Connect with us

Sports

New season kicks off with big storylines feat. Lakshya, Prannoy, Sat

Irrespective of the final matchups though, Sat-Chi will be the ones to watch out for in the tournament — fit again and raring to prove that the second half of 2024 was an injury-driven blip. Jan 6, 2025, 08:10 PM Open Extended Reactions It’s tough to chart their path ahead given how competitive the top […]

Published

on

New season kicks off with big storylines feat. Lakshya, Prannoy, Sat

It’s tough to chart their path ahead given how competitive the top tier of women’s singles is but fact os that crossing the first-round hurdle would be the small goal right now.

The 2025 badminton season is all set to begin with a bang on Tuesday with the Malaysia Open Super 1000 — the highest tier of the BWF Tour.One of these will be the quarterfinalist from this section, talk about a tough sector.All eyes in men’s singles will be on Lakshya Sen, the one with most potential who must make a bigger, and consistent, leap in 2025.Tanisha Crasto, who started off as more of a mixed doubles player till injury to her partner Ishaan Bhatnagar, is back in the draw with Dhruv Kapila. They’ve slowly been climbing up the ranks (world no. 69 now) and had reached the final of the Syed Modi together. They start against Ko Sung Hyun and Eom Hye Won and a win will put them in collision course with seventh seed Cheng Xing and Zhang Chi of China.

Men’s Singles

Once again there are three Indian pairs in mixed doubles.World no. 32 Malvika, who had a solid quarterfinal run at her last Super 1000 (admittedly just after the Olympics), will start against Goh Jin Wei. The experienced Malaysian has beaten her in their only meeting.It’ll be a challenge this time though, as they are they haven’t had much match practise lately. The duo has played only once since the Olympics — at the season-ending China Masters Super 750 — where they gave a very good account of themselves by reaching the semis. Yet, the time away and Satwik’s injury layoff showed itself in their game. They would have had time with Tan to get into a rhythm and work on areas of improvement, which will now be tested on court.

HS Prannoy. MADS CLAUS RASMUSSEN/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images

This time last year, the 22-year-old was languishing in a first-round losing slump. In 2025, he is coming off a Super 300 title at Syed Modi and a third-place finish at the inaugural King’s Cup, an invitational badminton tournament put together by the legendary Lin Dan in China.World no. 34 Sathish Karunakaran and Aadya Variyath, who have started making BWF main draws regularly and can grow into a good combination. They will take on Ashith Surya and Amrutha Pramuthesh (WR 54) in an all-Indian first round match.Prannoy starts his campaign against young Canadian Brian Yang, in what is their first meeting. While some rustiness to be expected, it’s hard to predict a path ahead for Prannoy but a win could bring an even bigger challenge in the second round — seventh seed Li Shi Feng. The Chinese starts his campaign against another Indian, Priyanshu Rajawat who has been promoted from reserves.

Men’s Doubles

Another section where India has a sizeable representation this time with three pairs, two of them seeded, as the rest of the field underwent a pairing overhaul after the Olympics.

Treesa Jolly and Gayatri Gopichand. Zac Goodwin/PA Images via Getty Images

In singles, the return of HS Prannoy after a long injury layoff, Lakshya Sen’s development from dangerous floater to consistent player and the bench strength of women’s badminton in the absence of PV Sindhu will be the big storylines.

From an Indian perspective, this season marks a new era, transitioning after the Paris Olympics with new foreign coaches and a renewed goal of stepping up on the BWF titles pyramid. Winning big tour titles should be the new year resolution for most Indian badminton players.

Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty. Alex Pantling/Getty Images

As discussed earlier, Lakshya’s ability is without question, but what he needs is the mental wherewithal to take the next step — big titles — which will only come with consistent performances every week. The highest ranked Indian at world No 12, he will look to get back into the top 8, for seedings and better draws at big events.Here’s a look at the Indians’ draw and chances at the first tournament of 2025:

Sports

2025 NCAA DI women’s golf championship field announced

Share The field for the 2025 NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Championships, to be conducted May 16-21 at Omni La Costa Resort and Spa in Carlsbad, California has been determined. Regional play took place May 5-7 at six regional sites, with the top five teams and top individual not on a qualifying team advancing to […]

Published

on


DI women golf selections

The field for the 2025 NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Championships, to be conducted May 16-21 at Omni La Costa Resort and Spa in Carlsbad, California has been determined.

Regional play took place May 5-7 at six regional sites, with the top five teams and top individual not on a qualifying team advancing to the national championships. Regional sites included Charlottesville, Virginia; Columbus, Ohio; Gold Canyon, Arizona; Lexington, Kentucky; Lubbock, Texas; and Norman, Oklahoma.

Texas will serve as the host of the championships and GOLF Channel will provide live coverage for the final three days of the championships.

The teams and individuals advancing to the 2025 championships finals are listed below.

Charlottesville Regional Site:

1. South Carolina
2. Ole Miss
T3. Florida
T3. Virginia
5. UCLA

Individual: 1. Marie Madsen – NC State

Columbus Regional Site:

1. Kansas
2. Arkansas
3. Ohio State
4. UNLV
5. LSU 

Individual: 1. Moa Svedenskiold – Houston

Gold Canyon Regional Site:

1. Oregon
2. Arizona State
3. Oklahoma State
4. Mississippi State
5. Cal State Fullerton

Individual: 1. Anna Davis – Auburn

Lexington Regional Site:

1. Florida State
T2. Georgia Southern
T2. Kansas State
4. Southern California
5. Vanderbilt

Individual: 1. Sofia Barroso Sá – TCU

Lubbock Regional Site:

1. Wake Forest
2. Texas
3. Iowa State
4. Tennessee
5. Purdue

Individual: 1. Lousiane Gauthier – Florida Gulf Coast

Norman Regional Site: 

1. Stanford 
2. Northwestern
3. Michigan State
4. Oklahoma
5. Baylor

Individual: 1. Audrey Ryu – Furman

The championship format in Carlsbad will include 30 teams and six individuals completing 54 holes of stroke play, and then the top 15 teams along with the top nine individuals not on an advancing team competing for one additional day of stroke play to determine the top eight teams for match play competition and the 72-hole stroke play individual champion. The top eight teams then compete in match play for the team national championship to be decided May 21. 

2025 NCAA DII women’s golf championship field announced

The field for the 2025 NCAA Division II Women’s Golf Championships has been determined. The championships will be held May 13-17 at Boulder Creek Golf Club in Boulder City, NV, and hosted by the University of Las Vegas, Nevada and Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority.

READ MORE

2025 NCAA DII women’s golf championship: Qualifiers, schedule, results

Everything to know about the 2025 DII women’s golf championship, including qualifiers, schedule and results.

READ MORE

2025 NCAA women’s golf championship: Schedule, how to watch, qualifiers

Your complete guide to the 2025 NCAA women’s golf championship, including selection show details, qualifiers, schedule and more.

READ MORE





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Women’s sports are fighting an uphill battle against our social media algorithms

Women’s sport is more and more getting the attention it deserves. Stadiums are filling, television ratings for many sports are climbing and athletes such as the Matildas’ Mary Fowler, triple Olympic gold medallist Jess Fox and star cricketer Ellyse Perry are becoming household names. Despite this progress, an invisible threat looms, one that risks undoing […]

Published

on


Women’s sport is more and more getting the attention it deserves.

Stadiums are filling, television ratings for many sports are climbing and athletes such as the Matildas’ Mary Fowler, triple Olympic gold medallist Jess Fox and star cricketer Ellyse Perry are becoming household names.

Despite this progress, an invisible threat looms, one that risks undoing years of advocacy and momentum.

That threat is the algorithm.

