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#ncaa eugene 2022
beatrack92 · 1 year
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Anna Hall (Florida)
2022 NCAA Championships (Eugene)
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mydaddywiki · 3 months
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Gene Deckerhoff
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Physique: Average Build Height: 5'9"
Emerson Eugene “Gene” Deckerhoff, Jr. (born May 2, 1945) is the radio play-by-play announcer of the NFL's Tampa Bay Buccaneers, a post he has held since 1989. He also served as the longtime voice of the Florida State Seminoles, calling games for the football, men's basketball, and baseball teams. Deckerhoff announced his retirement from FSU broadcasts following the football team's 2022 spring game. He also voices the P.A. announcer for EA Sports Madden NFL, NCAA Football, and Arena Football games.
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Obviously he has a cute, sexy body but the main attraction was his face. Very gentle looking. Sweet. Almost too innocent and cute looking to make sexual comments about. Almost. And that voice… well, he wasn't the voice of Florida State Seminoles and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for nothing. Looks like he lose some weight, but mmm… I wouldn’t kick him out of my bed.
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Deckerhoff, a Jacksonville native, has been married for over 57 years and they have three sons and six grandchildren. In the off-season, Gene enjoys traveling with his family, woodworking, photography and cooking. There isn't much else I can say about him. He's adorable and I'd love to fuck him.
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weekinsports · 1 year
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Player Profile - Dylan Crews
With the MLB Draft coming up on July 9th, let's take a look at potential #1 overall pick, Dylan Crews. Born in 2002 in Florida, Crews quickly showed off his potential. He played for the USA Baseball 14U team and their 18U team that won a gold medal. Crews attended Lake Mary High School, where he played Varsity Baseball for four years and was considered a top MLB Prospect at the time. However, he withdrew his name from the draft after high school and announced his full commitment to play baseball at Louisiana State University. Crews immediately started at Right Field for LSU as a freshman in 2021. In his freshman season, Crews slugged at an astounding rate, batting .362 with 18 home runs, which set a record for the most home runs ever hit by an LSU freshman. In addition, he was named National Freshman of the Year by Perfect Game. After the 2021 season, Crews switched to Center Field and continued to play at a high level, earning Co-SEC Player of the Year in 2022 while hitting .349 with 22 home runs. In his final season with LSU in 2023, Crews led LSU to their 7th College World Series Title, batting .426 with 18 homers and winning the Golden Spikes Award given to the nation's best college baseball player. Crews is expected to make an immediate impact on the team that selects him, as he has exceptional speed, power, and hitting.
Crews has been described by many scouts as a five-tool player, which is very rare. A five-tool player excels at hitting for average, hitting for power, base running, throwing, and fielding. Crews’ main weakness is his high whiff percentage on changeups and sliders. However, Crews still had a very high average on both of those types of pitches.
Although he is likely the most talented player in the draft, Crews reportedly is not interested in being selected first overall to the Pirates. Crews and his agent are asking for a record-breaking $10 million signing bonus, which would surpass the $8.42 million bonus that was given to Spencer Torkelson in 2020. One potential reason why Crews and his agent might be asking for such a high bonus is to be rejected by the Pirates so that he can then be chosen by the Nationals. Joe Doyle of Future Star Series has stated that Crews "fancies the idea of playing in Washington” instead of Pittsburgh. Crews and his agent have “purportedly thrown gaudy signing bonus demands at the Pirates" to try and get Crews to be selected with the #2 overall pick to the Washington Nationals.
