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McEndree Women Started Their Season With Tragedy—but Found Triumph

Today, the McEndree University women’s water polo team kicks off the first game of the NCAA National Championship. McEndree’s inclusion would be big news on its own. It’s the first time they’ve ever made the NCAA tournament, which includes just nine teams across the U.S.—and typically few, if any, teams from the Midwest. But this […]

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Today, the McEndree University women’s water polo team kicks off the first game of the NCAA National Championship. McEndree’s inclusion would be big news on its own. It’s the first time they’ve ever made the NCAA tournament, which includes just nine teams across the U.S.—and typically few, if any, teams from the Midwest.

But this year, the private university in Lebanon, Illinois, about 30 minutes east of St. Louis, has even more reason to take pride in its season. The team lost its head coach in a fatal car crash in January, just as the season was getting underway—and they’ve been led in her absence by a 25-year-old in his first head coaching gig.

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“It’s been an interesting year,” says Alex Figueras, who was only named the women’s head coach a few weeks ago after handling the job on an interim basis. “We had one of the lowest moments and some of the highest moments in the same season.” 

Figueras is the first to credit Colleen Lischwe as the person responsible for McKendree’s success. Lischwe had twice been named Missouri Female Water Polo Player of the Year at Kirkwood High School before becoming an Academic All-American at Marist College in New York and twice participating in the NCAA National Championships.

After coaching at Kirkwood High, Lischwe landed a coaching job at McKendree, and after being named the women’s head coach in 2017, also became the head coach of the men’s team the following year—making her the only woman head coach in an NCAA water polo program.

Then tragedy struck. Lischwe was on I-44 around 6 a.m. on Jan. 15, 2025, when she was struck by a semi. Her Prius fell off the highway to Vandeventer Avenue below. Lischwe, 35, left behind a husband and a 3-year-old daughter.

She also left a team in mourning. Figueras, Lischwe’s young assistant coach, was among those devastated by her death; Lischwe had coached his club team for a half-dozen years before they became colleagues. Suddenly he found himself trying to fill her shoes as the team headed into its first game of the season, less than two weeks later.

He recalls a team meeting with a sports psychologist, who explained that, tempting though it was, they should try to resist focusing on “winning one for Colleen” or making all their efforts about her. “You don’t want this to be the only thing that’s driving you, because at a certain point, things are going to go back to normal, or whatever normal looks like,” Figueras recalls him explaining. “When that happens, then you lose your motivation.” 

The very idea seemed shocking, he says. “When he brought that up, it seemed weird, because I was like, things are never going to be normal again, right?” But as winter turned to spring, and the team kept winning, it began to make more sense. 

“It’s not to say that we’ve moved on, because I don’t think we ever really will,” Figueras adds. “Like, there’s that little unspoken bond that I think we’re always going to have with this group and that is always going to be that extra motivating factor, that we can hear her voice still pushing us.”

Western Water Polo Association

Western Water Polo AssociationMcKendree University's women's water polo team celebrates with its coaches.
McKendree University’s women’s water polo team notched a 21-7 record in its 2025 season.

For Figueras, Lischwe’s death brought responsibilities he wasn’t sure he was ready for. A graduate of Saint Louis Priory School, he’d gone from playing club sports to competing in college to returning back to St. Louis to finish his degree at Washington University, where he graduated with a double major in marketing and English. He soon fell into coaching. 

“Most people, I think when they get into this world, they get in as an assistant, and then they start trying to work their way up to eventually go be an assistant at a top five program, or go be a head coach somewhere,” he says. “And that was never my goal. My goal was always I wanted to do it until it wasn’t fun anymore, and then I would get out of it.” 

Guiding the team has given him new appreciation for the job. In April, McKendree won its conference championship for the first time; the team finished its season with a 21–7 record. 

Says Figueras, “It’s been cool to develop these relationships, and that’s the part that I’m enjoying the most. I think I’m starting to find my way and figure it out.”

He’s gotten support from another person who knew Lischwe for years—his own dad, Miguel. A former college player for Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, Miguel Figueras has spent the last 25 years coaching teams in the St. Louis area while teaching second grade for the Clayton School District. But this spring, McKendree offered him the head coach position for its men’s team—and so next year, father and son will be working together, father taking the lead with the men, son with the women. 

Miguel Figueras says he’ll miss his job at Wilson Elementary School, but he jokes that his new duties won’t be all that different: “In a lot of ways, I’ll still be around seven and eight-year-olds when I’m working with college freshmen and sophomores!”

Miguel Figueras knows no one can fill Lischwe’s shoes, explaining that she did a great job of looking out for all her players, many of whom came from so far away to participate in McKendree’s program. “Colleen was always the force in making sure those kids were well taken care of,” he says.

But he’s also proud of his son. “They’ve just picked up right where Colleen left off,” he says of Alex and his assistant coach, 23-year-old Breno Tebet.

And despite not being quite old enough to parent the team, the fledgling head coach has found a way to mentor its athletes, his father says.

“It’s like he’s got 23 little sisters,” he explains. “He’s always been a very mature kid, but we’ve seen a lot of growth in him here.”

Both father and son were heading to Indianapolis yesterday for the tournament, and Alex Figueras was trying to set realistic expectations. They have a strong chance against Wagner College in the first round, he says, but Stanford is “like UConn women’s basketball” (read: not an easy foe). 

He adds, “I don’t want to count ourselves out, but I think that definitely will be a challenge. But getting into this is a big deal for us, and we want to definitely not just be like, ‘Okay, we’re just happy to be here.’” 

And no matter how this topsy-turvy year ends, there’s always next year. Alex Figueras will be back, and so will all but one player, he says. The graduating senior is a standout, but having so many players returning should give the coaches a lot to work with. The team Colleen Lischwe built should have plenty of victories to come, even when there’s a new roster of players who can no longer hear her voice pushing them.



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Natalie Dumas Wins 400m, Shatters NJ And Meet Records At NBN

Natalie Dumas continued to solidify her place as one of the greatest track & field athletes in U.S high school history with a stunning and electrifying performance for the ages in a thrilling girls 400-meter race at the New Balance National Championships on Saturday at Franklin Field in Philadelphia. Dumas, a junior at Eastern who always races […]

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Natalie Dumas continued to solidify her place as one of the greatest track & field athletes in U.S high school history with a stunning and electrifying performance for the ages in a thrilling girls 400-meter race at the New Balance National Championships on Saturday at Franklin Field in Philadelphia.

Dumas, a junior at Eastern who always races her best when it matters most, lit up the oval with a mind-blowing, jaw-dropping and heart-pounding victory, freezing the numbers on the clock at 51.14 to smash the NJ record and the meet record and win her second national title in 2 days!


Yes, you read all that right!!!

The 51.14 by Dumas obliterated the NJ record of 51.87 that she shared with the legendary Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone of Union Catholic, destroyed the meet record and places her No. 6 on the U.S all-time high school list!! 

The former meet record of 52.41 was set in 2023 Adaejah Hodge of Montverde Academy in Florida. 

It took everything Dumas had to get the victory as she dove across the line to edge senior Sydney Sutton of Bullis (Md.) for the second straight day. Sutton was second in 51.23, No. 10 in U.S history. 

Dumas had equaled McLaughlin-Levrone’s state record when she ran 51.87 at the South Jersey Group 4 Championships on May 17 at Pennsauken High School. 

McLaughlin-Levrone, a 4-time Olympic gold medalist and current world record holder in the 400 hurdles, ran 51.87 as a junior at the 2016 Meet of Champions at Northern Burlington High School. 


There are several more mind-numbing numbers and stats that further show just how amazing her performance was.  

Dumas’s 51.14 is the fastest by any high school girl since Kadecia Baird of Medgar Evers Prep in Brooklyn ran 51.04 in the semis of 2012 World Junior Championships in Barcelona.

It’s fastest in a high school-only race in 25 years, since Monique Henderson of Morse High in San Diego ran 50.74 at the 2000 California State Championships in Sacramento.

Only five women from New Jersey have ever run faster on any level. They are Olympic gold medalists McLaughlin (48.74 in 2023) and Trenton’s Athing Mu (49.57 in 2021). The other 3 are Mikele Barker of Montclair (50.63), her twin Me’Lisa Barber (50.87) Barber of and Olympian Nadia Davy of Bridgeton (50.66 in 2003).

The 51.14 also places Dumas No. 50 in the world this year,  No. 17 among U.S. women, it’s the fastest time on the world Under-20 list for this year, No. 10 all-time on the world Under-20 list and #4 on the U.S. Under-20 list, and her time would have placed her fifth at this year’s NCAA Championships!!

On Friday, the indefatigable Dumas ran a meet record 55.99 to win the 400 hurdles for the second straight year, just ahead of Sutton. That moved Dumas all the way up to No. 2 in NJ history and No. 6 in U.S. high school history. It took a record performance from Dumas to defeat Sutton, who was second in 56.04, No. 8 all-time!

The 55.99 by Dumas destroyed the meet record of 58.37 that was set by Myla Greene of Bullis in 2022 and places Dumas No. 2 on the all-time U.S. high school list for juniors.

That’s not all!

A couple hours later, she split 2:03.90 on the anchor to rally Eastern, from sixth to second in the sprint medley relay in 3:53.15, No. 4 in NJ history and No. 12 in U.S. history. 

And there is still more to come!

Dumas is scheduled to run the 800 on Sunday!!

Can she win that also???

After what she’s done the last 2 days, nothing Dumas does should surprise anyone anymore!!





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HaBaWaBa cheers for Lucia, the Golden Girl 2025Waterpolo Development World

Promoting women’s waterpolo is crucial in order to expand the boundaries of our sport and spreading its values. IOC have made a move with this purpose, increasing the participating teams in the female tournament at Los Angeles 2028 Olympics: for the first time in the history of the Games, women’s waterpolo will have the same […]

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Promoting women’s waterpolo is crucial in order to expand the boundaries of our sport and spreading its values. IOC have made a move with this purpose, increasing the participating teams in the female tournament at Los Angeles 2028 Olympics: for the first time in the history of the Games, women’s waterpolo will have the same number of teams as men’s, 12. 

Golden Boy Giulio Cesare Marzoli awarded by Ratko Rudic. Above, Golden Girl Lucia Piras (ph. Giacomello).

Golden Boy Giulio Cesare Marzoli awarded by Ratko Rudic. Above, Golden Girl Lucia Piras (ph. Giacomello).

Waterpolo Development also decided to do more for gender equality: after managing to more than double the number of participating teams in the HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS 2025 girls’ U13 tournament – from 5 in 2024 to 11 in the edition kicking off today – WPD have doubled the Golden Baby, the trophy dedicated to the youngest waterpolo player at the HaBaWaBa International Festival. 

So, in the closing ceremony held last night, in addition to the Golden Boy 2025 Giulio Cesare Marzoli also the Golden Girl was awarded: the trophy went to Lucia Piras, waterpolo player of Pinguine Sori Pool Beach, who will be 7 in a few days (she was born on July 13, 2018). 

Highly acclaimed by the large audience attended the Bella Italia & EFA Village square, Lucia received the trophy from the hands of Ratko Rudic showing some confidence with the stage and the crowd. In short, that girl has personality, which can only bode well for a bright sports career…

***

 

Click here for further infos about HaBaWaBa

 

 



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Halpern Named Gatorade Girls Soccer Player Of The Year

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. – Addison Halpern, a freshman forward/midfielder with the Virginia women’s soccer team, was named the 2025 Gatorade Girls Player of the Year it was announced by Gatorade with the release of its annual award. Halpern, who is rated the No. 5 overall recruit nationally, enrolled at Virginia in January and has been practicing […]

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Halpern Named Gatorade Girls Soccer Player Of The Year

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. – Addison Halpern, a freshman forward/midfielder with the Virginia women’s soccer team, was named the 2025 Gatorade Girls Player of the Year it was announced by Gatorade with the release of its annual award.

Halpern, who is rated the No. 5 overall recruit nationally, enrolled at Virginia in January and has been practicing with the women’s team through the spring. She is part of the fourth-ranked recruiting class in the nation.

Gatorade Player of the Year is the top honor in high school sports, celebrating the nation’s best high school athletes for their success on the field, in the classroom and in the community. Halpern was selected as the New Jersey state winner for 2024-25 and now claimed the national award.

As a senior, Halpern led the Argonauts to a 23-0 record and both the Prep B and Non-Public B state championships this past season. Halpern scored 44 goals and passed for 14 assists, setting up Rutgers Preparatory School’s 3-0 win over DePaul High School in the Non-Public B state final. Halpern missed the first six games of the season while participating in the FIFA Under-20 Women’s World Cup with the U.S. National Team. Also the 2024 United Soccer Coaches National Player of the Year, she is a two-time NJ.com State Player of the Year honoree. Ranked as the nation’s No. 5 recruit in the Class of 2025 by TopDrawerSoccer.com, she concluded her prep soccer career with 180 goals—second in state history—and 68 assists.

Halpern has volunteered locally with Rise Against Hunger and as an elementary school mentor and tutor. She has also donated her time as a youth soccer coach and as part of multiple community service initiatives through her church.

The Gatorade Player of the Year program annually recognizes one winner in the District of Columbia and each of the 50 states across 12 different high school sports – football, girls volleyball, boys and girls cross country, boys and girls basketball, boys and girls soccer, baseball, softball, and boys and girls track & field – and awards one National Player of the Year in each sport. The selection process is administered by the Gatorade Player of the Year Selection Committee, which leverages experts including coaches, scouts, media and others as sources to help evaluate and determine the state winners in each sport.

As part of Gatorade’s commitment to breaking down barriers in sport, every Player of the Year also receives a grant to donate to a social impact partner. To date, the Gatorade Player of the Year program has provided more than $5.6 million in grants to winners across more than 2,000 organizations.

Halpern and the Cavaliers open the 2025 season on the road at West Virginia on August 14 and will play the first home game of the season against Xavier on August 21. The Hoos host DC Power FC of the USL in an exhibition match on August 9.

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Nine Current and Former Long Beach State Athletes Competing in Volleyball Nations League – The562.org

The Volleyball Nations League got underway last week, with nine current and former Long Beach State athletes representing four different countries. Brothers Alex and Moni Nikolov are both competing for Bulgaria, alongside middle blocker Lazar Bouchkov and outside hitter Alex Kandev. Team USA features Long Beach alumni Mason Briggs, Kyle Ensing, and Shane Holdaway. Simon […]

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The Volleyball Nations League got underway last week, with nine current and former Long Beach State athletes representing four different countries.

Brothers Alex and Moni Nikolov are both competing for Bulgaria, alongside middle blocker Lazar Bouchkov and outside hitter Alex Kandev. Team USA features Long Beach alumni Mason Briggs, Kyle Ensing, and Shane Holdaway. Simon Torwie is representing Germany, while Skyler Varga is playing for Canada.

Bulgaria

Alex and Moni Nikolov each had a one-year stint at Long Beach State and became the only two players in NCAA history to win both AVCA Player of the Year and AVCA Newcomer of the Year honors. This year marks the first time the brothers are sharing the court in the VNL. 

Alex Kandev was a major contributor to Long Beach State’s 2025 national championship run, leading the team in kills in both the semifinal and championship matches. He plans to return to the Beach after the VNL season.

Through four matches, Bulgaria is 2-2 with wins over Argentina and Germany. Alex Nikolov has averaged over 14 kills per match, while Moni is averaging 22 successful sets per match and was named to the VNL’s Week One Dream Team. Each brother has also recorded at least one ace per match, with Moni averaging two aces per match.

USA

Three-time AVCA First Team All-American libero Mason Briggs has appeared in all four matches for Team USA. Briggs played four seasons at Long Beach State and helped lead the Beach to the 2024 national title game.

Opposite hitter Kyle Ensing is in his fourth year with Team USA in the VNL since graduating from Long Beach State in 2019. He was a key part of Long Beach State’s back-to-back national championships in 2018 and 2019, reaching the NCAA Final Four in all four collegiate seasons.

Shane Holdaway, a middle blocker, also played four years at Long Beach State and was part of the 2019 national title team. He graduated in 2023 after starting all 25 matches in his senior season.

Team USA is 2-2 after one week of play, with wins over Iran and Cuba. The team currently ranks sixth in the FIVB Men’s Volleyball World Rankings.

Germany

Middle blocker Simon Torwie is representing Germany, where he grew up and played for the country’s U18 national team. He played four years at Long Beach State and earned First Team All-Conference honors as a senior in 2024.

Torwie is averaging over five kills and four blocks per match through Germany’s first four matches. Germany is 1-3, with a win over France and three narrow five-set losses to Bulgaria, Canada, and Italy.

Canada

Skyler Varga is one of two active Long Beach State players in the VNL and has started to see action in the last two of Canada’s matches. Varga joined the VNL following a standout junior season at Long Beach State, where he helped the Beach capture a national championship.

The outside hitter saw the court for the first time in the VNL during a match against former teammate Moni Nikolov and Bulgaria, recording a pair of kills. Varga also tallied 12 kills against France.

Canada is 2-2, with wins over Germany in the opener and a recent sweep of Bulgaria.



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Organizers of bus tour against trans athletes in women's sports insist Santa Fe event will go forward

Organizers of a statewide bus tour to bolster support for the Trump administration’s policies on transgender athletes insisted Sunday their kickoff event Monday in Santa Fe will go forward as planned — despite a cancellation announcement from its would-be host, the Santa Fe Farmers’ Market Institute.  Victoria Coley, vice president for communications at conservative nonprofit […]

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Organizers of bus tour against trans athletes in women's sports insist Santa Fe event will go forward

Organizers of a statewide bus tour to bolster support for the Trump administration’s policies on transgender athletes insisted Sunday their kickoff event Monday in Santa Fe will go forward as planned — despite a cancellation announcement from its would-be host, the Santa Fe Farmers’ Market Institute. 

Victoria Coley, vice president for communications at conservative nonprofit Independent Women’s Forum, said in a news release Sunday the event, called “Her Game. Her Legacy. Celebration of Title IX,” is moving forward “full speed ahead.” 

“Independent Women has clearly and thoroughly communicated all event details and security accommodations to the venue staff,” Coley said. “Nothing has changed —except for the excitement building. Women and girls deserve this moment.”

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Ames Regional Economic Alliance hosts second part of Summer Series – Iowa State Daily

The Ames Regional Economic Alliance kicked off its second “Summer Series” event Wednesday afternoon, bringing brief moments of music and sunshine before inclement weather forced the event into an early end.  The event hosted Campustown businesses, including Superdog, Macubana and a range of other vendors. Wednesday’s festivities also hosted local band Mango Soul. According to […]

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The Ames Regional Economic Alliance kicked off its second “Summer Series” event Wednesday afternoon, bringing brief moments of music and sunshine before inclement weather forced the event into an early end. 

The event hosted Campustown businesses, including Superdog, Macubana and a range of other vendors. Wednesday’s festivities also hosted local band Mango Soul.

According to the Vice President of Economic Development, Travis Toliver, Summer Series checks a multitude of boxes in satisfying the local community.

“Events like [Summer Series] are designed to promote family fun,” Toliver said. “We want the community to see Campustown as a family-friendly environment.”

Thanks to the event’s location, some locals arrived on foot, none walking more than a few blocks to attend.

“Campustown is only two blocks from where we live,” local resident Charlie Case said. “We love these types of events, and having them this close makes it that much easier.”

Due to lightning in the area, the event was cut short and forced to shut down early, but not to the dismay of its attendees.  

“I don’t think the weather should stop people from having fun,” Ames local Dave Wagner said. “It’s live music, and it’s free. It doesn’t get much better than that.”

According to another event goer, Stacy Woodword, the event achieved its goals.

“The goal is to show that Campustown isn’t just college students,” Woodward said. “We come over here all the time to shop, have dinner, grab a drink, and we love it. There’s no reason that the students and community members can’t coexist.”

The Economic Alliance hopes to continue the event for years to come. It aims to showcase the likes of the local community and its members. 

“It’s awesome that we have the support of our sponsors, and we thank them all,” Toliver said. We’re proud to be supportive of Campustown and the local businesses and the community that calls Ames home.”



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