Sports
LA28 Event Programme Marks Strong Commitment Towards Innovation and Gender Equality
Published 7 hours ago Submitted by International Olympic Committee International Olympic Committee news The event programme and athlete quotas for the Olympic Games Los Angeles 2028 (LA28) have been approved by the Executive Board (EB) of the International Olympic Committee (IOC). With a total of 351 medal events, 22 more than at Paris 2024 (329), […]

Published 7 hours ago
Submitted by International Olympic Committee
International Olympic Committee news
The event programme and athlete quotas for the Olympic Games Los Angeles 2028 (LA28) have been approved by the Executive Board (EB) of the International Olympic Committee (IOC). With a total of 351 medal events, 22 more than at Paris 2024 (329), the LA28 programme maintains the core athlete quota of 10,500, with an extra 698 quota places allocated for the five sports proposed by the LA28 Organising Committee (baseball/softball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse and squash).
For the first time in history, all team sports will have at least the same number of women’s teams as men’s teams, with water polo adding two women’s teams, making it now 12 women’s and 12 men’s teams.
Football, with 16 female teams, will feature more women’s teams than men’s (12).
Gender equality was a key consideration when deciding on the athlete quota and the number of events. In the initial sports programme, with 10,500 athletes, the number of female athletes is 5,333 and the number of male athletes 5,167. The additional sports add 322 female athletes and 376 male athletes. In addition, six mixed events were added to the event programme. Out of 351 events, there are 161 women’s events, 165 men’s events and 25 mixed events.
A powerful platform for female athletes
- Football: for the first time in Olympic history, more women’s teams (16) than men’s (12) will compete.
- Boxing: an additional women’s weight category ensures full gender parity across events, while maintaining equal numbers of athlete quotas for men and women, as was the case at Paris 2024.
- Water polo: two additional women’s teams will ensure full gender parity in the athlete quota and number of teams.
- Expanded mixed events: archery, athletics (4x100m mixed relay), golf, gymnastics, rowing coastal beach sprint and table tennis will all see the inclusion of a new mixed team event.
New medal opportunities and innovation
- Swimming: the 50m backstroke, butterfly and breaststroke events for both men and women will bring high-speed excitement to the pool at Inglewood Stadium.
- Rowing: women’s solo (CW1x), men’s solo (CM1x) and mixed double sculls (CX2x) will make their debut in coastal beach sprint.
- Sport climbing: boulder and lead events will now be contested as separate medal events, creating new stages for athletes to shine.
- Basketball 3×3: having made its debut at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics with eight teams each for men and women, the event has expanded to include 12 teams per gender.
The full event programme is available here.
Twenty-four out of 31 Olympic International Federations had put forward a request for a change in their event programme from the Olympic Games Paris 2024. In total, 46 new events were requested (16 male / 17 female / 13 mixed), six of which were to potentially replace existing events, making a net total of 40 more events requested. In total, 772 additional quota places were requested for the initial sport and event programme of 10,500 athletes (339 male / 433 female).
The event programme principles
The event programme for LA28 was developed based on the requests submitted by the International Sports Federations to the IOC. The decision from the IOC EB followed the recommendation from the Olympic Programme Commission and the principles approved in 2023, which specified that the Games should be gender equal, globally appealing, cost and complexity conscious, and athlete focused.
LA28 sports programme
With the inclusion of boxing, approved by the IOC Session in March 2025, the LA28 sports programme is composed of 31 sports, with an additional five sports proposed by the Organising Committee and approved by the IOC in 2023.
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International Olympic Committee
International Olympic Committee
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) is a not-for-profit independent international organisation that is committed to building a better world through sport. It redistributes more than 90 per cent of its income to the wider sporting movement, which means that every day the equivalent of USD 3.4 million goes to help athletes and sports organisations at all levels around the world.
As the leader of the Olympic Movement, the IOC acts as a catalyst for collaboration between all parties of the Olympic family, from the National Olympic Committees (NOCs), the International Sports Federations (IFs), the athletes and the Organising Committees for the Olympic Games (OCOGs) to the Worldwide Olympic Partners, broadcast partners and United Nations (UN) agencies, and shepherds success through a wide range of programmes and projects. On this basis, it ensures the regular celebration of the Olympic Games, supports all affiliated member organisations of the Olympic Movement and strongly encourages, by appropriate means, the promotion of the Olympic values.
More from International Olympic Committee
Sports
Men’s Trio Garners CSC Academic All-District At-Large Team Accolades
Story Links MOREHEAD, Ky. — A rifle sharpshooter and two linksmen from Morehead State have earned spots on the 2025 men’s Academic All-District At-Large Team, as selected by the College Sports Communicators. Hayden Bell from Rifle, along with the golf duo of Logan Liles and Remy Stalcup were honored. Bell and Liles were […]

MOREHEAD, Ky. — A rifle sharpshooter and two linksmen from Morehead State have earned spots on the 2025 men’s Academic All-District At-Large Team, as selected by the College Sports Communicators.
Hayden Bell from Rifle, along with the golf duo of Logan Liles and Remy Stalcup were honored.
Bell and Liles were repeat selections from last year’s honorees.
The College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) began the distinguished Academic All-America® program in 1952, and since then, has honored thousands of deserving student-athletes from numerous sports across all divisions with these elite Academic All-America® scholar-athlete honors. In 2022, CoSIDA re-branded itself as the College Sports Communicators.
Currently, CSC sponsors Academic All-America® programs for men’s soccer, women’s soccer, football, tennis, volleyball, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, baseball, softball, swimming and diving and men’s and women’s track and field/cross country. Many other sports are eligible through the At-Large program. In 2022, the guidelines were updated to include more representation on the All-District teams. Sports have limitations to the number of athletes that can be nominated and the minimum grade-point average was raised to 3.50.
Sports
Morehouse, Zhelezov selected to first full class of Richard A. Rasmussen UAA Hall of Fame
Story Links Richard A. Rasmussen UAA Hall of Fame Class, 2025 WALTHAM, Mass. – The University Athletic Association has named the first full class of the Richard A. Rasmussen UAA Hall of Fame, and the list includes two members of the Brandeis Hall […]

WALTHAM, Mass. – The University Athletic Association has named the first full class of the Richard A. Rasmussen UAA Hall of Fame, and the list includes two members of the Brandeis Hall of Fame – Tim Morehouse ’00 of the men’s fencing team and Eleena Zhelezov ’95 of the women’s track and field program.
Over the past year, a committee was formed with representatives from each institution and the Association office to nominate and select individuals to be included in the first class. To be eligible as a student-athlete, a person must have earned their undergraduate degree from a UAA institution, competed for at least three years in the UAA, and graduated at least 10 years ago. Coaches and administrators become eligible once they have retired from a UAA institution.
The first class includes 25 student-athletes, seven administrators, three coaches, and one coach/student-athlete. Each UAA sport is represented in the first class with each current institution being represented with at least two inductees.
Morehouse, a saber fencer from 1997 to 2000, is the most successful male fencer in program history. He was selected to the NCAA Championships three times and earned All-America honors each time. As a sophomore, he finished 10th nationally. As a junior in 1999, with the Championships held at Brandeis, Morehouse finished in sixth place. In 2000, as a senior, he had the best-ever finish by a Brandeis male, finishing second in the Round Robin and fourth after the direct elimination bouts. After graduation, Morehouse continued his fencing career, representing the United States in three Olympics. He was an alternate in Athens in 2004, and in 2008 in Beijing, he helped the US men’s saber team place earn a silver medal, making him the first Olympian and Olympic medalist in Brandeis history. Morehouse also competed for the USA in London in 2012. Morehouse was named to the Brandeis Hall of Fame in 2004.
Zhelezov is the most decorated track and field athlete in Brandeis history. From 1991 to 1995, she won nine NCAA Division III Track and Field Championships. Zhelezov claimed both the indoor and outdoor triple jump crowns all four years and added a long jump title indoors in 1991 for good measure. Zhelezov was the first Division III student-athlete and one of only two in history to win the same event four years in a row both indoors and outdoors. She was a 15-time All-American, 14-time UAA Individual champion and 13-time New England Division III title-winner. As a senior in 1995, she was named the NCAA Division III Indoor Track and Field Athlete of the Year. Zhelezov still holds Brandeis school records in the long jump indoors and outdoors and in the triple jump outdoors. In addition to earning a spot in the Brandeis Hall of Fame in 2001, she was selected to the U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 2011.
Full list of the 2025 inductees into the Richard A. Rasmussen UAA Hall of Fame.
Sports
Swim Ireland Announces Boys’ U18 Roster For European Aquatics Water Polo Championships
Courtesy: Swim Ireland Swim Ireland is proud to announce the selection of the under-18 boys’ Water Polo Squad that will represent the nation at the upcoming European Aquatics Water Polo Championships, taking place from 18th to 24th August 2025 in Rio Maior, Portugal. Following a selection process and months of dedicated preparation, National Head Coach […]

Courtesy: Swim Ireland
Swim Ireland is proud to announce the selection of the under-18 boys’ Water Polo Squad that will represent the nation at the upcoming European Aquatics Water Polo Championships, taking place from 18th to 24th August 2025 in Rio Maior, Portugal.
Following a selection process and months of dedicated preparation, National Head Coach Goran Sablic has confirmed the final squad of 14 athletes and 4 team staff who will represent Ireland in this prestigious continental competition.
Over the next two months, the squad will continue working together with several intensive national programme training sessions as they make their final preparations for these significant international championships.
Speaking on the selection, National Head Coach Goran Sablic said, “The upcoming tournament presents a significant opportunity for our national team to compete against the top teams in Europe and showcase their full potential.
Given that the season has concluded for all clubs, the selected players will need to dedicate themselves to intensive training under the guidance of our experienced national coaches. This period will allow the coaching team to challenge the players, further develop their capabilities, and ensure they are in peak condition to represent the country and deliver exciting matches for us to watch.”
Speaking on the selection, Eoin Bridgeman, the selected Head Coach for the boys squad, said, “This group has shown great commitment and progress over the past number of months, and we believe we have a strong squad capable of competing at this level. We’re looking forward to the next few weeks training together as a squad and getting ready to represent Ireland at the tournament.”
Selected Athletes:
- Antonio Cascante – St Vincents
- Michael Cunningham-Smyth – Corrib
- Michael Dempsey – Corrib
- Mark Morissey – Clonard
- Paddy Cunningham-Smyth – Corrib
- Kyle Cosgrove – Corrib
- Fionn Byrne – St Vincents
- Daniel Egan – St Vincents
- Ethan Noonan – St Vincents
- Finn Gary – Clonard
- Shane Killian – Athlone
- Finn Donnelly – Cathal Brugha
- Julian Drum – Sandycove
- Nara Coll – Corrib
Selected Team Staff:
Head Coach: Eoin Bridgeman
Assistant Coach: Joe Cosgrove
Assistant Coach: Cillian Colvin
Team Manager: Oonagh Gary
Sports
Men’s XC And Track & Field Programs Place 2nd In USTFCCCA Program of the Year Standings
Story Links New Orleans, La. — After historic production from the men’s cross country team and both indoor and outdoor men’s track & field programs, the University of Lynchburg placed second in the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association NCAA Division III Program of the Year final […]

New Orleans, La. — After historic production from the men’s cross country team and both indoor and outdoor men’s track & field programs, the University of Lynchburg placed second in the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association NCAA Division III Program of the Year final standings, the school’s best placement in history.
To cap off the 2024-25 academic year, the men’s outdoor track & field program had multiple individual national champions for the first time in 26 years. Tor Hotung-Davidsen and Chasen Hunt claimed national titles in the 1,500-meter and 5,000-meter races, respectively. Both Hotung-Davidsen and Hunt made history prior to the NCAA Championships as well. Hotung-Davidsen clocked the fastest outdoor mile in NCAA DIII history earlier this year with a sub-four minute time at the Hill City Twilight, while Hunt claimed the fastest 5,000-meter time in NCAA DIII history by over five seconds at the Bryan Clay Invitational.
Multiple student-athletes broke program and ODAC records in the outdoor season for one of the best team performances in Lynchburg history. At the NCAA Championships, the Hornets’ men’s squad earned seven All-American honors and placed seventh overall as a team.
The indoor track & field program achieved incredible success as well, earning its fourth consecutive ODAC Championship title and its highest placement as a group at the NCAA Championships in program history with a fourth-place finish. With just six men competing, all six earned First-Team All-American status. The distance medley relay team placed second overall to start off the competition and freshman Tristan Wright produced a highlight moment with a time of 6.74 in the 100-meter dash, solidifying a new conference record in the event.
The men’s cross country team snagged its fourth straight ODAC Championship and claimed its second consecutive regional title this season. At the NCAA National Championship in Terre Haute, Ind., Hunt crossed the finish line in 14th place to secure an All-American accolade and lead the team to a 12th-place finish overall.
An outstanding year for all three programs allowed the Hornets to finish second in the overall standings, beating out UW-Eau Claire for the spot by 13 points. UW-La Crosse claimed the national title in all three seasons to secure first. MIT and North Central (Ill.) rounded out the top five in fourth and fifth, respectively. To view the list of final standings produced by the USTFCCCA, click here.
Visit Lynchburg athletics’ home online, LynchburgSports.com, anytime for up-to-the-minute news on all Hornets sports and coverage from the Lynchburg Hornets Sports Network.
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–LYN–
Sports
Former WSU track and field coaches, athletes react to program cuts
Nobody wore a black armband to work, but the tone was funereal in the text exchanges and calls among Washington State track and field alums Tuesday. When it wasn’t just angry. “I feel like going over to the alumni center and chopping that tile with my name on it out of the floor,” said former […]

Nobody wore a black armband to work, but the tone was funereal in the text exchanges and calls among Washington State track and field alums Tuesday.
When it wasn’t just angry.
“I feel like going over to the alumni center and chopping that tile with my name on it out of the floor,” said former Cougar coach John Chaplin. “I’m just so pissed.”
The reactions – from resignation to indignation – came in the wake of the school’s announcement on Monday that it was dropping the “field” part of the program and reducing, in ways unspecified, its numbers in the sprints and hurdles. The Cougars will carry on a program centered on distance running.
How many scholarships will be awarded, how much in budget savings will result and the status of assistant coaches have not been shared publicly. Athletic director Anne McCoy and head coach Wayne Phipps continued to refuse interview requests on Tuesday.
But one thing seemed clear. National regard for the once-formidable Cougar program will take another hit.
“The program has had such a rich tradition and heritage,” said Drew Ulrick, a Cougar discus thrower 20 years ago and now a real estate professional in Spokane. “It was more competitive in the ‘80s and ‘90s on the national stage, but even in my era you always knew WSU was at a meet – there were always a few stars out there.”
Like many, Ulrick was confused by the two-paragraph school statement that the cuts would give WSU “the best opportunity to remain competitive at the conference and national levels,” though it did specify “in the distance events.”
“I just wish they’d been up front and said, ‘We need to cut,’ and not tried to make it sound like this was a good thing,” said Debra Farwell, who coached throws at WSU for 20 years and was one of the pioneer athletes in the women’s program. “This is just sad and another sign that the college athletics system is broken.”
The school provided no rationale for the cuts. But the combination of existing athletic program debt, the collapse of the pre-2024 Pac-12 and the drying up of television money from that and, finally, the pressure the Cougar athletics will face navigating life after the recent House vs. NCAA settlement opening up direct payments to athletes suggests that it was solely a financial consideration.
The last WSU sport to take such a blow was men’s tennis, which was dropped entirely in 1994 after years of half-funding.
Cougar field events were not the first track-related casualty of the post-House world, either, with Colorado announcing last week that it was throwing more of its resources behind its renowned distance corps and axing two field events coaches.
“Sadly, there are probably many more to come,” said Cougar alum and hammer specialist Brock Eager, who competes on the professional level out of the Iron Wood Throws Club in North Idaho. “The whole scheme and layout of college athletics has changed completely in just the six years I’ve been out of college.”
While the Gerry Lindgrens, Henry Ronos and Bernard Lagats of the Cougars’ “Long Crimson Line” of distance runners put WSU track on the map, the field events were wildly underrated.
“The school record in the high jump is 7-foot-7,” noted Eager. “Ian Waltz threw 212 feet in the discus, Tore Gustafsson 255 in the hammer – I’m at 236 and that’s just third. All the other records are world class.”
Indeed, it’s been difficult in recent years for Cougar field athletes to even crack the school’s top 10s. But 14 of the school’s last 21 Pac-12 champions came on the field side.
“To lose that tradition is sickening,” said Farwell.
But what former athletes and coaches find more disheartening is the loss of opportunity.
“If I didn’t get a scholarship to go to college, I wasn’t going,” said Francesca Green, a two-time then-Pac-10 champion from Kennewick who now coaches at the University of Arizona. “Having (coaches) Rick Sloan and Lissa Olson take a chance on me was the opportunity of a lifetime, because my times in high school didn’t put me at the top of the country. So it was life-changing.”
It was a sentiment echoed by CJ Allen, a 2024 U.S. Olympian in the intermediate hurdles.
“If what’s happening with the program now happens back then, I don’t’ know if my life looks the same,” he said. “I won a conference championship as a freshman and used that momentum for the rest of my career, really. Put me in the SEC that year in a little more competitive field and maybe I don’t make the final.”
Allen would win another Pac-12 title before he left WSU, and made time gains each year post-collegiately through 2023 – until he’d become the 30th fastest 400 hurdler in history and No. 14 American.
“In the new scenario at WSU,” he said, “I don’t exist.”
It also puts into question, in the likelihood of similar cuts elsewhere, the impact to Olympic development if its feeder system shrinks. Green – “I’ve always been an optimistic person,” she said – believes elite athletes will always find their place and that it could be an iron-sharpening-iron outcome. But broad-based development could suffer.
“You’re not going to have the walk-on, the football guy who tries the hammer and takes to it and becomes national caliber in four years,” said Eager. “You’re going to miss out on making the diamonds-in-the-rough into diamonds.”
But that’s a macro problem. Alums are more worried about WSU’s micro problem.
“I think about so many kids that won’t get the opportunity now,” said Farwell. “A kid like Tim Gehring – from Kettle Falls, a walk-on and with our development program became a national championship competitor who threw 63-10. He’s an accountant now in Pullman. We had so many kids like that. Maybe they only got a semester’s tuition or books, but that was incentive for them to keep improving.”
Most of the track and field alums grasp the realities of today’s college landscape, even if they don’t like it or understand. They’re more saddened than disgusted.
That doesn’t make this wholesale gutting of the program easier to swallow. Chaplin, a long-time donor as well as the builder of the program, insisted he’s taking the Rono statue project he’s ramrodded off campus.
“I don’t want my name attached to the university in any way,” he said. “I’m embarrassed to be a graduate of WSU.”
Sports
Seven Recognized as Strength & Conditioning Athletes of the Year – Minnesota State University
Story Links COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Seven Minnesota State student-athletes were recognized this year as Strength & Conditioning Athlete of the Year for their sport through the National Strength & Conditioning Association (NSCA). Winners were honored at various team events this spring with a certificate. The Strength and Conditioning Athlete of […]

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Seven Minnesota State student-athletes were recognized this year as Strength & Conditioning Athlete of the Year for their sport through the National Strength & Conditioning Association (NSCA). Winners were honored at various team events this spring with a certificate.
The Strength and Conditioning Athlete of the Year Award program recognizes those collegiate and high school athletes whose athletic accomplishments reflect their dedication to strength training and conditioning.
Awards have been given since 1998.
” These student-athletes are the best of the best in Strength & Conditioning,” said Minnesota State Head Strength & Conditioning Coach Andy Stocks. “They have shown tremendous effort and passion on a daily basis. Their work ethic and dedication to Strength & Conditioning are undeniable. Their progress and performance during their collegiate career have far exceeded expectations.”
2024-25 Minnesota State Strength & Conditioning Athlete of the Year Winners
Emily Russo (Basketball)
Abby Gronholz (Swimming & Diving)
Nathan Gribble (Football)
Lucy Weninger (Soccer)
Megan Narveson (Track & Field)
Spencer Wright (Baseball)
Emma Loveall (Volleyball)
Stocks on Russo
“Emily has had a tremendous impact on the Minnesota State basketball program and the Strength & Conditioning department. Her work ethic sets a great example for others and her leadership drives her team to success. Emily is a true role model.”
Stocks on Gronholz
“Abby has shown tremendous effort in all aspects of being a student-athlete. She uses her performance in the weight room to drive success in the pool. Her hard work has won multiple NSIC championships and NCAA All-American honors. She is also successful in the classroom, being named to the NSIC All-Academic Team. Her drive to excel will lead her to great success in the future.”
Stocks on Gribble
“Gribble is a stalwart for the Maverick football program and the Strength & Conditioning department. His grittiness, intensity, and love for lifting are second to none. Gribble’s blue collar work ethic will drive him to great success in the future.”
Lee on Narveson
“Megan has fully bought into strength training to further her success any time she runs. She has used the weight room as a place to thrive and ensure her body stays strong and durable so she can handle what comes with running longer distances. She pushes herself every training session no matter how she feels and consistently finds a way to improve! She is a joy to have around every training session and does a great job pushing her teammates to the next level! She helps foster a positive training environment for our entire weight room!”
Lee on Wright
“Spencer understands and uses the weight room to create the best competitive advantage he can for himself on the mound. He trains with the highest intent whenever he steps in the weight room. He comes in every day looking to better himself as the strongest and most powerful athlete he can be. He also holds his teammates to the highest standards in the weight room to create a hard-working culture for the entire program! He is a great leader to have in the room every day.”
Lee on Loveall
“Emma bought in fully to the training system here on campus and used it to her advantage. She always came in with a positive mindset and put her best foot forward when it came to training every day. She pushed herself to be the strongest and most powerful version of herself, which would then help translate to her performance on the Volleyball Court. She was a joy to have around in the weight room during her time on campus!”
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