Sports
World figure skating championships preview

Many of the skaters in this week’s competition knew and trained alongside some of the victims and they will undoubtedly be on everyone’s minds throughout.He tied the record for most landed quadruple jumps, landing six of his attempted seven, en route to his third straight U.S. figure skating title. pic.twitter.com/VUzH7uetj1A tribute will be held on Wednesday night ahead of the pairs short program to remember the victims of the American Airlines plane crash, in which 28 people associated with the figure skating community were killed on their way home from the national championships in January. Among those who lost their lives were skaters Spencer Lane and Jinna Han, Han’s mother Jin Hee Han and Lane’s mother Christine Lane, and coaches Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, from the Skating Club of Boston, the host of the championships.Just how good is Malinin, the 2024 world champion? The 20-year-old American hasn’t lost a competition since 2023 and carries an eight-event win streak to Boston. And it’s not just that he keeps winning, it’s how he does it.
Heavy hearts
Haven’t watched figure skating since the 2022 Games? Or just need a quick refresher? We’ve got you covered. Here are the skaters and storylines you’ll want to know.Editor’s Picks

In a separate news conference, Evan Bates, the two-time defending ice dancing world champion with Madison Chock, said, “I think everybody’s looking forward to having something to cheer for.”
While Stellato-Dudek and Deschamps have struggled at times this season, Germany’s Minerva Hase and Nikita Volodin and Japan’s Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara have stepped up. Hase and Volodin won the Grand Prix Final and Miura and Kihara, the 2023 world champions, claimed the podium’s top spot at the Four Continents. So, who will come out on top in Boston? Stay tuned.If she’s not at 100%, there are several others looking to pounce. South Korea’s Kim Chae-yeon, who defeated Kaori at the Asian Games and was the world bronze medalist in 2024, is capable of winning yet again. The 18-year-old earned a career-best score in the free skate to clinch the Four Continents trophy in her native Seoul just over a month ago.While he has yet to complete all seven in one performance, that has hardly slowed him down, and he remains the only man to have ever successfully landed a quadruple axel cleanly in competition. During his run at nationals, he landed the quad axel and his signature aerial twist (nicknamed the “raspberry twist”), earning a massive free skate score of 219.23 for an overall score of 331.31. This gave him more than a 44-point margin of victory over second-place finisher Andrew Torgashev.
Malinin’s dominance
“[I] really just have this mindset of skating for them now,” reigning world champion Ilia Malinin told reporters last week about those from his Washington Figure Skating Club who were on the plane. “I’ll always have them in my head and in my heart, just remembering them, and this worlds [performance], I really want to dedicate to everyone on that flight. [I want to] just really give my all in that performance and really just make it worth it for them.”And it could be a very exciting week for the Americans. The contingent is legitimately in contention to claim three of the four world titles — something that has never happened before. (It’s worth noting, the often-dominant Russians remain barred from competition due to the ongoing invasion of Ukraine.)
While Malinin is the clear favorite for the men’s title, there is considerably more intrigue in the women’s competition.During his 2024 showing at worlds, Malinin became the first man in history to land six clean quadruple jumps in one program. And since then, he’s only tried to push himself further by incorporating a previously banned backflip and adding yet another quadruple jump to his routine. He clinched his third straight national title in January.— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) January 27, 2025
When asked last week if he considered Kagiyama a “rival,” he didn’t hesitate.Madison Chock and Evan Bates reminisce ahead of #WorldFigure next week! Deanna Stellato-Dudek, now 41, became the oldest women’s world champion in the sport’s history in 2024 when she and Maxime Deschamps claimed gold last year. Their season has been somewhat derailed with injuries and illness, but they nabbed the Canadian national title in January and recorded a runner-up finish at the Four Continents. They now have their eyes on winning yet another world title — and qualifying for their first Olympics together after Stellato-Dudek officially became a Canadian citizen in December.Of course, winning his second consecutive world title won’t be as easy, although he is the heavy favorite. Japan’s Yuma Kagiyama, who took home silver last year, will look to rebound after a shaky showing at the Asian Winter Games, and France’s Adam Siao Him Fa, the last man to beat Malinin in 2023, won bronze last year and will be looking to get his up-and-down season back on track. But ultimately, this is Malinin’s title to win — and he knows it.
As for the women …
And a trio of Americans could contend in front of a passionate home crowd. Amber Glenn, 25, brings an undefeated record this season. The two-time reigning national champion won at the Grand Prix Final in December — the biggest title for an American woman since 2010 — and seems to be peaking at the right time. Isabeau Levito, 18, captured silver at worlds last season. She missed nationals with a foot injury but was able to petition onto the team and made her return to competition last month. Nineteen-year-old Alysa Liu, a 2022 Olympian, came back in 2024 after a two-year retirement and has since finished in second place at U.S. nationals and in fourth place at last month’s Four Continents.It could be a close competition. Chock, 32, and Bates, 36, were bested by Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier at the Four Continents event this year by a fraction of a point. The Canadian duo were the runners-up at the 2024 world championships and have twice placed on the podium before but have never won gold. Will this be their year?Three-peat loading! ⏳
Japan’s Kaori Sakamoto is the three-time defending champion and hopes to become the first woman in over 60 years to win four in a row. But she has struggled as of late, finishing third at the ISU Grand Prix Final in December and then ending up in second place at the Asian Winter Games last month behind a near-disastrous free skate. Will she be able to rediscover her form and her confidence in time for Boston?
In addition to collecting some shiny new hardware, skaters will also be aiming to earn Olympic quota places for their respective countries during the competition — 24 spots are up for grabs in the men’s and women’s singles events, 16 in pairs and 19 in ice dance.Ilia Malinin isn’t backing down from a challenge.— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) November 2, 2024
Dance party
Italy’s Charlene Guignard and Marco Fabbri, the most experienced team in the field, finished in third place in 2024 and in second place in 2023. Americans Christina Carreira and Anthony Ponomarenko finished in seventh place last year and finished just off the podium at the Four Continents.
“Not necessarily,” he said. “I would consider myself to be my biggest rival. I mean for me, my whole motto is, I always like to compete against myself and to really just push my own limit.”How to watch ➡️: https://t.co/z7jqy4nmxH pic.twitter.com/8lsh0YgYobGLENN IS GOLDEN 🥇— U.S. Figure Skating (@USFigureSkating) March 19, 2025
1 RelatedD’Arcy Maine
More history for Stellato-Dudek and Deschamps?
The 2025 ISU World Figure Skating Championships get underway on Wednesday in Boston as the sport’s best look to make their mark with less than a year to go before the Milano Cortina Olympic Games.Five-time world medalists Chock and Bates are in search of their third straight world championship title — and would become the first duo to do so since Oksana Grishuk and Evgeni Platov claimed four in a row from 1994-1997. While Chock and Bates haven’t formally announced retirement plans, the recently married pair — who just won their sixth national title — have called the upcoming year leading into the Olympic Games as their “last shot” and have their eyes on gold in both Boston and in Italy next winter.
At Grand Prix France, reigning U.S. champion Amber Glenn secures her first-ever Grand Prix title! #GPFigure pic.twitter.com/imbwJ65Vbx
Sports
Spartan Club Athletes of the Week for Dec. 8: Antonio Sidoti & Gianna Phipps
The Spartan Club, comprised of Case Institute of Technology (CIT), Western Reserve University (WRU) and Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) alumni, parents of current students, faculty and staff, and friends of the University, is aimed at helping foster and honor the proud tradition of athletics at the University, while also supporting the current student-athletes. For more information on the Spartan Club, and to help support its purpose by becoming a member, CLICK HERE.
Case Western Reserve University first-year Antonio Sidoti, a sprinter on the men’s track and field team, and first-year Gianna Phipps, a sprinter on the women’s track and field team, have been named the Spartan Club Athletes of the Week for their performances this past week.
Sidoti matched a program record in the 60-meter dash in his first collegiate meet on Saturday, the Spartan Alumni Holiday Classic at the Veale Center in Cleveland. After running a time of 7.02 seconds in the prelims of the event, Sidoti tied the school record in the finals with a time of 6.96 seconds. The time currently ranks second in the University Athletic Association and 36th in Division III. The Spartans combined to win seven events with 11 finishes in the top three.
Phipps recorded three national top-12 marks and set a pair of school records in her first collegiate meet, the Spartan Alumni Holiday Classic at the Veale Center in Cleveland on Saturday. She ran the 11th-fastest time in Division III this season in the 200-meter dash, setting a school record with a time of 25.88 seconds. To end the meet, Phipps anchored the 4×400-meter relay which broke the program record with a time of 4:02.40, the seventh-best mark in the country this season. She also fell 0.07 seconds shy of the school record in the 400-meter dash, running a time of 58.88 seconds. Phipps ranks 12th in Division III with the time.
The Spartans will take a break from finals before returning to the Veale Center for the Spartan Icebreaker on Saturday, January 17, 2026. Action is slated to begin at 11 a.m.
The Spartan Club Athletes of the Week are selected by the CWRU Department of Athletics each Monday, based on their performance during the previous week of competition.
Honorable Mentions:
First-year sprinter Samaria Benochi (women’s track and field) placed in the top eight in three events at the Spartan Alumni Holiday Classic at the Veale Center in Cleveland on Saturday. Benochi helped the Spartans set a school record in the 4×400-meter relay with a time of 4:02.40, the seventh-best mark in Division III. She placed fifth in the triple jump by bounding 10.39 meters, the sixth-furthest leap in the conference this season. Finally, Benochi completed the 400-meter dash in 1:03.33 to place seventh, the ninth-fastest time in the UAA.
Junior guard Mya Hartjes (women’s basketball) led all Spartans with 19.0 points, 8.0 rebounds, and 2.5 assists per game over a pair of contests last week. Hartjes finished the week shooting 48.4% (15-of-31) overall, 30.8% (4-of-13) from three-point range, and 57.1% (4-of-7) from the free throw line. She led the team with 22 points in a 67-66 loss at home to Marietta on Wednesday, making eight-of-15 shots overall, two-of-six from behind the three-point line, and four-of-seven free throw attempts, while adding seven rebounds and two assists. She added a team-high 16 points, nine rebounds, and three assists during the Spartans’ 74-61 setback on the road to Denison on Saturday, making seven-of-16 attempts from the floor and two-of-seven from long range. Through the team’s first eight games of the season, Hartjes has averaged 15.0 points, 7.1 rebounds, and 4.3 assists per contest. CWRU stands at 5-3 overall during the 2025-26 season.
The Spartans will be on hiatus for the next three weeks for finals and the holidays before returning to action at the Baldwin Wallace Holiday Classic at the end of the month. The Spartans will face Oberlin at 3 p.m. on Monday, December 29, followed by a matchup against host and 21st-ranked Baldwin Wallace on Tuesday, December 30, also at 3 p.m.
Sophomore thrower Ishaan Solanki (men’s track and field) recorded a pair of career-best marks at the Spartan Alumni Holiday Classic on Saturday. Solanki placed ninth in the weight throw with a toss of 12.66 meters, which ranks fifth in the UAA. In the shot put, he heaved the ball 11.43 meters, finishing 14th.
Senior Art Martinez (wrestling) won all three of his matches at the Yellow Jacket Duals, hosted by Baldwin Wallace University in Berea, Ohio, on Friday night. He pinned Samuel Hutchinson of UNC Pembroke in the first dual, an eventual 35-12 CWRU loss, and defeated Baldwin Wallace’s Dorian Hoffman by decision 6-1 in a 31-15 Spartan setback. Hoffman is ranked second in the region at 125 pounds. Martinez ended the day with a pin of Jason Louiso of Wilmington in just 22 seconds, helping CWRU defeat the Quakers 45-7. Martinez, ranked third in the region at 133 pounds, improved to a team-best 14-1 with the three wins, including five pins and four technical falls. The Spartans dropped to 2-2 in dual matches this season.
