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Denver Women's Tennis Set for NCAA First Round at No. 4 Oklahoma

Story Links DENVER – The University of Denver women’s tennis team (12-9, 6-0 Summit League) will take on the nation’s No. 6 seed Oklahoma in the first round of the 2025 NCAA Division I Women’s Tennis Championships on Friday, May 2, at 2 p.m. CT/1 p.m. MT. Oklahoma will host the first and second rounds of […]

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Denver Women's Tennis Set for NCAA First Round at No. 4 Oklahoma

DENVER – The University of Denver women’s tennis team (12-9, 6-0 Summit League) will take on the nation’s No. 6 seed Oklahoma in the first round of the 2025 NCAA Division I Women’s Tennis Championships on Friday, May 2, at 2 p.m. CT/1 p.m. MT.
 
Oklahoma will host the first and second rounds of the NCAA tournament this weekend, starting with Friday’s first round against Denver. The winner of the DU/OU match will play the winner of the other first-round match between No. 20 Oklahoma State and No. 40 Tulsa in Saturday’s second round.
 
LAST TIME OUT:
Denver extended undefeated run in the Summit League tournament, winning its 11th consecutive title with matching 4-0 sweeps of North Dakota and Omaha in the semifinals and final, respectively, on April 18-19. Since joining the Summit League in 2013-14, Denver has never lost to a Summit League opponent.
 
All six Denver student-athletes who have played this year earned All-Summit League Team honors including Summit League Newcomer of the Year Marley Lambert. Her doubles partner, senior Andrea Burguete Beltran, helped lead Denver’s all-league honorees as well. For the fourth year in a row, head coach Paul Wardlaw also captured Summit League Coach of the Year.
 
DENVER’S NCAA TOURNAMENT HISTORY:
This is the 11th consecutive NCAA tournament appearance for Denver and its 14th overall. Twice, DU has advanced to the second round, most recently in 2017 after earning a 4-2 upset victory over then-No. 25-ranked USC.
 
In 2024, Denver played No. 25-ranked Texas Tech at the UCLA-hosted regional and claimed a singles point off the Red Raiders but ultimately fell, 1-4. It marked the second straight year that Denver claimed a point in its first-round match after claiming the win in doubles against Oklahoma State in 2023.
 
Denver made its first NCAA Division I tournament appearance in 2004 and has qualified for the field 11 straight times dating back to 2014.
 
This is the first year of a two-year pilot program that separates the NCAA singles and doubles championships, which were held in the fall. Burguete Beltran advanced in singles and won her opening match in a straight-set upset win over the then-No. 31-ranked Oyinlomo Quadre from FIU, making Burguete Beltran just the fourth DU player to win a match in the NCAA singles draw. The Denver senior nearly appeared in the doubles field with Lambert as well after appearing in the ITA Mountain Regional final in October.
 
DENVER’S HISTORY AGAINST THE FIELD:
Oklahoma: This will be the first meeting between Denver and Oklahoma.
 
Oklahoma State: Four times, Denver and Oklahoma State have played previously with OSU claiming all four wins. They most recently played in the first round of the 2023 NCAA tournament hosted by Stanford with the Cowgirls earning a 4-1 win after DU rallied to take the double point.
 
Tulsa: Denver owns a 4-1 record against Tulsa including back-to-back wins in 2023 and 2024. They last played on April 5, 2024, in Tulsa with DU claiming a 4-3 win in a competitive dual. The teams have never met in the NCAA tournament, nor have they played in a neutral site match previously.
 
Denver’s Home for College Sports
Visit DenverPioneers.com for complete coverage of all 18 of DU’s NCAA Division I sports
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Romania rout South Africa 24-5 in men’s water polo at World Aquatics Championships in Singapore

Romania rout South Africa 24-5 in men’s water polo at World Aquatics Championships in Singapore Romania on Monday routed South Africa 24-5 (8-0, 3-1, 7-3, 6-1) in a Group A match of the men’s water polo tournament at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore. The best scorers of team Romania were Francesco Iudean, Vlad Georgescu […]

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Romania rout South Africa 24-5 in men’s water polo at World Aquatics Championships in Singapore

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Romania on Monday routed South Africa 24-5 (8-0, 3-1, 7-3, 6-1) in a Group A match of the men’s water polo tournament at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore.

The best scorers of team Romania were Francesco Iudean, Vlad Georgescu and Levente Vancsik, with 4 goals each, Andrei Neamtu scored 3, Matei Lutescu, David Bota, Andrei Tepelus, 2 each, Andrei Prioteasa, Mihnea Gheorghe and David Belenyesi, one goal each.

Scoring for the South Africans were Dean Sneddon (2 goals), Ryan Sneddon (1), Matthew Nesser (1) and Carl Germishuys (1).

In the other group match, also on Monday, world runners-up Italy will face Olympic champions Italy.

Romania will play the last match of the group on July 16 against Serbia. AGERPRES (RO – writing by: Mihai Tenea; EN – writing by: Corneliu-Aurelian Colceriu)

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2025 Daily News Fans Boys Volleyball Player of the Year Poll

Agawam boys volleyball celebrates winning D2 state title over Wayland Agawam exacted its revenge for a loss last season, defeating Wayland in four sets to claim their 2nd D2 state championship in the last three years. Bump, set or spike? The 15 candidates for the 2025 Daily news Fans Boys Volleyball Players of the Year […]

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Bump, set or spike? The 15 candidates for the 2025 Daily news Fans Boys Volleyball Players of the Year are among the best in the state.

They are all-state selections, league MVPs and state semifinalists.

Five schools are represented. Marlborough leads the way with four candidates, while Natick and Milford put forth three each.

Vote below:

The poll will remain open for a week until noon Monday, July 21.



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Thailand bow out of VNL 2025 with narrow loss to Canada but avoid relegation

Under the guidance of coach Kiattipong Radchatagriengkai, Thailand fielded their full-strength squad, including Pornpun Guedpard, Pimpichaya Kokram, and Ajcharaporn Kongyot. The Thais made a flying start, racing to a 7-0 lead before comfortably taking the first set 25-17. However, Canada responded in the second and third sets, edging Thailand 25-23 and 30-28 to take a […]

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Thailand bow out of VNL 2025 with narrow loss to Canada but avoid relegation

Under the guidance of coach Kiattipong Radchatagriengkai, Thailand fielded their full-strength squad, including Pornpun Guedpard, Pimpichaya Kokram, and Ajcharaporn Kongyot.

The Thais made a flying start, racing to a 7-0 lead before comfortably taking the first set 25-17. However, Canada responded in the second and third sets, edging Thailand 25-23 and 30-28 to take a 2-1 lead.

Thailand bow out of VNL 2025 with narrow loss to Canada but avoid relegation

Thailand fought back valiantly in the fourth set, narrowly winning 25-23 to level the match and secure a vital point that guaranteed their VNL survival regardless of the final result.

In the deciding fifth set, the two sides traded points evenly, but Canada managed to clinch the win with a tight 15-13 finish.



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How Lake Worth Christian volleyball built a dynasty built on loyalty

Terri Kaiser speaks to audience following “Volley for the Cause” event Lake Worth Christian’s Terri Kaiser addressed the audience following a “Volley for the Cause” event put on in support of her battle against cancer. Lake Worth Christian has produced the most Player of the Year awards and state championships in Palm Beach County over […]

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  • Lake Worth Christian has produced the most Player of the Year awards and state championships in Palm Beach County over the past 25 years.
  • Head coach Terri Kaiser reflects on her 37 years with the program and its success.
  • Kaiser emphasizes the program’s focus on player loyalty and development over short-term gains.

Head coach Terri Kaiser hails volleyball as the ultimate team sport, and under her watch, Lake Worth Christian has become the ultimate volleyball program when it comes to Palm Beach County.

The Palm Beach Post’s “Summer Celebration” series takes a look at the last 25 years in each sport, but one would have to go long beyond that to find the roots of Kaiser’s impact on Lake Worth Christian’s community.

A bricklayer, in the truest sense.

Entering her 37th year at the school — split into two stretches — Kaiser remembers laying pipe in the ground to help expand what was at that point a one-building school.

“We didn’t build the gym until the 90s,” she said. “This is very important: Lake Worth Christian encouraged students first, and athletes followed.”

But when it came time for athletics, Kaiser quickly made her mark.

Surprisingly, she didn’t start out coaching volleyball.

Looking back at her career as a multi-sport athlete in high school and college, Kaiser admitted that softball was her best sport and is in fact what she started coaching in her first years at Lake Worth Christian.

But then she was asked about coaching volleyball, and a moment’s hesitation transformed over the years into a dynasty-like run perhaps unlike any other in the county.

Part of that is because as the sport has evolved, Kaiser has evolved right along with it.

“Volleyball is one of those sports that has evolved, changed, more than any other sport,” she said, pointing to a number of rule adjustments. “The rules keep changing. Volleyball, in the past 25 years has gone from best two out of three games to three out of five now. If you’re not doing it 12 months out of the year and touching the volleyball and playing the club circuit, you can’t evolve to be that next-level player.”

In her time at Lake Worth Christian, Kaiser has become a coach that surrounds herself with the game throughout the year, and she says that’s made as big a difference as any in helping the program find success.

“I think what’s evolved for Lake Worth Christian volleyball is the consistency, the willingness of me and other people that coach with me in the program to stay involved for the last 25 years in a 12-month program.”

Kaiser’s dedication to the program matches the importance it carries for her, in her heart.

Lake Worth Christian carries a unique sense of community for Kaiser, but it goes deeper than that.

It’s family, in the literal sense.

All four of her kids attended the school from kindergarten through senior year, and all four went to college at Palm Beach Atlantic. While Joy VanDyke remains coaching at Cardinal Newman after coaching for a time with her mother, two live in North Carolina and one lives in Texas, now.

The roots are the same, though, a testament to Kaiser’s depiction of loyalty being the hidden truth behind why the Lake Worth Christian volleyball program has been so successful.

“I think loyalty speaks a lot,” Kaiser said, who then took a moment to reflect on all of the players of the last 25 years and beyond that had won The Post’s Player of the Year recognition.

“Everyone, if you look at the list, they pretty much all were at Lake Worth Christian for longer than two years,” she said. “They didn’t just come in when the program was good. They came into the program from the beginning. Their ‘claim to fame’ — is that a good phrase? — would be, they were loyal. They were consistent. They stayed. And that’s different than what you have in the world right now.”

The idea of family extends to those players she’s coached, too.

Rather than focusing on the state championships under her watch — 2011, 2012, 2015, 2019, 2020, with another four runner-up finishes — Kaiser instead spoke with excitement about a cross-country trip she has planned this week.

The veteran coach is traveling to Texas to watch former Lake Worth Christian standout Sarah Franklin play in the Volleyball Nations League as the star outside hitter and former Player of the Year continues her Olympian-sized dreams.

In the era of instant gratification, it’s players like Franklin and others that Kaiser said stayed in the Defenders program and took the time to develop and play as year-round players.

And in that light, going forward, Kaiser says that while the question of best program in the last 25 years is an interesting one, she asks an intriguing follow-up.

“What school is going to give the biggest incentive to play there? It might be a unique year to do a ‘who had the most successful program in 25 years for each spot’ story. A good question would be, are they going to continue down that path?”

Certainly, it’s a question that will be answered in time. But for Kaiser, there is no time like the present, and her love for volleyball is as strong as ever.

Alex Peterman covers high school sports for The Palm Beach Post. He can be reached at apeterman@gannett.com.

Girls Volleyball Player of the Year winners (2000-25)

  • Lake Worth Christian – 11
  • Boca Raton – 4
  • Jupiter – 4
  • Olympic Heights – 4
  • Boca Raton Christian – 3
  • King’s Academy – 3
  • Palm Beach Gardens – 3
  • Benjamin – 2
  • St. John Paul II – 2
  • Spanish River – 2
  • Wellington – 2
  • Glades Day – 1
  • Jensen Beach – 1
  • Martin County – 1
  • Oxbridge Academy – 1
  • Royal Palm Beach – 1
  • Suncoast – 1
  • Trinity Christian – 1

Palm Beach County girls volleyball state championship (2000-25)

  • Lake Worth Christian – 5
  • Olympic Heights – 3
  • Boca Raton – 2
  • King’s Academy – 1
  • Spanish River – 1
  • Suncoast – 1



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“People follow me because they want realness”

Tilly Kearns on addressing periods in sports: ‘It’s not taboo’ Outside the pool, her bond with water polo is just as strong. Over 630,000 followers across various social media platforms tune in to watch the Australian give regular updates on the life and times of a water polo athlete. And it’s easy to see why. […]

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Tilly Kearns on addressing periods in sports: ‘It’s not taboo’

Outside the pool, her bond with water polo is just as strong.

Over 630,000 followers across various social media platforms tune in to watch the Australian give regular updates on the life and times of a water polo athlete. And it’s easy to see why.

Just like her online presence, Kearns is affable, charmingly funny and above all honest, and it’s the latter quality she believes is why people have gravitated towards her content.

“I just like to capture little moments. And that’s why it is really authentic and organic and nothing’s really curated too much,” she says of her online profile.

Even its origin story has a certain genuineness to it, with Kearns confessing she first started a dedicated Instagram page in high school.

“The girls of my school convinced me to make it, but I made a page called ‘Official Tilly Kearns’ and it was just like a joke with me and my friends but it got such a good reception and I was like, ‘Hang on, maybe I actually do have a bit a knack for this!'”

It came as a surprise to Kearns that the page would flourish with interest.

“I thought it would start and stop there at the Olympics, but it just kept going. And then I thought it was quite beautiful that I could share the whole journey from the end of the Tokyo Olympics right until Paris, and everyone who was with me from the beginning, got to share the whole journey instead of just tuning in for the two weeks of the Olympics and then tuning out and saying, see you in another four years.”

Life on a college campus, an American Football-playing boyfriend, Justin Dedich, who would eventually join the NFL, a look at the realities of water polo training – so much of Kearns’ experience as an athlete is available to view through her channels.

And while the energy is mostly fun, Kearns has also found herself unexpectedly addressing more serious topics, including the subject of losing periods in elite sports and diet.

“To me, that is like every day, and it’s insane that other girls don’t talk about that. Because me and my teammates are just so open, almost disturbingly so. We know everything about each other, we’ve seen everything, there are no boundaries between me and my teammates,” Kearns says, talking about the subject of periods. “It wasn’t until I just posted something that I didn’t think twice about, and it got a great response. And people were asking to hear more, and I was kind of shocked that I was like, ‘Oh, does not everyone talk like this? Am I, are we the weird ones?’”

Calmy and casually, Kearns collected questions and began addressing them. Revealing how she had lost her period at the age of 17, and thinking it was a good thing. It wasn’t until she overheard conversations with older teammates that she recognised what had happened wasn’t healthy.

“It’s the sisterhood,” she says. “They become your sisters, and everything’s so open. And the older girls in my team, when I was young and coming through, helped me grow up, and they helped me see a lot about the world and understand a lot of things that I realised that I was actually so lucky to have that, and not everyone has that.

“So I guess on the internet, if people want to turn to me to be that person, that’s great. But it is so important because it’s not taboo. It’s just the way life is, as it should be. Absolutely no shame around it.”



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ET volleyball players Scott, Jackson compete at junior national championship | ETVarsity

Area volleyball standouts Kamdyn Scott of Tatum and Triniti Jackson of Longview helped lead their club team to the USA Volleyball Junior National Championships earlier this month in Dallas, where they finished fifth in their 17U division. The massive national tournament had over 1,000 teams competing across 26 divisions for ages 14-17, running from June […]

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Area volleyball standouts Kamdyn Scott of Tatum and Triniti Jackson of Longview helped lead their club team to the USA Volleyball Junior National Championships earlier this month in Dallas, where they finished fifth in their 17U division.

The massive national tournament had over 1,000 teams competing across 26 divisions for ages 14-17, running from June 25 to July 3 at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center. The 17U age group featured six divisions with 381 teams.

Scott and Jackson, both rising seniors, play for the Untouchables EPA, a club based in Plano that competes in the North Texas Region under coach Ty Jenkins. It was the first time their team has qualified to Nationals, and they made it to the 17-USA Division gold bracket out of pool play and went 7-2 overall from June 30 to July 3. Out of those games they won 15 sets with six set losses.

The Untouchables EPA have competed in multiple tournaments in Dallas this year as well as national qualifier tournaments in Philadelphia, Kansas City and Chicago. They finished second at the Chicago qualifier, earning their Nationals bid. There they got to play teams from across the country in front of hundreds of college recruiters. In the 17U open division just above theirs, they got to watch players committed to D1 programs like Wisconsin, Nebraska and Louisville.

“It was really cool. It’s fun to see talent from other states because you just see Texas all the time, so it’s cool to see how other states play, and it kind of gives you a look for college,” said Scott. “I just think as a team we all did super good, and I’m going to really miss those girls next year.”

Scott plays outside hitter for Tatum Lady Eagles volleyball (612 kills, 367 digs, 74 blocks, 74 aces and 28 assists in 2024) and Jackson plays setter for the Longview Lady Lobos (635 assists, 482 digs, 401 kills, 71 aces and 52 blocks in 2024) . Their friendship dates to when they were little kids and the two first started playing volleyball together at the Wrecking Crew, a club based in Longview. During their high school careers representing Tatum and Longview, they’ve also made weekly trips to Plano to train and compete at the highest level in club volleyball.

Jackson faced adversity this summer when she fractured her shin bone, sidelining her for 12 weeks of the club season. After recovering from surgery, she made a comeback to help her team earn third-place in the Kansas City qualifier and the second-place finish in Chicago.

“Triniti doesn’t just lead on the court—she gives back off the court as well,” said Chaka Jackson, head volleyball coach at Longview. “She coaches with Wrecking Crew Volleyball and offers private lessons to many young athletes in her community, mentoring the next generation of players with heart and dedication… We are beyond proud of Triniti’s hard work, resilience, and leadership both on and off the court.”

Competing on the national stage was a longtime goal for both girls, and by the end of summer they’ll be making their decisions about where to further their athletic careers and education. They’ve been as diligent in the classroom as they are on the court, with Scott currently second in her class and Jackson completing 17 credits already at Kilgore College to put her on track for achieving her associate’s degree by Spring 2026.

Scott, a four-year starter in both volleyball and basketball, is weighing options for either route. She’s balanced commitments to each sport this summer, including a weekend at the Columbia Women’s Basketball Camp in late June in New York City, where she was selected the camp MVP, and an upcoming Select 40 circuit national tournament July 18-21 in Hamilton, Ohio with her travel team, Texas Platinum. Her summer volleyball plans will continue with a July 16 camp at Louisiana Tech and an Aug. 1-2 camp at Metropolitan State University of Denver.

It’s a demanding schedule, but for a driven athlete like Scott, she wouldn’t have it any other way.

“Sports is kind of my passion, so I don’t really get too tired of it,” she said.

For her impending senior volleyball season at Tatum, Scott is confident in her team and prepared to guide the underclassmen. Last year, Scott helped lead the Lady Eagles to a 40-6 record and district, bi-district and area championship wins. The program has won back-to-back undefeated district titles since the 2018 season.

“I think we’ll handle business in district and everything. And I’m just ready to play. It’s my last go. I’m with all my best friends, so I’m excited,” said Scott.



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