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Is India next for Allianz to make a naming rights splash?

Allianz recently secured naming rights to English rugby’s iconic Twickenham Stadium. (Credit: Allianz) Allianz is recognized as a leading insurance and asset management company globally. It serves over 125 million clients across more than 70 countries, illustrating its extensive reach and influence in the insurance sector. The company is deeply engaged with several sports entities […]

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Is India next for Allianz to make a naming rights splash?

Allianz is recognized as a leading insurance and asset management company globally. It serves over 125 million clients across more than 70 countries, illustrating its extensive reach and influence in the insurance sector.

The company is deeply engaged with several sports entities across diverse disciplines, including multi-sport games, soccer, and motorsport. Allianz views sports sponsorship as an effective marketing tool that resonates with both existing and potential customers, fostering positive brand perceptions and strengthening brand preference.

According to GlobalData, Allianz is currently involved in 42 separate agreements worth $142.1 million per year. A core element of Allianz’s sponsorship strategy is securing naming rights to prominent sports stadiums across various continents, including Europe, North America, South and Central America, and Oceania.

These naming rights agreements signify the brand’s approach to achieving global reach with local impact, aiming to bolster brand presence in specific markets and forge stronger connections with local communities. To date, Asia has not been a priority market for the brand for sports sponsorship.

The most recent naming rights agreement the company has secured is a multi-year deal in England with the Rugby Football Union (RFU), reportedly worth £10 million annually, which is equivalent to $12.8 million annually based on GlobalData’s conversion methodology.

This agreement designates Allianz as title sponsor of the RFU’s Twickenham home, which has now been renamed Allianz Stadium Twickenham. Allianz appears to have come to the aid of the RFU, which reported unprecedented losses of £37.9 million for the 12 months ending in June 2024.

Allianz continues to seek expansion in various territories, including Asia. The company’s asset management division, AllianzGI, received approval in 2019 from the China Securities Regulatory Commission to operate as a foreign-owned public fund management company in mainland China. This move is significant for Allianz, as it allows the company to tap into one of the largest and fastest-growing markets in the world, enhancing its asset management services in Asia.

India is another target for Allianz as a growth market, despite the company selling to the Bajaj Group its 26% stake in non-life and life insurance joint ventures with Bajaj Allianz General Insurance Company and Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance Company. Allianz has stated that it still plans to explore new opportunities to strengthen its position in the insurance sector across India, both as an investor and an operator.

Looking at India’s insurance sector, the country is expected to have the third-largest economy globally by the end of the decade. This impressive economic growth will generate rising disposable incomes, with many Indian citizens seeking to increase their financial and risk awareness, which will boost insurance demand nationwide.

The Indian insurance sector, particularly the general insurance industry, is projected to experience significant growth in the coming years.

According to GlobalData, the general insurance industry is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 9.9%, increasing from INR 3.35 trillion (approximately $40.36 billion) in 2024 to INR 4.89 trillion (around $57.3 billion) by 2028, based on gross written premiums (GWP).

In the next five years, India is expected to develop at the fastest rate among the Group of 20 (G20) nations.

A significant way for Allianz to enhance its brand visibility in India would be to secure a naming rights agreement with one of the nation’s most popular cricket stadiums.

With cricket often described as a religion in India, associating the Allianz brand with one of the country’s most renowned stadiums could be a crucial way to engage with their target audience. Over 600 million people in India watch cricket, representing a substantial portion of the nation’s total sports audience.

The commercial value of cricket in India, particularly through the IPL, is not only significant but also poised for further growth.

The combination of high match valuations, with the per-game value of domestic TV rights reaching approximately $13.78 million for matches between 2023 and 2027, extensive sponsorship deals, and the potential for further growth of the women’s IPL competition contributes to a thriving cricket economy. This underscores the potential benefits for Allianz in being associated with Indian cricket.

Since 2016, GlobalData estimates that the largest annual deal involving an insurance company and an Indian sports property is the active agreement between SBI Life Insurance and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), worth an estimated $5 million per year. The Indian life insurance company based in Mumbai serves as the official partner of the BCCI for both domestic and international home cricket.

GlobalData reports that Allianz’s 42 current sponsorship deals worldwide are spread across 11 different sports. However, the brand is not currently investing in any cricket-related sports properties. Nevertheless, the company has a history of investing in sponsorship opportunities in the sport.

If Allianz aims to expand its naming rights sponsorship portfolio, India would be an intriguing location, given the nation’s financial forecasts and the size of the customer base that Allianz could target. This move would be significant for Allianz, as it would mark the company’s first major venue naming rights deal in Asia.


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Enquirer names spring sports nominees for High School Sports Awards

The Cincinnati Enquirer announces its complete list of nominations for the 2025 High School Sports Awards live show, presented by Beacon Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine, which will be Wednesday, June 18, 2025, at Princeton High School’s Matthews Auditorium. The award show will feature Cincinnati Bengals Hall of Famer Anthony Munoz, with Fox 19’s Joe Danneman […]

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The Cincinnati Enquirer announces its complete list of nominations for the 2025 High School Sports Awards live show, presented by Beacon Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine, which will be Wednesday, June 18, 2025, at Princeton High School’s Matthews Auditorium.

The award show will feature Cincinnati Bengals Hall of Famer Anthony Munoz, with Fox 19’s Joe Danneman joining as a special guest.

All invited athletes are entitled to three tickets. All athletic directors of nominated athletes are also entitled to three tickets, which they can share with their coaches, staff or their athletes. Click here to reserve your free tickets. While these tickets are free, reservations are required to attend. Starting June 12, unclaimed tickets will open for families who need up to three (3) more tickets.

When reserving tickets, please register in the athletes’ or athletic directors’ names. The Enquirer reserves the right to cancel tickets for unrecognized names or multiple reservations past the initial claimed three (3) tickets. 

