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.
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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 4, 2025) – The U.S. Men’s Sitting National Team will play for the gold medal at the 2025 Dutch Tournament with three more wins on Saturday in Assen, Netherlands. The U.S. (5-0) began the day with a 3-1 (20-25, 25-17, 25-18, 25-9) Türkiye before sweeping Canada, 3-0 (25-19, 25-21, 25-20). The […]

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 4, 2025) – The U.S. Men’s Sitting National Team will play for the gold medal at the 2025 Dutch Tournament with three more wins on Saturday in Assen, Netherlands.
The U.S. (5-0) began the day with a 3-1 (20-25, 25-17, 25-18, 25-9) Türkiye before sweeping Canada, 3-0 (25-19, 25-21, 25-20). The U.S. Men’s Sitting Team clinched its berth in the gold medal match with a thrilling 3-2 (25-23, 25-12, 21-25 ,16-25, 15-13) victory over Poland.
MATCH STATISTICS vs. TURKIYE
MATCH STATISTICS vs. CANADA
MATCH STATISTICS vs. POLAND
vs. Türkiye
The U.S. finished with a 47-30 advantage in kills and 16-14 in blocks. Outside hitter Zach Upp recorded nearly twice as many aces as all other players combined with 13 of his team’s 16. Türkiye totaled four aces.
Upp led all players with 25 points with 11 kills and a block to go with his aces. James Stuck recorded a match-high 16 kills, adding a block and an ace.
Middle blocker Roderick Green finished with 12 points on eight kills and four blocks, and outside Ben Aman posted a match-high six blocks with three kills and an ace for 10 points.
vs. Canada
The U.S. finished with 34 kills compared to just 21 for Canada and held a slight edge in aces (13-10). Canada held the advantage in blocks (11-8).
Outside hitters Jason Roberts and Dan Regan were the top two scorers in the match. Roberts scored 16 points on eight kills, a match-best six aces and two blocks. Regan also delivered eight kills, adding four aces and two blocks for 12 points.
Alex Wilson was the third U.S. play to record eight kills and outside Sam Suroweic finished with six kills and an ace for seven points.
With a one-point lead at 13-12 in the first set, the U.S. went on a 7-0 run with Stuck serving to open up an eight-point lead. After Canada hoped to stop the momentum by taking a timeout at 17-12, Stuck responded with an ace.
The second set featured multiple ties until the U.S. took a two-point lead at 16-14. A Wilson kill extended the lead to three points, 18-15, and a pair of aces by Roberts stretched the lead to four, 21-17. Canada was unable to close the gap any closer than three points as the U.S. took a 2-0 set lead.
The U.S. started quickly in the third set, taking a 7-2 lead. The margin was seven, 14-7, when Canada scored five points in a row to close the gap to two. Canada pulled within a point on three occasions, the last being at 21-20, but the U.S. scored the final four points to complete the victory.
vs. Poland
The U.S. produced double-digit margins in kills (53-40) and aces (17-6), while Poland finished with eight more blocks (18-10).
Upp hit the 20-point mark for the second time in his two matches on Saturday, sharing match-high honors with teammate Green in kills (13) and leading all players with seven aces. Green added three blocks for 16 points.
Duda scored 15 points as one of three U.S. players to record a double-digit kill total with 12 to go with three aces. Aman finished with 10 points on four kills, three blocks and three aces.
Stuck totaled six points on five kills and a block, while Roberts scored five points on three kills and a pair of aces.
Behind the serving strength of Upp and Aman, the U.S. went on an 8-1 run to take a 16-7 lead in the first set. The lead grew to double digits,19-9, before Poland made a furious comeback to tie the match at 23.
Green stopped a four-point Poland streak to give the U.S. set point, and a hitting error secured the set for the U.S.
With a 10-7 lead in the second set, the U.S. scored eight of the next nine points for an 18-8 lead. Denying Poland a similar comeback to the first set, the U.S. scored six consecutive points for a 24-10 lead and took a 2-0 lead in the match three points later.
Poland scored the first four points of the third set and never trailed. At one point, the U.S. used a 5-2 run to cut the lead to two points, 19-17 but could not maintain the momentum after a delay of several minutes when the head official was clarifying information with the scorer’s table.
Poland ran out to 6-0 and 10-1 leads in the fourth set. The U.S. never got closer than seven points behind as the match headed to a deciding set.
An Aman kill put the U.S. ahead 6-3 in the fifth set and led Poland to call its first timeout. Duda registered a kill later in the set to extend the lead to four points, 10-6. After the teams exchanged the next two points, the U.S. took its biggest lead when Kremer hustled and made a great set for another Duda kill and a 12-7 lead.
Poland scored the next three points to lead head coach Greg Walker to call his first timeout. Duda scored again, this time off the Poland block, to make it 13-10. Once again Poland went on a three-point streak and tied the set at 13, completing a 6-1 run.
After Walker called his second timeout, Green scored off the block to set up match point, which the U.S. converted on a Poland hitting error.
Roster
No. Name (Position, Height, Hometown)
2 Dan Regan (OH, 6-0, St. Louis, Mo.)
3 Nick Dadgostar (L, 6-0, Sidney, Neb.)
4 Ben Aman (OH, 6-5, Edmond, Okla.)
5 Eric Duda (S/OH, 6-5, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.)
6 Alex Wilson (OPP/OH, 6-6, Saugerties, N.Y.)
8 James Stuck (S/OH, 6-5, New Kensington, Pa.)
10 Robbie Onusko(OH, 6-0, Daytona Beach, Fla.)
11 Roderick Green (MB, 6-3, West Monroe, La.)
14 John Kremer (L, 5-9, Buford, Ga.)
17 Zach Upp (OH, 6-5, Bartlett, Ill.)
20 Jason Roberts (OH, 6-3, Moncks Corner, S.C.)
22 Brett Parks(OH, 6-0, Miami, Fla.)
23 Will Curtis (S/L, 6-0, Cumberland, Maine)
49 Sam Surowiec (OH, 6-2, Everett, Wash.)
Coaches
Head coach: Greg Walker
Assistant Coach: Julie Allen
Assistant Coach: Dave Dantes
Assistant Coach: Kenzie Rombach
Performance Analyst: Sydnie Mabry
Athletic Trainer: Whitney Padgett
Schedule
July 4
USA def. Netherlands, 3-0 (25-16, 25-17, 25-23)
USA def. Japan, 3-0 (25-20, 25-16, 33-31)
July 5
USA def. Türkiye, 3-1 (20-25, 25-17, 25-18, 25-9)
USA def. Canada, 3-0 (25-19, 25-21, 25-20)
USA def. Poland, 3-2 (25-23, 25-12, 21-25 ,16-25, 15-13)
July 6
Gold medal match: USA vs. TBA, 7 a.m. PT
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Texas Tech continues massive athletics investment
The Texas Tech Red Raiders announced themselves as a major player in college athletics’ revenue-sharing era on Friday with a historic football signing. ESPN college football reporter Eli Lederman shared that 2026 five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo agreed to a staggering three-year, $5.1 million fully guaranteed contract for his commitment to Texas Tech. According to […]

The Texas Tech Red Raiders announced themselves as a major player in college athletics’ revenue-sharing era on Friday with a historic football signing.
ESPN college football reporter Eli Lederman shared that 2026 five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo agreed to a staggering three-year, $5.1 million fully guaranteed contract for his commitment to Texas Tech.
According to 247Sports, Ojo is the top offensive tackle and No. 5 overall prospect in his class.
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“The deal is believed to be one of the largest fully guaranteed revenue-sharing agreements in college football history under the recently approved federal settlement that allows college programs to pay their athletes directly.”
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The softball team came painfully close to winning the women’s College World Series in June, losing to Texas, 2-1, in the best-of-three championship series.
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Our Sports Reporter
GUWAHATI: Jorhat emerged as the champion in the 32nd All Assam Aquatic Championship, which concluded at the Sarusajai Sports Complex in the city today. Jorhat dominated the competition, amassing a total of 56 gold, 51 silver, and 36 bronze medals.
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In water polo, Sivasagar took home the men’s and women’s titles, while Jorhat claimed the runners-up positions in both events.
Group Champions: 1. Men (open) – Banadip Medhi (Kamrup), Women (open) – Disha Gogoi (Charaideo). Group – I (Boys) – Sanskar Bhuyan (Jorhat), Group – I (Girls) – Jahnabi Changmai (Kamrup). Group – II (Boys) – Prayash Gogoi (Jorhat) and Awad Aditya (Jorhat), Group – II (Girls) – Angarika Saikia (Jorhat) and Bhoomika Kashyap (Jorhat). Group- III (Boys)- Abhigyan Mohan (Jorhat), Group-III (Girls) Kasturi Gogoi (Kamrup).
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