Violette Perry: Kiwi on lessons from Jacinda Ardern and being the first woman on Yale men’s water polo team
Yet, in doing so, Perry (Ngāti Kahungunu ki Wairarapa) made history. “The Yale men’s water polo team has been around officially in the system since 1964, and through that whole time, I’ve been the first woman to ever play on that team. So it’s very much an honour for me.” The Kiwi athlete, now 22, […]
Yet, in doing so, Perry (Ngāti Kahungunu ki Wairarapa) made history.
“The Yale men’s water polo team has been around officially in the system since 1964, and through that whole time, I’ve been the first woman to ever play on that team. So it’s very much an honour for me.”
The Kiwi athlete, now 22, returned to Auckland last month after graduating, taking time to reflect on her experience as a student athlete at the prestigious Ivy League school in Connecticut.
Violette Perry was mistaken for a physiotherapist when she first arrived at the pool for the men’s Yale water polo team. Photo / Michael Craig
Recruited for her exceptional academic and athletic abilities, Perry spent four years at Yale balancing the intense demands of elite sport and rigorous study.
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Yet the path to an Ivy League education was anything but straightforward.
Born and raised in Bangkok until the age of 7, her Kiwi parents quickly learned of her natural sporting ability.
“It’s normal [in Bangkok] to be really good at one sport and do that really hardcore. I was quite good at swimming, and I was quite tall over there for a child.”
Perry’s family moved back to her mother’s hometown of Christchurch not long before the 2010 earthquakes. But the damaged sports facilities in the South Island city affected Perry’s desire to grow as an athlete.
She moved to Auckland, boarding at St Cuthbert’s College for her last two years of high school, where she focused on water polo and athletics, specialising in javelin, discus and shot put. She also excelled in science, finishing top of her class in chemistry.
It was at St Cuthbert’s where Perry explored the option of college in the United States before she was recruited to Yale to study a Bachelor of Economics.
Kiwi Violette Perry graduated from Yale University with a Bachelor’s degree in economics and supplementary coursework in computer programming.
She told the Herald she had never considered a scholarship to America until colleges began contacting her in Year 12. Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Brown, University of Pennsylvania and Cornell all offered Perry places in their programmes, which made the possibility a reality.
She said the balance of school and sport was what attracted her to Yale.
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“I can confidently say that going to Yale was by far the best decision I’ve ever made in my life.”
“I’ve been quite frustrated by the whole connotation around student athletes – that you can’t succeed in both academics and athletics. At Yale, all the students really defy that and everyone is brilliant both academically and athletically. That’s something that I really love about school.”
Perry became the first in three generations of her whānau to attend university – let alone at an Ivy League school – marking a significant milestone for her family.
“My Māori grandmother never had the opportunity to go to school at all, neither my dad or any of his eight siblings finished high school or went to university.
“It was crazy because you don’t hear about people going to these schools, and then, let alone two generations passed.
“That, I was very proud of.”
Two years into her time at Yale, Perry shifted her focus entirely to water polo after a shoulder injury ended her track and field career.
By the end of her sophomore year, she caught the attention of the men’s team coach. He saw potential in her abilities, knowing she could add value to the men’s side.
Violette Perry: ‘Going to Yale was by far the best decision I’ve ever made in my life.’
“The women’s team had a practice one weekend, and the men’s coach was there early for the men’s practice. Then he saw me training and he asked if I wanted to come join the men’s practice afterwards.
“I ended up just training with them at all of their practices and then we were able to get dispensation for me to play.”
Playing in the New England Division of the Collegiate Water Polo Association, she described it as a “crazy and unique experience”.
Perry told the Herald that playing in the men’s competition amplified the physical aspects of the already notoriously brutal sport.
She said the men’s game relied more on “brute strength” as there was “significantly more body contact and physical battling for position”.
Despite being the outlier, having to get ready for games in different changing rooms and having different physical abilities and strengths, her coach and teammates treated her with the same respect as anyone else, she said.
Violette Perry: ‘My teammates were so kind, they’re like my family.’
“My teammates were so kind, they’re like my family.”
Perry said that when it came to academia, she felt the cut-throat nature of an Ivy League school.
“It is very competitive, especially grades-wise.
“Everyone is their high-school valedictorian and it’s a bunch of A-plus personality people in one classroom.”
However, she said she never felt she had to choose between sport and study, given the school’s academic support system.
She would take early morning classes at Yale, leaving the afternoons and evenings free for training. During track and field season, she trained from 4pm-7pm on weekdays with weekend competitions then for water polo had evening pool sessions from 8pm-10pm four times a week, “plus intensive Saturday sessions where I’d train back-to-back with both the men’s and women’s teams”.
With her first-hand experience playing competitive sport alongside men, Perry was supportive of moves to exclude transgender women’s exclusion in top-flight female sports.
“While I deeply respect transgender individuals and support their inclusion in society, competitive sport presents unique challenges,” Perry said.
“The biological advantages from testosterone development are significant enough that even the most elite female athletes may struggle to compete on equal terms.”
She said it isn’t about discrimination, more so about preserving the competitive integrity that separate categories were designed to ensure.
Violette Perry said that when it came to academia, she felt the cut-throat nature of an Ivy League school.
Perry’s lessons from Dame Jacinda Ardern
Perry told the Herald that her graduation couldn’t have been more meaningful, as Dame Jacinda Ardern, the former New Zealand Prime Minister, addressed Perry’s graduating class.
As both Ardern and Perry excelled in male-dominated fields, Ardern’s presence at the ceremony, where she talked of the power of humility that comes with impostor syndrome, added a thoughtful parallel to Perry’s journey.
“She’s incredible, and what I remember the most about meeting her is how deeply personable she was,” Perry told the Herald. “I think that very much speaks volumes to her as a leader.”
She was one of the 12 lucky New Zealanders from the graduating class who met Ardern ahead of her speech with the entire year group.
She said Ardern asked the Kiwis if they were “disappointed she was chosen as the guest speaker”, but she and her peers responded adamantly: “Obviously not.”
Violette Perry (left) pictured at Yale University with Dame Jacinda Ardern.
“My friends were all so excited.
“Despite how much she’s achieved on such a global scale, she managed to make everyone in that room, all 12 of us, feel very seen and heard – and I think that’s really beautiful.
“It definitely speaks to how she’s not just a leader in the sense of making very big decisions, but also how she interacts with people in the smallest moments.
“I think that’s very much a quality of a very strong leader.”
Perry said she learned through Ardern the importance of how to act around others.
“It’s not just how you are on the big stage. She was the same on that stage as she was with us in that tiny room, and I think that’s a really important way to be.
“Being New Zealanders, we are very renowned for our humility and also our sense of community – and you can feel that from her, and it made me realise that in myself.”
Now back in Tāmaki-Makaurau Auckland, Perry is reconnecting with family while competing in the national water polo league for the Sea Wolves, all while planning her next steps.
Aware of the limited financial opportunities in the sport in Aotearoa, she has decided to prioritise her career, with plans to move to Sydney later this year for a role in management consulting.
Violette Perry: ‘If you’re a woman and you’re looking at going into a men’s league, don’t be intimidated by it.’ Photo / Michael Craig
As she steps into the next phase of her life, Perry is advocating for greater adaptability in male-dominated spaces and sports teams.
She said her experience playing for the Yale men’s water polo team was a success, given the inclusive environment where she was fully recognised and supported.
“It’s definitely less about females moulding into a certain way to fit into a pre-existing men’s water polo league and more just them creating space for people like me to come in.
“The league that I played in did that very well and I definitely think if you’re a woman and you’re looking at going into a men’s league, don’t be intimidated by it.
“I got a lot better as a player, I got a lot stronger – and there are a lot of benefits that came out of that.”
Bonnie Jansen is a multimedia journalist in the NZME sports team. She was named New Zealand’s Best Up and Coming journalist in 2025. She’s a football commentator and co-host of the Football Fever podcast and was part of the Te Rito cadetship scheme before becoming a fulltime journalist.
What the NCAA settlement means for ASU, athlete pay and Title IX
The distribution of revenue-sharing funds to athletes following the recent House v. NCAA settlement raises question about allotment to teams at ASU, whose coaches include from left, Kenny Dillingham (football), Molly Miller (women’s basketball), Missy Farr-Kaye (women’s golf) and Bobby Hurley (men’s basketball). (File photo by Sammy Nute/Cronkite News) PHOENIX – Arizona State began distributing […]
The distribution of revenue-sharing funds to athletes following the recent House v. NCAA settlement raises question about allotment to teams at ASU, whose coaches include from left, Kenny Dillingham (football), Molly Miller (women’s basketball), Missy Farr-Kaye (women’s golf) and Bobby Hurley (men’s basketball). (File photo by Sammy Nute/Cronkite News)
PHOENIX – Arizona State began distributing revenue-sharing funds to athletes Thursday in response to the recent House v. NCAA settlement, a shift in the college sports landscape that raises urgent questions about how colleges will uphold Title IX gender equity laws in the process.
The deal, which allows schools to directly pay athletes for the first time, was approved by Federal Judge Claudia Wilken June 6. It resolved three antitrust lawsuits alleging the NCAA illegally limited athlete compensation.
Under the settlement, the NCAA will pay $2.8 billion in back damages to athletes who competed from 2016-2024 and were fully or partially denied name, image and likeness (NIL) opportunities. Moving forward, each university can also compensate its athletes with the initial annual revenue-sharing cap set for $20.5 million, a mark set to increase yearly.
Arizona State athletic director Graham Rossini did not reveal what percentage of the money will go toward each team, but he emphasized that football, despite its economic importance to the athletic department, will not be the sole beneficiary.
“We’re maxing out revenue share, we are a full participant,” Rossini said. “There are female sports that will be receiving some of those funds. We’ve got 26 sports, the most in the Big 12 and 14 of them are female sports. We’re very committed to females having opportunities in athletics.”
Although ASU would not reveal percentage distribution, others have, and most are expected to reflect the back-payment formula defined in the $2.8 billion settlement: 75% to football players, 15% to men’s basketball, 5% to women’s basketball and 5% to all remaining sports.
North Carolina athletic director Bubba Cunningham said in a statement that four sports will share the $20.5 million allocation, with football and men’s basketball receiving the majority, and baseball and women’s basketball securing a smaller amount. LSU has said football will receive 75%, and men’s basketball 15%, with the remainder going to other sports.
A 2025 Opendorse report suggests 65.6% of the money at Power 4 schools will go to football, 20.3% to men’s basketball and 6.6% to women’s basketball, leaving only 7.5% for every other sport.
Title IX legal challenges
With ASU one of many Power 4 schools expected to continue prioritizing revenue-generating sports, equity concerns are mounting. Eight athletes from multiple schools already filed an appeal arguing that the settlement, specifically the back damages portion, violates Title IX as female athletes would get less money than players at high-earning men’s programs.
Arthur Bryant, a preeminent lawyer who has won more Title IX cases involving athletes than anyone in the country and recently published a critical Sportico analysis of the settlement, has serious doubts about the House settlement’s Title IX viability in the current landscape of college athletics.
“The House settlement creates Title IX violations and is a Title IX violation in a bunch of ways,” Bryant said. “Title IX requires that the money be distributed proportionally to the men and women athletes. So that’s how schools comply with the House settlement going forward and not create a Title IX problem.
“There are schools who said they’re going to do that, but there are other schools who said that they are going to give 90% of the money to the football and men’s basketball players. Those schools are violating Title IX and they’re walking themselves into a lawsuit against any woman who wants to sue.”
Since its 1972 passage, Title IX has impacted college sports, ultimately leading to the current space where NIL is benefiting female college athletes nearly as much as their male counterparts. For instance, women’s basketball superstars Caitlin Clark and Paige Bueckers have earned more from college NIL deals than their rookie WNBA contracts, a reason why many female basketball and volleyball players stay in college rather than turn professional.
Victoria Jackson, a history professor and co-director of the Great Game Lab at ASU, believes this expansion of opportunities is transformative.
“The benefits NIL has afforded female athletes are better than a salary in any league in any sport in the world,” Jackson said
Unlike Bryant, Jackson is not overly concerned that the House settlement will weaken Title IX protections. Instead of fighting against the money flowing into and from football, she encourages advocates for women’s and Olympic sports to focus on expanding their own revenue streams.
“And now that more football money is going to be staying with football athletes, advocates for women’s sports shouldn’t be fighting against that,” Jackson said. “They should be in support of that and also, you know, making a case that schools should be investing in women’s sports and Olympic sports, but pulling from other pots of money. And so what I’ve been working on is trying to identify new revenue streams to support women’s sports and Olympic sports because they do have value.”
Jackson went a step further, mentioning that colleges should separate football from all other sports given how professional the college game has become. If that were to happen, it would reduce Title IX concerns because most of the revenue-sharing money schools get and give to other sports comes from their football programs.
Jackson’s argument gains support when viewed through the latest Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act data from ASU. The university’s football team brought in $40,162,578, according to the EADA’s 2024 report, while its total revenue from all male and female sports except football and basketball came to $40,649,397, according to the EADA.
Title IX’s role in the NIL era reached the national stage earlier this year. On Jan. 16, President Joe Biden’s Office for Civil Rights issued a memo warning that NIL agreements could violate Title IX if not distributed proportionally. After taking office, President Donald Trump’s administration quickly rescinded the guidance, giving colleges more leeway to avoid pursuing gender equity revenue-sharing models.
Future of non-revenue sports
The combination of the settlement’s approval and Trump’s act sparked concern that non-revenue generating Olympic and co-ed sports such as swimming and diving, track and field and gymnastics could be cut or insufficiently funded, increasing the risk of Title IX violations in this new era of college athletics.
At the end of April, Grand Canyon University announced that this past spring would be the last season for its Division I boys volleyball team, with the school set to only offer the sport at club level next year. On June 16, Washington State University revealed that its track and field program is eliminating its field portion (throws and jumps) to mainly focus on distance events.
As Arizona State and other universities prepare to directly pay its athletes, questions around Title IX compliance are heating up. (3D illustration by Osaka Wayne Studios/Getty Images)
Aaron Hernandez, assistant dean and executive director of the Allan “Bud” Selig Sports Law and Business Program at Arizona State University’s Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, expressed concern that what has happened at other schools could take place at ASU.
However, Rossini said ASU not only plans to keep all 26 of its sports, but is investing more resources into them. For instance, the school is adding 200 new athletic scholarships to comply with roster limits that replace scholarship limits.
“I get that it’s time for these guys to share in the revenue, but the cost of all these other really special people in the community at schools like ASU is something that really worries me,” Hernandez said. “I hope that there’s a future where we keep our Olympic movement and our women’s sports propped up in a good way.”
ASU athlete’s perspective
One of those “really special people,” as Hernandez put it, is Kate Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald has made it her mission to educate and inspire fellow female college athletes in the NIL space. The co-founder of the Student Athlete Venture Studio, an initiative launched to support female athlete entrepreneurs, Fitzgerald spent four years playing beach volleyball at ASU and a fifth year as a graduate assistant coach while pursuing a master’s degree. In her senior year (2023-2024), Fitzgerald was ASU’s top NIL-earning Olympic sport female athlete, profiting from her volleyball lifestyle clothing brand VBAmerica.
Given her experience with Sun Devil athletics and NIL, Fitzgerald has full trust in Rossini to lead ASU in the right direction.
“He’s definitely helping ASU prevent cuts of programs … ASU always says No. 1 in innovation, so they’re being innovative about NIL and that’s ultimately in my opinion, the best way to go about it,” Fitzgerald said. “These are changing times, so instead of fighting and cutting, let’s try new ways to make money and find a new way to adapt to this newfound lifestyle of college athletics.”
As the House settlement era begins, the athletes most affected may be those outside the spotlight – athletes who, like Fitzgerald, must navigate a shifting landscape with both uncertainty and opportunity.
“If you’re not in a revenue generating sport or have a large social media following, that doesn’t mean you can’t leverage NIL,” Fitzgerald said. “You just have to go after it, and think long term – use NIL to find internships, build your career, and bring in some kind of revenue, even if it’s just food coverage…Realistically, NIL will not fall into your lap.”
In an era where millions of dollars are on the table, the future of college sports may indeed depend on creativity as well as compliance to ensure that progress for some doesn’t come at the expense of equity.
Women’s Volleyball Nations League kicks off week three, Team USA defeats Team Thailand |
Outside hitter Jordan Larson tips the ball during a game against Türkiye at the Women’s Volleyball Nations League on June 2 at College Park Center. File photo / Natanael Mazariego The final leg of the Women’s Volleyball Nations League preliminary phase began as Team USA took to the stage with five other national teams set […]
Outside hitter Jordan Larson tips the ball during a game against Türkiye at the Women’s Volleyball Nations League on June 2 at College Park Center.
File photo / Natanael Mazariego
The final leg of the Women’s Volleyball Nations League preliminary phase began as Team USA took to the stage with five other national teams set to play Wednesday through Sunday at College Park Center.
To begin the tournament in Arlington, the VNL opened day one with a 3-2 win by No. 7 Germany over No. 15 Canada.
After a disheartening 3-1 finish to start the preliminary phase in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, Team USA bounced back with a 3-1 overall in week two at Belgrade, Serbia. The team has returned to home soil with an No. 8 standing to kick off week three.
Team USA opened this week with a 3-1 win over No. 17 Thailand in the final match of the tournament’s first day at 7:30 p.m. at College Park Center. The victory marked the team’s third straight win in the tournament.
Team USA has undergone significant roster changes and additions to the tournament team, with 10 week one VNL debuts and four returning players.
“I think the players are getting more comfortable on the competition court,” said Erik Sullivan, Team USA head coach. “The systems that we’ve put in place and been working on for the last month, month and a half, are starting to tighten up and be better.”
The first three sets were tightly contested, but Team USA maintained the upper hand and found steady momentum, leading for most of the match. The team held a clear size advantage over Thailand and used it to their benefit throughout the series.
Blocked spikes and hard-driven serves helped set the team up for success, but Thailand stayed within reach using set pieces and coordinated plays to keep pressure on USA.
“They run a very fast and complex offense, which when they’re in system can be really hard to defend,” Team USA libero Lexi Rodriguez said. “I think it took us the first two sets to adjust to their speed, their style of play and it tests you to be a little bit more disciplined and patient.”
Thailand took the second set, but USA held off a late rally to win the third. With momentum on its side, Team USA closed out the match in dominant fashion, taking the fourth set 25-15.
The team held at least a seven-point lead throughout the latter half of the final frame and had two 4-0 runs.
Team USA setter Jordyn Poulter said Thailand is a scrappy and unique team to face. She called the victory a “total team win” and said she was proud of the team’s ability to stay composed and not get caught up in the opponent’s style of play.
The tournament will continue with Team USA facing off against No. 11 Dominican Republic on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at College Park Center.
The U.S. will play two more matches to close out the women’s preliminary phase, facing Canada at 7:30 p.m. Saturday and No. 6 China at 7 p.m. Sunday. All games are available to stream on VBTV.
Prior to LBSU: Made an immediate impact at McMaster College as a freshman in 2013, leading her team to an OUA championship and an appearance in the CIS tournament (Canada’s national collegiate tournament) … led the team with 3.15 kills per set in 67 sets played … selected to the OUA All-Star first team after […]
Prior to LBSU: Made an immediate impact at McMaster College as a freshman in 2013, leading her team to an OUA championship and an appearance in the CIS tournament (Canada’s national collegiate tournament) … led the team with 3.15 kills per set in 67 sets played … selected to the OUA All-Star first team after the season and was the MVP of the OUA Tournament … also averaged 2.22 digs per set on the year … served up 20 aces, which also led the squad.
Team Canada: The youngest players on Canada’s beach volleyball team … she has competed at several international competitions, including the U19 and U21 FIVB World Championships … won the beach volleyball Gold Medal at the Canada Games in 2013 with partner, Ali Wooley … placed ninth at the U19 FIVB World Championship in 2012 … won the Gold medal at the FIVB U21 World Championships in 2014 with partner Tia Miric … Bukovec and Miric were Canada’s first age group winners at an FIVB World Championship … competed in both the U21 and U23 World Championships this summer for Team Canada … finished ninth at the U23 World Championships in Poland with Miric.
Personal: Born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada … Also worked as a model in Canada.
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Slew of former Husker stars set to play in Nebraska volleyball’s alumni match
Nate Johnson, Channel 8 LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN) — The Nebraska volleyball team on Thursday released a long list of former Huskers that will play in the inaugural alumni match in August. Former player and assistant coach Jordan Larson headlines the group, as she was a three-time All-American during her career at Nebraska (2005-08). Larson also […]
LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN) — The Nebraska volleyball team on Thursday released a long list of former Huskers that will play in the inaugural alumni match in August.
Former player and assistant coach Jordan Larson headlines the group, as she was a three-time All-American during her career at Nebraska (2005-08).
Larson also won a National Championship with Nebraska in 2006 and is a four-time Olympic medalist, leading Team USA to gold in 2021.
Her four Olympic medals are tied for the most all-time by a women’s volleyball player.
SEE ALSO:Nebraska volleyball announces details for Fan Day, inaugural alumni match
Along with Larson, two-time All-American and national champion setter Kelly Hunter will play in the alumni match.
Three-time All-American and national champion middle blocker Lauren Stivrins will join the squad, as well as former national champion and All-American libero Kenzie Maloney.
Recent former Huskers Lindsay Krause, Leyla Blackwell and Ally Batenhorst have also committed to playing in the match.
The alumni match will be a standard best-of-five format on Aug. 16 at 6 p.m. at the Bob Devaney Sports Center.
For more information on tickets, visit the Nebraska Athletic Department’s website.
Categories: Husker Sports, Sports
Tags: Ally Batenhorst, alumni match, bob devaney sports center, Huskers, Jordan Larson, Kelly Hunter, kenzie maloney, Lauren Stivrins, leyla blackwell, Lindsay Krause, Nebraska, Volleyball
Total of 2,741 Big West Student-Athletes Named to 2024-25 Commissioner’s Honor Roll
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2024-25 Big West Commissioner’s Honor Roll A total of 2,741 student-athletes from 11 institutions across all 21-conference sponsored sports were named to the 2024-25 Big West Commissioner’s Honor Roll. To be named to the honor roll, student-athletes must be on a team roster in a Big West-sponsored sport and […]
2024-25 Big West Commissioner’s Honor Roll
A total of 2,741 student-athletes from 11 institutions across all 21-conference sponsored sports were named to the 2024-25 Big West Commissioner’s Honor Roll.
To be named to the honor roll, student-athletes must be on a team roster in a Big West-sponsored sport and were eligible for competition. There are three categories on the list based on GPA: Honor Roll (3.00-3.20), With Honors (3.21-3.50) and Highest Honors (3.51-4.00). The Faculty Athletics Representatives (FAR) of each of the 11 institutions submitted their lists to the conference office.
Big West Commissioner Dan Butterly commented, “The Big West Commissioner’s Honor Roll celebrates more than just academic success — it represents the extraordinary commitment of our student-athletes to excellence in every aspect of their college experience. Competing at the highest level of NCAA athletics while excelling in the classroom is no easy feat, and these individuals have demonstrated what it means to truly embody the spirit of the scholar-athlete. The Big West is proud to recognize their accomplishments and inspired by the discipline, leadership, and future they represent.”
UC San Diego had the most awardees in the conference with 360, with 204 receiving highest honors. UC Santa Barbara (347), UC Davis (273), Cal Poly (266) and Hawai’i (253) rounded out the top five. UC Irvine (236), CSUN (231), Cal State Fullerton (215) and Long Beach State (212) also eclipsed 200 honorees.