How sports consumption is changing

As more fans consume sport through digital platforms such as YouTube, TikTok, Instagram and increasingly, AI-curated streaming services such as WSC Sports, the content they see is being selected not by editors but by artificial intelligence (AI).

Algorithms, trained to maximise engagement and profits, are deciding what appears in your feed, which video auto-plays next, and which highlights are pushed to the top of your screen.

But here is the problem: algorithms prioritise content that is already popular.

That usually means men’s sport.

This creates what researchers call an echo chamber effect, where users are shown more of what they already engage with and less of what they don’t.

In sport, this can be deeply problematic.

If a user clicks on highlights from the AFL men’s competition for example, the algorithm will respond by serving up more men’s footy content.

Over time, content from women’s competitions risks being squeezed out, not because it is unworthy but because it has not yet achieved the same levels of engagement.

This is not a glitch, it is a structural flaw in how digital platforms are designed to serve content.

It means women’s sport, already underrepresented in traditional media, risks becoming all but invisible to many users in this AI-driven ecosystem.

Also, generative AI tools such as ChatGPT, Sora and others don’t just curate content, they now create it.

Match reports, fan commentary, video summaries and social posts are being generated by machines. But these systems are trained on historical data, which overwhelmingly favours men’s sport.

So, the more content the algorithm generates, the more it reproduces the same imbalance. What was once human bias is now being automated and scaled across millions of screens.

This may sound abstract, but it has real-world consequences.

Young fans raised on algorithmically curated content are less likely to see women’s sport unless they actively search for it. And if they don’t see it, they don’t form emotional attachments to it.

That has major implications for ticket sales, merchandise, viewership and sponsorship investment.

An uphill battle

In short, visibility drives viability. If women’s sport becomes digitally invisible, it risks becoming financially unsustainable.

A 2024 study in Victoria shows only around 15% of traditional sports media coverage in the state goes to women’s sport. This mirrors a 2019 European Union study across 22 countries, which found 85% of print media coverage is dedicated to male athletes.

And while progress has been made, particularly during events such as the FIFA Women’s World Cup or the Olympics, regular, everyday visibility remains an uphill battle.

AI threatens to compound these historic disparities. A 2024 study found algorithms trained on historical data reproduce and even amplify gender bias.

The very systems that could democratise access to sport content may, in fact, be reinforcing old inequalities.

What can be done?

We can’t turn off the algorithm. But we can hold it to account.

Platforms like YouTube, TikTok and Netflix should be required to undergo independent algorithmic audits.

These would evaluate whether content recommendation engines are systemically under-representing women’s sport and propose changes.

In Europe, the Artificial Intelligence Act, one of the world’s first comprehensive AI regulations, requires transparency and oversight for high-risk AI applications. Australia and other countries should consider similar obligations for content platforms.

Sport organisations and broadcasters need to create intentional pathways for fans to discover women’s sport, even if they haven’t previously engaged with it.

That means curated playlists, featured stories and digital campaigns that surface content outside the fan’s usual algorithmic bubble.

Platforms must balance personalisation with diversity.

We also need better media literacy, especially for younger audiences. Fans should be encouraged to explore beyond what’s served to them, seek out women’s sport channels, and recognise when the algorithm is reinforcing narrow viewing habits.

Teaching this in schools, sport clubs and community programs could make a big difference.

An opportunity for Australia

Australia is well placed to lead this change because our women’s national teams are globally competitive, our domestic leagues are growing and fan appetite is rising.

But without visibility, this momentum can fade. We must remember that algorithms don’t just reflect our preferences, they shape them.

In an age where AI can dictate what we see, the battle for attention becomes even more crucial.

If we want women’s sport to thrive every week, we need to ensure it is seen, heard and valued in the digital spaces where fandom now lives.