The Spartans will be off for final exams before resuming their season with the Chocolate Duals hosted by Messiah University in Grantham, Pennsylvania on Saturday, December 20.
2025-26 Spartan Club Athletes of the Week:
Sept. 2: Jacob Slater (men’s cross country) & Jamie Goldfarb (women’s soccer)
Sept. 8: Mitchell Fein (men’s soccer) & Maggie Farra (women’s soccer)
Sept. 15: Bradley Winter (men’s soccer) & Ceci Dapino (women’s soccer)
Sept. 22: Daniel King (football) & Halina Tompkins (women’s cross country)
Sept. 29: Sam DeTillio (football) & Kalli Wall (volleyball)
Oct. 6: Osi Chukwuocha (football) & Ceci Dapino (women’s soccer)
Oct. 13: Kalli Wall (volleyball) & Claire Kozma (women’s swimming and diving)
Oct. 20: Jacob Slater (men’s cross country) & Halina Tompkins (women’s cross country)
Oct. 27: Bradley Winter (men’s soccer) & Ellie Palaian (women’s soccer)
Nov. 3: Art Martinez (wrestling) & Sohalya Rawlins (women’s swimming and diving)
Nov. 10: Thomas Wagner (wrestling) & Emily Plachta (women’s basketball)
Nov. 18: Jacob Slater (men’s cross country) & Kalli Wall (volleyball)
Nov. 24: John Drumm (men’s swimming and diving) & Claire Kozma (women’s swimming and diving)
Dec. 1: Andrew Fox (men’s basketball) & Maura Schorr (women’s basketball)
Dec. 8: Antonio Sidoti (men’s track and field) & Gianna Phipps (women’s track and field)
Sports
Athletics HawkVision Intern in Iowa City, IA for University of Iowa Athletics
Details
Posted: 08-Dec-25
Location: Iowa City, Iowa
Type: Full-time
Salary: $16.00/Hour
Categories:
Operations
Operations – Video Services
Sector:
Collegiate Sports
Required Education:
4 Year Degree
Internal Number: 25006513
The University of Iowa Department of Athletics seeks applications for a HawkVision Intern. This is a full-time (temporary, PZ04 intern, and FLSA nonexempt) for one year, with the opportunity to be extended to two years determined by performance and departmental need. The University of Iowa is an NCAA Division I institution and a member of the Big Ten Conference. The Department of Athletics manages 22 varsity sports programs and related events with a workforce of approximately 250 regular employees and 300 temporary employees. Athletics is a people-centric organization that operates under a “Win. Graduate. Do It Right.” philosophy. For more information regarding Athletics, please click here.
Responsibilities: The Athletics HawkVision Intern will contribute to the activities of the External Relations Unit of the UI Department of Intercollegiate Athletics, to advance the outreach efforts of the department and its 22 varsity sports programs. Attain the necessary knowledge, skills and experience to compete for a professional-level position within or outside of the University of Iowa. The HawkVision Internship provides practical work experience within the University of Iowa Athletics HawkVision video office. The Intern will assist the Director of HawkVision in gameday video board operations, content creation, and live event production and streaming.
Highlights: The University of Iowa is a Big Ten, nationally ranked research university with 30,000 students located in Iowa City. A vibrant community boasting excellent public schools, safe, comfortable neighborhoods, affordable housing, a highly educated population, and numerous cultural, recreational, and sporting opportunities and events contribute to the Iowa City area frequently appearing high on the best-places-to-live listings. Go to “Working at Iowa” to learn more.
Required Qualifications:
- Bachelor’s degree in communications, graphic arts, video production, design or related field or equivalent combination of education and experience;
- Excellent oral and written communication skills;
- Ability to work effectively with individuals from a variety of backgrounds and perspectives, demonstrating strong interpersonal skills and ability to build trusting relationships;
- A valid U.S. driving license and the ability to meet and maintain University of Iowa Driving Policy standards;
- Working knowledge of and ability to utilize basic office support software (word processing, email, presentation software and spreadsheets);
- Must be able to move and load 50 pounds; work 40 hours per week which may include evening, weekend, and holiday hours.
