind of hard for people to be there that long.”

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Hardin volleyball vs. Billings Central

Hardin’s Taiya Guptill jumps and cheers during a match against Billings Central at Hardin High School on Oct. 10, 2024. Guptill will be playing for the Red team in this year’s Midland Roundtable Montana All-Star Volleyball Classic Friday, June 13, at the Lockwood High School gym at 6 p.m. 




On Tuesday, the Roundtable announced the rosters for the all-star match. The players selected to participate were previously announced in early April. For the 2024 game, it was decided to first select the players and then later to divide the all-stars into two balanced squads instead of an East vs. West format as was previously used.

A committee divided the 18 graduating high school seniors from the Class of 2025 into two teams evenly by position. Aubrey Beaumont of Rocky Mountain College will lead the Blue team and Maureen Boyle of Carroll College will be the head coach of the Red team.

“Most of our players are multi-talented and can play most every position,” said Kelly.

Last year, Boyle coached the Red team to victory, winning by scores of 25-16, 23-25, 27-25, 25-23.

All 18 players selected to participate in the all-star volleyball match will be playing college volleyball. Among those is Bozeman Gallatin’s Cadence Lundgren, a member of the Blue team, who earned the 2024-25 Gatorade Montana Volleyball Player of the Year award and who will be attending Kansas State University.

“Looking at this group and looking how talented they are, and where they are all going, is pretty impressive,” said Kelly.


Class of 2025 college recruit tracker

Over 425 Montanans in the class of 2025 have committed to or signed with college athletic programs so far.

Players will report on Thursday, June 12, and practice at the Lockwood High School gym later that night.

“They’ll only have one practice this year,” said Kelly. “But they are all in club volleyball. They all just finished in May playing club volleyball. So, they’ve practiced and their last game wasn’t in November. They’re ready to go.”

This year, a free clinic for youth players was also added to the lineup. The clinic, which filled up fast, will be from 3:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m. prior to the all-star match. The All-Star players and coaching staff will be conducting the clinic. The campers will receive free admission to the match.

“This is a chance for our All-Stars to give back to the young players in the area and to share the joy of the game and remember their journey,” said Kelly. “It started for them in the same way — in a gym with their role models and coaches.”

Midland Roundtable Montana All-Star Volleyball Classic

Friday, June 13, 6 p.m.

At Lockwood High School gym

Blue team: Addie Falls Down, S, Billings Senior, Montana State-Northern; Avaree Thompson, DS, Billings Senior, Dickinson State University; Taylor Speake, DS, Bozeman Gallatin, Central Washington University; Sofia Kimmel, OH, Bozeman, Carroll College; Juliana McFarland, OH, Belgrade, Dordt University; Jaycee Cleveland, S, Butte, Dickinson State University; Claire Hoadley, MH, Lone Peak, Rocky Mountain College; Ellie Reinertson, RSH, Gardiner, Montana Tech; Cadence Lundgren, MH, Bozeman Gallatin, Kansas State University. Coach: Aubrey Beaumont, Rocky Mountain College.

Red team: Ella Goeltz, DS, Florence, University of Providence; Taiya Guptill, S, Hardin, Miles Community College; Birdie Heuiser, MH, Helena, Carroll College; Kennedie Noseep, DS, Billings Skyview, Central Wyoming College; Morgan Jones, OH, Bozeman, Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville; Gianna Ruprecht, OH, Columbus, Rocky Mountain College; Hope Gonsioroski, RSH, Baker, Lubbock Christian University; Lauren Fox, S, Bozeman, Carroll College; Nora Dominick, MH, Shields Valley, University of Montana Western. Coach: Maureen Boyle, Carroll College.

Email Gazette Sports Editor John Letasky at john.letasky@406mtsports.com or follow him on X/Twitter at @GazSportsJohnL



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Men’s Water Polo Announces 2025 Schedule

Pepperdine men’s water polo has unveiled its highly anticipated 2025 schedule, which includes nine home matches at Raleigh Runnels Memorial Pool. Head coach Merrill Moses emphasized the tough competition in their upcoming season, with matchups against several top-tier teams, including NCAA defending champions UCLA and runner-up USC. The Waves will kick off their season at […]

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Pepperdine men’s water polo has unveiled its highly anticipated 2025 schedule, which includes nine home matches at Raleigh Runnels Memorial Pool. Head coach Merrill Moses emphasized the tough competition in their upcoming season, with matchups against several top-tier teams, including NCAA defending champions UCLA and runner-up USC. The Waves will kick off their season at the Triton Invite and host big games against Princeton and UC Irvine. The schedule reflects Pepperdine’s commitment to competing in the West Coast Conference (WCC), where they look to shine in their third consecutive year. Support from the local community and fans is highly encouraged throughout the season.

By the Numbers

  • Pepperdine will play nine home games during the 2025 season.
  • The Waves face five of the eight teams from the 2024 NCAA Tournament, showcasing a challenging lineup.

State of Play

  • The season opens at the Triton Invite on August 30-31.
  • Key home matchups include Princeton on October 12 and UC Irvine on November 1.

What’s Next

As the season approaches, the team is focused on preparation for tough early matchups against prestigious programs, which will set the tone for the remainder of the season. The anticipation builds as fans await ticket information for home contests.

Bottom Line

Pepperdine’s ambitious 2025 water polo schedule highlights the team’s goal of competing at the highest level and underscores the importance of community support to enhance the home game experience.





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Oklahoma’s toppled softball dynasty, in context of other college sports

Until Saturday Newsletter 🏈 | This is The Athletic’s college football newsletter. Sign up here to receive Until Saturday directly in your inbox. Today in college football news, the Mrs. and I have been rebuilding our CD collections from scratch … inspired by our kid, who’s started one of her own. CDs are so unbelievably back. […]

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Until Saturday Newsletter 🏈 | This is The Athletic’s college football newsletter. Sign up here to receive Until Saturday directly in your inbox.

Today in college football news, the Mrs. and I have been rebuilding our CD collections from scratch … inspired by our kid, who’s started one of her own. CDs are so unbelievably back.


Dynasties: Oklahoma softball’s place in college history

Yesterday, one of the greatest dynasties in major college sports history saw the end of its current title streak, though we’ll let future seasons determine whether the dynasty itself has run its course.

In the Women’s College World Series semifinals, big-money upstart Texas Tech — which had never won even a conference title in this sport until this season — knocked off four-time reigning champion Oklahoma. On a walkoff, no less. Having spoiled what would have been the third rivalry finale in four years between OU and Texas, the Red Raiders will take the shot themselves. Still plenty of juice, though, since few schools hate Texas more than Tech does. (The best-of-three starts tomorrow night.)

With history’s longest softball title streak now officially dusted, where does it stand in college sports history? Well, since this is college sports, there are about a million ways to answer that. All according to the NCAA’s records:

  • Among all Division I title streaks, the longest was Arkansas’ 12-year run in men’s indoor track and field, beginning in 1984.
  • If we limit it to just DI team sports that draw big crowds (a la modern softball), it’s UCLA basketball hitting seven in a row from 1967 onward.
  • Division I football’s best streak ever was — of course — North Dakota State’s five from 2011 through 2015. (The Bison might have since started yet another run, winning their 10th last season.)
  • In FBS football, the answer would be … a big mess. The last widely recognized three-peat was 1930s Minnesota, while I’d argue the only consensus-ish streak of five belonged to 1880s Yale.
  • If we include every sport in every level of the NCAA, then hang on to your freaking hats, because Ohio’s Kenyon College had the two longest ever: 31 and 17 in a row for its men’s and women’s swimming and diving programs, both lasting from the 1980s and into the 2000s.
  • As for the longest current streak, it belongs to Middlebury College’s Division III field hockey campaign, now seven years strong. This is the Vermont school’s second Until Saturday mention in 2025. Just setting up shop around here.

