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Diamond League to Olympics: 2024–25 Becomes Showcase for Asian Excellence

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Asian athletes are rewriting record books and commanding global podiums, a surge that sports news outlet China Global Television Network (CGTN) says marks a decisive shift in power toward the East.

Their momentum—evident in Diamond League victories and Olympic pageantry—has become one of the most talked-about topics across international Sport News desks, underscoring how 2024–25 has become a showcase for Asian excellence.

Zhang Mingkun delivered the year’s first headline on April 27, 2025, when he flew 8.18 meters to capture the men’s long jump at the Diamond League stop in Xiamen, China, according to the broadcaster.

Less than two weeks later, China’s men’s 4×400-meter relay quartet—anchored by a blistering finishing lap—clocked 3 minutes 1.87 seconds at a May 10 meet, breaking the national record and securing a lane at the Tokyo 2025 World Athletics Championships, the broadcaster reported.

Retiring sprint star Su Bingtian, Asia’s first sub-9.85 100-meter runner, took a valedictory bow on February 18 by winning the 60 meters in 6.65 seconds at the Jinan indoor meet—his final race over the short dash, the broadcaster noted.

Table-tennis phenom Sun Yingsha rounded out the stretch of milestones by carrying Asia’s flag during the Paris 2024 Olympic closing ceremony after pocketing two gold medals and one silver, the broadcaster said.

Competition rebalanced

CGTN analysts say Zhang’s 8.18-meter flight places him shoulder-to-shoulder with the world’s long-jump elite, challenging a field historically dominated by North American and European specialists. It also underscores China’s much-improved horizontal-jump coaching pipeline, a program once considered an afterthought behind the nation’s sprint and weight-class sports.

The relay breakthrough may be even more consequential. Four-lap events have been a Western stronghold since the 1950s. Yet, the 3:01.87 clocking moves China within striking distance of the medal-rifle range that begins around 2:58. Recent podiums at the World Championships have been won in low-three-minute territory, the network’s athletics desk observed.

Su’s farewell sprint, streamed live by the network’s digital channels, triggered millions of social-media tributes. Many fans thanked him for proving that an Asian sprinter could eclipse 10 seconds in the 100 meters and gap world-class starters over 60 meters. His parting words, “Keep chasing the impossible,” were replayed in highlight reels from the broadcaster throughout the week.

Rising next generation

While veterans attracted the marquee attention, a new wave pushed quietly from below. Sixteen-year-old Chen Yujie shattered the Asian youth 200-meter record by running 22.99 seconds at the same Xiamen meet where Zhang triumphed, the broadcaster said. Her time ranks among the fastest ever recorded globally for athletes under 17, hinting at sustained sprint depth.

China’s mixed 4×100-meter squad also earned early passage to the 2028 Los Angeles Games with a 41.30-second heat, evidence, the broadcaster noted, of coaching models that leverage male-female baton chemistry—still experimental in many federations.

Field veterans continued to prove that longevity is attainable. Shot-putter Gong Lijiao, 35, heaved 19.62 meters in Xiamen to claim Diamond League bronze. “Consistency is key,” she told the broadcaster afterward, crediting incremental technical tweaks to her ability to remain competitive after three Olympic cycles.

Broader significance

Sports economists interviewed by the broadcaster argued that these performances deepen Asia’s commercial leverage ahead of the next media-rights cycle. Brands courting Gen-Z fans in Southeast Asia, they said, see elite Asian athletes as effective ambassadors into both developed and emerging markets.

Geopolitically, the results arrive as Asia hosts a dense calendar of competitions: the 2026 Hangzhou Asian Games, the 2027 World University Games in Seoul, and the 2025 World Championships in Tokyo. Each outing provides regional federations with rehearsal time for LA 2028, where Asian television audiences are expected to surpass previous highs, the broadcaster projected.

Performance scientists quoted by the broadcaster pointed to upgraded national training centers, data-driven nutrition programs, and deeper collaboration with European biomechanics labs as key inputs. In China alone, sports-science funding increased by 18 percent year over year from 2023 to 2024, according to estimates from the broadcaster, drawn from public budget statements.

Shifting cultural narratives

The cascade of records is also recasting cultural perceptions. For decades, conventional wisdom held that Asian physiques were better suited for skill-based or weight-classified sports—such as table tennis, badminton, and archery—rather than pure power and speed—Zhang’s airborne show and the relay’s tempo challenge that archetype head-on.

The broadcaster’s commentators said Su’s farewell elicited nostalgia not only at home but across Asia, noting that Japanese, Korean, and Filipino track fans posted montages celebrating his 9.83-second national record from 2021. Many called him “Asia’s Bolt” in appreciation of the swagger he brought to the start line.

Sun Yingsha’s spotlight during the Paris ceremony served a parallel cultural function. Her presence signaled that Chinese athletes are now front and center at the world’s most-watched sports pageant, a mantle once reserved for figures from Europe or North America, the broadcaster noted.

Supporting color and reaction

Beyond the stadium, Chinese social-media platform Weibo lit up with hashtags referencing Zhang’s 8.18-meter jump, amassing more than 200 million reads within 24 hours, the broadcaster reported. Commenters praised the 22-year-old’s “rocket legs” and posted side-by-side GIFs comparing his flight to World Championship clips.

The relay team’s anchor, whose 44-second split sealed the record, told the broadcaster that practicing baton handoffs six times a day sometimes left him “dreaming of aluminum batons.” His coach added that sharper exchanges shaved at least 0.3 seconds from the previous record.

Chen Yujie’s school in Zhejiang province held an impromptu pep rally the Monday after her 22.99-second run. The broadcaster’s cameras captured classmates waving handmade signs reading “22.99 today, 22.50 tomorrow.” Teachers, the broadcaster said, highlighted Chen’s disciplined study habits, portraying her as a model of the student-athlete balance that Chinese educators encourage.

Gong Lijiao’s “Consistency is key” mantra resonated with older track fans. One retired coach, interviewed by the broadcaster, contrasted her 19.62-meter bronze with her throws of 20 meters or more from a decade earlier, saying her ability to stay within a meter of her prime marks is “remarkably rare” in power events.

Context within global rankings

World Athletics lists only a handful of men’s long-jumpers clearing beyond 8.20 meters in 2025, so Zhang’s 8.18 places him within centimeters of medal relevance. The Chinese relay sits inside the year’s top eight times, the cutoff used to forecast finalists at major meets, its data desk confirmed.

While Su’s indoor 6.65 will not top global charts—times nearer 6.45 usually win world titles—its symbolic weight comes from closing a career that inspired future Asian sprinters. Archival footage replayed by the broadcaster showed his 9.83 Olympic semifinal in Tokyo 2021, alongside his final flourish in Jinan, stitching a narrative arc that appealed to longtime track watchers.

Sun Yingsha, meanwhile, remains world No. 1 in women’s singles table tennis rankings through mid-2025, the broadcaster said. Her ability to transition from athletic dominance to ceremonial gravitas strengthens the argument that Asian champions can serve as soft-power envoys.

What comes next

CGTN will stream every session of the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo this August and has already labeled the event a “home-field advantage” for regional athletes to convert season-best marks into medals. Among the most anticipated showdowns: Zhang versus defending world champion Miltiadis Tentoglou, the Chinese 4×400 squad against the United States, and Chen Yujie’s possible senior debut.

Further out, national coaches told the network that qualification standards met in 2024–25 allow them to redirect focus from chasing entry marks to refining race tactics and injury prevention.

Wrap-up

With record performances, historic relay times, and star turns at global ceremonies, Asia’s athletes have announced themselves as equal contenders—if not pacesetters—on the international stage. The march continues toward the Tokyo 2025 World Championships and, beyond that, toward LA 2028, where, the broadcaster predicts, the region’s best will seek to turn this two-year run of breakthroughs into a permanent rewriting of athletics’ balance of power.





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Knight to Be Enshrined in ASUN Hall of Fame

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FORT MYERS, Fla. – Florida Gulf Coast University women’s basketball legend Whitney Knight has been selected to the ASUN Hall of Fame’s 11th induction class, which also includes Lipscomb’s Madi Talbert Artz (women’s cross county/track & field), North Florida’s Dallas Moore (men’s basketball) and North Alabama’s Ivy Wallen Murks (women’s basketball).

The Hall of Fame’s 11th annual induction ceremony is scheduled to take place on Thursday, May 28, 2026, in Jacksonville. Knight, who played for FGCU from 2011-16, becomes the eighth Eagle to earn the ASUN’s highest honor, joining softball’s Courtney Platt, Cheyenne Jenks, and Carmen Paez, baseball’s Chris Sale, Casey Coleman, and Richard Bleier, and volleyball’s Brooke Youngquist Sweat.

Knight’s induction further cements her status as one of the most decorated players in FGCU and ASUN history. A program-defining guard and the first Eagle ever selected in the WNBA Draft, Knight’s impact on the conference and the Green & Blue remains unmatched nearly a decade after her graduation.

Knight was named to the ASUN All-Decade Team following a dominant career in Fort Myers. She became the program’s first WNBA draft pick when the Los Angeles Sparks selected her 15th overall in 2016, just the seventh ASUN player all-time to be drafted. As a senior, she earned Associated Press Honorable Mention All-America recognition while also being selected as one of 30 national candidates for the NCAA Senior CLASS Award, highlighting excellence both on and off the court.

A two-time ASUN Player of the Year (2015, 2016), Knight stands as one of only two Eagles ever to earn three First Team All-ASUN selections, joining FGCU great Sarah Hansen. Her postseason résumé is equally impressive, being named 2015 ASUN Tournament MVP, 2016 All-Tournament Team, 2012 ASUN All-Freshman Team, in addition to a program-record seven ASUN Player of the Week honors.

On the court, Knight was a matchup nightmare whose versatility defined FGCU’s continual rise into a perennial mid-major power. She led the ASUN in blocks (99), steals (64), and three-pointers per game (2.8) as a senior, while also finishing top six in the league in rebounds and double-doubles. She produced eight double-doubles, five 20-point games, and scored a three-pointer in every game she played that season. Her nine-block performance remains one of the most dominant defensive outings in conference history.

Knight finished her career with 1,574 points, 735 rebounds, 333 blocks, 245 assists, and 206 steals, one of the most complete statistical profiles ever recorded by an Eagle. She remains the program’s all-time leader in blocks by a staggering margin while ranking second in career points, field goals made, field goals attempted, three-pointers made, and rebounds.

A four-year force whose two-way production and big-moment performances helped shape the foundation of FGCU’s women’s basketball identity, Knight’s legacy only continues to grow with her selection to the ASUN Hall of Fame.

More information about the ASUN Hall of Fame and the Class of 2026 will be released by the conference in the coming months.

To stay up-to-date on the Eagles, be sure to follow on Instagram and X at FGCU_WBB.



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Griffin signs with Southwestern track and field | Sports

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GRANT CITY, Mo. — Worth County senior Andrew Griffin made his college plans official on Tuesday morning in Grant City as the Tiger track star made his signing with the Southwestern Community College track and field program official.

“I’ve always wanted to be an electrician and they have a really good electrical program,” Griffin said. “I also wanted to continue my track career. Southwestern is just a nice small college. I didn’t want to go to a big college where there are lots of people. It makes me feel at home with the small town and small college.”



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Mountaineer track and field start 2025-2026 season with  record time at the Winston-Salem College Kick-Off – The Appalachian

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App States track and field started their 2025-26 indoor season at the Winston-Salem College Kick-Off Saturday. 

With the race starting for at the 60 meters, junior Kendall Johnson placed second with a 7.50 finish, just 1 second behind Converse University. Junior Nicole Wells finished 10th in the 60 meters with a time of 7.73. The 800 meter was led by senior Addison Ollendick-Smith who started her season with a fourth place finish with a time of 2:18.09.

The main event for the Mountaineers was the 4×400 meter relay, where they finished first with teammates Wells, senior Damyja Alejandro-Ortiz, senior Daye Talley and junior Jayla Adams, and had a record time of 3:45.76. 

In the pole vault, senior Ava Studney finished first clearing 3.95m and sophomore Abigail Goetz followed and finished fifth in the pole vault with a 3.50m. Freshman Alana Braxton won the long jump with 5.87m and freshman Kelly MacBride finished in the top 10 with 5.31m. The triple jump saw 3 of the women’s teammates finish in the top 6, with Braxton finishing first with 12.32m. freshman Ashlynn Wimberly finished second with 12.14m, and sophomore Jahaila Wright finished with 11.60m. 

In weight throwing, junior Dianna Boykin had a personal best of 14.70m to place eighth and sophomore Emily Edwards followed close behind with a top 10 finish in shotput, 12.17m and weight throw, 14.03m. In the 200 meter, both Adams and Talley finished top five with times of 24.39 and 24.77. 

For the Mountaineers next meet they will be in the UNC-Asheville Collegiate Opener on Jan. 10 at the Tryon International.



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Witherspoon Earns AVCA All- Region Honors

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AUGUSTA, Ga. – Augusta junior outside hitter Layne Witherspoon has been named an AVCA All-Region Honorable Mention selection following a standout 2025 campaign in which the Jaguars finished 25–9 and captured the Peach Belt Conference regular-season title.

Witherspoon delivered 346 kills on .295 hitting across 126 sets while adding 168 digs, 84 total blocks, and 433 total points. She tallied 17 double-digit kill performances, highlighted by a season-high 17 kills against Montevallo on Sept. 19 and a 21-point outing versus Francis Marion on Sept. 13. On the defensive side, she posted a season-best 14 digs at Flagler on Oct. 4 and recorded seven total blocks against Georgia College on Oct. 17. She was second on the team with 3.44 points per set.

A consistent presence in Augusta’s front row, Witherspoon helped power the Jaguars to their PBC regular-season championship and another postseason appearance.

Fans of Jaguar Athletics can subscribe to the email listserve by clicking here. Fans can follow Augusta University at www.augustajags.com and receive short updates on Facebook at Augusta University Athletics and on Twitter at @AugustaJags

 





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Hanson Wins Region Player of the Year, Cook Named Coach of the Year

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LEXINGTON, Ky. — Gophers senior outside hitter Julia Hanson was named AVCA Northwest Region Player of the Year while Keegan Cook was named Coach of the Year, the organization announced today. 

There are 14 first-team All-Region members and an additional group of honorable mention selections for each of the 10 regions. A Player of the Year, Freshman of the Year, and Coach of the Year were selected for every region.

The 213 student-athletes who made All-Region represent 109 different schools. Nebraska leads the way with seven All-Region selections, followed by Pittsburgh and Stanford with six apiece. Florida,  Kentucky, Louisville, Minnesota, Texas A&M, and Wisconsin all have five All-Region first-team or honorable mention selections.

Joining Hanson on the AVCA All-Northwest Region First Team were freshman opposite Carly Gilk and redshirt freshman setter Stella Swenson. Redshirt senior middle blocker Lourdes Myers and freshman middle blocker Jordan Taylor were named all-region honorable mention.

A Savage, Minn., native, Julia Hanson earns another major award after a magnificent senior season. She was also named a unanimous First Team All-Big Ten selection in 2025. During her fourth year in the Maroon and Gold, Hanson won Big Ten Player of the Week on Sept. 1 and was named MVP of the Golden Gopher Invitational on Aug. 31. 

For the year, she totaled 26 10+ kill matches in 32 chances, posting a career-high 4.13 kills per set, a mark that ranked her fourth in the Big Ten. Hanson also hit a career-best .309, a mark that ranked her third among Big Ten pins.

She tallied five 20+ kill matches and averaged a career-best 0.30 service aces on the year. Her 26 aces in conference play put her at No. 8 in the conference. Defensively, Hanson posted 0.64 blocks and 1.60 digs per set. She was named as one of 30 players to the AVCA Preseason Player of the Year Watch List and was a Preseason All-Big Ten honoree. Hanson helped Minnesota reach its first Sweet 16 since 2022 after going for 36 kills last weekend in two matches (.500 hitting).

Coach Cook was named AVCA Region Coach of the Year for the fourth time in his career and first at Minnesota. Cook led the Gophers to a 24-9 (12-8 Big Ten) record and a Sweet 16 appearance for the first time in his three years at the ‘U’. He and his coaching staff did this despite losing four starters to season-ending injuries in the first four weeks of the season. The Gophers played five freshmen starters for a majority of the season, including three-fourths of Big Ten competition. Minnesota also won four ranked matches this year, taking down No. 23 Indiana, No. 24 Penn State, No. 11 Purdue and No. 23 Iowa State. 

Carly Gilk earned an all-region nod to go along with her Freshman All-Big Ten accolades. The rookie opposite posted 2.28 kills per set on a scorching .293 hitting in 2025. She also posted 1.70 digs, 0.60 blocks and 0.27 aces per set in 28 matches played. She had seven 10+ kill matches and seven 10+ dig matches on the year. Gilk had the best match of her freshman year on Oct. 26 at Purdue, tallying 15 kills (.364) and 10 digs in a five set match.

Redshirt freshman setter Stella Swenson added an all-region honor after being named All-Big Ten Second Team and to the Big Ten All-Freshman Team. She averaged 9.78 assists, 2.16 digs, 0.61 blocks, 0.59 kills and 0.28 aces per set in her first year as a starter, playing in all 33 matches.

Swenson posted eight double-doubles, including a career-best 58-assist, 10-dig outing in a five-set win at Iowa. She ranked eighth in the Big Ten in assists per set and was fifth amongst setters with 0.59 kills per set. She was the first Minnesota freshman to post 1,000 assists in her rookie season since her sister, Samantha Seliger-Swenson, did so in 2015. Stella was named Big Ten Freshman of the Week on Sept. 1 after being named to the Golden Gopher Invitational All-Tournament Team. She was added to the AVCA Mid-Season Player of the Year Watch List as the only freshman on there,

Redshirt senior middle blocker Lourdes Myers had the best season of her career in 2025 in the Maroon and Gold. She was named AVCA All-Northwest Region Honorable Mention after going for 1.70 kills and 1.19 blocks per set, playing in all 33 matches. Myers had two 10+ kill matches in 2025, including a 12-kill, nine-block match at Washington. She had seven-or-more kills 13 times and five-or-more blocks 12 times. Myers ranked ninth in the Big Ten in blocks per set.

Freshman middle Jordan Taylor also earned AVCA All-Northwest Region Honorable Mention. She had a banner freshman season, averaging a team-best 1.24 blocks per set, playing in 30 matches. Taylor averaged 1.35 kills per set on .355 hitting, going for five-or-more kills 12 times. She had five+ blocks nine times, including a career-high 11 block match at Iowa on Nov. 16. 

The Gophers (24-9, 12-8 B1G) compete in the Sweet 16 against No. 1 seeded Pittsburgh (28-4, 18-2 ACC) at 6 p.m. CT on Thursday. The match will be on ESPN2.  



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Badgers Land Five on AVCA North All-Region Team

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MADISON, Wis. – Five total players of the Wisconsin volleyball team were named to the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) North All-Region Team. Outside hitter Mimi Colyer was named North Player of the Year, while head coach Kelly Sheffield was named Coach of the Year.

The Badger list of North All-Region First Team honorees consists of Carter Booth, Mimi Colyer, Grace Egan, Kristen Simon and Una Vajagic. Head Coach Kelly Sheffield also earned his sixth Coach of the Year honor.

Freshman Kristen Simon was one-of-three freshman named First Team. In the regular season, Simon played in 89-of-92 sets as the starting libero for Wisconsin. The Kentucky native led the team with 3.49 digs per set, chipped in with 14 service aces and averaged 1.10 assists per set. She reached double-figure digs 19 matches, including a season-best in her very first collegiate match against Kansas with 23. The 5-foot-8 libero also earned Big Ten All-Freshman this season.

For the first time in her career, right side hitter Grace Egan earned All-Region honors. Traditionally, an outside hitter, Egan moved over to the right side and averaged 2.43 kills per set, 2.19 digs per set, 3.09 points per set and chipped in with 25 service aces this season for the Badgers. She totaled three double-doubles (kills, digs) against Texas, Florida and Northwestern.

Outside hitter Una Vajagic steadily became one of the Badgers most dynamic players in the starting rotation. The Serbian native totaled 2.71 kills per set, 2.56 digs per set, and 3.07 points per set in her first full season with the Badgers. Vajagic also collected eight double-doubles (kills, digs) in the regular season, including a back-to-back double-doubles in her first two collegiate matches against Kansas and Texas. The 6-foot outside hitter also chipped in with 18 service aces for UW.

Senior Carter Booth claims her fourth All-Region honor and third with the Badgers. In all four years, she has been a First Team honoree, including Freshman of the Year when she was with Minnesota. In the regular season, Booth led the Badgers and ranked 5th in the NCAA with a .436 hitting percentage. She added 2.02 kills per set, 1.24 blocks per set and 2.70 points per set. Booth totaled eight matches where she didn’t have a hitting error, including a season best 11 kills on 15 swings with no errors. Defensively, Booth achieved a season best 10.0 blocks at Michigan St. on Nov. 15.

Also joining Booth as a four-time AVCA All-Region recipient is outside hitter Mimi Colyer. She also repeats as All-Region Player of the Year. As a freshman Colyer was named the Pacific North Region Freshman of the Year at Oregon, and in 2024, she was named the Northwest Region Player of the Year. In just one season with the Badgers, Colyer has already broken and is on pace to break several more single-season offensive program records. The California native reached double-figure kills in every match but one this season, including nine matches with 20 or more kills. Colyer averaged 5.32 kills per set, 5.93 points per set, 2.20 digs per set, and added 0.69 blocks per set. She also hit .334 in the regular season. Colyer totaled seven double-doubles including a season-best 25 kill, 18 dig performance at Washington on Oct. 24.

Head coach Kelly Sheffield earned his sixth All-Region Coach of the Year honor after leading the Badgers to a 24-4 regular season record, and a 17-3 Big Ten record for second place. Sheffield replaced nearly his entire starting rotation, including four All-Americans from a season ago.

Wisconsin is 1-of-55 teams assigned to the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) North Region, joining just Michigan State as a Big Ten school representing the North Region.

FULL LIST OF AVCA ALL-REGION RECIPIENTS

 



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