Connect with us

Sports

Wodonga Waterpolo Club among recipients of Victorian Government ‘Change Our Game’ sport funding

The Wodonga Dolphins Waterpolo Club is among the recipients of Victorian Government grants as part of The Change Our Game Community Activation Grants program, benefitting more than 11,500 individuals. The Wodonga Dolphins Waterpolo Club will deliver the Funfit Ladies Water Polo Program, a 10-week program with modified rules catering to beginners with all levels of […]

Published

on


The Wodonga Dolphins Waterpolo Club is among the recipients of Victorian Government grants as part of The Change Our Game Community Activation Grants program, benefitting more than 11,500 individuals.

The Wodonga Dolphins Waterpolo Club will deliver the Funfit Ladies Water Polo Program, a 10-week program with modified rules catering to beginners with all levels of fitness.

The Change Our Game Community Activation Grants program delivers grants of up to $10,000 to community sport and recreation clubs to help inspire women and girls to take part – including new women’s programs, opportunities for club leadership roles and other on and off field options.

Since 2018, The Change Our Game Community Activation Grants program has provided more than 700 grants totalling more than $3.7 million for community sport and active recreation clubs and organisations across the state.

Another recipient, Broadmeadows Basketball Association, will provide 60 multicultural women from three junior clubs access to a nine-week program featuring closed basketball sessions and the opportunity for formal coaching accreditation.

Community leaders are also backed through the program – among them Warrnambool Wolves Football Club’s U14 Girls Coach Melissa Francis, who will undertake the Football Australia/AFC C-Diploma to further her coaching journey and support the club’s junior teams.

Through the Fair Access Policy Roadmap, launched in August 2022, and the Community Activation Grants Program, the State Government is helping community sporting organisations achieve more equitable access and increase the number of women and girls actively taking part in their club.

Victorian Director of the Office for Women in Sport and Recreation Sarah Styles noted “Community sport is a powerful vehicle to create positive change. We are dedicated to breaking down barriers and fostering a level playing field for women and girls in community sport.”

Warrnambool Wolves Club President Jeff Morland-Hunt added “as part of our strategic plan, one of our key goals is to invest in opportunities for both new and experienced coaches, with a strong focus on supporting junior and girls’ coaching pathways. This grant brings us one step closer to achieving that vision.”

For more information about Change Our Game programs, visit changeourgame.vic.gov.au.

Related Articles

2nd February 2025 – Applications open for 2025 Change Our Game Community Activation Grants program

23rd October 2024 – Change Our Game continues to support opportunities for women as sport and active recreation leaders

5th February 2024 – Applications open for 2024 Change Our Game Community Activation Grants program

25th October 2022 – Hockey Victoria’s Suzanne Henderson among 96 Change our Game scholarship recipients

25th May 2021 – Victorian Government continues to support Change Our Game program


Support our industry news service
We hope that you value the news that we publish so while you’re here can we ask for your support?

As an independent publisher, we need reader support for our industry news gathering so ask that – if you don’t already do so – you back us by subscribing to the printed Australasian Leisure Management magazine and/or our online news.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Wilmington ends season at NCAA Championships

Story Links EUGENE, Ore. — Grand Canyon senior hurdler Cam Wilmington concluded his season in the semifinal round of the men’s 400-meter hurdles at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships on Wednesday evening at Hayward Field. With the event narrowed down to just 24 competitors, the top nine finishers in […]

Published

on


EUGENE, Ore. — Grand Canyon senior hurdler Cam Wilmington concluded his season in the semifinal round of the men’s 400-meter hurdles at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships on Wednesday evening at Hayward Field.

With the event narrowed down to just 24 competitors, the top nine finishers in Wednesday’s preliminary round advance to Friday’s final. Wilmington finished in 20th with a time of 51.57 seconds. Although he does not advance further into the meet, Wilmington earned All-American honorable-mention recognition for his finish in the nation’s top 24.

Under two weeks ago at the NCAA West First Round in College Station, Texas, Wilmington logged a personal best in the event with a time of 50.04. Days later, he ran a 50.12 to punch his ticket to Eugene. Either of those marks would have qualified for a top-nine finish. However, conditions in Eugene led to slower times across the board as only two of the event’s 24 entrants improved on their first-round marks.

Baylor’s Nathan Ezekiel cruised to the top time of the semifinal round with a mark of 47.86 that was over 1.2 seconds faster than the nearest competitor.

Wilmington ended a successful outdoor season that saw him make GCU history as the program’s first NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships qualifier in a men’s track event and 16th qualifier overall. He also was a WAC champion in the event.

 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Titans Conclude 2025 Track and Field Campaign with NCAA Semifinal Performances

Story Links EUGENE, Ore. – The 2025 Track and Field season came to a close for the Titans after sending two events to the semifinal round at the NCAA DI National Championship on Wednesday evening.  Joshua Hornsby, who punched his ticket to Eugene in the men’s 110m hurdles at the NCAA West First […]

Published

on


EUGENE, Ore. – The 2025 Track and Field season came to a close for the Titans after sending two events to the semifinal round at the NCAA DI National Championship on Wednesday evening. 

Joshua Hornsby, who punched his ticket to Eugene in the men’s 110m hurdles at the NCAA West First Rounds (May 28-31), ran a 13.53 in the event’s semifinal round. This placed him 14th out of the 22 finishers overall. Hornsby finishes the season holding the top four fastest times in Titan history (13.51, 13.53, 13.58, 13.61), all of which he set this season. 

The men’s 4×100 relay team composed of John Clifford, Isaiah Emerson, Dominic Gates and Ian Dossman placed 22nd place in the semifinal round with a time of 39.48. The athletes, who ran a combined time of 39.26, punched their ticket to the semifinal round on May 30 at the West First Round hosted on the campus of Texas A&M. 

SUPPORT THE TITANS!

Fans can purchase tickets for various Cal State Fullerton athletic events by visiting FullertonTitanstickets.com. The Athletic Ticket Office can also be contacted by phone at 657-278-2783 or by email at athletictixs@fullerton.edu.

FOLLOW THE TITANS!

Fans can keep up with the latest in Titan Athletics by following us on Facebook (Facebook/FullertonTitans), X (@FullertonTitans) Instagram (@FullertonTitans), YouTube (FullertonTitansAthletics) and TikTok (@FullertonTitans).  In addition, the women’s basketball team has established its own X (@FullertonTFXC) and Instagram accounts (@FullertonTFXC).

WATCH THE TITANS ON ESPN+

Titans fans can now watch every home event exclusively on ESPN+. Cal State Fullerton has built a top-tier production studio to give the viewers an ESPN quality production for all games at Titan Stadium. Additionally, all schools in the Big West Conference are committed to producing ESPN quality streams which will allow fans to watch the Titans on ESPN+ for all road conference games.

 





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

New Sarasota High volleyball coach wants to change Sailors direction

Sarasota County has produced some of the state’s best volleyball over the past decade. Cardinal Mooney, Riverview and Venice high schools have each made it to the final four in the past 10 years, with the Cougars (one) and Indians (two) bringing home state championships.  Sarasota High, however, could not tap into that local success. […]

Published

on


Sarasota County has produced some of the state’s best volleyball over the past decade.

Cardinal Mooney, Riverview and Venice high schools have each made it to the final four in the past 10 years, with the Cougars (one) and Indians (two) bringing home state championships. 

Sarasota High, however, could not tap into that local success. The Sailors haven’t made it to the regional round of postseason play since 2015 and have never played in a regional final. 

New Sarasota volleyball Head Coach Emma Thrift hopes to change that. 

Thrift knows Sarasota volleyball better than most. 

She played both indoor and beach volleyball at Riverview and has coached with Sarasota Volleyball Club — an AAU and travel organization — since she was a senior in high school. 

After routinely beating the Sailors in her high school days, the challenge of going to the rival excites Thrift. 

New Sarasota indoor volleyball coach Emma Thrift was a part of the inaugural beach volleyball team at Riverview High School.

Image courtesy of Emma Thrift

“It’s exciting to be on the other side,” Thrift said. “It fuels the fire a little bit more. It feels like I have something to prove.”

In the Sailors’ 10-11 season, Riverview eliminated Sarasota in its first district tournament game. 

That leaves plenty of room for improvement, but Thrift is focusing more on the intangibles than the record.

“Success for me this season would be building a solid culture and foundation,” Thrift said. “It’s not about winning, winning, winning. It’s about having them grow. Even if they lose, I want it to be five sets, close games, extra points every time. I don’t want it to be a 3-0 sweep. I would still count that as a win. Set wins are wins to me. When we see that growth in the season, that will set us up really well in the long term.”

Thrift, 23, graduated from Florida State University in 2024, but isn’t inexperienced in coaching. 

She has coached with Sarasota Volleyball Club, SRQ Beach Volleyball and The Classical Academy of Sarasota.

However, she is well aware she will be one of the youngest head varsity coaches in the state this season, and she’s planning on using that to her advantage. 

“I try to relate to them a little more because they’re still in high school,” Thrift said. “They’re going through the hardest part of their life right now. I feel like a lot of coaches as they get older kind of dismiss that, whereas I was more recently in their shoes. They want to feel respected and feel like they’re being heard, and I feel like I’m able to communicate that with them.” 

Despite Sarasota’s record and postseason result last year, Thrift should have some talent to work with this fall. 

Kills leader Liza Collier, a rising junior, is set to enter her junior season while Braelynn Rebholz, third in kills, will be a senior. 

Blocks leader Gemma Mulhollen is entering her junior season and ace leader Rylan Miller will be a senior. 

Sign Up for Daily Headlines

A daily dose of news from Longboat Key, East County, Sarasota and Siesta Key.

<

The work for next season has already begun.

Thrift held her first summer workout on June 9 at the school, and said roughly 50 players — including freshman, junior varsity and varsity — showed up, with more expected to come later in the summer. 

June will focus on building stamina and mental strength. Thrift intends on the Sailors playing deep into matches, which will require fortitude. That means cardio work on the track, high-repetition weightlifting and time on the court. 

Perhaps more important than strength and conditioning will be creating a team-first culture. Thrift said she can’t remember the players who were on the freshman and junior varsity teams when she was a varsity player. 

Instead, she wants an all-inclusive environment to encourage players to stay with the team through graduation. 

“What I really want to build right now is good culture,” Thrift said. “I want this team to be one unit. I don’t want freshman, JV, varsity. I want Sarasota volleyball. I feel like it didn’t really build a positive culture, and I want longevity.

“I know they can be great. I just need them to understand that they can be great as well.”

 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

How Flag Day got its start | News

Flag Day is commemorated each year in the United States on June 14. Though Flag Day is not an official federal holiday, the day remains significant nonetheless, as it traces its origins all the way back to 1777. The Second Continental Congress formally adopted the flag of the United States on June 14, 1777. That […]

Published

on


Flag Day is commemorated each year in the United States on June 14. Though Flag Day is not an official federal holiday, the day remains significant nonetheless, as it traces its origins all the way back to 1777.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Princeton University

EUGENE, ORE. – Greg Foster earned First Team All-America honors in the long jump as Princeton began competition at the NCAA Outdoor Championships in Eugene on Wednesday. On day one of the four-day championship meet, Joe Licata also made the Second Team All-America in the shot put.  In the semifinal events, Harrison Witt and Sam […]

Published

on


EUGENE, ORE. – Greg Foster earned First Team All-America honors in the long jump as Princeton began competition at the NCAA Outdoor Championships in Eugene on Wednesday.

On day one of the four-day championship meet, Joe Licata also made the Second Team All-America in the shot put. 

In the semifinal events, Harrison Witt and Sam Rodman advanced to the finals of the 1500m and the 800m, respectively, with Rodman setting a new program record in the 800m. 

Foster secured First Team All-American status by taking seventh place with a jump of 7.80m/25-7¼”. The competition marked the junior’s third NCAA Championship appearance and first All-America distinction. 

Licata made his NCAA debut in the shot put, finishing 13th with a mark of 18.93m/62-1¼” to earn him Second Team All-America honors. 

Rodman, making his fifth trip to NCAAs, qualified for Friday’s 800m final running a new personal best time of 1:46.27. The mark broke his own school record in the event for the second time this season, as Rodman smashed his own 2022 record just weeks ago with a time of 1:46.85 at the Princeton Elite. 

In the 1500m, Witt cruised into Friday’s final with a 3:41.98 finish for third place in semifinal two. His time was also third overall. With the performance, Witt, a 2025 indoor Second Team All-America honoree in the mile, made his third NCAA Championship appearance this academic year and fourth all-time. 

Up Next

The Tigers will look ahead to Friday as Witt and Rodman compete in their respective finals, and Casey Helm competes in the discus championship. Helm will kick off the action for the Tigers at 2:15 p.m. PST, with Witt and Rodman’s races taking place at 5:12 p.m. and 6:14 p.m. 

 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Cal Track Pair Ends Season In NCAA Semifinals

Al Sermeno/KLC fotos MacQuiddy (left) and Goode (right) each had an outstanding year for the Bears, setting program records both indoors and outdoors. T&F6/11/2025 8:44 PM | By: Cal Athletics MacQuiddy, Goode Finish Year As All-America Honorable Mentions EUGENE, Ore. – Two men from the California track & […]

Published

on



Cal Track Pair Ends Season In NCAA Semifinals


Al Sermeno/KLC fotos

MacQuiddy (left) and Goode (right) each had an outstanding year for the Bears, setting program records both indoors and outdoors.


MacQuiddy, Goode Finish Year As All-America Honorable Mentions

EUGENE, Ore. – Two men from the California track & field team completed their 2025 collegiate seasons on Wednesday evening, as school record-holders Garrett MacQuiddy (1500m) and Johnny Goode (400m) represented the Blue & Gold at the NCAA Outdoor Championships, held this year at Oregon’s Hayward Field.
 
Competing in his second NCAA Championships semifinal, MacQuiddy closed out his collegiate career with a time of 3:53.49 after being cut off on the back stretch, which kept him in the back half of the pack despite posting a time of 51.87 on the bell lap.
 
Goode, who broke the 40-year-old program record at the ACC Championships, raced in the third heat in the NCAA Semifinals and posted a time of 46.39 to likewise earn All-America Honorable Mention status.
 
The Golden Bears have just one more man (discus world record-holder Mykolas Alekna) appearing at the NCAA Championships his week, with the men’s discus competition slated for Friday at 2:15 p.m. PT.
 
2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships – Day One Results
Men’s 400m Semifinal – 21. Johnny Goode 46.39
Men’s 1500m Semifinal – 22. Garrett MacQuiddy 3:53.49
 
 
UP NEXT
Cal hammer throwers Valentina Savva, Giavonna Meeks and Audrey Jacobs – the largest group in school history to qualify for the NCAA Championships in the event – will compete Thursday at 1:30 p.m., while Lucija Leko is set to appear in the women’s shot put at 6:10 p.m.
 
STAY POSTED

For complete coverage of Cal track & field, follow the Bears on X/Twitter (@CalTFXC), Instagram (@caltfxc) and Facebook (@Cal Cross Country/Track and Field).
 





Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending