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Time to clean up women's basektball

Laura Hollis Creators Syndicate Women’s basketball should dispel the tired platitude that the world would be a much kinder place if women ran it. I just watched yet another video of WNBA player Caitlin Clark on the receiving end of inappropriately violent behavior during a game. This time, Clark’s team, the Indiana Fever, was playing […]

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Time to clean up women's basektball

Laura Hollis

Creators Syndicate

Women’s basketball should dispel the tired platitude that the world would be a much kinder place if women ran it.

I just watched yet another video of WNBA player Caitlin Clark on the receiving end of inappropriately violent behavior during a game. This time, Clark’s team, the Indiana Fever, was playing the Connecticut Sun.

The Fever were up 10 points, and Clark was in possession of the ball when she was poked in the eye by the Sun’s Jacy Sheldon. As Clark was recoiling away from the jab, Sheldon deliberately bumped her, and then Sheldon’s teammate Marina Mabrey shoved Clark to the ground — all while Clark was still holding her painful eye. (Mabrey was apparently later given a Flagrant-2 foul, as was Clark’s teammate Sophie Cunningham, who retaliated by deliberately fouling Sheldon with only 46 seconds left in the game. “Flagrant” fouls have financial penalties attached, although the WNBA does not disclose how much players are fined.)

To her credit, Clark refused to back down. She came back from the multiple fouls and hit a series of free throws that helped the Fever clinch the win.

Still, these were hardly isolated occurrences. Other clips posted on X appear to show Sheldon gouging Clark’s arm with her fingernails. And video footage from other games shows Clark being called a “b—h” by former Chicago Sky player Chennedy Carter, getting slapped in the face (also by Mabrey) and elbowed in the throat by Atlanta Dream center Brittney Griner when Clark wasn’t even in possession of the ball.

Personal attacks against Clark have become such a regular feature of WNBA games when the Fever play that observers on X are now referring to Clark as the league’s “punching bag.” It sure looks that way.

At this point, women’s basketball is starting to resemble mud wrestling without the mud. What’s next? Pulling hair?

Yes, I get it, basketball is a contact sport. And yes, these players are fiercely competitive. That can be said of men in certain sports as well. Hockey, for example, is notorious for the slams into the wall and fights that break out. But hockey players are wearing helmets, pads and other gear.

Bad behavior is bad behavior, in any sport. But this bad behavior reflects negatively on women’s sports, and at a time when women are fighting for the integrity of those sports. The women who have opportunities to play professionally should be role models for younger women and girls in college and high school who may have their sights set on playing professional ball, instead of setting poor examples by acting like spoiled brats on the court and in the press.

Some commentators opine that other WNBA players are jealous of the attention Clark has received since she went pro and joined the Fever. If that’s true, grow up. The athletes who feel that way should be glad that players like Clark are generating even more interest in their sport.

The gratuitous nastiness directed at Clark also encourages people to draw unfavorable comparisons between men’s and women’s sports.

Sure, we’ve all seen unnecessary roughness in football (again, a sport where the players are at least partially protected by their gear) and intentional fouls in men’s basketball.

But did you ever see another player poke Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Michael Jordan or LeBron James in the eye because they were talented players and got too much attention?

Much of the fault for this nonsense must be laid at the feet of the league and the officials, who are too slow to call out violence that is more than just “aggressive defense,” eject players who display poor sportsmanship and — if need be — sanction teams that let it happen (or, dare I say, encourage it). In fact, both the coaches for the Sun and the Fever criticized the referees who should have stepped in sooner to quell the hot tempers.

Fever coach Stephanie White said, “I started talking to the officials in the first quarter, and we knew this was going to happen. You could tell it was going to happen. So, they got to get control of it. They got to be better.”

Rashid Meziane, who coaches the Sun, said, “The ref has to do their job, to clean up the game and make sure the best team won the game and not just who is more physical.”

It truly is in the league’s longer-term best interests to get this under control. As many headlines as the temper tantrums generate, it’s like a sugar high; some people are just tuning in to see who’s going to throw the next punch.

Catfights may keep the public’s attention for a while, but they’ll eventually grow bored unless the games are about talent, exciting (and fair) competition and great play.

Ultimately, professional sports (for women and men) should be about personal development, teamwork, and victories that are the product of hard work, a positive attitude and great sportsmanship.

Female professional athletes have the potential to leave legacies that are more than just internet clicks and inflammatory headlines. They should take those opportunities as seriously as they do their season wins.

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UTSA’s Taussig, South Florida’s Brown Highlight American Scholar-Athletes of the Year

Story Links IRVING, Texas – UTSA baseball standout James Taussig and South Florida soccer star Georgia Brown have been chosen as the 2024-25 American Conference Scholar-Athletes of the Year, as chosen by the conference’s Academic Committee.   Taussig, who was chosen as the American’s Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year, and Brown, the American’s […]

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IRVING, Texas – UTSA baseball standout James Taussig and South Florida soccer star Georgia Brown have been chosen as the 2024-25 American Conference Scholar-Athletes of the Year, as chosen by the conference’s Academic Committee.
 
Taussig, who was chosen as the American’s Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year, and Brown, the American’s Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year, will each receive a $4,000 postgraduate financial scholarship.
 
Taussig and Brown were chosen from a group of 22 individual sport Scholar-Athletes of the Year who received $2,000 postgraduate scholarships. The 23 Scholar-Athletes of the Year include 16 individuals who won individual conference titles or earned all-conference accolades during the 2024-25 season.
 
Taussig, a native of Houston, becomes the first UTSA student-athlete and the fifth baseball player to be named as the American Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year. Taussig led the Roadrunners to their most successful season in program history in 2025 as he hit .344 with 10 home runs and 65 runs batted in to help UTSA to a win in the NCAA Austin Regional and its first appearance in the Super Regionals. He was named as Most Outstanding Player of the Austin Regional and was a first-team all-conference selection in the American.
 
Taussig graduated with a 3.94 grade-point average as a double major in finance and real estate finance and development. He was a four-time Dean’s List selection, a three-time President’s List honoree and was named the Will and Mary Hathaway Male Academic Athlete of the Year in 2025.
 
Brown, who hails from Highworth, England, becomes the third South Florida student-athlete to be chosen as the American Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year, joining 2021 winner Georgina Corrick (softball) and 2023 winner Dulcy Fankam- Mendjiadeu (basketball). She is the first women’s soccer player to earn the American’s top academic honor. 
 
Brown is a two-time College Sports Communicators. Academic All-America selection, including a first-team choice in 2024, when she earned first-team all-conference honors. A standout defender, Brown also contributed four goals and two assists in 2024 on her way to a second consecutive all-conference selection
 
Brown earned a 4.00 grade-point average as an undergraduate, completing a bachelor’s degree in biomedical sciences.
 
Selections for the 22 Scholar-Athlete of the Year awards, as well as the Male and Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year honors, are made by the Academic Committee on the basis of academic credentials and athletic performance. Each conference school may nominate one student-athlete per sport who has achieved senior academic standing as determined by the institution. A winner is chosen from each of the conference’s 20 sponsored sports in addition to at-large selections from sports not sponsored by the conference. 
 

Scholar-Athletes of the Year

The American Conference Scholar-Athlete of the Year awards are among of a number of scholarships presented by the conference during the academic year.

 

The conference has presented individual sport Scholar-Athletes of the Year in baseball, men’s basketball and women’s basketball since the 2013-14 season. The conference has presented individual awards in all other sports beginning with the 2017-18 season.

 

2025 American Male Scholar-Athlete of the Year

James Taussig, UTSA (Baseball)

 

2025 American Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year

Georgia Brown, South Florida (Soccer)

 

2025 American Scholar-Athletes of the Year


























Sport Student-Athlete School Highlights
Baseball James Taussig UTSA First-team all-conference; NCAA Austin Regional Most Outstanding Player
Men’s Basketball Xavier Bell Wichita State First-team all-conference; averaged 15.2 ppg in 2024-25
Women’s Basketball Synia Johnson East Carolina 112 career games; Most Outstanding Player of 2023 American Championship
Men’s Cross Country Ryan Adkins Tulane Member of 2024 American Championship team; placed 29th
Women’s Cross Country Amelie Attenborough Rice Registered top-25 finish at 2024 American Championship
Football Bryson Daily Army American Offensive Player of the Year; Sixth in Heisman Trophy voting
Men’s Golf Jake Peacock South Florida Two-time American Player of the Year and conference champion
Women’s Golf Lovisa Gunnar Tulsa Two-time all-conference; member of 2025 American championship team
Women’s Lacrosse Gianna Cutaia Charlotte First-team all-conference; led the American in ground balls per game
Men’s Soccer Logan Longo Memphis All-conference second team selection for 2024 regular-season champion
Women’s Soccer Georgia Brown South Florida First-team all-conference in 2024; 2023 Academic All-America selection
Softball Lauren Lucas Wichita State Three-time first-team all-conference; 2023 All-America selection
Women’s Swimming and Diving Andrea Zeebe Tulane American champion in 800 freestyle relay in 2025
Men’s Tennis Danijal Muminovic UTSA Runner-up at American Individual Championships
Women’s Tennis Darya Schwartzman Rice All-conference selection for nationally ranked Owls
Men’s Indoor Track and Field Hudson Bailey Wichita State 2025 American heptathlon champion
Women’s Indoor Track and Field Destiny Masters Wichita State Most Valuable Performer at 2025 American Championship
Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Joakim Genereux Wichita State Honorable mention All-America in 4×400 relay at 2025 NCAA Championships
Women’s Outdoor Track and Field McKyla van der Westhuizen Rice Two-time American champion in javelin throw
Women’s Volleyball Lara Kretschmer Charlotte Played 127 career matches; named to CSC Academic All-District Team
Men’s At-Large (Gymnastics) Joseph Buselmeier Army USA Gymnastics All-America; All-ECAC selection on floor and rings 
Women’s At-Large (Beach Volleyball) Olivia Stant UAB First-team all-conference after going 26-7 on top court



 



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NVL newcomers part seven – Farnborough Phoenix 

In the seventh of the summer series of articles on the new teams who will join the NVL for the 2025-26 season, Farnborough Phoenix speak about their Division 3 South West prospects.  Year formed: 1997.  NVL Coach: Nigel Spierts.  Social media handles: farnborough_volleyball_club (Instagram). Farnborough Volleyball Club- FVC (Facebook).  Website: Click here.  After two hugely […]

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In the seventh of the summer series of articles on the new teams who will join the NVL for the 2025-26 season, Farnborough Phoenix speak about their Division 3 South West prospects. 


Year formed: 1997. 

NVL Coach: Nigel Spierts. 

Social media handles: farnborough_volleyball_club (Instagram). Farnborough Volleyball Club- FVC (Facebook). 

Website: Click here. 


Farnborough Phoenix logo landscape

After two hugely successful seasons locally and regionally, Farnborough Phoenix are relishing playing National League volleyball and testing out just how good they can be at that level. 

Things certainly bode well for the Hampshire club, given recent achievements, having won Division 1 of the Berkshire League for the last two years running and also twice finishing as SEVA winners during that time. 

Alongside that, in last year’s National Shield competition, the team also enjoyed success where they swept to a 25-17, 25-13, 25-20 victory at the Last 64 stage over a Cheltenham and Gloucester side which had just been promoted to NVL Division 2 West. 

Farnborough also put up a fight at the Last 32 stage before being edged out in five sets by Portsmouth, who completed a reverse sweep on the south coast (21-25, 18-25, 25-23, 25-14, 15-12).   

From the autumn, they can look forward to the new challenge of facing the likes of Bedminster 2, Plymouth, Plymouth Mayflower, Portsmouth, Weymouth, Southampton 2, City of Bristol and Bristol 2 in NVL Division 3 South East. 

“We are consistently winning everything we can on a local and South East level,” said Head Coach Nigel Spierts. “We want to take it to new levels and see how far we can go. 

“We want to finish as high as possible in our new league. A top-three finish is the ambition, but we’ll be happy with playing our level consistently and peaking towards the end of the season. 

“Playing different teams with different styles and players is going to make things very interesting and we would love to have a good run in the Shield to go with our league matches.” 

While it is the highest-ranked women’s side that is making the foray into the NVL, Farnborough is an active club from top to bottom. 

It operates two men’s and two women’s teams, as well as a number of junior teams that play in a combination of the Berkshire Volleyball League and Surrey Volleyball League. 

In addition, the U18 boys team entered in the national Junior Grand Prix Series for the first time last season. 

With a main indoor venue for training and matches at Samuel Cody Sports College (GU14 8SS), the club welcomes people from year seven to adults who want to train, enjoy competitive volleyball and potentially play in a team. 

Nigel added: “It started as some friends coming together to play, but quickly expanded to form the club as it is now. 

