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College of Idaho beats Oklahoma Wesleyan 93-65 for its 2nd NAIA championship in 3 years

College of Idaho beats Oklahoma Wesleyan 93-65 for its 2nd NAIA championship in 3 years

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Samaje Morgan scored a season-high 28 points, Dougie Peoples had 21 points and five 3-pointers, and No. 1 seed College of Idaho beat seventh-seeded Oklahoma Wesleyan 93-65 on Tuesday night to claim its second NAIA championship in three years.
College of Idaho (35-2) won the program's third national title, also securing the NAIA Division II championship in 1996 and a D-I title in 2023. The Yotes lost in the Fab Four last season.
Oklahoma Wesleyan (28-8) also won a NAIA D-II championship in 2009.
Johnny Radford made a 3-pointer on back-to-back possessions to give the College of Idaho a 33-18 midway through the first half. The Yotes made 12 of their opening 15 shots, including 8 of 10 from 3-point range, while OKWU was 7 of 17 overall.
Peoples finished the first half with 17 points and five 3-pointers, and Morgan added 12 points as the College of Idaho led 49-29. The Yotes were 11 of 17 from 3-point range, while OKWU went 11 of 32 overall including 1 of 6 from distance.
It was the Yotes' second straight title game with a large lead, after nearly blowing a 23-point second-half advantage against Indiana Tech two years ago.
The Yotes were determined not to let another second-half lead evaporate against OKWU, which was not able to reduce its deficit below 16 points the entire second half.
Radford finished with 12 points for the College of Idaho and Tyler Robinett added 10. The Yotes finished 16 of 30 from behind the arc.
Nick Bene and Jaden Lietzke each scored 15 points for Oklahoma Wesleyan. Dylan Phillip, who scored a team-high 24 points on Monday, finished with five points in 19 minutes.

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Servite's ‘Fab Four' show their blazing speed at state track and field prelims
Servite's ‘Fab Four' show their blazing speed at state track and field prelims

Los Angeles Times

time31-05-2025

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Servite's ‘Fab Four' show their blazing speed at state track and field prelims

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time25-05-2025

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Nadal sheds tears as Paris pays homage to King of Clay

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Yahoo

time12-05-2025

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And so another of the great emperors of cricket abdicates. News of Virat Kohli's retirement arrived on Monday morning not with the fanfare and ceremony that might usually accompany such an announcement but with a conflicting sigh of expectation and disappointment, an acknowledgement that the end had long been near. There was to be no stage-managed farewell like that enjoyed by Sachin Tendulkar, no last Indian summer in England or valedictory bow, just a few days of speculation and a social media statement to proclaim the end of an era. For the long arm of Father Time taps on the shoulder of even the greats of the game. Into Test retirement Kohli quickly follows Rohit Sharma, more than 13,500 runs vanishing from their top order ahead of a tour of England in a flash during the Indian Premier League (IPL) hiatus. 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Between 2016 and 2018, Kohli made 3,596 runs at an average of nearly 67, with 14 hundreds in 58 innings. It was an extended peak comparable to any of those enjoyed by the rest of the so-called 'Fab Four'. If his fluctuating fortunes in the last few years have seen Kohli slip away statistically from Joe Root, Kane Williamson and Steve Smith, he was once very much their rival, each man unique in style but with a shared excellence. There was much to ridicule in Kohli's idiosyncrasies: the widened eyes and piercing glare at any bowler who dared dismiss him; the dibbly-dobbly seam bowled off the wrong foot; the win-at-all-costs mentality that changed the face of his nation's cricketing culture. Having shouldered the burdens of adulation and admiration at his peak, he soaked up the wrath and rage as his form ebbed, never bowing or breaking under the strain even as he was mocked or maligned. If he could be tough on his team, he was tougher on himself, demanding the highest of standards. If MS Dhoni was a laconic leader who steered Indian cricket into the modern age, Kohli's cult of personality compelled it to new heights. His 68 Tests as captain included 40 wins and developed a new pace cartel capable of going toe-to-toe with the best attacks of the age. Changing pitches and a changing world in recent years have curled the corners of a portrait of greatness, but my oh my could he play. The twin tons at Adelaide that announced his arrival echoed over a decade in which the balance of cricketing power shifted. Under his premiership, India went from a sometimes-submissive side to a supreme team crafted in the image of their leader, never backing down from a challenge, never giving an inch. There were double hundreds in Mumbai, against England, and Pune, against South Africa, a twirl of the pestle as he ground ill-matched attacks to dust. Even as his magisterial air of authority slipped, there were glimpses of the golden days – in what proved his final series there was a hundred at Perth, fading strains played more carefully by ageing, anxious fingers but the mellifluous chords still found, still sounding sweet. But the great guitarist has strummed his last tune in the arena that counts, now able to savour his cricketing dotage without the mental toil and turmoil that being Indian cricket's rock star brings. Perhaps there will be several more IPL seasons to come, like a svelter Elvis in his Las Vegas residency squeezed until the last rupee drops in the name of corporate and commercial success. Or perhaps a quixotic hope is that, having moved his family to London, Kohli will get the county contract he has long craved, a virtuoso leaving behind the bigger stages to play the concert halls and caverns out of his sheer love of his art. 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