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The Bold Type, with Commissioner Dan Butterly – May 12, 2025

Story Links Good morning!  I hope you all had a great weekend and were able to celebrate and commemorate all the mothers in your lives on Sunday.  Having lost my Mom on New Year’s Day, I took time on Sunday to reflect on the impact she had on my life, and how […]

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Good morning!  I hope you all had a great weekend and were able to celebrate and commemorate all the mothers in your lives on Sunday.  Having lost my Mom on New Year’s Day, I took time on Sunday to reflect on the impact she had on my life, and how much she is missed by our family.   

Before we get into this week’s update, each of you need to PLEASE watch this video from this week’s Big West Softball Championship.  

This is true emotion, a key reason WHY we do what we do, and provide championship experiences for our student-athletes. 

With the addition of the first-ever softball championship, and baseball championship later this month, we now have conference championships FOR ALL Big West sports.  Thank you to our institutional leadership for moving in this direction and providing these opportunities for our student-athletes, and for all of our fans for their support in celebrating The Big West postseason in each sport all year long.  

Congratulations to UC Santa Barbara for winning the first-ever Big West softball championship! The Gauchos impressively came all the way through the consolation bracket after falling in the first game of the week! Read more >>> 


Thank you to The Big West staff and Cal State Fullerton for hosting and managing the 2025 Big West Softball Championship last week. It was a great event for student-athletes, staff and fans alike – even if Championship Saturday was hot!  

Last week brought the unveiling of a proposed new governance structure for NCAA Division I, the NCAA press release on academic progress rates, and a Big West “Final Four” team in beach volleyball and women’s water polo as well as two teams in the men’s volleyball semifinals!  

Song of the week is “Higher” from Creed.  Maybe this is my walk-up song, but maybe it is because we all want to wake up to a world full of positives rather than negatives. 

Let’s get to The Bold Type! 


  PLAYING FOR THE TITLE – LONG BEACH STATE MEN’S VOLLEYBALL   

  • Congratulations to our Big West men’s volleyball champion Hawai’i for their run to the penultimate round and best of luck to Long Beach State as they drive for five. A victory over defending champion UCLA would give The Big West their fifth national collegiate championship since Big West sport sponsorship began in 2018. WOW! Watch the game today on ESPN2 at 4 p.m. PT. Watch here >>> 

  

   CONGRATULATIONS!   

  • Congratulations to NCAA Elite 90 Award winners Raha Peiravani from Hawaii women’s water polo and Georgi Binev of Long Beach State men’s volleyball!  This is a tremendous honor from the NCAA. 

  • To a new record already set in The Big West Track & Field Championships during multis weekend. Congratulations to UC Santa Barbara’s Brad Thomas and Long Beach State’s Claudine Raud-Gumiel came out as winners in the decathlon and heptathlon, respectively! Read more >>> 

  • To Long Beach State freshman phenom Moni Nikolov, named the AVCA’s Player of the Year! Moni is the fifth straight national player of the year from The Big West! Read more >>> 
  • To prolific outside hitter Hilir Henno of UC Irvine, who was announced Friday as the recipient of the AVCA Distinction of Excellence Award, presented by Nike Volleyball. Read more >>> 
  • To Hawai’i women’s water polo, who took down California in the quarterfinals before falling to eventual national champion Stanford in the semifinals! 
  • To top-seeded Long Beach State men’s volleyball who has dispatched Fort Valley State and Pepperdine in their quest for the National Collegiate Championship! 
  • To Hawai’i men’s volleyball for their 3-1 quarterfinal victory against Penn State before falling to defending champion UCLA in the semis!  
  • To Cal State Fullerton women’s golf, who qualified for the NCAA Championships beginning this weekend at Omni La Costa in Carlsbad!  It is the first time we’ve had a team at the Championships final site since 2015, and eighth all-time! Read more >>> 
  • It’s also a year of firsts for the Titans: 

    • First Big West Championship and spot in the NCAA Regionals! 
    • First time advancing to the National Championships! 
    • First No. 10 seed to advance in the NCAA six-regional era!  

  • After yet another stellar year on courts across the league, five programs from The Big West are represented in the American Volleyball Coaches Association’s (AVCA) 35th National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball All-America Team, unveiled on Monday. Congratulations to the  10 student-athletes on the first and second teams, over 40 percent of all honorees, and another 12 on the honorable mention listings.  Read more >>>  
  • To Big West softball champion UC Santa Barbara, who was selected as the No. 4 seed in the UCLA regional! The Gauchos open the double-elimination region on Friday at 4:30 p.m., facing off against the Bruins. Game 2 will be Saturday afternoon at either 2 or 4:30 p.m. Read more >>> 
  • To The Big West softball award winners and all-conference teams as voted on by our head coaches around the league! Read more >>> 
  • To Long Beach State senior Charlie Forster, Big West Golfer of the Year, and the 2024-25 All-Big West Teams, as voted on by the league’s 12 head coaches! Read more >>> 
  • To UC Irvine baseball, who this week is ranked: 

    • 13th by D1Baseball 
    • 15th by USA Today Coaches 
    • 17th by Baseball America 
    • 11th by NCBWA15th by Perfect Game 

  • Also to Cal Poly, UC Santa Barbara and Hawai’i baseball programs who are receiving votes by NCBWA! 