Desired qualifications:
- Basic knowledge and understanding of the professionalism and intensity necessary to successfully contribute to Division I athletics program;
- Demonstrates a working knowledge of video production, professional-grade cameras, editing software, and a basic understanding of broadcast studio production;
- Demonstrates the ability to coordinate and stream live events;
- Experience with Adobe Creative Suite, Daktronics, Evertz, and Ross Systems.
Application Process: Visit our website at http://jobs.uiowa.edu and search for keywords “HawkVision”. Only applications submitted at https://jobs.uiowa.edu will be accepted.
- Job openings are posted for a minimum of 7 calendar days and may be removed from posting and filled any time after the original posting period has ended.
- Applicants must upload a resume and cover letter and mark them as a relevant file to the submission. Applications without both a cover letter and resume will be considered incomplete and ineligible for consideration.
- Successful candidates will be subject to a credential/education verification and criminal background check and be required to self-disclose any conviction history.
- Five professional references will be requested at a later step in the recruitment process.
- As a part of the University of Iowa’s review of your application and consistent with its policies and practices, the University may access and/or view information about you that is job-related and publicly available on the internet, including but not limited to information on social media sites. The access, viewing and/or use of such information is governed by the University’s Policy on Human Rights, as well as state and federal law.
- For questions or additional information, please contact athletics tanner-erwin@uiowa.edu.
About Iowa:
- Joining the University of Iowa means becoming a vital part of the Hawkeye community, where your work directly impacts education, research, and student success.
- Enjoy exceptional health coverage, university-paid life insurance, robust retirement plans, and generous leave policies. Benefit from 24/7 support services, well-being resources, and access to UI Health Care specialists. Grow professionally with advanced training, leadership development, and tuition assistance.
- Iowa City offers a great quality of life with world-class performances at Hancher Auditorium, Big Ten athletics, top-ranked public schools, and outdoor recreation.
- Join us in making a difference at a leading Big Ten university and premier public research institution.
The University of Iowa is an equal opportunity employer. All qualified applicants are encouraged to apply and will receive consideration for employment free from discrimination on the basis of race, creed, color, religion, national origin, age, sex, pregnancy (including childbirth and related conditions), disability, genetic information, status as a U.S. veteran, service in the U.S. military, sexual orientation, or associational preferences.
About University of Iowa Athletics
The University of Iowa is a Big Ten, nationally ranked research university with 30,000 students located in Iowa City. A vibrant community boasting excellent public schools, safe, comfortable neighborhoods, affordable housing, a highly educated population, and numerous cultural, recreational and sporting opportunities and events contribute to the Iowa City area frequently appearing high on the best-places-to-live listings. Go to “Working at Iowa” at https://jobs.uiowa.edu/working-at-iowa to learn more.
The University of Iowa is an equal opportunity employer. All qualified applicants are encouraged to apply and will receive consideration for employment free from discrimination on the basis of race, creed, color, religion, national origin, age, sex, pregnancy (including childbirth and related conditions), disability, genetic information, status as a U.S. veteran, service in the U.S. military, sexual orientation, or associational preferences.
Connections working at University of Iowa Athletics
https://ncaamarket.ncaa.org/jobs/21890065/athletics-hawkvision-intern
Sports
Group of Bulldogs Run at VWS College Kick-Off This Past Weekend
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Seven members of the UNC Asheville track and field program competed in the Visit Winston-Salem College Kick-Off on Saturday (Dec. 6), highlighted by two school records, three indoor collegiate debuts, and three additional personal bests.
RESULTS
MILE (WOMEN)
2. Alison Graf 4:56.64 (SR)
3. Aneta Kucerova 5:03.06
10 Addison Corl 5:19.63 (PR)
12 Marika Dickel 5:22.96
MILE (MEN)
5. Bennett Moreno 4:17.58
7. Jan Malek 4:18.27
13 Tadiyos Sloan-Westmoreland 4:24.97 (PR)
3000M (WOMEN)
6. Aneta Kucerova 9:54.49 (SR)
7. Alison Graf 9:58.91
9. Marika Dickel 10:15.88
21 Addison Corl 10:44.70
3000M (MEN)
2. Jan Malek 8:24.27
11 Tadiyos Sloan-Westmoreland 8:44.97 (PR)
For full results, click here.
UP NEXT
Asheville officially begins its season on Saturday, Jan. 10, as the Bulldogs host the UNC Asheville Collegiate Opener at Tryon International.
To stay updated with all things surrounding Asheville track & field, follow the team on 𝕩.
Sports
ESPN presents NCAA Women’s Volleyball Regional rounds, Dec. 11-14

- For the second time, a Regional Final match will air on ABC (Sun., Dec. 14)
- ESPN is slated to air two Regional Semifinals on ESPN for the first time
- All four No. 1 seeds (Kentucky, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Texas) to host Regionals, Dec. 11-14
- All 12 matches will air on either ABC/ESPN/ESPN2, with all matches also available on the ESPN App
ESPN continues its exclusive presentation of the NCAA Women’s Volleyball Tournament this weekend with the Regional Semifinals and Finals set at the four top-seeded host sites – Kentucky, Nebraska, Pittsburgh and Texas.
Regional Semifinal play gets underway Thursday, Dec. 11, with four matches on ESPN2 from Kentucky (afternoon) and Pittsburgh (evening). The Regional Semifinals continue Friday from Austin and Lincoln, with the Texas Region airing on ESPN in the afternoon and the Nebraska Region airing on ESPN2 in the evening.
Regional Finals spring into action on Saturday, Dec. 13, with the Kentucky and Pittsburgh Regions as the first two teams claim their spot in the National Semifinals on ESPN2. Times will be determined following Thursday’s matches.
Action then wraps on Sunday, Dec. 14 on ABC/ESPN as the final two teams etch their spots in Kansas City, Mo. For the second time, a Regional Final will air on ABC – coming from either the Texas or Nebraska Region. Times will be determined following Friday’s matches.
Following the success last season, each Regional site will have a reporter on location, giving viewers insight from the sideline during the action.
Commentator teams calling the action from each location are as follows:
Kentucky Regional:
Play-by-play: Kevin Barnett
Analyst: Missy Whittemore – Three-time All-American at Florida
Reporter: Dawn Davenport – Three-year letterwinner at Auburn
Pittsburgh Regional:
Play-by-play: Anne Marie Anderson
Analyst: Nicole Branagh – Beach Volleyball Olympian and two-time All-American at Minnesota
Reporter: Shelby Coppedge – Four-year Texas A&M Corpus Christi defensive specialist
Texas Regional:
Play-by-play: Eric Frede
Analyst: Emily Ehman – Four-year Northwestern libero from 2016-19
Reporter: Michella Chester – Reporter & host for NCAA.com
Nebraska Regional:
Play-by-play: Courtney Lyle
Analyst: Holly McPeak – Three-time beach volleyball Olympian, third-winningest beach volleyball player of all-time
Reporter: Madison Fitzpatrick – Florida State beach volleyball standout (2018-22)
Studio Coverage:
Host: Sam Gore
Analyst: Mary Wise – Three-time AVCA Coach of the Year
Analyst: Jennifer Hoffman – Former Louisville All-American and U.S. National Team member
2025 NCAA Division I Women’s Volleyball Regional Semifinals and Regional Finals Schedule:
| Date | Time (ET) | Site | Match | Network |
| Thu, Dec. 11 | 1 p.m. | Kentucky | Regional Semifinals Creighton vs. Arizona State Kevin Barnett, Missy Whittemore, Dawn Davenport |
ESPN2 |
| 30 mins after Match 1 | Kentucky | Regional Semifinals Cal Poly vs. Kentucky Kevin Barnett, Missy Whittemore, Dawn Davenport |
ESPN2 | |
| 7 p.m. | Pittsburgh | Regional Semifinals Minnesota vs. Pittsburgh Anne Marie Anderson, Nicole Branagh, Shelby Coppedge |
ESPN2 | |
| 30 mins after Match 1 | Pittsburgh | Regional Semifinals Purdue vs. SMU Anne Marie Anderson, Nicole Branagh, Shelby Coppedge |
