Sports
João Fonseca's Australian Open first
João Fonseca’s Australian Open first-round win over Andrey Rublev shows why he’s a star of the future By Luke Pentony at Melbourne Park “I think when I arrived here, my first goal was to qualify for the main draw,” he said. 5h ago5 hours agoWed 15 Jan 2025 at 12:39am João Fonseca marched into the […]

João Fonseca’s Australian Open first-round win over Andrey Rublev shows why he’s a star of the future
Sports
Not Done Yet – California Golden Bears Athletics
Catharyn Hayne / KLC fotos Ruby Swadling found happiness through resilience during her senior season at Cal. WPOLO5/15/2025 9:56 AM | By: Michael Jorgenson Resilience Has Fueled Cal Star Ruby Swadling’s Happiness This feature originally appeared in the 2025 Spring edition of the Cal Sports Quarterly. The Cal […]


Catharyn Hayne / KLC fotos
Ruby Swadling found happiness through resilience during her senior season at Cal.
Resilience Has Fueled Cal Star Ruby Swadling’s Happiness
This feature originally appeared in the 2025 Spring edition of the Cal Sports Quarterly. The Cal Athletics flagship magazine features long-form sports journalism at its finest and provides in-depth coverage of the scholar-athlete experience in Berkeley. Printed copies are mailed four times a year to Bear Backers who give annually at the Bear Club level (currently $600 or more). For more information on how you can receive a printed version of the Cal Sports Quarterly at home, send an email to CalAthleticsFund@berkeley.edu or call (510) 642-2427.
The sound of a whistle pierces through the air on a February afternoon in Berkeley, and fans of the California women’s water polo team cheer as senior Ruby Swadling swims up to take a five-meter penalty shot.
Upon arriving at the spot, Swadling keeps her gaze fixed on the sideline at Spieker Aquatics Complex, waiting for her green light to shoot. The whistle blows again, and in an instant, the Golden Bears’ three-goal lead becomes four.
If you blinked, you missed it.
“She got rid of that ball so quick, Davis goalie Lucy Holland’s hands weren’t even out of the water before the ball got to the back of the net!” broadcast announcer Wes Kading remarks on the Overnght.com live stream.
In the grand scheme of things, this was by no means a goal carrying any sort of monumental implications. And in the context of the Bears’ 2025 season, it was just another one of many small steps in the right direction, giving them an 8-4 lead over top-10 program UC Davis on their way to an impressive 8-0 start to the year.
At that same moment though, more than 7,400 miles away though, Swadling’s family shared a hearty laugh over what it had just witnessed – and, what it really meant.
“[Kading] had never seen anyone take a penalty so quickly, and neither had I! Ruby just picked it up and threw it,” Swadling’s mother, Tessa, recalled. “I told her after the game that we were all laughing at home, it was so hilarious. She said to me, ‘Well, now I just give it a go, mum… It doesn’t matter.'”
In previous seasons, Swadling might have treated the penalty as seriously as if she were taking it in the fourth quarter of a tie game at the NCAA Championship. Things are different this year.
After arriving at Cal in January of 2020, Swadling quickly made a name for herself as one of the Bears’ top players, earning All-MPSF honors as a true freshman. Two months after earning her second consecutive ACWPC All-America honor in May of 2023, she helped her native Australia finish fourth at the World Aquatics Championships.
Following that experience, Swadling made the decision to take a year off from Cal, remaining in Australia to focus on training for the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Then, last May, as the Bears hosted the 2024 NCAA Championship – where they went on a historic run that saw them reach the national title game for the second time in program history – Swadling received the news: despite being one of the last 21 players in consideration to make Australia’s Olympic squad, she hadn’t made the final cut.
“That was definitely a very hard moment in my life and career, because I so easily could have said to myself, ‘I’m done. I don’t want to do this anymore,'” Swadling said. “Instead, I took a few months off, spent time with my family and friends, and came back to Berkeley, where I’ve been enjoying myself and having fun playing water polo. It’s something that I’m proud of; that I’ve come back to play water polo and not let that experience define me.”
There is a running joke in the Swadling family: “Mum must have been scrolling through Instagram last night, because I woke up to all these motivational quotes.” It’s a lighthearted sentiment shared by Swadling and her two older siblings, Mia and Max, but one that speaks volumes about the support system their family has in place.
While on one hand it was a tough pill for Swadling to swallow that her efforts and sacrifices had fallen short, it was another chance to be reminded by her mother to always find the silver lining.
“Out of something bad comes something good.”
This time around, the “good” took numerous forms. Swadling was able to enjoy her longest break from water polo since she started playing competitively at the age of 11. For the first time since she joined the Bears, she was able to join her family on holiday and reconnect with old friends. And, as she enjoyed her well-deserved break from training, she realized how she felt about water polo at this stage in her career.
“Having so much time off, it makes you remember how much you love the sport,” Swadling said. “When you’re in the depths of training, sometimes it can be a lot. But when you’re not in the pool and you realize, ‘I miss playing. I miss my teammates,’ you realize how much you miss it, and that’s so important.”
Coming from a family of swimmers, Swadling grew up watching Max and Mia compete on weekends. At age 10, during one of Max’s water polo games, Swadling turned to her mother and decided that she was done with swimming.
“Water polo looks like much more fun,” she told her.
Swadling went on to become an elite in three different sports – cross country, triathlon, and water polo. When the national camp schedules for triathlons and water polo eventually conflicted, she had to pick just one to continue pursuing. Her decision to go with water polo wasn’t a fluke – in fact, it was a choice that she doubled down on shortly after.
After completing her ninth year at SCEGGS Darlinghurst in 2016 – a distinguished private school known for its academics, but one without a sports program – Swadling again boldly chose her own path, telling her parents that she was going to transfer to St. Catherine’s School heading into year 10.
“We were reluctant because I went to SCEGGS, and her sister went there, but she turned to my husband and I and said, ‘I’m going. I’m going to make the appointment myself. If I want to keep playing water polo and doing well, then I have to move schools,'” Tessa said. “And so, we moved her… Well, actually, she moved herself. And It was the best thing she ever did.”
At St. Catherine’s – where four-time Olympian Richard Campbell served as the head of water polo and current Australia men’s national team assistant coach Andrew Yanitsas was the director of sport – Swadling gained the structure and guidance she needed as a student-athlete, and her love of water polo only continued to grow as she made larger and larger waves.
In 2018, playing for her lifelong club, UNSW Sydney, alongside former Arizona State star Daisy Carter and two-time Olympian Ashleigh Southern – who Swadling names as two of her most influential teammates – she helped the Killer Whales win their first-ever national championship.
That same year, she debuted on the international stage at the 2018 Youth World Championships in Belgrade, Serbia. It was at that tournament where, for the first time, Swadling’s path to Berkeley revealed itself.
“Ruby was approached by one of the American universities. She had never really thought about it before,” Tessa said. “A couple of the coaches spoke to her and that’s when she became interested. We thought it was an incredible opportunity for her to get an amazing education.”
While Tessa claims that some Australians have a romanticized idea of the American college experience, she notes that Ruby would be the first to admit that it’s no fairy tale. From traveling halfway across the world to arriving in Berkeley during the COVID-19 pandemic, to the academic pressures that accompany attending the world’s No. 1 public university, to the self-imposed expectations of performing athletically at the highest levels, Swadling has had plenty of challenges to overcome over the past five and a half years. But she has always found a way to push past them.
“A big reason why I continue to move forward is because of my resilience,” Swadling said. “There are a lot of bumps in the road and a lot of challenges that I’ve had to overcome. It’s so easy to just stop and say, ‘I’m done.’ But I’m always hungry to do more things, and as long as I’ve gone out there and given everything, I can be happy with what I’ve done.”
When Swadling came back for her fifth year as a Cal student-athlete last August, she brought with her a balance between academic, athletic and social pursuits that was as strong as it had ever been. It’s a strength that pays huge dividends both in the pool and for her mental health.
“I’ve tried not to be so narrow-minded, and I’m not so stressed about everything because I know that whether it’s something with school or water polo, it’s not the end of the world,” Swadling said. “When I came back in August, I realized the class I started with was gone, and the class below me was gone. It was an entirely new team with a lot of people I had never met before, but I was welcomed back with open arms. I feel so connected with my Cal teammates and our team camaraderie is special. That definitely makes me a lot happier, and I play my best water polo when I’m happy and I’m playing free.”
Once Swadling’s days at Cal are over, she plans to move home to Australia with her eyes set on the next Olympic cycle. While more challenges undoubtedly await her in the pursuit of her dreams, the sacrifices she makes will be accompanied – as they always have been – by the support of her family.
“My parents always used to tell me to leave nothing in the tank. I’m going to keep playing water polo and we’ll see what comes of that, but I’ve definitely got some more gas left in the tank,” Swadling said. “I’m not done yet.”
Sports
GCU athletes search for options after college cuts Volleyball program
Grand Canyon University cuts its men’s volleyball program, causing widespread disappointment in the community and among athletes. PHOENIX — Grand Canyon University’s men’s volleyball team went from being the top-ranked squad in the nation to nonexistent in just two years. In late April, the university announced it would eliminate the program, citing a desire to […]

Grand Canyon University cuts its men’s volleyball program, causing widespread disappointment in the community and among athletes.
PHOENIX — Grand Canyon University’s men’s volleyball team went from being the top-ranked squad in the nation to nonexistent in just two years. In late April, the university announced it would eliminate the program, citing a desire to focus resources on its 20 other varsity teams — a move that has sent shockwaves through the volleyball community.
Weeks after the cut, a groundswell of support has emerged. Local high school teams have worn purple in solidarity before matches. Even other NCAA men’s volleyball programs have voiced their disapproval.
“We’re just trying to put the word out there and not let the flame die,” UCLA player Cameron Thorne said at a recent press conference as he wore a #SaveGCUMVB shirt.
For many, it signals a troubling trend that could extend to other universities amid looming changes in college athletics.
“We won’t know the true impact for years to come,” Troy Dueling, boys’ volleyball coach at Sandra Day O’Connor High School and former GCU men’s assistant coach said. “What that program was was a pillar and beacon for this community. There are other programs in Arizona, but none at that level.”
According to the National Federation of State High School Associations, boys’ volleyball added more than 8,000 participants in 2024, making it the fastest-growing high school team sport by percentage in the country. With GCU’s decision, Arizona is now left without a single NCAA Division I men’s volleyball program.
The fallout has already affected recruits. Four incoming athletes discovered the news via a GCU post on social media, losing their opportunity to compete at the Division I level in-state.
“It wasn’t super far along, but they told me I was the best fit,” said Jack Slight, a junior setter at Sandra Day O’Connor High School. Slight, whose older brother Nick was an All-American at GCU, hoped to follow in his footsteps. “Would I have played for them if they offered? I would’ve. Now that’s off the table.”
“Jack is a special kid and talent,” Dueling added. “Watching him play beyond high school would’ve been something special.”
Without a head coach for the 2024 season, GCU assistant coaches co-led the program. One of them, Bryan Dell’Amico, was recently named the 2025 AVCA National Assistant Coach of the Year — and is now unemployed, but was heartbroken about all his players. Specifically, the seven freshmen on the roster and the four incoming recruits.
“Eleven kids just had the next four years of their life changed,” Dell’Amico said. “Beyond that, you have everyone else on the team who still had eligibility left.”
According to GCU’s 2024 Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act report, the men’s volleyball program cost just under $750,000 annually to operate — the sixth lowest among GCU’s 20 sports. Despite the low cost, it had the second-highest average home attendance, averaging over 1,100 fans per match — nearly 600 more than the women’s basketball team, which ranked third in attendance.
“We could debate whether it should’ve been men’s volleyball that got cut,” Dell’Amico said. “But GCU made a business decision. They’re reallocating their resources.”
That decision has raised alarms beyond Arizona, with growing fears that other smaller or non-revenue-generating sports could meet similar fates.
“This isn’t just a GCU-specific issue,” Dell’Amico added. “The House v. NCAA settlement is putting a cap on roster sizes and shifting the power to administrators. They’ll decide how many scholarships and how much revenue share goes to each sport.”
GCU declined to offer further comment on the matter. Meanwhile, advocates for men’s volleyball are exploring the possibility of a new program at Arizona State University.
According to sources, donors have approached and had conversations with ASU leadership. However, ASU tells 12 News it’s very unlikely to add a new men’s program due to Title IX constraints and is “focusing on resourcing their 26 programs.”
Still, local athletes are hopeful.
“I hope another program in the state will step up,” Slight said. “And I hope that school is ASU.”
“I do hope there is hopefully another university that’s seeing this community rally and maybe they want to take an opportunity to give this community a new team and a new home,” Dueling added. “It would be great if a school down in Tempe would like to do that.”
Arizona has a history of producing elite volleyball talent. Just this past week, Sandra Day O’Connor alum Zach Rama competed in the NCAA Division I national championship with UCLA. Two former GCU players — both Arizona natives — were recently invited to try out for U.S. national teams for their age groups.
For many in the state, the loss of GCU men’s volleyball is more than a budget decision — it’s a cultural setback for a sport on the rise.
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Sports
LBSU men’s volleyball’s championship party continues with parade downtown
Senior middleblocker DiAeris McRaven celebrates with the Long Beach State men’s volleyball team during the May 14 parade. Photo credit: Samuel Chacko Hundreds of Long Beach State men’s volleyball fans lined the streets of downtown Long Beach on Wednesday afternoon as the week-long party celebrating the 2025 national championship-winning team continued. The parade featured players, […]


Senior middleblocker DiAeris McRaven celebrates with the Long Beach State men’s volleyball team during the May 14 parade. Photo credit: Samuel Chacko
Hundreds of Long Beach State men’s volleyball fans lined the streets of downtown Long Beach on Wednesday afternoon as the week-long party celebrating the 2025 national championship-winning team continued.
The parade featured players, coaches, staff and several faculty members riding atop firetrucks down city blocks, blasting celebratory songs like “We Are The Champions” and “No More Parties in LA” – a subtle jab at the University of California, Los Angeles, after sweeping it in the title match.

The Long Beach State men’s volleyball team celebrate its fourth national championship in the program’s history as the team came back to Long Beach to celebrate on May 14. Photo credit: Samuel Chacko
“I’m an alumni twice, and I’m also a faculty for the school of nursing, and I just love our team,” LBSU season ticket holder Melissa Dyo said. “I’m a season ticket holder, and I’ve followed them for a lot of years now, and now they’re the best.”
The fans donned head-to-toe black and gold gear showed once again that their men’s volleyball fandom is extremely passionate. Throughout the season, The Beach sold out four matches at the Walter Pyramid, as well as all of their away matches in the conference.

Fans of Long Beach State men’s volleyball proudly held school posters and merchandise in celebration of the team’s NCAA championship victory over UCLA. Photo credit: Justin Enriquez
As it was heavily documented throughout the season, the fanfare that came with the superstar freshman and the 2025 AVCA Men’s National Player of the Year, Moni Nikolov, was unlike anything anyone had seen in the men’s volleyball landscape, including his head coach Alan Knipe.
Nikolov was one of several people to deliver a speech at the parade’s final destination, at Altar Society Brewing Co.
“Thank you to everyone here who has given us the attention I believe we deserve, cause we’ve put a lot of work into the season and it’s finally getting rewarded,” Nikolov said. “Thank you from the bottom of my heart, you guys made me feel truly special.”
Nikolov’s speech was met with the loudest of applause, and finally, the chant of “one more year,” referring to the rumors that Nikolov will turn professional in the coming weeks, erupted throughout the bar.

Long Beach State freshman setter Moni Nikolov waves and celebrates with the Long Beach State fans after The Beach’s national championship win against UCLA. Questions arise if Nikolov will come back to the team for a second year. Photo credit: Samuel Chacko
Knipe, who has now been a member of all four national championship-winning teams at LBSU, as a player in 1991 and being the head coach of the most recent three, expressed his gratitude to the fanbase he has repeatedly dubbed as the best in the country.
“These faces that I see here today, these are the ones we’ve been seeing at our games for years, and all season long at all the sellouts in the Pyramid,” Knipe said.
The parade allowed the fans to celebrate with one of the university’s most beloved teams and give them one final thank you for a truly special season that has ended in immortal glory.
“This has turned into so much more than I ever could have imagined,” Knipe said. “Hearing that tickets to get into a LBSU men’s volleyball game are on the secondary ticket market for hundreds of dollars just to get in and see these guys play is what I believe it should be.”
Even before the street was blocked off, passing drivers honked in celebration, contributing to the overwhelming sense of pride shared by everyone in attendance for what The Beach had accomplished.
Sports
Assistant Coach Beach Volleyball in Miami, FL for Florida International University
Details Posted: 15-May-25 Location: Miami, Florida Type: Full-time Categories: Coaching Coaching – Volleyball Sector: Collegiate Sports To apply, please visit careers.fiu.edu and reference Job Opening ID # 534611 Florida International University in Miami is seeking applications for the Assistant Coach Beach Volleyball. FIU is a member of Conference USA and offers eighteen (17) NCAA […]

Details
Posted: 15-May-25
Location: Miami, Florida
Type: Full-time
Categories:
Coaching
Coaching – Volleyball
Sector:
Collegiate Sports
To apply, please visit careers.fiu.edu and reference Job Opening ID # 534611
Florida International University in Miami is seeking applications for the Assistant Coach Beach Volleyball. FIU is a member of Conference USA and offers eighteen (17) NCAA Division I sports programs. The successful candidate will provide assistance to the Head Coach with activities associated with the Beach Volleyball program and student athletes, including recruitment, monitoring academic – performance and social development, fundraising activities, coordinating all enrollment activities of student-athletes, retention, assisting with the planning and preparation for practices and games. Duties include:
-Provides assistance to the Head Coach with activities associated with the program and student athletes, including recruitment, monitoring academic performance, fundraising and community service activities, and may include transport of prospect and student athletes to events, practices and competitions.
-Assists in the recruitment of student athletes. Attends off campus games for the purpose of evaluation and contact with high schools, junior colleges, four-year schools, and clubs for recruitment. Coordinates mailing of recruitment materials and recruiting information. Maintains contact with prospective student-athletes. Plans campus visits with prospective student-athletes and their parents.
-Under the direction of the head coach, evaluates, prepares, plans, and coaches practice sessions. Demonstrates proper sport specific skills and techniques and assists with designing training and practices strategies for both injury avoidance and optimizing individual and team performance.
-Coordinates all enrollment activities of student-athletes. Assists with monitoring academic performance, academic progress, retention and class attendance of student-athletes and intervene, when necessary, in conjunction with the Student Athlete Academic Center (SAAC) staff. Works to complete student’s development through graduation by monitoring academic needs.
-Assists to ensure successful administration of travel arrangements for team and processes all paperwork before and after every trip. Supervises and assigns responsibilities to team managers and graduate assistants if applicable. Maintains equipment inventory and oversee distribution to athletes. Follows FIU procedure in handling all ordering of supplies and any funds that flow through the athletic program. Plans long and short-term team objectives under the leadership of the head coach
-Interacts with various campus offices, departments, and athletic support units to ensure the successful operation of the program. Serves in a leadership role and promote participation in community service activities by student athletes. Coordinates community service in conjunction with the Director for Student Athlete Development, as requested.
-Maintains confidentiality for the department. Treats with utmost confidentiality and sensitivity any matter pertaining to medical, academic and personal data of student athletes and any information either directly or indirectly impacting the University and/or Athletic Department.
-Adhere to all State of Florida, University, NCAA, Conference, and department rules and policies pertaining to the position of Assistant Beach Volleyball Coach. Report any known NCAA violations or concerns to the Director of Athletic Compliance.
Bachelor’s degree in an appropriate area of specialization and one (1) year of coaching experience at the high school level or above; OR five (5) years of coaching experience at the high school level or above ; OR an equivalent combination of relevant education and/or experience. Successful experience as a graduate assistant or intern in an athletic program is acceptable with one (1) year of the required experience.
About Florida International University
Florida International University is a top public university that drives real talent and innovation in Miami and globally. Very high research (R1) activity and high social mobility come together at FIU to uplift and accelerate learner success in a global city by focusing in the areas of environment, health, innovation, and justice. Today, FIU has two campuses and multiple centers. FIU serves a diverse student body of more than 56,000 and 290,000 Panther alumni. U.S. News and World Report places dozens of FIU programs among the best in the nation, including international business at No. 2. Washington Monthly Magazine ranks FIU among the top 20 public universities contributing to the public good.
Connections working at Florida International University
Sports
Three-time Olympic medalist Ross almost didn’t reach the beach – Orange County Register
We caught up with Olympic beach volleyball gold medalist April Ross two days before she was named USA Volleyball’s head of coaching for the beach national teams, and discovered she was ready to quit the sport before she ever got started on the sand. Ross, who won three Olympic medals, was an indoor volleyball All-American […]

We caught up with Olympic beach volleyball gold medalist April Ross two days before she was named USA Volleyball’s head of coaching for the beach national teams, and discovered she was ready to quit the sport before she ever got started on the sand.
Ross, who won three Olympic medals, was an indoor volleyball All-American at Newport Harbor High and USC.
After earning Gatorade National Player of the Year in high school and NCAA Player of the Year at USC, and leading the Trojans to two national championships, Ross played three years of professional indoor volleyball in Puerto Rico.
But the injuries piled up and she was prepared to enroll in graduate school.
“My body just kind of fell apart,” she said. “You have a whole team of managers (in the U.S.). You have your coach, obviously, and then your physical therapists that work on you. You have your weightlifting coach, who keeps you strong so you don’t get hurt. When I went down to Puerto Rico, I didn’t have any of that. My body broke down. I came home, had surgery on my knee and I was like, ‘I’m done with volleyball. I’m not playing ever again.’”
Ross said weightlifting was a vital part of her training in high school and college, but she struggled doing it on her own in Puerto Rico. Ross couldn’t lift her arm above her shoulder by the end of her third season, and her knee hurt so much that she didn’t even finish her the season.
“It was a really tough time for my body,” said Ross, who quit playing volleyball and wanted to come home. She was unsure of her future and briefly worked as a hostess at House of Blues in Anaheim.
“I did not want to play volleyball anymore,” Ross said. “I was completely burned out. I was hurt and just not having any fun. I was missing my friends and family too much. I had made some money, which I was going to use to go back to school and earn a graduate degree.
“For that summer, during an interim period of time, I didn’t know exactly what I was going to do. My stepsister was the manager at House of Blues in Downtown Disney and she offered me a job, so I went through the whole application process and she helped me get a job there and I worked there for a summer,” Ross said. “I remember once the men’s U.S. national team came in and I seated them at one point. It’s kind of funny. They trained right down the street in Anaheim and they all came in one night to eat. They enjoyed it and had a good time.”
Then, fate intervened.
A former college teammate and roommate, Keao Burdine, called and asked if Ross could play with her in a couple of beach tournaments.
“I was just doing it for fun,” said Ross. It took some time and a few bumpy rides before Ross could fully settle into the beach game.
“My knee had healed and so I just said ‘why not,’” Ross said. “I was really bad, so it was like starting over again, starting a new sport. I had to learn so much. But I fell in love with the sport and the culture and the people.”
Ross had no plans to make a career out of beach volleyball, she said. “I didn’t know the basic differences, which now would be considered pretty stupid questions, and I had a lot to learn.”
Ross said. Ross and Burdine failed to advance past six qualifiers on the AVP Tour, and, well, that hostess job at House of Blues was sounding better and better.
Ross retired in 2024, fulfilled after winning a gold medal at the 2020 Tokyo Games and earning silver and bronze medals in the previous two Olympics.
“There was a lot of relief after (winning gold), and we (her partner was Alix Klineman) were elated and on cloud nine,” Ross said. “You accomplished what you set out to do. At the time, even when we were still in Tokyo, I felt a lot of closure, because I was 39 at the time and pretty decently older in terms of beach volleyball and Olympic volleyball and playing at that level.
“After that, I knew it was unlikely I would continue to play, regardless of how I did in tournaments. The gold medal sealed the deal for me,” Ross added. “Honestly, I was ready to go home. I played more (AVP Tour) volleyball after the Olympics at Manhattan Beach and Chicago, and we ended up winning those two tournaments. But it was hard to get motivated.”
Ross said she started to consider life after beach volleyball.
“I went through an identity crisis while coming down after the Olympics and I think that happened because I knew I had accomplished that final thing,” she said. “I am so grateful that I was able to reach my goals at the pinnacle of our sport.
“From my time at Newport Harbor, I don’t know why I’m like this, but it’s always about the next step. I made varsity, then can I get starting spot? We won CIF, now can we win state? Then I wasn’t even thinking about a scholarship, until I received my first (college recruiting) letter. Then it was OK, which college should I go to? And can I earn a starting spot? Can we win a national championship? What is the next step? I did that my whole career,” Ross said. “Can we win the gold medal at the Olympics? Once that was checked off, my job is done here.
“Even when I came back last summer on the AVP Tour, after having my son, the motivation wasn’t there and I didn’t have an ultimate goal to chase,” she added. “I had fun, and I’m glad I got to play with Alix and I did that. But it was a very different feeling.”
Richard Dunn, a longtime sportswriter, writes the Dunn Deal column regularly for The Orange County Register’s weekly, The Coastal Current North.
Sports
Men’s Senior Nationals Return To San Diego This Weekend
Story Links SCHEDULE | TICKETS | LIVE STREAMING | LIVE STATS San Diego, CA – May 15 – The 2025 Men’s Senior Nationals tournament returns this weekend in San Diego. Fourteen clubs will descend on the UCSD Canyonview Aquatic Center from May 16-18 for three days of water polo action. Riptide Black and Puerto Rico get things […]
SCHEDULE | TICKETS | LIVE STREAMING | LIVE STATS
San Diego, CA – May 15 – The 2025 Men’s Senior Nationals tournament returns this weekend in San Diego. Fourteen clubs will descend on the UCSD Canyonview Aquatic Center from May 16-18 for three days of water polo action. Riptide Black and Puerto Rico get things started on Friday, May 16 at 11:30am pt and we crown a champion on Sunday, May 18 at 11:30am pt. Joining Riptide Black and Puerto Rico will be The Olympic Club, Channel Islands, Alumni, Los Angeles Athletic Club, New York Athletic Club, UC San Diego, Berkeley WPC, USA Youth Blue, USA Junior, Long Beach AF, New York Athletic Club B, and USA Youth Red. For a complete event schedule, click here.
All matches will be broadcast LIVE on Overnght, subscribe today by visiting Overnght.com. LIVE stats of all matches will be provided by 6-8 Sports.
Pool Location
UCSD Canyonview Aquatic Center
3302 Voigt Drive
La Jolla, CA 92093
Admission
$15 per day
$25 for the weekend
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