Sports
Give your feedback in Player Survey 2025
Want to make the experience of playing volleyball the best it can be for yourself and those around you? Now is the chance for Volleyball England’s playing members to have their say on their last 12 months in the sport, via the 2024-25 Player Survey. What has gone well and what could be improved? What matters […]

Now is the chance for Volleyball England’s playing members to have their say on their last 12 months in the sport, via the 2024-25 Player Survey.
What has gone well and what could be improved? What matters most to you when you step out on court?
Win a prize
Tell us about your playing experience by clicking on the link here and you will be in the running to win one of three volleyball-related prizes.
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A pack of five Mikasa MV200 volleyballs: two for yourself and three for a club of your choice.
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A Kukri ‘Fly High, Dig Deep’ t-shirt
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A £20 VolleyStore voucher.
Terms and conditions for the prize draw can be found here.
Help shape the future
Don’t forget that your answers are important in shaping the future of volleyball across the country.
Each year, the Player Survey provides Volleyball England with important insight that steers how competitions are governed and delivered.
It doesn’t matter what level or format of volleyball you play. Volleyball England is keen to hear your open and honest feedback.
In confidence
All responses to this survey will be treated confidentially and anonymously. The closing date is 7th July 2025.
If you have any questions about this survey, please email us at: info@volleyballengland.org
Sports
NCAA Settlement Forcing Cuts to College Teams in Olympic Sports
Collegiate Olympic sports face roster and funding cuts or even elimination due to the NCAA’s $2.8 billion antitrust deal allowing colleges to pay student-athletes directly for the first time, athletes and coaches said. Roughly 41 Olympic sports programs have been cut across NCAA Division I, affecting at least 1,000 student-athletes after the settlement was announced […]

Collegiate Olympic sports face roster and funding cuts or even elimination due to the NCAA’s $2.8 billion antitrust deal allowing colleges to pay student-athletes directly for the first time, athletes and coaches said.
Roughly 41 Olympic sports programs have been cut across NCAA Division I, affecting at least 1,000 student-athletes after the settlement was announced by the NCAA in May 2024, said Sam Seemes, CEO of the US Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association.
“More are likely to follow,” four coaches’ associations for Olympic sports wrote in a statement.
Under the $2.8 billion deal approved June 6 by a federal judge, schools in what had been the five most historically competitive NCAA conferences can share payments worth up to 22% of their average athletic revenue, which is projected to be roughly $20 million per school annually.
Over a 10-year period, the NCAA and the conferences will pay $2.75 billion in back damages to thousands of Division I athletes who played since 2016.
The deal is likely to leave schools facing deficits and hurt sports except basketball and football, said Vin Lananna, director of track and field and cross country at University of Virginia and former president of USA Track and Field. “It can’t be a good thing,” he said.
Washington State
Washington State University announced in mid-June that it was shifting its track and field program to a “distance-focused approach” and would no longer be supporting field events such as jumps and throws “effective immediately.”
The athletic department declined to comment.
As a result, Washington State student-athletes Brooke Lyons and Ashley Willems said they received a little over two hours advance notice of the 10-minute Zoom call where they learned of their program’s dissolution and had no chance to ask questions.
In order to continue their track and field careers, both said they had to enter the transfer portal “very fast” in order to find another school where they could compete.
All three of their assistant coaches were fired, they said, and most of the sprinting and jumping athletes have opted to leave the school after they were told they could choose to stay with “limited resources” available.
Washington State has produced several track and field Olympians and all-Americans; four of its former athletes competed at the Paris Olympics in 2024.
Yet, success isn’t enough to protect a program from elimination, Seemes said.
Men’s Volleyball
That was the case at Grand Canyon University, which announced it was eliminating its men’s volleyball team—which made the NCAA Final Four in 2024—in late April to focus “on supporting its remaining 20 athletic programs.”
Cole Ottmar and Jaxon Herr, who were among 21 players cut from the team, said they were notified of its elimination in a 10-minute conversation with their athletic director.
The meeting wasn’t disclosed as mandatory and their coaches weren’t allowed in the room, they said.
Ottmar said he couldn’t attend the meeting because he had a final exam at the same time, but he found out through social media.
GCU declined to comment besides its public announcement.
Smaller Rosters
Some schools, including Georgia Tech’s swimming and diving team, are cutting their rosters rather than eliminating their programs. Caroline Porterfield and Sabina Mrzyglod were among 19 swimmers and divers on the team cut in April.
Georgia Tech Associate Athletic Director Mike Flynn confirmed, in an email to Bloomberg Law, that roster positions have been reduced across their 17 sports as the athletic department prepares for revenue sharing.
Kevin Sullivan, director of track and field at University of Michigan, a member of the Big Ten, said he has also made some cuts as both the women and men’s teams were over the roster cap of 45.
“Recruiting classes are going to have to get smaller,” he said.
The changes professionalize athletes in a way that makes the NCAA “more and more of a business and less of a collegiate athletic system,” said Ryan Fowkes, a recent Virginia Tech graduate who ran cross country and track.
In the long run, the US may find it harder to win Olympic medals in such sports as swimming, track, and gymnastics, because removing these opportunities for Division I athletes “thins out the competition pool,” he said.
More than 1,200 current, former, and incoming NCAA athletes competed at the 2024 Paris Olympics, including roughly 400 track and field athletes and 220 swimmers.
The settlement will come with a lot of “unintended and unforeseen consequences,” said Russell Dinkins, executive director of the Tracksmith Foundation, a nonprofit focused on increasing opportunity for participation in track and field.
Collegiate football and basketball players who have been “exploited” for decades will get what they deserve, but the settlement will harm high school students who want to pursue athletics, Dinkins said.
Greater competition for roster spots means high schoolers will have to be more elite and developed so they can stand a chance against international athletes and those in the transfer portal, he said.
“College athletics are providers for further education,” Dinkins said.
Mrzyglod said she will forgo her last year of eligibility to receive her degree from Georgia Tech after being cut from the swim team as a rising senior.
Not realizing she’d finished her swimming career at the time was the worst part of this experience, she said.
“Look at all this money coming for basketball and football athletes!” Mrzyglod said. “But what about all the athletes whose careers just ended?”
Sports
Ishan Chatterjee replaces Sanjog Gupta as Chief Executive Officer – Sports at JioStar
Mumbai: In a significant leadership transition, Ishan Chatterjee has been appointed Chief Executive – Sports at JioStar, replacing Sanjog Gupta. The move signals a bold step forward in JioStar’s ambition to redefine digital sports experiences and drive scale across content, commerce, and fan engagement. Ishan’s elevation follows a highly successful stint as Chief Business Officer […]

Mumbai: In a significant leadership transition, Ishan Chatterjee has been appointed Chief Executive – Sports at JioStar, replacing Sanjog Gupta. The move signals a bold step forward in JioStar’s ambition to redefine digital sports experiences and drive scale across content, commerce, and fan engagement.
Ishan’s elevation follows a highly successful stint as Chief Business Officer – Sports Revenue, SMB & Creators, during which he led JioHotstar’s monetization strategy, including a standout performance during the 18th season of the Indian Premier League (IPL). His leadership was instrumental in delivering record-breaking viewership and commercial outcomes for the platform.
Having joined JioCinema as Chief Revenue Officer in August 2024, Ishan quickly took on broader responsibilities across the JioStar ecosystem. In his new role, he will lead the full sports vertical across strategy, rights, programming, partnerships, monetization, and operations. He will continue to report to Kiran Mani and work on key transformation initiatives and stakeholder relationships.
Ishan brings over two decades of experience across digital media, consulting, and FMCG. He previously served as Managing Director of YouTube India, where he was a key force behind the platform’s growth in reach, revenue, and creator engagement. His 13-year career at Google saw him hold several senior leadership roles across EMEA and APAC, contributing to Google’s international expansion.
Earlier in his career, Ishan held positions at McKinsey & Company and Hindustan Unilever, grounding him in core business strategy and brand execution. A graduate of The Wharton School and St. Stephen’s College, Delhi, he combines academic rigor with operational excellence.
As CEO – Sports, Ishan will now shape the future of sports for JioStar—overseeing everything from rights acquisitions and live content innovation to monetization and fan ecosystem development. The appointment underscores JioStar’s commitment to building a digitally led, immersive sports experience for audiences across India and beyond.
Sports
Taking Stock 2025: How Arizona Wildcats track & field is looking under Andrew Dubs
The offseason is here, with all of Arizona’s sports done for 2024-25 season and the 2025-26 campaigns are still a little ways away. This means only one thing, it is a great time to take stock on where some of the programs stand now. Over the next few weeks, we’ll take a look at each […]

The offseason is here, with all of Arizona’s sports done for 2024-25 season and the 2025-26 campaigns are still a little ways away.
This means only one thing, it is a great time to take stock on where some of the programs stand now. Over the next few weeks, we’ll take a look at each of the UA’s men’s and women’s athletic programs to see what shape they’re in and what prospects they have for the near future.
We’ll break down each team and evaluate how it is performing under its current coaching staff, looking at the state of the program before he/she arrived and comparing it to now while also looking at what year two in the Big 12 might look like.
To finish up our series we look men’s and women’s track and field program that Andrew Dubs just took over last month:
How it looked before
After leading the cross country and track and field programs for 23 years, former director Fred Harvey announced his retirement in May. Overall he was with Arizona for 38 years.
During his time, across both programs, Harvey coached 11 national champions, 14 olympians, and 160 athletes who earned indoor or outdoor all-american honors.
About three weeks following Harvey’s retirement, the athletic department announced that Dubs would be the new head coach for track & field and cross country.
Where things stand now
Dubs now takes over a program that has seen individual success throughout the years, but has never been able to sustain overall success as a program.
Coming with Dubs is 14 years of Division I coaching experience along with coaching the USA National Track and Field team for the past five years.
When it comes to results on the track, he has coached 79 NCAA qualifiers, 32 all-americans, and 18 conference champions.
From Arizona, Dubs inherits athletes like Erin Tack, McKenna Watson, Antonia Sanchez Nunez, and Tapenisa Havea leading the women’s team.
For the men, it will be Sam Hala’ufia and Yan Vazquez, along with a 4x100m relay team that was able to get to the NCAA championships.
How Big 12 life differs from the Pac-12
Arizona was not able to have success when it came to winning conference championships in the Pac-12, but the move to the Big 12 brought new life into the idea of winning conference championships.
Even though Reinaldo Rodrigues won’t be returning to Arizona, he set a benchmark for his fellow athletes. Rodrigues won the Big 12 championship in the long jump.
This is the first Big 12 championship for the track & field program, and the goal now is to follow up with more next season, this time with Dubs at the helm.
One big question
Can Dubs bring fresh life into the program and stack the “small” wins? Arizona won’t necessarily be starting from scratch with Dubs coming in.
The Wildcats have the athletes, the facilities, and new life in the Big 12. This is a window for the program to start fresh in a way.
If the Wildcats can start to create a history of winning in the Big 12, it can allow them to establish themselves as a top program in a power four conference.
Once Arizona establishes itself as a top program, then being able to compete on a national level will follow. It will all start from the small wins.
Sports
USA Women Fall To Australia 12-11 In Shootout In Perth
Story Links Perth, Australia – The USA Women’s National Team went down to the wire with Australia in Perth, falling 12-11 in a shootout in their final tuneup before World Championship play starts later this week in Singapore. Jenna Flynn, Emily Ausmus and Ava Stryker led the USA offense with two […]

Perth, Australia – The USA Women’s National Team went down to the wire with Australia in Perth, falling 12-11 in a shootout in their final tuneup before World Championship play starts later this week in Singapore. Jenna Flynn, Emily Ausmus and Ava Stryker led the USA offense with two goals apiece in regulation as the match was tied 8-8 after four quarters. Amanada Longan and Isabel Williams again split time in cage combining for 10 saves. Team USA opens play at the World Championships against China this Wednesday at 9:10pm pt with live streaming on Peacock (login required). For more information on Team USA at the World Championships, click here.
Stats
USA 11 (2, 2, 2, 2) (3) J. Flynn 2, A. Stryker 2, E. Ausmus 2, J. Roemer 1, M. Allen
AUS 12 (2, 2, 1, 3) (4)
Saves – USA – I. Williams 6, A. Longan 4
Sports
Erin Inskeep/Clara Stowell, Kyle Baily/Cole Aidnik Beat Local Teams to Win Santa Barbara Open Titles | Sports
Santa Barbara beach volleyball standout Katie Spieler remembered coaching Erin Inskeep and Clara Stowell when they were young teens. Spieler taught them well. In the women’s final of the Santa Barbara Open, Spieler and cousin-partner Torrey Van Winden were denied a third title together by Inskeep and Stowell. The college stars went on a late […]

Santa Barbara beach volleyball standout Katie Spieler remembered coaching Erin Inskeep and Clara Stowell when they were young teens.
Spieler taught them well.
In the women’s final of the Santa Barbara Open, Spieler and cousin-partner Torrey Van Winden were denied a third title together by Inskeep and Stowell. The college stars went on a late 5-0 run to break open a one-point game and took the championship with a 28-22 victory in front of the famed Bath House on a windy Sunday.
For Stowell, it was her second straight Santa Barbara title. She won last year with Stanford teammate and San Marcos alum Taylor Wilson.
In the men’s final, the Huntington Beach duo of Kyle Baily and Cole Aidnik prevailed in an intense battle with Santa Barbara’s Dylan Foreman and Troy Fitzgerald, 28-25.
The California Beach Volleyball Association tournament was part of Santa Barbara’s Semana Nautica Sports Festival.
Women’s Final
Stowell’s big block helped her side break a 5-5 tie and spark a 6-1 run. But Spieler/Van Winden came roaring back. Van Winden ripped a kill on two and Spieler made some spectacular defensive plays that were converted into points. They tied the score at 14 and took a 15-14 lead.
“There was a little time there when we couldn’t put balls away because their defense was so good,” said Stowell. “So we just looked at each other and said we’re going to find space, giving each other good calls. We really trust each other.”
The teams went back and forth before Cal Poly’s Inskeep gave her side the lead for good (19-18) on a cut shot. The lead expanded to 22-19 before Stowell took over at the net. She scored three straight points on a kill off the block and two stuff blocks.
Inskeep was happy to have Stowell on the same side of the net.
“I don’t want to play against her,” she’s scary,” said Inskeep.
The Santa Barbara Open was Inskeep/Stowell’s first tournament together this summer. “With many more to come,” said Inskeep.
“We played two years ago the whole summer and last year played in a couple (of tournaments),” said Stowell. “But every year when you go back to college, we go our separate ways and play with our friends from our school. But we’re always down to play together because we have a really good connection. We communicate similarly, we have very good chemistry and we’re best friends.”
Spieler, who coaches youth players at East Beach, is impressed by the high level of play from the college players.
“There is so much talent in the youth, especially in college,” she said “We definitely wanted to get the title, but it was fun to play good volleyball at the end and all day.”

Spieler said she coached Inskeep and Stowell when she was living in Manhattan Beach back in the early 2000s.
“To see them now competing at that level is incredible. It’s just so cool to me because I think one of the best parts of beach volleyball is the college game right now. I think that system has really taken off and so I’m stoked to see it’s producing really high-level players and it’s giving girls all these opportunities to play. Even though we’re getting beat by them, it’s great to see.”
Spieler and Torrey Van Winden, who also finished second last year, started the day in an all-Santa Barbara pool that included Torrey’s sister Adlee and her partner Anastasia Kunz, a San Marcos alum. The four practice together at East Beach.
“She’s six months pregnant,” said Torrey of her sister. “It was really fun. “We were joking that it was three against two because Adlee had a full-blown baby.”
In the semifinals, Spieler/Van Winden defeated Emma Zuffelato of Santa Barbara and Faith Bartlett while Inskeep/Stowell beat Santa Barbara’s Portia Sherman and Logan Tusher.
Men’s Final
A service ace by Aidnik opened up a 23-18 lead and Baily delivered some clutch down the stretch to hold off Foreman/Fitzgerald.
“They’re a good team that is very scrappy and has good ball control,” said Fitzgerald of their opponents from Huntington Beach. “I think their service pressure ultimately got the best of us. We didn’t have the service pressure like they did.”
Asked what has been the key to their success, Aidnik replied, “It’s really simple: the power of friendship. I trust him and he trusts me, and I think you get a lot of little points in volleyball when you trust each other and focus on yourself.”

Baily added: “We just do our jobs. I think I got served a little more today, so I was just trying to side out and put up a decent block. (Cole) is really good at running down shots, digging some balls and scoring some points.”
For Foreman and Fitzgerald, getting to the finals of their hometown open tournament was quite an accomplishment, considering they practiced just one day before the tournament.
“The first time I got to play with him this summer was yesterday, so we had very little preparation,” said Foreman, a Santa Barbara High alum. “Last year, we played in this tournament as well and made to the quarters, so big improvement.”
Said the lefty Fitzgerald, a Dos Pueblos alum: “It was pretty short notice considering I’ve been starting to play with the USA (A2) National Team, but Dylan gave me a heads up, ‘Hey, you want to play in the Santa Barbara Open?’ I couldn’t say no. It’s a great pick up and we’re both from SB, obviously, so that made it even sweeter.”
Despite losing in the final, Foreman called it a good day. “We just kept getting better as the day went. We had some bad play in our pool and got second but we struck together and figure it out. It was super windy today and that was definitely a challenge, but it was good. We played well together. They were was just a good team.”
In the semfinals, Foreman-Fitzgerald beat Ben Apstein/Andrew Brown and Baily/Aidnik outlasted Will Rottman/Luke Turner.
Sports
Morris takes on World in Shifty Conditions
Aarhus, Denmark is serving up everything but predictability as the iQFOiL World Championships get underway, and Australian Olympic silver medallist Grae Morris is ready to assert his place at the top of the new Olympic cycle. Morris, a New South Wales Institute of Sport scholarship holder who took silver in Paris last year, has already […]

Aarhus, Denmark is serving up everything but predictability as the iQFOiL World Championships get underway, and Australian Olympic silver medallist Grae Morris is ready to assert his place at the top of the new Olympic cycle.
Morris, a New South Wales Institute of Sport scholarship holder who took silver in Paris last year, has already proven he’s more than up to the challenge of 2028. With two golds and a silver under his belt this season, the 21-year-old is eyeing nothing short of a podium finish.
More than 200 of the world’s best windsurfers from over 40 nations have descended on Denmark for the first World Championships of the new Olympic quad, and with Olympic medallists from both Tokyo and Paris in the fleet, the intensity is high and so is the pressure.
The six-day regatta, running through to July 11, opened with a punch. A fading westerly breeze created an unpredictable and tactical racecourse that kept even the most seasoned sailors guessing. Despite the chaos, Morris remains firmly in the hunt among the 116-strong men’s fleet.
“It was a pretty shifty day,” said Australian coach Arthur Brett. “Winds ranged from 6 to 12 knots with 20-degree shifts on the men’s course. Four races were completed, with Grae finishing seventh, second, fourth, and 23rd. The Race Committee has since made the interesting decision to discard race three, three hours after its completion – due to the fickle nature of the conditions.”
Australia’s depth in the class is also growing, with three other men in the field, including rising Queenslander Rory Meehan, who’s showing real promise. “Rory had some solid races and is developing nicely,” Brett added.
In the Women’s division, Australia is represented by Samantha Costin and Anna Cripsey, who are both continuing to build valuable international experience.
This World Championship also marks the first Worlds to feature the newly introduced smaller sail sizes. The change, which was implemented after the Paris Olympics, aims to make the class more accessible to lighter athletes and broaden competitiveness across the fleet. The men’s sail has shifted from 9 to 8 square metres, with the women’s moving from 8 to 7.3.
“We still don’t have enough data on whether this has achieved the outcome it was introduced for,” Brett explained. However, the lighter rigs will certainly be put to the test in Aarhus. “The forecast for the regatta is for light winds, and the team is looking forward to the remaining races,” he added.
Qualifying continues over the next two days before the fleet splits into Gold and Silver for the final stages. The regatta culminates in a high-stakes elimination final on July 11, with global livestreaming from July 9 to 11 giving fans around the world the chance to follow the action.
Full list of results here: https://2025iqworldsaarhus.sailti.com/en/default/races/race-resultsall
Australian Sailing Team (AST), Australian Sailing Pathway Team (ASPT), Australian Sailing Futures (ASF) and other Australian (AUS) results after day 1 at the World Championship:
iQFOiL Men – 117 Entries
10th – Grae Morris (AST)
30th – Rory Meehan (ASF)
82nd – Philip Cripsey (ASF)
99th – Jarrod Jones (ASF)
iQFOiL Women – 79 Entries
61st – Samantha Costin (ASF)
69th – Anna Cripsey (AUS)
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