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Former Big Sky State Games executive director to light torch with Olympians

BILLINGS — Karen Sanford Gall, former Big Sky State Games executive director, will light the torch with track and field Olympians at the 40th anniversary Big Sky State Games Opening Ceremonies. Along with Sanford Gall, Duncan Atwood, Willie Banks, Erin Aldrich Shean, Andre Phillips and Mac Wilkins will speak and be part of lighting ceremonies. […]

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BILLINGS — Karen Sanford Gall, former Big Sky State Games executive director, will light the torch with track and field Olympians at the 40th anniversary Big Sky State Games Opening Ceremonies.

Along with Sanford Gall, Duncan Atwood, Willie Banks, Erin Aldrich Shean, Andre Phillips and Mac Wilkins will speak and be part of lighting ceremonies. The event will take place Friday July 18th at the Lockwood High School stadium.

State Games Opening Ceremonies festivities include the Soaked Run, climbing wall, family entertainment, Food Truck Olympics, games, parade of athletes, Montana Mile, Montana 100, and torch lighting. The ceremony is free to attend.

Sanford Gall was the Executive Director for the Big Sky State Games for 24 years and employed by the Big Sky State Games since 1990. She retired in 2019. Sanford Gall was a four-time Olympic Trials qualifier in the marathon (’92,’96, ’00, 04). As a collegiate athlete Karen ran for the University of Wyoming.

She was inducted into the University of Wyoming Athletic Hall of Fame in 2010. She holds many records with the Governor’s Cup and Montana Women’s Run.

Karen grew the mission of the Games to include healthy lifestyle events that included Shape Up Montana and Big Sky Fit Kids. Also, Sanford Gall played an integral role in starting the YES Cross Country Meet and the management of the Heart and Sole Race. Sanford Gall has dedicated over 30 years inspiring Montanan’s to live a healthy lifestyle.

Along with Sanford Gall, track and field Olympians from the World Record Track and Field Camp will join the torch lighting ceremony.

Following are biographies of Olympians scheduled to appear:

Mac Wilkins, Discus: Former Discus World Record Holder (1976), Gold Medalist (1976 Olympic Games), Silver Medalist (1984 Olympic Games), Gold Medalist (1979 Pan American Games). Wilkins is the former Discus World Record Holder. He broke the world record a total of four times. He ranked as the number one Discus thrower in the world from 1976 to 1980. Wilkins is the former USATF Throws Coach at the Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista, CA.

Andre Phillips, Hurdles:Olympian, Gold Medal-1988, 1985 World Cup Champion, 1985 USATF Outdoor Champion, 1981 NCAA Champion, 2009 USATF Hall of Fame. Phillips is best remembered for winning a gold medal in the Seoul, Korea Olympic Games in 1988, beating Edwin Moses who was undefeated in more than 100 races. Phillips is an educator, receiving his Phd. in Education.

Duncan Atwood, Javelin: 1980, 1984 Olympian, two-time winner of the Pan American Games 1979, 1987, World Cup Finalist and a one-time World Championship Finalist. He was a clinician at the Ironwood Throws Camp and currently is the assistant coach for Pacific Lutheran University.

Erin Aldrich Shean, High Jump: 2000 Olympian, four-time World Championship team, Pan American Bronze Medalist. Shean competed at the 2000 Olympic Games and the World Championships in 1997, 2001, 2005 and 2007. Shean played volleyball at the highest level, competing for the United States women’s national volleyball team. She competed at the university level for the Texas Longhorns in both sports.

Willie Banks, Long Jump and Triple Jump: World Record Triple Jump Holder (1985-1995), Olympian (1980,1984,1988), Silver Medalist World Championships (1983). Banks is the former World Record holder in the triple jump. Banks held the record for over 10 years, and was inducted into the USA National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1999. He currently coaches at a local high school in California and often travels around the world teaching triple jump clinics.

For the sixth year prior to Opening Ceremonies, Banks will lead the State Games World Record Track & Field Camp on July 18 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Lockwood High School.

The entry fee is $150 (includes camp and BSSG Track and Field registration). The coaches’ fee is free if three or more of the coaches’ athletes attend. Register at bigskygames.org under Track & Field. Registration for the camp closes July 13th.

The track and field camp is sponsored by the Midland Roundtable. Wendy’s sponsors Opening Ceremonies. Major sponsors of the Big Sky State Games are Kampgrounds of America, First Interstate Bank, Rebel River Creative, and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Montana. For information go to bigskygames.org or call 406-254-7426.





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Trans athlete sues Swarthmore College for not letting her race with women

A transgender female athlete sued Swarthmore College on Thursday, alleging the college violated Title IX when it banned her from competing on the women’s track and field team earlier this year. Swarthmore informed the student, Evelyn “Evie” Parts, in February that she could no longer race for the women’s team in light of National Collegiate […]

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A transgender female athlete sued Swarthmore College on Thursday, alleging the college violated Title IX when it banned her from competing on the women’s track and field team earlier this year.

Swarthmore informed the student, Evelyn “Evie” Parts, in February that she could no longer race for the women’s team in light of National Collegiate Athletic Association policy, according to the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia. The NCAA on Feb. 6 had barred transgender women from competing in varsity sports in response to an executive order from President Donald Trump and threatened sanctions against member schools that didn’t follow the policy.

Parts, who first began racing for Swarthmore in August 2020, was told by school officials that she could either run as part of the men’s team, or run unattached to the college, according to the lawsuit — meaning she would not be able to receive coaching, medical treatment, or transportation, and would have to pay for her own entry to races.

Parts was named a captain of the women’s track team last fall, and she graduated from Swarthmore in May.

The lawsuit said the directive barring her from the team caused severe emotional damage for Parts — who started hormone replacement therapy during her junior year of high school and whose “birth certificate, Social Security card and driver’s license confirm” her sex as female. Later in February, Parts “commenced engaging in self-harm” by cutting herself with a razor, the lawsuit says; in April, she told a friend she wanted to kill herself.

The lawsuit — which identified Parts as the only transgender female athlete at Swarthmore — comes as colleges have been caught in the crosshairs of the Trump administration’s conservative agenda.

The University of Pennsylvania earlier this summer struck a deal with the Trump administration, agreeing to apologize to female athletes who objected to transgender swimmer Lia Thomas’ participation on their team. The university also agreed to restore records and honors the women would have won if not for Thomas, and said that for athletics, it would adhere to the definition of male and female in one of Trump’s executive orders.

The White House had paused $175 million in federal funding to Penn, citing Thomas’ participation, and funding was restored after the university reached an agreement with the administration.

The NCAA adopted its policy limiting competition in women’s sports to athletes assigned female at birth in response to Trump‘s executive order that threatened to pull funding from schools that allowed transgender women to compete in women’s sports.

In her lawsuit, Parts accused Swarthmore of disregarding federal and state law in adopting the NCAA policy. Regulations enacted by the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission in 2023 bar discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation.

According to the lawsuit, administrators told Parts that their counsel “could not find any way that federal or Pennsylvania state law superseded the NCAA ban on transgender athletes.”

The NCAA is also named as a defendant in the lawsuit, which says the organization showed a “reckless indifference to Evie’s rights as a woman” and illegally deprived her of equal opportunity.

“We stand by the allegations in the complaint,” Parts’ lawyer, Susie Cirilli, said Friday. “The NCAA is a private organization that issued a bigoted policy. Swarthmore College chose to follow that policy and disregard federal and state law.”

Spokespeople for Swarthmore did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday. The NCAA national office declined to comment.

The lawsuit alleges that Swarthmore knew it was discriminating against Parts. Her sibling, Winter Parts, a nonbinary runner who had also raced for Swarthmore, individually called school administrators to advocate for their sister’s well-being, according to the complaint.

After Evie Parts got a lawyer, Swarthmore on April 11 “fully reinstated” her to compete on the women’s track team, according to the lawsuit. It doesn’t specify why the college made that decision, or what it communicated to Parts. It’s also not clear if the college faced repercussions from the NCAA or the federal government for allowing Parts to continue competing.

Two months earlier, Valerie Gomez, Swarthmore’s associate director of athletics, acknowledged the distress the ban was causing Parts, according to the lawsuit. It quotes an email from Gomez to the NCAA, describing how “many of us vehemently disagree with this transgender ban.”

“The damage — emotional and otherwise — that this causes some of our student-athletes is immeasurable and unfair,” Gomez said in the email, according to the lawsuit.



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Vicenza hosts 2025 Volleyball Camp open to all DoDEA athletes | Article

1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – VICENZA, Italy – As part of Department of Defense Education Activity Europe opportunities, Vicenza hosted the annual Volleyball Camp in three installations including the gyms at Caserma Ederle, Del Din and Villaggio High School. Group photo of a Girls team after the tournament held at the […]

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VICENZA, Italy – As part of Department of Defense Education Activity Europe opportunities, Vicenza hosted the annual Volleyball Camp in three installations including the gyms at Caserma Ederle, Del Din and Villaggio High School.  Group photo of...








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VICENZA, Italy – As part of Department of Defense Education Activity Europe opportunities, Vicenza hosted the annual Volleyball Camp in three installations including the gyms at Caserma Ederle, Del Din and Villaggio High School. Group photo of a Girls team after the tournament held at the High School gym on Villaggio that concluded the camp Aug. 9, 2025.
(Photo Credit: Laura Kreider, USAG Italy Public Affairs)

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VICENZA, Italy – As part of Department of Defense Education Activity Europe opportunities, Vicenza hosted the annual Volleyball Camp in three installations including the gyms at Caserma Ederle, Del Din and Villaggio High School.  In the photo,...








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VICENZA, Italy – As part of Department of Defense Education Activity Europe opportunities, Vicenza hosted the annual Volleyball Camp in three installations including the gyms at Caserma Ederle, Del Din and Villaggio High School. In the photo, the final game of the tournament that concluded the week-long camp Aug. 9, 2025.
(Photo Credit: Laura Kreider, USAG Italy Public Affairs)

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VICENZA, Italy – As part of Department of Defense Education Activity Europe opportunities, last week Vicenza hosted the annual Volleyball Camp in three installations including the gyms at Caserma Ederle, Del Din and at the Vicenza High School on Villaggio.


VICENZA, Italy – Vicenza hosted the week-long Volleyball Camp in three installations including the gyms at Caserma Ederle, Del Din and Villaggio High School Aug. 5-9, 2025. Nearly 160 students from 6th to 12th grade participated in the event...




VICENZA, Italy – Vicenza hosted the week-long Volleyball Camp in three installations including the gyms at Caserma Ederle, Del Din and Villaggio High School Aug. 5-9, 2025. Nearly 160 students from 6th to 12th grade participated in the event that gave them the opportunity to improve their skills, while working with coaches from all over Europe.
(Photo Credit: Laura Kreider, USAG Italy Public Affairs)

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Nearly 160 students from 6th to 12th grade participated in the event that gave them the opportunity to improve their skills, while working with coaches from all over Europe. The week-long camp included three skill levels, including basic, intermediate and advanced.


VICENZA, Italy – Boys mixed teams participate in the tournament held at the Villaggio High School gym that concluded the annual DoDEA Europe Volleyball camp Aug. 9, 2025.




VICENZA, Italy – Boys mixed teams participate in the tournament held at the Villaggio High School gym that concluded the annual DoDEA Europe Volleyball camp Aug. 9, 2025.
(Photo Credit: Laura Kreider, USAG Italy Public Affairs)

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“The purpose of the camp is to give these athletes the chance to get ready for the upcoming volleyball season and work on the tactics with the experience of many coaches,” said John Kohut, in his 12th year teaching in the Vicenza High School and one of the camp administrators.

He highlighted that the number of participants increased throughout the years.

“There were athletes coming from Belgium, all over Germany, Spain, Italy and also from Bahrain,” Kohut said.

In addition to Vicenza, participating from Italy were the high schools of Aviano, Rome, Naples and Sigonella.


VICENZA, Italy – Girls mixed teams participate in the tournament held at the Villaggio High School gym that concluded the annual DoDEA Europe Volleyball camp Aug. 9, 2025.




VICENZA, Italy – Girls mixed teams participate in the tournament held at the Villaggio High School gym that concluded the annual DoDEA Europe Volleyball camp Aug. 9, 2025.
(Photo Credit: Laura Kreider, USAG Italy Public Affairs)

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On the last day, Aug. 9, the camp concluded with a special tournament with several mixed teams of students from all different schools, with the support of many volunteers coaching.

“We have lots of great people coming from everywhere,” said Kohut.

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Newport Beach to Host Major Volleyball Tournaments

Newport Beach will be the hub of American volleyball later this fall, the city hosting two major tournaments this October that will invite beach volleyball superstars, Olympians and legends for the world’s largest single-week prize of $550,000. The volleyball festivities begin with the five-day Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour Elite 16, held from Oct. 7 […]

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Newport Beach will be the hub of American volleyball later this fall, the city hosting two major tournaments this October that will invite beach volleyball superstars, Olympians and legends for the world’s largest single-week prize of $550,000.

The volleyball festivities begin with the five-day Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour Elite 16, held from Oct. 7 to Oct. 11. Eagle Four Partners and USA Volleyball have partnered for the event, working for the first time in history alongside Volleyball World and the Fédération Internationale de Volleyball for one of the most exclusive beach volleyball events of the year. It is the first time an elite-level international tour of this magnitude has been held in the United States since 2018. There is a $300,000 total payout for both genders.

“This is beach volleyball’s equivalent of a ‘major’ in tennis or golf. Just as all eyes turn to Wimbledon or The U.S. Open, this combined beach volleyball homecoming will be historic,” Kevin Martin of Eagle Four Partners and event co-founder said in a statement. “The world’s top 16 women’s and men’s pairs will have a new champion crowned on Saturday, but it will be the fusion of international and domestic stars that will captivate crowds on Sunday.”

A few dozen miles north of Newport Beach, Los Angeles is preparing to host the Olympic Games in 2028. As it approaches, Southern Californians can expect several events held by sports organizations such as USA Volleyball.

“Newport Beach isn’t just hosting a tournament; it’s launching USA Volleyball’s road to the LA28 Olympic Games,” said John Speraw, president and CEO of USA Volleyball. “This is the first of many world-class events we plan to bring to Southern California as we build excitement and momentum for 2028. With Olympians and legends sharing the sand, fans will experience the past, present and future of beach volleyball all in one unforgettable week.”

The volleyball offerings do not end there. On Sunday, Oct. 12, the city will host the third annual $250,000 Newport Beach Volleyball Invitational, the program including US Olympians Phil Dalhausser, Taylor Crabb, Kelly Cheng, and Kristen Nuss among the leading four-man teams in one of the most grueling single-day brackets in the world.

“If you’re a fan of the game, the Newport Beach pier is going to be rocking all week as spectators feast on the best beach volleyball event anywhere in the world in 2025,” Steve Obradovich, AVP Hall of Famer and co-founder of the Newport Beach Volleyball Invitational said in a statement. “We’re fired up to have Phil Dalhausser and Taylor Crabb leading two of the men’s teams and Kelly Cheng and Kristen Nuss leading two of the women’s teams in the Invitational. They’ll earn their share of $250,000 trying to survive the toughest single-day volleyball competition on the planet.”

There is free, first-come, first-served seating on the sand along the shores of the ocean for fans, as well as VIP and “Sand Suite” tickets. The VIP tickets are $670 and include all days of the Beach Pro Tour Elite 16 and the Newport Beach Volleyball Invitational, offering premium access with unobstructed views to both courts and a private VIP bar under a shaded tent, beverage sampling and vendor giveaways.

For more information, fans can visit nbvolleyball.com for tickets.



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Laguna Beach High rolls out eco-friendly stadium upgrade, free AI training offered to college students, and more – OCDE Newsroom

At Laguna Beach High School, the grass is greener — and safer — thanks to a million-dollar upgrade replacing the campus’ decade-old turf track and field with environmentally-friendly options that feel like natural grass while reducing upkeep and the risk of athletic injuries. The $1.165 million project features a new track surface overlay and Shaw […]

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At Laguna Beach High School, the grass is greener — and safer — thanks to a million-dollar upgrade replacing the campus’ decade-old turf track and field with environmentally-friendly options that feel like natural grass while reducing upkeep and the risk of athletic injuries.

The $1.165 million project features a new track surface overlay and Shaw Sports Turf with Geofill, a natural infill made of 80 percent coconut husks and 20 percent sand. Free of petroleum and other harmful chemicals, the new field offers cooler surface temperatures in hot weather and better traction in all conditions, translating into more opportunities for practices and games.

Laguna Beach Unified School District officials noted that the project was completed in just four weeks due to a manufacturing process that wove field lines and graphics directly into the turf before delivery. The work was carefully scheduled to avoid disruptions to its year-round community sports and athletics activities.

“As one of the few shared-use playing fields in the city, this stadium is an important resource for school and community athletics,” said Ryan Zajda, facilities and sustainability director at Laguna Beach Unified.

The new field will hold its first game on Aug. 29, when the Laguna Beach Breakers host Santa Monica High School in their season home opener. Before kickoff at 7 p.m., district leaders will celebrate the debut of the upgraded facility in a brief 50-yard-line ceremony.

“This project is a thoughtful investment that will keep our kids active, our community connected and enhance the health and wellness of our students and neighbors,” said Laguna Beach Board President Dee Perry.



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Bobcat Volleyball Sets Blue-Gold Scrimmage for Saturday Night

After more than a week of fall practices the Montana State volleyball squad steps on the court in a match-like environment when it hosts its annual fall Blue-Gold scrimmage on Saturday, Aug. 16 at 7 p.m. in Shroyer Gym. The scrimmage is free and open to the public. The Bobcats return twelve players that were […]

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After more than a week of fall practices the Montana State volleyball squad steps on the court in a match-like environment when it hosts its annual fall Blue-Gold scrimmage on Saturday, Aug. 16 at 7 p.m. in Shroyer Gym.

The scrimmage is free and open to the public.

The Bobcats return twelve players that were in the practice gym spring semester. Coupled with six freshmen and redshirt opposite hitter Makenzie Jackson, Head Coach Matt Houk and the rest of the Bobcat coaching staff are cautiously optimistic heading into the season which gets underway August 29-31with a home tournament in Shroyer Gym featuring Big 10 power Oregon, South Dakota and Prairie View A&M.

 



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Transgender ex-track and field athlete sues NCAA, Swarthmore College over alleged discrimination

Imagn Images Former college track and field athlete Evelyn Parts filed a lawsuit against Swarthmore College, school officials and the NCAA, alleging the institutions discriminated against her because she is a transgender woman. Following the NCAA’s amendments to its policies — which came after President Donald Trump issued an executive order authorizing federal agencies to […]

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Former college track and field athlete Evelyn Parts filed a lawsuit against Swarthmore College, school officials and the NCAA, alleging the institutions discriminated against her because she is a transgender woman. Following the NCAA’s amendments to its policies — which came after President Donald Trump issued an executive order authorizing federal agencies to penalize schools that allow transgender women to compete in women’s sports — Swarthmore informed Parts earlier this year that she could either participate in men’s competition or compete unattached to the school.

The suit claims that Swarthmore and the NCAA violated Parts’ Title IX rights, inflicted emotional distress and engaged in a civil conspiracy. The NCAA previously allowed transgender women to compete in women’s sports so long as they met sport-specific requirements, but on Feb. 6 it banned them from participation in women’s competition.

“We stand by the allegations in the complaint,” Parts’ attorney, Susan Cirilli, said to ESPN. “The NCAA is a private organization that issued a bigoted policy. Swarthmore chose to follow that policy and disregard federal and state law.”

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Swarthmore competes at the NCAA’s Division III level. Parts enrolled at the school in 2020 and joined the women’s cross country and track teams but did not begin competition until 2023. She transitioned in high school and delayed her college competition amid recovery from gender-affirmation surgery.

Parts competed with Swarthmore in 2023 and 2024 and was named a team captain last fall. When the NCAA adjusted its policies, she elected to participate unattached from Swarthmore rather than to move to men’s competition. The lawsuit states that, in turn, she was ineligible to receive coaching or any other financial, medical or travel support from Swarthmore. She competed unattached in two meets this spring and was later reinstated as a member of the Swarthmore women’s track and field team. Parts then competed in three meets with the school.





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