Sports
Summer baseball returns to Marion — and the field where the legendary Nolan Ryan got his …
Gary Price and Steven Seymour stood on the silver metal concourse, staring at the field through the drizzle, sipping steaming hot chocolate they had just purchased at the shaved ice truck. Hungry Mothers mascot Molly Dew makes the rounds at Hurricane Stadium. Molly takes her name from Hungry Mother State Park’s Molly’s Knob and Marion’s […]

Gary Price and Steven Seymour stood on the silver metal concourse, staring at the field through the drizzle, sipping steaming hot chocolate they had just purchased at the shaved ice truck.
Like everyone else at this high school stadium, the best friends since childhood were bundled in coats and caps. Some others wrapped themselves in blankets and ducked under umbrellas to hide from the threatening clouds.
“It’s great to have baseball back in Marion,” Price said.
Baseball? In these conditions?
On Memorial Day, Marion’s newest summer baseball team, the Hungry Mothers, took the field for its inaugural home game at Hurricane Stadium on the campus of Marion Senior High School. The team name, Hungry Mothers, is a fun nod to the nearby Hungry Mother State Park, located about 5 miles from the ballpark.
The Mothers, as some fans are already affectionately calling them, are a collegiate wood bat team, meaning most of their players compete on college teams where aluminum bats are used. The team is independent from a league for its first season and will play a 40-game schedule in 2025, primarily against teams from North Carolina that also carry amusing nicknames like Corn Dogs, Wampus Cats, Bigfoots and Swamp Donkeys.
At Marion’s home opener, the Hungry Mothers hosted the Carolina Disco Turkeys. The two teams had already squared off against each other two nights earlier on the Turkeys’ turfed home field in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Marion won that game 11-4, although the team managed only five hits. Pitchers for both teams combined to walk 31 batters. The first game in Marion’s existence took about four hours to play.
“I think it was one of the longest nine-inning games I’ve ever been a part of,” Marion head coach Steven McMillian recalled a couple of nights later.
The Memorial Day game was different in many ways, from the play on the field to the excitement in the air, neither of which could be dampened by the cold rain and chilly temperatures.
“We’re tough old birds,” said Price. “We don’t care [about the weather]. We used to run and play in weather like this, so we’ll come out here and watch a good ballgame.”
Carolina’s Disco Turkeys, in their brilliant peacock blue uniforms, jumped ahead in the first inning, scoring four runs before the Hungry Mothers had a chance to bat. But no one in the crowd of nearly 500 people seemed to mind much.
“We’re just glad to have another opportunity for Marion, because Marion is such a great home place,” Seymour, 56, said as the game slipped into the bottom of the second inning. “We’ve grown up. We’ve seen the good and the bad, and this is definitely a good thing for us.”
As the umpire called a strike below, Price took a sip of hot chocolate from a white Styrofoam cup and said, “We could be watching some of the stars of tomorrow here.”
* * *
If that line rings familiar, it likely means you know a little about Marion’s place in baseball history. In 1965, Major League Baseball’s New York Mets placed a minor league affiliate team here as a place to start the development of future players.
Bob Garnett, a banker in town, served as president of Marion Baseball. One of his many roles with the team included sitting behind a microphone for most home games as the ballpark’s public address announcer.
“Welcome to Marion Stadium, home of the Mets,” Garnett would say, “where the stars of tomorrow shine tonight.”
Most anyone who attended those games in the ’60s and ’70s still remembers Garnett’s famous line. It even made an appearance in a July 1966 New York Times article. “I think everyone in Marion took that [line] to heart, which was lovely,” said Times reporter Robert Lipsyte in a 2021 phone conversation, decades after he’d visited Marion to report on New York’s Baby Mets.
No matter who you talked with at the Hungry Mothers’ opening night at the Marion stadium — young people and those who were a bit older — the name Nolan Ryan would often come up.
He is easily the Marion Mets’ most famous alumnus. On Main Street in Marion’s downtown section, a small plaque honors Ryan, resting in the brick along a sidewalk.
The tall right-hander from Alvin, Texas, arrived in Marion in early June 1965. Garnett picked him up from the bus stop, and for years, he told the story of the lanky pitcher looking so frail that Garnett worried Ryan’s luggage “would break his arm in two.” Ryan’s stop in Marion was the beginning of a long baseball career, one that didn’t end until he retired from the major leagues at age 46. He still holds the record for the most career strikeouts, with 5,714, and no-hitters, with seven.
Many of Marion’s new Hungry Mothers cite Ryan’s legacy as one reason they chose to play baseball this summer in Marion.
“When you go out there you have a feeling that somebody great has been here before you,” said Carter Sayers, a Marion native and rising sophomore pitcher at Emory & Henry University. “You’re in the presence of a lot of history on this field.”
Though Ryan is Marion’s most famous former player, several others got their start here during the team’s 12-year affiliation with the New York Mets. One was Jim Bibby, who spent much of his life in Lynchburg and played professionally for a handful of teams. He and Ryan were teammates on Marion’s 1965 team. Other Major League alumni include Mike Jorgensen, Tom Foli, John Milner, Alex Trevino, Jody Davis and Jim McAndrew, who, along with Ryan, was part of New York’s 1969 Miracle Mets.
Most players, of course, never made it to the big leagues. Many moved on to other professions. They became coaches, teachers, architects, neuroscientists, actors, priests, circus trainers, bankers, broadcasters and so forth.
Former major league catcher Birdie Tebbetts coached the Marion Mets in 1967, a year after managing the Cleveland Indians in the majors. That got the attention of Life Magazine, which sent a writer and photographer to Marion to document what they called “A big leaguer in the boondocks.”
In addition to the Mets, Marion hosted another Appalachian League team briefly in the summer of 1955. When Welch Miners team officials decided they could no longer take on more debt to save the team in the small coal-mining West Virginia town, Marion offered to be the Miners’ new home. The team became known as the Marion Athletics and played out the season in the town’s then brand-new ballpark, Marion Stadium, now called Hurricane Stadium. Semi-pro baseball has a history in Marion, too. The Cuckoos played on the grounds of the Southwestern Virginia Mental Health Institute in the 1930s and ’40s, and the Marion Bucks played on the same field in the 1950s.
Marion’s rich baseball history played a significant role in landing the Hungry Mothers, nearly 50 years after the Mets abruptly left town in 1976 for reasons no one seems to remember.
Other Southwest Virginia towns were attractive potential locations for the Hungry Mothers. Greg Sullivan and Terry Hindle, the team’s managing partners, who have working connections to North Carolina-based collegiate wood bat teams, found Marion, a town of about 5,600 people, to be the most alluring.
“We went through the area with a fine-tooth comb,” Hindle said a week before Marion’s home opener, “and we found that a combination of things, the support from the local community and the history of baseball here, were a good combination. There’s a passion here.
“When you start hearing that the New York Mets had a rookie ball team here for all of those years, to me, that was the icing on the cake. It’s definitely a point of pride for this area.”
The team was officially introduced to the community on March 20 at a late-morning press conference in the Marion Senior High auditorium. Hindle, Sullivan and others involved in the process announced the team name, colors — red, black and white — and logos, one of which is a cartoonish, left-handed swinging mother bear with a baseball bat resting on her shoulder, snarling and ready to pounce on a fastball. At the announcement, Hindle said his group intended to keep the team in Marion “for the long haul.”
“We decided to make an investment into this community and into this team, and it’s something that as an organization we didn’t take lightly,” he said later, in mid-May. “We did a lot of homework and figured out this is where we wanted to be.”
Once they chose Marion, Hindle and Sullivan contacted Amanda Livingston, Smyth County’s director of tourism, in the fall of 2024.
“I would say I was a facilitator and people connector,” Livingston said. “They were interested in expanding, and they felt like Southwest Virginia was a great market. I 100% agree. Smyth County and Marion love baseball. We just have an innate love of baseball, and I think they rightly guessed, and it has been proven true, that there is a hunger for this type of family entertainment.”
Livingston connected Hindle and Sullivan with members of Smyth County’s board of supervisors and school board. Talks began between the entities in December and wrapped in January, recalled board of supervisors Vice Chair Mike Sturgill, who also works with the county’s school board. The talks involved Marion Senior High School administrators to discuss using the field, which is also home to the school’s varsity and junior varsity baseball teams.
Once there was an agreement to allow the new team to play on the field, a number of improvements had to be made to the ballpark that was built and opened in the mid-1950s.
For one, the crumbling painted red cinderblock outfield wall that stretched from the left field foul pole to extreme center field was demolished. A black chain-link fence replaced it. That was the easy part. Perhaps the most difficult chore was resurfacing the infield dirt and resodding the infield and outfield grass.
Marion Stadium is a multipurpose facility that also houses a football field for the high school’s Scarlett Hurricanes. In the fall, the football field runs through baseball’s right field and into the infield between first and second base.
“They basically took a bulldozer, cut it off, regraded, and hauled in several truckloads,” Sturgill said of the baseball field reconstruction.
“The county and the town of Marion put in some money” for the project, said Smyth County Administrator Shawn Utt. Also, “a lot of the work was donated.”
Marion Senior High School varsity baseball coach Kevin Terry and a group of his ballplayers took on the responsibility of replacing the grass. They received the first truckloads of grass on March 14.
“This stuff here,” Terry said in mid-April, pointing to the new sod, “comes in rolls of 2 feet by 3 feet … and we put 17 pallets [loads] down.” He and a friend began working on the field on the morning of March 14, starting at about 7 a.m. When the day’s final school bell rang, his young volunteers trekked to the field to help. Terry and some of his senior players worked until about 1 a.m. Saturday. “We got the entire infield done — the diamond area — that night,” the coach said.
After a bit of sleep, they returned around 10 a.m. and worked until 5 p.m. to carefully place rolls of sod — around 2,000 square feet, Terry noted — in the outfield.
School board superintendent Dennis Carter said the town and county’s new baseball venture is a “win, win, win.”