Because in the age of AI, what we don’t see may be just as powerful as what we do.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Eastern Washington volleyball adds seven freshman, one transfer for upcoming season

From staff reports As the 2025 season approaches, Eastern Washington volleyball has finalized its roster with the addition of eight new players. Coach Jon Haruguchi announced last Thursday the signing of seven freshmen and one transfer. The incoming freshmen are Judi Bolomboy, Mia Polloi, Sidney Gray, Quincey McCoy, Camryn Hagel, Olivia Burns and Jailyn Davenport. […]

Published

on


From staff reports

As the 2025 season approaches, Eastern Washington volleyball has finalized its roster with the addition of eight new players.

Coach Jon Haruguchi announced last Thursday the signing of seven freshmen and one transfer. The incoming freshmen are Judi Bolomboy, Mia Polloi, Sidney Gray, Quincey McCoy, Camryn Hagel, Olivia Burns and Jailyn Davenport. Cassie Moeller, a transfer, will also be joining the team this season.

Moeller joins the Eagles after spending one year each at Western Washington University and Spokane Falls Community College, where she competed in both volleyball and track and field. A multisport athlete from Mead High School, she lettered all four years in volleyball and track.

“Cassie has been a volleyball and track athlete at Spokane Falls and the time she’s spent with those programs has really paid off for her,” Haruguchi said. “Her physicality, ability to score and strength as a defender are all things we saw during the evaluation process. I am so happy to have a local Spokane player join us in Cheney.”

Davenport is the only other player from Washington, coming to Cheney from Walla Walla.

The rest of the additions include two players from Texas, and one each from Oregon, Colorado, California and Hawaii.

College rowing

The Washington State women’s rowing Varsity 8 boat earned West Coast Conference Crew of the Week honors after a strong performance at the 2025 Lake Wheeler Invitational on April 25-26, the conference announced.

The WSU V8 placed fifth on Friday at the Lake Wheeler Invitational in 6 minutes, 33.91 seconds to finish ahead of teams like No. 24 North Carolina, Miami, Gonzaga and Boston in the 18-team field. On Saturday, the WSU V8 finished in 6:28.02 to place third among the competition that also included No. 12 Virginia and No. 18 Duke.

College golf

Washington State junior Sam Renner was named to the All-West Coast Conference men’s golf team, the conference announced.

Renner is enjoying the best season of his Cougars career with a 70.45 season scoring average, tops in program history, five top-10 and eight top-25 finishes following the WCC Championships last month. Renner’s season includes back-to-back tournament victories in the fall, the first time in program history a player has captured back-to-back medalist honors.

Renner has also shot par or lower in 24 of his 33 rounds, including 14 rounds in the 60s.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Over 100 Student-Athletes Set to Participate in Commencement Ceremonies

Story Links SPRINGFIELD — A total of 105 current and former Missouri State University student-athletes will participate in the university’s commencement ceremonies Friday at Great Southern Bank Arena on the Springfield campus. These student-athletes have completed — or will be completing — their undergraduate and post-graduate requirements this spring and […]

Published

on


SPRINGFIELD — A total of 105 current and former Missouri State University student-athletes will participate in the university’s commencement ceremonies Friday at Great Southern Bank Arena on the Springfield campus. These student-athletes have completed — or will be completing — their undergraduate and post-graduate requirements this spring and summer.
 
For the eighth straight year, students who are on track to complete their degrees during the summer term will also be recognized with the spring graduating class.
 
Including 80 student-athletes designated as spring graduates and 25 summer graduates, a total of 105 Bears will be “turning pro” in their various fields of study this week.
 
During the 2024-25 academic year, A total of 133 Missouri State student-athletes will have completed their degrees. That total includes 28 individuals who finished their program requirements in December of 2024 at the conclusion of the fall term.
 
The MSU spring student-athlete class of 80 graduates matches the third-largest on record, while the 133 total for the academic year matches last year for the fifth-highest total of graduating student-athletes.
 
The top commencement classes for Missouri State Athletics are now: May 2021 (82), May 2017 (81), May 2025 (80), May 2023 (79), May 2024 (79), May 2019 (79), May 2020 (75), May 2015 (73), May 2018 (71).
 
Over the last 10 years, MSU commencement exercises have seen 1,299 student-athletes earn degrees, while 518 former Bears have graduated over the past four years alone. This year also marks the 12th consecutive academic year with more than 100 graduating Bears student-athletes.

Football (23), women’s swimming & diving (16) and women’s soccer (11) paced all sports in terms of individual graduates for the 2025 spring and summer class.

 

The 2025 spring and summer commencement list also includes 38 MSU student-athletes graduating with academic honors and 23 earning post-graduate degrees.

 

Ten student-athletes earned the top academic honor of summa cum laude (###) with a cumulative grade-point average of 3.90 or higher, including: Alex Boutin (men’s swimming & diving); Riley Drew (beach volleyball); Maddy Bushnell (volleyball); Mackenzie Chacon (softball); Jenna Anderson (women’s soccer); Iraia Arrue (women’s soccer); Grace O’Keefe (women’s soccer); Ashlie German (women’s swimming & diving); Jordan Drum (women’s track & field); and Juliette Robinson* (women’s tennis). 

 

Ten additional student-athletes compiled GPAs in the 3.75-3.89 range to earn magna cum laude (##) distinction: Lilly Whitley (women’s golf); Kim DeBold (softball); McKenzie Vaughan (softball); Kaeli Benedict (women’s soccer); Brynna Rutherford (women’s soccer); Sophia Hawley (women’s swimming & diving); Amy Henning (women’s tennis); Katie Griffin (women’s track & field); Chris Bedsole* (men’s swimming & diving); Chayenne Chivrac* (women’s golf).

 

Eighteen additional student-athletes finished with GPAs in the 3.50 to 3.74 range to garner cum laude (#) laurels. Becca Bach (beach volleyball) and Juliette Robinson (women’s tennis) will also be recognized for their work with a more rigorous curriculum in Missouri State’s Honors College.

 

All told, Missouri State University will confer a total of 2,804 degrees during ceremonies at Great Southern Bank Arena on Friday, including 1,938 bachelor’s degrees, 736 master’s degrees, 123 doctorate degrees and seven specialist degrees. Beyond the standard expectations, the university will recognize 68 students for their work with a more rigorous curriculum in Missouri State’s Honors College. The university will recognize 202 students who will graduate summa cum laude, 236 who will graduate magna cum laude, and 383 who will graduate cum laude.

 

Ceremonies will take place at 9 a.m., 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. at Great Southern Bank Arena on the Springfield campus.

By sport, here are Missouri State’s spring and summer student-athlete graduates (see key at bottom of page):

Baseball (6): Drake Baldwin General Business)#; Tyler Epstein (M.B.A. Business Administration); Miles Halligan (General Business); Jackson Holmes* (Economics); Dalen Stewart (Entrepreneurship)#; Tyler Tscherter (Marketing Management).

Men’s Basketball (3): Elijah Bridgers* (Exercise & Movement Science); Wesley Oba (Data Analytics Grad Certificate); Allen Udemadu* (Psychology).

Football (23): Thomas Anderson (General Studies); Brock Bagozzi* (General Business); Caden Bolz (M.S. Kinesiology); Reggie Branch* (Criminology and Criminal Justice); ob Clark (M.B.A. Business Administration); Alama Collins (General Studies, Business Principles Undergraduate Certificate); Raveion Harrell (Sports Administration); Brett Harris (General Business); Mark Hutchinson* (Communication Studies); Jakael Jackson* (Cybersecurity, Web Programming Undergraduate Certificate); D’Vontae Key (Public Relations); Hutson Lillibridge (Mechanical Engineering Technology); Celdon Manning (M.B.A. Business Administration, Project Management Grad Certificate); Lance Mason (Financial Planning); Dylan Simmons* (Fintech); Darion Smith (General Studies); Jaquez Smith (General Studies); Ja’Veo Toliver* (General Studies; Eunique Valentine (Psychology); Armon Wallace (Sports Administration); E.J. Williams* (General Studies; Ryan Williams* (General Studies); Jalen Williams* (M.P.H. Public Health, Professional Studies Grad Certificate, Public Health Core Grad Certificate).

Men’s Golf (2): Hampus Wijkstrom (M.B.A. Business Administration); Ludvig Wijkstrom* (Economics).

Men’s Soccer (1): Will Lowry (Psychology, Criminology and Criminal Justice, Criminal Investigation Undergraduate Certificate).

Men’s Swimming & Diving (6): Chris Bedsole* (Cybersecurity)##; Alex Boutin (Supply Chain, Logistics and Operations Management)###; Aiden Dunn (Computer Science, Web Programming Undergraduate Certificate); Reese Hodgins (Fintech); Brek Stukerjurgen (Construction Management); Brunno Suzuki-Tomiyama (Economics)#.

Women’s Basketball (4): Lindsey Byers (Wildlife and Fisheries Biology)#; Khloe Moad* (Criminology and Criminal Justice, Criminal Investigation Undergraduate Certificate); Paige Rocca (M.B.A. Business Administration); Lacy Stokes (Health Services).

Beach Volleyball (5): Becca Bach (Cell & Molecular Biology, Health Sciences Undergraduate Certificate, Molecular Physiology Undergraduate Certificate, Human Genetics and Genomics Undergraduate Certificate)#; Macy Blackburn* (M.P.S. Professional Studies, Sports Management Grad Certificate); Anamarie Colon-Calero (Biology Pre-Teacher Education); Riley Drew (Speech-Language Pathology)###; Olivia Rattler (Public Relations).

Women’s Golf (4): Helena Bel (Mathematics, Physics)#; Chayenne Chivrac* (Sport and Recreation Administration, Sport Administration Undergraduate Certificate)##; Kayla Pfitzner (M.B.A. Business Administration, Marketing Analytics Grad Certificate); Lilly Whitley (Psychology, Mental Health and Spirituality Undergraduate Certificate)##.

Softball (5): Mackenzie Chacon (Speech-Language Pathology)###; Kim DeBold (Computer Animation)##; Kenzie Derryberry (Exercise & Movement Science)#; Chloe Merced (Exercise Science)#; McKenzie Vaughan (Exercise & Movement Science, Health Sciences Undergraduate Certificate)##.

Volleyball (4): Maddy Bushnell (also played Beach VB) (Exercise & Movement Science)###; GG Carvacho (M.S.E.D. Elementary Education, Elementary Curriculum and Instruction Grad Certificate); Josie Halbleib* (Advertising & Promotion)#; Morgan Sprague (also played Beach VB) (Sports Medicine).

Women’s Soccer (8): Jenna Anderson (Financial Planning)###; Iraia Arrue (Cybersecurity, IT Infrastructure)##; Kaeli Benedict (Exercise & Movement Science)##; Ana Paula Fraiz (Communication Studies)#; Eydis Helgadottir Computer Science)#; Julia Kristensen* (Advertising & Promotion); Grace O’Keefe (Mechanical Engineering Technology)###; Brynna Rutherford (Cybersecurity)##.

STUNT (1): Reagan Risner* (Criminology and Criminal Justice, Victim Advocacy Undergraduate Certificate)#

Women’s Swimming & Diving (16): Grace Beahan* (M.H.A. Health Administration); Jordan Boyce (M.S.E.D. Educational Technology, Online Teaching and Learning Grad Certificate); Kelsey Boyce* (M.B.A. Business Administration, Leadership Grad Certificate); Sierra Brannan (M.B.A. Business Administration); Lauren Chaney (Psychology)#; Ashlie German (Supply Chain, Logistics and Operations Management)###; Sophia Hawley (Creative Writing)##; Cabrini Johnson (M.S. Behavior Analysis, Autism Spectrum Disorders Grad Certificate); Paige Lenahan (Drawing); Sira Limbu (Cybersecurity); Samantha Roemer (M.H.A. Health Administration); Kelly Sego (M.B.A. Business Administration); Payton Smith (Exercise & Movement Science, Foundations of Nutrition Undergraduate Certificate); Courtney Stanbury (Supply Chain, Logistics and Operations Management); Jordan Wenner (M.S.E.D. Special Education, Autism Spectrum Disorders Grad Certificate); Yuliya Zubina (M.B.A. Business Administration, Marketing Analytics Grad Certificate).

Women’s Tennis (6): Cristina Flaquer (M.S. Cell & Molecular Biology); Amy Henning (Nutrition and Dietetics, Health Sciences Undergraduate Certificate, Foundations of Nutrition Undergraduate Certificate)##; Mary Houston* (M.S.E.D. English Education); Sandra Lukacova (Marketing Management)#; Kate Miley (Agricultural Finance & Management)#; Juliette Robinson* (Corporate and Investments Finance)###.

Women’s Track & Field (11): Jordan Drum (Exercise & Movement Science)###; Kylie Ghormley (Sports Medicine); Katie Griffin (Marketing Management)##; Meghan Halstead (Entrepreneurship); Mary Margaret Harris (Psychology); Victory Ifah (Sports Medicine, Infant and Toddler Development Undergraduate Certificate); Sophie Karney (Agricultural Communications, Event Planning Undergraduate Certificate); Anna Lombardo (Exercise Science)#; Kamdyn Moody (Actuarial Mathematics)#; Jaide Rose* (M.P.S. Professional Studies, Sports Management Grad Certificate); Grace Spoonhour (Professional Sales)#.

 

#BearGrads

KEY
### Summa Cum Laude

## Magna Cum Laude

# Cum Laude

* Summer term graduate (Summer commencement ceremonies were eliminated in 2018)

 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Portville Black improves to 3-0 in beach volleyball victory

Content, Daily Headlines, High School, Local Sports, Newsletter, Sports, Volleyball PORTVILLE- Rain and mud didn’t stop Battle of the Border high school beach volleyball on Monday. The day’s results are below. “website”:”Website” Link 2

Published

on


Portville Black improves to 3-0 in beach volleyball victory


Content, Daily Headlines, High School, Local Sports, Newsletter, Sports, Volleyball





PORTVILLE- Rain and mud didn’t stop Battle of the Border high school beach volleyball on Monday. The day’s results are below.







“website”:”Website”





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Princeton University

PRINCETON, N.J.- Gavin Molloy has been named the winner of the Scott A.C. Roche ’94 Memorial Award, the team announced. The Roche ’94 Award is awarded to the senior player or players who, like Scott, lead with energy and determination, intense competition spirit and a contagious love of the game. “I’m not sure I could […]

Published

on


PRINCETON, N.J.- Gavin Molloy has been named the winner of the Scott A.C. Roche ’94 Memorial Award, the team announced.

The Roche ’94 Award is awarded to the senior player or players who, like Scott, lead with energy and determination, intense competition spirit and a contagious love of the game.

“I’m not sure I could define Gavin’s contributions to this program better than the description of this award,” head coach Dustin Litvak said. “I did not have the pleasure of knowing Scott Roche but like Gavin, it sounds like he was both a culture changer and daily barometer of what it means to consistently bring every ounce of yourself, every day, for the benefit of the team. 

 

The 2025 senior class will go down as one of the most talented and successful in program history and Gavin raised the bar on how to approach training, compete with passion and celebrate the successes of the team and his teammates above his own. He’s the player you love to coach and his teammates love to play with and his next venture is very lucky to have him.”

Molloy saw time in over 100 career games for the Tigers and scored 54 goals, registered 102 assists, grabbed 59 steals, and drew 45 ejections. Molloy, a captain in his senior season, was part of Princeton’s four consecutive Northeast Water Polo Conference titles from 2021 to 2024.

 



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending