Sports
Why Barbara Kendall backs women’s Olympic water polo campaign
In 2015, Barbara Kendall received the Sport NZ Leadership Award at the Halberg Awards.
Photo: Photosport Ltd 2015 www.photosport.co.nz
Five-time Olympian Barbara Kendall has thrown her weight behind the New Zealand women’s water polo team in their bid to qualify for the next Games.
The ‘White Caps’ believe they have a golden opportunity to qualify for Los Angeles 2028, with the Olympic quota for women’s water polo increasing from 10 teams to 12.
The team narrowly missed out on Paris 2024, falling just two goals short of Olympic qualification.
Women’s water polo was only added to the Olympics in 2000, with men’s water polo on the programme since 1900. No New Zealand team have ever qualified for the Olympics in the sport.
Kendall competed at five Olympic Games, winning gold, silver and bronze medals in windsurfing. She is now the White Caps performance coach and was introduced to water polo through her two daughters.
“They started playing at school and just loved it,” she said. “There was no-one at the school really managing it, so I just stepped in and ended up managing water polo for Whangaparāoa College, right up until both of them finished.
“I didn’t really know much about it, but I knew how to put a team together.”
Eldest daughter Samantha later joined the Atlantis City club in Auckland, where Kendall met White Caps head coach Angie Winstanley-Smith.
“What she was trying to achieve was a big dream with very little resource to try and get a team to the Olympic Games in Paris,” Kendall said. “There was no money, so it was pretty much a voluntary role, just building a plan and it’s taken a long time.
“She was, like, ‘Barbara, we’d love to have you on the team just supporting’ and I went, ‘Yep’.”
NZ women’s water polo team – the White Caps.
Photo: Catharyn Hayne Photography
NZ Water Polo chief executive Jan Shearer competed at three Olympics in sailing, winning a silver medal with Leslie Egnot at Barcelona 1992.
Olympian Polly Powrie joined the White Caps a couple of years ago as team manager. Powrie is a two-time Olympic medallist, winning gold at London 2012 and silver at Rio 2016, alongside teammate Jo Aleh in the women’s 470 sailing class.
England-born Winstanley-Smith represented Great Britain for 11 years, including the 2012 London Olympics, before retiring in 2014 and moving to New Zealand.
“Angie is an outstanding individual,” Kendall said. “Most people wouldn’t dedicate their life to it, it’s a real life calling.
“Then, when Jan became CEO, it was, like, ‘Right, I’m in’, because Jan’s an amazing operator, and then Polly joining as well. When you have really good operators in behind a good coach, who knows what can happen, so that was why I joined.”
Kendall knows what it’s like to prepare for Olympic qualification, but that’s brand new territory for the White Caps squad members. Some have spent time playing in the American college system on scholarships, some are coming from club level.
“Taking them from that level to actually what’s required when you step up into high performance systems is quite a big jump and some people don’t make it, because it’s relentless, it’s 24/7.
“It’s meticulous and so many boxes need to be ticked to ensure that you are operating under a high performance energy stream. It’s tiring and it’s really hard.”
Kendall enjoys working within a team sport.
“What a privilege to work with a group of female athletes striving to be their very best,” she said. “The dynamics are quite different, because you can have one person off and it can affect the whole team.
“They learn to understand their teammates, and what stresses them or what motivates them. They have to be able to adapt and have empathy.
“All those things you learn from a team sport, which you probably don’t learn from an individual sport, because it’s all about you, but in a team sport, you’ve got to look outside yourself a lot more.”
The NZ women’s water polo team at a training base in Auckland.
Photo: Supplied
Kendall said she had a “million stories” she could share about the realities of high performance sport, “based on everything I learnt in 25 years of travelling overseas, sleeping in cars, little support”.
“When you get to the end of it, you may not qualify for the Olympic Games,” she said. “You may not win a medal, but what you have learnt that has made you you, that’s priceless …and that’s where I come in.”
Kendall’s philosophy is to grow the person, then the athlete will flourish.
“In high performance sport, you go into pressure cooker situations and all your fears surface, so it’s how you embrace them and learn through them. It can be a really tough journey, so understanding that is actually when the most growth occurs, and you are much stronger and resilient from those times.”
The White Caps are currently on the road, gaining valuable experience in Europe against the world’s top teams, before heading to the world aquatics championships in Singapore.
Kendall will rejoin the team there, after a quick detour to watch daughter Aimee Bright compete at the 2025 iQFOiL world championships in Denmark. Bright is one of New Zealand’s top young windfoilers, a newer evolution of windsurfing.
Stacked with Olympic experience
New Zealand sailors Jo Aleh and Polly Powrie (right) at the Olympics.
Photo: PHOTOSPORT
Winstanley-Smith, who started coaching the team in 2017, appreciates that she has now got a management team stacked with Olympic experience.
One of her assistant coaches is Eelco Uri, a former Dutch player, who competed at the 1996 and 2000 Olympics with the Netherlands men’s team.
Winstanley-Smith said of Kendall: “Anyone who meets Barbara, it’s impossible not to feel energised.
“She’s been to five Olympics, she works with the IOC. Ultimately, what she brings is, ‘Yes, this is high performance, but it’s fun, we choose to be here’,” she said.
“She challenges the environment, and gets us to look at each other as people and how we can connect, and how everyone is different and how we navigate that within a team, so she’s been gold in that respect for me.”
Shearer spent three years as CEO of Snow Sports NZ, before taking charge of NZ Water polo in 2021, when Covid was having a big impact. She is also board chair of Canoe Racing NZ.
Winstanley-Smith’s first three months of communication with Shearer was over Zoom, when Auckland was in lockdown.
“She came in, and just provided a support for me and a guidance in the New Zealand high performance environment, and her connections and ability to get stuff done is just incredible.
“Immediately, her knowledge and expertise, she came from Snow Sports and we’ve all seen the success they have had, and also Canoe Racing New Zealand, so two organisations she’s been involved with who’ve had a lot of Olympic success, I don’t think that’s by chance.”
Jan Shearer (left) and Leslie Egnot at the Barcelona Olympic Games, 1992.
Photo: PHOTOSPORT
Winstanley-Smith said Powrie was the most unassuming, laid-back person she had ever worked with.
“So level-headed, which is fantastic for me, because she balances my ADHD out, so it’s great,” she laughed.
“She just loves being involved in sport, but not for the limelight. The girls can sit down at breakfast in tournament and chat through, ‘What was the morning like before you went out to sail your last race and won gold’ – those key moments that Polly has lived that she can bring real-life experience.”
White Caps captain Jessica Milicich, 29, has been in the squad for nine years and said missing out on Paris was difficult, but it made them confident they could make it.
She said having so much Olympic experience around the team was invaluable.
“Having Angie lead our programme has been really important for us,” Milicich said. “We wouldn’t be in the position that we are today without her.
“She’s really driven the women’s programme forward in the time that she’s been head coach. I’ve never met anyone as technically capable as her.
“She understands what you’re going through in high-pressure moments, she is very calm in times of stress, she is just so valuable and we are lucky to have someone like her involved.”
Jessica Milicich of the NZ women’s water polo team.
Photo: Deep Blue Media
Milicich said also having Powrie and Kendall in their camp filled them with confidence.
“They both came to the Doha world champs with us last year and the impact that they had was so positive, so all of our feedback was that we wanted them to be involved moving forward.
“Barbara creates an atmosphere where she brings out the best in everyone. She is really focussed on how we can perform as a group and individually at our best, so I think that is really important, because when you get to those international moments, she has so much experience and value to offer.
“Then Polly is just awesome. Having the two of them, I think we are very fortunate, and I don’t think you’d look across any other staff or team management, and have the same kind of experience or value.”
Traditionally, Europe produces strong water polo teams like Hungary, Greece and Italy. USA is strong in women’s water polo and Australia won silver in Paris last year.
“For us to break in to that upper tier, we are a little bit further away, so the more we get exposed to those kind of teams, the better,” Milicich said.
Water polo is now one of 10 recognised team sports under the High Performance Sport New Zealand programme, which has bumped up their funding.
“Singapore is one of our first world championships where we haven’t had to do much fundraising,” Milicich said. “It’s covered, but normally, it has been self-funded.
“To get to this point where we can now move forward and hopefully continue to grow the sport is really exciting.”
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Sports
Pitt volleyball reaches Final Four again but can it win championship?
Updated Dec. 17, 2025, 11:38 p.m. ET
KANSAS CITY, MO ― Upon arriving at last year’s NCAA volleyball Final Four in Louisville, Kentucky, Pittsburgh Panthers head coach Dan Fisher received several commemorative Louisville Slugger bats.
Throughout the 2025 season, they would sit in his office in special holders, serving as a reminder of what could have been. Last December, Pitt’s title push ended shy of the championship game. After making four consecutive Final Four appearances without winning a trophy, the No. 1 overall seed fell short ― again. The Panthers lost 3-1 to the Louisville Cardinals in the semifinals and went home empty-handed.
On Wednesday, Fisher, well aware that Pitt let a potential chance at a championship slip away, reflected on the disappointment he felt.
“I can simultaneously be proud of making the Final Four and disappointed we didn’t advance,” he said. “I can hold those two thoughts at once.”
The balancing act of holding space for pride and disappointment has likely been something the Panthers coach and his team have been silently juggling all season. At some point, it probably had to become a small part of what fueled them to get back to volleyball’s biggest stage and return for a fifth straight Final Four ― even if they may never admit it out loud. Multiple opportunities to win a championship don’t happen often, and when a team can’t bring home any hardware, the questions about winning inevitably become louder.
Will Pitt ever be the “bride” and not the “bridesmaid”? Is this the year the Panthers finally put it all together?
Six total players at the 2025 Final Four have experience playing at this level. Fisher’s roster has five of the six Final Four veterans. Pitt opposite Olivia Babcock and middle blocker Bre Kelley have been to two prior Final Fours. Several other Panthers players have been to at least one. Wisconsin Badgers middle blocker Carter Booth, with one appearance, is the remaining player. With so many young and new faces on all four tournament rosters, Pitt’s experience could prove valuable if it wants to reach the national championship on Sunday. Babcock addressed the potential advantage during Wednesday’s Panthers press conference.
“Since so many people have been here before, we were able to prepare the newer players coming into this experience what to expect,” Babcock said. “We’re also able to just remind them constantly that even though there will be a lot of media ― things there wouldn’t typically be ― stay locked in at the goal at hand. It is very easy to get distracted. I think those players are going to help our newer players be able to hone in on the task.”
Babcock stressed that it’s an honor to be on the Final Four stage. Still, she says the Panthers are focused. Their preparation has been better, including how they practice and scout opponents and visualize matches. Kelley shed a bit more light on how the Panthers are staying grounded as they approach Thursday’s semifinal match.
“In the past, I feel like we’ve always made it a point that we have to win the Final Four. This year, we have really emphasized, especially with our sports psychologist, to play ball,” Kelley said. “Obviously, we’re trying to embrace this moment and be where our feet are. This game is supposed to be fun. It’s not supposed to be severely taxing on your mind and body.”
The Panthers revealed that the team has broken down every intense matchup, as far back as a September regular-season sweep against the No. 1 Kentucky Wildcats, to just one point at a time. The team said even in a dominant 3-0 win like that one, the focus this year has been on being “good” after getting to 20 points in a set. Once the Panthers get to that point, Babcock says they are “able to flip a switch”. Then, it becomes a matter of which team gets to 25 first. She believes that if Pitt is playing “the best points of (their lives)”, they’ll find a lot of success. Fisher seemed to be in lockstep with that thought process.
“The main message is just to stay in the moment,” he said. “Along with that, we were touching on it earlier about what’s different about this team, and I think when we’re playing our best, we’re really good. So just knowing that we don’t know what the outcome will be, but we certainly know how good we can be…”
Pitt takes on No. 3 Texas A&M during the 2025 NCAA volleyball Final Four at 6:30 p.m. ET Thursday on ESPN.
Sports
Utah State Volleyball Quartet Named to CSC Academic All-District Team
Kofe earned the distinction via a 3.81 GPA while majoring in marketing and leading the Aggie offense to a program-record .274 hitting percentage this season, ranking third in the nation with 11.08 assists per set and also earning Mountain West Player of the Year honors. Kofe is the only player in the nation with three matches of 60 or more assists. Her 1,330 total assists this season ranks fifth all-time at USU while she already sits in eighth for career assists at Utah State with 2,290. Kofe also added 32 kills, 28 aces, 285 digs and 37 total blocks on the year.
Barlow received the honor after posting a 3.97 GPA while majoring in integrated studies. This season, Barlow Utah State’s single-season program record for hitting percentage with a mark of .444, shattering the previous mark of .375 (min. 5 attempts per set) held by Denae Mohlman and set in 1997. Barlow is now the career record holder for hitting percentage, sitting at .418 for her career at Utah State, topping current assistant coach/director of operations Kennedi Hansen’s career mark of .362 (min. 1,000 attacks). Barlow recorded six matches of at least 17 attempts and zero hitting errors this season while no other player in the nation had more than four according to ESPN research. Barlow finished with 321 kills, 18 aces, 51 digs and 93 blocks on the season. She earned All-MW honors for the fourth time in her career.
Helgesen earned the award after recording a 3.57 GPA while majoring in psychology. Helgesen finished the season with 391 kills on a .295 hitting percentage, the 10th-highest hitting percentage in program history with at least five attempts per set. Helgesen also ranks seventh all-time for career hitting percentage at USU (min. 1,000 attempts) with a mark of .275 as an Aggie. Helgesen broke USU’s single-game hitting percentage record with at least 20 attempts, hitting .704 against Grand Canyon. Helgesen also added 26 aces, 96 digs and 68 blocks on the year. She earned All-MW honors for the first time in her career this season.
Štiglic earned the honor after posting a 3.68 GPA and majoring in marketing. Štiglic finished the season with a team-high 3.56 kills per set, totaling 431 kills alongside 29 aces, 146 digs and 63 blocks. Štiglic earned all-MW honors this season after ranking seventh in kills per set (3.63) and fourth in points per set (4.27) during conference play. Štiglic also ranked sixth in the MW with 0.31 aces per set, totaling 21. She hit double-digit kills in 17 of 18 matches during MW action, totaling nine kills in her lone match not reaching the plateau. Štiglic also recorded seven matches with multiple aces.
Fans can follow the Aggie volleyball program on Twitter, @USUVolleyball, on Facebook at /USUVolleyball or on Instagram, @usuvolleyball. Aggie fans can also follow the Utah State athletic program on Twitter, @USUAthletics, Facebook at /USUAthletics and on Instagram, @USUAthletics.
– USU –
Sports
Ptacek, Zelenovic Named AVCA All-Americans
The Honorable Mention All-America honors come after both Ptacek and Zelenovic were named First Team All-Big 12, leading one of the league’s most efficient and balanced offenses. Under first year head coach Matt Ulmer, the Jayhawks finished with a 24-11 and the program’s fourth appearance in the NCAA Sweet 16 all-time.
Ptacek, a native of Prescott, Wis., earns her first career All-America honors after hitting .314 with 331 kills, 136 blocks and 27 service aces during the 2025 season. Ptacek was recently named to the AVCA All-Region Team and was named to the AVCA Player of the Year Watch List during the 2025 season.
Zelenovic, a freshman from Novi Sad, Serbia, finished a standout freshman season for the Jayhawks, leading the team with 485.5 total points, 375 kills, 46 service aces and a .276 hitting percentage. Defensively, Zelenovic posted 123 total blocks. Zelenovic was also named to the AVCA All-Region Team and was named as the Central Region’s Freshman of the Year.
Ptacek and Zelenovic are the latest Jayhawks to earn All-America honors, becoming the 14th and 15th Jayhawks to earn All-America honors all-time. Kansas has had multiple All-Americans in just eight seasons all-time, including 2025, 2024, 2023, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014 and 2013.
See below for a full list of Kansas volleyball All-American honors:
Josi Lima 2003 Honorable Mention Caroline Jarmoc 2013 Third Team 2012 Second Team Chelsea Albers 2014 Honorable Mention 2013 Honorable Mention Sara McClinton 2013 Honorable Mention Erin McNorton 2013 Honorable Mention Cassie Wait 2016 Honorable Mention Ainise Havili 2017 Honorable Mention 2016 Third Team 2015 First Team 2014 Honorable Mention Kelsie Payne 2017 Third Team 2016 First Team 2015 First Team Madison Rigdon 2017 Honorable Mention 2016 Honorable Mention Caroline Bien 2021 Honorable Mention Reagan Cooper 2023 Third Team Camryn Turner 2024 Third Team 2023 Honorable Mention Toyosi Onabanjo 2024 Honorable Mention
Sports
Colorado Volleyball Pin Attacker Ana Burilovic Named AVCA All-American
Burilovic’s selection makes her the volleyball program’s seventh All-American (sixth athlete), and she collects the fifth presented by the AVCA (since 1981). She becomes the Buffs’ first AVCA All-American since middle blocker Naghede Abu was named to the third team at the conclusion of the 2018 season. The Buffs also boast six previous AVCA All-American honorable mentions and two Volleyball Magazine All-American honorable mentions.
“We couldn’t be more proud of Ana’s efforts and achievements this season, and it’s gratifying to see her get the recognition she deserves,” head coach Jesse Mahoney stated. “She has grown into one of the premier six-rotation players in the country.”
Last week, Burilovic was named to the AVCA All-West Region First Team for the first time in her career, just a week after being selected to the 2025 All-Big 12 First Team. On Sept. 30, Burilovic was named AVCA Player of the Week and Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week after aiding the Buffs in their road sweep over then-No. 14 BYU and then-No. 23 Utah. She was named Big 12 OPOW again on Nov. 4, after leading Colorado’s win over Northern Colorado with 30 kills, hitting .329, nine digs, two blocks and one ace (Oct. 28). At the beginning of the season, Burilovic was selected to the 2025 Preseason Big 12 Team, and she was on the Anteater Classic and Buffs Invitational all-tournament teams.
Burilovic led the Big 12 in points per set with 5.47, good for sixth in the NCAA, and in kills per set with 4.71, good for ninth in the country. She was also third in conference for aces per set with 0.43, landing at 46th in the country. In the NCAA, Burilovic was also fifth for total points (656.0), seventh for total attacks (1,424), eighth for total kills (565), 17th for attacks per set (11.87), and 23rd for total aces (51).
In her 32 matches in 2025, she has accumulated 565 kills, 211 digs, 51 aces, 64 blocks and 19 assists. Burilovic has four kill-dig double-doubles on the season, now totaling 10 in her career. She has had 13 matches with 20 or more kills this season (a CU VB record). Burilovic surpassed 1,000 career kills at West Virginia, becoming the 19th Buff to total over 1,000 career kills. She now has 1,061 career kills, 521 career digs, 118 career aces and 116 career blocks.
At the end of the 2025 season, Burilovic leads the program in rally-scoring era aces with 115, putting her at eighth overall. She is also 15th in CU history for career kills (1,061), and second overall for kills in a single season with 537. Additionally, with two 30-kill matches against UCF (Oct. 2) and at Northern Colorado (Oct. 28), she is only the second player in Colorado Volleyball history to have two matches in a single season with over 30 kills.
Fourteen student-athletes across the country were selected to the AVCA All-America Third Team, 14 to the second team and 14 to the first team. Fifty-seven were also named Honorable Mention. A full list of the honorees can be found at avca.org.
Under 10th-year head coach Jesse Mahoney, Colorado finished the 2025 season 23-9 and went 12-6 against Big 12 opponents. Coach Mahoney has led the Buffs to a 164-135 record in his 10 seasons at the helm. The Buffs made their 22nd appearance in the NCAA tournament after the conclusion of the regular season, sweeping American in the first round before falling to four-seed Indiana in the second round. The Buffs’ last match against the Hoosiers marks the 12th second round appearance in program history. Colorado has 20 wins this season, marking the program’s 13th 20-win season and its first since 2022. With 23 wins this season, this is the most in a season since 2017 and ties for the third-most wins in a season in program history.
For more information on the Colorado volleyball team, please visit cubuffs.com/vb. Fans of the Buffs can follow @cubuffsvb on Instagram, X, and Facebook.
Sports
Cassidy Hartman earns AVCA All-American Honorable Mention staus
LEXINGTON, Ky. — The American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) announced its annual All-American selections on Wednesday morning ahead of the NCAA Tournament semifinals with UNI’s Cassidy Hartman earning All-American Honorable Mention recognition.
The announcement marks the 17th All-American selection in program history and 16thin the Bobbi Petersen era (1997, 2001-pres.). A full list of UNI’s AVCA All-American can be found below.
The 2025 MVC Player of the Year and a First Team All-MVC selection, Hartman led the league with 4.64 kills per set, along with 2.74 digs per frame, 58 total blocks and 19 aces during her junior season. Starting all 32 matches during her junior season, Hartman recorded ten or more kills in 27 matches this season, as well as six matches with 20+ kills, including a career-high 26 terminations at Southern Illinois in the regular season.
She also posted 14 double-double outings. A three-time MVC Player of the Week this season and a member of the Capital Credit Union Classic All-Tournament Team back in September, Hartman earned AVCA All-Region Honorable Mention honors in 2024.
Hartman helped lead the Panthers to a 26-6 record overall, a 16-0 mark in MVC play and the program’s fourth consecutive MVC regular season and tournament titles, as well as a run to the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
UNI’S AVCA ALL-AMERICANS
- 1999 – Shannon Perry (3rd Team)
- 2002 – Molly O’Brien (3rd Team)
- 2009 – Ellie Blankenship (Honorable Mention)
- 2009 – Bre Payton (Honorable Mention)
- 2010 – Bre Payton (2nd Team)
- 2010 – Ellie Blankenship (3rd Team)
- 2010 – Michelle Burrow (Honorable Mention)
- 2011 – Bre Payton (2nd Team)
- 2011 – Krista DeGeest (Honorable Mention)
- 2013 – Shelby Kintzel (Honorable Mention)
- 2017 – Heather Hook (Honorable Mention)
- 2017 – Karlie Taylor (Honorable Mention)
- 2017 – Piper Thomas (Honorable Mention)
- 2018 – Piper Thomas (Honorable Mention)
- 2019 – Karlie Taylor (Honorable Mention)
- 2024 – Kira Fallert (Honorable Mention)
- 2025 – Cassidy Hartman (Honorable Mention)
UNI volleyball action can be followed all season long on social media on Facebook (UNI Volleyball), X (@UNIVolleyball) and on Instagram (@univolleyball). The full 2025 schedule and roster, along with the latest Panther news and information can be found online at UNIpanthers.com.
Sports
Kentucky Volleyball Final Four Watch Party Set for Thursday at Drake’s Lansdowne – UK Athletics
LEXINGTON, Ky. – Big Blue Nation is invited to cheer on Kentucky Volleyball in the NCAA Final Four at the official watch party hosted at Drake’s Lansdowne, on Thursday, Dec. 18.
The Wildcats face Wisconsin approximately 30 minutes after the conclusion of the Texas A&M vs. Pitt match, which begins at 6:30 p.m. ET. Kentucky’s match is expected to start around 9 p.m. ET.
Fans at the Lansdowne location can enjoy UK Volleyball promotional items and giveaways, with tables available on a first-come, first-served basis. The Landsdowne Drakes is located at 3347 Tates Creek Road in Lexington,
Can’t make it to Lansdowne? All Drake’s locations in Kentucky will show the match, so you can find a spot near you to support the Wildcats.
Drake’s Kentucky Locations:
Lexington
- Lansdowne – 3347 Tates Creek Road
- Brannon Crossing – 390 E. Brannon Road, Nicholasville
- Hamburg – 1880 Pleasant Ridge Drive
- Leestown – 1735 Sharkey Way
Louisville
- Hurstbourne – 2651 S. Hurstbourne Parkway
- Outer Loop – 3501 Outer Loop
- Paddock Shops – 3921 Summit Plaza Drive
- St. Matthews – 3939 Shelbyville Road
Other Locations
- Elizabethtown – 151 The Loop
- Bowling Green – 3267 Ken Bale Blvd
- Owensboro – 3050 Highland Pointe Drive
- Florence – 6805 Houston Road
- Danville – 2596 South Danville Bypass
- Pikeville – 175 Lee Ave.
Join us and be part of the excitement as Kentucky Volleyball competes for a spot in the national championship match!
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