College Sports
Hungary rules at HaBaWaBa PLUS 2025
If Egypt is the new powerhouse of the HaBaWaBa movement, as demonstrated last Saturday by Sodic Sports Club’s double in the U9 and U11 categories, the Hungarian school is a timeless certainty: the U13 finals day of the HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS 2025 turned into a stage of excellence for Magyar waterpolo. In both the […]

If Egypt is the new powerhouse of the HaBaWaBa movement, as demonstrated last Saturday by Sodic Sports Club’s double in the U9 and U11 categories, the Hungarian school is a timeless certainty: the U13 finals day of the HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS 2025 turned into a stage of excellence for Magyar waterpolo. In both the women’s U13 tournament and the mixed team competition, in fact, the final challenges were entirely “made in Hungary”.

Szentes player celebrating the U13 Girls HaBaWaBa PLUS win (ph. Giacomello).
The final of the U13 girls’ tournament (11 teams participating) starring Szentes Starfish and OSC Girls from Budapest was exciting and balanced. The game, played point to point, ended in a draw (7-7) before being decided in an electrifying final chapter on shootouts. Thanks to saves by number 1 Emma Meszaros, it was Szentes Starfish who won the gold medal, ending the match on 11-10 score: it’s the first HaBaWaBa title for the club coming from South Hungary.
The U13 mixed-teams tournament had as many as 58 squads at the start, a marked increase from 51 teams registered in 2024. PSN Sharks – club from the city of Pecsi that won the U11 title at HaBaWaBa in 2019 – and Balaton VK from Balatonfuzfo were face to face in the final game. The two teams put on a superb technical and competitive match, leading the score by turns: a goal by the Sharks with 35’’ to go set the score at 6-6, sending the game to shootouts. At penalties phase, kids from Pecsi handled the tension better, winning overall 9-7 and clinching the second ever HaBaWaBa title for their club.

PSN Sharks’ joy after winning the U13 mixed teams tournament at HaBaWaBa PLUS 2025 (ph. Giacomello).
SEMIFINALS AND THIRD PLACE. In the morning semifinals of the U13 girls’ tournament, Starfish Szentes overcame the Swiss RZO U13D team 12-4, while OSC Girls won 8-3 over Entente 95 Filles from France. In the final for 3rd place RZO U13D defeated 7-3 Entente 95 Filles and took the lowest step on the podium.
In the U13 mixed teams’ tournament, the semifinals ended with Balaton’s narrow victory over Vasas (7-6) and PSN Sharks’ success over Rapallo Gialli (9-4). The final for 3rd place ended with Vasas’ victory over the Italian team (13-11).

PSN celebration… (ph. Giacomello).
FAIR PLAY. During the closing ceremony, the winning teams of the Fair Play Trophy will also be awarded: the trophy is assigned to the most correct teams in the two tournaments based on the scores given by the juries. In this edition, it was lifted by Universo Silvi – at its first ever participation in the U13 girls’ tournament – and Pescara Nuoto e Pallanuoto, in the mixed team competition.
SEE YOU IN 2026. HaBaWaBa 2025 has thus come to an end, in the last two weeksthe “game of the ball in water” brought together at the Bella Italia & EFA Village in Lignano Sabbiadoro 147 teams from 5 continents and 15 countries: Australia, Croatia, Egypt, France, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Montenegro, Palestine, Monaco, Singapore, Slovakia, Switzerland, Turkey, United States.
The event – supported by World Aquatics, European Aquatics, FIN, CONI and realised thanks to the help of sponsors Turbo, Compact Goals, Ossidabile and All Risks Consulenze Assicurative – proved once again to be a huge success, a true festival capable to create unforgettable memories in little athletes, coaches and fans, transforming waterpolo into a means of spreading the noblest values of sport.
HaBaWaBa will return to Lignano Sabbiadoro in the summer of 2026, but the HaBaWaBa movement will continue to gather in the coming months in the various stages of the HaBaWaBa International Circuit scattered around the world, from Brazil to Egypt, from Spain to South East Asia.

PSN Sharks on the podium of HaBaWaBa PLUS 2025 awarded by Olympic champions Zoltan Szecsi e Branislav Mitrovic (ph. Giacomello).
Szentes Starfish, HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS 2025 U13 Girls tournament champions: Emma Meszaros, Lea Szolfi Ludescher, Boglar Toth, Petra Boldizsar, Eszter Tyukasz, Ajsa Jenei, Emma Kata Hekedi, Lena Kecskes, Kata Szabo, Lilla Galfi, Kiara Vanda Nagy, Liliana Berkes, Laura Somogyi, Luca Meszaros. Coach: Fruzsina Bravik.
PSN Sharks, HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS 2025 U13 mixed teams tournament champions: Balazs Marcz, Zalan Tibor Kovacs, Peter Lubiczki, Bence Daniel Chvojka, Manolo De Blasio, Adam Zalan Becsei, Zsigmond Labossa, Sebestyen Wagner, Otman Taya, Donat Horvath, Adam Kindl, Balint Jozsef Kovacs, Goran Predacs, Miroszlav Poszovacs, Dominik Kovacs. Coach: Tamas Voros.
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Click here for further infos about HaBaWaBa
College Sports
Soccer opens 2025 season against Nevada on Thursday
Home sweet homeASU enters Thursday’s contest being unbeaten in 21 (15-0-7) straight non-conference matches at home since the 2019 season, which includes a 3-0 record in the 2021 spring campaign in matches played at Mountain America Stadium. The Sun Devils have 10 home matches on their schedule which includes ASU being home for the entire […]


Home sweet home
ASU enters Thursday’s contest being unbeaten in 21 (15-0-7) straight non-conference matches at home since the 2019 season, which includes a 3-0 record in the 2021 spring campaign in matches played at Mountain America Stadium.
The Sun Devils have 10 home matches on their schedule which includes ASU being home for the entire month of September, featuring the Big 12 opener against BYU on Sept. 18 and tilts against Denver, Pepperdine and UTEP. ASU has a 125-78-30 (.609) record at Sun Devil Soccer Stadium.
Series notes
ASU is 1-0 all-time against Nevada, with their only meeting coming in a 5-0 victory at the Cats Classic in Tucson on September 14, 2014. Thursday marks the first meeting between both teams in Tempe.
About the opposition
The Wolfpack went 6-13-2 in 2024 and finished tied for sixth in the Mountain West, going 4-6-2 in conference play last season. Nevada fell in the quarterfinals of the Mountain West Tournament last November to Colorado State.
Olivia Loomis leads all Nevada returners with five goals, an assist and 11 points last season. In net Mia Collins returns, posting 43 saves in eight matches.
Nelles in net
Starting in all 19 matches last season, Nelles ranks fourth in program history with 227 saves and 27 victories, all as a Sun Devil. Having six shutouts last season, she has 18 career clean sheets which is second in ASU history. The senior has registered 70+ saves in all three seasons as a Sun Devil and posted 4.01 saves per game which ranks fourth best in program history.
She enters the new season having played 4,320 consecutive minutes in goal for the Sun Devils.
Blundell’s best
Appearing in all 19 matches as a freshman last season Blundell garnered 2024 Big 12 Freshman of the Year honors and scored a team-best nine goals, which was ninth nationally among freshmen last year and eighth in the Big 12 overall.
The sophomore had two multi-goal games last season, including a hat trick against Penn. Her two game-winning goals came against Houston and Penn. In 2024, the Sun Devils were 7-3-1 when Blundell registered at least one point in a match.
Sun Devil Hall of Fame
Cali Farquharson is one of eight inductees in the Sun Devil Athletics class of 2025. Farquharson, left an indelible mark on Sun Devil Soccer during her career from 2012-15 and the only Sun Devil to record double-digit goals in four straight seasons. She finished her career second all-time in goals (44) and points (102).
Farquharson was a clutch performer, one of four at ASU through 2015 with more than 10 game-winning goals. She earned NSCAA All-Region honors and All-Pac-12 recognition three times.
Spanning the globe
The Sun Devil Soccer team has 17 international student-athletes competing, led by Canada with seven players. England (four) and South Africa (two) also have multiple players, while, Japan, Norway, Germany and the Netherlands have one player each.
Preseason recognition
Reigning Big 12 Freshman of the Year Kierra Blundell was named to the 2025 Big 12 Preseason Team and the only sophomore forward to make the list. She earned spots on the Big 12 Second Team All-Conference honors and on the Big 12 All-Freshman list.
Barrett, The Honors College
The Sun Devils have nine student-athletes enrolled in Barrett, The Honors College. Honors students are diverse and come from many different backgrounds. Barrett students take additional honors courses and are required to complete a thesis during their college experience.
Soccer student-athletes in Barrett, The Honors College:
Norah Bell, Business
Kierra Blundell, Sports Science and Performance Programming
Addison Haws, Biological Sciences (Biomedical Sciences)
Miki Hayashi, Data Science
Olivia Herrera, Business (Sports Business)
Brianna Nunley, Marketing
Katherine Ozard, Medical Studies
Tano Uzezi-Itesa, Health Sciences
Ava Wright, Biological Sciences, (Biomedical Sciences)
Returners
Cameron Valladares returns to the ASU offense for her senior season after recording 18 total points from last season. She brings consistency and firepower to the field after starting 17 of 19 matches last season and logging over 1,200 minutes played. Valladares finished third on the team in goals (7), points (18) and her four-game winners tied for third-most in the Big 12. She also found the net in six different matches and posted an efficient .474 shot-on-goal percentage.
On the defensive side, senior Grace Gillard returns after a standout junior season in which she also started 17 of 19 matches and logged the most minutes played by a field player with 1,587. As a defensive anchor, Gillard helped lead the Sun Devils to six clean sheets.
Returning for her sophomore season, midfielder Ella Kettles made an immediate impact as a freshman, starting 18 of 19 matches and logging 1,425 minutes. She played the full 90 minutes in two contests, and recorded 80-plus minutes in six additional matches.
Transfers
Daan Louwerse transfers from Grand Valley State after starting 23 of 24 matches and totaling 4,072 minutes over the past two seasons. Louwerse helped lead her previous team to 10 clean sheets.
Local native Tatum Thomason transfers from Washington after starting every match for the Huskies last season. Thomason logged a total of 1,716 minutes in the previous season.
Lucy Fazackerley transfers from East Carolina after starting every single game and holding down the defense.
Free tickets for kids 6th grade and under
For every home match this season and with a purchase of adult tickets, tickets for kids in the sixth grade or younger are complimentary.
Looking head
ASU begins a three-match road trip starting August 21 against Texas at 5 p.m. MST. Following matches against Texas State on August 24 and a match against UNLV on August 28. The team will return to Tempe on August 31, facing New Mexico State at 7 p.m. MST (ESPN+).
College Sports
Hezly Rivera wins women’s all-around at U.S. Gymnastics Championships
If Hezly Rivera was the rookie on the 2024 U.S. Olympic gymnastics team, she was the veteran one year later, winning the U.S. Gymnastics Championships in New Orleans Sunday night with eight hit routines across two days of competition, taking home gold in the all-around, uneven bars, balance beam and floor. Olympic alternate Leanne Wong […]