Coach Patty Gasso’s softball Sooners didn’t put together a streak long enough to hurdle some of the biggest records in the books, but they also managed to challenge for a fifth straight title despite playing in The Portal And NIL Era. This season, their previous star Jordy Bahl was the DI Player of the Year for her home-state Huskers, and the Texas Tech team that finally took OU down was led by million-dollar ace NiJaree Canady.

(Nobody’s heart is breaking for any SEC power in any sport, but still. It’s reasonable to wonder whether staying on the very top is even harder now. Salute.)


Quick Snaps

🥏 Frisbee emoji? No, it’s a blue chip, you see. Today, Grace Raynor ranks all 25 No. 1 recruits of the 2000s. I can stop selling this link now, because you’ve already clicked it.

💰 Three days ago, it would’ve cost Bill Belichick $10 million to leave his job at North Carolina. As of this week, it’d cost just $1 million. Still hasn’t coached a game yet!

🐂 Jim Leavitt, USF’s founding coach who then led the Bulls to their momentary No. 2 ranking in 2007, left the program on very bad terms in 2010. He’s now joining the athletic department’s hall of fame, alongside late basketball coach Amir Abdur-Rahim.

🧢 Lots of slow starters in recruiting, like Alabama down at No. 45. Not without precedent at this point in the calendar, but still.

  • For teams looking to vault upward in the rankings, look to the hills of … Idaho? Averaging about one blue-chipper per year these days, plus three-stars drawing a lot more attention than they used to.

🎬 “It’s little (stuff) like this. That’s not typical for 3. Watch 8. That’s the stuff I watch this game and go, hmmm … Why aren’t we playing as hard as we usually play? If this was Ohio State, Adon would knock the crap out of him.” — Marcus Freeman with Pete Sampson, explaining Notre Dame‘s loss to NIU while demonstrating how coaches watch film.


We Meet Again: Why the Big Ten is into the auto-bids thing

As we talked about last week, the current “50 million automatic College Football Playoff bids for the Big Ten and SEC, plus scraps for the other powers” plan isn’t necessarily the SEC’s favorite.

As SEC commissioner Greg Sankey has noted, four auto-bids for his league in a 16-team field could actually decrease the SEC’s number of contestants. But … wouldn’t roughly the same be true for the Big Ten? In that case, why would the B1G want this at all?

As Scott Dochterman explains, it all goes back to the exact same thing the Big Ten has been yelling at the sky for nine years now: Its teams play one more conference game per year than the SEC’s or ACC’s do. Scott writes:

“Without uniform scheduling, Big Ten officials are concerned that an open (five automatic bids and 11 at-larges) plan would cause more schools to ease up on their nonconference slates rather than play other power-conference schools; one recently called it a ‘race to the bottom.’”

Hmm. In general, this version of college football’s eternal strength-of-schedule debate has been non-stop since the CFP era began, with everybody saying each offseason that SOS should matter more, but then nobody liking it once the season begins and a three-loss team ranks ahead of a two-loss team.

As for the perpetual Big Ten vs. SEC sub-debate, by any schedule-strength metric, Big Ten and SEC teams annually play schedules that are about as comparable overall as any you’ll find anywhere in such a sprawling sport.

  • In the upcoming season, for instance, Team Rankings judges Texas and Ohio State as having the hardest slates. They even play each other. College Football News has Florida at No. 1, followed by Wisconsin. Bill Connelly’s rankings start with three SEC teams, likewise followed by Wisconsin. In ESPN’s, the easiest schedule in either league is Maryland’s at No. 61 out of 136.
  • To be clear, this disparity does complicate things. Having a longer conference schedule automatically means a larger number of losses to distribute throughout league records, which can make the middle and bottom of that league look weaker than it is. (Then again, in certain years, it can artificially inflate the top.) Regardless, expanding to nine games was not something anyone else forced the Big Ten to do in 2016.

(As always, because it’s impossible to discuss any of this without hearing a specific charge: I’m not an SEC alum. I’m a Conference USA alum who was raised to root for an ACC rival of an SEC team. My list of annoyances with the SEC happens to not include this one, and nobody hoodwinked me into thinking that. I still love you.)

(Top photo: Sarah Phipps / The Oklahoman / USA TODAY NETWORK)



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