Sports
Texas Athletics claims 2024-25 Division I LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup
Story Links AUSTIN, Texas — On the strength of two National Championships and seven NCAA top-three finishes, The University of Texas has won the LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup for the second-straight year and the fourth time in the last five years, the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) announced Thursday morning. During the […]

AUSTIN, Texas — On the strength of two National Championships and seven NCAA top-three finishes, The University of Texas has won the LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup for the second-straight year and the fourth time in the last five years, the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) announced Thursday morning. During the current 2024-25 season, the Longhorns amassed 1,255.25 points, while USC placed second with 1,253.75 points and Stanford took third with 1,251.0 points.
UT snapped Stanford’s 25-year stronghold on the Directors’ Cup during the 2020-21 season by scoring 1,252 points, while the Cardinal posted 1,195.75 points. That victory ended an impressive run by Stanford that began in 1994-95 and went through 2018-19 (no Cup was awarded in 2019-20 due to COVID-19). North Carolina won the first Cup in 1993-94. The Longhorns finished second in the standings three times during the Cardinal’s 25-year run, earning runner-up honors in 2001-02, 2002-03 and 2004-05.
During the 2021-22 season, the Longhorns amassed 1,449.50 points to claim the Cup again, while Stanford placed second with 1,352.25 points. UT joined the Cardinal as the nation’s only programs to win it in back-to-back years. The Longhorn have won consecutive Cups twice now and only a runner-up finish in 2022-23 separated Texas from a run of five-straight titles.
Texas finished runner-up in the Cup standings to Stanford during the 2022-23 season. The Cardinal won the Cup with 1,412.00 points, while the Longhorns posted 1,370.50 points. The Longhorns reclaimed the Cup during the 2023-24 season, as UT amassed 1,377.00 points while Stanford placed second with 1,312.75 points.
During the 2024-25 season, Texas registered NCAA team titles in Men’s Swimming Diving and its first-ever national championship in Softball, which marks the fifth-straight year the Longhorns have won multiple national titles in the same academic season. Excluding the COVID-shortened year of 2019-20, Texas has won at least one NCAA team title in 10-straight seasons.
Over the last five years, the Longhorns have won 13 NCAA team championships by eight different programs, while seven additional programs have either made the Final Four or finished in the top three at the NCAA Championships. Texas sponsors 21 intercollegiate sport programs, and with Softball earning its first NCAA title, 15 of those 21 programs have now claimed a National Championship. The Longhorns have captured 68 all-time National Championships (64 NCAA titles).
Texas produced 10 top-five and 13 top-10 team finishes at the NCAA Championships during the recent academic year. The 10 top-five performances marked a tie for the second-most in school history, trailing only the 12 recorded in 2021-22. The 13 top-10 efforts also tied for the second-most in school history, just one shy of the record 14 in 2021-22. The Longhorns have registered a total of 49 top-five NCAA team finishes and 65 top-10 NCAA team finishes during the last five years.
In addition to the pair of National Championship performances, the Longhorns recorded NCAA top-five team showings in Women’s Swimming and Diving (third), Rowing (third), Football (tied for third in the College Football Playoff, advancing to semifinals), Women’s Basketball (tied for third/NCAA Final Four), Men’s Tennis (tied for third/NCAA Semifinals), Beach Volleyball (tied for fifth/NCAA Quarterfinals), Women’s Golf (tied for fifth/NCAA Quarterfinals) and Men’s Golf (tied for fifth/NCAA Quarterfinals). Texas added NCAA top-10 finishes in Volleyball (tied for ninth/NCAA Round of 16), Women’s Tennis (tied for ninth/NCAA Round of 16) and Women’s Outdoor Track and Field (tied for 10th).
The Longhorns qualified 20 of their 21 NCAA eligible sports for their respective NCAA Championship events. Texas was the ONLY school in NCAA Division I to have its Football, either Men’s or Women’s Basketball, and either Baseball or Softball programs reach the Final Four of their NCAA Tournaments this season. Additionally, Texas Men’s and Women’s Golf were one of only two schools that saw both of its programs advance to the match play round of the NCAA Championships.
In addition to its success on the national level, UT earned a league-best eight Southeastern Conference titles during the 2024-25 season: Soccer (tournament), Men’s Swimming and Diving, Women’s Swimming and Diving, Women’s Basketball (regular season), Men’s Tennis (regular season and tournament), Rowing and Baseball (regular season). Of note, the eight championships doubled the next closest member institution, as South Carolina had four. With Beach Volleyball also winning the Coastal Collegiate Sports Association (CCSA) tournament title, the Longhorns won a total of nine conference championships in 2024-25 and have now claimed 663 all-time league titles in school history.
Since UT Vice President and Lois and Richard Folger Athletics Director Chris Del Conte arrived on the Forty Acres in December 2017, the Longhorns have claimed a total of 15 National Championships, 30 NCAA top-two finishes, 59 NCAA top-five finishes, 85 NCAA top-10 finishes and 82 total conference championships. Texas also has reached two CFP Semifinals, claimed four LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup crowns and posted six top-five Directors’ Cup finishes.
The LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup was developed as a joint effort between NACDA and USA Today. A revised scoring system was implemented for the 2024-25 season. Points are awarded based on each institution’s finish in NCAA Championships. Division I schools can score points in a maximum of 19 sports, five of which must be baseball, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, women’s soccer and women’s volleyball.
Texas recorded its seventh-straight top-five Director’s Cup finish after a fifth-place showing in 2017-18 and a fourth-place effort in 2018-19. There was no award in 2019-20 due to COVID-19. UT also was the top-ranked institution in the Southeastern Conference in the Directors’ Cup standings and has been the top-ranked school in its respective league (SEC, Big 12 or Southwest Conference) for 11 consecutive years and 24 times in the 32-year history of the Directors’ Cup.
Texas has now recorded a top-10 finish a total of 25 times in the 32-year history of the Directors’ Cup: 1st (2020-21, 2021-22, 2023-24 and 2024-25), 2nd (2001-02, 2002-03, 2004-05 and 2022-23), 3rd (2005-06), 4th (1995-96 and 2018-19), 5th (2007-08 and 2017-18), 6th (2008-09, 2011-12 and 2013-14), 7th (1993-94, 1996-97 and 2016-17), 8th (2006-07), 9th (1999-2000, 2014-15 and 2015-16) and 10th (1994-95 and 2003-04).
2024-25 Division I LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup Final Standings (Top 3 schools)
Rank
|
School
|
Total Points
|
1.
|
TEXAS
|
1,255.25
|
2.
|
USC
|
1,253.75
|
3.
|
Stanford
|
1,251.00
|
Texas in the Division I LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup Final Standings
Year
|
Finish
|
2024-25
|
1st
|
2023-24
|
1st
|
2022-23
|
2nd
|
2021-22
|
1st
|
2020-21
|
1st
|
2019-20
|
n/a (no standings due to COVID-19)
|
2018-19
|
4th
|
2017-18
|
5th
|
2016-17
|
7th
|
2015-16
|
9th
|
2014-15
|
9th
|
2013-14
|
6th
|
2012-13
|
13th
|
2011-12
|
6th
|
2010-11
|
12th
|
2009-10
|
15th
|
2008-09
|
6th
|
2007-08
|
5th
|
2006-07
|
8th
|
2005-06
|
3rd
|
2004-05
|
2nd
|
2003-04
|
10th
|
2002-03
|
2nd
|
2001-02
|
2nd
|
2000-01
|
19th
|
1999-2000
|
9th
|
1998-99
|
11th
|
1997-98
|
Tie 15th
|
1996-97
|
7th
|
1995-96
|
4th
|
1994-95
|
10th
|
1993-94
|
7th
|
Sports
Harlan Lopez – Men’s Cross Country Coach
Harlan Lopez joined Saint Mary’s as an assistant in the spring of 2018 and was promoted to Associate Head Coach prior to the 2019-20 season. In 2022-23, Lopez was named the Head Coach of both the Men’s Cross Country and Track and Field Programs. The 2024 cross country season proved to be the best to […]

The 2024 cross country season proved to be the best to date under Coach Lopez’s tutelage. His team finished within the top-five at the WCC Championship meet for the first time in his tenure at head coach. The team also picked up their first meet win under his guidance, taking home first place at the Pacific Invitational.
From July 2016 to March 2018, Lopez was the head men’s and women’s cross country/track coach at Holy Names University. He cultivated a culture of success through emphasizing commitment to teammates as well as investing in a goal setting atmosphere. He guided success for the program as he helped the men’s team to a fifth-place finish at the 2016 PacWest Cross Country Championships, the highest finish for any sports program in school history. Lopez also led efforts to the women’s team to a program best 11th-place finish.
Lopez’s coaching expertise continued to the University of Texas at Austin where he was an assistant for the men’s cross country and track team from 2012-13. Lopez worked directly with the steeplechase group where three athletes made the regional meet and one athlete made the national meet. He assisted the Longhorns to a 2nd place finish at the 2012 Big 12 Cross Country Championships, a 1st place finish at the South Central Regional Championship and a 9th place finish at the NCAA Cross Country National Championships.
In 2004 he was the head distance coach for the Diablo Valley Track and Field Club in Lafayette where he organizes travels, accommodates race entries for the Junior Olympics and most importantly introduces young athletes to encourage them to follow their passions while working in a holistic athletic lifestyle.
Lopez was a student athlete at the Northern Arizona University where he received his Bachelor of Arts in liberal studies in emphasis in Psychology. While attending NAU he was qualified for Big Sky Conference Indoor and Outdoor Championships and scored in the 10,000 meters in 2007. From 2010-11 Lopez attended San Francisco State University and received a single subject credential program in Physical Education and was also a recipient of the Athletics Honor Roll. Lopez not only coached at Holy Names University, he also completed a masters degree in Urban Education.
Lopez’s outstanding leadership and organization is a USA Track and Field Level 2 certified coach in endurance.
Sports
U.S. Women’s U23 National Team Rolls Past Suriname at 2025 Pan Am Cup
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 28, 2025) – The U.S. Women’s U23 National Team dominated Suriname, 3-0 (25-10, 25-13, 25-7) at the 2025 NORCECA Women’s U23 Pan American Cup on Monday in León, Mexico. The U.S. (2-0) concludes pool play against Costa Rica tomorrow, Tuesday, July 29, at 3 p.m. PT. The U.S. outscored Suriname 75-30 and hit […]

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 28, 2025) – The U.S. Women’s U23 National Team dominated Suriname, 3-0 (25-10, 25-13, 25-7) at the 2025 NORCECA Women’s U23 Pan American Cup on Monday in León, Mexico.
The U.S. (2-0) concludes pool play against Costa Rica tomorrow, Tuesday, July 29, at 3 p.m. PT.
The U.S. outscored Suriname 75-30 and hit .521 (43 kills and only six errors in 71 total attacks). Suriname finished with more hitting errors (17) than kills (15). The U.S. registered the only five blocks in the match and 10 of the 11 aces.
Setter Caroline Kerr ran the nearly unstoppable U.S. offense while scoring five points on one kill, one block and a match-high three aces. Libero Emmy Klika totaled 18 digs and 12 successful receptions.
The top five scorers in the match were from the U.S., with each totaling at least nine points. Outside hitter Norah Sis hit .600 with 13 kills and only one error in 20 attacks, adding two aces for 15 points. Middle blocker Cara Cresse also reached double digits with 11 points on nine kills and two blocks.
Middle Raven Colvin (five kills with two blocks an aces), outside Ava Martin (seven kills and two aces) and opposite Lauren Rumel (eight kills and an ace) all totaled nine points.
A Cresse kill on a slide gave the U.S. an 8-3 lead early in the match. The U.S., which went on a 9-2 run for a 17-5 lead, took its biggest lead on the final point on an ace by Martin. Rumel recorded five kills with Sis (four kills) and Martin (three kills in addition to her ace) adding four points.
Suriname took its first leads of the match 2-1 and 3-2 in the second set. The U.S. scored five consecutive points, culminating with a Sis kill on a back row attack, to prompt a timeout. After the teams split the next 10 points, the U.S. went on a 5-1 run to take a 16-9 lead on a Rumel ace.
The lead reached double digits, 20-10, on a Kerr kill and moved to 11 (23-12) on a Kerr service ace. Colvin ended the set by putting a ball down after an overpass on one of the longer rallies of the contest. Sis produced five kills, Cresse scored five points on four kills and a block, and Colvin finished with four points on three kills and a block.
Two Kerr aces and a Colvin block led the U.S. to a 6-0 start to the third set. After Suriname put together three consecutive points for the first time in the match, the U.S. went on another 6-0 run that included a pair of aces by Sis.
Leading 16-5, the U.S. scored seven consecutive points and nine of the last 11 to close out the match. Sis led the way with six points on four kills and two aces.
USA Volleyball Women’s U23 Roster
Name, (Pos., Height, Hometown, College/Pro, Region)
1 Emmy Klika (L, 5-7, 2003, Novelty, Ohio, Pro Volleyball Federation, Ohio Valley)
3 Chloe Chicoine (OH, 5-10, 2004, Lafayette, Ind., Univ. of Louisville, Hoosier)
4 Cara Cresse (MB, 6-6, 2003, Ft. Wayne, Ind., Univ. of Louisville, Hoosier)
6 Raven Colvin (MB, 6-1, 2003, Indianapolis, Ind., Pro Volleyball Federation, Hoosier)
8 Eva Hudson (OH, 6-1, 2004, Ft. Wayne, Ind., Univ. of Kentucky, Hoosier)
9 Norah Sis (OH, 6-2, 2003, Papillion, Neb., Pro Volleyball Federation, Great Plains)
10 Averi Carlson (S, 5-11, 2003, Lucas, Texas, SMU, North Texas)
11 Ifenna Cos-Okpalla (MB, 6-2, 2004, Flower Mound, Texas, Texas A&M, North Texas)
13C Caroline Kerr (S, 5-11, 2004, Champaign, Ill., Univ. of Tennessee, Great Lakes)
15 Ava Martin (OH, 6-1, 2004, Overland Park, Kan., Creighton Univ., Heart of America)
16 Jurnee Robinson (OPP/OH, 6-1, 2004, Simpsonville, S.C., LSU, Palmetto)
18 Lauren Rumel (OPP, 6-2, 2003, Tucson, Ariz., Oregon State Univ., Arizona)
Alternates
7 Brooke Bultema (MB, 2004, Cincinnati, Ohio, Univ. of Kentucky, Ohio Valley)
12 Ella Swindle (S, 6-2, 2004, Columbia, Mo., Univ. of Texas, Heart of America)
14 Devin Kahahawai (OPP, 6-4, 2004, Kailua, Hawaii, Univ. of Texas, Aloha)
17 Marianna Singletary (MB, 6-4, 2004, Charleston, S.C., UCLA, Southern)
19 Maya Sands (L, 5-7, Rock Falls, Ill., Univ. of Missouri, Great Lakes)
Coaches
Head Coach: Marie Zidek (DePaul)
Assistant Coach: Kayla Banwarth (PVF, Olympian)
Assistant Coach: Danielle Scott (LOVB, Olympian)
Performance Analyst: Matthew Adams (Michigan)
ATC: Cherryl Bueno (Coast to Coast AthletiCare)
Team Lead: Taylor Marten (Ozark Juniors)
Schedule
All times Pacific
July 27: USA def. Dominican Republic, 3-0 (27-25, 25-19, 25-21)
July 28: USA def. Suriname, 3-0 (25-10, 25-13, 25-7)
July 29: USA vs. Costa Rica, 3 p.m.
July 30: Quarterfinals
July 31: Semifinals and Classification Matches
Aug. 1: Medal Matches and Classification matches
Sports
Villanova Track & Field Stars Past and Present To Compete at National Championships This Week
VILLANOVA, Pa.—One of the biggest weeks of the summer track & field season is set to commence as countries from all parts of the globe hold their senior national championships in the final days of July and early days of August. There is added significance to national competition this year with these meets serving as […]

As is always the case on the national and worldwide stages, the Wildcats will be well represented by current student-athletes and alumni who are competing at the highest levels of the sport. Most notably, a group of eight athletes will be in action at the 2025 Toyota USATF Outdoor & Para National Championships in Eugene, Ore. starting on Thursday afternoon and continuing through Sunday afternoon. Coverage of the championships can be seen on NBC live and on-demand as well as USATF.tv on-demand. Visit the meet homepage for a full television schedule and live results.
Rising senior Marco Langon (Raritan, N.J.) and rising junior Dan Watcke (Hinsdale, Ill.) are each qualified for the USATF Championships in the 5000 meters and the 800 meters, respectively. Both are veterans of national and international competition and are coming off sensational collegiate seasons over the past year which included first team All-America performances in their respective events. Just over a month after closing out his record-setting collegiate career with a third straight appearance at the NCAA Championships, men’s distance runner Liam Murphy will be running the 1500 meters at the USATF Championships.
Veteran middle distance runner Sean Donoghue (Dublin, Ireland) will be running the 1500 meters this week at the Athletics Ireland National Outdoor Track & Field Senior Championships. Donoghue is returning to the Wildcats for a fifth collegiate campaign in 2025-26. During his collegiate career, Donoghue is a two-time BIG EAST champion and a two-time Penn Relays champion who ran the leadoff leg of Villanova’s 4xMile relay in 2024 which recorded the second-fastest time in world history. At home in Ireland, he was a two-time Irish U20 champion in the 1500 meters and advanced to the final of the event at the National Senior Championships.
The men’s 5000 meters at the USATF Championships consists of one championship race which is set for Sunday afternoon at 4:52 p.m. Eastern time (1:52pm Pacific time) at Hayward Field in Eugene. Langon is coming off a third place finish at the same venue in the NCAA Championships final last month. Earlier in the year he placed sixth in the 5000 meters and seventh in the 3000 meters at the indoor NCAA Championships, and he finished the 2024-25 collegiate competition season with All-America honors in cross county, indoors and outdoors. He most recently ran a lifetime best time of 13:12.89 in the 5K in Belgium on July 19.
Watcke will see a familiar face in the men’s 800 meters in Oregon as former teammate Sean Dolan is another entry in the event. The first round heats of the 800 meters are scheduled for Thursday at 6:07 p.m. Eastern time (3:07 p.m. PT), with the top finishers moving on to the semifinal round on Friday afternoon. Watcke earned first team All-America honors in the 800 meters with a fifth place finish at this year’s indoor NCAA Championships. It was his first collegiate NCAA Championships meet and the result came in his redshirt freshman indoor campaign. Watcke ran a lifetime best of 1:46.32 in the 800 meters at Penn State in January and recently set an outdoor PR with a time of 1:46.60 in Ireland on July 9.
Murphy finished the 2025 collegiate campaign as the all-time NCAA record holder in the event with a lifetime best of 3:33.02 set on March 27 at North Carolina State. Murphy set seven NCAA and/or school records while wearing the Villanova singlet, and in his final season as a collegian he tied the Wildcats records for career All-America honors (nine) and career BIG EAST titles (11) by a men’s athlete. Murphy has excelled on the big stage before. Last summer he made a remarkable run through the 1500 meters competition at the U.S. Olympic Team Trials, becoming the first Villanovan since 1988 to make the final and ranking as the third collegiate runner to cross the finish line in the final.
Two of the top women’s middle distance runners in program history – McKenna Keegan and Angel Piccirillo – are each entered in the women’s 800 meters this week. They will get underway in the first round heats on Thursday at 6:37 p.m. Eastern time (3:37 p.m. PT) and will be vying to advance to the semifinal on Friday afternoon.
Men’s distance runner Casey Comber is competing in the 3000 meter steeplechase this week, beginning with first round competition on Thursday at 8:39 p.m. Eastern time (5:39 p.m. PT), with the event proceeding to a final on Saturday afternoon. Women’s high jumper Sanaä Barnes will be in action in the final of her event on Friday starting at 7:05 p.m. Eastern time (4:05 p.m. PT).
Sports
Women’s Volleyball Set for 16 TV Matches During Regular Season – Penn State
UNIVERSITY PARK, — Fans of Penn State women’s volleyball will have plenty of chances to watch the defending national champions on national TV this season. The Nittany Lions are scheduled for 16 matches across three networks – FOX, BTN, and FS1 – during the regular season. Penn State’s first five matches of the season will […]

UNIVERSITY PARK, — Fans of Penn State women’s volleyball will have plenty of chances to watch the defending national champions on national TV this season. The Nittany Lions are scheduled for 16 matches across three networks – FOX, BTN, and FS1 – during the regular season.
Penn State’s first five matches of the season will air live national TV, starting with the season opener against Creighton on FS1. That match is part of the AVCA First Serve event and is scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 23 in Lincoln, Nebraska. The Nittany Lions’ second match of the event against Kansas in Sioux Falls, South Dakota will air on B1G Network on Monday, August. 25.
The Nittany Lions then have three straight matches on FOX. That stretch includes contests against Arizona State (Aug. 31) and TCU (Sept. 1) at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, and the team’s home opener against Kentucky on Friday, Sept. 5. The Nittany Lions are back on FOX later in the season when they host Nebraska on Friday, Oct. 3.
Penn State has 11 matches scheduled to air on B1G Network. In addition to the matchup with Kansas, that list of opponents includes Pitt, UCLA, Wisconsin, Washington, Oregon, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Nebraska and Iowa.
The 2025 Penn State women’s volleyball season is presented by Musselman’s.
Sport |
Day |
Date |
Visiting Team |
|
Home Team |
Site |
TV |
Time (ET) |
Notes |
Volleyball |
Saturday |
August 23, 2025 |
Penn State |
vs. |
Creighton |
Lincoln, NE |
FS1 |
6:00 PM |
AVCA First Serve |
Volleyball |
Monday |
August 25, 2025 |
Kansas |
vs. |
Penn State |
Sioux Falls, SD |
BTN |
6:30 PM |
Sanford Pentagon |
Volleyball |
Sunday |
August 31, 2025 |
Penn State |
vs. |
Arizona State |
Pittsburgh, PA |
FOX |
5:00 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Monday |
September 1, 2025 |
Penn State |
vs. |
TCU |
Pittsburgh, PA |
FOX |
5:00 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Friday |
September 5, 2025 |
Kentucky |
at |
Penn State |
University Park, PA |
FOX |
8:00 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Wednesday |
September 17, 2025 |
Pittsburgh |
at |
Penn State |
University Park, PA |
BTN |
7:00 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Sunday |
September 28, 2025 |
UCLA |
at |
Penn State |
University Park, PA |
BTN |
12:00 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Friday |
October 3, 2025 |
Nebraska |
at |
Penn State |
University Park, PA |
FOX |
8:00 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Friday |
October 10, 2025 |
Wisconsin |
at |
Penn State |
University Park, PA |
BTN |
7:00 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Friday |
October 17, 2025 |
Penn State |
at |
Washington |
Seattle, WA |
BTN |
10:30 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Saturday |
October 18, 2025 |
Penn State |
at |
Oregon |
Eugene, OR |
BTN |
10:00 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Friday |
October 31, 2025 |
Penn State |
at |
Michigan |
Ann Arbor, MI |
BTN |
6:30 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Sunday |
November 2, 2025 |
Indiana |
at |
Penn State |
University Park, PA |
BTN |
4:00 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Sunday |
November 9, 2025 |
Penn State |
at |
Illinois |
Champaign, IL |
BTN |
4:30 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Friday |
November 28, 2025 |
Penn State |
at |
Nebraska |
Lincoln, NE |
BTN |
6:30 PM |
|
Volleyball |
Saturday |
November 29, 2025 |
Penn State |
at |
Iowa |
Iowa City, IA |
BTN |
TBD |
Sports
Look at the most terrifying World Championship
Big news friends, I’m MOVING TOMORROW! It’s SO EXCITING!!!!! And also I DID NOT GET ANY SLEEP BEFORE WRITING THIS!!!!! and have DECIDED TO PERMANENTLY STAY IN MY NEXT HOUSE TO AVOID THIS HELLISH EXPERIENCE EVER AGAIN!!!! I did, however, make sure to carve out time to watch unusual sporting events in the middle of […]

Big news friends, I’m MOVING TOMORROW! It’s SO EXCITING!!!!! And also I DID NOT GET ANY SLEEP BEFORE WRITING THIS!!!!! and have DECIDED TO PERMANENTLY STAY IN MY NEXT HOUSE TO AVOID THIS HELLISH EXPERIENCE EVER AGAIN!!!!
I did, however, make sure to carve out time to watch unusual sporting events in the middle of the move.
Do you rank sports based on how likely you would die if you participated? Or perhaps on how much merely watching a sporting event makes your body shudder in horror? Let me introduce you to the most NOPE event in all of international sports: The high diving competition at the World Aquatics Championships. They pre-populate the pool with emergency rescue divers, just in case. (See the little guys all the way down there in the pool?)

And it just so happens that this year’s high diving world championship also featured an absolute thriller of a duel, a surprise American gold medal, and another W for a niche sports GOAT.
-
The championship was held at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore, where they include just about every water-related event. They have Katie Ledecky racing against Summer McIntosh, just like in the Olympics, as well as diving and water polo. But it’s also got a bunch of fringe events, like multiple forms of open-water swimming, solo artistic swimming, and the high dive.
-
They need to build a separate high diving venue because the platform is NINETY FEET IN THE AIR. And the pool needs to be extra deep so the divers do not die when they hit the bottom.
-
All the dives are feet first, because it’s too dangerous to expose your head to impact at those high speeds.
-
And the scuba team is there in case impact with the water knocks a diver unconscious.
-
In the men’s 27m competition, Team USA’s James Lichtenstein won his first World Championship on the final dive of the competition … although it would be almost as accurate to say Spain’s Carlos Gimeno lost it. The two attempted the exact same dives throughout the competition and Gimeno led the whole way, but a sliiiiight over-rotation on the final dive gave Lichtenstein a 3.6-point win and the first American championship since 2017. Here’s Gimeno after the scores popped up:

England repeated as Women’s Euros champions, the greatest thing to happen to England in nearly two weeks since the Oasis reunion tour started. The Lionesses beat Spain on penalty kicks in the final, and for the second-straight game and the second-straight Euros, the winner came off Chloe Kelly’s foot. (Her signature run-up with the little crow-hop … iconic.)
And I’m going to be honest, I’m so mad about it. I’m just so mad about it. The English won back-to-back-to-back knockout stage matches in which they looked clearly worse than their opposition, stealing this tournament like it’s a priceless artifact they’re going to put in the British Museum and refuse to return to its original country because the 17th Earl of Chestwick-Hampstershire “found” it on an expedition in 1847.
-
England led for exactly one minute during its three knockout round matches. You’ve probably taken about three minutes to read this far into the newsletter, which is about three times as long as England held a lead in the knockout stages.
-
England trailed for 174 minutes in the knockout stages, almost an hour per match. That’s the length of “The Godfather.” (Don’t worry, this newsletter is not 174 minutes long.)
-
England finished the tournament fourth in XG/90, behind Spain, France and Sweden … two of which they beat on penalty kicks.
-
So OK, maybe you’re thinking they were great on penalty kicks. BUT THEY WEREN’T! They only hit six of 12 penalty attempts between the two shootouts. And I can’t even give goalkeeper Hannah Hampton all the credit—while Hampton made some saves between the two shootouts, England’s opponents also missed the net entirely on four of their 11 attempts—two over the crossbar, and two wide.
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Long story short … USWNT is going to win the 2027 World Cup.
OK, I fear I have been too mean to England. To make it up to the lads and lasses, I am going to talk about The Darts: 18-year old Luke Littler won the World Matchplay championship in stunning fashion, coming back from huge deficits in the semifinals and the finals.
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The YouTube title for this video says “THE SECOND-GREATEST LEG OF ALL TIME?” which seems awfully specific. So I had to search “greatest darts leg of all time” and sure enough the channel posted that video two years ago. Even more electric.
Respect to The Darts for maintaining discipline in YouTube titles, something I cannot attest to. (My NCAA March Madness picks were not, in fact, The Most Accurate.)
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In the final, Littler again lost the first five legs. But of course, the finals at the World Matchplay are best-of-35—you know, best-of-35, that other classic format we all know and love—and Littler rallied back to win 18-13.
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At 18 years old, Luke the Nuke has now won the Triple Crown of Darts—the World Championship, the World Matchplay, and the Premier League. And The Darts is a sport where middle-aged men can shine. His opponent in Sunday’s final, James Wade, is 42. The World Matchplay winner in 2021, Peter Wright, was 51 at the time.
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2-time Olympic gold medal-winning fencer Lee Kiefer won her first-ever gold at the World Championships, rallying back from an 11-4 deficit in the quarterfinals, surviving, advancing, and totally dominating the semis and the gold medal match.
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Kerry dominated the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship to win their 39th title, the most of any county. That means this shirt I bought at the SuperValu in Dingle celebrating Kerry’s 37 All-Ireland championships is now two championships out of date.

(I would take a picture of me wearing the shirt, but, like I said, I’m moving tomorrow, and I have no clue where it is. Probably 3/4ths of the way down a box also containing towels and winter clothes.)
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Canada’s Summer McIntosh won the 400m freestyle at the World Aquatics Championships in her first head-to-head battle against Katie Ledecky of the meet … but that was broadly expected. (McIntosh set a world record and won gold last year in Paris; Ledecky won bronze.) The real showdown is the 800m later this week.
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Tadej Pogačar coasted to his fourth Tour de France title, putting him just one away from tying the all-time record, because NOBODY HAS EVER WON MORE THAN FIVE. REMEMBER THAT GUY WHO WON MORE THAN FIVE? NO, YOU DON’T. Pogačar also won the Mountains Classification but didn’t get to wear the polka dot jersey because he was already wearing the yellow jersey.
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The green jersey for the Points Classification went to Jonathan Milan of Lidl-Trek, which I am mentioning because that’s the team our new editor Louis Bien works for during his day job. (Ed. Note: <3)
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Nick Kurtz went 6-for-6 with four home runs in one of the greatest individual games in baseball history.
The #4 pick in the 2024 draft, Kurtz is just the 20th player in MLB history to hit four dingers in a game, and the first rookie.
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Former Alabama softball star Montana Fouts powered the Talons to the first AUSL title with a shutout win in Tuscaloosa. The Talons won the game 1-0 on a sixth-inning home run and this unreal solo double play in the seventh:
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Bubba Wallace won NASCAR’s Brickyard 400, which gets a big “hell yeah” from me.
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Team USA won the most medals at the World University Games—which, you know, makes sense, because we do the most college sports. (Japan and China did have more gold medals, though.)
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You can catch world championship swimming and diving every day this week. The diving gets started really early, while the swimming kicks off at 7 a.m. Eastern. That’s gonna be on Peacock.
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But make sure you lock in for the main event: Ledecky vs. McIntosh in the 800m free on Saturday morning.
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Also on this week: The Tour de France Femmes. Unlike the men’s race, which takes nearly a month, this one takes 10 days. They’ll get into the mountains this weekend. That’s also on Peacock!
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The USA Track and Field Championships will start Thursday in Eugene, Ore. I am not going to look it up but I feel like that should also be on Peacock.
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The NFL Hall of Fame Game is Thursday night, and as much as I love football I genuinely feel it should not exist in the month of July.
Sports
Wabash earns USTFCCCA honors | Journal Review
For the Journal Review The Wabash College track and field program and student-athletes Haiden Diemer-McKinney and Quinn Sholar have been honored for their academic and athletic excellence by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association following the 2024-25 season. The Little Giants were named a USTFCCCA All-Academic Team, one of 115 NCAA […]

For the Journal Review
The Wabash College track and field program and student-athletes Haiden Diemer-McKinney and Quinn Sholar have been honored for their academic and athletic excellence by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association following the 2024-25 season.
The Little Giants were named a USTFCCCA All-Academic Team, one of 115 NCAA Division III men’s programs to receive the honor. Wabash posted a cumulative team grade point average of 3.36, surpassing the 3.10 threshold for recognition.
Diemer-McKinney, an economics major, and Sholar, an art major — both rising seniors — were among 512 individuals named USTFCCCA All-Academic Athletes. To earn the distinction, student-athletes must hold a cumulative GPA of 3.30 or higher and rank among the top 50 nationally in an individual event or be part of a top-35 relay.
Diemer-McKinney earned All-North Coast Athletic Conference honors in both cross country and track and field. He placed 15th at the 2024 NCAC Cross Country Championships to secure third-team all-conference recognition. During the indoor season, he finished second in the 800-meter run and ran the leadoff leg on the Little Giants’ runner-up distance medley relay and 4×400-meter relay teams to collect three All-NCAC performances. He added a fifth all-conference honor in the outdoor season with another second-place finish in the 800 meters at the 2025 NCAC Outdoor Championships.
Sholar captured the NCAC title in the weight throw at the 2025 indoor championships and placed third in the shot put to earn additional all-conference recognition. In the spring, he secured second-place finishes in both the shot put and discus at the NCAC Outdoor Championships, earning two more All-NCAC honors. Sholar qualified for the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor National Championships in the discus and finished 20th in the event.
“I am very proud of our team and the individuals for earning Academic All-American honors from the USTFCCCA,” said Clyde Morgan, Director of Track and Field and Cross Country at Wabash. “This is always one of our program’s goals, so to see them achieve academic greatness is phenomenal, especially at a prestigious place like Wabash College. Congratulations to all of our young men and coaches, as well as the rest of the Wabash community, who have poured into our team not just as scholar-athletes, but as young men.”
The honors cap a successful 2024-25 campaign for Wabash, which included an NCAC Outdoor Championship team title and multiple NCAA Championship qualifiers and All-American performances across cross country and indoor and outdoor track and field.
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