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Boekelheide, Raasch among year-end award winners

Northwestern’s Ella Boekelheide runs for the finish line at the State Cross Country Meet at Broadland Creek Golf Course in Huron. Boekelheide has been named the Prep Girls' Athlete of the Year by the South Dakota Sportswriters Association. Photo by John Davis taken 10/25/2025

The South Dakota Sportswriters Association has announced its year-end awards for 2025.

Recognition is given to the top athlete, coach and team for high school girls and boys, and college women and men. Also recognized are the “independent” male and female athlete of the year, “independent” team of the year, and the state’s sports celebrity.

The SDSWA began presenting these honors in 1954.

Prep Girls’ Athlete

Ella Boekelheide, Northwestern

Boekelheide won her third Class B State Cross Country Individual Championship this fall in her senior season. She also won state titles as an eighth-grader and a junior. She won her fifth overall Lake Region Conference cross country crown.

She was also a standout setter for the Northwestern volleyball team, which won 37 matches and finished third at the Class B State Tournament.

“It’s definitely hard to do volleyball and cross country at the same time, but I couldn’t imagine giving either of them up,” Boekelheide said. “So I just make it work and it works pretty well. It takes a lot of hard work, but it’s very rewarding.”

This past spring, Boekelheide won the 800-meter, 1,600 meter and 3,200-meter runs at the Class B State Track and Field Meet.

She said it all comes down to having a competitive mindset.

“It’s all about the process. I’m never wanting to give up,” Boekelheide said. “I think that’s the big part. It’s just a big mindset thing.”

Prep Boys’ Coach

Paul Raasch, Castlewood

One of the all-time winningest coaches in South Dakota high school boys basketball history, Castlewood native Paul Raasch secured his first state title by leading his hometown Warriors to a 24-2 season that concluded with a 52-31 win over Viborg-Hurley in the State B championship game at Aberdeen.

The title was the first for the Warriors and helped them avenge a 49-44 regular-season loss to Viborg-Hurley in the Hanson Classic.

Castlewood boys’ basketball coach Paul Raasch, center, hoists the State Championship trophy at the South Dakota Class B Boys Basketball Tournament at Wachs Arena. Raasch has been named the Prep Boys’ Coach of the Year by the South Dakota Sportswriters Association. Photo by John Davis taken 3/22/2025

Raasch entered his 40th season as a head boys basketball coach in December with a 621-261 career record. He previously coached at Alpena, Webster and Langford.

He led Langford Area to a state B runner-up finish in boys basketball in 2015, a state Class 9B football championship later that fall and a state Class 9B runner-up football finish in 2016.

Celebrity

Dallas Goedert, Britton

This former Britton-Hecla standout became a Super Bowl champion this past season, helping lead the Philadelphia Eagles to a win over the Kansas City Chiefs.

The SDSU alum is in his eighth season as a tight end with the Eagles.

He had two receptions for 27 yards in Super Bowl LIX. He scored a touchdown in a playoff game against the Green Bay Packers, and had a career-high 170 yards receiving in a single game in a win over New Orleans during the 2024 regular season.

Independent Male Athlete

Carter Sanderson, Pierre, hockey

Pierre’s Carter Sanderson made South Dakota sports history in 2025.

Sanderson was the first South Dakotan to be drafted into the NHL, selected by the Pittsburgh Penguins with the 169th pick in the sixth round of the 2025 NHL Draft.

Last season, he played his first year of junior hockey in the USHL with the Muskegon Lumberjacks (Mich.), scoring five goals and six assists in 48 games. He played in 13 games and tallied one assist in helping Muskegon win the Clark Cup.

A 6-foot-2, 192-pound forward, Sanderson is a University of North Dakota commit and is currently on the Muskegon roster.

Independent Female Athlete

Bergen Reilly, Sioux Falls, Nebraska volleyball

Reilly continued to star for Nebraska volleyball in 2025, leading the Huskers to a 33-1 record, 20-0 in the Big Ten Conference, the regional finals of the NCAA tournament and finishing as a finalist for the AVCA player of the year. She is the South Dakota Sportswriters Association’s Independent Female Athlete of the Year for the second time in three years.

Nebraska setter Bergen Reilly passes the ball during a match during the 2025 season at the Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln, Neb. (Nebraska athletics photo)

Reilly, an O’Gorman High School product, was named All-American, Big Ten player of the year, as well as Big Ten setter of the year and all-Big Ten first team for the third time. With the 6-foot-1 junior setter facilitating the offense, Nebraska hit a school-record .351 hitting percentage, which ranked No. 1 nationally and is the best hitting percentage by a Big Ten team since 2009 Penn State. Reilly averaged 10.47 assists per set and 2.70 digs per set, and totaled 73 kills, 67 blocks and 19 aces.

With one collegiate season remaining, Reilly ranks No. 3 in Nebraska history in career assists in the rally-scoring era with 3,723. Her career assists per set average of 10.70 ranks No. 4 among active Division I players and No. 2 in school history in the rally-scoring era.

Independent Team

Rushmore Thunder Hockey

The Rushmore Thunder boys’ hockey team capped a remarkable 2024-25 season by winning the USA Hockey High School 2A National Championship in late March at Irvine, CA. The Thunder went 5-1 in the tourney, which ended with a 6-2 win over the Warriors Hockey Club (IL) in the championship game that featured a hat trick by the Thunder’s Easton Knoll.

Jackson Hepper of the Rushmore Thunder and Mylan Evans of the Watertown Lakers try to control the puck during their first-round game in the South Dakota Amateur Hockey Association varsity boys state tournament last spring in the Prairie Lakes Ice Arena at Watertown. The Thunder were named the Independent Team of the Year for 2025, as chosen by the South Dakota Sportswriters Association.

Coach Konrad Reeder’s club enjoyed a fabulous 30-1 season that included a 25-0 run through the South Dakota Amateur Hockey Association. The Thunder went 22-0 in league play and then won three more games, including a 7-0 victory over Sioux Falls East in the championship, to win the SDAHA varsity boys state tournament in early March at Watertown.

Forwards Cameron Ritter (32 goals, 36 assists in SDAHA regular-season play) and Colton Merchen (30-34) and defenseman Wyatt Reeder (48-68) each earned SDAHA first team all-state honors. Defensemen Jackson Hepper (9-32) and Jackson Prussner (6-23) each made the all-state second team.

College Men’s Athlete

TJ Chukwurah, Black Hills State University football

TJ Chukwurah put together a record-breaking season for the Black Hills State University football team.

A 5-foot-11, 190-pound junior wide receiver, Chukwurah recorded the best single season by a wide receiver in Black Hills State's NCAA Division II era, breaking records for receiving yards (1,100) and receiving touchdowns (16).

He began the season with three straight 100-yard receiving games and added another three within the last five games for a total of six such games. At the end of the regular season, he remained tied for fifth in all divisions of NCAA football (FBS, FCS, DII, and DIII) with his 16 receiving touchdowns and was first in NCAA Division II.

The Arlington, Texas, native was the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference leader in receiving touchdowns, receiving yards, and receiving yards per game. He was named All-American, all-conference, all-region and was a Super Region 4’s Harlon Hill (Division II Heisman Trophy) candidate.

College Men’s Coach

Rod DeHaven, SDSU

DeHaven coached the SDSU men’s track and field and cross country programs to Summit League championships in all three seasons — indoor track, outdoor track and cross country for 2024-25, and then claimed the Summit men’s cross country title again in November 2025. He was also the Summit League coach of the year in all three seasons, as well.

South Dakota State cross country coach Rod DeHaven speaks during SDSU’s fall athletic media in August at Dykhouse Stadium in Brookings. Photo by David Bordewyk/S.D. NewsMedia Association

Among the most impressive feats included the Jacks’ men winning the school’s first outdoor track and field conference title since 1986. SDSU last swept the conference track and cross country titles in an academic year in 1974-75 in Division II’s North Central Conference, and pulled off the first Summit men’s triple crown in 18 years.

For the 2025 fall cross country season, the Jackrabbits won the Summit men’s title for the 14th time, including a league-record 10th consecutive championship and individual champion Cody Larson leading the way.

College Men’s Team

South Dakota State wrestling

The 2025 calendar year was good to the Jackrabbits on the mat. To cap the 2024-25 season, SDSU had a third-place finish at the Big 12 Championships and sent a program-record nine wrestlers to the NCAA Division I tournament in March, which finished with Cade DeVos reaching the semifinals and earning All-American honors at 174 pounds.

Head coach Damion Hahn, in his eighth season matside for the Jackrabbit program, has continued to rack up the wins, becoming the school’s winningest D-I coach at 74-38 in dual contests (as of Dec. 17). The 2025-26 season started with a historic dual win at No. 7 Minnesota on Nov. 25, a first in SDSU history. The Jacks are ranked No. 8 in the most recent D-I coaches’ poll.

College Women’s Athlete

Sylvie Zgonc, South Dakota State volleyball

Zgonc excelled for the Jackrabbits once again in 2025. A 5-foot-11 junior outside hitter, Zgonc was named Summit League player of the year for the second-straight season, powering the Jackrabbits to an NCAA tournament berth again. She’s the first repeat Summit League player of the year in 16 years and earned honorable mention All-America honors from the American Volleyball Coaches Association, becoming the first Jackrabbit in the team’s Division I history to receive that honor.

South Dakota State’s Sylvie Zgonc passes the ball during a Summit League volleyball tournament match this past fall at First Bank and Trust Arena in Brookings. Photo by Trent Singer/Sioux Falls Live

Zgonc, a native of Hartford, Wis., finished in the top-50 nationally in kills (451), while leading the Summit in kills per set (4.34) and points per set (4.77). While her career remains active, she is the Jackrabbits’ all-time leader in career kills per set at 4.07.

College Women’s Coach

Gretta Melsted, Augustana

Melsted led the Vikings to another successful season, winning a fifth straight Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference regular season title. The Vikings went 25-3 in league play, earning an eighth regular season crown under the longtime Augustana coach.

Augustana finished 50-11, a second straight 50-win season and seventh under Melsted. The Vikings swept through the NSIC Tournament and the Central Plains Regional before dropping the Super Regional to Central Oklahoma two games to one.

Melsted is 863-374 in her career, including 782-283 at Augustana and 419-106 in NSIC regular season play with the Vikings. She took over the Vikings prior to the 2007 season after serving as head coach at Culver-Stockton for three seasons (81-91).

College Women’s Team

South Dakota State basketball

The Jackrabbits finished with a 30-4 season in 2025, which was the second-most wins in SDSU’s Division I women’s basketball history only behind SDSU’s first tournament appearance in 2009. It was the fifth time in that span that SDSU has won a game in the NCAA tournament, defeating No. 17-ranked Oklahoma State 74-68 in the first round, which was the Jacks’ 20th win in a row. SDSU finished the season ranked No. 23 nationally and bowed out in the second round at the hands of eventual national champion Connecticut in Storrs, Conn.

The South Dakota State women’s basketball team celebrates its championship victory following the Summit League women’s basketball tournament championship game last March at the Premier Center in Sioux Falls. Photo by Landon Dierks/Mitchell Republic

The Jackrabbits, who ran their winning streak against Summit League opponents to 59 games with the Summit League tournament title in 2025, were powered by junior forward Brooklyn Meyer, who averaged 17 points and nearly six rebounds per game in an All-America honorable mention season. Senior guard Paige Meyer was a first-team all-Summit pick and was Summit tournament MVP.

SDSU coach Aaron Johnston was named the Summit League’s coach of the year for the ninth time, including for the fifth year in a row. It was SDSU’s 14th consecutive season with at least 20 wins and he picked up his 500th career coaching win at the Division I level during the 2024-25 season.

Prep Boys’ Athlete

Griffen Goodbary, Sioux Falls

This two-time South Dakota Gatorade High School Player of the Year led Sioux Falls Christian to the Class A State Championship his senior season, following a state- runner up finish in 2024.

The 6-foot-10 Goodbary, who is now playing for Drake University, averaged 18 points, 6.1 rebounds, and 2.8 assists per game his senior season.

Goodbary scored 32 points and hauled down 15 rebounds in the State A title game victory against Hamlin to cap off a 25-1 season. The win avenged a setback to Hamlin in the championship game the year before.

Sioux Falls Christian’s lone loss in Goodbary’s senior season came to Iowa 2A State Champion Western Christian 89-86 in double overtime. In Goodbary’s final two prep seasons, Sioux Falls Christian had a combined overall record of 49-2.

Prep Boys’ Team

Philip cross country

The Philip Scotties continued their reign on Class B boys cross country in 2025.

The Scotties won their fourth consecutive Class B cross country championship, becoming the first team to win four straight titles in the class. Philip has won five overall Class B boys cross country state championships.

In 2025, the Scotties tallied 12 team points, finishing with three of the top-seven runners. Jack Peterson and Baylor Burns placed second and third, respectively. Creston Burns (seventh) and David McKinley (12th) finished in the top 12. Aidan Craven (44th) rounded out the Scotties’ runners.

Philip also won the Region 5B and Western Great Plains Conference titles during the season.

Prep Girls’ Coach

Ronette Costain, Harrisburg

The Webster native led Harrisburg High School's volleyball team to another stellar season in her 30th season as the Tigers' head coach in 2025. Harrisburg capped a 35-2 season with a state Class AA title, becoming the first big-school team in state history to win four state championships in a row.

Harrisburg coach Ronette Costain is pictured along with players Nahla Fjeldheim (18), Francesa Barnett (15), Kya Keegan (6), Sarah Holt (9), Avery Klein (11) and Kennedy Kokenge (10) during a first-round Class AA match against Mitchell in the South Dakota State High School Volleyball Tournament this past fall at The Monument in Rapid City. Costain was chosen as the Girls’ Prep Coach of the Year for 2025 by the South Dakota Sportswriters Association.

The Tigers had a state-record 87-match winning streak come to an end with two losses to nationally-ranked teams in a tournament at Las Vegas, NV. Harrisburg started a new streak by closing out the season with 24-straight wins, including a 3-0 victory over O’Gorman in the state championship.

Harrisburg’s last loss to a South Dakota team came on Oct. 11, 2022 against Pierre. Costain, who is closing in on 600 career wins, is one of the winningest volleyball coaches in state history.

Prep Girls’ Team

Bennett County track and field

The Bennett County girls track and field team rolled to the Class B state championship in May, a first in school history since 1986.

The Warriors racked up 85 points, finishing 39.5 points ahead of second-place Colman-Egan. The young Warriors were powered by sisters Reagan and Peyson O’Neill. Reagan, a sophomore, finished first and set state meet records in the 100-meter dash (11.73), 200-meter dash (24.08) and long jump (19-02.25). She anchored the record-setting 400-meter relay team.

Peyson, a freshman, won the 100-meter hurdles (14.30), 300-meter hurdles (43.88) and high jump (5-6). She set state meet records in both hurdle races, while also running on the first-place 400-meter relay team. Harley Harris, a sophomore, won the triple jump (36-3.25), placed fourth in the 100-meter hurdles (15.68) and was on the 400-meter relay team. Macy Claussen, a freshman, was also on the winning 400-meter relay team.

It was Bennett County’s second state championship in the calendar year, as it also won the Class B girls basketball title in March. In the fall, Bennett County placed fourth in the state volleyball tournament.

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