Among those wins was the opportunity for economic development — “it gets some folks into Smyth County and the town of Marion,” Carter said — and a chance to make much-needed improvements to the Marion baseball complex.
The third win is giving students who recently graduated from Smyth County schools an opportunity to play once again in front of a home crowd while honing their baseball skills.
“It’s going to be a good opportunity. It’s going to be fun,” Sayers, the 2024 Marion Senior High graduate, said before the team’s first practice. “There will be a lot of people in the stands who watched you play in high school, and they’re going to watch you come back and play for this team as well. To be able to pitch off this mound again is going to be pretty neat. I’m looking forward to getting started.”
* * *
Hungry Mothers players and coaches met in person for the first time at 6 p.m. May 23 at Hurricane Stadium, only 25 hours before their first official game in Winston-Salem. Not everyone was there yet. Some players were still with their college teams.
“Tonight, we’re going to get together, throw some bullpens,” McMillian said as players got acquainted, “see what kind of arms we have” — that’s baseball coach-speak for pitchers — “take some in and out to just to see what position guys we have, and then we’re going to go hit in the cages just to kind of have an idea.”
McMillian has a long history coaching baseball, 26 years to be exact, but this is his first venture into skippering a collegiate summer league team. The Mount Airy, North Carolina, native is currently the head coach at Southwest Virginia Community College in Cedar Bluff, and before that, he was an assistant baseball coach at Emory & Henry. He also runs his own travel ball organization.
“I’m just excited about the newness and the opportunity to be a part of something here,” he said before formally talking to his players as a group for the first time. “When I came here to the opening day ceremony [announcement at Marion Senior High], I was blown away by the love and what the town of Marion wants to do for this team.”
Moments later, McMillian instructed the 22 players to have a seat along the third-base line. He introduced himself and his wife, Candice, and urged the ballplayers to curb their language around his young son, who was sitting nearby. Many nodded in respect to his wishes. He briefly talked about what was to happen in the rest of the night and Saturday. McMillian told them when to arrive at the ballpark the next day — “We’re leaving around 2-ish,” he said — how meals would be handled, and when batting practice would take place once they arrived in Winston-Salem for their date with the Disco Turkeys.
“Any questions?” he asked. One player asked when they would receive their uniforms.
“They’re supposed to get those to us tomorrow,” he answered. “You get two jerseys, one hat and two pairs of pants.”
McMillian also explained the evening’s hour-and-a-half practice. “We’ll throw some pens and hit the [batting] cages,” he said.
It all was running smoothly until the coach noticed something missing: There were no baseballs to be found. Thankfully, one of his assistant coaches had a few boxes of balls.
“Being a part of a new program, there’s always kinks to everything you do,” McMillian said. “But, we’ll try to get this thing rolling in the right direction.”
The next night’s 11-4 victory over the Disco Turkeys did a lot to move things in a positive direction for the Hungry Mothers.
* * *
Hours before the much-anticipated Memorial Day home opener, rain poured in spurts in Marion. It rained. It stopped. It rained and stopped again. A common question posed on the Hungry Mothers’ Facebook page throughout the morning was various forms of, “Is the game still on for tonight?”
Eager fans got their answer shortly after noon when the team’s social media manager posted: “Game is still on for tonight! The field is being prepped for tonight’s opener at 6:30.”
When the Hurricane Stadium gates swung open at 5:30 p.m., the parking lot was already filling up. And the vehicles kept coming, windshield wipers swishing back and forth.
Remember the famous line from “Field of Dreams”? If you build it, they will come.
Inside the ballpark, fans grabbed hot dogs, popcorn and nachos at the concession stand, which was run by the Marion Senior High School band boosters. (Word around the ballpark said the hot dog chili was delicious.) Some plunked down in lawn and camping chairs. Many flocked to the long, covered area along the third-base line.
But not Carole Rosenbaum. “I’m going to sit up there,” she said, pointing to the small open-air metal bleachers behind home plate. Rosenbaum, 82, is a Marion resident and lifelong baseball fan with a gnarly collection of baseballs autographed by scores of Marion Mets players, including Nolan Ryan. In her collection, too, are nearly a half-dozen broken bats from Mets games she attended as a child and teenager and a couple of decades-old worn gloves that she and her father used when having a catch at their home.
“It’s so exciting to have baseball back here,” said a beaming Rosenbaum, clad in a navy-blue rain jacket, as she made her way through the crowd, past the souvenir table and into the bleachers minutes before the pre-game festivities began on the field.
Smyth County native and renowned Hank Williams Jr. tribute artist Arnold Davidson sang — as himself, not Hank — a warm rendition of the national anthem as the crowd stood and teams lined up along the first- and third-base lines. Throwing out the ceremonial first pitches were Utt, the county administrator; board of supervisors member Mike Sturgill; and Carter, the outgoing school board superintendent and only lefty in the group. Each, it appeared, threw strikes.
The game got underway moments later when Hungry Mothers’ right-handed pitcher Jacob Nester of Carroll County fired a fastball to the plate for a called strike, much to the delight of his chirping teammates in the third base-side and the home crowd, despite the rain, wind and 56-degree temperature.
