Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

Sports

ASWA Baseball Rankings

Published

on

ASWA Baseball Rankings

With the 2025 high school baseball playoffs now underway in both the AISA and the AHSAA, the Alabama Sports Writers Association has released its final baseball rankings of the season.

This week’s first-round pairings in the AHSAA include several top 10 matchups. One of those has No. 4-ranked Oxford traveling to play No. 2 Mountain Brook in Class 6A.

RELATED: See the Round 1 pairings

The AHSAA Class 7A playoffs begin next week.

Here are this week’s rankings:

CLASS 7A

1. Hewitt-Trussville (29-2)

2. Bob Jones (29-9)

3. Enterprise (27-1)

4. Central-Phenix City (28-7)

5. Fairhope (23-9)

6. Thompson (26-12)

7. Hoover (23-14)

8. Grissom (22-10)

9. Vestavia Hills (22-8)

10. Tuscaloosa County (25-12)

Others nominated: Alma Bryant (17-11), Auburn (15-15), Baker (15-14), Dothan (19-10), Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa (21-13), Huntsville (17-15), James Clemens (24-10), Opelika (19-11).

CLASS 6A

1. Hartselle (25-7)

2. Mountain Brook (24-8)

3. Chelsea (19-9)

4. Oxford (23-9)

5. Buckhorn (23-12)

6. Helena (18-13)

7. Saraland (19-9)

8. Spanish Fort (18-13)

9. Homewood (27-7)

10. Northridge (22-7)

Others nominated: Cullman (17-14), Fort Payne (17-10), Gardendale (20-8), Gulf Shores (18-12-1), Hazel Green (25-11), Hueytown (23-13), Pelham (14-14), Pell City (17-12), Rehobeth (19-9), Spain Park (15-15), Stanhope Elmore (20-13), Wetumpka (18-13).

CLASS 5A

1. Springville (26-4)

2. American Christian (24-12-1)

3. Madison Academy (29-6)

4. St. Paul’s (19-8-1)

5. Northside (26-10-1)

6. Faith Academy (22-5)

7. Boaz (22-8)

8. Russellville (22-10)

9. Headland (21-8)

10. Marbury (24-6)

Others nominated: Briarwood (17-14), Charles Henderson (20-13), Corner (14-11), East Limestone (20-12), Elberta (20-7), Elmore County (22-9), Guntersville (18-13), Holtville (15-14), Jacksonville (16-16), John Carroll (16-15), Lawrence County (23-9), Leeds (22-11), UMS-Wright (15-11).

CLASS 4A

1. Oak Grove (24-3)

2. Opp (21-4)

3. Etowah (20-12)

4. Haleyville (22-7)

5. Deshler (23-9)

6. Bibb County (21-9)

7. Alexandria (17-12)

8. Trinity (19-8)

9. Madison County (21-4)

10. Satsuma (18-10)

Others nominated: Bayside Academy (16-15), Central-Florence (20-13), Cleburne County (12-9), Orange Beach (19-10), Tallassee (18-10), Westbrook Christian (22-6), W.S. Neal (14-6).

CLASS 3A

1. Prattville Christian (28-2)

2. Glenwood (23-4)

3. Winfield (26-6)

4. Thomasville (18-7)

5. Gordo (19-13)

6. St. James (16-9)

7. Vinemont (22-8)

8. Collinsville (17-8)

9. Thorsby (25-8)

10. Fyffe (19-7)

Others nominated: Elkmont (18-10), Flomaton (16-9), Lauderdale County (18-12), Lee-Scott (19-10), Phil Campbell (18-12), Piedmont (16-13), Providence Christian (13-12), T.R. Miller (14-11), Whitesburg Christian (18-10), Wicksburg (14-9).

CLASS 2A

1. Vincent (23-5)

2. G.W. Long (17-10)

3. Ariton (22-8)

4. Decatur Heritage (23-5)

5. Sumiton Christian (20-7)

6. Red Bay (20-6)

7. Mars Hill Bible (16-12)

8. Cottonwood (17-6)

9. Pleasant Valley (17-10)

10. North Sand Mountain (19-8)

Others nominated: Bayshore Christian (13-13), Cedar Bluff (16-12)*, Lindsay Lane (17-15), Pike Liberal Arts (14-14), Reeltown (14-10).

*–Record includes 4 forfeit losses.

CLASS 1A

1. Appalachian (21-3)

2. Hackleburg (23-6)

3. Addison (21-8)

4. Millry (22-8)

5. Brantley (14-2)

6. Leroy (20-8)

7. Billingsley (18-8)

8. Fayetteville (18-10)

9. Florala (15-7)

10. Athens Bible (14-7)

Others nominated: Coosa Christian (12-11), Hubbertville (15-6), Kinston (11-5), Lynn (16-10), Spring Garden (16-8), Sweet Water (14-14).

AISA

1. Lakeside (47-4)

2. Chambers Academy (23-8)

3. Hope Christian (21-8)

4. Macon-East (23-13)

5. Southern Academy (20-9)

Others nominated: Bessemer Academy (19-10), Clarke Prep (21-4), Fort Dale (18-7), Jackson Academy (10-10), Patrician (13-13).

Sports

H.S. INDOOR TRACK & FIELD: GLOW region athletes face off at Nazareth University | Sports

Published

on







Link

Continue Reading

Sports

ALL MOUNTAIN VOLLEYBALL | Sports

Published

on








10-31 sv miley riddle main sports Cut.jpg

The Appalachian Newspapers’ 2025 All Mountain Volleyball Team is composed of players from the 15th Region, Jenkins, Buckhorn, Knott Central, Perry Central and Hazard.

The 2025 All Mountain Volleyball team was voted upon by the Appalachian Newspapers’ Randy White, Steve LeMaster and Adam Mahan.

All Mountain Volleyball Player of the Year nominees:

Kylie Kinner — Paintsville

Miley Riddle — Shelby Valley

Lindy Gearheart — Pikeville

Taylor Baker — Knott Central

All Mountain Volleyball 

Player of the Year

Miley Riddle — Shelby Valley: Riddle had an outstanding junior season. She led the state in kills with 838 (Paintsville’s Kylie Kinner finished second with 828). Riddle helped Shelby Valley to its most successful season in school history as the Lady Wildcats finished the season with a 34-6 record. Shelby Valley won the 15th Region All “A” Classic and advanced to the state All “A” Classic Bronze Division finals, the 59th District Tournament, their first-ever 15th Region Tournament championship, a win over Knott Central in the opening round of the KHSAA Volleyball State Tournament and an appearance in the state volleyball quarterfinals. 

All Mountain Coach of the 

Year nominees: 

Misty Riddle — Shelby Valley

Dawn Kinner — Paintsville

Shae Cornett — Knott Central

All Mountain Coach of the Year:

Misty Riddle — Shelby Valley: Riddle helped Shelby Valley to its most successful season in school history as the Lady Wildcats finished the season with a 34-6 record. Shelby Valley won the 15th Region All “A” Classic and advanced to the state All “A” Classic Bronze Division finals, the 59th District Tournament, their first-ever 15th Region Tournament championship, a win over Knott Central in the opening round of the KHSAA Volleyball State Tournament and an appearance in the state volleyball quarterfinals.

All Mountain Volleyball Team

Shelby Valley

Sahnia Linton

Talynn Johnson

Ryleigh Perry

Paintsville

Kylie Kinner

Mallory May

Ella Wells

Addison Helton

Pikeville

Lindy Gearheart

Carly May

Sophie Woods

Catharine Walters

Kyla Lee

East Ridge

Savannah Baldridge

Lily Stacy

Savannah Wallace

Olivia Stanley

Pike Central 

Layla Johnson 

Sadie Vaughn

Alyssa Hess

Molly Reed

Claire Stacy

Belfry

Baylor Hall

Makaylin Meade

Abrielle Swain

Phelps

Adrianna Pigman

Clarity Mounts

Cloey Bevins

Johnson Central

Chloe Reed

Macie Clark

Mia Estep

Madi Conn

Martin County

No stats listed on the KHSAA website

Magoffin County

Karlee Wallen 

Kellen Simpkins

Jaylee Reed

Abby Barnett

Betsy Layne

Jayden Jarrell

Jania Isom

Harlyn Slone

Aubrey Williams

Miley Burchett

Prestonsburg

Addison Wright

Ally Hamilton

Katie Slone

Floyd Central

Chloe Howard

Lydia Wallace

Caidence Lafferty

Rylee Daniels

Miley Thornsbury

Lawrence County

Braylee Stafford

Aryn Huffman

Kailyn Stacy

Hazard 

Savannah Combs

Mallory Mitchell

Rachel Allen

Adyson Jent

Perry Central

Laney Davis

Lylah Sullivan

Meghan Asher

Kinley McGraner

Knott Central

Taylor Baker

Zoe Miller

Samara Bailey

Ava Waddell

Buckhorn

Ashlynn Adams

Chasity Turner

Haylee-Drew Blank 

Jenkins

Abbigail Lilly

Peyton Wilder

Kassidy Bolling

Letcher Central

Evany Pack

Kelsi Holbrook

Calissa Lowe

Hanna Eldridge



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

See 2025 Tri-Valley Conference volleyball all-league teams

Published

on


The 2025 Tri-Valley Conference Blue and Red Divisions volleyball all-league teams:

TVC Blue

First Team

Kate Belt, Valley Lutheran

Aubrey Wood, Carrollton

Ava Stroud, Hemlock

Emma Rohrs, Ithaca

Hayden Sherman, Valley Lutheran

Payton LaVigne, Carrollton

Braelin Rodammer, Valley Lutheran

Amiyah Martinez, Carrollton

Linden Pomaville, Valley Lutheran

TVC Red

First Team

Savannah Beery, Alma

Madison Geer, Frankenmuth

Mia Maxwell, Freeland

Addison Bickel, Frankenmuth

Ella Kokaly, Garber

Mia Robinson, Swan Valley

Lauren Bitzer, John Glenn

Jeana Lenhard, Garber

Second Team

Ava Wagner, Garber

Evie Engelhardt, Garber

Lauren Seeley, Alma

Giovanna Clark, Alma

Avery Geer, Frankenmuth

Tori Caudy, Freeland

McKenna Avila, Swan Valley



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Grand Canyon refugee Jordan eager for UH volleyball debut

Published

on


HONOLULU — Trevell Jordan didn’t see it coming. No one did.

The Grand Canyon middle blocker and his teammates were summoned to a meeting in April, for what the Antelopes assumed would be a talk about the following NCAA season.

In a sense, it was — there wouldn’t be one. GCU athletic administration informed players that the Phoenix school had opted to reclassify men’s volleyball to a club sport in 2026.

“It was shock,” Jordan recalled Monday. “All of us were very sad because we thought that this was going to be something great. We were building really great connections with each other, so we expected to keep those connections.”

Now Jordan, a 6-foot-10 sophomore from Mesa, Ariz., is in the process of forging new ones with Hawaii, one of the sport’s elite college programs over the last decade.

[Note: See below for more photos of Hawaii men’s volleyball’s Monday practice to prepare for Friday’s season opener against NJIT.]

The Rainbow Warriors, who return five starters and 12 letterwinners, openly aspire for the national championship after falling in straight sets to UCLA in May’s national semifinals.

UH is ranked No. 2 in the preseason AVCA and Big West Conference polls behind defending national champion and rival Long Beach State. It is the ninth straight year the Rainbow Warriors are in the national top five at season’s start.

Jordan is eager to test his abilities in a setting with more school and community buy-in and, to be sure, higher expectations.

“This is a whole different environment, different standards that I really love to see in the sport of volleyball,” he said. “I’m so pumped to be here.”

After fall training and some break time over the Christmas holiday, Charlie Wade’s group got back at it Monday as part of a breathless week leading up to Friday’s 7 p.m. opener against the New Jersey Institute of Technology.

UH players and staff will get their Big West championship rings after Sunday’s 5 p.m. rematch with NJIT.

GCU’s sudden announcement stunned the men’s volleyball community; the Antelopes were a program on the rise and GCU, formerly labeled a for-profit institution, was known for lavish spending for its athletics programs. Wade accurately predicted a feeding frenzy for the Antelopes’ talent. Some of the Lopes’ other standouts found homes: hitter Trent Moser went to BYU, setter Jaxon Herr went to Penn State, libero Matthew Thornton landed at UCLA.

Wade, UH’s 17th-year leader, felt it was a no-brainer to extend Jordan a life raft. Jordan played and started in 21 of GCU’s 28 matches last year, contributing 1.68 kills per set and 1.02 blocks per set. More importantly, he was already familiar with many of UH’s players, including Tread Rosenthal, Finn Kearney, Justin Todd and Kainoa Wade, as well as new UH assistant Donan Cruz, from his time over the summer competing with Team USA.

Junior setter Tread Rosenthal has emerged as the Rainbow Warriors’ unquestioned team leader, according to coach Charlie Wade. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)

“He had offers to go to every top program in the country,” Wade said, “and ironically they were pushing him to make a fast decision, and they pushed him towards us, because I was the one saying hey, ‘I’m in for the long haul, I want you to be here and take your time to figure it out.’”

Wade said it fascinates him to watch how newcomers like Jordan handle the trappings of men’s volleyball stardom at UH, especially once they become known in the local community.

He’s constantly tinkering with the formula of what will keep UH in the hunt for a third national title. That included booking his team for an as-of-yet unnamed tournament in Anaheim, Calif., Feb. 19 and 20 that will provide the four participating schools — UH, UCLA, USC and LBSU — with Name, Image and Likeness revenue for their players.

“That’s what keeps me up at night, for sure,” Wade said. “It is sustaining the success. To have a good year, but we’ve been really good for a long time and we need to not only be really good, but be the best. The best every year. That is difficult to attain, and that is the expectation — to be the best. Do everything you can to be better today and be the best at the end.”

Jordan joins a pair of capable sophomores at the middle position in Todd and Ofeck Hazan. Maryknoll School alum Alex Parks and 7-foot freshman Roman Payne round out the group that lost vocal leader Kurt Nusterer to a lucrative job in economics.

Wade said Rosenthal has emerged as a true team leader at setter and he hopes for a “payoff year” for him in his junior season. He’s backed up by sophomore Victor Lowe, senior Vladimir Kubr and freshman Magnus Hettervik of Norway.

UH has an embarrassment of riches at the pins with Adrien Roure, Louis Sakanoko, Kristian Titriyski, Kearney and Kainoa Wade. Sophomore Mitchell Croft and freshman Thatcher Fahlbusch add depth.

The Warriors lost a fan favorite at libero in Farrington High alumnus ‘Eleu Choy but brought in a player with Canadian U21 national team experience in junior Quintin Greenidge. Kai Taylor and Matthew Wheels are the team’s other defensive specialists.

“I think we got really good recruits,” Sakanoko said. “Quintin, Trevell, Mitch, all those people, they’re going to step on the court and be really, really good. We lost Eleu Choy, who’d been here for a while, but we got Quintin, who’s as good as he is.”

Rosenthal, Roure and Titriyski were named to the preseason All-Big West team.

UH confirmed Monday that assistant coach Kupono Fey has been elevated to associate head coach, replacing Milan Zarkovic in that role. Zarkovic, in some ways the emotional pulse of the team, took an assistant job at UCLA in the offseason.

Cruz, a Maui native and the former head coach at Ball State, was hired in September and is focusing on the setting/offensive game.

“Kupono and Donan have stepped up amazing for us,” Rosenthal said. “Obviously Milan is one of the best coaches in the world and it’s a huge loss. I’m sure UCLA’s happy that they got him. But Kupono and Donan have trained us very well.”

Hawaii coach Charlie Wade, right, has a new makeup of his staff with associate head coach Kupono Fey, center left, and new assistant Donan Cruz, left. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)

Kupono Fey, a UH alumnus, has been on staff with Wade as an assistant since 2023. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)

Hawaii hitter Louis Sakanoko voiced confidence in the team’s handful of newcomers to join an experienced roster. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)

Brian McInnis covers the state’s sports scene for Spectrum News Hawaii. He can be reached at brian.mcinnis@charter.com.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Rainbow Warrior volleyball picked No. 2, land 3 on Big West preseason team

Published

on


Reading time: < 1 minute

UH Mānoa volleyball team celebrating on the court

The University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa men’s volleyball team was picked second in the preseason Big West coaches’ poll while a trio of Rainbow Warriors were named to the seven-member preseason team—setter Tread Rosenthal, outside hitter Adrien Roure and opposite Kristian Titriyski.

UH Mānoa received 22 total points, just two points behind preseason favorite Long Beach State. UC Irvine was ranked third followed by a three-way tie for fourth among CSUN, UC San Diego and UC Santa Barbara.

The Rainbow Warriors, who captured their fourth Big West Championship title last season, were also ranked No. 2 in the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) preseason top 20 coaches poll.

UH Mānoa returns five starters—Rosenthal, Roure, Titriyski, Justin Todd and Louis Sakanoko—and 12 lettermen from last year’s squad that finished 27–6 and advanced to the NCAA Championship semifinals. Rosenthal and Roure were AVCA first-team All-Americans while Titriyski was named to the second team.

The Rainbow Warriors open the 2026 season with a two-match series against NJIT on January 2 and January 4. See the entire 2026 schedule on UH News.

Read more at Hawaiiathletics.com.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Lake Stevens’ Hoglund named state 4A Volleyball Coach of the Year

Published

on


Lake Stevens volleyball coach Kyle Hoglund talks to his team in the season opener against Curtis High School in Lake Stevens, Wash., on Sept. 11, 2024. Curtis won all three sets: 25-19, 25-20 and 25-18. (Taras McCurdie / The Herald)

Lake Stevens volleyball coach Kyle Hoglund talks to his team in the season opener against Curtis High School in Lake Stevens, Wash., on Sept. 11, 2024. Curtis won all three sets: 25-19, 25-20 and 25-18. (Taras McCurdie / The Herald)

LAKE STEVENS — It’s no secret that any high school athlete would want to win a state championship. Reaching the pinnacle after months, and in many cases years, of hard work is a self-gratifying feeling any high-level athlete dreams for themselves.

But for Lake Stevens volleyball, which perennially carries realistic state title aspirations, the players wanted to win the championship for more than just themselves. They wanted to win for their head coach, Kyle Hoglund.

Hoglund has been part of the Vikings program for nearly 20 years, and has led it for the past 10. As the program continually fell short of reaching the mountaintop over the past few years, the motivation to finally get it done centered primarily around the coach who put everything into helping his team get there.

“(Hoglund) deserves so much more than just a state championship,” said Laura Eichert, the Vikings’ star outside hitter who was recently named The Herald’s All-Area Volleyball Player of the Year. “He changed so many players’ lives for the positive that I just wanted, more than anything, to bring him home a state championship, just because of how special of an impact he’s made on everyone.”

If there was ever a year to finally get it done, it was 2025. Led by Eichert as well as four-year varsity players Olivia Gonzales and Kam Strom, Lake Stevens went undefeated in the regular season (excluding tournaments) and postseason, dropping just one set all year leading up to the championship match.

Facing the reigning 4A champions Curtis, who had eliminated them in the semifinals last year, the Vikings fell behind 2-0 before executing a thrilling comeback to secure the state title with a 3-2 victory. It was a Hollywood ending to a dream season.

But every theater-goer knows to stick around during the credits. In addition to winning his first state title as a head coach, Hoglund was selected as the Washington State Volleyball Coaches Association 2025 4A Coach of the Year.

“For the last 10 years being the head coach and only missing the state tournament because of COVID, it’s interesting to have the group of girls that keep coming in and want to perform and want to achieve at a high level,” Hoglund said. “And keep putting in the work, and keep trusting in the coaches, and we seem to get there every year. It’s an amazing ride every time.”

Prior to arriving at Lake Stevens, Hoglund was a player himself, but he got tendinitis in both knees while playing for Golden West College in Huntington Beach, Calif. Robbed of his ability to play, Hoglund turned to coaching. More than winning awards or championships, Hoglund said he got into it to serve as a positive role model for his players and show them “the right way of life.”

That said, winning is still very much the goal every season. As he molded the Lake Stevens program into his own, Hoglund constructed the pillars with life outside of high school sports in mind. One of the biggest hallmarks of the Hoglund-led Vikings is fitness. The conditioning Lake Stevens volleyball undergoes sounds like hyperbole. The highlights — or maybe ‘lowlights’ if you’re the one training — include doing 150 burpees as a warm-up during summer workouts, and mile-long runs up and down the bleachers of Vikings Stadium.

Like in life at large, there’s only so many things an athlete can control, and Hoglund views conditioning as a major one.

“I want these girls who really want to go and play at the next level that this is just a small sample of what it’s really like,” Hoglund said. “I’ve had former players call and say, ‘thank you’ for what we’ve done, because now they understand and move on. We have players now after winning state, they realize that the conditioning matters, and it’s tough. There’s few controllables you can control in the world. For an athlete, one of them is how you can condition, how much you can be in there, and so why not make sure that is something that is taken care of?

“So we do a great job with that. … We maybe even run more than our own soccer team here at school does, but a lot of that is getting the mind to tell the body what to do.”

The other big hallmark comes from building a strong mental foundation. The team conducts a summer book club reading materials about mental toughness, and the players will write in journals throughout the season to help stay in tune with the mental side of the game. The journaling started when Hoglund was an assistant under Amy Wiklund, but has since developed into an integral process.

Encouraged to put their thoughts and feelings into words, the players and coaches establish a better level of understanding with each other. There may be moments where Hoglund realizes he has to give a player some grace if she is going through a tough time, and other moments where he can push harder to help players reach goals they set out to achieve. With more understanding and connection, the team thrived.

“Going up to our state championship game was a fairly easy road, in some respects, but you saw that what we did at the state tournament wasn’t easy,” Hoglund said. “The championship was not an easy way to win, but the girls never wavered on themselves. They cared about each other, trusted each other, and a lot of that goes back to what we do during the summer and all year long.”

Even before the results justified the process, it fully resonated with the players.

“(Hoglund) is probably the most mentally aware person you can ever meet,” Gonzales said. “He will always ask you how your day is. You can tell he genuinely cares, and it really has an effect on the team chemistry, because everyone just feels so much closer because we’re so vulnerable with each other all the time. And that was like a huge part in winning, is that we were really trying to ‘out-team’ their team because we just had so much love for each other.”

More than ever, the 2025 Lake Stevens volleyball team represented a strong group, both mentally and physically. Hoglund described this year as a “drama-free” season, which he said is not often the case. As much as he helped each player grow on and off the court, this year’s team helped him as a coach with working on the “finer details” of the game.

As the weeks since winning the championship pass, and the offseason burpees and bleacher miles come nearer, it will become harder for Hoglund to turn the page. The program will graduate six seniors, including Eichert, Gonzales and Strom, which will mark the end of an era and task Hoglund with building up a new one. But Hoglund will cross that bridge when he gets there.

“I don’t even know if I’ve really thought about (next year) yet,” Hoglund said. “I’m still trying to enjoy the moment.”

After winning a state title and Coach of the Year, why wouldn’t he?

Gallery






Link

Continue Reading
Motorsports3 weeks ago

SoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener

Motorsports3 weeks ago

Donny Schatz finds new home for 2026, inks full-time deal with CJB Motorsports – InForum

Rec Sports4 weeks ago

Black Bear Revises Recording Policies After Rulebook Language Surfaces via Lever

Sports4 weeks ago

Men’s and Women’s Track and Field Release 2026 Indoor Schedule with Opener Slated for December 6 at Home

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

David Blitzer, Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment

Rec Sports4 weeks ago

How Donald Trump became FIFA’s ‘soccer president’ long before World Cup draw

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Michael Jordan’s fight against NASCAR heads to court, could shake up motorsports

NIL3 weeks ago

DeSantis Talks College Football, Calls for Reforms to NIL and Transfer Portal · The Floridian

Sports3 weeks ago

Elliot and Thuotte Highlight Men’s Indoor Track and Field Season Opener

Motorsports3 weeks ago

Rick Ware Racing switching to Chevrolet for 2026

Motorsports3 weeks ago

JR Motorsports Confirms Death Of NASCAR Veteran Michael Annett At Age 39

Sports3 weeks ago

#11 Volleyball Practices, Then Meets Media Prior to #2 Kentucky Match

Technology4 weeks ago

23 عاما من الفضائح السياسية والجنسية منذ انقلاب حمد بن خليفة.. استغلال الفتيات الصغيرات في الدعارة.. ضبط ابنة رئيس وزراء قطر خلال ممارستها لجنس الجماعي.. ملامح الحكم تتخبط بين المنفي وتدخلات النساء

NIL3 weeks ago

Colleges ponying up in support of football coaches, programs

Technology4 weeks ago

23 عاما من الفضائح السياسية والجنسية منذ انقلاب حمد بن خليفة.. استغلال الفتيات الصغيرات في الدعارة.. ضبط ابنة رئيس وزراء قطر خلال ممارستها لجنس الجماعي.. ملامح الحكم تتخبط بين المنفي وتدخلات النساء

Most Viewed Posts

Trending