List of Awards: 2021 LSWA Louisiana Freshman of the Year, 2021 ABCA All-South Region First Team, 2021 Freshman All-SEC, 2021 Second-Team All-SEC, 2021 NCAA Eugene Regional All-Tournament Team, 2021 U.S. Collegiate National Team Member, 2021 First-Team Freshman All-American (Collegiate Baseball, D1 Baseball, NCBWA), 2021 Third-Team All-American (NCBWA, ABCA), 2021 Second-Team All-American (Perfect Game, D1 Baseball), 2021 Perfect Game National Freshman of the Year, 2022 U.S. Collegiate National Team Member, 2022 LSWA Hitter of the Year, 2022 NCAA Hattiesburg Regional All-Tournament Team, 2022 First-Team ABCA All-South Region, 2022 SEC Community Service Team, 2022 SEC All-Defensive Team, 2022 First-Team All-SEC, 2022 Golden Spikes Award Semifinalist, 2022 SEC Co-Player of the Year, 2022 Consensus First-Team All-American, 2023 SEC Community Service Team, 2023 SEC Academic Honor Roll, 2023 ABCA Gold Glove Team, 2023 SEC All-Defensive Team, 2023 First-Team All-SEC, 2023 SEC Player of the Year, 2023 SEC Male Athlete of the Year, 2023 NCAA Regional All-Tournament Team, 2023 College World Series All-Tournament Team, 2023 Consensus First-Team All-American, 2023 Golden Spikes Award Winner
Height, Weight, Age: 6’0”, 205 lbs, 21 years old
Citations: https://lsusports.net/sports/bsb/roster/player/dylan-crews/
https://syndication.bleacherreport.com/amp/10081911-mlb-rumors-dylan-crews-eying-record-breaking-10m-bonus-amid-pirates-nationals-buzz.amp.html
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hispeedtrackclub · 2 years
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The 2022 NCAA outdoor track and field championships are June 8-11, 2022. Both the men's and women's championships are held simultaneously. The 2022 NCAA outdoor track and field championships will be held at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. It will be the 14th time the outdoor championships have been held in Oregon and the second time held at the newly-renovated Hayward Field (at Hayward Field) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cgnj9ZDLTb_/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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vaultermagazine · 3 years
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February 2022 Jimmy Issue of Vaulter Magazine
February 2022 Jimmy Issue of Vaulter Magazine
Pole vault is getting heated as we head into the indoor season for high school and college. Some pro vaulters are out getting some new marks, and the diamond league meets are underway. In June we have the NCAA outdoor meet and July we will attend the World Outdoor meet in Eugene, Oregon. This will be a busy year for the magazine and our staff of photographers and writers. We’ve solicited more…
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atletasudando · 3 years
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El gran momento de la vallista venezolana Yoveinny Mota
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Prensa: Fed. Venezolana Yoveinny Mota siente que está viviendo un sueño, luego del extraordinario comienzo de temporada que la tiene al borde de la clasificación olímpica en 100 m con vallas y a dos centésimas del récord suramericano sub23. Nada más real que los progresos que este sábado dieron lugar a la plusmarca nacional, el 12.95 registrado en el LSU Invitational de Baton Rouge.“Estoy muy contenta por mi actuación de hoy (el sábado), pero no satisfecha”, comentó Mota una vez concluida la competencia. “El trabajo no ha terminado, ahora más que nunca hay que seguir enfocada y seguir trabajando para lograr lo que quiero. Tener todos los récords nacionales en las vallas cortas en Venezuela me hace sentir muy bien. Voy a seguir trabajando para lograr lo que quiero”. Efectivamente, a sus 20 años, Yoveinny posee los récords nacionales de 60 m con vallas en pista cubierta en las categorías juvenil (8.39), sub23 y adulto (8.14), y de 100 m con vallas al aire libre menor (13.18), junior (13.25), sub23 y adulto (12.95). Adicionalmente, ha bajado tres veces este año su marca personal de 200 m, para dejarla en 23.23, un registro que la ha sorprendido a ella también: “Es algo que no me esperaba porque no me gusta correr esa prueba, lo hago porque mi entrenador me insiste en que me ayuda a mejorar el 100. Con el 23.23 me pasa igual: estoy contenta pero no satisfecha, sé que puedo correr mejor”. Mejorar es un lema de vida para Yoveinny desde que se integró a los famosos Razorbacks, el equipo de atletismo de la Universidad de Arkansas, la segunda más ganadora en la historia de la NCAA, y por eso asegura que no siente ansiedad en su búsqueda de la marca mínima para los Juegos Olímpicos de Tokio 2020, de la que la separan apenas 11 centésimas de segundo. “La verdad no me enfoco en lograr la marca olímpica, porque trato de disfrutar mi carrera lo más que puedo, en cada competencia trato de ver la parte positiva y la parte negativa. Eso va a salir solo, la verdad que yo no me apuro porque cuando tú estás segura de lo que has trabajado en la pista, sabes muy bien que grandes cosas se vienen. Así es como yo me siento: siento que estoy dejando la vida en los entrenamientos, pero cada vez que voy a la pista veo un resultado. Porque yo no vea en este momento 12.84 en la pizarra no me voy a poner triste o voy a perder el enfoque. Voy a seguir trabajando porque sé que eso va a llegar”. La temporada de Yoveinny Mota le brindará al menos tres oportunidades más de registrar el ansiado crono. El próximo fin de semana correrá en el Arkansas Twilight, pero no está segura de que los 100 m con vallas estén en su programa. Sí lo estarán en el Campeonato de la Conferencia Sureste (SEC), los Regionales y los Nacionales de la NCAA, que se realizaran del 9 al 12 de junio en el Hayward Field de Eugene, sede de los Trials que definirán al equipo olímpico estadounidense y del próximo Mundial de Atletismo Oregon 2022. “Estoy viviendo un sueño, ojalá eso hubiera pasado en mi país. No podría describir lo que es esto: la atención, la logística, el trato, todo. Tengo el mejor entrenador del mundo para mí, los mejores fisioterapeutas, todo es increíble” .En ese estado de ánimo, y en su mejor momento deportivo, así terminará Yoveinny Mota la ruta hacia Tokio 2020 Read the full article
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junker-town · 7 years
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What we know so far about the NHL deciding to forgo the 2018 Winter Olympics
The NHL’s bombshell decision on Pyeongchang leaves more questions than answers.
The NHL announced on Monday that they will not be participating in the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang. The writing’s been on the wall for months now with each stalled negotiation, but the league finally pulled the plug just a week before the end of the 2017-18 season.
Yet, this announcement has brought up a lot more questions than answers. We’ve known for awhile now that the Olympics were in doubt. Now that they’re off the table, we’re in a bit of a holding pattern. No one really knows what’s going to happen to the ever-growing list of players who want to go, or what this means for the future of the NHL with the Olympics.
You’ve likely got questions. Probably a lot of them. We’re just as clueless as you, but let’s try to figure it out together, shall we?
What will this decision mean for the players who want to go and their owners who may or many not support them?
Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports
The biggest question mark of them all with this decision is what will the players do? There’s been an ever-growing list of NHL players that have spoken out in support of professionals attending the Olympics. They include: Alex Ovechkin, Jonathan Toews, Connor McDavid, just to name a few.
Now that the Olympics ship has sailed officially for the NHL, that puts players and owners in a rough spot. Capitals owner Ted Leonsis said he supports Ovechkin’s decision to go play for Team Russia. Players like Erik Karlsson will have a rougher time, however, as Senators’ owner Eugene Melnyk would only have allowed the Ottawa defenseman to go if he was playing for Team Canada.
Just after the news broke, the NHL sent out a memo that teams are not allowed to comment on individual player-by-player cases and that the league will “deal with it”. There’s no word either on whether there will be an NHL-wide mandate on cases like Ovechkin or if they’ll let the clubs handle their own players.
So, what happens if some players do go?
Photo by Tom Szczerbowski/Getty Images
No one knows what the penalty would be for players who do defy the NHL and head to Pyeongchang in the middle of the 2017-18 season. It could range from fines — for the players themselves and/or the owners — to suspensions, much like how players sit out a game if they miss the All-Star Game.
And if players do get “permission” from either the league or their owner, will the national teams even accept them? The European teams might, and Russia no doubt will, but the catch is a bit more for the United States and Canada. The NHL has the most sway over Team USA and Team Canada as the countries are the league’s center of power, and it’s not unreasonable to wonder if the league would attempt to come down on the national teams as well.
Where will the players come from?
Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports
There will more than likely be a few NHL players to make the trip to Pyeongchang, but the majority of the players will likely come from the collegiate level like they used to. But that throws a whole new dimension into the mix, as college kids would have to forgo two and a half weeks of their school schedule in mid-February. Add that in with the run up to the NCAA tournament in March and you’ve got a lot of wrinkles to be ironed out within 10 months.
Also in play are the Canadian major junior leagues, but mid-February also brings challenges. Much like the NCAA, the month of February is the run up to the finals for each of the three leagues in the CHL before the league-wide championship in May.
It’s also uncertain if the AHL counts under the NHL’s restriction, but it’s unlikely considering the players are under NHL contracts.
What does this mean for future NHL participation in the Olympics?
Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images
The knee-jerk reaction would be to question the league’s involvement with the Olympics in the foreseeable future. I know I did, and it’s a valid point.
The NHL’s talks with the International Olympic Committee clearly have been stalled for months. Just take a look at these few sentences from the NHL’s statement on the matter:
"A number of months have now passed and no meaningful dialogue has materialized. Instead, the IOC has now expressed the position that the NHL's participation in Beijing in 2022 is conditioned on our participation in South Korea in 2018.”
In the past, the league has made it clear that their real driving force in agreeing to a 2018 Winter Olympics was to get to Beijing in 2022. The NHL has wanted to put a foothold in there for years, and the announcement just last week that the Kings and Canucks would be playing two preseason games there only confirms it.
So, why would they risk boxing themselves out of 2022? The Olympics aren’t some pick and choose buffet where the NHL only goes when it benefits them alone. According to TSN’s Darren Dreger, the league doesn’t fear they won’t get a seat at the 2022 Olympic table.
There’s good reason for it too. Amateur hockey players won’t net the Olympics a lot of money and the NHL will be more inclined to meet the IOC’s demands before Beijing.
Is there anything else we need to know?
John E. Sokolowski-USA TODAY Sports
NBC is “disappointed” with the NHL for forgoing the Olympics. It’s good to remember that NBC holds the NHL’s national television rights and the Olympic television rights.
The lack of NHL participation also is a big boost to the KHL, who could see Russian players return next season to get a shot at the Olympics.
Current NHL players aren’t being silent about the news either. Henrik Lundqvist has tweeted his disappointment. Sharks defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic also put out a cryptic picture of the Pyeongchang Olympic logo on his Twitter account. It’s likely many more NHL players will express their displeasure with the league in the coming days.
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beatrack92 · 1 year
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Jadyn Mays (Oregon)
2022 NCAA Championships (Eugene)
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beatrack92 · 1 year
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Julia Fixsen (Virginia Tech)
2022 NCAA Championships (Eugene)
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beatrack92 · 1 year
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Courtney Wayment (BYU)
2022 NCAA Championships (Eugene)
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beatrack92 · 2 years
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Kayla Sweeney (Coastal Carolina)
2022 NCAA Championships (Eugene)
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beatrack92 · 2 years
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Jasmine Moore (Florida)
2022 NCAA Championships (Eugene)
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beatrack92 · 2 years
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Anna Hall (Florida)
2022 NCAA Championships (Eugene)
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beatrack92 · 2 years
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Anna Hall (Florida)
2022 NCAA Championships (Eugene)
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beatrack92 · 2 years
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Nicola Ader (Nevada)
2022 NCAA Championships (Eugene)
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beatrack92 · 2 years
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Rachel Baxter (Virginia Tech)
2022 NCAA Championships (Eugene)
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