logo
IHSAA baseball: See who made 2025 ALL-USA Central Indiana Super Team

IHSAA baseball: See who made 2025 ALL-USA Central Indiana Super Team

Show Caption
Indiana high school baseball season is over.
Meet this year's ALL-USA Central Indiana baseball Super Team, honoring the best of the best Central Indiana.
FIRST TEAM
Eli Bennett, Cathedral
The IU commit batted .394 with 21 runs scored, 34 RBIs, six doubles, four home runs and three triples. On the mound, Bennett went 2-3 with a 3.37 ERA and 17 strikeouts over 18⅔ innings.
Ben Canada, Guerin Catholic
The sophomore batted .407 with 33 runs scored, 30 RBIs, five doubles, six home runs, one triple and six stolen bases.
Blake Cope, Covenant Christian
Cope batted .446 with 39 runs scored, 20 RBIs, three doubles, nine triples, four home runs and 37 stolen bases.
Tyler Denny, Mooresville
Denny batted .460 with 40 runs scored, 31 RBIs, 11 doubles, eight home runs, two triples and 36 stolen bases.
Hudson DeVaughan, Mooresville
The Alabama commit went 4-0 with a 2.26 ERA and 74 strikeouts over 43⅓ innings. At the plate, DeVaughan batted .227 with two home runs and one double.
Desmond Francis, Park Tudor
The Notre Dame commit batted .404 with 23 runs scored, 15 RBIs, two doubles, two triples, 21 walks to just nine strikeouts and 25 stolen bases. On the mound, Francis had a 2.19 ERA and 45 strikeouts over 38⅓ innings.
Joe Glander, Noblesville
The John A. Logan commit went 4-2 with a 1.29 ERA and 62 strikeouts over 49 innings. At the plate, Glander batted .245 with eight runs scored, three RBIs, one double and one triple.
Nick Godsey, Southport
The Marion County Player of the Year batted .413 with 21 runs scored, 20 RBIs, seven doubles, one triple, one home run and eight stolen bases. On the mound, Godsey went 5-1 with a 2.79 ERA and 102 strikeouts over 52⅔ innings.
Gannon Grant, Center Grove
The Tennessee commit had an 8-0 record with a 2.02 ERA and 58 strikeouts over 55⅓ innings. At the plate, Grant batted .376 with 21 runs scored, 26 RBIs, three doubles, one home run and three stolen bases.
Rigg Mahurin, New Palestine
The Olney Central commit had a 9-2 record with a 1.46 ERA and 89 strikeouts over 67⅓ innings. At the plate, Mahurin batted .352 with 29 runs scored, 13 RBIs, six doubles, one triple, one home run and five stolen bases.
Colin McNeer, Brownsburg
The Wabash Valley commit batted .437 with 21 runs scored, 20 RBIs, five doubles, five home runs, three triples and one stolen base.
Parker Rhodes, Greenfield-Central
The Mississippi State commit went 4-2 with a 1.24 ERA and 88 strikeouts over 45 innings.
Aiden Smith, Shelbyville
The Kentucky commit went 5-1 with a 2.39 ERA and 55 strikeouts over 44 innings. At the plate, Smith batted .413 with 31 runs scored, 24 RBIs, seven doubles, seven home runs, one triple and nine stolen bases.
J.D. Stein, Carmel
The Wake Forest commit batted .333 with 36 runs scored, 20 stolen bases, 12 RBIs, two doubles, one triple and one home run.
Tate Troxell, Guerin Catholic
The Alabama commit had a 1.00 ERA and 100 strikeouts over 56 innings. At the plate, Troxell batted .250 with seven runs scored, 11 RBIs, two doubles and one home run.
SECOND TEAM
Carter Beck, Avon
The Akron commit had a 1-0 record with a 0.93 ERA and 50 strikeouts over 30 innings.
Grayson Betts, Franklin
Betts went 7-1 with a 1.75 ERA and 84 strikeouts over 52 innings. At the plate, Betts batted .241 with 14 RBIs, seven runs scored, two doubles and one home run.
Brendan Boynton, Lawrence North
The Wabash commit batted .403 with 15 runs scored, 10 RBIs, five triples, three doubles and three stolen bases. On the mound, Boynton went 0-1 with a 1.96 ERA and 42 strikeouts over 35⅔ innings.
Trevor Corbett, Noblesville
The Saint Xavier commit batted .368 with 22 runs scored, 18 RBIs, four doubles, three home runs, one triple and four stolen bases. On the mound, Corbett went 2-0 with a 2.94 ERA and 33 strikeouts over 16⅓ innings.
Peyton Dickens, Whiteland
The Houston commit batted .362 with 24 runs scored, 18 RBIs, five home runs, four doubles, three triples and 20 stolen bases. On the mound, Dickens had a 2-2 record with 47 strikeouts over 27⅔ innings.
Huston Dunn, Fishers
The Ball State commit batted .333 with 25 runs scored, 13 RBI, seven doubles, two triples, one home run and nine stolen bases. The shortstop finished with a .940 fielding percentage.
