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BANGLADESH WOMEN'S CRICKET TEAM SET FOR HISTORIC WEST INDIES TOUR

​2nd ODI on 21 January 2025, 2:00PM at Warner Park, St KittsChinelle HenryTheir last ODI meeting, which took place nearly three years ago in New Zealand on 18 March 2022, resulted in a four-run victory for the West Indies. Overall, the two teams have met five times in international competition—four times in T20Is and once […]

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BANGLADESH WOMEN'S CRICKET TEAM SET FOR HISTORIC WEST INDIES TOUR

​2nd ODI on 21 January 2025, 2:00PM at Warner Park, St KittsChinelle HenryTheir last ODI meeting, which took place nearly three years ago in New Zealand on 18 March 2022, resulted in a four-run victory for the West Indies. Overall, the two teams have met five times in international competition—four times in T20Is and once in an ODI—and West Indies are yet to taste defeat.
Zaida James2nd T20I on 29 January 2025, 6:00PM at Warner Park, St Kitts
Cricket West Indies’ Director of Cricket Miles Bascombe welcomed the series:​1st ODI on 19 January 2025, 2:00PM at Warner Park, St Kitts
Performance Coach: Dr. Nadine SammyHead Coach: Shane Deitz ​Karishma Ramharack
Cherry Ann Fraser-ENDS-The tour will feature three (3) CG United One-Day Internationals and three (3) T20 Internationals, all scheduled to take place at Warner Park in Basseterre, St Kitts.West Indies captain Hayley Matthews and her Bangladesh counterpart Nigar Sultana Joty after their match at last year’s T20 World Cup.Manager: Sheena Gooding ​​3rd ODI on 24 January 2025, 2:00PM at Warner Park, St KittsST. JOHN’S, Antigua – Cricket West Indies (CWI) today announced the women’s squad to compete against Bangladesh in their upcoming inaugural bilateral white-ball tour of the West Indies from 19 to 31 January.Jannillea GlasgowQiana JosephAssistant Coach: Ryan AustinGames will be broadcast on ESPN Caribbean, while admission to the venue is free.While Stafanie Taylor is still recovering from a knee injury, Jannillea Glasgow and Cherry Ann Fraser, who recently had successful stints in state cricket in Tasmania, have been included.West Indies Women’s Head Coach Shane Deitz commented:This marks the West Indies Women’s first-ever bilateral series against Bangladesh, and it is Bangladesh’s first bilateral series tour of the Caribbean, as both teams continue their preparation for upcoming ICC events.Aaliyah AlleyneMandy MangruShemaine Campbelle (vice-captain)Ashmini MunisarAssistant Coach: Damien WrightTeam Management Unit:The two teams last met in the group stage of the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2024 in the UAE.Under the leadership of Matthews, the selected squad represents a blend of seasoned campaigners and eager newcomers.Strength & Conditioning Coach: Antonia Burton ​The two teams last met in the group stage of the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2024 in the UAE on 10 October, where West Indies Women secured an eight-wicket victory at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium. Previously, their last T20I clash was on 9 November 2018 at Guyana’s Providence Stadium during that year’s ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in the Caribbean.West Indies Women’s Squad:Afy FletcherBangladesh Women’s Tour of the West Indies Schedule (Eastern Caribbean Time):​1st T20I on 27 January 2025, 6:00PM at Warner Park, St Kitts ​ODIs:​3rd T20I on 31 January 2025, 6:00PM at Warner Park, St KittsWest Indies Women are still in the hunt for qualification to the 2025 ODI World Cup.Hayley Matthews (captain)Physiotherapist: Angelica HolderTeam Analyst: Gary Belle ​Shabika GajnabiNerissa CraftonT20Is:A series victory is also in the sights of West Indies captain Hayley Matthews, with her team seeking qualification to the 2025 ODI World Cup.Media & Content Officer: John PhillipsDeandra Dottin

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Bella Sims, Olympian, NCAA Champion Transfers to Michigan

Olympic Medalist, NCAA Champion Bella Sims Transfers to Michigan After two years swimming for the University of Florida, Olympian Bella Sims has committed to transfer to the University of Michigan. The Wolverines announced her commitment on social media. “Excited to welcome US Olympian and World Champion (Bella Sims) to Ann Arbor!”   Bella Sims was […]

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Olympic Medalist, NCAA Champion Bella Sims Transfers to Michigan

After two years swimming for the University of Florida, Olympian Bella Sims has committed to transfer to the University of Michigan.

The Wolverines announced her commitment on social media.

“Excited to welcome US Olympian and World Champion (Bella Sims) to Ann Arbor!”

 

Bella Sims was an Olympic silver medalist in Tokyo as part of the 800 free relay. The has won three world championship medals on relays for the U.S. as well.

Sims will have two remaining years of eligibility at Michigan.

The Wolverines have not had a star of this magnitude in the past four years since NCAA champion Maggie Mac Neil transferred to LSU.

Michigan has been rebuilding with solid pieces since and had a strong NCAA meet, finishing ninth. Add Sims to the mix and the Wolverines will continue to trend upward under coach Matt Bowe.

As a freshman at Florida, Sims was the NCAA champion in both the 200 freestyle (1:40.90) and 500 free (4:32.47) in 2024 and took third in the 200 back (1:48.47).

As a sophomore, Bella Sims focused on backstroke and finished second in the 100 back (49.12) and 200 back (1:47.11) at NCAAs in March.

Now, she will join a Michigan team on the rise to return to a top five program in the country.

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Beyond The Diamond – California Golden Bears Athletics

Andrew Madsen/KLC Fotos From an early age, Holly Medina endured many trials and tribulations leading up to the moment she decided to dedicate her life to Christ. SB5/13/2025 7:45 AM | By: Dermonte Bond Holly Medina Takes Leap Of Faith This feature originally appeared in the 2025 Spring […]

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Beyond The Diamond


Andrew Madsen/KLC Fotos

From an early age, Holly Medina endured many trials and tribulations leading up to the moment she decided to dedicate her life to Christ.


Holly Medina Takes Leap Of Faith

This feature originally appeared in the 2025 Spring edition of the Cal Sports Quarterly. The Cal Athletics flagship magazine features long-form sports journalism at its finest and provides in-depth coverage of the scholar-athlete experience in Berkeley. Printed copies are mailed four times a year to Bear Backers who give annually at the Bear Club level (currently $600 or more). For more information on how you can receive a printed version of the Cal Sports Quarterly at home, send an email to CalAthleticsFund@berkeley.edu or call (510) 642-2427.

 

Audience of one.

 

For some, it doesn’t mean much. But it’s a motto that California outfielder Holly Medina embodies. Reminded every time she’s in the batter’s box and with every sip of water – with the initials AO1 written on her bat and water bottle – she is never concerned about the opinions of others nor needs their acceptance.

 

Medina’s journey has not always been easy. From an early age, she endured many trials and tribulations leading up to the moment she decided to dedicate her life to Christ.

 

During her childhood, religion was never a huge factor in the household and was not forced upon her at a young age. Instead, after learning of her friend’s religious views and deeper discussions with her grandparents, she began to beg her parents, Niki and Adam Medina, to start taking her to church. That is where her religious journey began to take form.

 

“It was never like – we have to go, and I was never in a Christian or Catholic school,” Medina said. “I remember my friends in elementary school were pretty religious, and I would go home and be like – ‘Mom, can you please take me to church and – can we go to church on Sunday?’ My grandparents had a big effect on it. They would talk to me about religion here and there.”

 

Growing up in Hesperia in Southern California, Medina made the varsity softball team during her freshman year at Oak Hills High School. But that wasn’t enough. She knew if she wanted to reach her career goals, she would have to venture outside her hometown to get exposure. She set a goal to make the Firecrackers Select 18U travel ball team in Huntington Beach, over an hour from her home.

 

“I was committed to the grind, but it was so much fun,” Medina said. “I finally met people who were at the same level and pushing me to be more. I was the underdog the whole time. I was constantly being pushed. I had the best memories on that team and being in Huntington Beach, playing softball and traveling with all those people. That was when I knew – this is what I am going to do.”

 

Despite finding success on the field, Medina still had not received any attention from major college programs leading up to her senior year of high school. She earned recognition from mid-major schools and visited several campuses, such as Southern Utah and Montana.

 

Even though Medina thoroughly enjoyed her official visit to Montana, she ultimately decided to remain patient. She traveled to Texas to compete in a tournament where college coaches were in attendance.

 

“I go to the tournament and I end up balling out,” Medina said. “We had a recruitment guy on our team that handled a lot of that for us, luckily, and he told me – you’re not going to believe it, but Cal and LMU are both interested.”

 

Overwhelmed with emotions, she immediately scheduled visits to LMU and Cal that following week. While visiting Berkeley, she immediately knew her future and officially committed to Cal during the visit.

 

“I knew I wanted to stay in California,” Medina stated. “It felt far enough from home to experience things and the fact I was getting this education and being able to play in a power school. That was great.”

 

While on campus during the fall of her freshman year, Medina wanted to commit and dive further into her faith. Despite establishing a foundation during her childhood, she finally felt that everything was coming together.

 

“In high school, a church opened in my hometown, and I started working at the coffee bar there,” Medina said. “I got into fellowship with that, but it didn’t click until college that I truly felt my faith start to flourish.”

 

In December of her freshman year, she made a New Year’s resolution to fully grow her relationship with Christ. After enduring many hardships throughout the year, she took a leap of faith and got a tattoo, displaying a cross on her lower left forearm. That decision marked a key moment in her religious journey.

 

“It was kind of the reminder to put God first and to grow in my faith, Medina said. “Ever since that moment, that has been something I have stuck with because I’ve never felt the way I have in my faith as strong as I do right now.”

 

As she returned to campus for her sophomore year in August 2024, and after many months of compiling the thoughts that raced through her head surrounding the idea of being baptized, she finally felt that she was ready for the next step in her journey.

 

“I had been wanting to get baptized for a while,” Medina said. “Over the summer, it was a big turning point for me. Prior to it, I was like – I would love to be baptized, but I didn’t know why, what the point was, or if I deserved to be baptized. Those are the thoughts that were going through my head.”

 

During the nearly seven-hour drive from her hometown back to campus, she convinced herself that it was time. After returning to campus, she visited her church, City Center, and one of the first topics that was being discussed during service was about baptism.

 

“That’s crazy,” Medina said in disbelief. “I really wanted to do it, but it was happening the next week, and school hadn’t even started.”

 

As a member of Athletes in Action on campus, Medina went to bible study the next day and confided to one of the mentors and AIA team leader, Karen Butler. During the conversation, she shared her concerns about getting baptized without having her support system with her, as most of her teammates hadn’t returned to campus yet, and her parents were seven hours away. That’s when she discovered that the organization, AIA, holds baptisms. She was immediately sold and committed to a date.

 

“It was not really about where. It was more about who was doing it and the community,” Medina said. “I knew that AIA had been a big thing at school, and it had helped me a lot. I knew all the people in my support system would be there.”

 

After crossing off the days on the calendar for months, the moment finally arrived. On November 6, 2024, surrounded by loved ones, teammates, coaches, members from her church, and even her therapist, Holly took the cold plunge into the tub of war and publicly declared her faith in Jesus Christ.

 

“It was just uniting. All my favorite people filled in one room. It was not just celebrating me but how I felt and the fruits of the spirit. It was such a joyful day.” Medina said. “Not everyone there, I don’t even think, was religious, but they were supporting me. It was so inspirational for them, which is God’s work itself.”

 



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New Penn and Portville Black still undefeated in Battle of the Border beach volleyball

Submitted High School, Local Sports, Sports, Volleyball PORTVILLE- Olean got two victories to climb to third in the Battle of the Border beach volleyball league on Monday. Portville Black and New Penn are still going strong at “website”:”Website” Link […]

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New Penn and Portville Black still undefeated in Battle of the Border beach volleyball

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High School, Local Sports, Sports, Volleyball





PORTVILLE- Olean got two victories to climb to third in the Battle of the Border beach volleyball league on Monday. Portville Black and New Penn are still going strong at







“website”:”Website”





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Neuqua Valley dominates Hinsdale South to start the girls water polo postseason

It’s the first round of the girls water polo playoffs. Tonight’s matchup features the eighth-seeded Neuqua Valley Wildcats facing the ninth-seeded Hinsdale South girls water polo. The Wildcats look to defend their pool and advance to round two with a home victory tonight, as the Hornets look for a road upset victory coming off a […]

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It’s the first round of the girls water polo playoffs. Tonight’s matchup features the eighth-seeded Neuqua Valley Wildcats facing the ninth-seeded Hinsdale South girls water polo. The Wildcats look to defend their pool and advance to round two with a home victory tonight, as the Hornets look for a road upset victory coming off a 13-4 loss against Hinsdale Central. This highlight is sponsored by BMO.

Neuqua Valley jumps out to a fast start

The Wildcats start hot as Samira Nadgar opens the playoffs for Neuqua Valley by scoring the first goal of the night off a long-range pass from Phoebe Puacz. Seven assists in the game for Puacz.

Neuqua looks to continue the pressure as Alexa Egan locates captain Phoebe Puacz for another Wildcat goal, sparking a scoring run for the blue and gold offense.

A part of the Wildcat scoring run, Isabella Marasco attempts the shot but is denied before she finds Nadgar giving the Neuqua a 5-0 lead with two minutes remaining in the first.

The Wildcats have all the momentum in their favor as Gabriella Snider takes on the Hornet defense alone before she puts it through. At the end of the first quarter, the Wildcats hold a commanding 8-0 lead.

Neuqua looks to press the advantage as Nadgar passes to Abigail Schiltz, who knocks down the first tally of the second quarter.

Nadgar looks to involve another teammate for another assist, as she locates an open Isabella Marasco, who quickly fires into the back of the net.

The Hornets look to score some points before the half and eventually come up with their first score of the game as Autumn Lambke connects with the back of the net however, the Hornets trail at the half 12-1.

The Wildcat offense shares the wealth

Coming out of the half, the Wildcats look to pick up where they left off. Ava Wallin scores the first points of the second half, as the lead builds to a dozen goals.

Her teammate Yarae Chung looks to feed off the scoring as she scores back-to-back goals as the Wildcats hold a commanding 15-1 lead with four minutes to go in the third.

Neuqua advances to the quarterfinals in blowout fashion

Nadgar continues to share the ball, as she finds Madelin Harp for the dagger as the Wildcats dominate the Hornets with a 20-3 victory in the first round of IHSA girls water polo playoffs. The Wildcats take on the top seed, Naperville North, for a quarterfinal round matchup.

For more prep sports highlights, visit the Naperville Sports Weekly page.





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More than just a number – The Hawk Eye

What if I’m not good enough for college? Everyone says junior year is the hardest — they aren’t wrong. From balancing multiple AP classes, dual credit courses and preparing for the SAT and PSAT, this year felt like a constant battle, and no one talks about how overwhelming and lonely it can feel when things […]

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What if I’m not good enough for college?

Everyone says junior year is the hardest — they aren’t wrong. From balancing multiple AP classes, dual credit courses and preparing for the SAT and PSAT, this year felt like a constant battle, and no one talks about how overwhelming and lonely it can feel when things don’t go as hoped. 

Junior year is considered to matter the most — it’s the year colleges care about. The one where your GPA, test scores and extracurriculars either set you up for success, or shatter your dreams. I walked into this school year confident, thinking that this was going to be my best academic year. I began chasing a version of myself I thought colleges wanted. However, when I tapped on the SAT’s “reveal your score” and saw a number that didn’t reflect my efforts, I broke – not all at once, but quietly and slowly — a pain that would linger within me.

I felt constant humiliation from my friends and family who teased me about my score. It hurt because I was the student who’d always earn A’s on assignments, studying day and night. Slowly, I began disappearing into my classes, not caring about anything because I felt like my dream of getting into a good college was crushed. After months of SAT prep, I couldn’t understand how it all fell apart. Now, I’m left wondering how I can improve as I’m running out of time.

With my own sport, track and field, I felt the pressure of having to succeed and make big achievements to impress colleges. I thought I would do well and that I’d work hard to earn a varsity spot. Despite my dreams, I ran my worst meet crushing any remaining faith I had for my future. Everything was falling apart. No matter how hard I tried to hold on, I constantly felt like I was losing grip of the future I wanted. 

But here’s one thing no one really says: it’s OK not to be OK.     

Our plans fall apart, and failure happens to all of us. The truth is, sometimes a person can do everything right, but still fall short. It’s normal. It’s not the end of the world. Failing a test and not being the “perfect student” doesn’t mean an individual failed at life. It’s how one responds to the obstacles that they’ll face that matters. 

Rather than figuring out my major, the college I’m going to or what my future looks like, I learned to get back up — even if I didn’t feel like it. Growth doesn’t always come easily; sometimes it shows up in big losses that can’t be redeemed, yet you choose to keep going anyway. 

It’s OK to lean on people, because without them, we might forget how to live. I distanced myself from the people I cared about. I missed out on my homecoming game, the dance, Thanksgiving parties, hangouts and late-night food drives with my friends — moments I’ll never get back all because I thought nobody would understand the pressure that consumed me. 

I realized the most meaningful parts of my junior year were the exact opposite of what I imagined at the start. It was the late-night FaceTime calls, the immaturity, laughter and the people who stuck around when I couldn’t be myself. 

Junior year was tough, but it showed me that being myself is enough. That meant more to me than any number could. 



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Women’s water polo keeps Stanford NCAA title streak alive

No. 1 Stanford women’s water polo dominated No. 3 USC in a gutsy performance that secured the Cardinal the 2025 NCAA Championship. The final score was 11-7 as Stanford’s defense kept USC scoring at bay.  While USC got an early lead in the first quarter, leading 3-1, Stanford came back in the second, tying the […]

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No. 1 Stanford women’s water polo dominated No. 3 USC in a gutsy performance that secured the Cardinal the 2025 NCAA Championship. The final score was 11-7 as Stanford’s defense kept USC scoring at bay. 

While USC got an early lead in the first quarter, leading 3-1, Stanford came back in the second, tying the game 5-5 with a buzzer beater from redshirt sophomore Juliette Dhalluin. Dhalluin scored the only goal in the third quarter en route to a hat trick, giving the Cardinal the offensive firepower needed to preserve their lead in the final quarter of the game. 

This marks the team’s 10th NCAA title, the last one having been secured in 2023, and the 137th NCAA championship for the Cardinal as they’ve won at least one national championship each year since the 1976-1977 season.

The Cardinal had secured the No. 1 seed coming in, which wasn’t a surprise given their strong season. They had a 15-0 streak, one of only four in Stanford’s history, and have scored at least 10 goals per game, with six members of the team having scored at least 25 goals overall this season. The team was also fresh off their MPSF win 11-9 against defending NCAA champion UCLA when the latter was ranked No. 1 to Stanford’s then No. 2.

Five Olympians who redshirted the year before for the Games — Jenna Flynn, Ryann Neushul, Jewel Roemer, Ella Woodhead for Team USA and Serena Browne for Team Canada — have returned with their scoring prowess. Leading in scoring is Flynn with 59 goals, Neushul with 55 and Roemer with 44. The three players are also on the Peter J. Cutino watch list, putting them in contention for an award that honors the outstanding Division 1 collegiate male and female athlete in water polo.

In addition to the championship win, the team stacked up the awards. Neushul made the MPSF first team and was also named their Player of the Year, which is the eighth in Stanford’s history. Her teammates Christine Carpenter, Flynn and Roemer made the second team, and Dhalluin was an honorable team pick. This year marks the sixth time in seven seasons in which five of the all-conference award recipients were from Stanford. Stanford women’s water polo displayed pure domination on their title-winning run.



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