Sports
Cal Women’s Water Polo to Open NCAA Championships vs. Hawaii
The Cal women’s water polo team, fresh off its first victory over USC in 14 years, earned a berth in the NCAA Championships and will open play against No. 4 seed Hawaii on Friday, May 9 at Indianapolis. Hawaii (21-4) own a 12-11 win over the Bears (19-5) at a tournament Irvine in February. The […]

The Cal women’s water polo team, fresh off its first victory over USC in 14 years, earned a berth in the NCAA Championships and will open play against No. 4 seed Hawaii on Friday, May 9 at Indianapolis.
Hawaii (21-4) own a 12-11 win over the Bears (19-5) at a tournament Irvine in February. The teams split two regular-season matchups a year ago before Cal beat the Rainbow Wahine 9-6 in the NCAA tournament to advance to the title game for the first time since 2011.
This is the Bears’ 11th appearance in the NCAAs, including four years in a row. Cal has missed playing in the NCAAs just three times since 2019.
They lost 7-4 to top-seeded UCLA in last year’s national championship game.
If Cal beats Hawaii it will advance to the semifinals on May 10 against the winner of a quarterfinal game between top-seeded Stanford (22-1) and either Wagner (21-8) or McKendree (21-7). The Cardinal beat the Bears 12-8 in their only meeting this season.
In the opposite bracket, UCLA (19-5) is seeded No. 2 and USC (27-4) is No. 3.
The championship game will be held on Sunday, May 11 at noon. The game will be aired on ESPNU.
Cal finished third at the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation tournament last weekend at UCLA. The Bears lost 15-14 to the Bruins in the semifinals before knocking off No. 2 seed USC 13-12 — their first victory in the series since 2011.
Center Feline Voordouw, a sophomore from the Netherlands, scored three goals in the win over the Trojans. Ruby Swadling, who leads the club with 55 goals, scored twice Sunday, as did Elena Flynn and Eszter Varro’.
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Sports
Women’s 4×400 Relay Qualifies for Nationals in Dramatic Fashion
Story Links BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION, Texas – A history-making relay wrapped up the Montana State track and field team’s week at the NCAA West First Rounds on Saturday in College Station, Texas. In dramatic fashion, the Bobcat women’s 4×400 meter relay team grabbed the very last ticket to Eugene out of […]

BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION, Texas – A history-making relay wrapped up the Montana State track and field team’s week at the NCAA West First Rounds on Saturday in College Station, Texas.
In dramatic fashion, the Bobcat women’s 4×400 meter relay team grabbed the very last ticket to Eugene out of the final heat of the night, becoming the first-ever relay in school history to qualify for the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships.
Before the joy, however, there were nerves.
Initially, the Cats thought their time of 3:34.31, the second-fastest race in school history, had put them 13th—one spot out of punching one of the 12 tickets to Eugene.
Yet, a team directly ahead of MSU was disqualified and a protest was filed—so the quartet of Olivia Lewis, Peyton Garrison, Giulia Gandolfi, and Caroline Hawkes were stuck in limbo while the big board inside E.B. Cushing Stadium continuously ran the results of the race on a loop.
Finally, after the entire facility had emptied out and what seemed like an eternity of waiting, the results were made official. The Bobcats were headed to Eugene.
It was an incredible effort for a Montana State squad that had been unable to field a relay at the Big Sky Championships due to injury.
Helping save the day on Saturday was Hawkes, a junior from San Clemente, California, who took the baton in seventh place out of eight teams before tearing off an incredible 51.98 second split as the anchor—roaring back to pass three teams and place Montana State fourth in a stacked heat and one spot out of an automatic qualifier but in position to snag the last time qualifier.
The Cats finished ahead of Texas, Oklahoma State, Stanford, BYU, and plenty of other high-pedigree teams to secure their bid and continue a special season.
Lewis, a freshman from Corvallis, started things off before handing the baton to Garrison, a junior from New Castle, Colorado. From there it went to Gandolfi, a junior from Faenza, Italy, and then to Hawkes, the ten-time All-Big Sky honoree.
Thanks to Billings junior Hailey Coey punching her ticket to nationals in the long jump on Thursday, the 4×400 meter relay team’s qualification means the Bobcats will have multiple entries on the women’s side at the NCAA Outdoor Championships for just the fourth time in school history (2015, 2012, 2006).
Those five will join Harvey Cramb (1,500 meters) and Rob McManus (3,000 meter steeplechase) in Eugene from June 11-14, marking four total entries and seven student-athletes who will don the Blue and Gold on the biggest stage in the sport.
Earlier in the day, two Bobcat distance standouts capped memorable tenures with another appearance at the NCAA Regional meet.
In the 3,000 meter steeplechase, Bozeman native Grace Gilbreth closed out a memorable career finishing 31st with a time of 10:27.89.
The school record-holder ends her time in the Blue and Gold with two All-Big Sky honors in cross country and a pair of bronze medals in the steeplechase at the Big Sky Championships.
In the 5,000 meters, graduate student Kyla Christopher-Moody closed out her career placing 38th with a time of 16:41.73.
Christopher-Moody, a native of Royal Oak, Michigan, set four school records this year in the indoor mile, indoor 3,000 meters, outdoor 1,500 meters, and outdoor 5,000 meters.
UP NEXT
Seven Montana State track and field athletes advance to compete at the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships, held June 11-14 at Historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon.
Hailey Coey (long jump), Harvey Cramb (1,500 meters),Rob McManus (3,000 meter steeplechase), and the women’s 4×400 meter relay team (Olivia Lewis, Peyton Garrison, Giulia Gandolfi, and Caroline Hawkes) will all represent the Bobcats at the national championship meet, marking the fourth straight year Montana State has sent at least three qualifiers to the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
The four Bobcat entries at the national meet are tied for the third-most in program history, behind only the five in 2023 and 2022. The Cats also qualified four entries to the national meet in 2015.
The 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships will air on the ESPN family of networks.
#GoCatsGo
Sports
How an oddball smuggled out the KGB’s biggest secrets
In March 1992 a scruffily dressed, unshaven old man knocked on the door of the newly opened British embassy in Vilnius, Lithuania. He was carrying what might have been a bag of laundry. From it he produced some pieces of paper on which were scribbled handwritten notes. The man said he wanted to speak to […]

In March 1992 a scruffily dressed, unshaven old man knocked on the door of the newly opened British embassy in Vilnius, Lithuania. He was carrying what might have been a bag of laundry. From it he produced some pieces of paper on which were scribbled handwritten notes.
The man said he wanted to speak to somebody. Already the Americans had taken one look at him and sent him back into the cold. Luckily a junior female British diplomat had better instincts, for what Vasili Mitrokhin was touting was what the CIA would call “the biggest counterintelligence bonanza of the postwar period”.
His duffle bag contained many of the most important secrets in the KGB’s archive, where he had worked for three decades. The surreptitiously copied documents Mitrokhin would ultimately pass on to MI6 offered, its chief, Sir Richard Dearlove, said, “a sweeping overview of KGB operations over 50 years”.
Among the treasure dropped into the West’s lap were lists of names of numerous KGB agents abroad, both “illegals” — long-term penetration spies operating under false identities — as well as contacts passing on information. Shockingly, there proved to be 300 of the latter in the French establishment, and 30 in the Italian foreign ministry alone. In Britain Mitrokhin’s revelations led to the public unmasking of the last of the atom programme spies, Melita Norwood, dubbed by The Times, because of her shopping habits, “The spy who came in from the Co-op”.
Significant though this haul was, as tales of espionage go, one largely set amid the piled-up files of a vast bureaucracy is not an obvious page-turner. Moreover, the introverted Mitrokhin never offered much insight into the motivation for his actions and many of the details of his defection remain secret. Nevertheless, this is a wilderness that Gordon Corera, formerly the BBC’s security correspondent and now co-presenter with the spy novelist David McCloskey of the intelligence podcast The Rest Is Classified, is well equipped to traverse.
Whatever one makes of Mitrokhin — and his MI6 handlers thought him a prickly oddball — it certainly took remarkable courage to do what he did. Years of reading the files he was storing turned Mitrokhin from a true believer in communism into a quietly ardent opponent of its repressive machinery. When the KGB began moving its headquarters from the Lubyanka in Moscow to a new site in the 1970s — a huge operation as the organisation was generating three million documents a year — Mitrokhin was tasked with selecting which files should go and which should stay.
Some inconvenient ones had already been destroyed, for instance files that may have revealed the young Stalin was in touch with the tsar’s secret police. Determined to expose the system to the light, Mitrokhin started to make aides-memoire of what he read — tiny scraps of paper in code that he smuggled out of the archive hidden in his socks.
The KGB informant Melita Norwood was dubbed ‘The spy who came in from the Co-op’
TONY HARRIS/PA
Aided by a photographic memory, even for passport numbers and addresses, at weekends he would go to his country cottage, or dacha, and reconstitute the documents with a typewriter. This he christened Erika, and he thought of it as “the love of his life”.
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All too aware of the resources and paranoia of the KGB, he took pains not to be seen to be buying equipment for Erika, instead making ink from fruit juice and fabricating new ribbons from scraps of old ones. For 12 years, until his retirement in 1984, Mitrokhin typed, burying what became the volumes he had compiled — one exposed the hidden scale of the Soviet Union’s losses in Afghanistan — in milk churns concealed under the dacha.
Had he been caught, the best he could have expected was a bullet in the back of the head. Given the necessarily slow pace of Mitrokhin’s work, however, Corera sensibly tries to broaden the story by setting it within the wider context of the Soviet Union’s history. That in turn offers some insights into Mitrokhin’s motivation.
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“Defectors defect because they are defective,” runs an old spying trope. In Mitrokhin’s case he seems to have become disillusioned after being reprimanded when a field operative in Israel. Then, in 1956, while in Melbourne keeping an eye on the Soviet Union’s Olympic team, he found himself less than covertly in the sights of the press. He was photographed publicly urging the water polo team to hit back at their Hungarian opponents, who had vented their fury at the crushing of the uprising in Budapest then taking place.
A picture of a Hungarian player with blood running down his face went around the world, and the embarrassment led to Mitrokhin being sent to KGB’s equivalent of the salt mines: its archive.
The bloodied Hungarian water polo player Ervin Zador at the 1956 Olympics
BETTMANN ARCHIVE
What Corera conveys particularly well is Mitrokhin’s peculiarly Russian mindset. Mitrokhin could loathe the unfairness that underpinned how the KGB operated while staying a Russian nationalist, convinced of its moral superiority over the West. He especially deplored the KGB’s targeting of intellectuals, the guardians of Russia’s culture. The KGB was always hottest on defectors of this kind. Mitrokhin saw files revealing plots to break Rudolf Nureyev’s legs when he went to America, while 18 officers were dispatched to the Philippines to ensure that a chess player beat a formerly Russian
opponent.
Mitrokhin’s chance came with the end of the Soviet Union in 1991, the seismic event that seemed to end the career of a young KGB officer, Vladimir Putin. Corera has unearthed new details of his exfiltration. This was much more complex than that of, say, the KGB defector Oleg Gordievsky, as Mitrokhin wanted to bring not just his archive but his whole family, including his aged mother-in-law, none of whom had been told what was happening.
The operation was authentically chaotic rather than executed with Bond-like panache. Emergency numbers didn’t work, minibuses had to be commandeered in the street, and the wheelchair of Mitrokhin’s son — who suffered from a neurological illness — was too wide for the gangplank of the ship on which the family were meant to escape. Yet so low-key had Mitrokhin been all his life that no one noticed he had gone.
“Mitrokhin is a really difficult person,” observed Christopher Andrew, the Cambridge don who worked with him on publishing the archive commercially in 1999. “But he is also a hero.”
The book’s author Gordon Corera co-hosts the intelligence podcast The Rest Is Classified
The weird thing was that no one knew quite how to handle the weapon the West had been given. The Treasury jibbed at the cost of resettling Mitrokhin’s family, the politicians regarded information about a seemingly vanquished enemy’s historic operations as old hat, while the spooks would sometimes rather not have been reminded of their failure to catch moles.
Mitrokhin’s hope had been that his exposure of the KGB’s crackdown on domestic dissent would lead to Nuremberg-style justice for Russia’s former leaders. The West, however, focused more on what he revealed about the Soviet Union’s penetration of its bureaucracies and economies.
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In the years before he died, in 2004 at the age of 81, Mitrokhin became disappointed with what he found in the West, and nostalgic for the somewhat idealised, Tolstoyan version of the deep Russia he had left behind. Corera perhaps labours the point that it is a mentality shared with Putin and his supporters, yet The Spy in the Archive is nevertheless the overdue and often striking memorial Mitrokhin merits.
The Spy in the Archive: How One Man Tried to Kill the KGB by Gordon Corera (William Collins £25 pp336). To order a copy go to timesbookshop.co.uk. Free UK standard P&P on orders over £25. Special discount available for Times+ members
Sports
No. 11 Women’s Track and Field advances six events to NCAA Outdoor Championships
Story Links COLLEGE STATION, Texas – No. 11 Texas Women’s Track and Field finished the last day of the NCAA West First Round and advanced six events to the NCAA Outdoor Championships. The women’s 4×100-meter relay showed off a new lineup with Carleta Bernard, Holly Okuku, Kenondra Davis and Ramiah Elliott and […]

COLLEGE STATION, Texas – No. 11 Texas Women’s Track and Field finished the last day of the NCAA West First Round and advanced six events to the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
The women’s 4×100-meter relay showed off a new lineup with Carleta Bernard, Holly Okuku, Kenondra Davis and Ramiah Elliott and recorded a season-best time of 42.85 to advance to Eugene.
Sophomore Akala Garrett advanced in both hurdle events for the first time in her career after recording a personal-best non-winded time of 12.98 in the 100-meter hurdles. She later set the E.B. Cushing Stadium record in the 400-meter hurdles with a time of 54.72, the sixth-fastest time in UT history. Garrett will be the first Longhorn to compete at the NCAA Championships in both hurdle events in the same season since Rasin McIntosh competed in both events in 2003 and 2004.
Freshman Mackenzie Collins also reached the NCAA’s in the 400m hurdles, earning the last spot with a time of 57.14. It marks the second-straight season the Longhorns have sent a freshman to the NCAA Championships in the event after Garrett went last season.
Texas later sent two through in the 200-meter dash. Kenondra Davis equaled her personal best with a time of 22.58, moving her up to No. 10 on the school’s all-time performer list. Okuku qualified for her first individual NCAA event by matching her personal best with a time of 22.85, the 10th-fastest time of the night.
Results
Akala Garrett – 1st – 400mH – 54.72 (qualified)
Bernard, Okuku, Davis, Elliott – 2nd – 4×100 – 42.85 (qualified)
Akala Garrett – 5th – 100mH – 12.98 (qualified)
Kenondra Davis – 6th – 200m – 22.58 (qualified)
Holly Okuku – 10th – 200m – 22.85 (qualified)
Mackenzie Collins – 12th – 400mH – 57.14 (qualified)
Chrystal Herpin – 13th – Discus – 53.89m
Collins, Elliott, Bernard, Koom-Dadzie – 4×400 – 3:35.12
Elizabeth Stockan – 24th – 1500m – 4:34.62
Elizabeth Pickett – 33rd – 5000m – 16:36.68
Sports
Mosley Wraps Up CSUN’s Stay at the NCAA West First Round
Story Links COLLEGE STATION, Texas—CSUN Track & Field’s Summer Mosley concluded her stay at the NCAA West First Round on Saturday at E.B. Cushing Stadium by competing in the discus. Mosley would register her longest throw on her third and final attempt, which went for 50.09m (164-4). That throw would place her […]

COLLEGE STATION, Texas—CSUN Track & Field’s Summer Mosley concluded her stay at the NCAA West First Round on Saturday at E.B. Cushing Stadium by competing in the discus.
Mosley would register her longest throw on her third and final attempt, which went for 50.09m (164-4). That throw would place her 38th overall out of a 48-athlete field, but short of advancing to the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Mosley also competed in the hammer throw this past Thursday at the regional, finishing 25th overall with a toss of 57.92m (190-0).
A native of Miami, Mosley had a career season in her first year with CSUN. Mosley would win two individual titles at the 2025 Big West Championships, finishing first in the hammer throw at 59.66m (195-9) and the discus at 53.51m (175-7). The two title wins were her first conference titles in her collegiate career.
Overall, CSUN was represented in nine different events at this year’s NCAA West First Round with six on the men’s team and three on the women’s team. The three regional appearances from the women were the most since the 2019 season. In all, CSUN broke three men’s records this outdoor season while 13 all-time top-10 marks were set across the men’s and women’s teams.
ACCORDING TO COACH JUSTIN JOHNSON
“I’m proud of our performances this week, even though things didn’t fall our way, I know that each student-athlete put their all into their performances. And for that, I am thankful and proud of each and every one of them. From the outside looking in, some may see this as a failure, but we are all on a journey seeking greatness and sometimes you will fall. There are great lessons to learned in defeat. I believe these young men and women have what it takes to pick each other up and continue on our journey in search of greatness. We will be back next year physically, mentally and emotionally stronger because of the experiences we have gone through and our willingness to do what it takes to be great. Go Matadors!”
#GoMatadors
Sports
Marquette University Athletics
COLLEGE STATION, Texas – Marquette University track & field student-athletes Danny Olsen and Annika Bynum competed in the NCAA West First Round this week. Olsen competed in the first round of the 400m on Wednesday night with a 46.48 second performance. Olsen had the 47th best time coming into the first round and finished 25th. […]

Olsen competed in the first round of the 400m on Wednesday night with a 46.48 second performance. Olsen had the 47th best time coming into the first round and finished 25th.
“It was a fantastic year for Danny,” Rogers said. “I’m super proud of his drive and perseverance this year. Our athletic trainer Matt Martin deserves a huge shout out. He did a great job with Danny working through a couple tough injuries this season. We are all excited for what the future holds.”
Olsen qualified for the NCAA first round after he won gold and broke his own program record with a time of 46.21 seconds in the 400-meter at the BIG EAST Outdoor Championships on May 17, becoming Marquette’s first ever conference champion in the event.
Bynum competed in the semifinals of the high jump for the second year in a row and no heighted on Saturday.
“It was a terrific season for Annika,” Rogers said. “Unfortunately, today wasn’t her day. She has been a tremendous leader on our team and made quite an impact on the program these past four years.”
Bynum qualified for the semifinals after tying the program record in the high jump, clearing 1.80 meters at the Uncaged Eagle Open on May 9.
Keep up with the Marquette men’s and women’s track and field programs through social media by following on X (@MUTFXC) and Instagram (@MUTFXC) and ‘liking’ on Facebook (/MUTFXC).
Sports
Tulane Finishes 15th at ICSA Open Fleet Race National Championship
ST. MARY’S CITY, Md. – With the regatta limited to one day of racing and only seven rotations Tulane University landed 15th out of 18 teams in the ICSA Open Fleet Race National Championship on Friday in St. Mary’s City, Maryland. The Green Wave ended the championship regatta with 161 total points through 14 […]

The Green Wave ended the championship regatta with 161 total points through 14 total races across two divisions.
Skippers Christian Ebbin and Hamilton Barclay teamed with crews Sabrina Anderson and CJ Ricci to pace the Wave on the water from the B Division. The Tulane quartet finished 10th in their division with 69 total points in seven races. Ebbin and Anderson paired together for three races and posted their best performance in the final rotation finishing fifth. Barclay and Ricci hit the water for four races together including a sixth-place performance in the duo’s best race.
In the A Division, skipper Kelly Holthus teamed with crew Taylor Bartell to finish 16th in the division. The Green Wave duo ended with 92 points across seven races on the waters of the St. Mary’s River. Holthus and Bartell combined for the best finish of the regatta for Tulane landing in fourth in their third race.
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Tulane University is located in the city of New Orleans. It is a city built on tradition and resiliency. The lessons Green Wave student-athletes have learned through their connection with this university and city have BUILT doctors, lawyers, business leaders, conference champions, all-conference players, All-Americans, professional athletes and NCAA tournament teams. The city of New Orleans has shaped us into who we are today. We are One City. We are Tulane. We are NOLA BUILT. Check out our story at NolaBuilt.com.
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