Sports
'It's a movement'
When Janie and Stephanie Ellingwood went to a local brewery one night to watch a U.S. Women’s National Team soccer game with some friends, they didn’t think it would be a big deal to ask the staff to turn on the sound. The bartenders had always been friendly to the married couple, who frequented the […]

When Janie and Stephanie Ellingwood went to a local brewery one night to watch a U.S. Women’s National Team soccer game with some friends, they didn’t think it would be a big deal to ask the staff to turn on the sound.
The bartenders had always been friendly to the married couple, who frequented the bar at least a few times a week. And they were the only patrons in the small room, situated away from the main viewing area where the volume was on full blast. So they were surprised when the staff curtly shot down their request without any explanation.

Opened in early June to coincide with Pride Month, Untamed Spirits is the first women’s sports bar in the city of Los Angeles.
(Alyson Aliano / For The Times)
The Ellingwoods continued watching the nail-biting game with subtitles, but as it got more and more exciting, customers began spilling over to their side of the bar. Before long, the small room was packed.
“We were all cheering,” says Janie. “We all gave each other high-fives.”

The wife-and-wife duo took over another sports bar in Silver Lake and turned it into Untamed Spirits, the first women’s sports bar in L.A.
(Alyson Aliano / For The Times)
Still, the staff refused to turn up the volume.
The experience left the Ellingwoods, who are diehard fans of the L.A. Sparks and season-ticket holders for Angel City Football Club, wondering why there weren’t any bars in Los Angeles where they could comfortably watch women’s sports without feeling ostracized. So they decided to create their own.
After months of searching for a location, the wife-and-wife duo took over another sports bar in Silver Lake — formerly known as Trophy Wife — and turned it into Untamed Spirits, the first women’s sports bar in the city of L.A.
Opened in early June to coincide with Pride Month, Untamed Spirits joins a short list of bars in the U.S. dedicated to women’s sports, including Portland’s Sports Bra, which is expanding to four new cities including Las Vegas and Boston; Rough & Tumble in Seattle; Minnesota’s A Bar of Their Own; and Rikki’s in San Francisco. Long Beach’s Watch Me! Sports Bar, which opened its doors last July, was the first in California.
Stephanie, 37, who played professional golf for a few years, felt that L.A. needed something like this. “Something that’s a little bit classier, that isn’t sticky when you put your arms on the bar,” she describes.
“For once, I want to watch a game at the bar with sound on instead of some random spot in the corner,” Janie, 34, adds.

The bar is sleek and modern — a neon pink sign reads “Welcome to the Untamed Era,” and whimsical black and white illustrations cover a few of the walls.
(Alyson Aliano / For The Times)
On a recent Tuesday night, Janie was behind the counter pouring drinks, including their signature Angel City pink punch, for patrons sitting at the bar, which was adorned with rainbow flags and an Angel City Football Club flag. Meanwhile, Stephanie was floating around the space, checking on customers. The couple, who met while playing volleyball together at La Quinta High School, also run a made-to-order croissant bakery based in Orange County and remodel and manage residential properties throughout Southern California.
The bar is sleek and modern — a neon pink sign reads “Welcome to the Untamed Era,” and whimsical black and white illustrations cover a few of the walls. Menstrual products are displayed on the bathroom counter. The spacious patio is filled with plants and a sign that says “Watch Women’s Sports Here.” (There’s a TV in nearly every corner, so there’s no bad seat.) Although Untamed Spirits specializes in women’s sports of all kinds — even the more niche ones like kayaking, Janie says — the bar also plays men’s sports.

“Some people might call it a trend, but it’s not a trend,” Janie says. “I believe it’s a movement.”
(Alyson Aliano / For The Times)
Sitting at a table with a date and two friends, Marina Sobreviñas, 31, says she’s found that queer bars like Hi Tops in Los Feliz are more likely to play women’s sports, but she felt that “it’s about time” there is a spot dedicated to them. She recalls her experience trying to watch the FIFA Women’s World Cup at a bar.

Untamed Spirits offers bar food with an international twist with dishes like kimchi fried rice.
(Alyson Aliano / For The Times)

Untamed Spirits sells nonalcoholic and alcoholic drinks including margaritas and a signature Angel City pink punch.
(Alyson Aliano / For The Times)
“There was like, one World Cup TV out of the 10 TVs they had going, and it was sort of fascinating,” she says. “Like, ‘Am I’m the only one wearing a jersey today? OK, no problem.’”
Sobreviñas says that women’s sports are just as exciting as men’s sports.
Lisa Marie Ornelas, 30, agrees. “Women [athletes], in a way, have a little bit more to prove,” she says.
Untamed Spirits arrives in L.A. at a time when interest in women’s sports is expanding at a “meteoric pace” across the globe, according to Nielsen. The 2024 NCAA women’s basketball tournament averaged nearly 19 million viewers (with a peak of 24 million viewers for the final game between Iowa and South Carolina), an 89% bump from the previous year. The WNBA draft audience jumped 511%, and overall interest in the league grew 29% between 2023 and 2024. The National Women’s Soccer League saw a 17% boost in interest between 2023 and 2024. With the heightened interest, ad spending also increased: In 2024, TV advertisers spent $244 million on women’s sports, a year-over-year increase of 139%, according to TV marketing firm EDO.

Untamed Spirits has indoor seating and a spacious patio where patrons can enjoy sports of all kinds.
(Alyson Aliano / For The Times)
“Women in general have been playing great sports for a long time,” says Stephanie. “I just think the right people who have the ability to put them in the spotlight are finally noticing.”
More women’s sports bars are expected to open throughout the country. Jax Diener, who opened Watch Me! Sports Bar in Long Beach with her wife about a year ago, recalls when women’s sports weren’t aired on TV at all. She went to the first WNBA game at the Forum in 1997.

Untamed Spirits recently became an official bar partner of the Angel City Football Club.
(Alyson Aliano / For The Times)
“We used to come home after those games that were so exciting and turn on the sports that night to see the replays, and they weren’t even mentioned,” says Diener. “It was as if the league didn’t even exist.”
Diener says she was excited when she heard about another women’s sports bar opening in Southern California. “To me, it was really important for them to know that we’re in this together,” she says, adding that she has a text thread with other women’s sports bar owners where they share advice. “This is not a competition. This is women supporting women.”
Untamed Spirits recently became an official bar partner of the Angel City Football Club, which has a majority female-led ownership group that includes Natalie Portman, Abby Wambach and America Ferrera. The Ellingwoods will host their first watch party on Sept. 7 when the ACFC takes on Gotham FC.
Janie and Stephanie, who’ve been at the bar every day since it opened, say they are excited to eventually distill their own spirits, host more events and watch parties in the space and foster community among women’s sports lovers.
“Some people might call it a trend, but it’s not a trend,” Janie says. “I believe it’s a movement.”

Janie, left, and Stephanie Ellingwood say they are excited to eventually distill their own spirits, host more events and watch parties in the space and foster community among women’s sports lovers.
(Alyson Aliano / For The Times)
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Sports
Hokies selected to outdoor track and field Academic All-ACC team
CHARLOTTE, N.C. – The ACC announced the 2025 Outdoor Track & Field All-ACC Academic field on Friday afternoon. To qualify, individuals were required to maintain a 3.0 GPA each semester, a 3.0 or higher cummulative GPA and compete in the ACC and/or NCAA Championships during the 2025 outdoor track & field season. Virginia Tech had […]

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – The ACC announced the 2025 Outdoor Track & Field All-ACC Academic field on Friday afternoon.
To qualify, individuals were required to maintain a 3.0 GPA each semester, a 3.0 or higher cummulative GPA and compete in the ACC and/or NCAA Championships during the 2025 outdoor track & field season.
Virginia Tech had 19 men’s selections and 17 women’s.
Men’s Selections
Lukas Baroke, Systems Biology
Linus Chepkochei, Sports Media & Analytics
Ethan Coleman, Agribusiness
Ben Conacher, Genetics, Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Cameron Davis, Exercise & Health Sciences
Dylan DeCambre, Engineering
Maddox Hamm, Criminology
Jack Helmich, Financial Planning & Wealth Management
Sam Herenton, Agriculture and Life Sciences
Viktor Idhammar, Mechanical Engineering
Roan Kelly, Financial Planning & Wealth Management
Tomas Kersulis, Computer Science & Applications
Nate Paris, Biology
Nick Plant, Management
Vlad Puchko, History
Ben Reynolds, Economics
Jacob Rice, Industrial & Systems Engineering
Declan Rymer, Mechanial Engineering
Kahleje “KJ” Tillmon, Marketing
Women’s Selections
Caitlyn Bobb, Collaborative Community Leadership
Katrin Brzyszkowska, Communications
Lindsey Butler, Sociology
Elizabeth Coe, Exercise & Health Sciences
Logan Daley, Human Development
Julia Fixsen, Business
Sophia Holgado, Animal & Poultry Sciences
Erin Kelleher, Marketing
Faith Jeruto Kipmaiyo, Human Development
Mary Kate McGranahan, Computer Science & Applications
Mariana Pestana, Human Nutrition, Foods & Exercise
Star Price, Biological Sciences
Lyndsey Reed, Nutrition & Dietetics
Katie Seyfang, Agriculture & Life Sciences
Chiara Sistermann, Biological Sciences
Barbora Stejfova, Psychology
Lila Waters, Marketing
Sports
Aggies earn nods in preseason polls
Zoe Collins Rath, Austin American-Statesman | Hearst – Austin Transition Texas A&M volleyball opens its season late next month but, the Aggies are already getting some preseason love. Coaches in the conference projected in the 2025 SEC preseason coaches’ poll that the Aggies will finish in third place. The top spot went to Kentucky, which finished […]

Texas A&M volleyball opens its season late next month but, the Aggies are already getting some preseason love.
Coaches in the conference projected in the 2025 SEC preseason coaches’ poll that the Aggies will finish in third place. The top spot went to Kentucky, which finished with nine first-place votes and have won the SEC championship for the past eight seasons. Texas followed with six points.
A&M received one preseason first-place vote.
The Aggies were eliminated in the regional semifinal against Wisconsin in five sets last season and finished last year 21-8. Head coach Jamie Morrison is looking to continue the momentum in his third year as the head coach with a strong amount of the rotation returning.
Two Aggies volleyball players, middle blocker Ifenna Cos-Okpalla and opposite Logan Lednicky, were named to the 2025 preseason All-SEC team.
Texas A&M opens the season Aug. 25 against Minnesota in the AVCA First Serve.
SEC volleyball preseason coaches’ poll
Kentucky (9 first-place votes)
Texas (6)
Texas A&M (1)
Missouri
Florida
Tennessee
Oklahoma
LSU
Georgia
Ole Miss
Arkansas
Vanderbilt
Auburn
South Carolina
Mississippi State
Alabama
SEC volleyball preseason team
Jaela Auguste (MB, Florida)
Brooke Bultema (MB, Kentucky)
Brooklyn DeLeye (OH, Kntucky)
Eva Hudson (OH, Kentucky)
Molly Tuozzo (L, Kentucky)
Jurnee Robinson (OH, LSU)
Nia Washington (OH, LSU)
Mokihana Tufono (S, Ole Miss)
Maya Sands (L, Mizzou)
Alexis Shelton (OH, Oklahoma)
Caroline Kerr (S, Tennessee)
Emma Halter (L, Texas)
Torrey Stafford (OH, Texas)
Ifenna Cos-Okpalla (MB, Texas A&M)
Logan Lednicky (OPP, Texas A&M)
Sports
Apple’s Big Bet on Prestige Sports Content Is Paying Off
Apple’s latest theatrical release, “F1: The Movie,” recently became the company’s first movie to top the box office in its opening weekend. Comparing this to other Apple movies, we can see how “F1” is leading other Apple releases in terms of U.S. demand. This is a promising signal for the film’s prospects on Apple TV+ as well as Formula […]

Apple’s latest theatrical release, “F1: The Movie,” recently became the company’s first movie to top the box office in its opening weekend. Comparing this to other Apple movies, we can see how “F1” is leading other Apple releases in terms of U.S. demand. This is a promising signal for the film’s prospects on Apple TV+ as well as Formula 1’s global expansion potential.
In the days since premiering, “F1” outperformed recent Apple Original titles like “Napoleon,” “Killers of the Flower Moon” and “Argylle.” The U.S. was the market with the highest demand for this movie, which may be a surprise given the lack of traction the sport has with Americans. As an example, we can see this when looking at the hugely successful “Drive to Survive” on Netflix. So far this year, the U.S. doesn’t even rank in the Top 10 markets with the highest demand for this show. Something particular about this movie helped it to break through with Americans (Brad Pitt’s star power may have something to do with that).

The opportunity here goes beyond box office bragging rights. Formula 1 remains a niche sport in the US, accounting for just 4.9% of total sports demand so far this year – far behind countries like the Netherlands (21.2%), Italy (12.9%), and Germany (12.0%), according to Parrot Analytics’ Sports Demand. Globally, F1 commands 8.1% of all demand for sports competitions, underscoring the growth potential in the U.S. market.

There’s a clear precedent for sports-adjacent content becoming a major growth engine. “Drive to Survive” helped introduce Formula 1 to US audiences and has been a hit with Netflix, generating over $300 million in global streaming revenue to date, with over $140 million coming from the US and Canada alone.
Apple appears to be taking a similar long-view approach. Its recent content investments include a multi-year deal with Major League Soccer and “Onside,” a docuseries about MLS. In 2024, Apple TV+ had the highest share of its catalog dedicated to sports docuseries among major streamers, signaling a strategic commitment to this genre.

The embrace of sports-adjacent content isn’t new to Apple. “Ted Lasso,” its breakout hit and sly commentary on Americans’ unfamiliarity with soccer (football to everyone outside of the US), has become a cornerstone of its streaming business. Since 2020, our Streaming Economics model calculates that the show has generated over $500 million in global streaming revenue for the platform.
With “F1,” Apple isn’t just releasing another star-driven film; it is making a calculated bet on the power of sports storytelling to grow fandom in key markets. The early success of the movie, coupled with Apple’s broader investment in sports-themed content, signals a deliberate strategy: use prestige entertainment to pull niche sports further into the mainstream. If the trajectory of “Drive to Survive” is any indication, “F1” could mark the starting line for a much larger cultural and commercial play.
Sports
Springfield College’s Samantha Paul Named Finalist for 2025 NEWMAC Student-Athlete of the Year Award and Nominee for NCAA Woman of the Year
Story Links Springfield, Mass. – July 11, 2025 – Recent Springfield College graduate Samantha Paul (Albany, N.Y.) of the women’s track and field program was named as a finalist for the 2025 New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference (NEWMAC) Female Student-Athlete of the Year Award and a nominee for the 2025 NCAA […]

Springfield, Mass. – July 11, 2025 – Recent Springfield College graduate Samantha Paul (Albany, N.Y.) of the women’s track and field program was named as a finalist for the 2025 New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference (NEWMAC) Female Student-Athlete of the Year Award and a nominee for the 2025 NCAA Woman of the Year Award.
The NEWMAC Female Student-Athlete of the Year Award focuses on the areas of academic achievement, athletics excellence, service and leadership. A selection committee made up of Athletic Directors, Senior Woman Administrators, Sports Information Directors and Athletics Diversity and Inclusion Designees review all nominees and ultimately select the recipients every year.
This year, the NEWMAC selected a total of 11 women from across the league as finalists for the Female Student-Athlete of the Year Award including Natalie Barnow of MIT, Paul and Angie Czeremcha of Springfield, Ruby Kransnow of Clark University, Ally Landau of Smith College, Brianna Neary of Salve Regina University, Camille Newman of Wellesley College, Yoshiko Slater of Emerson College, Olivia Soffer of Babson College, Megan Tupaj of WPI and Juliette Zito of Wheaton College.
The winners of the NEWMAC Female Student-Athlete of the Year were Soffer and Barnow, who move forward for consideration for the D3CA (Division III Commissioners Association) Regional and National Female Student-Athlete of the Year Award as well as the 2025 NCAA Woman of the Year Award.
A communication/sport journalism major with a 3.913 GPA, Paul was a Second Team All-American, NEWMAC Champion and NEWMAC record breaker in the triple jump as a senior. She also was named USTFCCCA All-Academic and garnered both USTFCCCA All-Region honors and NEWMAC Academic All-Conference accolades. A leader in Women of Power and campus media, she organized empowerment workshops, ran school drives, and mentored incoming students as a campus orientation leader.
Paul finished 13th overall in the triple jump with a leap of 11.90-meters at the 2025 NCAA Division III Indoor Track and Field National Championships and followed it up with a mark of 11.54-meters for 20th at the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field National Championships.
For the latest on Springfield College Athletics, follow the Pride on social media on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Be sure to tune into all Springfield College Athletic events by subscribing to FloSports.
Sports
EIU Athletics 2024-25 Year In Review – No. 10
** During the month of July, EIUPanthers.com looks back at 14 events, moments and players that helped shape the 2024-25 academic year. ** For the first time since being started in 1982 the Eastern Illinois Athletic Department inducted teams into its Athletic Hall of Fame. The first team induction took place for the Class of […]

For the first time since being started in 1982 the Eastern Illinois Athletic Department inducted teams into its Athletic Hall of Fame. The first team induction took place for the Class of 2024 as nine historic teams were the first to be inducted during the 2024 EIU Athletic Hall of Fame ceremony on Friday, September 27 at Groniger Arena.
The teams inducted include the Panthers six national championship teams along with three AIAW era women’s teams that each advanced deep into their respective national tournaments. Listed below is quick information on each of the teams that were inducted including the 1968 Men’s Cross Country, 1969 Men’s Cross Country, 1969 Men’s Soccer, 1974 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field, 1977 Men’s Cross Country, 1978 Football, 1980 Volleyball, 1981 Women’s Basketball and 1982 Softball teams.
1968 Men’s Cross Country
Under legendary coach Maynard “Pat” O’Brien, Eastern Illinois won its first national championship of any kind as the Panthers claimed the NCAA College Division National Championship held in Wheaton, Ill. The Panthers scored 99 points to win the championship by 31 points over runner-up Minnesota State Mankota. MIT was the third place finisher followed by Western Illinois and UC Davis. The Panthers top finisher was Larry Mayse who finished in 7th place with a time of 25:37.
1969 Men’s Cross Country
The Panthers successfully defended their 1968 National Championship in 1969 as O’Brien again coached EIU to a dominating defense. The Panthers scored 84 points to out-distance runner-up Eastern Michigan by 62 points. Cal State Chico was third followed by Illinois State and Humboldt State. The championship again held in Wheaton, Ill., featured top performances by Marty McIntire (3rd overall) and Dike Stirrett (4th overall).
1969 Men’s Soccer
It what proved to be a banner year for men’s sports at EIU, the Panthers soccer team under the guidance of head coach Fritz Teller captured the NAIA National Championship ending the year with a 13-2-1 record. EIU ended the season with four consecutive shutouts including a 1-0 win over Davis and Elkins in the National Championship match. Freshman Gerardo Pagnani scored the only goal in the championship knocking home the national championship winner in the waning minutes of overtime.
1974 Men’s Outdoor Track
Holding serve on its home track, Eastern Illinois won its fourth school national championship as the Panthers won NCAA College Division National Championship at Lincoln Stadium (now O’Brien Stadium) in Charleston. The Panthers scored 51 points to edge Norfolk State and Cal Poly in the team standings. The team was coached by Maynard “Pat” O’Brien giving him his third national championship at EIU. Darrell Brown was the only EIU athlete to place first at the national meet winning the long jump with a leap of 25’07.25″ feet.
1977 Men’s Cross Country
Under head coach Dr. Tom Woodall, EIU returned to the national championship stage in cross country winning the title by one of the largest margins in NCAA history. EIU scored just 32 points as four runners placed in the Top 14 lead by Joe Sheeran in second place and Casey Reinking in fifth. The Panthers nearest challenger was South Dakota State with 151 points, a 119 point difference. Indiana University of Pennsylvania and Minnesota State Mankota were tied for third.
1978 Football
A Cinderella story if there ever was one… The EIU football thought to be on its death bed and fighting not be eliminated as an intercollegiate sport made its first foray into the NCAA playoffs it’s most memorable. Under first year head coach Darrell Mudra, EIU went from a 1-10 program in 1977 to a 12-2 team in 1978. Poke Cobb rushed for 101 yards and a touchdown early in the fourth quarter and Delaware kicker Brandt Kennedy missed a 45-yard field goal with nine seconds left as EIU won 10-9. The defense held the Blue Hens vaunted Wing-T offense to only 155 yards rushing while linebacker Ray Jeske made 21 tackles in the game.
1980 Volleyball
The EIU volleyball team made the Panthers first splash on the national stage as a women’s team when they posted a school record 43 wins advancing to the AIAW Division II National Tournament. Under second year head coach Lynette Nevins, the Panthers received an at-large berth at the Midwest AIAW Tournament and then locked up an at-large bid to the National Tournament. The team would go 1-2 in pool play with a win over College of Charleston before loses to Central Florida and eventual national runner-up Hawai’i Hilo. The program would transition to the NCAA Division I level two seasons later winning 36 matches in their inaugural NCAA season.
1981 Women’s Basketball
The EIU women’s basketball program caught fire in the latter part of the 1981 season as they won 18 of 19 games including capturing the Illinois AIAW Tournament Championship as they earned an at-large berth to the AIAW National Tournament. The Panthers won three straight games to win the IAIAW Championship and then placed second at the Midwest AIAW Regional. Earning an at-large tournament berth, EIU beat Colorado College in the opening round of the tournament 77-69 before losing to William Penn in the Elite Eight round. EIU finished the season with 25-8 overall record under the direction of head coach Barbara Hilke.
1982 Softball
In the final year of AIAW membership the EIU softball team made the deepest national tournament run by a Panthers women’s team as they posted a school record 45 wins as they finished third in the nation. Head coach Deanna D’Abbraccio led the team through the loser bracket which included a 21-inning win over Portland State to get the consolation bracket final. EIU would lose that game bringing home the 3rd place national finish. At the World Series EIU picked up an opening round win over Central State before losing to eventual national champion Northern Iowa. EIU added elimination game wins over Ithaca College, Nicholls, Nevada and Portland State before being eliminated by SIUE.
2024-25 Year In Review
No. 14 – EIU Hires Five New Head Coaches
No. 13 – EIU Beach Volleyball Wins First-Ever OVC Tournament Match
No. 12 – Baseball Wins Longest Game In OVC History
No. 11 – Cooper Willman Sets EIU Single Game Receiving Record
Sports
Records galore: Six things to know about the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore
[SINGAPORE] Not long after sundown on Thursday (Jul 10), President Tharman Shanmugaratnam declared the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore open, kickstarting 24 days of action that will, in all likelihood, see some record-breaking feats in the pool. At the opening ceremony held at the Esplanade’s Singtel Waterfront Theatre, he spoke of how the world of […]

[SINGAPORE] Not long after sundown on Thursday (Jul 10), President Tharman Shanmugaratnam declared the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore open, kickstarting 24 days of action that will, in all likelihood, see some record-breaking feats in the pool.
At the opening ceremony held at the Esplanade’s Singtel Waterfront Theatre, he spoke of how the world of aquatics has seen “remarkable advances” in recent years, as records that were long unbroken – and even regarded as unbreakable in some instances – have been surpassed.
The 22nd World Aquatics Championships is also an opportunity to celebrate the “quiet but profound” way in which sport can unite people, even as we root for different teams.
“In a world increasingly divided, sport reminds us that we can strive together even as we compete, that we can demonstrate our common humanity,” said President Tharman.
Among the 500-plus guests in attendance were World Aquatics president and former Kuwaiti national swimmer Husain Al-Musallam, several Singapore ministers, and some of the athletes from all over the world.
The championships began on Friday morning with water polo and will finish with the final swimming and diving events on Aug 3.
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Here are six things to know about the World Aquatics Championships:
A first for South-east Asia
Singapore is the first country in South-east Asia to host this championships, which is considered the second most prestigious aquatics event after the Olympic Games.
It was back in February 2023 when it was announced that the Republic would stage the 2025 edition, taking over from Kazan, following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Three competition venues
Swimming and artistic swimming events will take place at the new 4,800-seater WCH Arena, which was built earlier this year on a former open-air car park next to the Leisure Park Kallang mall, a short walk from the National Stadium.
The other two competition venues are the OCBC Aquatics Centre, where diving and water polo will take place; and Palawan Green in Sentosa, where spectators can catch the open water and high diving events.
Record participation
There will be over 2,500 athletes from 206 countries and territories competing across a record 77 medal events in six aquatics disciplines: swimming, artistic swimming, diving, high diving, open water swimming, and water polo.
In a speech at the opening ceremony on Thursday, Husain also revealed that, for the first time, there will be more female swimmers than males at the global meet.
Singapore is fielding a total of 72 athletes, its largest contingent to date. The group includes 32 athletes who are making their debut at the championships.
Plenty of stars
It is a star-studded affair in Singapore, with Paris 2024 gold medal winners Leon Marchand, Summer McIntosh, Katie Ledecky, Thomas Ceccon and Kaylee McKeown all set to race in the pool.
Keep a lookout for Hungary’s Kristof Rasovszky, the current world and Olympic champion in the men’s 10 km open water swimming. For the women, Australia’s Moesha Johnson is one to watch. She won a silver in the 10 km open swim in Paris and is one of the favourites to claim her first individual world title in Singapore.
In diving, China made a clean sweep of all the gold medals at the Paris Games and at last year’s world championships. If all goes according to plan, the likes of women’s four-time 3-metre springboard world champion Yani Chang and the men’s 10-m champion Hao Yang will take gold in Singapore too.
In artistic swimming, Olympic champions China will probably dominate the team competitions once again. For the men’s solo and mixed duet categories, check out the teams from the US, Japan, Ukraine and Spain who are all expected to do well.
Emergence of more swimming medallists
At the last championships held in Doha last year, 29 countries won swimming medals, which was the deepest medal table in the event’s history. World Aquatics executive director Brent Nowicki is expecting to see that number surpassed in Singapore.
“The sport is really at that point where general dominance of individuals or countries is dissipating,” the American said at a press conference on Thursday.
“We are seeing more rising stars. Will we see more than 30 world records? I don’t know. Will we see more than 29 medallist countries? Yeah, maybe that’s what I expect. If we can pull that off, that would be a real testament to the growth of our sport.”
In Doha last year, the US won eight gold medals out of 20 overall in swimming, while China was second with seven golds from 11 medals.
More prize money
The Singapore edition will see athletes competing for a slice of a record prize money pool of more than US$6 million, with an additional US$30,000 world-record bonus in swimming. Last year in Doha, the total amount awarded was US$5.6 million.
For more information and to buy tickets, visit the official website for details
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