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Tom Krasovic

San Diego Wave general manager Camille Ashton will see bright aspects of her soccer past and present on Saturday, when the Kansas City Current and Wave play in Mission Valley. Current forward Temwa Chawinga is a global star from Africa who, along with coach Vlatko Andonovski, joined the club when Ashton was Kansas City’s GM. […]

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Tom Krasovic

San Diego Wave general manager Camille Ashton will see bright aspects of her soccer past and present on Saturday, when the Kansas City Current and Wave play in Mission Valley.

Current forward Temwa Chawinga is a global star from Africa who, along with coach Vlatko Andonovski, joined the club when Ashton was Kansas City’s GM. Teams built partly by Ashton reached the National Women’s Soccer League final in 2022 and semifinals in 2024. Led by its top star and coach, K.C. now stands 3-0-0.

Ashton left K.C. last May, joining the Wave a month later.

Several players she’s brought to San Diego (1-1-1) have provided entertaining moments. One is African forward Chiamaka Okwuchukwu, 19.

In 2011, the future Wave GM was a versatile All-American on Stanford’s national championship team. She went on to play with three NWSL franchises and in three European leagues.

Embracing a learning adventure, Ashton then worked with World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) in talent development.

The mother of a young boy and expecting the birth of her second son this summer, the 34-year-old Ashton answered questions ahead of Saturday’s 7 p.m. match at Snapdragon Stadium.

What excites you about this Wave team?

A: There’s a lot that does. It’s obviously early. There was a lot of change to this team over the last couple of months. You can see the way we’re trying to play the game. It’s an exciting team to watch and a team that is fighting to win.

In what ways is coach Jonas Eidevall, formerly of England’s Arsenal, meeting the expectations you had when you hired him in January?

A: He’s done a really, really good job in a short amount of time. We had staff still joining throughout the preseason. So it wasn’t like there was a lot of time to put this new group together to build connections and set up processes to start the season. So, he’s really starting to build a foundation. He’s very clear in his expectations and standards.

Wave general manager Camille Ashton played at Stanford under her maiden name, Camille Levin. Levin (facing camera) hugs teammate Christen Press (23) after making a goal during the semifinals of the NCAA Women's College Cup soccer tournament against Boston College in Cary, N.C., Friday, Dec. 3, 2010. Stanford won 2-0 over Boston College. (AP Photo/Sara D. Davis)
Wave general manager Camille Ashton played at Stanford under her maiden name, Camille Levin. Levin (facing camera) hugs teammate Christen Press (23) after making a goal during the semifinals of the NCAA Women’s College Cup soccer tournament against Boston College in Cary, N.C., Friday, Dec. 3, 2010. Stanford won 2-0 over Boston College. (AP Photo/Sara D. Davis)

What’s your scouting report of yourself as a player?

A: I don’t know (laughs). I haven’t thought about me in a long time. It’s been a minute.

You played several positions, right?

A: That is true. I spent a lot of my career playing multiple positions. I was usually a right back. But I played left back, central-mid. I played like a wing position. So at Stanford, I played every single position except for goalkeeper at some point.

That seems conducive to becoming a GM. Broadened your soccer view?

A: Yes, you certainly learn a lot playing multiple positions throughout your career. So, I don’t think that hurt me, certainly.

How did you end up with WWE after your playing career ended?

A: So, I actually got my master’s in sports management when I was finishing my playing career. And when I started to think about what was next for me, I knew I wanted to stay in sports and be on the management side.

Quite honestly, at that time, in soccer, and certainly in this league, there really weren’t general managers. The route if I wanted to stay in the game was coaching, and that was never a passion of mine. There really wasn’t this general manager-type role yet that had evolved in the women’s game.

The most important thing for me was to be somewhere where I felt like I was going to learn a lot. And I had an opportunity through actually somebody I’d met through my Stanford alumni network that headed all the talent development at WWE.

It was a world I knew nothing about, in wrestling, but obviously a very established sports and entertainment entity that I learned so much from. Actually, even though it seems like it couldn’t be more different than soccer and this (NWSL) world — (there were) a lot of parallels in what I learned there in what I was doing. There was recruitment of talent there, and management of a development system, and over 100 athletes from all over the world trained in part of this development system there with 40-plus staff — coaches, medical, performance, nutrition.