ESPN2 | |
| Fri, Dec. 12 | Noon | Texas | Regional Semifinals Indiana vs. Texas Eric Frede, Emily Ehman, Michella Chester |
ESPN |
| 30 mins after Match 1 | Texas | Regional Semifinals Wisconsin vs. Stanford Eric Frede, Emily Ehman, Michella Chester |
ESPN | |
| 7 p.m. | Nebraska | Regional Semifinals Texas A&M vs. Louisville Courtney Lyle, Holly McPeak, Madison Fitzpatrick |
ESPN2 | |
| 30 mins after Match 1 | Nebraska | Regional Semifinals Kansas vs. Nebraska Courtney Lyle, Holly McPeak, Madison Fitzpatrick |
ESPN2 | |
| Sat, Dec. 13 | 5 p.m. | TBD | Regional Finals TBD |
ESPN2 |
| 7:30 p.m. | TBD | Regional Finals TBD |
ESPN2 | |
| Sun, Dec. 14 | 3 p.m. | TBD | Regional Finals TBD |
ABC |
| 7:30 p.m. | TBD | Regional Finals TBD |
ESPN |
* All 12 matches will also be available on the ESPN App
All of ESPN. All in One Place.
ESPN offers its full suite of networks and services directly to fans on the ESPN App, providing more choice, flexibility and access to all of ESPN, including more than 47,000 live events per year, on-demand replays, industry-leading studio shows and original programming, and more. The ESPN App gives fans a unique viewing experience that includes multiview and synchronized two-screen viewing options, swipe-able vertical video and a personalized SportsCenter For You, as well as integrated game stats, ESPN Fantasy sports, betting odds and information from DraftKings, sports merchandise, and more. These features are available to all fans who watch on the ESPN App on mobile and connected TV devices, whether they subscribe directly or through a pay TV package. Bundling options available for fans include a limited time offer for the ESPN DTC Unlimited plan with Disney+ and Hulu for $29.99/month for the first 12 months. For more visit stream.espn.com.
Sports
Baylock, Rychkov Garner NJAC Weekly Honors
PITMAN, N.J. – Following a pair of historic performances, TCNJ women’s basketball’s Amanda Baylock and TCNJ track and field’s Maxim Rychkov were tabbed as their respective sport’s NJAC Athlete of the Week, as announced by the conference this afternoon.
Baylock earns her first career Player of the Week nod following an outstanding stretch in which the sophomore averaged 21 points on .538/.500/1.000 splits along with 2.5 rebounds and 2.5 assists to guide the Lions to a pair of dominant NJAC wins.
The Scotch Plains, N.J. native opened her week hitting a trio of 3-pointers as part of a nine-point outing in TCNJ’s 69-43 win over Stockton before erupting on the offensive end in the Lions’ wire-to-wire victory over Kean. Playing just 25 minutes against the Cougars, Baylock set career highs in both points (33) and 3-pointers (7), both of which are the most by a TCNJ player since 2021. The sophomore now easily paces the conference and ranks fifth in Division III in 3-pointers made per game (3.4), converting at an impressive 38.6% clip.
Rychkov made history of his own in his 2025-26 debut en route to the sophomore’s second Track Athlete of the Week honors. Competing at the TCNJ Indoor Open, Rychkov matched the school record in the 60-meter (6.77) before breaking the TCNJ and NJAC record – held by future Olympian Cheickna Traore – and setting the third-fastest finish in Division III history in the 300-meter with his time of 33.54.
Sports
Volleyball’s Loryn Helgesen Named America First Credit Union Utah State Student-Athlete of the Week
With their sponsorship of the student-athlete of the week, America First Credit Union donates funds directly to support student-athlete scholarships.
Helgesen, from Kaysville, Utah, led the Aggies during a pair of matches last week at the NCAA Tournament, including a first-round upset of seventh-seeded Tennessee (3-2) and a loss to second-seeded Arizona State (3-1). Against the Volunteers, Helgesen finished with 14 kills on a .308 hitting percentage and tied for the team lead with four blocks while adding seven digs, one ace and one assist. Against the Sun Devils, Helgesen recorded 19 kills on a .429 hitting percentage, both team highs, and added three digs, one block and one assist.
Helgesen finished the season with a .295 hitting percentage, ranking ninth all-time for a single season at USU with at least five attacks per set. Her career hitting percentage of .275 also ranks sixth all-time in program history with at least 1,000 attacks.
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.
Join The Big Blue Club
Gifts to the Big Blue Club provide the resources necessary to build championship-caliber programs. It also comes with great benefits, including complimentary parking at football and men’s basketball games, access to the best seat locations, exclusive ticket presales, and more. Join online here or contact a member of the Big Blue Club via email or by phone at (435) 797-2583.
Nominees from other sports for USU Student-Athlete of the Week included:
MEN’S BASKETBALL – Junior guard Mason Falslev (Benson, Utah) helped Utah State to a 1-1 record on the road last week with a 74-6` loss at South Florida and a 79-53 win at Charlotte. Against the Bulls, Falslev scored 19 points, to go along with eight rebounds, three steals and two assists, while shooting 7-of-17 from the floor, 3-of-6 from 3-point range, and 2-of-4 from the free throw line. Against the 49ers, he scored 22 points, along with six assists, five rebounds, and four steals, shooting 7-of-12 from the field, 0-of-3 from 3-point range and 8-of-8 at the free throw line. For the week, Falslev averaged 20.5 points, 6.5 rebounds, 4.0 assists and 3.5 steals per game, while shooting 48.3 percent (14-of-29) from the field, 33.3 percent (3-of-9) from 3-point range and 83.3 percent (10-of-12) at the free throw line.
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL – Junior guard Aaliyah Gayles (Las Vegas, Nevada) led the Aggies with 16.0 points per game last week in a pair of road losses at LMU (63-58) and San Diego (70-66). Against the Lions, Gayles scored 12 points and added three rebounds, two assists, two steals and one block. Against the Toreros, Gayles scored a team-high 20 points, USU’s first 20-point scorer this season, on 6-of-15 shooting, and led the team with four rebounds, four assists, two steals, and one block.
2025-26 America First Credit Union USU Student-Athlete of the Week Winners
Sept. 1 – Miles Davis, Football
Sept. 8 – John Miller, Football
Sept. 15 – Bryson Barnes, Football
Sept. 22 – Bryson Barnes, Football
Sept. 29 – Loryn Helgesen, Volleyball
Oct. 6 – Kaylie Kofe, Volleyball
Oct. 13 – Tess Werts, Soccer
Oct. 20 – Loryn Helgesen, Volleyball
Oct. 27 – Loryn Helgesen, Volleyball
Nov. 3 – Mara Štiglic, Volleyball
Nov. 10 – Rine Yonaha, Soccer
Nov. 17 – Garry Clark, Men’s Basketball
Nov. 24 – MJ Collins, Men’s Basketball
Dec. 1 – Andrea Simovski, Volleyball
Dec. 8 – Loryn Helgesen, Volleyball
– USU –
-
Rec Sports2 weeks agoFirst Tee Winter Registration is open
-
Rec Sports2 weeks agoFargo girl, 13, dies after collapsing during school basketball game – Grand Forks Herald
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoCPG Brands Like Allegra Are Betting on F1 for the First Time
-
Sports3 weeks agoVolleyball Recaps – November 18
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoF1 Las Vegas: Verstappen win, Norris and Piastri DQ tighten 2025 title fight
-
Sports2 weeks agoTwo Pro Volleyball Leagues Serve Up Plans for Minnesota Teams
-
Sports2 weeks agoUtah State Announces 2025-26 Indoor Track & Field Schedule
-
Sports2 weeks agoSycamores unveil 2026 track and field schedule
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoRedemption Means First Pro Stock World Championship for Dallas Glenn
-
Sports2 weeks agoTexas volleyball vs Kentucky game score: Live SEC tournament updates





