Connect with us

Sports

MiLB Attendance Numbers Down Again So Far In 2025

Image credit: Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images) Traditionally, Memorial Day weekend is when MiLB attendance finds another gear. With schools getting out and the weather warming up, the end of May and months of June and July are normally the time when more casual fans come back out to the ballpark. But most […]

Published

on

MiLB Attendance Numbers Down Again So Far In 2025


Image credit:

Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images)

Traditionally, Memorial Day weekend is when MiLB attendance finds another gear. With schools getting out and the weather warming up, the end of May and months of June and July are normally the time when more casual fans come back out to the ballpark.

But most MiLB teams will need a bigger-than-normal summer boost this season. Announced attendance across the 120 full-season clubs is down from 2024, continuing what has become a steady trend.

Across those 120 teams, announced attendance is down 174 fans per game, a 4.6% percent drop compared to this time last season. Currently, teams are averaging 3,472 fans per game in 2025 compared to 3,646 fans per game through this time last year.

That 2024 number was a drop itself, as this time in 2023 teams were averaging 3,776 fans per game. Compared to two seasons ago, attendance is down 304 fans per game.

The drops are being seen across the vast majority of MiLB orgs, with 82 teams (68%) showing an attendance decline, 61 teams down 200+ fans per game and 26 teams down 500+ fans per game. There are 29 teams showing an increase of 100 or more fans compared to last year.

A cooler and wetter spring has likely played a role in some cities, but the number of lost games so far (154) is right in line with the average of 155 games lost by this point of the season for the 21st century.

Here are the 10 teams with the biggest increases:

Team INCREASE Notes
Hub City Spartanburgers +2,144 Moved from Down East
Columbus Clingstones +1,842 Moved from Mississippi
Memphis Redbirds +742
West Michigan Whitecaps +713
Knoxville Smokies +551 Opened new stadium
Chesapeake Baysox +503 Rebranded this year
Gwinnett Stripers +502
Akron RubberDucks +368
Lehigh Valley IronPigs +361
Hillsboro Hops +329

And here are the 10 teams with the biggest declines in announced attendance. The Tampa Tarpons have artificially seen their attendance drop significantly because they’ve been moved out of their home stadium to accommodate the Rays, but even with that, they don’t crack the top 10 attendance decliners:

Team DECREASE
Buffalo Bisons -1,511
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders -1,370
Wichita Wind Surge -979
Arkansas Travelers -832
Indianapolis Indians -778
New Hampshire Fisher Cats -681
Lake County Captains -652
Salt Lake Bees -647
Hartford Yard Goats -645
Rochester Red Wings -636

Attendance will increase over the remainder of the season, as fans come out more during the summer than in spring or fall. Over the past three seasons, the final attendance numbers show an average increase of 333 fans per game compared the attendance after the Sunday preceding Memorial Day.

But a similar boost this year would only increase final average attendance to 3,802 fans per game, which would bring overall MiLB attendance perilously close to dipping below the 30 million fans mark in a normal season for the first time in decades. MiLB collectively teams average 7,900 dates per year (accounting for rainouts and other cancelled games). At 3,800 fans per game, MiLB would draw 30,020,000 fans this season with 7,900 dates.

The coronavirus-shortened 2021 season led to fewer games and attendance restrictions, resulting in MiLB teams drawing just 22.1 million fans that season. Still dealing with coronavirus after effects in 2022, teams drew 30.9 million fans. That increased to 32.1 million fans in 2023 before dipping to 31.3 million fans last season.

Multiple operators have said that teams have figured out how to better generate revenue per fan across the minors. But MiLB is a mass-audience product, which means year-over-year decrease for three straight seasons is a concern. MLB is bucking this trend, drawing 327 more fans per game in 2025 than 2024 (even with two MLB teams playing in MiLB ballparks this year).

MLB declined a request for comment.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

EMCC softball standouts Karen and Gail Wisher selected to CSC Academic All-America At-Large Team

EMCC softball standouts Karen and Gail Wisher selected to CSC Academic All-America At-Large Team Published 9:52 am Wednesday, July 9, 2025 Karen Wisher readies herself for the pitch while at bat for the EMCC lions during the 2025 softball season. Submitted photo AUSTIN, Texas – Former East Mississippi Community College softball standouts Karen Wisher and […]

Published

on


EMCC softball standouts Karen and Gail Wisher selected to CSC Academic All-America At-Large Team

Published 9:52 am Wednesday, July 9, 2025

Karen Wisher readies herself for the pitch while at bat for the EMCC lions during the 2025 softball season. Submitted photo

AUSTIN, Texas – Former East Mississippi Community College softball standouts Karen Wisher and Gail Wisher have been named to the 2024-25 Academic All-America Women’s At-Large Team for the College Division, the College Sports Communicators announced Tuesday.

 

Karen was one of 13 first-team national selections, while Gail was one of seven second-team recipients. EMCC joined Jones College as the only two MACCC members to have multiple student-athletes selected among the organization’s 20 at-large national academic recipients. Representing the recognized women’s sports of badminton, basketball, beach volleyball, bowling, cross country, curling, field hockey, flag football, golf, half marathon, ice hockey, rugby, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field, volleyball, water polo and wrestling, the College Division is comprised of student-athletes from two-year colleges, Canadian institutions and any other institution not affiliated with the NCAA or NAIA.

EMCC’s Gail Wisher throw a pitch from the mound during the 2025 softball season. Submitted photo

Identical twin sisters out of Alma Bryant High School in Irvington, Alabama, the Wishers both majored in exercise science at EMCC and have committed to continue their academic and softball careers within the Magnolia State at Blue Mountain Christian University.

 

With a 3.77 cumulative grade point average during her EMCC career as a two-year starting centerfielder for head coach Mackenzie Byrd’s Lions, Karen Wisher batted .332 for her career with 36 extra-base hits (22 doubles, 10 home runs and 4 triples), 39 runs batted in and 68 runs scored. She also posted a career slugging percentage of .556 and was 16-for-17 in career stolen base attempts.

Newsletter sign up WIDGET


Email newsletter signup

 

On the heels of being named to the 2024 All-MACCC Second Team as a freshman after leading EMCC in hitting (.338), home runs (7), hits (45), extra-base hits (20), doubles (12), total bases (80), slugging percentage (.602) and runs scored (39), Karen Wisher followed with an equally impressive sophomore season. The right-handed hitter who throws left-handed led the Lions in hitting (.333) and slugging percentage (.523) for the second straight season as a sophomore this past year.

 

While also having excelled in the classroom with a 3.87 cumulative GPA, Gail Wisher earned 2025 All-MACCC honorable mention recognition as a sophomore after becoming the first EMCC softball pitcher since 2014 to reach double-digit wins in a season with a 10-12 record and 3.39 earned run average. The right-hander finished seventh among conference leaders with the most strikeouts (137) thrown by a Lions pitcher in a single season since EMCC Sports Hall of Fame member Courtney Nunn reached the century mark during the 2009 and 2010 seasons with 156 and 217 strikeouts, respectively.

 

As a two-year starter either in the circle or primarily at shortstop when not pitching for the Lions, Gail Wisher batted .296 for her EMCC career, including 25 extra-base hits (18 doubles, 6 HRs and one triple), with 56 runs scored and 46 RBIs during her 83-game EMCC career.

 

Academically at East Mississippi, the Wisher twins both graduated with magna cum laude honors this past spring and were both four-time President’s List scholars. In addition to being two-time NJCAA Academic Award recipients and repeat Academic All-MACCC honorees, they were members of the Phi Theta Kappa honor society during their two years on the Scooba campus.

 

At the prep level, the Wishers were both two-time Class 7A All-County high school selections at Alma Bryant along with being co-recipients of the Hurricanes’ prestigious 2023 Frank Menton Athletic Award.

 

Established in 1952 and selected by College Sports Communicators, Academic All-America is the longest running and premier award for athletic and academic success across championship college sports at all NCAA levels, the NAIA, two-year colleges and Canadian institutions. Teams are announced year round and amplified by CSC member colleges, universities and conferences on a wide local, regional, national and even international scope.

 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

How dream cricket is redefining sports gaming

As India rides the wave of its digital sports entertainment revolution, the lines between gameplay, storytelling and sport are blurring faster than ever before. Amid this transformation is Dream Cricket, a homegrown powerhouse quietly shaping the future of AAA-quality sports gaming. The team behind Dream Cricket isn’t just building a game, it’s building an experience […]

Published

on


As India rides the wave of its digital sports entertainment revolution, the lines between gameplay, storytelling and sport are blurring faster than ever before. Amid this transformation is Dream Cricket, a homegrown powerhouse quietly shaping the future of AAA-quality sports gaming. The team behind Dream Cricket isn’t just building a game, it’s building an experience that mirrors the thrill, emotion and complexity of real-world sport.

Born from a vision to create console-quality sports games for mobile, Dream Cricket has been crafting immersive, high-performance cricket gameplay with meticulous attention to detail. Every swing of the bat, ambient stadium chant and player animation is a result of cross-functional teams working in lockstep to deliver authenticity at scale. And it’s not just about cricket. It’s about creating a new dimension of fan engagement, one where users don’t just watch the game, they live it.

Dream Cricket aims to offer a deeply realistic cricket experience. In a country where cricket is more than just a sport, this is no small task. The development process goes far beyond basic match simulation. The team invests in deep gameplay systems that reflect cricket’s nuanced strategies, be it the physics of reverse swing, fielding dynamics, or batter temperament.

Gameplay design is anchored in authenticity, and that requires complex modelling of everything from player fatigue to pitch behaviour. The game is designed to reward real cricket knowledge and strategy, whether you’re timing a perfect cover drive or setting up an off-spin trap.

Visual storytelling is a key component of Dream Cricket’s design philosophy. The art direction focuses on realistic environmental details such as pitch textures, lighting effects, and stadium elements, to enhance immersion. Each game environment is carefully designed to reflect the atmosphere of real-world venues and contribute to an engaging player experience.

The goal isn’t just realism, it’s resonance. The team understands that cricket is played and consumed differently across geographies and Dream Cricket reflects this. From Wankhede to MCG, the stadiums are designed to be instantly recognisable and emotionally evocative for fans around the world.

Character modelling is equally intentional. Rather than going for photo-realism, Dream Cricket has developed a distinctive visual style that’s grounded in the reality of cricket but elevated through creative exaggeration to emphasise player movement and emotion. The result is an art style that’s unique, scalable and instantly immersive.

Sound design is another powerful tool for Dream Cricket. A lot of thought goes into making the game sound as real and as alive as possible. Stadium ambience, the cheer of a home crowd, the thud of the ball hitting the bat and more. It’s all layered to create an immersive soundscape that evolves with gameplay.

But sound in Dream Cricket goes beyond effect. It’s about interaction. Adaptive audio systems ensure that sound cues respond dynamically to in-game decisions, adding another layer of emotional feedback and user immersion.

Dream Cricket operates at the intersection of Indian sports culture and global gaming standards. While the game is deeply inspired by India’s relationship with cricket, the ambition is global. It is being built to compete with the best sports titles in the world, both in design sophistication and user experience.

This level of ambition is supported by a full-stack production ecosystem where engineers, designers, artists and audio specialists work in agile sprints, constantly refining the game based on player feedback, real-world data and evolving gameplay trends. The team leverages high-end proprietary tools, modular workflows and next-gen engines to build a product that feels premium on even mid-range devices.

In many ways, Dream Cricket represents the future of digital sports entertainment in India. As gaming and sports converge, fans are no longer content being passive viewers. They want to play, feel and influence the game. Dream Cricket is turning that desire into reality, one pixel, one animation, one perfectly timed shot at a time.

With the rise of esports, immersive fan engagement and mobile-first AAA gaming, India is not just consuming digital sports entertainment. It’s creating it. And Dream Cricket is at the forefront, turning India’s biggest passion into its next great gaming export.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Charles Waddell Set to Retire After Nearly Two Decades with Gamecocks – University of South Carolina Athletics

Intercollegiate athletics have certainly changed a lot in the fifty-plus years since Charles Waddell was a three-sport star at the University of North Carolina more than 50 years ago. Now, South Carolina’s Deputy Athletics Director is retiring and looking forward to the next chapter. “I’m a team guy, and I like being involved in teams,” […]

Published

on


Intercollegiate athletics have certainly changed a lot in the fifty-plus years since Charles Waddell was a three-sport star at the University of North Carolina more than 50 years ago. Now, South Carolina’s Deputy Athletics Director is retiring and looking forward to the next chapter.

“I’m a team guy, and I like being involved in teams,” said Waddell, who came to South Carolina in 2006 and also served as the sport administrator overseeing a variety of sports, including football, women’s basketball, track and field, men’s basketball, and equestrian. “That’s what college athletics is about. You work with people, and you’re pulling for a common goal. The biggest thing I’ve gained from all these experiences is the people that come into your life, and you develop relationships with. Those relationships turn into friendships.

“Now, I’ll try to get a little more involved with kids in different ways, especially underserved kids and letting them know that they have an opportunity for a good life if they make good decisions. They can achieve more than they think they can sometimes.”

Waddell knows all about achieving at a high level. As a student-athlete, he may have been the Bo Jackson of his era after lettering in football, basketball, and track and field at North Carolina, where he graduated in 1975. He earned the prestigious Patterson Medal as a senior at UNC, which is the highest athletic award at the school. He earned All-ACC honors and All-American honors in football, eventually playing in the NFL with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Seattle Seahawks, and San Diego Chargers. Looking back, he can’t help but reflect on the challenges ahead with all the changes in college athletics.

“The growth that we’ve seen in college athletics and the money involved has changed the scope of what it’s all about,” Waddell said. “It’s much more of a business. It was always a business in college, but with the money involved, you now have more people from the outside that are getting involved with the athletes. Unfortunately, you’re probably going to hear more stories of kids who were taken advantage of or have blown opportunities. All the kids that get paid in college now won’t make it in the professional leagues, so this might be the most money they’re making for their entire life. Hopefully, we can get kids to do the right things by investing and setting aside money because their college career may be the pinnacle of their career. They need to have the right leadership and guidance.”

He credits his parents for providing him with great direction and advice early in his life.

“My dad was a janitor, and my mom cleaned houses and then went back to school and became a nursing assistant when I was in high school,” Waddell said. “She went back to junior college so she could provide assistance to other people. They were solid, hard-working, spiritual people. My mom threatened me that if I ever brought in a B for a grade, I wasn’t going to be able to play for my team. My parents gave us a good structure.”

Prior to coming to work for South Carolina Athletics nearly twenty years ago, Waddell worked in administration at Fayetteville State University in North Carolina where he was the Vice Chancellor for Advancement. Before that, he spent nearly a decade as the Director of Marketing and Sponsorships for Richardson Sports in Charlotte and was responsible for marketing and corporate sponsorships for the Carolina Panthers. He had previously worked as Assistant Commissioner for the Big Ten Conference. Among the many things he will miss about working in intercollegiate athletics, is the daily interaction with student-athletes.

“Getting to know the kids and watching games makes you more invested in it,” Waddell said. “You pull for them a little bit more when you know who the kids really are, as well as the coaches and staff. They’re not just co-workers; they’re friends.

“I just wanted to say thanks for the opportunity to come down and work here! It’s been a great run. Looking back at the success we had in our programs during my time here has been off the charts. I spent the most time with football, women’s basketball and track and field. (Former track and field coach) Curtis (Frye), (former football coach) Steve (Spurrier), and (women’s basketball coach) Dawn (Staley) are all hall of fame coaches. It was great being along for the ride with them.”

As he retires, Waddell looks forward to spending more time with family, including his wife, Sandra, his three grown children, and three grandchildren.

“I’m going to hang out and catch up with the family,” said Waddell. “I’ve got the grandboys who are involved with lots of stuff like soccer and basketball and now a little bit of football. Sandra and I might do a little bit of traveling, but most of what we do will be centered around those three grandboys.”





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Phoenix Releases 2025 Volleyball Fall Slate

Story Links ELON, N.C. – The Elon University volleyball team announced its 27-match 2025 fall schedule on Wednesday, July 9. The Phoenix will play 11 of those matches on its home court at Schar Center with other notable contests on Elon’s 2025 slate include three matches against 2024 NCAA Tournament […]

Published

on


ELON, N.C. – The Elon University volleyball team announced its 27-match 2025 fall schedule on Wednesday, July 9. The Phoenix will play 11 of those matches on its home court at Schar Center with other notable contests on Elon’s 2025 slate include three matches against 2024 NCAA Tournament teams — College of Charleston, Delaware State and Wofford — and three teams that finished in the top 75 of the NCAA RPI rankings — Appalachian State, Towson and Wofford.
 
Elon opens the season with a pair of matches on its home floor, facing Coppin State on Friday, Aug. 29, before hosting Bethune-Cookman the following day, Saturday, Aug. 30. After those contests, the Phoenix will embark on a seven-match road swing, beginning at Appalachian State on Sept. 2. The team will then head to the Wildcat Classic on Sept. 5-6 to face host Davidson and take on Coastal Carolina and Delaware State.
 
The Phoenix closes out its road trip in South Carolina, facing ACC foe Clemson on Sept. 11. Elon then travels to Spartanburg, S.C., for contests at Wofford (Sept. 12) and USC Upstate (Sept. 13).
 
The CAA volleyball season begins at home for the maroon and gold with matches against Hampton at Schar Center on Sept. 19-20. Elon will host NC Central for a single match on Sept. 24 before concluding the month on the road at Radford on Sept. 27.
 

The Phoenix heads to Hofstra for its first league road games on Oct. 4-5. Elon returns to Schar Center to host Northeastern on Oct. 11-12, then travels to Towson on Oct. 17-18. The maroon and gold will host Piedmont Triad rival North Carolina A&T on Oct. 24-25 before visiting in-state foe Campbell on Oct. 31 and Nov. 1.
 
Elon wraps up the home portion of its schedule against UNCW on Nov. 8-9, then closes out the regular season on the road at defending league champion College of Charleston on Nov. 15-16.
 
The 2025 CAA Volleyball Championships is scheduled to take place on Nov. 20-22, hosted at Towson.
 
The 2025 campaign marks the debut of Phoenix head coach Matt Troy, who spent the past six seasons at Johns Hopkins, compiling a 151-17 record. Troy led Johns Hopkins to the 2019 NCAA Division III national championship and reached at least the NCAA quarterfinals in each of the past three seasons, including a Final Four appearance in 2024.
 

— ELON —



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Choy Garners Academic All-America Honors

Story Links AUSTIN, Texas – University of Hawai’i men’s volleyball libero ‘Eleu Choy was named to the College Sports Communicators Academic At-Large All-America third team becoming the sixth men’s volleyball player in school history to receive Academic All-America honors.   Choy joins an exclusive list that includes former Rainbow Warriors Dejan Miladinovic […]

Published

on


AUSTIN, Texas – University of Hawai’i men’s volleyball libero ‘Eleu Choy was named to the College Sports Communicators Academic At-Large All-America third team becoming the sixth men’s volleyball player in school history to receive Academic All-America honors.
 

Choy joins an exclusive list that includes former Rainbow Warriors Dejan Miladinovic (2002), Costas Theocharidis (2002 & ’03), Jonas Umlauft (2011), Stijn van Tilburg (2019), and Jakob Thelle (2022 & ’23).
 
The at-large category consists of more than a dozen NCAA-sponsored sports including men’s volleyball, women’s beach volleyball, women’s water polo, and men’s and women’s golf, all of which UH sponsors.
 
Choy, a two-time CSC Academic All-District honoree, has a master’s in civil engineering. He was a two-time starting libero for the Warriors, earning AVCA All-America honorable mention honors this past season. Choy helped UH win the 2025 Big West Championship and advance to the semifinals of the NCAA Championship.
 
A total of three men’s volleyball players were among the 44 Division I student-athletes named to the first, second, and third teams. Choy joined Loyola’s Parker Van Buren (first team) and Long Beach State’s Skyler Varga (third team) on the list.
 
 

#HawaiiMVB

 
 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

MORE THAN 100 HOURS OF LIVE COVERAGE OF 2025 WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS BEGIN THIS FRIDAY EXCLUSIVELY ON PEACOCK

Live Streaming Coverage of Swimming, Diving, Water Polo, Open Water Swimming, and Artistic Swimming from Singapore Presented July 11-Aug. 3, Exclusively on Peacock U.S. Women’s and Men’s Water Polo Open Their Campaigns on Friday at 12:10 a.m. ET and 10:35 p.m. ET, Respectively Katie Ledecky, Leon Marchand, and Torri Huske Headline Swimming Action Beginning July […]

Published

on


Live Streaming Coverage of Swimming, Diving, Water Polo, Open Water Swimming, and Artistic Swimming from Singapore Presented July 11-Aug. 3, Exclusively on Peacock

U.S. Women’s and Men’s Water Polo Open Their Campaigns on Friday at 12:10 a.m. ET and 10:35 p.m. ET, Respectively

Katie Ledecky, Leon Marchand, and Torri Huske Headline Swimming Action Beginning July 26

Additional Coverage, including Preliminaries, Presented Live on Team USA TV

STAMFORD, Conn. – July 9, 2025 –More than 100 hours of live coverage of the 2025 World Aquatics Championships from Singapore will stream exclusively on Peacock beginning this Friday, July 11 at 12:10 a.m. ET. All finals in all disciplines across swimming, diving, water polo, open water swimming, and artistic swimming will be presented live on Peacock.

From July 11 through Aug. 3, Peacock will stream over 100 hours of live coverage featuring many of the top U.S. Olympic medalists from Paris competing against elite international fields in swimming, diving, water polo, artistic swimming, and open water swimming. This will be the first time that Singapore has hosted this event.

Live coverage begins this Friday with U.S. women’s and men’s water polo at 12:10 a.m. ET and 10:35 p.m. ET, respectively, and with open water swimming beginning Monday at 9 p.m. ET with the women’s 10km final.

Team USA TV will present preliminaries and select semi-finals action from the artistic swimming and diving competitions. Team USA TV is a free ad-supported TV channel, launched in partnership by the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, NBCUniversal, and FAST Studios. Team USA TV brings fans the incredible stories of Team USA athletes and their journey to represent Team USA at the Olympic and Paralympic Games and is available now on Peacock, Roku TV, Amazon Freevee, LG Channels, and Tablo. For more information, click here.
The U.S. men’s water polo team earned the bronze medal at the Paris Olympics, their first trip to the podium since 2008, while the women finished in fourth place. The U.S. men are currently ranked sixth in World Aquatics’ world rankings, while the women are third. All U.S. water polo matches will be presented live on Peacock.

The U.S. is sending an impressive contingent of athletes to Singapore for artistic swimming and open water swimming, with 2024 Paris Olympic team silver medalists Anita Alvarez and Dani Ramirez and Paris Olympic 4x200m freestyle silver medalist Claire Weinstein, who recently won the 5km at the U.S. National Open Water Championships, all expected to compete.

Olympic gold medalists Katie Ledecky, Leon Marchand, and Torri Huske headline swimming coverage beginning Saturday, July 26, live on Peacock. Additional details on the swimming portion of the World Aquatics Championships will be released closer to the start of competition.

NBC Sports’ Coverage Schedule, Friday, July 11 – Saturday, Aug. 9 (all times ET)

Date Event Time Platform
Fri., July 11 Water Polo: Women’s Prelim (USA vs. China) 12:10 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Men’s Prelim (Canada vs. USA) 10:35 p.m. Peacock
Sun., July 13 Water Polo: Women’s Prelim (Netherlands vs. USA) 8:45 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Men’s Prelim (USA vs. Brazil) 12:10 a.m. Peacock
Mon., July 14 Open Water Swimming: Women’s 10km Final 9 p.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Women’s Prelim (Argentina vs. USA) 9 p.m. Peacock
Open Water Swimming: Men’s 10km Final 8 p.m. Peacock
Weds., July 16 Water Polo: Men’s Prelim (Singapore vs. USA) 7:10 a.m. Peacock
Thurs., July 17 Open Water Swimming: Women’s 5km Final 7:30 p.m. Peacock
Open Water Swimming: Men’s 5km Final 10 p.m. Peacock
Fri., July 18 Open Water Swimming: Women’s 3km Knockout 8 p.m. Peacock
Open Water Swimming: Men’s 3km Knockout 10 p.m. Peacock
Sat., July 19 Artistic Swimming: Men’s Solo Technical Final 2 a.m. Peacock
Artistic Swimming: Women’s Solo Technical Final 6:30 a.m. Peacock
Open Water Swimming: Mixed 4x1500m Relay Final 8 p.m. Peacock
Sun., July 20 Artistic Swimming: Team Freestyle Final 6:30 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Women’s Semifinal 10:35 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Women’s Semifinal 9 p.m. Peacock
Mon., July 21 Artistic Swimming: Men’s Solo Freestyle Final 2 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Women’s Semifinal 4 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Women’s Semifinal 5:35 a.m. Peacock
Artistic Swimming: Women’s Duet Technical Final 6:30 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Women’s Semifinal 8 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Women’s Semifinal 9:35 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Men’s Semifinal 9 p.m. Peacock
Artistic Swimming: Women’s Solo Freestyle Final 10 p.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Men’s Semifinal 10:35 p.m. Peacock
Tues., July 22 Water Polo: Men’s Semifinal 4 a.m. Peacock
Artistic Swimming: Team Technical Final 6:30 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Men’s Semifinal 5:35 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Men’s Semifinal 8 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Men’s Semifinal 9:35 a.m. Peacock
Weds., July 23 Water Polo: Women’s 7th/8th Place Game 4 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Women’s Bronze Medal Game 5:35 a.m. Peacock
Artistic Swimming: Mixed Duet Technical Final 7:30 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Women’s 5th/6th Place Game 8 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Women’s Gold Medal Game 9:35 a.m. Peacock
Thurs., July 24 Water Polo: Men’s 7th/8th Place Game 4 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Men’s Bronze Medal Game 5:35 a.m. Peacock
Artistic Swimming: Women’s Duet Freestyle Final 7:30 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Men’s 5th/6th Place Game 8 a.m. Peacock
Water Polo: Men’s Gold Medal Game 9:35 a.m. Peacock
Artistic Swimming: Mixed Duet Freestyle Final 10 p.m. Peacock
Fri., July 25 Artistic Swimming: Acrobatic Routine Final 7:30 a.m. Peacock
High Diving: Women’s 20m Final 11 p.m. Peacock
Sat., July 26 Diving: Mixed 3m/10m/ Team Event Final 3:30 a.m. Peacock
Diving: Women’s 1m Springboard Final 7 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Prelims Day 1 10 p.m. Peacock
High Diving: Men’s 27m Final 11 p.m. Peacock
Sun., July 27 Diving: Mixed 10m Platform Synchro Final 3 a.m. Peacock
Diving: Men’s 1m Springboard Final 5:30 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Finals Day 1 7 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Prelims Day 2 10 p.m. Peacock
Mon., July 28 Diving: Men’s 3m Springboard Synchro Final 4 a.m. Peacock
Diving: Women’s 10m Platform Synchro Final 6 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Finals Day 2 7 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Prelims Day 3 10 p.m. Peacock
Tues., July 29 Diving: Women’s 3m Springboard Synchro Final 3:30 a.m. Peacock
Diving: Men’s 10m Platform Synchro Final 5:30 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Finals Day 3 7 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Prelims Day 4 10 p.m. Peacock
Weds., July 30 Diving: Mixed 3m Springboard Synchro Final 5:30 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Finals Day 4 7 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Prelims Day 5 10 p.m. Peacock
Thurs., July 31 Diving: Women’s 10m Platform Final 6:15 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Finals Day 5 7 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Prelims Day 6 10 p.m. Peacock
Fri., Aug. 1 Diving: Men’s 3m Springboard Final 6 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Finals Day 6 7 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Prelims Day 7 10 p.m. Peacock
Sat., Aug. 2 Diving: Women’s 3m Springboard Final 6 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Finals Day 7 7:30 a.m. Peacock
Swimming Highlights 2 p.m. NBC*
Swimming: Prelims Day 8 10 p.m. Peacock
Sun., Aug. 3 Diving: Men’s 10m Platform Final 5:30 a.m. Peacock
Swimming: Finals Day 8 7 a.m. Peacock
Sat., Aug. 9 Swimming Highlights 1 p.m. NBC*

*Encore presentation

–NBC SPORTS–





Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending