Sports
'I'm in the dark'
Former Gaza hostage Mia Schem revealed Thursday that she is the woman who filed a complaint alleging a well-known Tel Aviv fitness trainer raped her. In a preview for an upcoming interview with Channel 12, Schem said she could no longer remain silent. “In captivity, in the Hamas tunnels and without a hand, I had hope,” […]

Former Gaza hostage Mia Schem revealed Thursday that she is the woman who filed a complaint alleging a well-known Tel Aviv fitness trainer raped her.
In a preview for an upcoming interview with Channel 12, Schem said she could no longer remain silent.
“In captivity, in the Hamas tunnels and without a hand, I had hope,” she said. “Suddenly, I am in darkness.”
According to Schem, the alleged assault occurred about six weeks ago. She later filed a complaint with the North Tel Aviv police station. The trainer, who has a large social media following, was arrested but released last month due to a lack of sufficient evidence, police said.
Schem and the trainer knew each other beforehand—she had been one of his clients at a fitness studio in north Tel Aviv. A few days before filing the police complaint, she reportedly invited him to her apartment for help with something personal, not for a training session. The invitation came at the suggestion of a friend.
After they met, Schem reportedly contacted several friends, saying she felt disoriented and could not fully recall what had happened. However, Schem said she feared she may have been sexually assaulted.
Schem told police the trainer entered her bedroom, where the alleged assault took place, according to a report by Ynet.
The trainer initially denied entering Schem’s room
During questioning, the trainer initially denied entering the room, but later changed his version of events and admitted to briefly stepping inside while Schem was changing clothes.
In a police confrontation between the two, Schem told the trainer, “I was dazed for three days because of you,” and asked him not to look at her. When he refused, an investigator instructed him to avert his gaze, Ynet added.
Schem described five signs she said supported her account—three physical marks on her body and two findings from medical tests. The trainer did not respond to these claims, instead repeating, “I’m a good person,” and at one point breaking down in tears, saying, “I have a family.”
She told investigators she continues to suffer delayed flashbacks, all of which involve the trainer.
In addition to Schem’s complaint, police have also questioned the trainer in connection with a separate allegation, as reported by Ynet.
In that case, a different young woman accused him of harassment via disappearing messages sent a year earlier. She said he sent unsolicited, sexually explicit messages.
The trainer’s attorney, Sassy Gez, denied all the allegations. “He is an innocent man with no criminal record,” Gez said. “The complainant herself said during the confrontation that she ‘thinks it happened.’ The fact that he was released without any conditions proves that no rape occurred. The case will be closed soon due to a lack of evidence.”
While police have not confirmed the identity of the complainant, they stated that the investigation is ongoing.
Sports
Trickey &Harvey lead Ripon High graduating class
Logan Trickey and Chetan Harvey knew for quite some time that they were in line for the top two academic spots come graduation. That was before the start of the school year – both were all but certain by January. The two will lead the Ripon High Class of 2025 at Friday’s 7 p.m. commencement […]

Logan Trickey and Chetan Harvey knew for quite some time that they were in line for the top two academic spots come graduation.
That was before the start of the school year – both were all but certain by January.
The two will lead the Ripon High Class of 2025 at Friday’s 7 p.m. commencement ceremony at Wes Stouffer Field.
Trickey earned the No. 1 spot as class valedictorian based on his 4.45 grade point average. Harvey, who has a 4.4 GPA, is the salutatorian.
Logan Trickey is the son of Kristopher and Cynthia Trickey. He’ll be attending UCLA in the fall to study Aerospace Engineering – the program is ranked among the top 10 in the U.S., according the U.S. News & World Report.
“I’ve always had a fascination with problem solving and with space,” he said.
Trickey, who was also involved in track & field, cross country, and soccer for the Indians, credits his teachers and parents for their support.
“My teachers always pushed me to do extra work while my family was there to provide positive feedback,” he said.
Chetan Harvey is the son of Jack and Anupa Harvey.
His father is Manteca podiatrist Jack Andrew Harvey DPW.
Chetan, like his father, is also leaning towards the medical profession, possibly as a G.I. doctor specializing in the digestive system and its related organs.
But those plans are on hold as he awaits his upcoming two-year mission with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
“I’m still deciding (on colleges) between UCLA and BYU,” said Harvey, who was water polo, swimming, and choir at RHS. For the latter, he was named to the San Joaquin County Office of Education’s High School Honor Choir.
Harvey was part of the Ripon boys water polo team that made a historic run back in November to capture the CIF NorCal Division III title.
He’s thankful for his religious faith – first and foremost – and his family for his successes thus far.
“My parents pushed me to do my best,” said Harvey.
Sports
Role vacancy – Project Lead (Talent)
Volleyball England is seeking a Project Lead (Talent) to help continue to develop an enhanced Talent system that provides opportunities and supports players to achieve their potential across all formats of the sport. The role supports the Beach and Indoor Performance Programmes – including national teams – at both Senior and age group levels in […]

The role supports the Beach and Indoor Performance Programmes – including national teams – at both Senior and age group levels in line with Volleyball England’s strategy, The Game Plan.
Working within a wider Talent team, the successful candidate will coordinate annual programme registrations and selection processes for the programmes, lead on the planning and delivery of logistics for camps and competitions, support meeting the entry requirements for national and international events and maintain up-to-date athlete, camp and competition records.
They will also collaborate with the Digital and Communications team to produce content where required and project manage and execute the administrative tasks aligned to national funding grants (such as SportsAid and Backing the Best), among other tasks.
For a full role description, including key responsibilities, person specification and contractual details, please click here.
To apply please follow this link to complete the application (you will need to upload your CV and covering letter). If you have any queries, please email jobs@volleyballengland.org.
Please complete our Diversity and Inclusion Questionnaire link.
The application deadline is Wednesday 4th June 2025 with interviews planned for 10th June 2025.
Sports
Blue Tornado, Lady Lakers win 2A Regional track and field championship | Sports
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Sports
Three Dirtbags Named All-Conference – Long Beach State University Athletics
LONG BEACH, Calif.—The Big West announced Tuesday that three Long Beach State baseball players were awarded All-Conference honors. The conference’s 11 head coaches voted on all awards. Kyle Ashworth was named second-team All-Conference. Ashworth was the leading Long Beach State hitter this season. The graduate student hit .330 and had a team-high 11-game hitting streak. […]

Kyle Ashworth was named second-team All-Conference. Ashworth was the leading Long Beach State hitter this season. The graduate student hit .330 and had a team-high 11-game hitting streak. Ashworth was the club leader in runs scored (43), hits (64), doubles (12), triples (2 with three others), total bases (86), and on-base percentage (.456). Ashworth recorded 20 multiple-hit games in 2025 and nine multiple-RBI games. He did not commit an error in 117 chances (111 PO-6A). In Big West only play, Ashworth led the league in on-base percentage (.507). He was fourth in hitting (.393), fourth in walks (22), tied with two others for fourth in hits (46), tied for sixth with three others in doubles (10), and 12th in stolen bases (60). A 2024 honorable mention All-Conference selection, Ashworth moved to fourth in school history in career walks, completing his career with 99. Former MLB All-Star Jason Giambi holds the school mark with 116. Ashworth led the team in walks in 2025 with 37 and was second in the Big West in the category.
Albert Roblez earned second-team All-Conference honors. Roblez led the team in ERA (2.78), saves (4), strikeouts (79), and strikeouts per nine innings (12.19). His strikeouts per nine innings tally is the fifth-best in school history. At 4-3, he was third on the team in victories. Opponents hit 168 (the sixth best in school history) against him in 2025. In league-only play, Roblez was the Big West leader in earned run average (1.97), opposing batting average (.146), fewest hits allowed (23), fewest runs allowed (12), and fewest earned runs allowed (10). He was fourth in strikeouts (61) and tied for fifth with five others for fifth in saves (5). In the May 19 NCAA Division I statistical report, Roblez was fourth in hits allowed per nine innings (5.25), 22nd in strikeouts per nine innings, 36th in ERA, 47th in WHIP (1.06), 93rd in strikeouts, and 149th in saves.
Kellan Montgomery was chosen as an honorable mention All-Conference. Montgomery finished the season with a team-high nine wins (9-4) and a team-high 76 innings pitched. He was second on the club in strikeouts with 60. He was named Big West Pitcher of the Week on April 14. Montgomery retired the final 19 Cal State Bakersfield batters he faced as he tossed a complete game four-hitter as Long Beach State defeated the Roadrunners 3-2 on April 13. Montgomery threw the first Long Beach State complete game since May 12, 2023, when Nico Zeglin blanked UC Santa Barbara 1-0. He struck out eight and walked two. He got 15 ground ball outs to go along with the strikeouts. Montgomery threw 122 pitches, 82 of which were for strikes. In conference-only statistics, Montgomery was third in wins (6) and fifth in innings pitched (58.1). Entering the May 19 NCAA Division I statistical report, Montgomery is 12th in victories, 11th in starts (14), and 56th in complete games.
~#LongBeachBuilt~
Sports
Six artistic swimmers reveal how they stay mentally sharp
A methodical approach to mental training may help, but it’s ultimately up to the individual to determine what works best. That process takes time, and 18-year-old Barbara Coppelli of Chile admits that she hasn’t quite figured it out. Image Source: Barbara Coppelli competes with Macarena Vial Mella in the Duet Free Final at the World […]

A methodical approach to mental training may help, but it’s ultimately up to the individual to determine what works best.
That process takes time, and 18-year-old Barbara Coppelli of Chile admits that she hasn’t quite figured it out.
Image Source: Barbara Coppelli competes with Macarena Vial Mella in the Duet Free Final at the World Aquatics Artistic Swimming World Cup 2025 in Markham, Canada (Steph Chambers/Getty Images)
“I have really bad concentration problems,” Coppelli says. “In training, I get yelled at ALL the time. Sometimes I’m listening to the coach, but I’m actually just seeing her, not paying attention to her.”
Coppelli, who does double-duty on the junior and senior national teams, says, “Right now, I’m just understanding when I am getting distracted. It’s like, ‘Okay, you’re dissociating. Pay attention now.’ Sometimes I do understand but I don’t do anything about it.”
Unfortunately, resources are limited. “Being a tiny country,” she says, “we don’t have the financial stuff. You see all the big countries bringing physiotherapists, massage people, photographers, psychologists [to a competition like the World Cup in Canada]. It’s, like, we were fighting to get both of our coaches here. It’s very challenging. That’s kind of stopping us a bit from moving forward in our sport.”
Image Source: Tomoka Sato competes with Moe Higa for Team Japan in the Duet Free Routine at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games (Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
Japan’s Tomoka Sato, 23, says that her mental fortitude comes from “repeated practice.”
“I do image training. I close my eyes and imagine the underwater scenery,” says the 2023 world champion in mixed technical duet. When the competition grows near, “I imagine judges and spectators at the match venue, too. I add that.”
Then, just before the performance, she will incorporate music and envision a supportive atmosphere.
Image Source: Team Japan competes in the Mixed Team Acrobatic Final at the Doha 2024 World Aquatics Championships (Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)
“I swim thinking everyone is watching, including judges, coaches and the audience is on my side. This helps me relax,” she says.
Then, in the water, “even when I think, ‘It’s no good, it’s no good,’ I have to push myself. I will swim with faith in the accumulated practice I have gained,” Sato says. “If I’m nervous, I believe in my practice and keep swimming.”
Still, Sato admits, there have been moments when pressure has reduced her to tears. When that happens, she says, “I write in my diary.” And, she says, “I call my younger brother, Yotaro, who understands me the most.” (Yotaro is also her mixed-duet partner.)
After switching nationalities from Mexico to the US, Ana Martinez, 23, says the mental game is harder than ever.
Due to a three-year waiting period to represent her new nation, Martinez says, “Last time I competed, the sport was called synchro, had different rules, and no base marks, so I have been preparing a lot. I’ve been visualizing what I need to do. When you’re eight people in the water, you have to think in patterns. Maybe it’s a line. Maybe it’s two lines.
“You also have to be tighter on the counts. We count one through eight. Sometimes we move on every count, or maybe we move on one count, then hold it for another two counts. It depends on the choreography. But the judges are very strict. If we’re not on count, you can get a ‘minor’ [error which carries a 0.1 penalty], an ‘obvious’ [error which costs 0.5 points], or a ‘major’ if it’s too off,” which yields a 3.0-point deduction.
As a result, she says the team works on visualization every time it swims through the entire routine. And when they do, Martinez says, “Some people visualize themselves – like how do I want to look in the water?” so they imagine how high they want to be, how a limb should look, or maybe their facial expressions. In contrast, she says, “Some people visualize what they’re looking at when they’re swimming.”
Many athletes choose one point-of-view or the other, but Martinez – whose role as a “pusher” means she’s at the bottom of every team structure – does both.
“If it’s a new routine,” she explains, “I like to look what I’m looking at [in the water]. But if it’s a very worked [out] routine, I like to look at myself.”
In addition, the US team has studied and established breathing exercises.
“When you exhale fast, it makes you ready to perform,” Martinez says, “versus if you inhale fast and exhale slow, then it relaxes you. I don’t know if you’ve seen this – but that’s why, when swimmers are about to go on, they go, “HA!”
American flyer Elle Santana, 19, says it helps to be able “to feel your team – even on land,” so she appreciates when the US does its group breathing together “to calm ourselves and stay in our little bubble. It doesn’t matter what other teams are doing in the pool; as soon as we walk into the competition, we’re very honed in.”
Image Source: Halle Pratt of Canada competes during the Solo Free Routine Final at the Japan Open at Tokyo Tatsumi International Swimming Center in Tokyo, Japan (Matt Roberts/Getty Images)
Sometimes, switching the brain off can also be effective. The key to staying mentally sharp “for me,” says Canada’s Halle Pratt, 25, “is downtime, making sure you’re well-rested. I try to sleep 8½ hours every night, and a little more towards competition. But I’m not afraid to take a nap in the middle of the day. I think that’s super-helpful.”
Image Source: Diego Villalobos Carrillo competes with Itzamary Gonzalez Cuellar for Team Mexico in the Mixed Duet Technical Preliminaries at the Fukuoka 2023 World Aquatics Championships (Adam Pretty/Getty Images)
Mental training, however, is not universal.
Mexico’s mixed duet specialist Diego Carrillo Villalobos, 20, is an ex-diver who went from complete beginner to world championship silver medallist in just three years. “I don’t have any special mental training,” he says. “I visualise a little bit, but I think it stresses me. I just trust in my work, and that relaxes me.”
Image Source: Team Spain competes in the Team Technical Routine at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games (Clive Rose/Getty Images
Ultimately – whatever the method (or non-method) of mental training – most artistic swimmers agree on a few universal truths.
Martinez, the Mexican-American says, “I think confidence is key. The first step is to believe you can do it, right? Then, you look at the details. And, of course, trusting your preparation and all the training you have.”
After spending eight hours in the pool six days of the week, and about 80 run-throughs of a routine, it becomes second nature.
Sports
A&M-Texarkana athletes soar in the classroom and on the field
TEXARKANA, Texas — The Texas A&M University-Texarkana athletic department has announced that the overall GPA for all student athletes in the Spring 2025 semester was a 3.25. There were 319 student athletes enrolled at the university during the spring semester that ended on May 7, 2025. There were 45 student athletes who earned a 4.0 […]

TEXARKANA, Texas — The Texas A&M University-Texarkana athletic department has announced that the overall GPA for all student athletes in the Spring 2025 semester was a 3.25.
There were 319 student athletes enrolled at the university during the spring semester that ended on May 7, 2025. There were 45 student athletes who earned a 4.0 for the semester and qualified for President’s Honors, 101 who finished with a GPA higher than 3.5 and earned University Honors, and 239 who finished with at least a 3.0, which will earn them a spot on the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll.
“We are exceptionally proud of the dedication our student athletes have for their work in the classroom,” said A&M-Texarkana President Dr. Ross Alexander. “To have so many of them qualify for academic honors while competing at a championship level is a testament to their work ethic and drive. We have made adding additional sports and student athletes an integral part of our growth strategy at A&M-Texarkana, and this is precisely why. These are strong students who we know will excel not only during their time with us, but in their careers as well.”
“Our student athletes had an outstanding year both in the classroom and in competition,” said Ryan Wall, A&M-Texarkana Director of Athletics. “With over 40 students earning a perfect 4.0 GPA across multiple sports, it’s clear they’re excelling in every area. This success is a reflection of their hard work and discipline, as well as the commitment of our coaches who continue to recruit high-character individuals and hold them to high standards on and off the field. Kudos to both our student-athletes and coaches for setting the bar high and representing our institution with pride.”
Texas A&M University competes in the NAIA’s Red River Athletic Conference and currently fields 17 varsity sports including men’s and women’s basketball, soccer, cross country, track and field, and tennis, as well as baseball, softball, women’s volleyball, women’s beach volleyball, competitive cheer, competitive dance and esports. The Fall 2025 semester will see the addition of four new sports, with men’s and women’s bowling and golf joining the program.
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