If Hezly Rivera was the rookie on the 2024 U.S. Olympic gymnastics team, she was the veteran one year later, winning the U.S. Gymnastics Championships in New Orleans Sunday night with eight hit routines across two days of competition, taking home gold in the all-around, uneven bars, balance beam and floor.
Olympic alternate Leanne Wong took silver in the all-around and gold on vault, followed by fellow alternate Joscelyn Roberson in third in the all-around and silver on floor.
“It means the world to me to take this national championship title home because I worked so hard for this,” Rivera told NBC after the competition. “It was not easy coming back after the Olympics. I took some time off, so much work in the gym, hard work, blood, sweat, tears, so I’m just so grateful that I’m here today.”
One year after the Olympics, Rivera’s fellow teammates were not in the picture on Sunday. Simone Biles and Sunisa Lee have both taken time away from elite competition. Jordan Chiles and Jade Carey both competed for UCLA and Oregon State, respectively, but have not returned to the elite level so far this year either. Who might stage a comeback — and when — remains unclear.
That means the field for October’s World Championships roster is wide open. The women’s team will not be named for a few weeks and will take into account selection events this fall, but this weekend’s performance will play a key role as well.
The men’s team, on the other hand, named its World Championships team on Saturday, based on Championship results this weekend. That squad will be led by 2024 Olympian Asher Hong, who won gold on vault, floor and rings and silver on parallel bars, and who won the all-around by nearly eight points, the largest margin in U.S. Championships history.
“I’m just grateful that all the training paid off,” Hong told NBC after the men’s competition. “It was a hard grind these past five weeks, I had a lot of hard trainings, but, you know, I came here with confidence. One of our mottos is ‘leave no doubt,’ and that’s what I wanted to do here today.”

Asher Hong celebrates after winning vault at the U.S. Gymnastics Championships on Saturday. (Stephen Lew / Imagn Images)
He will be joined by fellow Olympian Brody Malone, who won gold on parallel bars, silver on rings and bronze on pommel horse, horizontal bar winner Taylor Burkhart and pommel horse winner Patrick Hoopes. Silver medalists Brandon Dang (pommel horse) and Kameron Nelson (floor, vault), and bronze medalist Donnell Whittenburg (rings, parallel bars) round out the team.
Left off the team was 2024 Olympian Frederick Richard, who finished second in the all-around, but whose best single-event finish was third on high bar. Unlike in the Olympics, the 2025 World Championships will not feature a team competition — just medals for individual events. Olympic pommel horse hero Stephen Nedoroscik was also left off the team. He struggled with a fall in that competition — his only event — finishing fifth.
The yet-to-be-named women’s team will take into account results throughout the season. Just a few weeks earlier, U.S. Classic belonged to the newcomers, topped by Claire Pease and Simone Rose, with Roberson in third. But falls from Pease throughout the weekend landed her in 10th place. Rose finished in fifth, and Winter Cup winner Ashlee Sullivan finished in fourth.
That meant that Sunday, the Championships belonged to the veterans. Without a team competition, building a team for Worlds requires an eye toward the individual events, led by Rivera and Wong.
Also staging a comeback is Skye Blakely, who was having a breakout season in 2024 until an Achilles injury during the Olympic Trials forced her to withdraw from the competition. She spent the past year competing for the University of Florida alongside Wong, and in her first elite competition back since the injury, tied for first with Rivera on bars and secured second on beam, her only two events of the weekend.
(Photo of Hezly Rivera competing at the U.S. Gymnastics Championships in New Orleans on Sunday: Kyle Okita / Cal Sport Media via AP Images)
College Sports
SLU women's soccer back in action
College soccer is ready to kick off. At SLU, the Billiken women’s soccer team already has an exhibition under their belts. Author: ksdk.com Published: 10:07 PM CDT August 10, 2025 Updated: 9:58 PM CDT August 10, 2025 1


College soccer is ready to kick off. At SLU, the Billiken women’s soccer team already has an exhibition under their belts.
College Sports
With LSU days ahead, Rivera captures U.S. Gymnastics Championship in New Orleans – Crescent City Sports
NEW ORLEANS — The future of LSU gymnastics ascended the Big Easy’s podium. Hezly Rivera, a gold medalist in last year’s Paris Olympic Games at just 16 years old, took home the all-around women’s title to cap the Xfinity U.S. Gymnastics Championships on Sunday. It’s her second time on top of the event in three […]

NEW ORLEANS — The future of LSU gymnastics ascended the Big Easy’s podium.
Hezly Rivera, a gold medalist in last year’s Paris Olympic Games at just 16 years old, took home the all-around women’s title to cap the Xfinity U.S. Gymnastics Championships on Sunday.
It’s her second time on top of the event in three years, also emerging victorious in 2023.
Rivera dazzled a Smoothie King Center crowd to score a winning 112, just clear of Florida’s Leanne Wong (111.2) and Arkansas’s Joscelyn Roberson (109.6).
The now 17-year-old Rivera led by a razor-thin two tenths entering the second and final day of senior women’s events. She dropped below Wong after her vault but gracefully corkscrewed ahead on uneven bars and never looked back.
Her decisive floor routine wasn’t spotless, but with a gleaming smile and high level of difficulty, Rivera locked up the all-around crown. Bearing the weight of heavy expectations as the sole Olympian to take part, she delivered.
“It means the world to me,” Rivera said. “I’ve worked so hard for this. It was not easy coming back after the Olympics. I took some time off. So much hard work in the gym, blood, sweat, tears. I’m just so grateful that I’m here today.”
After gold medaling the balance beam in last year’s Olympic Trials, Rivera dominated on Sunday to earn top marks. The New Jersey native didn’t medal in vault but tied for first in uneven bars and prevailed in floor after two rotation days.
Her teammate in Paris, Jordan Chiles, presented her with gold for her floor routine win.
While she verbally committed to LSU last September, Rivera won’t compete in Baton Rouge until 2027. However, her shimmering resume can give Tiger faithful hope for more national titles after the program’s first in 2024.
The victory also bodes well for a return to the Olympic stage, set for 2028 in Los Angeles.
This weekend was just a sneak peek.
“I feel like we all had support from each other, the crowd and the gymnast,” Rivera said. “It was a very good spot to have championships. I was really excited to compete here, and I can’t wait to compete in Louisiana in the years to come.”
Annalisa Milton, another future LSU gymnast, also took part in the senior women’s slate.
Rivera’s demonstrative day concluded the gymnastics world’s triumphant return to New Orleans, which hosted the U.S. Championships for the first time in 30 years. The next generation of gymnasts put outstanding skills on display and brought together a host of past, present and future Olympic athletes, coaches and judges.
Caroline Moreau (Keller, Texas) took the junior women’s title on Sunday afternoon, while Maksim Kam (Muskego, Wis.) and Asher Hong (Tomball, Texas) topped the men’s junior and senior divisions on Saturday.
After hosting last year’s SEC Championships, New Orleans is gradually inserting itself as a home for sports of the olympiad. This event also continues the city’s successful run of athletic spectacles, following Super Bowl LIX and UFC 318.
“We want the people of New Orleans to come out and see this event, get in here and pack these seats,” LSU gym coach Jay Clark told WDSU on Wednesday. “You’re going to see some of the most incredible athletes in the world do the things that are just superhuman, and make it look easy.”
College Sports
IN PICS: Ex LSU Star Olivia Dunne Enjoys Beach Time Wearing Cheetah Print Bikini in New Jersey
Former artistic gymnast for the LSU Tigers, Olivia Dunne, recently had a day out with her friend Lily Chee. Dunne, who boasts over 5.4 million followers on Instagram alone, often puts up her life updates on social media. This time, Dunne went to a beach in New Jersey with Chee. She posted multiple pictures from […]

Former artistic gymnast for the LSU Tigers, Olivia Dunne, recently had a day out with her friend Lily Chee. Dunne, who boasts over 5.4 million followers on Instagram alone, often puts up her life updates on social media.
This time, Dunne went to a beach in New Jersey with Chee. She posted multiple pictures from her day out at Monmouth Beach on her Instagram story, and can be seen wearing a cheetah print bikini.
In the first picture, Dunne and Chee posed with their backs facing the camera as a wave hit them. In the second picture, which was originally uploaded on Chee’s IG story, and Dunne reposted it, they can be seen smiling at each other. The pictures can be seen below:


Chee is a New York-based actress, model, and social media influencer. As seen on Dunne’s third IG story, they went on a road trip. Sitting in the back of a car, Chee posed for the picture with a bag of Popup Bagels in her hands.
There were other boxes from the same place kept on their seat as well. Dunne captioned her story:
“road trip essentials:”
Chee later reposted the image on her profile with a comment:
“too good @popupbagels [fire emoji]”

In the most recent picture on Chee’s Instagram, the two friends can be seen posing for a picture inside what appeared to be a club.

Olivia Dunne is one of the most popular gymnasts who made millions of dollars during her college stint through NIL deals. After college, she transitioned toward modeling and has already graced several magazine covers.
Dunne is also a Sports Illustrated swimsuit model. Despite all her success, the 22-year-old also faced some harsh trolling and name-calling on the internet.
Olivia Dunne opened up about her struggles
During an appearance on Stephanie McMahon’s “What’s Your Story” podcast, Dunne revealed how she struggled with body image issues due to social media. She said:
“I did have a very big male audience at the beginning of my college career. And that was hard. It was hard to feel like people were watching me, judging me. I’ve definitely have had some problems with some body issues.” (34:48)
Dunne explained that gymnastics is one of the sports where the athlete ends up developing a lot of muscles. Notably, she received a lot of disheartening comments from her male audience.
“When I first started posting, men were like, ‘I do not like those muscles.’ They were calling me a linebacker, they were calling me a football player.”
Dunne struggled to understand why someone would comment on her if they claim to not like what she does. Eventually, she got a grip on how social media works and started ignoring those people. Dunne has been in a long-term relationship with Pirates pitcher Paul Skenes.
Read More:
Paul Skenes’ Girlfriend Olivia Dunne Poses in Blue Swimwear as She Embraces Summer Break at Long Beach Island
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