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Angel City's jump from Hollywood brand to good NWSL team

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Angel City's jump from Hollywood brand to good NWSL team

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — On a typically warm, sunny spring day in Southern California, Angel City FC sporting director Mark Parsons made it clear that he wasn’t interested in doing things normally. Why? Because Angel City FC is not just another club.

Parsons requested to move his interview with ESPN from the team’s news conference room to his office down the hall, where a slideshow presentation being projected onto the wall answered most conceivable questions about Angel City’s future. The interviewee had become the host, a subtle metaphor for how one of the world’s most famous women’s soccer teams is trying to take control of its own narrative on the field.

The presentation to ESPN was the same one, minus a few confidential pages, that Parsons had recently given to players and staff upon taking the job in January. His mission — and the reason the club hired him — is relatively simply laid out in the first slide: “Be world leaders in women’s soccer on and off the field.”

Indisputably, Angel City has quickly built a recognizable brand with its off-field moves since launching five years ago.

The Los Angeles-based NWSL franchise made a splash with a celebrity ownership group that includes Hollywood actress Natalie Portman, tennis icon Serena Williams, and pop star Becky G. The team broke ticket and sponsorship records before players kicked a ball in a competitive match. The team made headlines by mandating that all sponsors dedicate 10% of their deals to local philanthropy. Last year’s sale of the team at a $250 million valuation made it the most valuable women’s sports franchise in the world.

Success on the soccer field, however, is yet to follow. The team has never won a playoff game and has made it to the postseason only once in three attempts. Last year’s 12th-place finish was further marred by the first points deduction in NWSL history as punishment for salary cap violations. The team’s general manager and head coach exited four days apart in the offseason.

The most consistent on-field characteristic of Angel City in its early years was the inconsistency of the team’s performances. It’s a striking juxtaposition: The team with the most defined off-field brand in women’s soccer lacked any distinguishable identity on the field.

Parsons, a 38-year-old NWSL championship-winning coach, must find solutions to that problem. He is also only one new character in a wider Hollywood reboot.

New head coach Alexander Straus will arrive in L.A. next month after winning three straight Frauen-Bundesliga titles with Bayern Munich. U.S. women’s national team forward Alyssa Thompson is playing at MVP levels to lead a young, rejuvenated roster. And new majority owners Willow Bay and Bob Iger (CEO of Disney, which owns ESPN) have injected both historic cash and refreshing optimism into the entire operation, according to those throughout the building.

Early-season results have begun to follow. Angel City’s 4-3 road victory on May 2 over the Washington Spirit, last year’s championship runners-up, was one of the franchise’s signature victories. A goal deep in stoppage time by forward Riley Tiernan — a non-roster invitee who ranks second in the league in goals — embodied the developing grittiness of the team, a trait that had too often been lacking during late-game collapses of yesteryear.

Still, Angel City hasn’t won anything yet — and there lies the challenge. Los Angeles is a city defined by winners, like the NBA’s Lakers and MLB’s Dodgers. All the great work being done off the field only goes so far if Angel City is just a mid-table team every year.

“When things happen [here], it ripples,” Parsons told ESPN. “We haven’t even won trophies yet. Imagine what’s going to happen when we win trophies.

“I think we have a responsibility to win because people copy sports teams that win. [NBA star] Steph Curry starts shooting from wherever, everyone starts shooting from wherever. Angel City wins, what’s everyone going to start doing? They’re going to empower female athletes. They’re going to be rooted in the community and make a difference in their cities.”