What led to the acquisition of Chawinga, who’s from Malawi and played in China and Sweden?

A: I’m really proud of my time in Kansas City. Right now, Kansas City is certainly a team to beat in the league. Everybody knows who Chemwa is now, maybe not so much when she joined the league. I’m really happy for her.

My focus is obviously on San Diego. I’m really excited about this team, and everything we’ve started to build here. I’m excited for this game this weekend, too. …

When I came here, what we spoke about was wanting to build something that was truly sustainable. You can see in this league often a team has success one year and then it’s hard to sustain that.

And so, it was really about building something that’s sustainable where we’re competing for championships year after year. A nice bonus, too, I’m from this area originally (she attended high school in Irvine). This is also home for me, which is a nice cherry on top.

We have 15 new staff members. From the summer when I joined, we have 13 new players on this roster. It’s recruitment of players and staff and bringing these players to San Diego. Building connections with people, building a foundation.

Tongue slightly in cheek here, how long until the Wave win their first NWSL postseason championship?

A: (Laughs). That’s not a fair question to ask. Well, we’re going to do all we can to win one as soon as we can, I can tell you that much. It’s hard to put a timeline on those things. When you look at us this season, we have very clear goals to be playing in November and competing for a title.

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Texas Tech Red Raiders – Official Athletics Website

LUBBOCK, Texas – The No. 12-seeded Red Raiders (46-12) won their opening game of the Lubbock NCAA Softball Regional on Friday evening, taking down Brown (33-16) 6-0 in Texas Tech’s 24th shutout victory of the season and 46th total win, a new program record.   Freshman Samantha Lincoln got the start and threw 3.0 great innings, allowing […]

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LUBBOCK, Texas – The No. 12-seeded Red Raiders (46-12) won their opening game of the Lubbock NCAA Softball Regional on Friday evening, taking down Brown (33-16) 6-0 in Texas Tech’s 24th shutout victory of the season and 46th total win, a new program record.
 
Freshman Samantha Lincoln got the start and threw 3.0 great innings, allowing just one hit while striking out two batters. Chloe Riassetto came in for the final 4.0 innings and picked up her eighth win of the season, allowing just one hit through the 12 batters she faced. Both pitchers combined to throw just 70 in the Tech’s fourth-straight shutout.
 
On offense, Alana Johnson produced four RBI thanks to a triple and three-run homer as she finished the day 2-for-3 at the plate. NiJaree Canady took over the team lead for homers crushing her ninth long ball of the season 295 feet over the center field fence.
 
Mihyia Davis didn’t have a hit but reached base twice via walk. Davis stole two bases as well and eclipsed 100 stolen bases for her career. Lauren Allred, Raegan Jennings and Alexa Langeliers each picked up a hit and Hailey Toney recorded an RBI on her fifth sacrifice fly of the season.
 
How it happened:
Lincoln shook off any nerves she might’ve had as she struck out the first batter she faced in her first career postseason start. Lincoln allowed one hit in the first inning, but it was erased after a 6-4-3 double play. The lefty proceeded to put down the Brown bats in order in the second and third innings.
 
Davis led off the game with a walk and stole second and third during the next two pitches. Toney waited patiently at the plate after taking pitches and delivered the first run of the game, driving a ball to left field allowing Davis to tag and score.
 
Allred and Langeliers reached in back-to-back at-bats via hit and walk. Allred was caught stealing trying to go to third, but Tech was still able to capitalize as Johnson tripled to right center field making it 2-0 in favor of the Red Raiders.
 
Tech made its next offensive push in the third inning. Johnson drove in Allred and Langeliers courtesy of the long ball, her eighth of the season. Canady followed that up just one at-bat later with a home run of her own.

Ticketing

Texas Tech Athletics will be opening up a limited amount of infield tickets online for tomorrow and Sunday.

 

UP NEXT: Tech will play the winner of No. 2 Mississippi State v. No. 3 Washington at 1 p.m. tomorrow.



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Stanford, Cal win, Santa Clara facing elimination at NCAA softball

The Cal Bears and Stanford Cardinal softball teams took different paths to first-round NCAA Tournament victories, but both Bay Area teams moved closer to a College World Series berth on Friday. Santa Clara’s Hope Alley homered three batters into the Broncos‘ first-ever NCAA tournament game and the Broncos didn’t fold after yielding a four-run second […]

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The Cal Bears and Stanford Cardinal softball teams took different paths to first-round NCAA Tournament victories, but both Bay Area teams moved closer to a College World Series berth on Friday.

Santa Clara’s Hope Alley homered three batters into the Broncos‘ first-ever NCAA tournament game and the Broncos didn’t fold after yielding a four-run second inning, but couldn’t complete the comeback against 13th-ranked Arizona and are one loss from elimination in the 64-team tournament.

No. 16 ranked Stanford rolled past Binghamton of New York 9-2 in Eugene, Oregon, scoring in each of the first four innings of the rout. In Norman, Oklahoma, Annabel Teperson allowed two hits in Cal’s 1-0 win over Omaha, and in Tucson, Arizona, SCU fought back to cut a five-run deficit to one in the fourth inning, but was doomed by two more big innings in a 13-5, five-inning loss to the 13th-ranked Wildcats.

Stanford (41-11) entered the tournament with the second-highest team batting average in the nation (.357) and averaged 8.1 runs during the regular season and came out swinging against the Bearcats (36-13) quickly building a seven-run lead. Caelen Koch had four of the Cardinal’s ten hits and drove in two runs. Emily Jones also drove in two runs, and eight different Stanford players scored at least once against the Bearcats, who are in the tournament for the second time in school history.

The Cardinal, which is looking to reach the CWS for the third straight year, faces an old Pac-12 rival, No. 16 Oregon, on Saturday at 1 p.m.



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Florida Atlantic University Athletics

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Late game heroics from sophomore Kiley Shelton gave the No. 2-seeded Florida Atlantic softball team its first NCAA Regional win since 2016, a 5-4 victory over No. 3-seed Georgia Tech, in an eight-inning thriller on Friday afternoon.   The Owls (45-10) and the Yellow Jackets (27-23) went back-and-forth in the opening game of […]

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GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Late game heroics from sophomore Kiley Shelton gave the No. 2-seeded Florida Atlantic softball team its first NCAA Regional win since 2016, a 5-4 victory over No. 3-seed Georgia Tech, in an eight-inning thriller on Friday afternoon.
 
The Owls (45-10) and the Yellow Jackets (27-23) went back-and-forth in the opening game of the Gainesville Regional with four lead changes in the final three innings. Facing two outs on the board and two runners on base in the bottom of the eighth, Shelton hit the game winning RBI single to right field for the walk-off win.
 
Junior pitcher Autumn Courtney made the start and received the win to improve to 24-3 on the season, pitching 5.1 innings before re-entering in the top of the eighth. 
 
THE BEGINNING 
Courtney picked up right where she left off from her previous stellar postseason outing, with three swing-and-miss strikeouts in the top of the first inning to retire the side.
 
A fourth strikeout from the First Team All-Region selection Courtney stranded Yellow Jacket runners on second and third base in the top of the second. Leading off the bottom frame, sophomore first baseman Bella Cimino launched a shot to left field, her sixth home run of the year, for the first score of the game.
 
In the bottom of the fifth, sophomore Ciara Gibson blasted the ball to right center field for the Owls’ second leadoff home run of the game. The Yellow Jackets responded in the top of the sixth with three runs to take a 3-2 lead.
 
THE TURNING POINT
A two-out walk from freshman second baseman Destiny Johns put an Owl runner on base in the bottom of the sixth. Back-to-back doubles then ensued, first from Gibson then from Shelton in her first clutch hit of the game, to put FAU up 4-3.
 
Down to their last strike in the top of the seventh, a solo home run from the Yellow Jackets tied the score. Florida Atlantic was retired in the bottom half to send the game into extra innings, its first such game since the season opener.
 
THE FINISH 
Courtney returned to the circle to finish the job, stranding two runners on base to get out of the top of the eighth.
 
Johns reaching on a fielder’s choice set up the winning run. Gibson and Shelton remained the heroes of the game, with the former drawing the walk to advance Johns to second before the latter brought her home from second for a walk-off victory.
 
NOTES/NOTABLE

  • The Owls now have 17 comeback wins on the season, tied for fourth most in the nation.
  • Shelton is batting .444 in her last five games with six RBI.
  • Cimino’s home run is the first by an Owl batter in an NCAA Regional game since May 21, 2016. It is the first multi-home run game by the team during an NCAA Regional in program history.
  • With a base hit on the day, redshirt sophomore outfielder Kylie Hammonds has reached base in 24 consecutive games and 51 out of 55 appearances in 2025.
  • Courtney has struck out 14 batters in two postseason appearances. 

 
UP NEXT
The Owls continue NCAA Regional play with a matchup against No. 1-seed Florida (44-14) on Saturday. First pitch is at 12 p.m. With a win on Saturday and Sunday, Florida Atlantic can advance to the Super Regionals for the first time in program history.
 
FOLLOW THE OWLS
For the Owls’ complete schedule, click HERE. To follow the team socially, visit @fausoftball, or for the most up-to-date information, go to www.fausports.com.
 
The Owls’ 2025 postseason is powered by Demand the Limits Injury Attorneys.
 



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State vs. Settlement

A new law in Tennessee empowers schools to directly facilitate NIL deals—potentially defying the NCAA and proposed House settlement. The State of Tennessee just made a bold move in the ongoing battle over NIL—and it could shake up how schools across the country approach athlete compensation. After recently signing a new law (Senate Bill No. […]

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State vs. Settlement

A new law in Tennessee empowers schools to directly facilitate NIL deals—potentially defying the NCAA and proposed House settlement.

The State of Tennessee just made a bold move in the ongoing battle over NIL—and it could shake up how schools across the country approach athlete compensation.

After recently signing a new law (Senate Bill No. 536) into effect, which was approved on May 1, 2025, the Volunteer State has put its universities back in the driver’s seat when it comes to NIL deals.

The state law says schools can now directly facilitate and support NIL compensation for their athletes—even through third-party collectives or affiliated foundations. That’s a significant shift from the NCAA’s current gray area, where schools are expected to keep some distance.

 

So what’s the catch? Basically, this law dares the NCAA to try to stop them.

Here are the key takeaways:

  • Tennessee schools can directly arrange and provide NIL deals to athletes unless they’re explicitly blocked by federal law or a binding court order.
  • The NCAA can’t punish schools in Tennessee (i.e., Tennessee, Vanderbilt, or Memphis) for participating in NIL activities that are legal under state law.
  • Athletes can’t lose eligibility over NIL income, and their scholarships won’t be impacted by it either.
  • The law protects schools from lawsuits for their involvement in NIL deals and shields internal NIL records from open records requests—meaning it’ll be harder for the public to see where the money’s going.
  • Private colleges (like Vanderbilt) can opt out of parts of the law if they agree with the NCAA to follow its rules instead.

As Tennessee pushes the envelope, it directly challenges the pending House v. NCAA settlement—a landmark agreement designed to fundamentally reshape college sports.

Unless Congress acts quickly, the NCAA’s already shaky landscape will continue to deteriorate, leaving states to create their own rules and further fuel an NIL arms race.

 

Georgia head coach Kirby Smart issued a stark warning this week: Without uniform national guidelines, universities could soon find themselves forced into painful decisions, including cutting non-revenue sports. Traditionally, Olympic and smaller sports programs rely heavily on revenue from football and basketball to survive. But if schools must increasingly funnel resources into ever-escalating NIL payouts to compete for talent, sports like wrestling, swimming, and track and field will be first on the chopping block.

It isn’t just finances at stake, either. The very integrity of college athletics hangs precariously in the balance. NIL, while empowering athletes, has opened doors to bidding wars and questionable recruiting tactics. Without Congress stepping in, these pressures threaten the fairness, transparency, and legitimacy that have defined collegiate athletics for generations.

In short, Tennessee’s new law isn’t just a local policy shift—it’s an alarm bell signaling a potentially chaotic future. The future of college athletics—and the many student-athletes whose sports may hang in the balance—depends on swift and decisive action from lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

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Cowgirl Softball drops Indiana in NCAA Regional opener

Fayetteville, Ark. — Seven runs in the sixth inning lifted the No. 24 Oklahoma State softball team to an 11-6 victory over Indiana at Bogle Park Friday.    This is OSU’s 16th consecutive win in NCAA Regional play going back to 2019.   The Cowgirls never led until the sixth and trailed by as many as […]

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Fayetteville, Ark. — Seven runs in the sixth inning lifted the No. 24 Oklahoma State softball team to an 11-6 victory over Indiana at Bogle Park Friday. 
 
This is OSU’s 16th consecutive win in NCAA Regional play going back to 2019.
 
The Cowgirls never led until the sixth and trailed by as many as four runs in the fourth inning.
 
Karli Godwin homered twice for OSU on nearly identical two-run blasts to center field. She finished 3-for-3 with a career-high five runs batted in.
 
Perhaps the most critical at-bat of the game came in the sixth, when pinch hitter Audrey Schneidmiller singled through the right side to score Macy Graf from second and tie the game at six. A hard grounder from Rachael Hathoot two batters later drove in Schneidmiller and Tia Warsop to give the Cowgirls an 8-6 advantage before the game was blown open thanks to a run-scoring sacrifice bunt by Megan Delgadillo followed by an RBI single from Amanda Hasler. The Cowgirl scoring was capped when Schneidmiller walked with the bases loaded.
 
The seven-run sixth inning marked OSU’s most runs in an inning this season.
 
This marks the most runs scored by OSU in an NCAA Tournament game since 2022. With the win, the Cowgirls improved to 34-18, while the Hoosiers dropped to 33-19.
 
Rylee Crandall picked up the win and improved to 6-4. She entered the game in the fourth inning and kept the high-powered Indiana offense scoreless in the fifth, sixth and seventh. IU’s Brianna Copeland fell to 17-9 with the loss.
  
Offensive standouts for Oklahoma State included Godwin (3-for-3 with 2 home runs and 5 RBIs), Davis (2-for-3 with three runs scored) and Schneidmiller (1-for-1 with 2 RBIs). 
 
The Cowgirls will face the winner of the Arkansas-Saint Louis matchup at noon tomorrow in the second round of the Fayetteville regional. 
 
For season-long coverage of Oklahoma State Softball, visit okstate.com and follow @CowgirlSB on X and @osusoftball on Instagram. For tickets, visit okstate.com/tickets or call 877-ALL-4-OSU. 
 
 






  1 2 3 4 5 6 7   R H E
Indiana 2 0 1 3 0 0 0   6 7 4
Oklahoma State 2 0 0 2 0 7 X   11 8 0

 
 
WP: R. Crandall (6-4) LP: B. Copeland (17-9); SV: None
HR: OSU – Godwin 2 (6,7)
HR: UT – Minnick 2 (18), Wilkison (7)
Duration: 2:28; Attendance: 2928
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



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Former Hurricanes Pitcher Carson Palmquist Set for MLB Debut with Rockies – University of Miami Athletics

CORAL GABLES, Fla. — Former Miami Hurricanes left-handed pitcher Carson Palmquist has been called up to the Colorado Rockies and is expected to make his Major League debut Friday night against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona. The Fort Myers native and 24-year old will be the 69th player in the program’s history […]

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CORAL GABLES, Fla. — Former Miami Hurricanes left-handed pitcher Carson Palmquist has been called up to the Colorado Rockies and is expected to make his Major League debut Friday night against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona.

The Fort Myers native and 24-year old will be the 69th player in the program’s history to reach baseball’s biggest stage.

Palmquist, who starred for the Hurricanes from 2020 to 2022, was one of the most dominant arms in college baseball during his time in Coral Gables. He ended his three-year career at Miami with an 11-5 record and 208 strikeouts in 140.1 innings.

The left-hander earned All-America honors in 2021 as a closer, leading the ACC in saves, before shifting to a starting role in 2022 and finishing with a 9-4 record and 118 strikeouts.

The Rockies selected him in the third round (No. 88 overall) of the 2022 MLB Draft, and he has steadily climbed through the minors. Palmquist opened the 2025 season with Triple-A Albuquerque, where he posted a 3.82 ERA and 45 strikeouts in 35.1 innings across seven starts.

To stay up to date with the University of Miami baseball team, be sure to follow @canesbaseball on Instragram, X and Facebook.





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