Athletes should dress up for the event. Scroll down to see the premium and seasonal invitees for spring, winter and fall.

Please note this awards show is not affiliated with the all-city/all-star teams or athlete of the week winners. However, The Enquirer will have a place to pick up athlete of the week certificates at the event. Those not picked up will be mailed to the athletic departments.

Questions? Email mlaughman@enquirer.com.

Premium award nominees for the 2025 Enquirer High School Sports Awards

Boys athlete of the year

Tyler Fryman, Beechwood; Elijah Guttman, Cincinnati Country Day; Patrick McLaughlin, La Salle; Max Mehlman, Batavia; Matt Ponatoski, Moeller; Jaxson Snell, Taylor

Girls athlete of the year

Bailey Bacher, Lakota East; Rodnora Jones, Gamble Montessori; Lily Parke, Beechwood; Abigail Pettyjohn, Deer Park; Grace Pitzer, Mount Notre Dame

Boys coach of the year

Evan Dreyer, Anderson football; Kelven Moss, Lakota West basketball; Tom Rapp, Mason cross country; Frank Russo, Moeller track; Scott Sievering, SCD boys soccer

Girls coach of the year

Alyssa Flading, Roger Bacon volleyball; Carlton Gray, Winton Woods girls basketball; Justin Holthaus, Cooper girls basketball; Gretchen Krumdieck, St. Ursula girls volleyball; Jamie Tipton, Springboro girls soccer; Blaine Wallace, Western Brown softball

Boys team of the year

Aiken boys basketball; Covington Catholic boys tennis; Indian Hill boys soccer; Mason baseball; McNicholas boys volleyball

Girls Team of the Year

Badin flag football; Lawrenceburg girls soccer; Madeira girls soccer; Purcell Marian girls basketball; Seton volleyball

Spring sports nominees for the 2025 Enquirer High School Sports Awards

The Enquirer sports staff chose the following athletes based on several factors, including postseason awards, statistics, college commitments, game-changing ability, team roles and divisional and positional diversity. We asked prominent coaches for feedback in nearly all categories.

Ohio baseball

Joey Buchanan, Milford; Conner Cuozzo, Moeller; Devlan Daniel, Indian Hill; Caleb Driessen, Badin; Eric Fleetwood, Anderson; Derek Fleming, Loveland; Wil Kraus, Oak Hills; Evan Lafferty, MVCA; Matt Ponatoski, Moeller; Jack Ryan, St. Xavier; Wyatt Shaw, Princeton; Zion Theophilus, Moeller; Andrew Visconti, Mason

Northern Kentucky/Indiana baseball

Sam Bond, East Central; Chase Flaherty, Beechwood; Adam Forton, Highlands; Dylan McIntyre, Ryle; Tyler Ruete, Simon Kenton; Tyler Schumacher, Campbell County

Girls flag football

Harlowe Allen, Seton; Ta’Niyah Anderson, Aiken; London Armstrong, Shroder; Aly Beckenhaupt, Mount Notre Dame; Penelope Bolinger, St. Ursula; Lauren Bower, St. Ursula; Jamyala Brown, Spencer; Lauren Enginger, Mercy McAuley; Amiyah Foster, Hughes; Bella Heile, Badin; Charlotte Holm, Seton; Morgan Mitchell, Clark; Tabriyia Richardson, Woodward; Evie Schoolfield, MND; Brooke Sebastian, Badin; Breanne Tereba, Ursuline

Ohio boys lacrosse

Clay Barkimer, Milford; Garrett Brenkert, Sycamore; Seth Farrell, Mariemont; Alex Gordon, Wyoming; Khalif Hocker, St. Xavier; Gus Kleeman, Mason; Sam Koehler, Mariemont; Tyler Lupinski, Mason; Peter Marietta, Mason; Luke Sprong, St. Xavier; Talon Vianello, Mariemont; Trent Yelton, St. Xavier

Northern Kentucky boys lacrosse

Brayden Brzygot, Dixie Heights; Brady Dickman, St. Henry; Ryan Forbes, Cooper; Keegan Gregory, Walton-Verona; Blake Leiker, Ryle; Finn Maddox, Covington Catholic; Gideon Turner, Cooper; Bryson White, Ryle; Aiden Wood, Dixie Heights

Ohio girls lacrosse

Carson Bahl, Indian Hill; Grace Bevington, Ursuline; Marin Bode, Kings; Reilly Hellmann, Ursuline; Cassie Larsen, Indian Hill; Macy LaShells, CHCA; Jane Muller, Mariemont; Jordana Ronis-Tobin, Sycamore; Mandy Schneider, Milford; Faith Sellet, Seton; Charlotte Soller, Mariemont

Northern Kentucky girls lacrosse

Meaghan Bailey, Ryle; Andrea Carothers, Notre Dame; Georgi Kirtley, Notre Dame; Jessica Matusik, Cooper; Grace Panko, Notre Dame; Hannah Powers, Notre Dame; Samantha Sandefur, Cooper; Sarah-Kate Siroky, Dixie Heights

Ohio softball

Kylie Bailey, Waynesville; Olivia Basil, St. Ursula; Kylie Cobb, Talawanda; Alisha Fox, Mason; AnnaBelle Geiser, Mason; Charlee Helton, Western Brown; Ava Hensley, Fairfield; Meghan McClellan, Milford; Grace Parkhurst, Kings and Ella Teubner, Lebanon

Northern Kentucky/Indiana softball

Payton Brown, Highlands; Kaitlyn Dixon, Highlands; Hope Hamilton, Campbell County; Taylor Jones, Simon Kenton; Averie Lightner, Conner; Abby Turnpaugh, Notre Dame

Ohio boys tennis

Drew Baumgartner-Peyton Nelson, Springboro; Greg Bernadsky, Mason; Neelan Gandhi-Michael Ryu, Indian Hill; Gareth Kurowski-Jeremy Starczynowski, Indian Hill; Nihal Narisetty, St. Xavier; Adi Nayak, Seven Hills; Janek Teply-Daniel Tonkal, Mason

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys tennis

Shayaan Ahmad, Villa Madonna; Kalei Christensen-Blake Hussey, Covington Catholic; Jacob Kramer/William Tribble, Covington Catholic; Finley Mackay, Walton-Verona; Neel Reddy, Beechwood; Navneeth Selvaraju, Ryle; Alex Yeager, Covington Catholic

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls tennis

Cassidy Derry-Isabella Norvell, Dixie Heights; Kayla Johnson, Cooper; Sadie Jones, Beechwood; Avery Love-Niveditha Selvaraju, Ryle; Kaylin Lovell, Scott; Julia Lyons, Villa Madonna; Isabella McElwee-Malia Christensen, Notre Dame Academy

Boys volleyball

Cam Evans, St. Xavier; Konnor Farnsworth, Ryle; Bryce Fielman, Milford; Gavin Gerhard, McNicholas; Ethan Gundrum, McNicholas; Carter Lucas, Loveland; Josh Sabin, Fenwick; William Sauer, Moeller; Grant Simer, Lakota East; Joe Taggart, St. Xavier; Tommy Tierney, Elder; Andrew Weigand, Roger Bacon

Ohio boys track and field

Gavin Barry, Moeller; Teague Boland, Moeller; Dom Ellis, St. Xavier; Matt Fogler, Moeller; Nathaniel Gockerman, CHCA; Grant Harrison, New Richmond; David Lorek, Loveland; Joel Nimoh, Lakota West; Cale Wilson, Clinton-Massie; Matthew Wright, Purcell Marian

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys track and field

Charlie Ford, Newport Central Catholic; Will Kemper, East Central; Josiah Lockridge, Lloyd Memorial; Brayden Polly, Simon Kenton; Will Sheets, Covington Catholic; Brennan Simpson, Dixie Heights; Paul Van Laningham, Cooper

Ohio girls track and field

Kristen Berwanger, Mercy McAuley; Delaney Cilley, Loveland; Lily Eagleston, Mason; Emma Goins, Little Miami; Chloe Hamilton, Mercy McAuley; Heidi Harmeyer, Seton; Claire Iaciofano, Turpin; Camille Lewis, Deer Park; Vivian Momper, Madeira; Penelope Webb, Wyoming

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls track and field

Callie Bentley, East Central; Olivia Holbrook, Campbell County; Alexis Howard, Simon Kenton; Caroline Nordman, Beechwood; Lily Parke, Beechwood; Ava Walters, Bishop Brossart; Zoey Woosley, Bishop Brossart

Winter sports nominees for the 2025 Enquirer High School Sports Awards

Boys archery

Jack Albertson, Ryle; Marshall Anstaett, Highlands; Kennan Caudill, Ryle; Logan Hammer, Boone County; Brayden Henry, Boone County; Corbin Jones, Grant County; Brayden Nevels, Cooper; Ethan Pauciulo, Ryle; Kayson Stone, Cooper; Christian Wallace, Ryle.

Girls archery

Addison Alloway, Scott; Ava Boertlein, Notre Dame; Lexus Goff, Scott; Abigail Jewell, Ryle; Anna Beth McCarty, Simon Kenton; Nyla McIntosh, Simon Kenton; Cora Beth Mehltretter, Simon Kenton; Prisha Shah, Ryle; Kilee Spegal, Simon Kenton; Amelia Whalen, Ryle.

Ohio boys basketball

Jaiden Arnold, Aiken; Tommy Clark, Kings; Alex Kazanecki, Moeller; Michael Lewis, Fairfield; Trey Perry, Lakota East; Nate Riep, Oak Hills; Bryce Snell, Cincinnati Country Day; Joshua Tyson, Lakota West; Cayleb Walters, Summit Country Day; Jacob Wassler, St. Xavier; Kellen Wiley, Wyoming; Christian Wilkins, Winton Woods; Cam Williams, Elder

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys basketball

Jay Bilton, Simon Kenton; Griffen Derry, Dixie Heights; Aaron Gutman, Walton-Verona; Garyn Jackson, Campbell County; Andy Johnson, Cooper; Landon Lorms, Ryle; Finn Louden, Conner; Athens McGillis, Covington Catholic; Yamil Rondon, Newport; Jack Sullivan, Beechwood; E. J. Walker, Lloyd Memorial

Ohio girls basketball

Dee Alexander, Purcell Marian; Katie Berrey, Waynesville; Kailee Bransford, Mount Notre Dame; Mari Gerton, Princeton; Layla Hale, West Clermont; Bryn Martin, Springboro; Ky’Aira Miller, Purcell Marian; Callie Nichols, St. Ursula; Madison Parrish, Mason; Alli Robertson, Harrison; Daniah Trammell, Winton Woods; Aniya Trent, Springboro

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls basketball

Catherine Buddenberg, Dixie Heights; Caroline Eaglin, Newport Central Catholic; Marissa Green, Highlands; Isabella Jayasuriya, Campbell County; Maya Lawrie, Notre Dame Academy; Zoee Meyers, Bishop Brossart; Aumani Nelson, Holy Cross; Haylee Noel, Cooper; Brynli Pernell, Simon Kenton; Braylin Terrell, Walton-Verona

Ohio boys bowling

Jace Amann, La Salle; Jayden Brown, Elder; Ben Carberry, Fairfield; Connor Copeland, Lebanon; Colby Hosier, Lakota West; Tanner Iles, Oak Hills; Sam Massie, Clinton-Massie; Aiden Rapien, Elder; Jordan Rottinghouse, Elder; Johnathan Schneider, La Salle; Will Shepard, West Clermont

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys bowling

Tyler Blume, Simon Kenton; Kyan Brewer, Pendleton County; Dylan Davis, Covington Catholic; Peyton Elmore, Boone County; Tony Fox, Simon Kenton; J.D. Hitt, Campbell County; Tyler Ketron, Cooper; Maddox Kuryla, Boone County; Bryce Sargent, Campbell County; Kenny Sparks, Cooper

Ohio girls bowling

Kaylee Braun, Mt. Notre Dame; Kendall Cook, Mercy McAuley; Carolyn Edmisten, Georgetown; Kylie Fisher, Wilmington; Anna Francisco, Harrison; Lily Holder, Western Brown; Taylor Hooks, West Clermont; Mackenzie Pyle, Wilmington; Izzy Rhoads, Wilmington; Nevaeh Williams, Walnut Hills

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls bowling

Alyssa Bechtol, Dixie Heights; Kree Brewer, Pendleton County; Teegan Ellison, St. Henry; Olivia Hicks, Lloyd Memorial; Maddie Marshall, Pendleton County; Ava Mayfield, Boone County; Hayley Pelstring, Notre Dame; Abby Sargent, Campbell County; Alexis Tignor, Cooper; Abree Young, Dixie Heights

Gymnastics

Leah DeVilbiss, Lakota East; Anya Freson, Lakota East; Kiera Laite, Mariemont; Leah McElveen, Lakota West; Zoey Ostdiek, Lakota West; Ella Oum, Turpin; Quinn Strong, Indian Hill; Maddy Smith, Turpin

Ice hockey

Brendan Canham, Mason; Andrew Coburn, St. Xavier; Finn Friede, Moeller; Max Gerber, Moeller; Finn Hayes, St. Xavier; Maddox Malton, Northern Kentucky Norse; Eli Natorp, Mason; Brian O’Connor, St. Xavier; Joey Rusnak, St. Xavier; Jacob Sackenheim, Moeller; Braeden Sample, Moeller; Greyson Sanders, Springboro; Benjamin Unkraut, Northern Kentucky Norse

Ohio boys swimming and diving

Cooper Burt, Ross; Connor Bennett, Ross; Brady Campbell, Milford; Bryce Cousins, West Clermont; Jaeger Ellerman, St. Xavier; Chase Grisi, St. Xavier; Aidan Jansen, Mason; Hayden Meyers, Turpin; Arjun Velayutham, Indian Hill; Jason Zhao, Indian Hill

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys swimming and diving

Chanith Abeysinghe, Highlands; Griffin Barlow, Highlands; Chase Knopf, Ryle; Andy Pleiman, Ryle; Cono Presti, Beechwood; Isaiah Reinhart, Simon Kenton

Ohio girls swimming and diving

Taylor Bacher, CHCA; Bella Basford, Anderson; Grier Gordon, Ursuline; Ansley Neff, Wyoming; Reese Reilly, Roger Bacon; Addie Robillard, Sycamore; Quinn Schureck, Walnut Hills; Maya Schweikert, Kings; Julia Shafer, CHCA; Bella Teply, Mason

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls swimming and diving

Ryon Argo, Beechwood; Sadie Hartig, Notre Dame; Clare Herfel, Notre Dame; Sarah Jones, Highlands; Gabriella Stephens, Ryle; Reese Yauger, Ryle; Liv Wallace, Notre Dame

Ohio boys wrestling

Will Adkins, Moeller; Jack Hoffman, Springboro; Holden Huhn, La Salle; Matt Kowalski, Springboro; Konner Lambers, Elder; Gage Murphy, Reading; Isaiah Nichols, Edgewood; Kane Shawger, St. Xavier; Demetrius Stanley, Lakota East; Colin Wooldridge, La Salle

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys wrestling

Ethan Davis, Grant County; Landon Evans, Ryle; Luke Hyden, Walton-Verona; Jonah McCloskey, Simon Kenton; T.J. Meyer, Walton-Verona; Rider Trumble, Ryle

Ohio girls wrestling

Natalie Carlisle, Lebanon; Rylee Dearwester, Harrison; Gabby Fenton, Taylor; Camryn Gresham, Lakota East; Liberty Johnson, CNE; Charley Jones, New Richmond; Kelsey King, Lakota West; Elizabeth Madison, Loveland; Chenelle Trammell, Lebanon; Leah Willen, Harrison

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls wrestling

Sophie Anderson, WaltonVerona; Peyton Brinkman, Ryle; Emma Hood, Highlands; Emma Moore, Walton-Verona; Leighna Prater, East Central; Rose Thomas, Conner

Fall sports nominees for the 2025 Enquirer High School Sports Awards

Ohio boys cross country

Alex Bruns, St. Xavier; Samuel Darmanie, Springboro; Dom Ellis, St. Xavier; Nathaniel Gockerman, Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy; Wyatt Gockerman, Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy; Ryne Reynolds, Little Miami; Caden Winship, Mason; Ronan Wolfer, Loveland; Liam Woodward, Summit Country Day; Jason Xu, Mason; Michael Zegarski, Little Miami.

Northern Kentucky and Indiana boys cross country

Jake Chapman, Batesville; Jonathan Christopher, Campbell County; Lincoln Herald, Grant County; Nathan Hopper, Conner; Joe Mayer, Covington Catholic; Luke McLane, Covington Catholic; Will Sheets, Covington Catholic; Paul Van Laningham, Cooper

Ohio girls cross country

Elle Campbell, Milford; Molly Deardorff, Lakota East; Callie Fox, Summit Country Day; Cate LeRoy, Madeira; Adriana Luking, Talawanda; Efa Paschka, Mason; Evelyn Prodoehl, Lakota West; Lucia Rodbro, Talawanda; Abby Sewell, Mercy McAuley; Ava Shepard, Lakota West; Brady Sterbling, Bethel-Tate

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls cross country

Callie Bentley, East Central; Aidan Christopher, Campbell County; Lila Dunlevy, Campbell County; Olivia Holbrook, Campbell County; Allison Kopser, Ryle; Lily Parke, Beechwood; Alexandra Rooney, Cooper; Jena Weiler, East Central

Field hockey

Josie Broenner, Mount Notre Dame; Chloe Castellini, Summit Country Day; Laura Fagan, Mount Notre Dame; Rachel France, Mount Notre Dame; Kincade Givens, Indian Hill; Harper Hodgett, Ursuline Academy; Ella Jones, Mount Notre Dame; Maddie Lanphear, Indian Hill; Liz Thurnau, St. Ursula Academy; Julia Ward, Ursuline Academy

Ohio football ‒ offense

Justice Burnam, Anderson, Devlan Daniel, Indian Hill; Gracen Goldsmith, Hamilton; Demico Harris, St. Bernard-Elmwood Place; Aidan Hopewell, Madeira; Trace Jallick, Anderson; Tucker Kattus, St. Xavier; Jamison Kitna, Lakota East; Cole Koops, Harrison; Jovan Love, Moeller; Patrick McLaughlin, La Salle; Caden Piening, Anderson; Matt Ponatoski, Moeller; Jahmeir Spain, Mt. Healthy

Northern Kentucky/Indiana football ‒ offense

Clay Hayden, Beechwood; Cash Harney, Covington Catholic; Isaiah Johnson, Cooper; Ryan Minges, East Central; Cam O’Hara, Cooper; Dylan Stewart, Conner; Adam Surrey, Highlands

Ohio football – defense

Grant Beerman, Lakota West; Ja’Kobe Clapper, St. Xavier; Raishawn Cotton, Mt. Healthy; Ryan Coyle, Cincinnati Country Day; Aaron Dowdell Jr., Taft; Jess Hauer, Wyoming; Jonah Hayes, Moeller; Justin Hill, Winton Woods; Paul Nelson, Princeton; Brady O’Connor, La Salle; Drayden Pavey, Taft; Jayonn Saunders, Anderson; Derek Uran, Elder; Trey Verdon, Hamilton

Northern Kentucky/Indiana football ‒ defense

Austin Alexander, Cooper; Tyler Copeland, Lloyd Memorial; Mattox Kelly, Beechwood; Noah Knigga, Lawrenceburg; Tate Kruer, Covington Catholic; Jacob Savage, Ryle; Dillon Smith, Ryle

Ohio boys golf

Ethan Argus, Cincinnati Country Day; Finley Bartlett, Wyoming; Landon Harris, Moeller; Marshall Morency, Anderson; Cayse Morgan, Elder; Michael Stagnaro, St. Xavier

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys golf

Talen Beane, Campbell County; Ben Carter, St. Henry; Will Carter, St. Henry; Paxton McKelvey, Ryle; Hank Shick, Highlands; Nate Surrey, Highlands

Please note: Boys golf is a spring sport in Indiana so we may add more players to this grouping.

Ohio girls golf

Eva Becerril, Sycamore; Campbell Drum, Mount Notre Dame; Taylor Dunkle, Springboro; Sophia Fink, Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy; Ellie Hartung, Madeira; Paige Treherne, Lakota West

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls golf

Tatjana Andracenko, Dixie Heights; Didi Jiradamkerng, Notre Dame; Emma Laker, Bishop Brossart; Anika Okuda, Ryle; Rowan Pies, East Central; Reagan Ramage, Cooper

Ohio boys soccer

Ryan Boyd, Lakota West; Shaun Dickerson, Lakota East; Alex Dorko, Anderson; Nick Feldhaus, Waynesville; Nick Henke, Milford; Gaven Johnson, Harrison; Karson Lang, Moeller; Max Murphy, Mariemont; Marcos Neto, Mason; David Ray, Summit Country Day; Everett Rinaldi, Seven Hills; Connor Wilkes, Indian Hill

Northern Kentucky/Indiana boys soccer

Austin Bush, Campbell County; Parker Byland, Boone County; David Do, Covington Catholic; Harrison Gamble, Highlands; Donovan Lameier, Dixie Heights; Sam Lang, Highlands; Brennan Lewis, East Central; Maddox Pemberton, Cooper; Tanner Robertson, Covington Catholic

Ohio girls soccer

Tessa Blain, Springboro; Anna Cornejo, Madeira; Chloe Dunford, Waynesville; Lauren Flax, Anderson; Anneliese Knight, Mason; Alex Lewis, Cincinnati Christian; Lexi O’Shea, Seton; Presley Pennekamp, Oak Hills; Emily Steiner, Batavia; Mia Stevens, Summit Country Day; Olivia Trick, Mount Notre Dame; Addy Zawaly, Mariemont

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls soccer

Reagan Buchert, Conner; Jozie Holmes, Campbell County; Izelee Kerns, Conner; Aubree LaBazzo, Lawrenceburg; Megan McGraw, Notre Dame; Rylee Schloss, East Central; Rachel Shewmaker, Bishop Brossart; Ally Welch, Conner

Ohio singles tennis

Caroline Boyle, Badin; Addison Cassidy, Mason; Ana Gotike, Mason; Maria Poon, St. Ursula Academy; Saanvi Reddy, Mason; Sophia Thompson, Indian Hill

Ohio doubles tennis

Caroline Brown / Cassie Larsen, Indian Hill; Pratyusha Chaudhuri / Emma Wagner, Mason; Renee Harper / Brooke Lint, Oak Hills; Maggie Marburger / Katelyn Bastos, Summit Country Day; Allison Sayles / Serena Sayles, Sycamore; Bhavana Singidi / Adriana Moreno, Mason

Ohio girls volleyball

Sakura Codling, Seton; Callie Combs, Seton; Molly Creech, St. Ursula Academy; Addy Franz, Ursuline Academy; Mariah Gaines, Roger Bacon; Emma Frietch, St. Ursula; Katie Gielas, Ursuline Academy; Luci Heid, Badin; Ally Hughes, Roger Bacon; Makenna Kirlin, Loveland; Ava McIntyre, Kings; Caroline Moore, Mercy McAuley

Northern Kentucky/Indiana girls volleyball

Madelyn Demler, St. Henry; Julia Grace, Notre Dame Academy; Keira Hans, Simon Kenton; Morgan Heater, Ryle; Milyn Minor, Scott; Kate Neltner, Bishop Brossart; Ava Tilden, Notre Dame; Lucy Trapp, Ryle

Ohio boys water polo

Grant Carmody, Sycamore; Jackson Connor, Milford; Marco Di Loreto Tarot, Mason; Cole Dowden, Sycamore; Sam Franke, St. Xavier; Thomas Pitstick, St. Xavier; Evan Preissler, Sycamore

Ohio girls water polo

Tia Fidanza, Sycamore; Rachell Hemmila, Mavericks (Hughes High School); Maddie House, Milford; Cam Kilimnik, Mavericks (St. Ursula Academy); Mariam Ndiaye, Mason; Claire Ponstingle, Mason; Isabelle Shade, Sycamore



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When it comes to girls sports, what happens in California will not stay there

A teenage competitor who has transitioned from male to female was able to compete in a California state championship as a girl, against girls, over the weekend. The California Interscholastic Federation rule changes last week made it so that the young woman who would have otherwise won first place shared the podium with the transgender […]

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A teenage competitor who has transitioned from male to female was able to compete in a California state championship as a girl, against girls, over the weekend. The California Interscholastic Federation rule changes last week made it so that the young woman who would have otherwise won first place shared the podium with the transgender athlete (CIF is the governing body for high school sports in California).

When I asked Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office for comment, it quickly responded that the governor didn’t sign AB 1266 (a state law that allows students to play in the sport league of their preferred gender). Gov. Jerry Brown did. It also said Newsom had nothing to do with CIF or the rule changes. 

Yet, when I spoke to insiders in Sacramento, the feeling on the ground was very different. Centrist and level-headed Democrats are terrified to speak up. They feel pressure from the Democratic caucus to sit down and shut up. The statement Newsom released, applauding the CIF rule change, made it pretty clear where he stands, even though he, too, is distancing himself from this issue for now.

Newsom’s office also restated to me what some outlets have reported, that it believes the number of high school athletes who are transgender is in the single digits in the state. Mothers with girls in sports called BS on this when they spoke to me via phone, text, email, and DMs. California does not require student athletes to disclose their gender identity, so how did the governor’s office come up with this number? The mad mamas I spoke to offered up numerous instances of their girls facing biological boys in sports ranging from water polo to volleyball to basketball and even hockey.

A continual thread from the Left is that these parents and “outsiders” are “anti trans.” But in reality, their tone is more about concerns of safety, innocence, and unfairness. These aren’t all parents or students on the religious Right.

Sophia Lorey, outreach director at the California Family Council, a Christian public policy group that advocates religious freedom, parental rights, and fairness in school sports, has attended numerous CIF events. She started doing so at the request of parents and participating athletes. Lorey was removed by a CIF official over the weekend for handing out pink “XX Only” bracelets and pamphlets with her mother.

“As a former CIF varsity and collegiate athlete, I showed up to defend girls’ sports and was escorted out by CIF and police for handing out ‘save girls’ sports’ bracelets and flyers,” she told me. “No one could point to a single policy justifying their actions. Meanwhile, a male athlete was dominating three girls’ events. These girls deserved celebration, not compromise. Watching them share the spotlight with someone who had a biological advantage was painful. We are failing them when we refuse to protect fairness.”

She continued, “Silencing women who speak up for fairness is an attack on the First Amendment and a betrayal of every female athlete who plays by the rules. It is clear that I didn’t disrupt the competition; I disrupted CIF’s narrative.”

Most participants who are pro-girls, pro-girls sports, and pro-girls’ opportunities are confused and frustrated when they show up at tournaments, meets, and competitions to find out that they will be competing against someone with a biological advantage. The meets were confusing and sad when these girls recognized that they wouldn’t make the top nine because of a biological male. They were upset, nervous, and in tears while feeling a sense of disappointment and unfairness before they even competed. 

DOJ THREATENS LAWSUIT OVER CALIFORNIA TRANSGENDER ATHLETE POLICY

CIF isn’t doing these things in a vacuum. It is afraid of radical leftist organizations such as Equality CA and the Trevor Project, whose form 990s boast funding of almost $100 million nationally, coming in and pressuring the Democratic supermajority not to allow CIF to operate as an organization within the state. Worst case scenario, these agenda-driven Democrats create a new state body to regulate school sports that is beholden to the legislature directly. 

The California Family Council has a website with a petition that has garnered over 15,000 signatures demanding that the CIF take the concerns of girls in sports seriously and make rule changes to protect them. I’d urge all concerned athletes and parents to sign it. You may think that this started in California and ends in California, but it is happening everywhere. Our girls deserve better.

Elisha Krauss is a conservative commentator and speaker who resides in Los Angeles, California, with her husband and their four children. She advocates women’s rights, school choice, and smaller government.



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ROAD TO A HOME WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS BEGINS IN LA SEU FOR AUSTRALIAN CANOE SLALOM TEAM THIS WEEKEND

With 117 days to go until the ICF Slalom World Championships arrive in Sydney, the Australian Canoe Slalom team are preparing to get their 2025 international season underway in Spain, this weekend. Olympic gold medalists Jessica and Noemie Fox headline the 10-strong team that will compete at the 2025 ICF Canoe Slalom World Cup 1 […]

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With 117 days to go until the ICF Slalom World Championships arrive in Sydney, the Australian Canoe Slalom team are preparing to get their 2025 international season underway in Spain, this weekend.

Olympic gold medalists Jessica and Noemie Fox headline the 10-strong team that will compete at the 2025 ICF Canoe Slalom World Cup 1 in La Seu from Friday 6 June through until Sunday 8 June.

“The main objective that I have my eyes on this year is the World Championships…a home World Championships in a career is very special,” Noemie Fox said. 

“But also the World Cups this year, I’m really looking forward to challenging myself – it’s a bit of a harder schedule with just one run, straight to top 12 and into the final.

“So I think there’s a lot more challenges this year for me, but I’m excited to step up in my slalom events and to maintain my Kayak Cross world rankings and titles,” she said.

It is the first of five World Cup events, with the season set to culminate in Penrith for the 2025 ICF Slalom World Championships.

The World Cup 1 program will start with the men’s and women’s Kayak Heats and Finals on Friday, before the men’s and women’s Canoe Heats and Finals on Saturday, and wrap up with the Kayak Cross on Sunday.

Among the Australians competing this weekend is World Cup and senior national team debutant Ben Ross.

“Debuting on my first senior team is very exciting, and for me it’s all about coming into the Worlds with a performance objective, do as well as I can, but also really lapping up the experience, enjoying the opportunities that being on the senior team provides and just trying to get as much out of the experience as I can.

“I’m racing World Cups 1 and 2, in La Seu (Spain) and Pau (France), and then I’ll be taking a break for World Cup 3 for the U23 World Championships…they’re quite close to each other.

“I went to Seu and Pau for the first time last year, just for training and I was really privileged to be able to do that.

“Seu is quite unique – I’ve watched a lot of my fellow team mates race there in the past and watched a lot of races online, but never myself.

“But I feel like I’m in a good place, I’ve had a bit of training on the course but it’s a really special place in Slalom history, with the 1992 Olympics and to be able to race there will be super exciting,” Ross said.

The 2025 ICF Canoe Slalom World Cup season will be broadcast LIVE on Fox Sports Australia and Kayo Sports.

 

2025 ICF CANOE SLALOM WORLD CUP 1

Friday 6 June

  • 7:30pm AEST | Women’s Kayak Heats
  • 8:29pm AEST | Men’s Kayak Heats
  • 11:05pm AEST | Women’s Kayak Final
  • 11:47pm AEST | Men’s Kayak Final

Saturday 7 June

  • 7pm AEST | Women’s Canoe Heats
  • 7:50pm AEST | Men’s Canoe Heats 
  • 10:04pm AEST | Women’s Canoe Final
  • 10:47pm AEST | Men’s Canoe Final

Sunday 8 June

  • 6pm AEST | Kayak Cross Time Trial
  • 10pm AEST | Kayak Cross Heats
  • 11pm AEST | Kayak Cross Quarterfinals
  • 11:40pm AEST | Kayak Cross Semi Finals
  • 12am AEST | Kayak Cross Finals

 

AUSTRALIAN TEAM

Jessica Fox (Women’s Kayak, Canoe, Kayak Cross)

Noemie Fox (Women’s Kayak, Canoe, Kayak Cross)

Kate Eckhardt (Women’s Kayak, Canoe, Kayak Cross)

Lucien Delfour (Men’s Kayak, Kayak Cross)

Tim Anderson (Men’s Kayak, Kayak Cross)

Ben Pope (Men’s Kayak, Kayak Cross)

Tristan Carter (Men’s Canoe)

Kaylen Bassett (Men’s Canoe)

Ben Ross (Men’s Canoe)

Georgie O’Callaghan (Women’s Kayak Cross)



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To end all women's sports

There’s a new book out on women’s sports, and on the surface, it seems like a good read. The rippling back muscles of a female athlete grace the cover. She’s strong, determined, and—judging by the subtitle, “The Case for Feminist Sport”—she’s ready and able to take on any man. Yet in the book, Open Play, […]

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To end all women's sports

There’s a new book out on women’s sports, and on the surface, it seems like a good read. The rippling back muscles of a female athlete grace the cover. She’s strong, determined, and—judging by the subtitle, “The Case for Feminist Sport”—she’s ready and able to take on any man.

Yet in the book, Open Play, it is men, not women, who come out on top.

The authors, Sheree Bekker and Stephen Mumford, paint a utopian vision of athletics fit for John Lennon’s “Imagine,” a world without sex-specific sports for men and women. In place of the current system, they advocate for what they call “open play”—men and women blissfully competing against each other. Gone are the gender binary, the patriarchy, and any notion of women as “the weaker sex.”

Branding their case as “feminist,” the authors suggest that women’s sports is itself a child of the patriarchy. Sports weren’t separated because of biology, they insist, but because of society’s outdated views of sex differences. To adjust the old saying, women need separate sports like a fish needs a bicycle. The authors even go so far as to suggest that men may hold no natural advantage over women in terms of size and strength.

George Orwell was right: “There are some ideas so absurd that only an intellectual could believe them.” The collective weight of science, biology, the experience of female athletes, and common sense contradict this book at every turn.

The latest science has confirmed the obvious: Males do hold an inherent physical advantage over females in nearly all sports. According to researchers, that advantage becomes real almost as early as it can be measured, and it isn’t erased by puberty blockers, testosterone suppression, or cross-sex hormones. Even pre-pubescent boys have a physical advantage over girls the same age.

This was particularly evident in one analysis of top track-and-field performances. Over an eight-year period, boys ages eight and younger outperformed girls of the same ages by 19% in shot put, 32% in javelin, and nearly 5% in long jump. In running, the boys were up to 6.7% faster than girls, depending on the event. And in swimming, boys ages 10 and younger were 1.2 to 2.6% faster than girls in most events.

Keep in mind, an inch or a split second can make all the difference. It was a mere .09 of a second that separated Chelsea Mitchell, one of the fastest girls in Connecticut, from a male who took the winner’s podium at the state championship. Riley Gaines, an NCAA swimmer, was robbed of a championship trophy after tying male swimmer Lia Thomas for fifth place.

Try as they may to frame their argument as pro-woman, it is a recipe for unfairness—one that would likely spark a mass exodus of women from sports.

But it isn’t just physical differences that matter. As every athlete knows, the mental game is essential. And the psychological toll on girls who are forced to compete against boys is crushing. They feel demoralized, inferior, and let down by the adults who should protect them. The authors of Open Play fail to address these factors.

I think of the elite teenage softball players who quit because they didn’t want to have to fight a male for pitching time; the middle school girls who have been forced to share changing rooms with boys and faced sexual harassment; the track runners who have taken their mark with a weight of sadness before the starting gun even fires, knowing that the taller, faster, stronger male standing two feet away is guaranteed to win. It’s demoralizing to know your best won’t be good enough—that months of early wake-ups and training will all come to nought simply because you’re a girl.

The authors of Open Play would condemn all female athletes to such pain. Try as they may to frame their argument as pro-woman, it is a recipe for unfairness—one that would likely spark a mass exodus of women from sports.

This unfairness speaks to a far deeper problem in the authors’ thinking—one that touches on reality itself. In response to the now-famous question, “What is a woman?”, the authors proudly answer: Who knows? “No one can say in a sentence what it is to be a woman, or a man, in a way that covers all people and separates them correctly into two groups,” they write.

It’s no wonder we disagree on how to save women’s sports. We don’t even agree on what women are.

I do agree with the authors on one thing: Women do deserve better than what they’re getting. But real equality will only come when it is founded on truth rather than fantasy, when we recognize that humanity is not androgynous but that men and women, though equal in dignity, are beautifully distinct by God’s design.

That’s a fact that no amount of postmodern deconstruction or wishful thinking will ever change.

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Mater Dei, Sage Hill win CIF State boys volleyball championships – Orange County Register

The Mater Dei and Sage Hill boys volleyball teams won CIF State championships over the weekend. This is the first season that CIF State championships have been held for boys volleyball. Previously, the volleyball season ended with regional playoffs. All of the state finals were played at Fresno City College. In the Division II final […]

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The Mater Dei and Sage Hill boys volleyball teams won CIF State championships over the weekend.

This is the first season that CIF State championships have been held for boys volleyball. Previously, the volleyball season ended with regional playoffs.

All of the state finals were played at Fresno City College.

In the Division II final on Friday, Mater Dei defeated Clovis Buchannan in four sets, 17-25, 25-23, 25-19, 25-20.

Monarchs sophomore Jeremiah Postasi had a team-high 16 kills in the match.

Sage Hill won the Division III championship Saturday by defeating San Francisco International, 25-19, 25-16, 25-23.

Mira Costa continued its season-long dominance by winning the Division I title by defeating San Jose Archbishop Mitty, 25-14, 15-15, 25-21.

The Mustangs defeated Huntington Beach 3-0 in the CIF Southern California Regional final and defeated Huntington Beach in five sets in the CIF Southern Section Division 1 final.



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Long Beach To Host 7 Paralympic Sports In 2028

LONG BEACH, CA — Long Beach has been selected to host seven sporting events for the 2028 Los Angeles Paralympic Games, city officials said in a statement Tuesday. Long Beach’s waterfront will serve as the backdrop for para climbing, para swimming, shooting para sport, sitting volleyball, blind football (soccer), para rowing and para canoe-sprint, according […]

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LONG BEACH, CA — Long Beach has been selected to host seven sporting events for the 2028 Los Angeles Paralympic Games, city officials said in a statement Tuesday.

Long Beach’s waterfront will serve as the backdrop for para climbing, para swimming, shooting para sport, sitting volleyball, blind football (soccer), para rowing and para canoe-sprint, according to city officials.

“We are incredibly proud and honored that Long Beach will host seven Paralympic sporting events for the 2028 Los Angeles Paralympic Games,” Mayor Rex Richardson said in a statement Tuesday. “This milestone truly showcases our commitment to inclusion, athletic excellence and community spirit.”

SEE ALSO: Flying Taxis May Help Ease LA Traffic During 2028 Olympics

The 2028 games mark the debut of para climbing, which, along with para swimming, will take place in the convention center lot, Long Beach city officials said. Shooting para sport will take place at a temporary indoor range, sitting volleyball at the Long Beach Arena, blind football (soccer) at Alamitos Beach, and para rowing and para canoe-spring at Marine Stadium, city officials said.

Earlier this year, Long Beach was selected to host 11 Olympic games in 20028, including beach volleyball, handball, water polo, sailing and target shooting.

City officials said Tuesday that Long Beach’s involvement in the Olympic and Paralympic games will raise its international profile as a “world-renowned destination for business, tourism and special events.”

“It will also generate significant economic activity for the city and enhance the livability of Long Beach residents and visitors for generations to come,” city officials said in a statement.

The Olympic Games are set to take place from July 14 to 30, while the Paralympic Games will be hosted from Aug. 15 to 27.

To ease travel in and around game venues, Los Angeles County officials are considering implementing a water taxi and a flying taxi.



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