Angel City has built one of the best off-field brands in global women’s soccer. Is building success on the field finally next? Meg Oliphant/NWSL via Getty ImagesParsons said he has “no doubt we have the ability to be winning trophies within the next three years,” but the margins are thin between success and failure in the ultra-competitive NWSL.On and off the field, Angel City is at an inflection point — and the business is inherently interwoven with soccer. Both aspects of the team recently hit the reset button.A major shake-up in ownership, and a new directionAngel City redefined standards within the NWSL and drew global media praise for being an innovative, progressive brand.But different didn’t mean perfect. The ownership group had no background in sports. The team was set up more like a startup tech company, a structure that created conflict behind the scenes as the team spent more money than any competitor.Julie Uhrman, now the team’s CEO, co-founded Angel City alongside Portman and venture capitalist Kara Nortman. After receiving over a hundred rejections from traditional investors (according to Uhrman), the group connected with Alexis Ohanian, the co-founder of Reddit and husband of Serena Williams. Ohanian had attended the 2019 Women’s World Cup in France and grew interested in owning an NWSL team.Ohanian invested millions and became Angel City’s principal owner, but he did not structure the deal to give himself control of the team’s board. The setup created an awkward power vacuum — at one point, he was a representative on the NWSL’s board of governors, but had to fund decisions with which he did not necessarily agree. In a post on X last year around the time of Angel City’s sale, Ohanian called the mistake “one of the many hard lessons I learned as a first-time sports team owner.”Turmoil spilled into the public eye last year as reports from the Los Angeles Times and Wall Street Journal detailed infighting at the club. The combination of disagreements and growing financial needs ultimately led Angel City to look for a new control owner in a process that intensified in early 2024, sources confirmed to ESPN.Uhrman argues that the tension was overplayed. “I think the biggest misnomer is there was a lot more alignment within Angel City than what was reported,” Uhrman told ESPN in April, but the need for change was clear as the team sought more money to continue on its ambitious path. “Angel City was built differently. We were built like a startup,” Uhrman said.Angel City’s three founders — from left, actor Natalie Portman, team president Julie Uhrman and investor Kara Nortman — sit down for a media interview in 2023. Allison Zaucha/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesIn the past, Angel City made cash calls or sought external funding to keep up with their needs, but Uhrman said “the conversation changed” in the last round of discussions as investors expressed interest in becoming more involved and obtaining more equity.Uhrman said one of her biggest lessons from the team’s first season was “the immense amount of work” and detail that goes into developing a playing style and philosophy. “Those are things that we could have done in advance, that we had the time to do, that we just didn’t do,” she said.”The other thing that was a really big learning was the true amount of investment needed to build a high-performance culture, staff and team is significantly more than was ever invested in any club within the NWSL when we joined,” she said. “When we joined, we had the largest sporting staff at the time. We were the only staff with a dedicated player care representative. So, we felt like we went above and beyond what the other clubs had done. But the reality was that, actually, it wasn’t enough still.”All of which set the table for Bay and Iger to take over controlling interest of the team — and, crucially, for Bay to have full control of Angel City’s board of directors.Uhrman recently shifted to her CEO role from president, and Carmen Bona was hired to become the team’s president of business operations, a newly created role.Ohanian said multiple times last year that he was not selling any shares in the team. His percentage of ownership decreased by dilution after Bay and Iger took over shares of the team from others in Angel City’s horde of initial investors, a source with knowledge of the situation confirmed.The drama played out more publicly than Angel City executives would have liked, but by all accounts, from personnel and sources across the club, there is an optimistic feeling that Angel City is in its best place to date, which has allowed the team to focus more intensely on how to start winning on the field.A new training facility is the most tangible recent proof of change. The team ditched the temporary trailers it had used since its inaugural season to move across the parking lot at Cal Lutheran University and take over a building previously occupied by the L.A. Rams.Even that is a temporary solution — it’s a four-year agreement, although Uhrman said discussions are underway to stay there — but it is also a major step forward. The 50,000-square-foot space is the largest training facility in the NWSL. Plans for the move were already in motion, but they needed funding from Bay and Iger, who committed to spending another initial $50 million post-acquisition.”The reality is, the second the players saw this performance center and realized that Angel City had delivered on its promises — actually overdelivered and provided them something that they feel that they deserved and is above and beyond what they’ve experienced anywhere else — it did feel like a page turn for us,” Uhrman told ESPN.Uhrman conceded that the off-field brand and on-field product must co-exist. There are early signs of progress.Early signs of Angel City’s progress on the fieldNearly eight minutes of stoppage time had gone by at Audi Field in Washington, D.C., on May 2 when Tiernan smashed the ball into the back of the net for the dramatic game-winning goal against the Spirit.Tiernan is arguably the best story in the NWSL right now. She was a non-roster invitee who earned a contract and the starting forward role for Angel City. Tiernan’s late goal at Audi Field was her second of the game and fifth in five games, bringing her to second in the league scoring table at the time.Parsons pointed at Tiernan as proof of what’s being built in L.A.: a team focused on winning. “The biggest driver of culture is how you pick a team,” said Parsons, who won an NWSL championship and two NWSL Shields as head coach of the Portland Thorns.”When you don’t do that [choose players on merit], and you pick people because you think they’re going to be good, that’s the biggest thing that will rip a culture apart.”Parsons’ point is implicit but important: L.A. is a city obsessed with stars, but making decisions based solely on external expectations is a recipe for disaster. Angel City learned the hard way in 2021 when it went to hire its first coach.The team’s previous technical leaders identified North Carolina Courage head coach Sean Nahas as the best available candidate for their needs, but after that news leaked, fans expressed outrage that Angel City, whose brand was built around equity for women, would hire a man for the job. Angel City changed course, and while it is impossible to say what could have been if the team stuck to its process, the incident was an early example of both the external brand conflicting with the soccer product, and the team allowing its identity to be shaped by someone else.

Christen Press joined Angel City when it launched in 2022 and brought star power to the team, but has played a smaller role this season. Katharine Lotze/Getty ImagesEvery decision made by interim head coach Sam Laity and the technical staff, which Parsons leads, shapes the new identity they are attempting to build.Angel City still has star power, including two-time World Cup winner Christen Press, who at 36 and post-ACL recovery has been limited to limited reserve opportunities thus far this year. Tiernan was a nobody, but she earned the starting No. 9 job and the right to keep it through her play. Others, like fellow rookie midfielder Macey Hodge, have done the same.

In his presentation to ESPN, Parsons shared five attacking metrics and six defensive metrics that he feels, in his decade-plus involved in the NWSL, lead to success in the league. Each successful team thrives in those metrics through different playing styles, he said, but the end goal must be to win these key areas that range from non-penalty expected goals, to distance of defensive pressure from goal and “wide box area” goals, which are a trend in the women’s game lately.

“I believe that to build a club you have to be very clear on identity — very clear,” Parsons told ESPN. “That identity also has to match your culture and the community of the area that you’re in. Your identity also has to lead you to the things that you need to do to win in this competitive league.”

He confirmed what he already suspected from afar about Angel City and the L.A. culture by asking people like Bay and Uhrman — who are not “soccer people” but are a snapshot of the fan base — what they want to see from the team.

“This city is about excitement, energy, winning, scoring,” he said in summary. A team in L.A. needs to win, but it needs to do so in style. That means out-possessing the opponent and applying pressure higher up the field.

STREAM FUTBOL W ON ESPN+Ali Krieger, Cristina Alexander and Jeff Kassouf debate the biggest storylines and break down the best highlights from women’s soccer in the Americas. Stream on ESPN+ (U.S. only)

Angel City has done that at times this season, including in that important victory over Washington. Still, the telltale signs of a project in its infancy remain. As good as Angel City has looked at times, the team has still collapsed in games and conceded 16 goals, tied for second worst in the league. The win over the Spirit was preceded by a 3-2 loss to the Orlando Pride that saw Angel City blow a 2-0 lead late, and getting thrashed 4-0 by NJ/NY Gotham FC in LA.

Parsons points to those three teams and the Kansas City Current — last year’s top four finishers — as the model for Angel City’s arc. All four were at or near the bottom of the table in recent years before rebuilding to become champions or contenders.

Uhrman said she wants a home playoff game this year. Parsons would love that too, he said, but also knows that winning a trophy in 2025, at this stage of the team’s development “is not logical” if you look at those four teams as an example.

“We want to be a legacy off the pitch and a dynasty on the pitch,” Uhrman told ESPN. “That’s not one championship — that’s many. I believe we are laying the foundation today with our staff and our facilities, our coaching decisions, our player decisions.”

Change is still in progress. Straus won’t arrive as head coach until June, meaning he will have only about half the season to work with the team. Straus will be tasked with showing the players how they get to the point of achieving those dreams. “My job is to make us dream a little bit,” Parsons said of setting the high-level goals as sporting director.

Angel City is still in that dream stage, a startup wading its way out of some hard early lessons. Which direction it heads next will determine whether it inserts itself into LA lure, or risks being just another club.

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Waverly Senior Sophia D. Commits to Sarah Lawrence College Volleyball

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The Waverly School proudly congratulates senior Sophia D. on her commitment to play collegiate volleyball at Sarah Lawrence College this fall. Sophia officially celebrated her signing at Waverly’s fall athletics lunch in December, surrounded by her teammates and fellow fall student-athletes.

Sophia’s achievement reflects years of hard work, dedication, and the leadership she brings to Waverly’s athletic community. Through Waverly’s athletics program, students grow not only as competitors, but also as leaders—developing teamwork, resilience, time management, and confidence within a culture that values sportsmanship, balance, and personal growth.

Congratulations, Sophia. Waverly looks forward to cheering you on as you take this exciting next step in your athletic and academic journey.

The Waverly School, 67 W. Bellevue Drive, Pasadena, (626) 792-5940 or visit thewaverlyschool.org.

 

 

 



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Men’s volleyball set to replicate success with new lineup, rotation in 2026 season

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The only thing worse than losing might be finishing second.

But with last season’s national championship loss in the rearview mirror, all sights are now set on the 2026 campaign.

No. 1 UCLA men’s volleyball (2-0, 1-0 MPSF) welcomed its new season with two straight sweeps against No. 15 McKendree (0-2) and Concordia (0-2, 0-1) on Friday and Sunday, respectively, at Pauley Pavilion.

Although several key members of last season’s championship run have departed, including 2025 MPSF Player of the Year Cooper Robinson, the Bruins are confident in their ability to replicate previous successes.

“The locker room’s fun,” said sophomore outside hitter Sean Kelly. “I think we have great team chemistry this year, and we’re really getting better every day.”

(Ruby Galbraith/Daily Bruin)
Sophomore outside hitter Sean Kelly rises to serve the ball. (Ruby Galbraith/Daily Bruin)

Kelly tallied 142 total kills on a .323 clip while making 14 starts during the 2025 season to earn a spot on the MPSF All-Freshman Team. He opened 2026 with eight kills against McKendree on a .571 success rate. His four kills in the first set against Concordia helped propel the team to a 25-13 set victory – the fewest points allowed by UCLA in a non-deciding set since January 2025.

Alongside Kelly in the offensive are seniors outside hitter Zach Rama and setter Andrew Rowan. Over the opening two victories, Rama led the team with 27 total kills on a .420 hitting percentage, while Rowan added an efficient 12.67 assists per set.

With both entering their final year as Bruins, they understand the increased leadership role they will play throughout the season.

“We got a lot of new pieces in the starting lineup, so early on in the year, we’re trying to find our groove and find our rhythm,” Rowan said. “It’s definitely so familiar being a senior here … but every season is different. To the younger guys, we’re just trying to teach them the work ethic that we try to build here.”

Junior middle blocker Micah Wong Diallo has already seen an elevated role from last season, where he only started in two matches. The Los Angeles local started both matches to open up the season, tallying 14 kills on a .824 hitting percentage and adding three blocks.

(Amelia Chief/Daily Bruin senior staff)
Junior middle blocker Micah Wong Diallo jumps with his arm extended in preparation to spike the ball. (Amelia Chief/Daily Bruin senior staff)

Coach John Hawks – now in his second season as UCLA’s head honcho – spoke about his high hopes for Diallo moving forward in the year.

“Micah’s got a bright future,” Hawks said. “Last year, we probably would have played him more. I think there were just some injuries that he dealt with that he had to work through. I expect big things from Micah.”

Hawks has been experimenting with a rotation of Diallo and senior middle blocker Cameron Thorne to open up the season, and he is pleased with the results so far. Thorne recorded five blocks in each match, accompanied by 13 total kills on a .688 clip.

“I thought our middles were perfect,” Hawks said. “We just need to get those guys more attempts and figure out how to open them up a little bit.”

The victories did not come without mistakes. The Bruins committed 18 service errors against McKendree and 11 against Concordia. Hawks said he wanted to clean up ball control and tighten up blocking rotations.

(Ruby Galbraith/Daily Bruin)
Coach John Hawks speaks to redshirt junior opposite David Decker on the sideline. (Ruby Galbraith/Daily Bruin)

And for a team that came so close to a national championship just eight months ago, correcting those mistakes could help ensure a different ending to this season.

UCLA will now look ahead to next weekend, when they will match up against Ball State and Loyola Chicago as part of the First Point Collegiate Challenge.

“I’m excited,” said Hawks, who served as head coach of Loyola Chicago from 2022-24. “I’m excited where we are right now, and I’m looking forward to some team bonding.”



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Three Podiums Highlight Season Opening Alpine Action

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GEORGETOWN, Colo. – The Colorado Buffaloes ski team opened the alpine portion of the season with three podium finishes Monday in the slalom races at Loveland Ski Area as part of the Denver Invitational.

The Buffaloes earned runner-up finishes in both the men’s and women’s races, highlighted by Louison Accambray’s career-best second-place finish on the women’s side and a 2–3 showing from freshmen Stanley Buzek and Feb Allasina in the men’s race. Through two of eight alpine races this week, Colorado sits second in the team standings.

Accambray led the CU women, while Alexa Brownlie finished seventh, Hannah Soria placed 14th and Cathinka Lunder finished 16th. Paige DeHart did not finish her first run.

On the men’s side, Colorado faced adversity early, as Justin Bigatel and Christoffer Oestroem did not finish the first run, while Filip Wahlqvist crashed just five gates from the finish on the second run after holding a sizeable lead following the opening run. Despite the setbacks, Buzek and Allasina delivered podium performances to keep the Buffs firmly in contention.  It was the first time two alpine newcomers were on the podium in their first college race since 2007 when Drew Roberts and Stefan Hughes went 1-2 in a slalom race at Utah.

HOW IT HAPPENED

The CU women were first on the course and posted a solid opening run before surging in the second run. Accambray climbed from sixth after the first run to finish second overall, while Brownlie jumped from 16th to seventh and Soria made a significant move from 23rd to 14th. Lunder remained steady throughout the race, sitting 14th after the first run and finishing 16th. Collectively, the three skiers gained 22 positions between runs, with Soria posting the fourth-fastest second run and Brownlie recording the fifth-fastest.

In the men’s race, early first-run exits by Bigatel and Oestroem placed increased pressure on the remaining Buffs, and both Buzek and Allasina responded. Allasina surged from a starting position of 35 to 15th after the first run, then vaulted into third place with one of the fastest second runs in the field. Buzek, who started 16th, was third after the first run and moved up one position to finish second. Buzek recorded the second-fastest second run, while Allasina posted the third-fastest.

UP NEXT

Colorado remains at Loveland Ski Area on Tuesday for another set of slalom races as part of the Spencer James Nelson Memorial Colorado Invitational before heading to Aspen for giant slalom races Wednesday and Thursday.

WHAT IT MEANS

The somewhat short-handed alpine teams had a solid season opening performance, with some highs (two freshmen on the podium, career-best finish for Accambray) and lows (Filip Wahlqvist crashing five gates from the finish, three DNFs on the men’s side), which is the nature of the business for all skiers, especially alpine skiers.  But CU did place four women in the top 16 and despite only scoring two men, still are just eight points out of the lead.  A solid start to the alpine season.

 

TEAM NOTES

SKIER NOTES

  • Louison Accambray finished second for her career-best slalom result and sixth podium finish overall, including her second slalom podium, in 15 career races.
  • Alexa Brownlie / Hannah Soria both made strong collegiate debuts for Colorado, with Brownlie placing seventh in her first college race and Soria finishing 14th. For Soria, the result marked her 10th career top-20 finish in her 19th collegiate slalom race.
  • Cathinka Lunder placed 16th, recording her fourth career top-20 finish and second in slalom. It marked her second-best slalom finish, trailing only a 12th-place result at Loveland in a qualifier race last season.
  • Stanley Buzek / Feb Allasina both reached the podium in their first collegiate race, with Buzek finishing second and Allasina third. It marked the first time two alpine newcomers finished on the podium in the season-opening race since Drew Roberts and Stefan Hughes went 1–2 in the Utah slalom opener in 2007.

TEAM SCORES (DAY 1): 1. Denver, 163; 2. Colorado, 155; 3. Utah, 127.5; 4. Alaska Anchorage, 125; 5. Montana State, 110; 6. Colorado Mountain, 104; 7. Nevada, 92.5; 8. Westminster, 30.

WOMEN’S SLALOM: 1. Sara Rask, Denver, 1:29.20; 2. Louison Accambray, Colorado, 1:29.66; 3. Elisabeth Creighton, Denver, 1:30.05; 3. Mia Hunt, Denver, 1:30.05; 5. Ella Bromee, Alaska Anchorage, 1:30.11; 6. Stella Buchheister, Denver, 1:30.18; 7. Alexa Brownlie, Colorado, 1:30.20; 8. Carmen Nielsen, Alaska Anchorage, 1:30.22; 9. Nicola Rountree-Williams, Denver, 1:30.36; 10. Tea Kiesel, Montana State, 1:30.45.

Other CU Finishers: 14. Hannah Soria, 1:31.19; 16. Cathinka Lunder, 1:31.40; Paige DeHart, DNF (Run 1).

MEN’S SLALOM: 1. Johs Herland, Utah, 1:29.59; 2. Stanley Buzek, Colorado, 1:30.29; 3. Feb Allasina, Colorado, 1:31.00; 4. Lucas Ellis, Colorado Mountain, 1:31.05; 5. Pierick Charest, Utah, 1:31.34; 6. Harry Hoffman, Utah, 1:31.38; 7. Sindre Myklebust, Utah, 1:31.64; 8. Adrian Hunshammer, Denver, 1:31.78; 9. Bosse Mikelsson, Montana State, 1:31.79; 10. Giorgio Baldo, Alaska Anchorage, 1:32.02.

Other CU Finishers: Filip Wahlqvist, DNF (Run 2); Justin Bigatel, DNF (Run 1); Christoffer Oestroem, DNF (Run 1).

 



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Men’s And Women’s Track And Field Come Out On Top In Final Home Meet

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HANOVER, N.H. – The Dartmouth men’s and women’s track and field teams hosted the Ivy vs. America East Challenge, marking their final home meet of the indoor season. 

Both teams had impressive finishes, placing first overall. The women wrapped up the meet with a final score of 73.83, while the men finished with a score of 63. 

Andie Murray won the women’s 500m, finishing the race in 1:15.39. Emmy Thornton clinched the 800m with a final time of 2:20.65. Claire McDonald placed first in the 3000m with her 9:59.68 mark. Mariella Schweitzer won the 60m hurdles with an impressive 8.67 finish, as well as the long jump with a 5.97 mark. 

Charlotte DiRocco secured points for Dartmouth after clearing 1.65m in the high jump, finishing in first place. Similarly, Ellison Weiner cleared 3.65m to clinch first place in the pole vault. As for the throws, Kylee Bennett and Zaneta Pivcova clinched the weight throw and shot put, with 15.41m and 14.54m marks, respectively. 

Jack Rousseau won the 400m for the men with his final time of 50.13, followed by Noe Kemper clinching the 800m with a 1:54.31 finish. Michael Bueker, Keion Grieve, Jack Inglis and Jack Intihar clinched the men’s 4×4 with a 3:27.64 finish. As for the jumps, David Adams cleared 4.95m to clinch the pole vault for the Big Green, Intihar clinched the long jump 7.14m mark and Roy Leibovitz won the triple jump with a 15.45m mark, which is good for No. 14 in the nation. 

Colton McMaster rounded out the meet for the men, clinching the shot put and weight throw with 17.53m and 19.17m marks, respectively.

The Big Green will return to action when heading to New Haven, Conn., for the annual Dartmouth-Yale-Columbia meet on Saturday, Jan. 17.



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University of Georgia set to dedicate new track and field facility Feb. 18 | Georgia Sports

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A brand-new track and field facility will open in Athens on Feb. 18, aiming to serve both the University of Georgia campus and the local community, according to its athletic department.

Located on South Milledge Avenue, the complex will feature a 400-meter, nine-lane Spec Towns Track with an infield long jump, a triple jump and a pole vault facility. The venue will have a capacity of 2,500 that can accommodate up to 4,000 for select events with a grandstand, a press box, an observation deck, restrooms and concession stands.

The new venue replaces the old one on South Lumpkin Street, which had not hosted an event for the Georgia men’s or women’s track and field team since April 2023. Now, the Bulldogs are slated to host the Spec Towns Invitational at the new complex this April, the Torrin Lawrence Memorial in May and the SEC championships in 2027. 

High school competitions will also be held at the new facility with the Classic City Track and Field Invitational scheduled for March, making it the first competition on the venue’s calendar, and the GHSA state track meet in May. 

The project, which cost $59.8 million, was funded exclusively by donations and gifts, and will become one of the “premier track and field destinations in the country,” according to the university’s director of athletics Josh Brooks.

“We are excited about the opportunities this facility will create for our athletes, our campus and our community,” Brooks said. “While it will support our student-athletes at the highest level, it will also create opportunities that will bring athletes of all ages to our campus throughout the year.”

The new complex will have a strong emphasis on strengthening ties between the university and local community, as public usage hours will give residents a new place to run and exercise, while big events can boost the local economy through hotel stays and visits to local businesses and restaurants. 

“The Classic City Track and Field Invitational in March will mark the first competition in the new facility, bringing a regional high school meet to campus and expanding access to elite facilities for local student-athletes,” Alison McCullick, the university’s director of community relations, said. “In addition to competitions, the space will remain open for walking, running and everyday recreation, making it a year-round asset for the university and Athens.”



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Cryst, Pazanti Earn Big West Player Of The Week Honors In Collegiate Debuts

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LONG BEACH, Calif. — In their collegiate debuts, Jackson Cryst and Jake Pazanti made immediate impacts for Long Beach State men’s volleyball, earning Big West Player of the Week honors following a dominant opening weekend. The Beach opened the 2026 season with two straight-set victories, defeating Lindenwood and McKendree at the Pyramid, as Cryst was named Men’s Volleyball Defensive Player of the Week and Pazanti earned Long Beach State Freshman of the Week recognition.

Cryst anchored the Long Beach State defense in his first collegiate action, averaging 1.50 blocks per set and totaling nine blocks over the weekend. His presence at the net helped limit opponents to a combined .157 hitting percentage and contributed to the Beach averaging 3.33 blocks per set across the two matches. Cryst also added seven kills on .462 hitting, showing efficiency and composure on both sides of the net.

Pazanti also impressed in his collegiate debut, directing the Long Beach State offense with poise and balance. The freshman setter recorded 58 assists (9.67 per set) while guiding the Beach to a .351 team hitting percentage in the opening weekend.

In addition to his setting responsibilities, Pazanti contributed six kills on .750 hitting, 16 digs, five blocks, and two service aces, impacting the match in every phase during his first career starts.

Long Beach State men’s volleyball returns to action this week with a three-game road stretch through the Buckeye State to face Central State, George Mason and Ohio State as the Beach continue early-season competition following a successful opening weekend.



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