And, to our Big West Players of the Week! 

  • Baseball – Matthew O’Brien, UC Riverside (pitcher); Nate Castellon, Cal Poly (field player) 
  • Softball – Eva Hurtado, Cal State Fullerton (pitcher); Ava Arce, Cal State Fullerton (field player); Giselle Mejia, UC Santa Barbara (freshman) 
  • Track & Field – Chase Walter, Cal Poly (men’s track); Rory Devaney, Cal Poly (men’s field); Makiah Parker, Cal State Bakersfield (women’s track); Lilian Turban, Hawai‘i (women’s field) 

   

   ONLY THE BOLD STAND FOR FAIRNESS   

SONG OF CHOICE – “Right Now” by Van Halen 

On Wednesday, the NCAA unveiled a proposed new Division I governance model on YouTube—one that could fundamentally reshape the future of college sports, and in my opinion, not for the better (LINK).  The CCA-22 commissioners were presented with the draft model on Monday afternoon, but were told not to share the model outside of the presentation.  

If adopted as presented, it will hand unchecked control of the Division I governance process to four conferences: the SEC, Big Ten, ACC, and Big 12. These leagues would gain a 65% weighted voting bloc on NCAA committees—an insurmountable majority that effectively silences the voices of the rest of Division I, including conferences like The Big West. In short: a structure in which a few decide for all. 

This is not shared governance. This is consolidation of power by the very conferences,  institutions and leadership that helped drive the NCAA into its current legal and financial crisis. And now, they seek to rewrite the rules to insulate themselves from accountability, while expecting others to share the financial burden of settlement costs from cases like House v. NCAA. 

Let’s be bold and honest: the only thing holding Division I together right now is a legal settlement. NCAA President Charlie Baker has said as much—that if the A4 conferences walk away, they alone would be responsible for the full financial cost of the House settlement. Rather than risk that, this proposal looks like an effort to force out those of us who still believe in education, access, parity, and opportunity for student-athletes across all institutions—not just the richest ones. 

And once governance is centralized, what’s to stop them from restricting national championship access? From changing scholarship rules in ways that disadvantage mid-majors? From building a postseason system that rewards only the highest-resourced teams? Absolutely nothing. 

This isn’t bold leadership. It’s power consolidation masquerading as progress. 

The Big West will not stand by silently. We are committed to championing the principle that all Division I student-athletes deserve meaningful access to championships, fair representation in governance, and the chance to succeed on and off the field—regardless of conference affiliation or athletic budget. 

In the weeks ahead, The Big West will work with our peer conferences to demand a better model—one that respects the diversity of Division I and honors the values of equity, education, and competition. If this system is truly for the benefit of college athletes, then all their voices—not just the loudest or wealthiest—deserve to be heard. 

We cannot let financial pressure become the pretext for undermining fairness and opportunity in college athletics. The integrity of higher education depends on leadership that is inclusive, principled, and forward-looking. 

After all, we’re The Big West. 

Only The Bold. 


   GRADUATES OVER GUARANTEES: THE BIG WEST DIFFERENCE   

SONG – “My Hero” from Foo Fighters 

In an era when college athletics headlines are dominated by name, image and likeness (NIL) deals and multimillion-dollar transactions, it’s easy to lose sight of what truly defines success. In The Big West, we’ve chosen a different path—one that puts purpose before profit, and student before athlete. 

Our member institutions are among the most respected public universities in the country. Academic rigor is not a slogan for us—it’s a standard. Our student-athletes don’t just play for wins; they commit themselves to the classroom, the community, and a degree that will serve them far beyond their years of eligibility. 

This year’s Academic Progress Rate (APR) data reflects that commitment (LINK). The Big West earned 38 perfect team scores of 1,000 across 11 institutions. More than 61% of our programs meet or exceed the national four-year average. That doesn’t happen by accident—it happens because our campuses invest in the academic success of student-athletes with the same intensity as they invest in competitive success. 

While others are paying millions to rent talent for a season, we’re investing in futures that will impact generations. That’s not to diminish the opportunities NIL can offer—but at The Big West, we believe the most powerful name, image, and likeness is the one on a diploma.

Our student-athletes are earning more than statistics. They’re earning degrees, building character, and preparing for lifelong achievement. That is the Big West difference. 

We’re proud of our champions. We’re even prouder of our graduates. In The Big West, we choose graduates over guarantees—every time.

  

   ESPN TO ANNOUNCE “FLAGSHIP” NAME AND PRICE THIS WEEK   

Flagship is the handle ESPN has used for about a year now to refer to its developing and highly anticipated direct to consumer app, which will for the first time make all of ESPN’s channels available for standalone sale. This week ESPN will retire the place setter name “Flagship” and replace it with the real thing. (LINK) 

  

   BROADCAST TRAILBLAZERS   

On May 3rd, Long Beach State hosted a unique softball event between Cal Poly and Long Beach State, which became the first on-air execution of ESPN’s cloud-based production model. The event, broadcast on ESPNU, utilized a Discrete cloud-based production setup, which mirrors traditional production with multiple operator and production positions, including video switchers, audio consoles, replay and graphics operators, and directing/production user stations. The core production team operated remotely from ESPN’s facilities in Bristol, CT. 

Thanks to the coordination between Long Beach State’s Mike Habura and the institutional  IT department, a 1GB data line was set up to support the production. This milestone is a point of pride for Long Beach State and The Big West! 

 

   MEDIA ARTICLES ON NCAA AND LEGAL ISSUES   

  • Lawyers for NCAA and plaintiffs in proposed House settlement say in filing that they have made changes to roster limits that Judge Claudia Wilken said two weeks were unfair and preventing from granting final approval. (LINK)  Judge Wilken is allowing three lawyers for objectors who focused on the proposed roster limits to file responses by May 13. Wilken also is allowing the plaintiffs and the NCAA/Conferences to file replies by May 16. 
  • Attorney Steve Molo, who represents a group of objectors, has already voiced opposition to the revision: “While the NCAA and Class Counsel have acknowledged our objection to roster caps is valid, their proposed mushy modification doesn’t go far enough. Many, many student athletes have had something taken away from them. The fight will continue.” (link); Molo, attorney Laura Reathaford, and the Buchalter firm will be those allowed to submit responses to the revision by May 13. (link) 
  • Sportico’s Michael McCann writes on how a potential Trump administration executive order on college athletics could face a bevy of legal pushback. (link) 
  • Kennyhertz Perry attorney Mit Winter: “The NCAA is appealing the order granting Jett Elad’s motion to preliminary enjoin the NCAA’s 5 year eligibility clock rule. It’s also appealing the lower court Pavia decision. Those 2 appeals will tell us a lot about how courts will look at NCAA eligibility rules going forward.” (link) 


   CELEBRATE ASIAN AMERICAN, NATIVE HAWAIIAN AND PACIFIC ISLANDER HERITAGE MONTH!   

May marks Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, a time to celebrate the diversity and impact of AANHPI individuals across college sports. 

Why it matters: AANHPI student-athletes are making significant strides in college sports, with record growth in participation, leadership roles and academic success. 

  • By the numbers: Total AANHPI student-athletes competing across all NCAA divisions in 2023-24 reached 13,739, a 54% increase over the past 10 years. 

Top sports for student-athletes: Football and women’s soccer lead in total numbers, but sports like fencing and gymnastics include high percentages of AANHPI student-athletes. 

Leadership trends: AANHPI representation is rising in leadership roles, with a 49% increase in head coaches and a 53% increase in presidents/chancellors since data collection began. 

 

   QUOTE OF THE DAY   

“The world is not fair, and not everyone gets to be heard, but if you want to change it, you have to fight for it.” – From the musical Hamilton.  This quote, while not stated verbatim in the musical, is a powerful distillation of the themes explored in Hamilton.   

And, from one of our major partners, as I discussed the formation of a marketing, branding, ticketing and attendance subcommittee once the 2026-27 membership is set:  “But they better not recommend a change to the logo…that branding is too good!” 

  

As I have noted, the next 4-6 weeks could be the most dynamic time of change for NCAA Division I athletics.  

In closing, be sure to thank our athletic trainers, game managers and SIDs.Their work is vital to the success of your student-athletes, and to every Big West program.  

Have a great week, and good luck to all of our programs at upcoming Big West and NCAA Championships! 


Dan 





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Water Polo & Swimming: Sharing More Than Just Pool Space

Story Links For years, swimming and water polo have been two sports that shared a pool but little else. Yet for a growing number of athletes, the lines between these disciplines are beginning to blur. Historically, Duke Kahanamoku, Johnny Weissmuller, and Brad Schumacher were perhaps the most prominent US Olympians who […]

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For years, swimming and water polo have been two sports that shared a pool but little else. Yet for a growing number of athletes, the lines between these disciplines are beginning to blur.

Historically, Duke Kahanamoku, Johnny Weissmuller, and Brad Schumacher were perhaps the most prominent US Olympians who both swam and played water polo at the highest levels. Matt Biondi was another example. After competing in both swimming and water polo in his youth, Biondi accepted a scholarship at the University of California, Berkeley, to swim under head coach Nort Thornton and play water polo for legendary head coach Pete Cutino. As a swimmer, Biondi earned 11 Olympic medals and set world records in five events. As a water polo player, Biondi helped Berkeley win three NCAA Championships, was named All-America four times, and voted the team’s Most Valuable Player in 1985.

Even so, for a long time, it was often believed that participation in one sport might negatively impact the other.

“There’s an antiquated notion that water polo takes away from swimming…but being open to trying and showing the benefits of doing something different as a means of improving your primary thing has been huge for us,” said Michael Koziol, the head coach of water polo at Germantown Academy in Pennsylvania.

In Texas, Pennsylvania, and beyond, a new generation is embracing the synergy between swimming and water polo and finding ways for the two sports to build upon one another to create more complete athletes and stronger teams. As a result, dual-sport athletes like Biondi are becoming less of an exception.

“I think [swimming and water polo] really do go hand in hand,” said Brandon Dion, the head coach of both swimming and water polo at Marcus High School in Flower Mound, Texas. “Whether you’re using swim season as your conditioning to make you a better water polo player or you’re using water polo as a break from staring at the black line year round, there is definitely room for both,” he said.

Dion grew up swimming in Texas because the state did not yet offer high school water polo. At Fullerton College in California, however, he competed in freestyle sprints, breaststroke, and water polo.

Another Texan, Scott Slay, participated in both sports growing up but admits the swim season was much longer since water polo was not officially sanctioned. As the Texas High School Coaches Association 2024-25 Girls Water Polo Coach of the Year, the Boerne Champion coach now insists that his water polo players swim in the offseason because it improves their conditioning.

“We are doing a lot of sprint training in swimming practice,” Slay said, “but water polo [also] helps build endurance as well as the quick-twitch muscle fibers you need for sprint swimming.”

Koziol, at Germantown Academy, emphasizes that a team-sport mindset can also reinvigorate even the most dedicated swimmers.

One of the biggest advantages is the carryover of camaraderie. Athletes tend to build trust and chemistry in the high-octane world of water polo and bring that energy into the more individual setting of swimming.

Dion said that water polo establishes “the feeling of team and family…so when we roll into swim season, it makes it a little easier to focus on the group as a whole. With the relays, [athletes] know they are [performing] for somebody else – just like they do in water polo – as opposed to just them versus the clock.”

Koziol, in Pennsylvania, sees a similar crossover. “The inherent teamwork in water polo makes it more attractive to kids who are more collaborative,” he said, and when they shift to swimming, the “swimmers then take lessons learned in water polo and focus more on relay[s] or on finding time [to] connect with their teammates between swim sets.”

Slay agreed. “Kids are very close after water polo heading into swimming,” he said. “We’re more like a family than just a team.”

“Water polo is in the fall and swimming is in the winter, so it’s a nice lead-in,” Koziol said.  “Some coaches look at [water polo] as an extended pre-season for swimming, [but] being more of a water polo guy, I view it as two sides of [the same] coin.”

To train athletes effectively in both sports, sprint sets are essential. Dion emphasizes Ultra-Short Race-Pace Training (USRPT), a method of swim training focused on short intervals at race pace or faster. This helps both sports because athletes often sprint between two-meter lines in water polo, and high school swimming primarily focuses on short distances.

Koziol, meanwhile, tends to blend traditional and modern training methods. For example, he will have his water polo players swim with goggles several times a week for conditioning.

All three coaches agree that blending swimming and water polo not only makes athletes faster and fitter – it also keeps them more motivated.

“It’s really hard to do something uninterrupted for eleven-and-a-half months of the year,” Koziol said. “It’s great to break things up so swimmers get their mind off the black line for a few months while increasing their aerobic capacity.”

Dion has also seen his swimmers thrive by adding water polo.

“Maybe they weren’t successful in other team sports,” Dion said, “but they always wanted to be part of a team. It’s an easy transition because they crave that camaraderie. We’ve had success with kids who crave that switch.”

Ultimately, the goal is to showcase the benefits of both sports and “showing them they can be successful in both,” Dion said. “You can apply your swim background to a team sport with a water polo ball, and you can take all this sprint work you’ve done in water polo, put it on a block, and be successful there too.”

Combining swimming and water polo offers more than just a two-season routine; it offers a complete athletic experience.

As Slay put it, “[I think] they do well for each other.”

Even if “water polo players who swim kinda grin and bear it,” Koziol surmised, “[when it’s] time to get the ball back in their hands, they realize the payoff.”

In the pool, as in life, sometimes the best way forward is to look at things from both sides.

 



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Air Force men’s water polo announces 2025 WCC Schedule

6/3/2025 11:07:00 AM | Men’s Water Polo USAF ACADEMY, Colo. – The 2025 West Coast Conference men’s water polo game schedule has been released, announced today by the conference office. The Falcons host three home matches, in addition to being the host institution for the 2025 WCC Men’s Water Polo Championships. Air Force’s WCC-opener is Oct. […]

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6/3/2025 11:07:00 AM | Men’s Water Polo USAF ACADEMY, Colo. – The 2025 West Coast Conference men’s water polo game schedule has been released, announced today by the conference office. The Falcons host three home matches, in addition to being the host institution for the 2025 WCC Men’s Water Polo Championships. Air Force’s WCC-opener is Oct. 2 at Pacific. The Falcons then play its first conference home game Oct. 12, hosting Cal Baptist. The ensuing weekend has the Falcons in Southern California to take on LMU on Oct. 17 and Pepperdine on Oct. 19. Air Force plays its final two WCC…





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Christensen commits to SMSU | News, Sports, Jobs

Submitted photo Sleepy Eye St. Marys’ Noah Christensen poses for a photo after signing his Letter of Intent to continue his cross-country and track and field career in college at Southwest Minnesota State University. Pictured with Noah are his mom Ann, dad Mark, and his brothers Eli and Isaac. SLEEPY EYE — River Valley senior […]

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Submitted photo
Sleepy Eye St. Marys’ Noah Christensen poses for a photo after signing his Letter of Intent to continue his cross-country and track and field career in college at Southwest Minnesota State University. Pictured with Noah are his mom Ann, dad Mark, and his brothers Eli and Isaac.

SLEEPY EYE — River Valley senior Noah Christensen has been running at a very high level this season.

And colleges have taken notice, as the Sleepy Eye St. Mary’s senior has committed to run both track and field and cross-country at Southwest Minnesota State University.

“I’ve always enjoyed running in high school, and I had some friends that took that next step, and they really liked it,” Christensen said. “They really encouraged me to take that next step with them and run with them, and they helped me go through the steps and told me what to do, and that’s what made me want to do it. And it’s fun to run. I enjoy doing it.”

Christensen runs the 400-meter and 800-meter races in track and field, as well as the corresponding relays. Christensen’s best time in the 400 is 53.25, and his best time in the 800 is 2:01.19. Christensen also has a personal-best time of 16:44.6 in cross-country. Those times were good enough to convince SMSU that he was a worthy addition to its program.

“I had some friends there,” Christensen said. “And the main thing is they have the programs I want to go for. They have [agriculture] business and agronomy. They’ve got a good program for that, and it’s close to home where I get to see my younger brothers and my family. If I want to come home and watch them play sports or need to help my dad or need to see my mom or something, I can be home in an hour. It’s close to home, I have my friends there, they’ve got the program I want to go for.”

File photo by Fritz Busch
River Valley 4×400 relay runner Noah Christensen battles a Windom runner at the Section 2A Track and Field Championships at Mankato West High School this past Saturday.

Christensen said he got some insight into the program from his friends and from a campus visit.

“Before I committed, I went out and visited their coach, and he was really nice,” he said. “I had some friends there too that told me about it, so I kind of knew what to expect. But he was really nice and they have a good facility. Their whole campus is all indoors, so you don’t ever have to go outside, which is really nice.”

Christensen said it will be challenging to be a two-season athlete at the next level.

“I’m going to be extremely busy,” he said. “It has its pros and cons, obviously, but it will keep me out of trouble anyway … Time management with school and sports. I’m not going to have my parents there to help me with everything, so that’s going to be a learning curve, but I’m sure it’s going to be alright.”

He added that the level up in competition would be an adjustment in college.

“Right now, I’m one of the better athletes that I see,” he said. “But there, I’m probably not going to be one of the top athletes, so that will take some getting used to for sure.”

Christensen hopes to be All-Conference in both track and cross-country during his time at SMSU.

“Getting conference is a big thing out there,” he said. “If you make conference, I’m sure that’s going to be one of my goals for cross-country and track. And just getting good grades and completing my major and minor eventually.”

Christensen also hopes to continue to contribute on the relay teams with the Mustangs.

“Relays are fun,” he said. “It’s fun to go with your guys. My roommate next year at SMSU [Springfield’s Matthew Groebner] is actually on the relay teams with me [at River Valley], so we’re going to be rooming together next year, which will be fun to have somebody I know to talk to and room with. That will be really fun, to have some people you know, but then also have the opportunity to meet a lot of new people and make a lot of new friends.”

Christensen and the River Valley 4×400 and 4×800 relay teams will run in the state meet preliminary rounds on Tuesday. Christensen hopes to place in the top nine with the 4×400 team to advance to the finals.

“The 4×800 I don’t really know where we stand, but it will be fun to go against some good teams,” he said.



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20 Alabama Athletes Qualify for NCAA Track and Field Championships: Roll Call, June 4

Alabama track and field will be well represented at next week’s NCAA Outdoor Track and Field National Championship meet held at the historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. Alabama will send nine women and 11 men to compete in 14 different events at the most historic track and field facility in North America. Doris Lemngole […]

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Alabama track and field will be well represented at next week’s NCAA Outdoor Track and Field National Championship meet held at the historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore.

Alabama will send nine women and 11 men to compete in 14 different events at the most historic track and field facility in North America. Doris Lemngole headlines the Crimson Tide contingent as she looks to defend her 2024 3,000m Steeplechase title.

Event

Alabama Women Competing

200m (1)

Precious Nzeakor

3,000m Steeplechase (1)

Doris Lemngole

10,000m (1)

Brenda Tuwei

High Jump (1)

Miracle Ailes

Long Jump (1)

Mariia Horielova

Shot Put (2)

Treneese Hamilton, Mye’Joi Williams

Javelin (1)

Megan Albamonti

Heptathlon (1)

Katelyn Adel

Event

Alabama Men Competing

400m (1)

Samuel Ogazi

3,000m Steeplechase (1)

Ezekiel Pitireng

10,000m (3)

Victor Kiprop, Dennis Kipruto, Dismus Lokira

4x400m Relay

Donald Chiyangwa, Samuel Ogazi, Oussama El Bouchayby, Peter Diebold

Shot Put (2)

Christopher Crawford, Trevor Gunzell

Discus (3)

Christopher Crawford, Trevor Gunzell, Christopher Young

Former Alabama track and field star and current NXT champion Isaac Odugbesan, known as Oba Femi, signed a contract to face NXT’s newest rising star, Jasper Troy, next week on NXT. Troy recently won the inaugural season of WWE’s LFG which earned him an NXT contract. NXT airs on the CW every Tuesday night.

Former Crimson Tide football player Steve Wright passed away at the age of 82. The 6’6″, 250-pound offensive tackle was a fifth-round pick out of Alabama in 1964 and is the model for the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award.

June 4, 1927: Former Alabama star Johnny Mack Brown filmed his first movie “The Fair Co-Ed.” The silent movie would soon appear in screens across the country with Hollywood starlet Marion Davies sharing the spotlight with the ex-Crimson Tide halfback. The film was a comedy, but promoted by Metro-Goldwyn Mayer Studios as being the best college movie ever made. Brown was an honor student who worked his way through school while finding time to play in football, baseball and track.

June 4, 2018: Legendary basketball coach C.M. Newton died.

June 4, 2021: While celebrating her 21st birthday, Montana Fouts became just the fifth pitcher, and the first during her lifetime, to throw a perfect game in the Women’s College World Series. Alabama topped UCLA, and Team USA pitcher Rachel Garcia, 6-0

I don’t think there’s been a better person in athletics than C.M. Newton. In all athletics, not just basketball. He had the utmost respect from people.”

– Former Kentucky coach Tubby Smith



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Champions League Final Four – five talking points

FTC’s jubilant squad celebrate lifting the Champions League trophy with their fans in Malta. Photo: Istvan Derencsenyi 1. FTC-Telekom managed to complete the hardest job – retain the Champions League title – which most people probably expected them to do in Malta at the weekend. But, as FTC coach Balazs Nyeki commented in his post-game […]

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FTC’s jubilant squad celebrate lifting the Champions League trophy with their fans in Malta. Photo: Istvan Derencsenyi

1. FTC-Telekom managed to complete the hardest job – retain the Champions League title – which most people probably expected them to do in Malta at the weekend. But, as FTC coach Balazs Nyeki commented in his post-game interview, several great teams have failed to achieve that feat in the past, and even if Fradi’s dominance looks even more overwhelming, their moment of triumph only arrived after two hard-fought matches.

Earlier this year, the Hungarian giants were making their games look easy, as they demolished their respective rivals in the first three rounds of the Quarter Final Stage, including a 18-10 thrashing of Barceloneta and a 17-9 rout in Savona.

However, they couldn’t maintain that high level in the spring, as they suffered their first defeat on Day 4 in Barcelona, though only in a shootout, and they had to overcome some minor headaches in a couple of matches. But those experiences only helped them to get ready for the ultimate showdown in Malta.

A year ago, they downed Novi Beograd in a shootout and edged out title-holders Pro Recco in a thrilling final.

This time, they managed to beat CN Marseille and VK Novi Beograd in a way that the last few minutes didn’t offer much drama, as both of their rivals were clearly beaten by the closing stages.

However, both challengers made them suffer. Some in the Budapest camp recalled Hungary’s quarter-final against France at the Doha World Championships, when the Magyars led 8-4 at half-time, just like here, but they went on to miss a series of chances, while the French came back and with Thomas Vernoux’s blasts they caused the biggest upset of the event.

Now, after some rockets by Vernoux – where FTC goalkeeper Soma Vogel looked just as helpless as in February 2024 – the match was becoming very similar, but only until 10-10.

Fradi then stepped up a gear and proved that this team is different, and after making two from eight in man-ups in the second half, they went four from four in the last six minutes to close down the contest.

Then, in the final, after a gruelling battle in the first half that saw five goals apiece, FTC managed to speed up their game – while NBG appeared a little worn out – and a mighty 4-0 rush was too much for the Serbs to handle.

In the end, both teams hit double digits once again (13-11 this time), just like they have done in all their previous five clashes.

The win secured Fradi’s title-defence – the first-ever by a Hungarian side – and they also became the first Magyar club to lift the trophy three times, surpassing Vasas and OSC, which had two titles apiece from the Seventies and Eighties.

Fradi’s last two seasons have been a demonstration of absolute power – last season they went 40-1 across all competitions, and this time they finished with 48-1, so combined that adds up to a staggering 88-2 win-loss total in 90 matches, and they clinched seven trophies along the way.

Back in April, they lost to Barceloneta on penalties, which means they haven’t been defeated in regular time since August 2023, as only Olympiacos could upend them in 32 minutes, in April 2024. So, one loss in four quarters in 90 matches, which is simply astonishing.

FTC’s Hungarian star Krisztian Manhercz was in fine form, scoring six goals in the final and was awarded the MVP trophy. Photo: Istvan Derencsenyi

2. Krisztian Manhercz’s story doesn’t lack twists, and becoming the MVP this year was the ultimate redemption for Fradi’s powerful forward, who scored six goals in the gold medal match.

Eight years ago, when he was classed as one of the most talented youngsters in Hungarian water polo, he joined Fradi, but it was a complete failure.

He found life under coach Zsolt Varga extremely difficult, and after a while he wasn’t even being named in the match-day squads, so he kind of escaped at the end of the season to find shelter at OSC.

There he matured and became a brilliant player, but however strong the team was that had been built around him, they were unable to win anything.

After losing in successive finals, he joined Marseille last season, where he finally tasted winning on the domestic scene, but the French side fell short in the Champions League.

In the meantime, Zsolt Varga was appointed the head coach of the national team in 2022, and their first job was to sit down and put behind them everything which had ruined their relationship years earlier.

It went so well that, this year, Varga even nominated Manhercz as the new captain of the national team, and Krisztian – or as everyone calls him, ‘Mano’ – also returned home to take a second shot at playing for Fradi.

A totally different chapter started for him in the autumn, as his transition phase was almost invisible – he came up with smooth performances early on and it was like he had been part of the illustrious FTC set-up for years.

Still, Manhercz saved his best displays for the end of the season, and his six goals on Sunday night lifted Fradi when Novi were pushing them really hard.

His no-look strike from an-almost impossible angle appeared to crush Milan Glusac’s confidence. The young NBG goalkeeper had done really well until that point, but he was nowhere near as solid in the remaining time and Fradi hit three more goals in two and a half minutes, which proved decisive.

Manhercz’s feat was even more remarkable as this was his first ever Champions League Final Four, unlike his childhood friend Soma Vogel, who was playing in his sixth Final 8/4. Still, with the skills and the experience he has, this performance was anything but surprising.

Novi Beograd battled hard but had to settle for the silver once again. Photo: Istvan Derencsenyi

3. Novi Beograd reached their third final in four years, but once again they failed to get their hands on the famous trophy. This time it wasn’t Pro Recco – like in 2022 and 2023 – who denied them, instead it was this season’s favourites, Ferencvaros.

Their unreal march to the final looked very much like the Serbian national team’s incredible run in Paris. At last summer’s Olympics, few people – if anyone – thought before the start that the Serbs would stand a chance, but they ended up on the top of the podium.

Somewhat similarly, NBG had recently lost a lot of key players (in the summer), including their Spanish scoring machine Alvaro Granados, and the freshly-crowned Olympic champion Nikola Jaksic.

They admittedly only dreamt of making the Final Four in the autumn, however, they showed tremendous strength and fighting spirit during the season – which is anything but surprising from a Serbian team.

Zivko Gocic, who captained the 2016 Olympic winning team in Rio, has already proven that he’s just as influential as a coach as he was as a player.

The NBG mastermind has managed to build a team that has the finest blend of experienced veterans and extremely talented youngsters.

Team effort prevailed in the Quarter Final Stage against classy rivals like Olympiacos, Marseille and Jadran and was enough to upset Barceloneta and land a place in the final.

And while they could keep up their tough, aggressive defending and precise execution in offence, they were on equal terms with FTC.

However, after 20 minutes or so, they began to run out of steam, and Nikola Lukic, who scored six goals just like Manhercz, started missing his shots, but first and foremost they were unable to slow Fradi down.

And it was clear that once the Magyars were gearing up, the game would shift to their favourite territory – and their 0-4 rush brutally demonstrated that.

While in the previous three years, the Novi players (a totally different line-up) might have been disappointed to fall short again and again, this year’s silver should be seen as a tremendous feat.

It’s not a big consolation, but a telling fact that this was their fourth appearance in the F8/4 and they lost to the eventual champions every time (a year ago, Fradi beat them in the semis). So, one may put this into a different perspective – you have to beat Novi Beograd to lift the trophy.

The CNAB squad celebrate collecting their bronze medals. Photo: Istvan Derencsenyi

4. Zodiac CNAB took home the bronze for the fifth time in their history. They may have thrashed Marseille 19-9 on the last day, and showed their better face once more, but they were anything but satisfied.

Losing to Novi Beograd in the semis was a very bitter pill to swallow, as they were unable to perform at the level they hit in the spring, which saw them become the only team in the whole season to force a draw against the mighty Ferencvaros and then beat them in the shootout.

The Spanish side have also had a tremendous run this season, losing just one single match in regular time across all competitions (in Budapest, to Fradi), and only a saved penalty denied them a coveted place in the final in Malta (NBG won the shootout 5-4).

Another grand battle with Fradi would have been a worthy ending for this team, which is likely to be transformed once again this summer. And CNAB are the prime example that in the gruelling world of the Champions League, even a near-perfect season from a brilliant team cannot guarantee a (really) happy ending.

CN Marseille’s bench could only look on as CNAB dominated the bronze medal game throughout. Photo: Istvan Derencsenyi

5. Marseille’s first appearance on the grand stage landed them in fourth place. In recent years, it has become a rarity that a team could achieve something big during their first try (Fradi did manage to win in 2019 on their debut). Still, their relentless fighting spirit forced a balanced match against FTC in the semis – now they really need to work on their away-game performances.

Reaching the finals relied mostly on their fine home wins. Away from Marseille, they were 2-4 in the two stages combined, so add the results of the Final Four and you are at 2-6 – which is a sharp contrast to their 5-1 run in front of their loud and passionate fans in the south of France.

The playing area will be reduced from next season. Photo: Istvan Derencsenyi

6. OK, let us add a quick bonus talking point – as we witnessed history in another aspect at the weekend, as when the final concluded, a century-old era came to an end too.

The game between FTC and Novi was the last one played on a field 30m long. The new rules – already applied at the recent World Cup matches – curtailed the men’s playing field to 25m.

Once water polo moved to pools from lakes (where the ball had to be placed on top of boats to score), the field’s length was set at 30m and that has been in use ever since.

A new chapter begins now, and we have seen several changes to the rules over the past decades, with many being real game-changers, like introducing quarters instead of halves, abandoning the so-called standing rule, switching from a leather ball to a rubber one, creating possession and exclusion time, offering time-outs and so on – but the field’s measurements had never been touched (in the men’s game).

Now that will change too – and time will tell how we’ll remember the last game played in a 30m field.

Watch water polo action live on www.euroaquaticstv.com and stay up-to-date with live results/tables and real-time updates through the European Aquatics App. Download it here: Google Play.

Gergely Csurka for European Aquatics



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Loaded Schedule Awaits Men’s Water Polo in 2025

Story Links 2025 Schedule Single-Game Tickets SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The Santa Clara University men’s water polo team announced Tuesday its 2025 schedule, which includes 11 home dates, six West Coast Conference games and participation in three marquee tournaments. […]

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SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The Santa Clara University men’s water polo team announced Tuesday its 2025 schedule, which includes 11 home dates, six West Coast Conference games and participation in three marquee tournaments.
 
The Broncos (13-11, 2-4 WCC) will host three WCC games, two against last season’s top-two finishers in the standings – Pacific (Oct. 5) and Pepperdine (Nov. 14). They’ll also host major non-conference clashes against nationally ranked programs UC Davis (Sept. 27), UC Santa Barbara (Oct. 3), Long Beach State (Oct. 11), and Stanford (Nov. 5). Santa Clara will also host its annual Julian Fraser Memorial tournament on Oct. 24-26.
 
Single-game tickets for all 2025 home games are available now. Click here to purchase tickets online, call the Broncos ticket office at (408-554-4660), or email broncotickets@scu.edu.
 
“As a coaching staff, we are really excited for what is in store this coming season,” said Santa Clara University head coach Keith Wilbur. “Between tournaments, non-conference head-to-head games and conference play within the WCC, we face a lot of really strong opponents in 2025.”
 
Santa Clara kicks off its season in August with two games in one day on Aug. 30. It takes on Fresno Pacific before facing host UC Merced in the Central Valley. It then heads to the annual Princeton Invitational on the East Coast on Sept. 5-7, where it’ll play three games in three days. Two weeks later, the Broncos head to Southern California to take part in the MPSF Invite against some of the top programs in the country, hosted by UCLA this season.
 
“In my time at Santa Clara, this will be our toughest strength of schedule in a season, and the team is really looking forward to the challenge,” added Wilbur.
 
WCC road trips to California Baptist (Oct. 16), San Jose State (Oct. 18) and Air Force (Nov. 8) round out the regular season schedule. The third annual WCC Tournament will be held on Nov. 21-23 on the campus of the Air Force Academy in Colorado. The NCAA Championship is being hosted this season by Stanford from Dec. 5-7.



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