From there, however, the Mothers struggled. On top of their four-run first inning, the Disco Turkeys piled on another run in the second, two more in the third and one in the fifth. If you’re keeping score, that’s a 7-0 advantage.
Despite the score, and the on-again, off-again drizzle, Marion’s crowd hung in there with each pitch. You couldn’t have found a more delighted fan than Betsy Shearin, whose son, Daniel Shearin, plays first base for Marion. Betsy Shearin lives in Independence but grew up in Marion. She met with family members at the game, including her brothers, Norman and Don Barker, who played baseball for Marion Senior High.
“To be able to come here and watch him [Daniel] play is such a big deal,” said Shearin, wearing a white sweatshirt — she made it herself — with the Hungry Mothers’ mamma bear logo on the front and Daniel’s jersey number, 32, in red on the back. “We’re just baseball through and through.”
Norman Barker wished “Marion would do a little bit better tonight,” getting a chuckle from his family, “but it’s just exciting to have it back into the community.”
As the game reached the top of the sixth, Steve Foster, Greg Rashad, Frankie Newman and Phillip McElraft, who grew up together in Marion, talked and joked as the Disco Turkeys loaded the bases.
Newman and Rashad have purchased season tickets for the Hungry Mothers and proudly wore their passes on lanyards around their necks.
“I don’t know how many games I’ll get to, but I want to support them all I can,” said Newman, who lives in Christiansburg.
Rashad chimed in. “It’s back. Baseball is back in Marion,” he said with great enthusiasm and a New York Mets cap resting on his head. “It’s about time! It’s good to be back watching the game. You can’t beat this.”
And then …
CRACK!
It might have been the loudest sound at the ballpark that night. It’s the sound a bat makes when perfectly colliding with a pitched ball. If it’s a batter on the team you’re rooting for, it may be the sweetest sound in baseball.
With one violent swing of the bat, a Disco Turkey hit a ball that appeared to be destined for the railroad tracks beyond center field. Maybe the moon.
“Oooooh,” said someone in the grandstand.
“Did it go over?” Rashad asked anyone who could answer.
“Robbie Smith with the grand slam,” PA announcer Kevin Schwartz confirmed.
The home run blast put the game even further out of reach at 11-0 for Carolina.
“Do they have the 10-run rule in this league?” Newman joked. They all laughed.
Turns out, he was right. When Marion failed to close the gap through seven innings, the game was considered complete.
Disco Turkeys 13, Hungry Mothers 0.
“I’m going to be honest, the first home game was a little rough. You know, we’re still learning what we have,” McMillian said moments after the final out was recorded, as his players collected their bats and gloves from the dugout. “We made a few mistakes the first couple of innings. We didn’t start our first home game off very well, but we got great kids who are working hard. And we got great support from the crowd here tonight.”
The night’s results didn’t seem to matter to fans, who smiled all evening through the chill and rain and occasional blunders. Because after five decades of missing summer baseball in Marion, the fact that it was back — win or lose — was all that really mattered.
Sports
Turkish Sultans of Net to face Japan for Nations League semis spot
The Turkish Women’s National Volleyball Team is bracing for a fierce quarterfinal clash against Japan in the 2025 FIVB Volleyball Nations League, a matchup rich with both tactical nuance and emotional stakes. Set for July 24, at the Atlas Arena in Lodz, Poland, the encounter pits the 2023 champions, known as the “Sultans of the […]

The Turkish Women’s National Volleyball Team is bracing for a fierce quarterfinal clash against Japan in the 2025 FIVB Volleyball Nations League, a matchup rich with both tactical nuance and emotional stakes.
Set for July 24, at the Atlas Arena in Lodz, Poland, the encounter pits the 2023 champions, known as the “Sultans of the Net,” against one of the tournament’s most technically polished teams.
While the winner advances to the semifinals to face either Brazil or Germany, the tension runs deeper than the bracket.
Japan’s head coach, Ferhat Akbaş, knows his opponents all too well.
The Turkish tactician, also the coach of Turkish club giants Eczacıbaşı Dynavit and brings a deep understanding of the very system he’s now plotting to outwit.
His inside knowledge of Türkiye’s top players and style adds a layer of intrigue few matchups can offer.
Türkiye enter the knockout stage after finishing the expanded preliminary round with eight wins and four losses, securing the sixth seed out of 18 teams.
Their journey across host cities – from Istanbul and Ottawa to Beijing and Belgrade – was marked by consistency, grit, and the leadership of seasoned veterans like captain Eda Erdem, dynamic outside hitter Hande Baladın, and the explosive Melissa Vargas.
This year’s VNL, the seventh edition of the tournament, features an expanded field with no relegation from 2024.
Newcomers Czechia and Belgium joined the fray, with the former qualifying through the 2024 Challenger Cup and the latter earning their spot based on FIVB rankings.
Japan, meanwhile, looked sharp throughout the preliminary phase, finishing third overall.
Known for their speed, tight formations, and nearly flawless defense, they rely heavily on stars like Sarina Koga and Mayu Ishikawa.
Their silver-medal finish in 2024, where they fell to Italy in the final, showed they are more than capable of going the distance.
The quarterfinal clash against Türkiye will test Japan’s system like few matches have.
While their fast-paced offense and disciplined backcourt are strengths, the physicality of Türkiye’s front line and the firepower Vargas brings at the net could stretch their limits.
The psychological edge may rest with Akbaş’s knowledge, but Türkiye’s experience in pressure situations could be the difference.
Elsewhere in the quarterfinals, Italy, the 2024 champions, face eighth-seeded U.S.
Brazil, one of the tournament’s most consistent performers, takes on Germany, while host nation Poland, who earned their spot with a fourth-place finish, goes up against China.
For Türkiye, a victory over Japan would mark a return to the semifinals and put them two wins away from reclaiming their title.
Sports
Cuban beach volleyball duo conquers Moscow and is crowned champion in the Russian league
The Cuban duo of beach volleyball composed of Noslen Díaz and Jorge Luis Alayo achieved a historic victory at the Moscow stop of the Russian national championship this Saturday, defeating the locals Oleg Stoyanovski and Ilya Leshukov in a thrilling final, one of the most feared pairs on the European circuit. According to the specialized […]

The Cuban duo of beach volleyball composed of Noslen Díaz and Jorge Luis Alayo achieved a historic victory at the Moscow stop of the Russian national championship this Saturday, defeating the locals Oleg Stoyanovski and Ilya Leshukov in a thrilling final, one of the most feared pairs on the European circuit.
According to the specialized page CubanSp1ke on Facebook, the Cubans started the match with an impeccable performance, dominating the first set 21-11. However, the Russians responded strongly in the second set, which they won 21-16.
Everything was decided in a tense tiebreak filled with refereeing controversy, where Díaz and Alayo managed to stay focused to seal the victory 15-12 and take the title.
Four titles in Russia and notable growth
With this victory in the Russian capital, the Caribbean players now have four titles in Russia: Moscow and Kazan in the national league, as well as gold in the Russian Cup and the prestigious Sirius tournament, the mentioned source stated.
The Eurasian country, which has welcomed them with enthusiasm and respect, has become a crucial stage in the professional development of this duo, regarded as the best in Cuban beach volleyball.
Beyond the prestige, the victory secured them 150,000 rubles in prize money (about 1,666 US dollars).
Unbeaten on the way to St. Petersburg
Before being crowned, Díaz and Alayo shone in the quarterfinals against Valeriy Samoday and Taras Sivolap, winning 21-15 and 25-23. In the semifinals, they came back against the duo from Dynamo Moscow, Krasilnikov and Reinson, winning 17-21, 21-13, and 15-12.
The result allows them to look forward with optimism to the next challenge: a new stage of the Russian Cup in Saint Petersburg, which will take place in six days and offers an even larger prize pool.
A milestone for Cuban sports
The success of Díaz and Alayo goes beyond sports. Their performance reaffirms the potential of Cuban beach volleyball on international stages, despite the structural limitations they face on the island.
Invited to the Russian professional circuit for their talent and charisma, they have garnered not only the support of the local audience but also the recognition of an international community that already views them as champions.
Frequently Asked Questions about the Victory of the Cuban Beach Volleyball Duo in Moscow
What achievement did the Cuban beach volleyball duo reach in Moscow?
The Cuban beach volleyball duo, composed of Noslen Díaz and Jorge Luis Alayo, was crowned champion at the Moscow stop of the Russian national championship, defeating the locals Oleg Stoyanovski and Ilya Leshukov in a closely contested final.
How many titles has the Cuban duo won in Russia?
With their victory in Moscow, Noslen Díaz and Jorge Luis Alayo have accumulated four titles in Russia: two in the national league (Moscow and Kazan), one in the Russian Cup, and another in the prestigious Sirius tournament.
What is the next challenge for Díaz and Alayo after their victory in Moscow?
The next challenge for the Cuban duo will be a new stage of the Copa de Rusia in Saint Petersburg, which will take place in six days and offers a larger prize pool.
Sports
Anais Dallara – Women’s Tennis Coach
Anais Dallara, following a stellar playing career as the winningest tennis player in Long Beach State history, is in her fifth year as the assistant coach. During her outstanding four-year career, Dallara established new program records for most career wins (185), most singles wins (98) and most singles wins in a season (30 in 2012). […]

During her outstanding four-year career, Dallara established new program records for most career wins (185), most singles wins (98) and most singles wins in a season (30 in 2012). She is also second on the doubles win list (87). She capped her career with a historic senior season, setting the school record for singles wins in a season with 30, while reaching a ranking of No. 101 and posting an 11-0 record against Big West opponents at No. 1 singles while earning Big West Player of the Year honors.
A four-time All-Big West selection, Dalara became just the fourth player in school history to earn an invitation to the NCAA Singles Championship, while leading the 49ers to their second-ever NCAA tournament victory, defeating No. 33 Arkansas 4-0. Over her career, Dallara was a four-time All-Big West selection, a four-time ITA National All-Academic honoree and became the first Long Beach State player to reach the ITA Regional semifinals in the same season as the NCAA Singles Championship.
Academically, Dallara was a four-time ITA National All-Academic honoree at Long Beach State and she earned her master’s degree from Long Beach State in 2016. Hailing from Valbonne, France, Dallara has an elite -4/6 French Federation women’s tennis ranking.
Dallara also has an elite -4/6 French Federation women’s tennis ranking
Sports
How to watch USA vs Argentina Women’s Water Polo clash at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships
Here’s the all-you-need-to-know guide on how to watch and livestream USA vs Argentina Women’s Water Polo clash at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships. The USA Women’s National Team kept their momentum rolling at the World Championships, notching a second straight win with a hard-fought 11-9 triumph over the Netherlands. Watch USA vs Argentina Women’s Water […]

Here’s the all-you-need-to-know guide on how to watch and livestream USA vs Argentina Women’s Water Polo clash at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships.
The USA Women’s National Team kept their momentum rolling at the World Championships, notching a second straight win with a hard-fought 11-9 triumph over the Netherlands.
Emily Ausmus spearheaded the American attack with a hat trick, while Amanda Longan stood tall between the posts, registering eight key saves.
Despite a modest 1-for-7 conversion on power plays, the Americans were sharp from the penalty spot, sinking 3-of-4 attempts. The Dutch, meanwhile, struggled with efficiency, going just 1-for-8 on the power play and converting 1-of-2 penalties.
Team USA will look to wrap up group play on a high note when they face Argentina on Monday night.
GOAL has everything you need to know to watch USA vs Argentina Women’s Water Polo clash at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships in the United States.
World Aquatics Championships 2025: USA vs Argentina Women’s Water Polo date, start time
USA vs Argentina Women’s Water Polo game at World Aquatics Championships 2025 will broadcast live on Monday, July 14, 2025 at 9:00 pm ET or 6:00 pm PT from the World Aquatics Championships Arena (WCH Arena) in Singapore Sports Hub in Singapore.
How to watch USA vs Argentina Women’s Water Polo at World Aquatics Championships 2025 live on Peacock
Live coverage from World Aquatics Championships Arena (WCH Arena) in Singapore Sports Hub in Singapore kicks off Sunday live on Peacock.
When and where are the World Aquatics Championships 2025?
The 2025 World Aquatics Championships are making a splash in Singapore, with the action unfolding at the brand-new, 4,800-capacity World Aquatics Championships Arena (WCH Arena) — a state-of-the-art venue unveiled in June at the iconic Singapore Sports Hub.
The competition kicks off with water polo on 11 July, and will ride the wave all the way through to a grand finale on 3 August, when the last swimming and diving medals will be up for grabs.
Sports
Sunday Sit-Down with Mizzou volleyball coach Dawn Sullivan
COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ) ABC 17 Sports Director Nathalie Jones caught up with Mizzou Volleyball’s head coach Dawn Sullivan to preview the upcoming 2025 season on this week’s edition of Sunday Sit-Down. The Tigers are entering their third year under Coach Sullivan’s leadership, looking to build on the early success of her tenure with the team. […]

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)
ABC 17 Sports Director Nathalie Jones caught up with Mizzou Volleyball’s head coach Dawn Sullivan to preview the upcoming 2025 season on this week’s edition of Sunday Sit-Down.
The Tigers are entering their third year under Coach Sullivan’s leadership, looking to build on the early success of her tenure with the team. MU has posted 40 combined wins and earned back-to-back NCAA Tournament berths, including a run to the Sweet 16, over the last two seasons.
“I think this team has some high aspirations. They want to take one step further within the SEC. How do we win the SEC? How do we get to an Elite Eight?” Sullivan said. “The way they’re training, day in and day out, I think those are the standards that they’re setting for themselves now. They’re never really comfortable where they’re at. They’re just always looking for a little bit more.”
You can watch the full interview in the video player above.
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Sports
Vote on best players of 2000-25
The Palm Beach Post is hosting a summer celebration featuring the best of Palm Beach County high school athletics from the first 25 years of the 21st century. Starting the first week of June, the Post will roll out content highlighting every state champion and Player of the Year winner from 2000-25, including photos, reader […]
The Palm Beach Post is hosting a summer celebration featuring the best of Palm Beach County high school athletics from the first 25 years of the 21st century.
Starting the first week of June, the Post will roll out content highlighting every state champion and Player of the Year winner from 2000-25, including photos, reader polls and premium content. A full publication schedule can be found at the bottom of this page.
This week, we’ll continue with Palm Beach County girls volleyball, which has produced countless collegiate and professional players in the last quarter century.
A couple of notes regarding the historical record: The Post awarded Large and Small School Player of the Year awards until 2022, when the award was consolidated in association with the Palm Beach County High School Sports Awards Show. Large School Player of the Year winners are listed first in years with multiple winners. A handful of seasons include Co-Player of the Year selections.
2000: Julia Caner, Olympic Heights
- Caner, a 5-foot-6 outside hitter, averaged 12 kills per match as a junior outside hitter and helped the Lions win a fifth consecutive state championship.
2000: Ashley Youngs, Lake Worth Christian
- Youngs averaged 14.6 kills, 6.1 blocks and 6.2 digs per match in leading the Defenders to the region final. She signed with the University of Miami.
2001: Julia Caner, Olympic Heights
- Caner amassed 336 kills to win her fourth straight state championship with the Lions, the program’s sixth consecutive overall. Caner’s career record was 128-6 in four seasons and she signed with Rollins College.
2001: Carmen Paez, Glades Day
- Paez led the Gators to the state semifinals for the first time in program history while racking up 288 kills and 63 assists. She also shined for the softball team.
2002: Summer Weissing, Olympic Heights
- Weissing dominated with 300 kills and a team-high 380 digs as the Lions captured a Florida record seventh consecutive state championship.
2002: Kelly Lord, King’s Academy
- Lord overcame midseason injuries to lead King’s Academy to the state semifinals. She finished with 247 kills, 30 blocks and 173 digs from the outside hitter position.
2003: Summer Weissing, Olympic Heights
- Weissing averaged 12 kills and led the Lions to the region finals before the program’s record state championship streak came to an end. She signed with Florida State University.
2003: Heather Friend, Pope John Paul II
- Friend was among the area leaders in kills with 327 to power the Eagles to the region finals. She also chipped in 70 aces as well as 132 digs and 27 blocks.
2004: Madison Robelen, Spanish River
- On the heels of a state championship season, Robelen was once again the quarterback for a Sharks team that reached the state championship match.
2004: Heather Friend, Pope John Paul II
- Friend led the Eagles to the state semifinals for the first time since 1993 with 193 kills. She continued her volleyball career and education at the Savannah College of Art and Design.
2005: Lydee Benoit, Suncoast
- Nicknamed “Beast” for her powerful spikes, Benoit was the inspirational leader for a Chargers team that won the Class 4A state championship. She finished with 310 kills and 204 digs.
2005: Amanda Manke, Trinity Christian
- Manke dished out 620 assists as well as 112 kills from the setter position. She powered through a torn meniscus suffered during the region final to help the team reach the state semifinals.
2006: Devon Woolard, Spanish River
- Woolard switched from outside hitter to setter and became a key figure in the Sharks’ run to the state semifinals.
2006: Erika Retzsch, Boca Raton Christian
- Retzsch was a foundational player in Boca Raton Christian’s rise as a volleyball program under Len Visser, who called her “an inspiration for our school” in 2006. She was the first player to join a club volleyball team and resisted lures to transfer to larger schools.
2007: Brett Benzio, Jensen Beach
- Benzio, a multi-sport star in volleyball and basketball, helped the Falcons win the 4A state title, the first by a Treasure Coast team since 1994.
2007: Emily Kirk, King’s Academy
- Kirk was an All-State selection at middle hitter for the Lions, who reached the state championship match in their defense of the 2006 state title.
2008: Cassady Cook, Royal Palm Beach
- Cook led the Wildcats to the best season in school history with a 26-5 record and berth in the Class 6A state championship match. She piled up 338 kills, 352 assists, 247 digs and 81 blocks.
2008: Becki Meerbeek, Lake Worth Christian
- Meerbeek, a 6-foot-3 middle blocker, managed to lead her team with 404 kills and 98 blocks despite a midseason emergency appendectomy. The Defenders went 27-5 and reached the Class 1A state championship match.
2009: Elise Walch, Martin County
- Walch was arguably the best player in Florida in 2009, earning Florida Dairy Farmers Miss Volleyball after an astonishing season with 547 kills, 151 blocks and 29 aces. The Tigers finished 31-1 and won the 5A state title. She signed with Wisconsin.
2009: Danielle Lampman, Lake Worth Christian
- Lampman, a 5-foot-3 setter, led the area with 867 assists while guiding the Defenders to the state semifinals. She signed with Bryan College in Tennessee.
2010: Melissa Green, Boca Raton
- Green shined for the Bobcats and ultimately signed with the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga.
2010: Brytney Annis, Lake Worth Christian
- Annis formed a dominant middle duo with sophomore Meagan Milligan, helping the Defenders return to the state semifinals for the 16th time.
2011: Kate Rawls, Wellington
- Rawls led the Wolverines in kills (302) and helped Wellington finish 25-2 and state runner-up. She played indoor and beach volleyball at Georgia State.
2011: Kristen Reid, Lake Worth Christian
- Reid was the Class 2A Florida Dairy Farmers Player of the Year. She helped form the core of Lake Worth Christian’s breakthrough state championship team after nine previous losses in the state final.
2012: Ruth Harrington, Boca Raton
- Harrington won Florida Dairy Farmers 8A Player of the Year and set school records for career- and single-season kills. She led the Bobcats to a 31-1 record and the program’s first state championship.