“The last three years has seen significant changes with the club growing from 84 to 178 members we have to date (junior and adults). 

“There’s lots being done in the junior setting to develop things, with the club part of the Thames Valley High Performance Training (TVHPT) programme.” 

Phoenix will go into the NVL season with a 14-player squad who Nigel says are all important and have the potential to impact the game. 

In fact, he cites the strength of the bench as one of the key components to its ongoing success. 

“The experience and leadership of Carly Lane and Ramona Dienel will be important to us, as ex-Super 8s players, as well as the versatility and quality of captain Weronika Korkosz,” said Nigel. 

“The strength of this team comes from a deep bench which are alert and ready to step in at any stage. 

“One to watch is 13-year-old Maria Smolinska who played at the U15 Inter Regional Championships in May and is part of the national team pathway.” 


Find out more about the NVL by clicking here. 

 



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Rachel Davis Named Big South Woman of the Year Nominee – University of South Carolina

Story Links CHARLOTTE, N.C. – The Big South Conference announced the nominations for the Big South Woman of the Year this afternoon.  Nominees for the annual honor are submitted by the league’s member institutions, and a Selection Committee of Conference Administrators will determine the Big South Woman of the Year, who will […]

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. – The Big South Conference announced the nominations for the Big South Woman of the Year this afternoon.

 Nominees for the annual honor are submitted by the league’s member institutions, and a Selection Committee of Conference Administrators will determine the Big South Woman of the Year, who will advance as the Conference’s official nominee for the national NCAA Woman of the Year Award.

A total of 10 individuals comprise this year’s institutional nominees, seven of which are the official candidates for Big South Woman of the Year — Charleston Southern golfer Odette Font Garcia (Mallorca, Spain), High Point lacrosse player Esprit Cha (Ellicott City, Md.), Longwood soccer player Alex Dinger (Fredericksburg, Va.), Longwood softball player Er’ron Burton (Suffolk, Va.), Radford volleyball player Meredith Page (Murfreesboro, Tenn.), USC Upstate track & field athlete Rachel Davis, and Winthrop lacrosse player Maddy Hodgson (Lebanon, Ohio).  Also among the institutional nominees from non-sponsored Big South sports were Presbyterian top/tumbler Abigail Katz (Columbia, S.C.), Presbyterian wrestler Chiara Barbieri (Brampton, Ontario) and UNC Asheville swimmer Riley Edmundson (Flower Mound, Texas).

 

Davis, a Management major, participated in the USC Upstate Gospel Choir, was a teacher for kids aged 8-14 at Emmanuel Anglican Church, and volunteered as a basketball coach at Drayton Mills Elementary School.

Head Coach Carson Blackwelder stated, “Rachel is the perfect candidate for this award. She embodies all the qualities you think of for Woman of the Year.”

Connect with the Spartans     

Facebook.com/UpstateAthletics     

Twitter | @UpstateXCTrack @UpstateSpartans     

Instagram | @UpstateXCTrack @UpstateSpartans     

YouTube.com/UpstateSpartans 

INVEST IN CHAMPIONS – Join the Upstate Athletic Fund (UAF) and enjoy enhanced benefits for your support of all USC Upstate programs! Make your gift today, click here!

 

SAVE THE DATE FOR SPARTY’S BALL – MAY 17th – Support USC Upstate Athletics at Sparty’s Ball, the largest fundraising event of the year for the Upstate Athletic Fund (UAF), to be held Saturday, May 17, 2025 at the Milliken Club at Fifth Third Park. For tickets, sponsorship and auction information, click here!

 



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Annika Hester – Women’s Volleyball

Oregon State 2024 • First Team All-WCC • Appeared in 110 sets across the 28 matches played • Led Oregon State in kills with 340, ranked eighth in the WCC • Hit .441 on 34 swings, collected 20 kills to just five errors in a five-set win over San Francisco (Oct. 12) • Had 25 […]

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Oregon State
2024
• First Team All-WCC
• Appeared in 110 sets across the 28 matches played
• Led Oregon State in kills with 340, ranked eighth in the WCC
• Hit .441 on 34 swings, collected 20 kills to just five errors in a five-set win over San Francisco (Oct. 12)
• Had 25 kills in a road win over Gonzaga (Oct. 19) and also tallied a season-best 25 points
• Season-best eight digs in the season finale at Pepperdine (11/30)

San Diego (2021-23)

• Appeared in 53 sets across 23 matches played in two seasons (took redshirt in 2022)

• Tallied 58 kills and totaled 12 digs

• Recorded 40 kills in 2023, including a season-best 11 against Tennessee, along with a career-best 13.0 points (Aug. 31)

HIGH SCHOOL & CLUB

• Three-time Gatorade Player of the Year (2018, 19, 20-21) in Maine

• 2020 Under Armour All-America First Team

• Twice named Southern Maine Activities Association (SMAA) MVP (2018, 19)

• Three-time SMAA All-Conference Team choice (2017-19)

• Back-to-back SMAA Class A State Champ (2018-19)

• Holds record at high school – Falmouth HS – for kills in a match (36)

• Won NERVA Regional Tournament with Maine Juniors VBC in 2018

• Trained with USA Volleyball High Performance (A1, 2019 and 2020; A1 Beach, 2019; A2, 2018)

• Finished third at Swedish National Beach Volleyball Championship Tournament (Tylösand, Sweden) in 2017 with partner Johanna Bengtsson

• National Honors Society member

• Volunteered at Good Shepherd Food Bank and served as a volunteer volleyball coach at Falmouth Middle School

PERSONAL

• Daugher of Louise and Matt Hester

• Has one brother, Niklas

• Father, Matt, played basketball at Hope College before professionally and later coached in Denmark

• Mother, Louise, played professional basketball in Sweden and Denmark before collegiately in the USA at Grand Valley State 

• In her spare time, she enjoys cooking, baking, painting, traveling and spending time with friends and family



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Five Olympic sports to try in the summer months

Running: Happiness in every stride Ok, hear us out. We know athletics can have a reputation as a PE class punishment or the thing you do when you’re late for a bus. But there’s also a whole world of joy, clarity and community waiting just beyond that first kilometre. Yes, it’s great for your body, […]

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Running: Happiness in every stride

Ok, hear us out.

We know athletics can have a reputation as a PE class punishment or the thing you do when you’re late for a bus. But there’s also a whole world of joy, clarity and community waiting just beyond that first kilometre.

Yes, it’s great for your body, strengthening your heart, lungs and muscles, but as with many sports above, the real magic is in what it does for your mind. Studies show running can ease anxiety, sharpen focus and lift your mood.

There’s the rush of endorphins that leaves you proud post-run. The peace of a solo jog after work, letting the day melt off your shoulders one footfall at a time. And the finish lines (real or metaphorical) that remind you how far you’ve come in a sport that asks only that you begin.

You don’t need to be the next Noah Lyles. You don’t need to sprint like Julien Alfred or clock marathon splits like Eliud Kipchoge. In fact, you don’t need to race at all. As distance runner John Bingham wrote in The Courage to Start, “If you run, you are a runner. It doesn’t matter how fast or how far… You just run.”

There’s something beautifully simple about it. Running doesn’t care what shoes you wear, how fast you go, or how long you’ve been doing it. It just asks you to move.

And chances are, you will enjoy it.

Kara Goucher, a two-time Olympian, said it best: “Running allows me to set my mind free. Nothing seems impossible. Nothing unattainable.” Or take it from Mo Farah, one of the greatest distance runners of all time: “I need it as much for my head as I do for my body.”

And here’s a bonus: running doesn’t have to be lonely. From early morning parkruns to massive marathon festivals, the running community is warm, welcoming, and wonderfully weird. These days, run clubs are popping up everywhere, gathering people of all paces and playlists to join the movement.

But it’s also there when you need solitude, when you want to lace up, zone out, and listen to your breath and the steady beat of your feet on trail or pavement.

Whether you’re sprinting down a track, jogging through the woods, or taking your first ever walk-run around the block, know this: you’re in the club.

Besides, if cross-country skiing can be fun (and it is), then running can be too. Especially when it’s less about the destination and more about the joy of moving forward: slow, steady and free.

So if you want to channel the energy of Paris 2024, try organising your own mini Olympics with friends. Sadly, your medals may not feature Eiffel Tower fragments, but the memories will be just as golden.



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UT Dallas athletes blindsided after track and field programs cut – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

UT Dallas athletes blindsided after track and field programs cut – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth Skip to content Close Menu Contact Us Link 0

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UT Dallas athletes blindsided after track and field programs cut – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth



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