Drake McClurg, Center Grove
The IU commit batted .320 with 44 runs scored, 18 RBIs, seven doubles, four triples, two home runs and 12 stolen bases.
Austin McNabb, Perry Meridian
The Dayton commit went 1-1 with a 2.82 ERA and 59 strikeouts over 39⅔ innings.
Hudson Mills, Lutheran
The junior batted .460 with 40 runs scored, 38 RBIs, six doubles, three triples, seven home runs and seven stolen bases. On the mound, Mills went 5-1 with a 4.20 ERA and 60 strikeouts over 40 innings.
Jacob Morris, New Palestine
The junior batted .427 with 30 runs scored, 26 RBIs, four doubles, four home runs, one triple and 13 stolen bases. On the mound, Morris went 5-1 with a 2.12 ERA and 41 strikeouts over 33 innings.
Drew Nelson, Roncalli
Nelson batted .413 with 28 runs scored, 28 RBIs, five doubles, four home runs, two triples and eight stolen bases. Nelson finished with a .977 fielding percentage.
Wyatt Pennington, Avon
The Evansville commit batted .330 with 30 runs scored, 21 RBIs, eight doubles, three home runs, two doubles and nine stolen bases. On the mound, Pennington went 1-0 with a 3.32 ERA and 38 strikeouts over 25⅓ innings.
Ryan Redding, Lutheran
Redding went 4-1 with a 2.10 ERA and 70 strikeouts over 53⅓ innings. He earned the win for Lutheran's first state title against Kouts.
Braden Shaw, Zionsville
The DePauw commit went 6-1 with a 1.62 ERA and 48 strikeouts over 39 innings.
THIRD TEAM
Josh Bingman, Brebeuf Jesuit
The Southwestern Illinois commit went 5-1 with a 2.45 ERA and 72 strikeouts over 51⅓ innings.
Braeden Burton, Franklin
The IU Southeast commit went 6-1 with a 1.26 ERA and 76 strikeouts over 61⅓ innings.
Luke Cherry, Fishers
The Grace College commit batted .364 with nine runs scored, 15 RBIs, two doubles and one triple.
Luke Collinsworth, Westfield
The senior went 3-2 with a 2.69 ERA and 67 strikeouts over 41⅔ innings.
Bo Cooper, Cathedral
The St. Charles commit batted .349 with 18 RBIs, two runs scored, five doubles, one triple and seven stolen bases. Behind the plate, Cooper had a .980 fielding percentage.
Beckett Doane, Noblesville
The Mississippi State commit had a 4-4 record with 68 strikeouts over 38⅓ innings.
Ethan Dorsey, Cathedral
The John A. Logan commit went 5-1 with a 1.67 ERA with 39 strikeouts over 37⅔ innings.
Mayo Fernandez, Fishers
The Grace College commit batted .390 with 14 runs scored, 16 RBIs, three doubles, one triple and four stolen bases.
Garrett Groce, Danville
The Akron commit went 5-5 with a 2.19 ERA and 71 strikeouts over 44⅔ innings.
Bryce Haney, Triton Central
The Wabash commit went 9-1 with a 1.31 ERA and 94 strikeouts over 59 innings. At the plate, Haney batted .459 with 37 runs scored, 36 RBIs, 10 doubles, four home runs, one triple and four stolen bases.
Tyler Hughes, Zionsville
The junior batted .313 with 24 runs scored, 15 RBIs, six doubles, six triples, one home run and 11 stolen bases.
Jackson Kamp, New Palestine
The Anderson commit batted .311 with 20 runs scored, 26 RBIs, seven doubles, six home runs and one stolen base. Behind the plate, Kamp finished with a .977 fielding percentage.
Owen Lecher, Lutheran
The senior batted .500 with 34 runs scored, 35 RBIs, nine doubles, five home runs and 11 stolen bases. On the mound, Lecher went 1-0 with a 2.68 ERA and 19 strikeouts over 15⅔ innings.
Clayton Lenz, Avon
The junior batted .380 with 26 runs scored, 16 RBIs, eight doubles, two home runs, one triple and 19 stolen bases.
Gavin Lykins, Plainfield
The South Florida commit went 4-2 with a 2.42 ERA and 60 strikeouts over 37⅔ innings. At the plate, Lykins batted .309 with 19 runs scored, 17 RBIs, four doubles, four home runs and nine stolen bases.
Rykin Matthias, North Central
The junior batted .386 with 27 runs scored, 28 RBIs, seven doubles, five home runs, four triples and 18 stolen bases.
Kai Newman, Lapel
The Huntington commit went 7-1 with a 1.42 ERA and 117 strikeouts over 59 innings. At the plate, Newman batted .359 with 28 runs scored, 22 RBIs, seven doubles,
Maalik Perkins, Whiteland
The Ball State commit batted .321 with 28 runs scored, nine RBIs, four doubles, three triples and 41 stolen bases.
Aiden Reynolds, Noblesville
The IU commit batted .309 with 18 runs scored, 19 RBIs, seven doubles, three home runs, one triple and two stolen bases.
Owen Sanders, Fishers
The Saint Xavier commit went 5-1 with a 2.90 ERA and 44 strikeouts over 50⅔ innings.
Toby Savini, Cascade
The junior batted .464 with 33 runs scored, 19 RBIs, 10 doubles, four triples and 26 stolen bases.
Brendon Stwalley, Monrovia
The junior went 2-0 with 1.76 ERA and 80 strikeouts 47⅔ innings. At the plate, Stwalley batted .286 with five doubles, 20 RBIs, 16 runs scored and three stolen bases.
Ian Taylor, Guerin Catholic
The junior batted .363 with 35 runs scored, 25 RBIs, nine doubles, four home runs, six triples and 18 stolen bases.
Jackson Wagner, Brownsburg
The Wabash Valley commit batted .436 with six runs scored, 12 RBIs, 10 doubles, one home run and three stolen bases. Behind the plate, Wagner had a perfect 1.000 fielding percentage.
Jack Warner, Danville
The Frontier commit batted .435 with 19 runs scored, 18 RBIs, seven doubles, five home runs and three stolen bases.
Simeon Wasil, Hauser
The senior went 9-0 with a 0.48 ERA and 114 strikeouts over 58 innings. At the plate, Wasil batted .408 with 25 runs scored, 26 RBIs, eight doubles, four triples, two home runs and nine stolen bases.
Honorable Mentions
Avon: Jack Bland, Nolan Hataway, Brayden Salyer; Beech Grove: Guerin Boshears, Griffin Matracia, Bishop Moore Ben Davis: Austin Calvin, Avery Mitchell; Bethesda Christian: Noah Dininger; Bishop Chatard: Sammy Bardach, Greg Mates, Declan Hostettler, Brady Keating; Brebeuf Jesuit: Andre O'Brien, Anthony Suscha, Brownsburg: Luke Albrecht, Ethan Gladstein, Ty Jarvis, Drew Jennings, Canyon Koonce, Ryan Murphy; Carmel: Cole Caldwell, Gabe Mathison; Cascade: Brady Beikes, Noah Dasgupta, Cort Hubner, Braxton Lewis; Cathedral: Connor Christiansen, Michael Gallagher, Eli Sinsabaugh, Landon Hughes; Center Grove: Kyle Boots, Carson Bush, Grady Grant, Cayden Jones, Andrew Krupa, Kellen Thomson, Cal Schembra, Hudson Stewart; Covenant Christian: Henry Boyce, Eli Kegaris; Crispus Attucks: Dillon Wells; Danville: Aiden Chiodo, Ethan Wooten; Decatur Central: Zach Losito, Drew Dalton, Brayden Smith; Eastern Hancock: Gavin Jenkins, Hayden Rouse; Edinburgh: Avynn Whitaker; Fishers: Zander Carnahan, Reid Garber, Deagan Repp, Hayden Werner; Franklin: Landen Basey, Carsten Bland, Nash Netter, Blake Smythe; Franklin Central: Ryan Lovell, Brayden Mahoney; Greenfield-Central: Zander Cobb; Greenwood: Ethan King, Jayden Pierce, Blake Reitmeyer; Greenwood Christian: Caden Camden; Guerin Catholic: Luke Gremelspacher, Finn Holden, Carson Kail, Nolan Ratcliff, Karson Smith; Hamilton Heights: Nick Hulen; HSE: Jackson Bixler, Michael Hoog; Heritage Christian: Will Ambrose, Alex Jackson, Tripp Vaughan, Carson Wilhite; Indian Creek: Nolan Harden, Talan Steinway, Nick Winters; Irvington Prep: Cortez Jenkins, Aiden Pollack; Lapel: Rylie Hudson, AJ Nunley, Lawrence Central: Paul Carnes, Sebastian Toussaint; Lutheran: Caleb Courtot, Nate Hughes, Dax Lockliear, Sam Strader; Martinsville: Josh Jones, Rhys Wolf; Mooresville: Liam Delp; Mt. Vernon: Ryker Baer, Andre Boldt, Tristan Sitton; New Palestine: Gavin Neal; North Central: Jackson Dinnsen, Garrit Ullom, Tanner Wilson, Tristan Wilson; Park Tudor: Miles Dubie, M.J. Gaines; Pendleton Heights: Colton Frank, Ty Frakes, Brayden Stevenson, Jordan Williamson; Perry Meridian: Aiden Kerr, Nate Risley; Pike: Jimquell Young; Plainfield: Zach Rhoden, Luke Warriner; Purdue Broad Ripple: Hayden Holder, Kyler Jones; Purdue Poly: Kin Chow, Nevan Jeffers, Roncalli: Gio Ardizzone, Collin Ash, Jaden Kuria, Sam Roeder; Scecina: Dom McKiernan, Brady Ray; Shelbyville: Dalton Jones, Reece Prickett, Gavin Reed; Shortridge: Jorge Jobito; Southport: Robert Ludlow, Riley Matlock; Triton Central: Nick Riggins, Eli Sego, Bo West; Tri-West: Jackson Catt, Ethan Frye, Luke Haboush, Cole Keller, Jackson Sorgi, University: Cooper Cammack, Ryan Castetter, Caleb Stocker, Beckett Suh; Warren Central: Keith Jackson; Jacob Vokes; Western Boone: Gavin Hawkins, Quinn Westerfeld; Westfield: Matt Drozlek, Beck Jordan; Whiteland: Ethan Engel, Isaac Phegley, Blake Riddle, Kayden Wilson, Peyton Wingfield; Zionsville: Davis Moore, Matt Pedersen, Jackson Tielker
Share your feedback to help improve our site!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Legendary football coach returns to the sidelines as Alabama school names him interim coach
Legendary football coach returns to the sidelines as Alabama school names him interim coach

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Legendary football coach returns to the sidelines as Alabama school names him interim coach

Legendary football coach returns to the sidelines as Alabama school names him interim coach originally appeared on The Sporting News One of the legendary, albeit controversial, high school head football coaches in the country is going to lead another team in the 2025 season. Rush Propst, who has guided programs in Alabama and Georgia, has been named the interim coach at Coosa Christian, located in Gadsden, Ala. He is taking over for head coach Mark O'Bryant, who was recently suspended for the 2025 season, confirming that in an interview with O'Bryant led the Conquerors to a 9-1 record in '24 but was banned in the postseason and had to forfeit five games due to the use of an ineligible player. Because of the school suspending O'Bryant, the Alabama High School Athletic Association lifted the imposed postseason ban, meaning the Conquerors are eligible for the playoffs should they qualify. Now, Coosa Christian turns its program temporarily over to someone who, though extremely successful, has a checkered past himself. Propst has won 296 career games along with seven state championships. He may be well known for his tenure at another Alabama school, Hoover, where he won five state titles from 1999-2007. The program was also featured on the MTV documentary series Two-A-Days, which filmed for two of the Buccaneers' seasons. However, Propst resigned at Hoover in 2007 in the wake of the program having to forfeit several wins due to using an ineligible player. He later coached at Georgia schools Colquitt County and Valdosta, as well as another Alabama school, Pell City. While at Colquitt County, during a 2015 playoff game, Propst head-butted one of his players, which initially led to him being suspended for the 2016 season, though the decision was eventually appealed. Propst resigned at Pell City following the 2023 season - his only season there - after the team went 1-10. Now, Propst gets another chance to lead a team, while perhaps getting the opportunity to record his 300th career win. MORE HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS NEWS Shreveport (Louisiana) QB leaves one program and hints at his potential new school These are the top 20 quarterbacks in the Austin (Texas) area returning this season Carroll (Louisiana) football coach speaks out after being dismissed: 'I used profanity' Five-star '26 Louisiana high school long snapper makes in-state commitment Louisiana high school receiver makes in-state commitment on his late uncle's birthday Highly regarded Louisiana '26 recruit stays right at home with commitment to LSU

5 College Football Bounceback Teams to Watch in 2025: Who's Ready to Rebound?
5 College Football Bounceback Teams to Watch in 2025: Who's Ready to Rebound?

Miami Herald

time5 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

5 College Football Bounceback Teams to Watch in 2025: Who's Ready to Rebound?

Bad schedules, bad injuries, bad luck, bad personal changes. It happens to the best of teams, and college football fans will usually move past one down almost never accept two in a row. If a program is really that good, it proves that past success wasn't a blip, gets over problems in a flash, and then everything is back to five teams have all been fantastic over recent seasons, and all five struggled mightily last year. They're all about to bounce back this season. dd 5. Alabama - Alabama 2025 Preview It's all relative. One college football team's clunker is another's dream season. At almost anywhere else, if you go 9-3 in the regular season and come within a whisker of making the College Football Playoff, you've done something right. At Alabama, the panic sirens go Bryant himself could've taken over the Tide after Nick Saban, and there would've been a tough transition to deal with. On the plus side, the Vanderbilt loss was a blip, the Tennessee loss was close, and any year Bama blows out LSU and beats Auburn by two touchdowns is a the second year under Kalen DeBoer, the team is good enough to not just get to the CFP but win it all. (But, just getting into the tournament would be a bounceback year.) 4. Washington - Washington 2025 Preview After playing for the national title in the 2023 season, 2024 was supposed to be a down year, to a lost quarterback Michael Penix Jr., along with almost all the stars from the high-powered offense, as head coach Kalen DeBoer took his talents to off a massive year at Arizona, head coach Jedd Fisch stepped in, started the rebuild, and it was the program's second losing season since 2009, including a brutal loss to Washington State and a tough bowl loss to Louisville in the final won't be a return to the success of two years ago, but Fisch did a great job through the portal, he has a potential star in quarterback Demond Williams, and the schedule has a base of six almost-certain wins to build off of. 3. Florida State - Florida State 2025 Preview The Florida State football program let 2023 beat it the rough finish and heartbreak of not making the College Football Playoff, a tough loss to Georgia Tech in Ireland became an early breaking point in a brutal 2-10 season - the program's worst since going 1-10 in Seminoles won't bounce all the way back, but if they can pull off a win over Alabama in the opener ...Even if that doesn't happen, split the dates with Miami and Clemson, and there's a real shot FSU could be playing for the ACC title. 2. Oklahoma - Oklahoma 2025 Preview This needs to be more like a breakthrough season for head coach Brent Venables than a bounceback. With two 6-7 seasons wrapped around a 10-3 run in 2023 that wasn't as strong as the record made it appear, it's time for Oklahoma to be a player the second half of the schedule is brutal, and Michigan comes to Norman in Week 2, but it's Oklahoma. It's supposed to beat the great teams, and this year's version has the talent to do it. 1. Utah - Utah 2025 Preview Utah was going to walk right into the Big 12 like it owned the place, go to the College Football Playoff, and all the success from the Kyle Whittingham era in the Pac-12 was going to transfer over. But instead of bouncing back from a disappointing 8-5 2023, it clunked with a 5-7 four different quarterbacks see meaningful time was part of the problem, and now that's solved by getting Devon Dampier from New Mexico. He's just the highest-profile skill star from a tremendous haul of parts for the D will be fantastic, the O will be far better, and after losing four games by one score, here comes the pivot. This will be the season last year's was supposed to be. Related: 5 College Football Teams That Will Surprise in 2025: Who Could Be This Year's Indiana? © 2025 The Arena Group Holdings, Inc. All rights reserved.

2025 College Football Odds: Why Kalen DeBoer, Alabama Will Reach 10 Wins
2025 College Football Odds: Why Kalen DeBoer, Alabama Will Reach 10 Wins

Fox Sports

time6 hours ago

  • Fox Sports

2025 College Football Odds: Why Kalen DeBoer, Alabama Will Reach 10 Wins

College Football 2025 College Football Odds: Why Kalen DeBoer, Alabama Will Reach 10 Wins Published Aug. 13, 2025 6:43 p.m. ET share facebook x reddit link Alabama's 2024 season? It was somewhat shaky. With that, bettors might be wondering if they should roll with the Tide to go Over 9.5 wins in 2025 or if they should back the Under. Let's break it down. Last year was head coach Kalen DeBoer's first season at Alabama, and he produced a 9-3 record. All three losses were in conference and on the road. The Tide were able to beat Georgia by seven and got two blowout wins against LSU and Missouri. Overall, it was a respectable first season for the new head coach, but it was a year full of uneven play, mental mistakes and sloppiness that we hadn't seen at Alabama under Nick Saban. Still, there's no cause for concern for me heading into 2025 because of DeBoer's track record. DeBoer spent nine years as a head coach between NAIA Sioux Falls, Fresno State and Washington before being hired as Alabama's head coach in January 2024. He succeeded the legendary Saban after he retired. At Sioux Falls, DeBoer went 11-2 in his first season before going 56-1 in the next four seasons with three national championships. He then took over Fresno State during the 2020 COVID-19 year and went 3-3. Throw that year away. He went 9-3 the following season before being hired by Washington. DeBoer went 25-3 in his two seasons at UW, losing in the national title game to Michigan to end the 2023 season. That's 104-12 as a head coach before heading to Alabama. He can coach and I expect a better product from the Tide this season. A hallmark of a DeBoer team is a sensational offense. Explosive. Attacking. Multiple. That is not what we saw at times from the Tide in 2024, so DeBoer hired back Ryan Grubb to run the offense. Grubb was the OC at Sioux Falls, Fresno State and Washington with DeBoer. Can Ryan Grubb help get the Tide's offense rolling? ADVERTISEMENT At Washington, Grubb produced one of the best passing offenses in the sport with quarterback Michael Penix Jr., a Joe Moore Award-winning offensive line and a group of NFL receivers. While we are unsure if he's got a Heisman-capable quarterback, the Tide's offensive line is one of the best in the country, and Alabama has the skill position players to rival those at Washington. Now, let's talk about the starting QB, Ty Simpson. Simpson is more in the mold of Penix than he is Jalen Milroe, who started for the Tide last season. Simpson is tall and will operate a passing game from the pocket with more efficiency, while being less likely to run or use his legs. That pairs with the offense Grubb and DeBoer ran at Washington. While it might take some time for the offense to get humming at the pace it would like, I trust this staff and Alabama's talented players to get it done. Now, let's look at the defense. The Bama D was not what we'd seen under Saban, but that should surprise no one. The Tide lost a defensive genius and some of their better players hit the portal. The defense was far better at the end of the season than it was in the beginning, which is something important to note. Alabama returns 69% of its defensive production, including multiple defensive linemen. The linebacker room is down Jihaad Campbell, but it has plenty of experience, plus the addition of Nikhai Hill Green from Colorado. The secondary returns five players who have starting experience. In short, this roster might be the most talented in the SEC. The Tide have recruited well after DeBoer's shaky start. The schedule is manageable. Alabama should beat Florida State and Wisconsin in the non-conference, and it is at Georgia after a bye. Alabama also doesn't play Texas or Texas A&M. I'd roll with Alabama going Over 9.5 wins. PICK: Alabama Over 9.5 wins Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account , and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily! What did you think of this story? share

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store