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Volleyball | The First Spring

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Spring isn’t the show in college volleyball. Spring is rehearsal season for fall’s curtain raising, complete with dress rehearsals in as many as four exhibition matches. Spring isn’t supposed to be the destination. But darned if Nashville’s Brentwood High School didn’t feel like the place to be to Kati Berezowitz on the evening […]

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Spring isn’t the show in college volleyball. Spring is rehearsal season for fall’s curtain raising, complete with dress rehearsals in as many as four exhibition matches. Spring isn’t supposed to be the destination. But darned if Nashville’s Brentwood High School didn’t feel like the place to be to Kati Berezowitz on the evening of March 21.

Berezowitz was supposed to be in high school gyms this spring. But not this high school gym, as Vanderbilt took the court in any sort of varsity match for the first time since 1980. A midyear enrollee from Wisconsin who completed high school in December, she spent the fall playing against rivals with names like Wetosha Central. In Brentwood’s full-to-capacity gym, the rival on the other side of the net was the University of Tennessee.

“It was honestly nothing like what I was expecting,” Berezowitz marveled some weeks later. “I was expecting maybe a half full gym—I don’t even know what I was expecting. All I know is it wasn’t that. There were so many people. The energy was amazing. The support we’ve seen around being the first team to bring volleyball back is crazy.”

Berezowitz is the youngest of three Division I volleyball-playing sisters, along with former Kentucky national champion Maddie and current Wildcat Molly. She’s also the smallest of the sisters—and most anyone else on a Division I court. Being tall isn’t a requirement for a libero/defensive specialist. Still, at 5-foot-3, she’s used to the looks that greet her when she and teammates enter a room or she wears her Vandy Volleyball gear around town. The looks that suggests someone is wondering if she’s a player or manager.

It’s tempting to define Berezowitz in comparison to others, by the sisters she has or the height she doesn’t. She’s more interested in establishing who she is and discovering what she can be. It’s why she gladly traded her senior prom for a freshman college writing seminar. And it’s why she welcomed the nervous energy, even the stage fright, bubbling up in the moments before the exhibition against the Lady Vols. She isn’t yet a starter, let alone a star. But at Vanderbilt, she isn’t following in anyone’s footsteps. With her teammates, she gets to define a program and set the standard against which others will be compared.

For Berezowitz and more than a dozen women like her, Vanderbilt was the place to be this spring. And there was no chance she was going to miss it.

“I was happy that I was still able to be the player I know how to be—I didn’t change who I am. I think the best things I bring to the court are my communication and my ability to lead. Not losing that when I got to college was a big thing for me.”

Kati Berezowitz

Shaped by a Volleyball Family

Somewhere in her family’s Burlington, Wisconsin home, there are photos of Berezowitz, not much more than 10 years old and probably stretching to reach 4 feet, standing next to Anders Nelson, still very much 6-foot-9. There is some history here.

Long before he was Vanderbilt’s head coach, Nelson encountered a family’s passion for volleyball. Some years ago, when he was still a Kentucky assistant coach, Berezowitz’s grandparents approached him in an airport. He does stand out in such settings. After reminiscing about their shared Wisconsin roots, they confided that their granddaughter Maddie wanted to play for the Wildcats. It was hardly the first time someone lobbied him on behalf of a family member. Most efforts came to nothing. But Maddie Berezowitz proved persistent, a decorated high school player who always seemed at the hub of teams that maximized their potential—winning two state titles and reaching three finals.

Maddie became an integral part of the culture at Kentucky, even without playing extensively for much of her time in Lexington. She won the NCAA Elite 90 Award for volleyball, recognizing academic achievement among student-athletes competing at the top level. She co-hosted a popular podcast with then-teammate and current Vanderbilt assistant coach Azhani Tealer. And sure enough, she was part of another championship.

“The whole family understands what it means to be on a team,” Nelson said. “Probably better than any family I’ve been able to interact with. They understand that hard work is how they get what they want—they have a really clear understanding that is how you get rewards. That’s a very cool thing and just speaks to parents who have done a terrific job.”

Maddie, Molly and Kati argued as regularly as expected of siblings—about who was the best volleyball player or athlete or a hundred other things. Also like many siblings (and including Kati’s older brother Joey, now a college basketball player), they wanted each other to succeed against everyone else. If Kati is these days determined to forge her own path, it’s because she so badly wanted to be like her sisters when she was younger. Trying to keep up with them—and get a word in edgewise—explains why, by her own admission, she’s now the loudest of the bunch. But they also taught her to be strong and selfless.

The age difference meant that was particularly true in the case of Maddie, whose entire collegiate journey played out while Kati was still in middle and high school.

“She was a good example of what it means to be a team player, and that definitely shaped my understanding of the game and college volleyball,” Berezowitz said. “Not everybody is going to be the star. Not everybody can be the star. But everybody has a role. For me, coming into Vanderbilt a semester early, it was going to be hard. But I think having her example in the back of my mind was calming.”

But there was also particular appeal to a part of the Vanderbilt opportunity that Nelson stressed with everyone he and his staff recruited—something that no other school could. Rather than being next in line elsewhere, they could be first at Vanderbilt.

Kati was a freshman in high school when Vanderbilt reinstated volleyball as its 17th varsity sport and a sophomore when Nelson was introduced as head coach. Early in the recruiting process, she recalled him saying that as much as he enjoyed coaching Maddie, this wasn’t about continuing a story. This had to be her journey.

“That was really reassuring because I know he’s not going to make me be my sister,” Berezowitz said. “He’s not going to compare me to Maddie because we’re two different people. He sees that, which is something that I really respect about him.”

Getting an Early Start

She liked everything about Vanderbilt. She connected with the coaching staff Nelson assembled, first Lauren Plum and Russell Corbelli and then, of course, a very familiar face in Tealer. Looking for a place where she could envision spending four years, volleyball aside, she loved Nashville. She just had one question for Nelson: Could she enroll early?

Midyear enrollment is an increasingly common phenomenon for student-athletes in fall sports who are looking to ease their transition to college. From early in her own high school days, Kati worked with her parents, both educators, as well as Burlington school counselors to work ahead and keep her options open.

When Nelson confirmed it was possible, she scrapped her remaining visits and committed.

In addition to Berezowitz, Kayla Dunlap, Taylor Porter and Maya Witherspoon enrolled at midyear, giving all four valuable time to adjust to college academically and socially and giving the volleyball program the necessary quorum to accelerate growth on the court.

“Our administration was really open and helpful with me wanting to get as much of our team here as possible,” said Nelson, also praising the bridge programming for midyear students put on by the Ingram Center for Student-Athlete Success. “They understood why it was so important for this group, particularly, just knowing that we were going to rely on a lot of young players in a lot of different ways.”

A Spring Unlike Any Other

Berezowitz also played softball into her high school years, but there was never much doubt as to which sport was pastime and which was passion. Both involved teamwork and camaraderie. Both provided the competitive adrenaline of winning and losing. But where softball forced her to wait innings before getting another chance after a bad at-bat or an error in the field, redemption awaited on the next point in volleyball. If you were humble enough to embrace your stumbles, you could see yourself growing from them in real time.

The deserved fuss and fanfare around the opening exhibition notwithstanding, that’s what spring volleyball is all about. It isn’t glamorous. It’s also where Berezowitz was at her most influential for a program doing everything for the first time. For all the information she had gleaned from watching her sisters, and for all the planning she put into enrolling early, college wasn’t a breeze. Still, she set the tone for a group of midyear enrollees who were anything but timid or hesitant to speak up—and not just when things were going well.

The team has weekly “intention” meetings intended to help individuals sharpen their focus on what they want to get out of the days ahead and just generally where they’re at. In one, Nelson opened the floor to discussion, and instead of the usual awkward silence familiar in such settings the world over, Berezowitz jumped in with unflinching self-criticism.

“She was very open and honest about some of her struggles and wanting to learn and grow faster than she was,” Nelson said. “She’ll look back on that and think ‘Well, yeah, everyone goes through that.’ But when you are going through it, you don’t see it like that. She was really transparent and vulnerable with her teammates about those struggles. It’s pretty mature to acknowledge those feelings, but then sharing them is another level.”

Vanderbilt’s first spring was constantly useful and occasionally revelatory. It highlighted how much of a gem the program has in Dunlap, a Nashville native and perhaps the most improved player over the course of her first semester on campus. It showcased Reese Animashaun, an integral part of the program’s original signing class, as a standout who could pass against elite serving opposition and whose skills grew across the board.

Early enrollee and Nashville native Kayla Dunlap earned rave reviews in her first spring (Vanderbilt Athletics). 

But as much as the highlight-reel moments and star turns, Vanderbilt had to find out if the culture seeded over a short period of time had taken root. The Commodores had to show they could learn from the sometimes humbling tests that come with competing for playing time and facing another team across the net, even in matches that don’t count.

They needed to embrace all those things that Berezowitz has always loved about the sport and the rewards it affords those humble enough to learn.

Berezowitz and her teammates sign autographs following Vanderbilt’s spring match against Purdue in Fishers, Ind. (Vanderbilt Athletics). 

By the end of the semester, she started to see the gains for her perseverance, her passing skills and strong platform coming to the fore. Now it’s up to her to continue working on her own before the team reconvenes for a summer trip to Asia.

“I was happy that I was still able to be the player I know how to be—I didn’t change who I am,” Berezowitz said. “I think the best things I bring to the court are my communication and my ability to lead. Not losing that when I got to college was a big thing for me. If anything, I grew because I played with different players, different situations, different roles.”

The Place to Be First

Berezowitz’s past few months were a whirlwind. There was the first day on her own after her parents departed and her first volleyball practice. There was her first college class—English composition. There was the first midterm that didn’t go quite as well as she hoped—and the first final that did. There was also, of course, the first match against Tennessee.

Amid it all, there was also the first night when it all felt like it made sense.

Initially, she tried hard to fit in and be what a college student-athlete was supposed to be. Whatever that was. Mostly, it was exhausting. Then a teammate texted her one evening that a bunch of them were hanging out in one of their rooms. She should come by. They had practice the next morning, but as the hours crept past, no one moved to call it a night.

She could have been at home in Wisconsin, with someone else to do the laundry and an easy senior spring to coast through in school. But it wouldn’t have felt like this.

“I think that that’s when I really started to feel like I belonged,” Berezowitz said. “I started to connect with the girls on a deeper level. Honestly, that was my favorite memory, which is weird because we weren’t even doing anything fun or crazy. We were sitting in a dorm talking, But I think that’s where I became friends with all of them.”

The first official match looms in August. And there will be more firsts for Vanderbilt volleyball in the years to come—the first SEC victory, the first postseason match, maybe even the first national championship somewhere down the road. They will be earned by women who dare to lead the program forward, following in the footsteps of a group who came through the first spring and walked onto that Brentwood court.

“One of the coolest parts of the experience was the little girls wearing Vandy volleyball shirts—I had a lot of girls come up to me after the game asking for pictures,” Berezowitz said. “I never expected it to be like this. It was super, super cool. I’m looking forward to kids in Nashville being able to look up to us and try to play for Vandy volleyball one day. I think it’s really cool that we can pave the way for Nashville volleyball.”

Photos by Alondra Munoz Sandoval, Joe Howell and Pilar Ballough.





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Chargers, Texans, Jaguars, Colts, Ravens, Patriots

The Chargers announced two promotions and two new hires earlier this month in their front office. In the scouting department, Mike Jasinski was promoted to national scout, Jaylen Bannerman-Oden was promoted to area scout, and Kevin Weidl was hired as a national scout. In analytics, Maya Harvey was hired as a football systems developer. Jasinski […]

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The Chargers announced two promotions and two new hires earlier this month in their front office. In the scouting department, Mike Jasinski was promoted to national scout, Jaylen Bannerman-Oden was promoted to area scout, and Kevin Weidl was hired as a national scout. In analytics, Maya Harvey was hired as a football systems developer.

Jasinski has been with the Chargers since 2018, when he joined the team as a combine area scout after recruiting roles at Purdue and Northwestern. In two years, Los Angeles promoted him to an area scouting role, in which he covered the northeast area for two years and the plains area for the past three. The son of Titans pass game coordinator & cornerbacks coach Tony Oden, Bannerman-Oden entered the NFL as a video intern and external scouting game charter for the Browns in 2020. He joined the Chargers the next year as a pro scouting/operations intern and worked two years after that as a scouting assistant before getting promoted to college & pro scout last year.

Weidl reunites with second-year general manager Joe Hortiz, coming from Hortiz’s old team in Baltimore. Weidl ended an eight-year stretch with the Ravens, in which time he served as a southeast/southwest area scout for four years and a southeast/midwest area scout for the other four. Before arriving in Baltimore, Weidl spent 10 years with ESPN Scouts Inc.

Harvey earns her new job after working as a fellow for the Chargers during the final year of her computer science degree program (with a concentration on human computer interaction) at Stanford last year. In addition to her computer science background, Harvey was an athlete for the Cardinal, lettering all four years in beach volleyball.

Here are a few other staff updates from around the AFC:

  • The Texans were the other team to make multiple additions in the month of June. In the front office, Aaron Wilson of KPRC 2 tells us that Mack Marrone has joined the staff as a scouting and administration assistant. The son of Patriots offensive line coach Doug Marrone, Marrone debuts in the NFL after finishing a collegiate playing career as a linebacker at Colgate. The second addition in Houston was Will Stokes who joins the analytics department as a football data analyst, according to Neil Stratton of SucceedinFootball.com. Stokes worked last summer as a football data analyst with the Commanders.
  • Jon Dykema can’t seem to keep away from the NFL. Four months after leaving the Lions to serve as Michigan State’s executive senior associate athletic director and assistant general counsel, Matt Zenitz of 247Sports reports that Dykema is expected to be hired by the Jaguars. His role in Jacksonville is not year known, but his 14 years in Detroit were spent as the team’s director of football compliance.
  • Per Stratton, the Colts have promoted Greg Liverpool III to midlands area scout. He began in football working recruiting internships throughout his education at Coastal Carolina and served internships for the Colts doing operations during training camps in 2021 and 2022 and for the NFL Scouting Combine in 2022. In 2023, he joined Indianapolis in a full-time role, serving as a scouting assistant until this promotion.
  • The Ravens have hired Ramon Ruiz away from Rutgers, according to Zenitz. Most recently serving as the Scarlet Knights director of recruiting, Ruiz has reportedly been a key contributor to head coach Greg Schiano‘s turnaround of the Rutgers football program, helping the team to winning records in back-to-back seasons for the first time in 12 years. Jeff Zrebiec of The Athletic adds that Ruiz’s title with the team will be player personnel assistant.
  • Lastly, ESPN’s Seth Walder tells us that the Patriots have hired Max Mulitz as personnel analytics coordinator. Mulitz came to the NFL as a full-time intern in the Eagles’ data research department in 2015. Three years later, the Dolphins hired him as a football analyst and promoted him to manager of coaching analytics after just a year. He held the position for four seasons before parting ways with Miami in March. Mulitz joins Ekene Olekanma as the second analytics hire for New England this month.





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Lion volleyball team adds three newcomers

The East Texas A&M University Volleyball Team has announced the additions of three new players for the 2025 season. The new players are (from left) Courtney Green, Katelyn Pritchard and Zoe Ruskofsky Lion Athletics Photos The East Texas A&M University Volleyball Team has announced the additions of three new players for the 2025 season. The […]

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  • The East Texas A&M University Volleyball Team has announced the additions of three new players for the 2025 season. The new players are (from left) Courtney Green, Katelyn Pritchard and Zoe Ruskofsky Lion Athletics Photos

    The East Texas A&M University Volleyball Team has announced the additions of three new players for the 2025 season. The new players are (from left) Courtney Green, Katelyn Pritchard and Zoe Ruskofsky Lion Athletics Photos

    The East Texas A&M University Volleyball Team has announced the additions of three new players for the 2025 season. The new players are (from left) Courtney Green, Katelyn Pritchard and Zoe Ruskofsky Lion Athletics Photos

COMMERCE — The East Texas A&M University volleyball program has announced three additions to the 2025 roster.Third year coach Joe Morales has added two transfers and an incoming freshman to the squad in 2025. The transfers are Courtney Green from Oregon Tech and Zoe Ruskofsky from Coalinga College. Katelyn Pritchard joins the Lions as a freshman from McAllen.’I am excited ab…

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State Games of Mississippi continue in the Queen City

MERIDIAN, Miss. (WTOK) – Several State Games of Mississippi events were held in the Queen City on Saturday. Cycling/Time Trials kicked things off at 7 AM on Saturday, as several riders were out and about competing in the heat and humidity. For the first time, Chess was added as a competition, and multiple competitors showed […]

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MERIDIAN, Miss. (WTOK) – Several State Games of Mississippi events were held in the Queen City on Saturday.

Cycling/Time Trials kicked things off at 7 AM on Saturday, as several riders were out and about competing in the heat and humidity.

For the first time, Chess was added as a competition, and multiple competitors showed up.

“A lot of people don’t consider chess to be a sport. They see you sitting there and just moving pieces, but there have been biometrics measured. They’ve measured the heart rate, pulse rate, and respiration rate of Grand Masters at chess tournaments, and they’ve found that they burn as many calories as tennis players. While some people don’t consider chess a sport, it indeed is physically draining. All the thought process and everything behind it. We’re excited to add chess to the State Games today,” Tournament Director Lizabeth Thrasher said.

The Beach Volleyball Competitions were moved due to all the rain our area has experienced, but the competition was still fierce.

“You know, a lot of the guys that are on the lower net down there have played Men’s Open at some point in their life, traveled around a lot. Judd Smith is here. He’s the owner of Bulldog Beach, so we’re happy to have him back from Florida. So there’s a lot of talent on that lower court right now. And then the co-ed teams and the women’s teams, we’ve got two college players right now that are playing on the co-ed net… college female players, a beach player and an indoor player, so there’s a lot of talent out here today,” Beach Volleyball Commissioner Doug Everett said.

Out at the Northeast Park Soccer Complex, teams from all over the Magnolia State came and competed in the 7v7 High School Soccer Event.

“State Games 7v7 has been running for a long time, and we’re glad to have all the team support. We’ve got teams from Picayune, Moss Point, and some local teams [such as] West Lauderdale Boys and Girls, and Meridian High are here. It’s just a great opportunity for the local teams to play some teams that don’t normally play,” 7v7 High School Soccer Commissioner Matt Castleberry said.

The Lauderdale County Agricultural Center held the State Games Equestrian events on Saturday, and riders of all ages competed in the events!

“It means everybody’s interested in it again. It’s growing again. It had slacked off for a while, but now it’s coming back. It means more money from Meridian, more shows here, more money for them, more money for us, and a greater diversity of horses,” Equestrian Events Commissioner Scott Thomas said.

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ALMONT VOLLEYBALL YOUTH CAMP – The County Press

ALMONT — The Almont varsity volleyball team and coaches ended a week of fun Thursday capping off their annual youth volleyball camp that ran Monday-Thursday at the high school. New varsity coach Michelle Wangler, along with assistant coach Cortney Kendall, stressed not hitting the ball as hard as you can, rather, hitting it up, out […]

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ALMONT — The Almont varsity volleyball team and coaches ended a week of fun Thursday capping off their annual youth volleyball camp that ran Monday-Thursday at the high school. New varsity coach Michelle Wangler, along with assistant coach Cortney Kendall, stressed not hitting the ball as hard as you can, rather, hitting it up, out and fast to serve across […]





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Sports on TV for Sunday, June 22 -newspressnow.com

By The Associated Press (All times Eastern)Schedule subject to change and/or blackoutsSunday, June 22AUTO RACING 7:30 a.m. FS1 — FIM MotoGP: The Brembo Grand Prix of Italy, Tuscany, Italy 10 a.m. FS1 — NTT IndyCar Series: Warmup, Road America, Elkhart Lake, Wis. 11 a.m. FS1 — NXT IndyCar Series: The Grand Prix at Road America, […]

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By The Associated Press

(All times Eastern)
Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts
Sunday, June 22
AUTO RACING

7:30 a.m.

FS1 — FIM MotoGP: The Brembo Grand Prix of Italy, Tuscany, Italy

10 a.m.

FS1 — NTT IndyCar Series: Warmup, Road America, Elkhart Lake, Wis.

11 a.m.

FS1 — NXT IndyCar Series: The Grand Prix at Road America, Road America, Elkhart Lake, Wis.

Noon

CBS — ABB FIA Formula-E: The Jakarta Grand Prix – Round 12, North Jakarta, Indonesia (Taped)

NBC — IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship: The Saleh’s Six Hours of Glen, Watkins Glen International, Watkins Glen, N.Y.

1:30 p.m.

FOX — NTT IndyCar Series: The Xpel Grand Prix at Road America, Road America, Elkhart Lake, Wis.

2 p.m.

FS1 — NHRA: Qualifying, Virginia Motorsports Park, North Dinwiddie, Va. (Taped)

PRIME VIDEO — NASCAR Cup Series: The Great American Getaway 400 Presented by VISITPA.COM, Pocono Raceway, Long Pond, Pa.

4 p.m.

CBSSN — FIM Motocross: The MX2, Matterly Basin, Great Britain (Taped)

FOX — NHRA: The Virginia NHRA Nationals, Virginia Motorsports Park, North Dinwiddie, Va.

5 p.m.

CBSSN — FIM Motocross: The MXGP, Matterly Basin, Great Britain (Taped)

BEACH VOLLEYBALL

1 p.m.

CBSSN — AVP League: Week 4 – Day 2, East Hampton, N.Y.

3 p.m.

CW — AVP League: Week 4 – Day 2, East Hampton, N.Y.

BIG3 BASKETBALL

1 p.m.

CBS — Week 2: Detroit Amps vs. Miami 305, Boston Ball Hogs vs. DMV Trilogy, Houston Rig Hands vs. Chicago Triplets, L.A. Riot vs. Dallas Power, Baltimore

COLLEGE BASEBALL

2:30 p.m.

ABC — Men’s College World Series – Final: LSU vs. Coastal Carolina, Game 2, Omaha, Neb.

ESPNU — Men’s College World Series – Final: LSU vs. Coastal Carolina, Game 2, Omaha, Neb. (UmpCast)

GOLF

1 p.m.

GOLF — PGA Tour: The Travelers Championship, Final Round, TPC River Highlands, Cromwell, Conn.

3 p.m.

CBS — PGA Tour: The Travelers Championship, Final Round, TPC River Highlands, Cromwell, Conn.

GOLF — PGA Tour Champions: The Kaulig Companies Championship, Final Round, Firestone Country Club South Course, Akron, Ohio

NBC — LPGA Tour: The 2025 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship: Final Round, Fields Ranch East at PGA Frisco, Frisco, Texas

HORSE RACING

12:30 p.m.

FS1 — NYRA: America’s Day at the Races

2 p.m.

FS2 — NYRA: America’s Day at the Races

4 p.m.

FS1 — NYRA: America’s Day at the Races

LACROSSE (MEN’S)

Noon

ABC — PLL: Utah vs. Denver, Baltimore

MLB BASEBALL

1:30 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Texas at Pittsburgh (1:35 p.m.) OR Atlanta at Miami (1:40 p.m.)

4:30 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Kansas City at San Diego (4:10 p.m.) OR Boston at San Francisco (4:05 p.m.)

7 p.m.

ESPN — N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia

ESPN2 — N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia (StatCast)

NBA BASKETBALL

8 p.m.

ABC — NBA Finals: Indiana at Oklahoma City, Game 7

SOCCER (MEN’S)

3 p.m.

TNT — FIFA Club World Cup Group Stage: Real Madrid vs. CF Pachuca, Group H, Charlotte, N.C.

TRUTV — FIFA Club World Cup Group Stage: Real Madrid vs. CF Pachuca, Group H, Charlotte, N.C.

7 p.m.

FOX — CONCACAF Gold Cup Group Stage: U.S. vs. Haiti, Group D, Arlington, Texas

FS1 — CONCACAF Gold Cup Group Stage: Saudi Arabia vs. Trinidad and Tobago, Group D, Las Vegas

9 p.m.

TNT — FIFA Club World Cup Group Stage: Manchester City vs. Al Ain FC, Group G, Atlanta

TRUTV — FIFA Club World Cup Group Stage: Manchester City vs. Al Ain FC, Group G, Atlanta

10 p.m.

FS1 — CONCACAF Gold Cup Group Stage: Mexico vs. Costa Rica, Group A, Las Vegas

FS2 — CONCACAF Gold Cup Group Stage: Dominican Republic vs. Suriname, Group A, Arlington, Texas

SOCCER (WOMEN’S)

10 p.m.

CBSSN — NWSL: Washington at San Diego

SOFTBALL

7 p.m.

ESPNU — Athletes Unlimited: Talons vs. Volts, Norman, Okla.

TENNIS

6 a.m.

TENNIS — London-ATP, Halle-ATP, Berlin-WTA, Nottingham-WTA Finals

11:30 a.m.

TENNIS — Bad Hoburg-WTA Early Rounds

5:30 a.m. (Monday)

TENNIS — Eastbourne-ATP/WTA, Mallorca-ATP, Bad Homburg-WTA Early Rounds

6 a.m. (Monday)

TENNIS — Eastbourne-ATP/WTA, Mallorca-ATP, Bad Homburg-WTA Early Rounds

VOLLEYBALL (WOMEN’S)

10:30 a.m.

CBSSN — FIVB Nations League Pool Play: France vs. U.S., Pool 6, Belgrade, Serbia

WNBA BASKETBALL

3 p.m.

ESPN — Indiana at Las Vegas

7 p.m.

NBATV — New York at Seattle

_____



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Carcarey Earns Silver Medal with Team USA at U20 Water Polo World Championships

Jon Carcarey, a rising junior at Pepperdine University, secured a silver medal with Team USA at the U20 Water Polo World Championships in Croatia, marking the nation’s best finish ever at this level. The team advanced to the championship match after a dramatic penalty shootout win against Serbia and a tight semifinal victory over Hungary, […]

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Jon Carcarey, a rising junior at Pepperdine University, secured a silver medal with Team USA at the U20 Water Polo World Championships in Croatia, marking the nation’s best finish ever at this level. The team advanced to the championship match after a dramatic penalty shootout win against Serbia and a tight semifinal victory over Hungary, with Carcarey contributing four goals throughout the tournament. The U.S. began the competition with losses against Croatia and Hungary but rebounded by defeating Montenegro and Iran in knockout stages. In the final match, they faced Spain but were edged out 14-11. This achievement marks only the second medal for the U.S. in the tournament’s history.

By the Numbers

  • The U.S. finished with a silver medal, the highest-ever at a Junior World Championship.
  • Carcarey scored four goals during the tournament, including three against Hungary.

State of Play

  • Team USA started the tournament with a 19-10 loss to Croatia and a 13-12 defeat to Hungary.
  • They rebounded by defeating Montenegro (16-10) and Iran (23-5), leading to a quarterfinal win over Serbia.

What’s Next

Carcarey will return to Pepperdine, where he has a total of 60 goals over two previous seasons. The Waves are set to begin their next season at the Triton Invite in San Diego from August 30-31.

Bottom Line

Carcarey’s performance at the U20 World Championships not only highlights his personal achievements but also signals a rising trajectory for U.S. water polo on the international stage, making it a pivotal moment for future competitions.





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