2012: Meagan Milligan, Lake Worth Christian
- Milligan led the Defenders with 361 kills and 101 blocks to help the Defenders repeat as state champions. She was the Florida Dairy Farmers 2A Player of the Year and signed with St. John’s University.
2013: Chelsea Boretti, Wellington
- Boretti shined at setter with 815 assists and led the Wolverines to the first undefeated regular season in school history. She signed with Rollins College.
2013: Jessica Armstrong, Benjamin
- Armstrong was the Bucs’ kills leader and powered the Bucs to a 23-3 record and the program’s first region final in 17 years. She signed with Stetson.
2014: Cara Guthrie and Dani Jaffe, Jupiter
- Guthrie and Jaffe formed the core of Jupiter’s first appearance in the state championship match. The Warriors finished 29-2. Jaffe set a school record for career appearances (116) and had a team-high 467 digs while Guthrie led the Warriors with 337 kills.
2014: Emily Lampman, Lake Worth Christian
- Lampman led the area with 691 digs to help the Defenders win a district championship.
2015: Christine Jarman, Boca Raton
- Jarman led the Bobcats with a team-high 381 kills and a .404 hitting percentage.
2015: Emily Lampan and Hannah Tannone, Lake Worth Christian
- Lampman and Tannone were central in the Defenders’ run to the Class 2A state championship. Lampman posted 726 digs while Tannone had 601 digs and 281 kills.
2016: Christine Jarman, Boca Raton
- Jarman was spectacular in her final varsity season with 340 kills and 246 digs to lead Boca Raton to a 24-2 record and the Class 9A state championship. She signed with the University of Alabama.
2016: Jenna Culhan, Lake Worth Christian
- Culhan transferred from Boca Raton to Lake Worth Christian for her senior season and won Florida Dairy Farmers Class 3A Player of the Year. She piled up a state-best 454 kills with 462 digs and 62 aces to help the Defenders reach the Class 3A state semifinals. She signed with Liberty University.
2017: Madelyne Anderson, Palm Beach Gardens
- Anderson helped Gardens finish 26-2 and reach the Class 9A state championship game. She was a complete player with 330 kills, 36 aces, 92 blocks and 214 digs. Anderson signed with Florida State beach volleyball.
2017: Sarah Franklin, Lake Worth Christian
- Franklin led the Defenders to the Class 3A regional finals, finishing with 405 kills, 78 blocks, 254 service points and 92 aces in her sophomore campaign.
2018: Ashley Klein, Palm Beach Gardens
- Klein’s had 448 digs and 44 aces to help the Gators reach the state championship match.
2018: Libby Nieporte, Oxbridge Academy
- Nieporte led the ThunderWolves with 466 kills and 316 digs as the ThunderWolves reached the region final. She signed with Bucknell.
2018: Ellie Blain, Benjamin
- Blain was an offensive powerhouse with 421 kills in the Bucs’ 21-2 campaign to the Class 3A state championship match.
2019: Hannah Heide, Palm Beach Gardens
- Heide dished out more than 2,300 career assists and led the Gators to three consecutive state runner-up finishes.
2019: Sarah Franklin, Lake Worth Christian
- Franklin dominated with 603 kills and 277 digs to lead the Defenders to the Class 2A state championship, capping a celebrated high school career with more than 2,000 kills. She signed with Michigan State and later transferred to Wisconsin.
2020: Amanda Dewitt, Jupiter
- Dewitt had 201 kills and 58 digs, supercharging the Warriors to a 16-0 campaign and victory in the Tri-County Championship in the first fall of high school sports during the COVID-19 pandemic. She signed with South Florida.
2020: Annie Smith, King’s Academy
- Smith had 174 kills and 59 blocks to guide the Lions to a 15-1 record and state semifinal finish. She signed with James Madison.
2021: Vivian Miller, Jupiter
- Miller posted 283 kills and led in serve receptions as Jupiter finished 25-1. She signed with Ole Miss and later transferred to Virginia.
2022: Tekoa Barnes, Boca Raton Christian
- Barnes’ 628 kills as a sophomore were the best of any player in Florida. The Blazers advanced to the state semifinals.
2023: Sarah Brodner, Jupiter
- Brodner, the team captain and an imposing middle hitter, rattled off 239 kills and 45 blocks to lead Jupiter to a 25-4 record and the state semifinals.
2024: Tekoa Barnes, Boca Raton Christian
- Barnes capped one of the most productive varsity volleyball careers in state history with 486 kills as a senior and a third consecutive state runner-up finish. She signed with Oklahoma.
Eric J. Wallace is deputy sports editor for The Palm Beach Post. He can be reached at ejwallace@gannett.com.
- Baseball (June 2-6)
- Softball (June 9-13)
- Boys Soccer (June 16-20)
- Girls Soccer (June 23-27)
- Boys Basketball (June 30-July 4)
- Girls Basketball (July 7-11)
- Volleyball (July 14-18)
- Football Defense (June 21-25)
- Football Offense (June 28-Aug. 1)
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