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The Soapbox: Trump’s fire hydrant technique and the con of South Africa’s ‘white refugee’ status

O P I N I O N Stand up. Speak up. Its your turn. Trump would give refugee status to White South Africans.  Whites comprise 7% of South Africa’s population; nevertheless, they control 80% of the wealth.  Don’t grant refugee status to people living well. They don’t need it.   While visiting South Africa, I […]

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O P I N I O N

Stand up. Speak up. Its your turn.


Trump would give refugee status to White South Africans.  Whites comprise 7% of South Africa’s population; nevertheless, they control 80% of the wealth.  Don’t grant refugee status to people living well. They don’t need it.  

While visiting South Africa, I talked with an Afrikaner very concerned about how to fund a pool for the local water polo club.  South Africa is a wealthy, developed country, where, for example, they performed the world’s first heart transplant and held the World Cup soccer finals.  Poor White South Africans exist, but it can handle its own.  South Africans need American refugee status as much as a fish needs a bicycle.

Crime touches White South Africans.  While sad, this makes sense.  When asked why he robbed banks, Willie Sutton said, “Because that’s where the money is.”  South African criminals also go where the money is.  Recall: Whites control 80% of South Africa’s wealth.

But Trump doesn’t care about South Africans. White refugee status is a con.  

Two reasons motivate Trump’s South African scam.  First, he wants to please his South African advisor, Elon Musk.  Second, to distract Americans from his dismantling of our government.  Cronyism lets him import Musk’s toadies.  “Distractionism” covers his illegal actions: kill America’s government, institute welfare for the wealthy, and line his pockets.  

Silence Trump’s executive microphone.  Make his actions visible and then make him answer for them.  Tell Congress to start checking and balancing.  We didn’t elect a king.  

Beg to differ? Agree to disagree? Post your response below using our DISQUS commenting app. Got issues of your own? Thoughtful prose on topics of general interest are welcome. Send to [email protected] for consideration.



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4 teams flying to HaBaWaBa Egypt!Waterpolo Development World

From Lignano Sabbiadoro to Somabay, to keep living the HaBaWaBa dream. This is the journey the teams classified at 2nd and 3rd places in Gold U9 and U11 tournaments of HaBaWaBa International Festival 2025 will take: Italian Bogliasco, Rapallo Sharks, San Mauro Squali, and Montenegrin Primorac 1 will fly to HaBaWaBa Egypt thanks to the generous […]

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From Lignano Sabbiadoro to Somabay, to keep living the HaBaWaBa dream. This is the journey the teams classified at 2nd and 3rd places in Gold U9 and U11 tournaments of HaBaWaBa International Festival 2025 will take: Italian Bogliasco, Rapallo Sharks, San Mauro Squali, and Montenegrin Primorac 1 will fly to HaBaWaBa Egypt thanks to the generous and exciting initiative by Mindset For Sport Development, the partner of Waterpolo Development which will organize the 1st Egyptian stage of the HaBaWaBa International Circuit. The event is scheduled on December 18-22, 2025, in Somabay, a magnificent venue on the Red Sea.

Montenegrin Primorac 1, 3rd in U11 HaBaWaBa 2025. Above Italian San Mauro Sharks, who got the 2nd place (ph. Giacomello).

Montenegrin Primorac 1, 3rd in U11 HaBaWaBa 2025, between Fouad Luxor and Ezz Nour. Above, Italian San Mauro Sharks, who got the 2nd place (ph. Giacomello).

Mindset will pay for flight and accommodation and offer free participation in the tournament to 15 people (including players and coaches) from each team. This huge investment aims to promote HaBaWaBa Egypt and at the same time offers a new opportunity to the teams involved after the narrowly missed gold medal at HaBaWaBa International Festival in Lignano Sabbiadoro.

“Young athletes need access to international exposure that broadens horizons and builds confidence – Mindset Managing Partner Fouad Luxor stated – Waterpolo gives them the opportuinity to gain valuable exposure and experience through travel and cultural exchange”. “Waterpolo taught me discipline, resilience, and teamwork – Mindset Founder & CEO Ezz Nour added -. We are focused on building the character and mindset of young atheletes to thrive in and beyond the pool. We are developing a community that is perpeared for the challenges of both sport and life”. 

Waterpolo Development congratulates the award-winning teams and extends special thanks to Mindset for their efforts to ensure that HaBaWaBa Egypt becomes another great success for the HaBaWaBa community.

***

 

Click here for further infos about HaBaWaBa

 



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Former Baylor VB star Lauren Briseño competing for Team USA in VNL

ANAHEIM, California (KWTX) – Former Baylor volleyball libero, Lauren Briseño, has been competing for Team USA in the Volleyball Nations League. “I’m just so full of gratitude,” said Briseno. “And just getting the opportunity to be here and just getting to play with people who I’ve really looked up to for the past several years […]

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ANAHEIM, California (KWTX) – Former Baylor volleyball libero, Lauren Briseño, has been competing for Team USA in the Volleyball Nations League.

“I’m just so full of gratitude,” said Briseno. “And just getting the opportunity to be here and just getting to play with people who I’ve really looked up to for the past several years and for as long as I’ve been watching volleyball.”

The team consists of 43 of the best volleyball players in the country. Avery Skinner, another former Bear and a recent Olympic Silver Medalist, is also on the USA roster.

“She is just, like, my volleyball hero,” said Briseño. “Truly, this is what it’s all about. And just getting to play with some incredible athletes, Olympians. It’s just such a big dream of mine and I just can’t believe that I’m here doing it.”

Team USA has already played matches in Serbia and Brazil. They’re set to play in Arlington, Texas from July 9-13. It’s not guaranteed that Briseño will get to travel to Arlington to compete, but if she does, she told KWTX it would be a “full circle moment.”

“I just think it would be so nice to have everyone there, especially like being able to see all of my hard work and really putting it on display for people to see,” said Briseño. “It would be really amazing. Hopefully, fingers crossed, I would love that.”



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County volleyball great to play for USA | News, Sports, Jobs

PITTSBURGH — It’s been a whirlwind first six months of the year for University of Pittsburgh freshman and Crestview High School volleyball great Abbey Each. After graduating early from Crestview in December, Emch early enrolled at Pittsburgh to begin honing her skills with the elite Panthers team which made it to the NCAA tournament semifinals […]

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PITTSBURGH — It’s been a whirlwind first six months of the year for University of Pittsburgh freshman and Crestview High School volleyball great Abbey Each.

After graduating early from Crestview in December, Emch early enrolled at Pittsburgh to begin honing her skills with the elite Panthers team which made it to the NCAA tournament semifinals last season.

She even got into the spring scrimmage against rival Penn State.

“I played in maybe one or two sets,” the 6-foot, 3-inch middle blocker said. “It was a super fun scrimmage.”

Her decision to enroll early immediately started paying dividends.

“I’ve learned so much already here,” Each said “I think that one of the best decisions I’ve made was to come early. There’s just so much information to learn about volleyball. Getting more adapted to the faster and quicker volleyball helped my chances.”

Early in June, Emch flew out to the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Training Center in Colorado Springs to take part in training for what possibly would be a spot on the USA U19 World Championship roster.

The national program invited 19 of the best to take part in the training and only 12 would go on to the tournament set for July 2-13 in Osijek, Croatia and Vrnjacka Banja, Serbia.

“A day or two before we left they sent out an e-mail with the roster,” Emch said. “I was so excited and I had confidence, but I wasn’t 100% sure. I just couldn’t believe it when the roster came out. I was so excited.”

She immediately called family back home in Ohio.

“It was 10:15 p.m. when the roster came out and I immediately Facetimed my parents,” Emch said. “I was so excited.”

Emch left quite a legacy at Crestview. With her in the lineup the Rebels went 102-6 in four years and didn’t lose at home. She holds all of the Rebels kill and blocks records. In 338 career sets, Emch produced 1,577 kills, a 53.6% kill rate, a .501 hit percentage, 206 aces, 791 points, 317 blocks, 732 digs and 32 assists.

But now it’s on to a much bigger challenge.

“I think I might be the one with the smallest high school, but all the girls are just so super incredible and it has been just super fun to get to know them over the past week,” Emch said.

Emch landed on Team USA via attendance at national team development programs. She said she has been going to them for about three years and attended around five or six.

“They’re just a bunch of really good athletes around the country and all the coaches are mostly college coaches,” Emch said. “Some of them work for USA Volleyball. There are also recruiters from USA Volleyball who go to the tournaments we all play at and they find the athletes they want to select and come for the national team.”

Emch said she had been on the radar for national team representation before but being at Pitt already put her over the threshold. She said she’s adapted nicely to the workout and practice schedule and the school has been helpful in putting her in the right position to take on her studies.

“I do think I have improved since January,” Emch said. “I think that just having these athletes by my side has helped me a ton and just getting to learn from the older girls and just getting to be around them every day has been such a great experience so far.”

As for the Team USA roster, Emch said she doesn’t think she played against or with any of them during club ball, but she’s familiar with some of them from past camps. The one player she is the most friendly with is Penn State’s Gabrielle Nichols, a 6-3 middle blocker from Winston Salem, North Carolina.

Emch’s European swing will start training in the Netherlands from June 26-30. She said there are several scrimmages set up with other national teams there and that’s where she’ll know more about her role on the team.

Team USA’s first game will be at 3:15 p.m. on July 2 against Spain in Osijek. USA will play Peru at 3:15 p.m. on July 3 also in Osijek. Team USA will celebrate July 4 with a 3:15 p.m. match against Poland also in Osijek. Bulgaria and Turkey will follow at 3:15 p.m. on July 6 and 7 to complete the group stage.

The top four finishers in each group advance to the round of 16 which starts on July 8.

Emch said she’s unsure if her family will able to make it to Croatia to see her play.

“We play five hours away from the nearest airport in Croatia,” Emch said. “It might be really difficult but they haven’t ruled anything out and I think they really want to go.”

Whether this leads to something like the Olympics later on down the line is up to fate, but Emch would like to try.

“It’s definitely a long road ahead but a bunch of Olympians have played on these youth teams,” Emch said. “It could be a stepping stone.”

Notes

¯ The tournament is held every two years.

¯ Team USA is the defending champion.

¯ China owns the most titles with four but hasn’t won since 2013.

¯ Brazil has three titles but hasn’t won since 2009.

¯ USA’s titles came in 2019 and 2023.

¯ Osijek also co-hosted the 2023 tournament.

¯ USA has qualified for every tournament since 2003.

¯ The tournament was originally set for July 7-20 but was moved due to a request by the hosts.

¯ VolleyballWorld.com has streaming options available.

¯ Emch will wear No. 8.



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Pride 2025 – Aidan Walsh of Sporting Pride

When Aidan Walsh stepped away from swimming and water polo as a young man, he didn’t see anyone who represented him in sport. The locker room culture, casual homophobic language dismissed as “banter,” and complete absence of visible LGBTQI+ role models created an environment where he couldn’t bring his full self to the activities he […]

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When Aidan Walsh stepped away from swimming and water polo as a young man, he didn’t see anyone who represented him in sport. The locker room culture, casual homophobic language dismissed as “banter,” and complete absence of visible LGBTQI+ role models created an environment where he couldn’t bring his full self to the activities he loved.

Fast forward to today, and Aidan is at the forefront of transforming Irish sport as a key figure with Sporting Pride, an organisation now in its ninth year of creating safer, more inclusive spaces where everyone feels they belong. Their work spans awareness campaigns, community outreach, and partnerships with Sport Ireland, national governing bodies, and local sports partnerships.

During our conversation, Aidan unpacks two groundbreaking initiatives making a real impact across Ireland. The “Let’s Get Visible” campaign encourages clubs and organisations to visibly demonstrate support during Pride Month through rainbow laces, inclusive signage, and participation in Pride events. Meanwhile, an innovative advocacy programme with Clare Sports Partnership is training local LGBTQI+ advocates to be voices for inclusion within their clubs.

We explore the power of allyship in challenging locker room culture and how having visible supporters within sports clubs creates safe spaces for LGBTQI+ athletes. Aidan emphasises how important it is for teammates to speak up when they hear homophobic language: “It’s constantly people standing up and saying that wasn’t the right thing to do.”

The conversation also highlights the thriving network of over 45 LGBTQI+ sports clubs across Ireland that provide welcoming environments where people can connect with others like themselves while enjoying the physical and mental health benefits of sport. Many of these clubs offer pathways back into sport for those who stepped away due to feeling unwelcome.

Looking ahead, Aidan envisions a sporting landscape where every young LGBTQI+ person sees someone like them in sport, whether playing, coaching, or leading, and where inclusion is embedded in how clubs operate year-round, not just during Pride Month.

Ready to become a better ally? Visit sportingpride.ie to find resources for making your sports organisation more inclusive and welcoming for all.

 

 

Digital Infrastructure Event

 

 

An event with leaders in the field looking at how Irish sporting organisations and sponsors can play at the top of their game in the Digital world. Scheduled for August 29th.  Let us know below if you are interested and we will be in touch.

 

Recent Sport for Business Podcasts

 

 

Further Reading for Sport for Business members:

Check out more of our Sport for Business coverage of Inclusion

 

WHAT’S UP NEXT?

Sport for Business is in planning for major events bringing together leaders in Irish Sport and Business across a range of subjects in the second half of the year.

On Thursday, August 29th we will host a special event looking at Digital infrastructure including the use of AI in sport..

Register your interest in joining us for this event above

Find out More about Our Sport for Business Events Programme Here

 

MEMBERSHIP AND EVENTS

Sporting Pride and all the leading sporting and business organisations in and around the world of sport are among the 300+ members of the Sport for Business community, which includes all of the leading sports and sponsors, as well as commercial and state agencies, individuals interested in our world, and an increasing number from beyond these shores taking a keen interest in Ireland.  

Find out more about becoming a member today.

Get the full benefit of a Sport for Business membership by joining us at one of our upcoming events, where sporting and business leadership come together.

Or sign up for our twice-daily bulletins to get a flavour of the material we cover.

Sign up for our News Bulletins here.

 

 



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Wildcat Reaghan Fitzpatrick signs with ACC for basketball, volleyball | News, Sports, Jobs

Courtesy Photo Reaghan Fitzpatrick, seated, signed on Thursday to play volleyball and basketball at Alpena Community College. She is pictured with her dad, Lee Fitzpatrick, brother, Sam Fitzpatrick, and mom, Amy Fitzpatrick. Courtesy Photo Reaghan Fitzpatrick, seated, signed on Thursday to play volleyball and basketball at Alpena […]

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Courtesy Photo
Reaghan Fitzpatrick, seated, signed on Thursday to play volleyball and basketball at Alpena Community College. She is pictured with her dad, Lee Fitzpatrick, brother, Sam Fitzpatrick, and mom, Amy Fitzpatrick.

Courtesy Photo Reaghan Fitzpatrick, seated, signed on Thursday to play volleyball and basketball at Alpena Community College. She is pictured with ACC Volleyball Coach Courtney Holmes, and ACC Basketball Coach Karl Momrik.

ALPENA — Reaghan Fitzpatrick joined the list of Wildcat athletes moving on to become collegiate athletes when she signed with Alpena Community College on Thursday to play basketball and volleyball in the 2025-2026 School Year.

Fitzpatrick is enrolled in Alpena High School’s Early College Program. She will be one of the first student-athletes to benefit from the efforts of ACC President Don McMaster, who was the driving force in getting legislative approval for early college student-athletes to compete in college athletics in their 13th year.

Alpena Public Schools wishes Fitzpatrick congratulations and best of luck in her collegiate career in both academics and athletics.



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Aaron Brooks, Greg Slick, Jerry Spessard and Cheryl Wilkes picked for county sports hall

The world of sports is constantly changing.The Washington County Sports Hall of Fame is going with the flow. The area’s shrine to local sports greats will induct a wide and diverse range of talent with the Class of 2025. It reflects a huge industry that isn’t just games and scores, coaches and athletes anymore. The […]

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Aaron Brooks, Greg Slick, Jerry Spessard and Cheryl Wilkes picked for county sports hall


The world of sports is constantly changing.The Washington County Sports Hall of Fame is going with the flow.

The area’s shrine to local sports greats will induct a wide and diverse range of talent with the Class of 2025. It reflects a huge industry that isn’t just games and scores, coaches and athletes anymore.

The four newest members reflect a huge impact in different realms of sports, locally, nationally and internationally.

On the athletic side, the class features an Olympic bronze medalist and his national Hall of Fame high school coach.

From the administrative side, there’s a nationally-known sports equipment inventor and a trailblazing teacher who was a major figure in the advent of girls and women’s sports in the county, which includes providing the starting point of Williamsport’s volleyball dynasty.

The group will be honored at the WCSHOF’s 37th banquet on July 19 at Elks Lodge No. 378 on Robinwood Drive in Hagerstown.

The inductees and other honorees:

Olympic medalist Aaron Brooks waves to the crowd during a community celebration at Hagerstown's Meritus Park.

Aaron Brooks

Brooks has created an international identity through his wrestling, faith and goodwill.

After vastly-successful prep and collegiate careers, Brooks represented the United States at the 2024 Paris Olympics, winning a bronze medal in wrestling as the pinnacle of his decorated career.

The North Hagerstown graduate attended Penn State and became one of only seven college wrestlers to win four NCAA titles through 2024. He posted an 89-3 record at PSU, with four Big Ten championships and four All-American honors. He went undefeated as a senior and was named Big Ten wrestler of the year.

He was the Outstanding Wrestler at the 2024 NCAA Tournament and won the Dan Hodge Trophy — wrestling’s version of the Heisman Trophy.

With a combined interest in freestyle and Greco Roman wrestling, Brooks has competed in and earned a number of national and international titles and has trained at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Brooks amassed a 163-2 record while wrestling for North Hagerstown, where he was awarded four letters and was a three-time team captain. He is a four-time Maryland State 4A-3A champion — each at different weight classes — and also won four Washington County, 4A-3A West Region and NHSCA National Championship titles. He was a two-time Hub Cup champion.

North Hagerstown wrestling coach Greg Slick speaks during the Aaron Brooks Homecoming of Hope community celebration at Meritus Park on Sept. 7, 2024.

Greg Slick

Slick turned limited playing experience into an influential coaching career by applying the lessons and disciplines learned in football, wrestling and rugby. They became the standards for coaching and life.

Slick was unable to participate in organized athletics because of job-related family relocations, until entering North Hagerstown in 1969. He lettered in football and wrestling for the Hubs and competed in open wrestling tournaments from 1975-80.

At Frostburg State, he had an injury-shortened football career. He pivoted to help create and play three years for Frostburg’s fledgling rugby program.

After his 1976 graduation, Slick returned to North to help coach football and wrestling. He was appointed the Hubs’ head wrestling coach in 1979, and the program has thrived under his reign. North has 561 victories, and has endured just seven losing records, in his 45-year tenure through 2025. Slick’s work earned a 2025 induction to the MPSSAA Wrestling Hall of Fame. Previously, he received the “Lifetime Service to Wrestling” award and entered the National Wrestling Hall of Fame in 2007.

Slick guided North to the 2014 MPSSAA 4A-3A team title, and the Hubs finished second in 2015 and third in 2016. North also has four MPSSAA state dual meet tournament berths, finishing second twice. To date, 56 North wrestlers have made the state tournament podium, including 26 who have wrestled in weight-class finals under Slick. Eight wrestlers, including Brooks, have accounted for 13 championships and 13 runner-up finishes.

In this April 2013 file photo, Jerry Spessard displays fliers about the Eagle Eye Electronic Home Plate, a device he created with the help of two faculty members from the University of Maryland.

Jerry Spessard

Spessard took his love of sports into a different direction — as an inventor and entrepreneur, creating groundbreaking products to promote athletic safety and advances worldwide.

He owns 18 patents for various sporting-equipment inventions, highlighted by his most successful product, the GameFace Sports Mask. In 2005, the infielder’s mask for facial protection became the top-selling product for girls softball in 62 countries. Since the patent protection expired, 13 companies have made versions of the mask competing with Spessard’s, which still sells millions annually.

Spessard spearheads two other revolutionary inventions. One, which is being tested, is a chest protector using tennis racket stringing principles to prevent heart injuries in lacrosse and other sports. The second is an electronic home plate, which earned Spessard two national honors.

Spessard has been recognized by Virginia Tech, his alma mater, as one of the school’s 100 top graduates in the 20th Century.

Spessard was raised in Hagerstown and spent his childhood playing through its youth baseball and basketball leagues. He played baseball and football at North Hagerstown — and was a football captain in 1966 — before playing football at Virginia Tech.

Cheryl Wilkes

Cheryl Wilkes

Wilkes has been one of the driving forces leading to the establishment, growth and success of girls and women’s sports in Williamsport and Washington County.

She began her 36-year teaching career at the advent of Title IX, the landmark federal civil rights law of 1972. It opened the doors to girls and women’s sports in Williamsport, and during her 34 years (1970-2004) at Williamsport/Springfield Middle School, Wilkes helped provide the foundation for success.

A number of Wilkes’ students have won state championships before becoming teachers and coaches who successfully carried on her influences and fundamentals to continue the grass roots growth of girls and women’s sports.

The movement expanded with the start of National Girls and Women in Sports Day, observed annually in February. In 1996, Wilkes helped create the Washington County Girls and Women in Sports Foundation, which gives recognition along with sponsor and scholarship awards.

Wilkes is a major figure behind Williamsport’s rise to volleyball prominence. She started volleyball play days at middle schools, which fostered multiple generations of Wildcat players. Those players went on to win state volleyball, track and cross country championships, along with a state basketball and softball title.

Wilkes’ influence grew through the development of the annual Springfield Middle Gymnastics Show and middle school cross country meets and volleyball tournaments. She co-organized after-school intramurals and taught swimming at Fountain Head Country Club in her earlier years.

Wilkes played sports, was a county champion and graduated Williamsport before attending High Point (N.C.) University, where she played on its first volleyball team and on the basketball squad.

Honors and scholarship awards

The WCSHOF also will present the following honors and scholarships to local administrators and high school athletes:

  • Donald Stoner Coach of the Year Award: Susanna Barnhart, Grace Academy
  • William Lightner Official of the Year Award: Steve Moyer, umpire
  • Sara “Skip” Ward Scholarship Award: Grace Ellis, Smithsburg
  • Harry L. Cunningham Jr. Scholarship Award: Brody Stratton, Hancock
  • Millie Shank Athletic Academic Scholarship: Jenna Howe, Smithsburg
  • Gregg DeLauney President’s Award Scholarship: Cassius Freeman, South Hagerstown
  • Carroll I. Reid Jr. Scholarship, sponsored by Cumberland Valley Athletic Club: Rian Johnson, North Hagerstown
  • Carroll and Virginia Reid Memorial Scholarship: Ayden Weakfall, Smithsburg & Vinny Roncone, Smithsburg
  • Jeff Scuffins Memorial Scholarship, sponsored by Cumberland Valley Athletic Club: Jakob Davidson, Boonsboro
  • Dotty Piccolomini Scholarship: To be determined

Banquet information

Doors will open at 5 p.m. on July 19. The event begins with a social hour, followed by dinner at 6. The presentation program will follow dinner.

Tickets for the ceremony are $35.

For information or to purchase tickets, contact Frank Linn at 301-730-8401 or Gregg DeLauney at 240-675-1228.

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