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Next generation shines as Kenya’s junior athletes dominate Afraha trials

Monday 23rd June, 2025 04:40 AM| By Raphael Munge Junior athletes in action during the 2000m race U-18 and U-20 trials at Afraha Stadium in Nakuru on Saturday, June 21, 2025. PHOTO/Raphael Munge The future of Kenyan athletics is in safe hands. That was the bold message at Afraha Stadium where junior stars […]

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Next generation shines as Kenya’s junior athletes dominate Afraha trials
Junior athletes in action during the 2000m race U-18 and U-20 trials at Afraha Stadium in Nakuru on Saturday, June 21, 2025. PHOTO/Raphael Munge

The future of Kenyan athletics is in safe hands.

That was the bold message at Afraha Stadium where junior stars dazzled during the National Under-18 and Under-20 Trials.




From South Rift to Nyanza, Central and beyond, junior athletes showcased raw talent and promise, a result of years of structured training and strategic planning.

Athletics Kenya (AK) Youth Development Director Barnaba Korir said the performances at the Afraha Stadium trials are proof that the federation’s nationwide programmes are working.

“What we’re seeing is not by chance. It’s the result of deliberate, consistent investment in young people,” noted Korir.

“Our holiday camps, school partnerships and regional camps are allowing our youth to dream and succeed.”

Barnaba commended all regions for producing top performers but highlighted South Rift’s leading role, describing it as a key pillar in AK’s development model.

“This region continues to lead in both numbers and structure. South Rift has nine active camps, the most in any region, and remains a cornerstone of our efforts,” said Korir.

Reflecting on his own experience as an athlete in the same region in 1983 before receiving a US scholarship, Korir noted how far youth athletics have come.

“Back then, we didn’t have the kind of support our athletes enjoy today. Now, with better coaching, facilities, and access to education, we are shaping not just great athletes, but great people,” he added.

Korir also emphasised the importance of holistic development and went ahead to credit AK’s school-based holiday training camps for combining academics with athletics, a model that prepares athletes for life beyond the track.

“Our vision is to raise disciplined, educated, and focused athletes who can represent Kenya with pride.”

In 2024, Korir said AK’s collaboration with the Ministry of Sports and the Ministry of Education has enabled a smoother transition for young athletes from school into competitive sport.

With the expected completion of renovations at Afraha Stadium, Korir promised that more national events will be held in such upgraded venues to inspire and reach more talent at the grassroots level.

Similarly, Korir reaffirmed AK’s commitment to integrity and clean athletics warning, “We are capturing accurate biodata from a young age to curb age cheating and doping. No one should mislead our youth with shortcuts. The future of athletics must be clean, honest, and athlete-centred.”

He reiterated that the government-supported U-20 training camps remain a crucial part of AK’s long-term plan.

“These camps allow us to walk with the athlete through every step. They are central to our development strategy.”

Concluding his remarks, Korir expressed optimism and national pride stating that across Kenya “we are seeing brilliance emerge. These young athletes are the heartbeat of our future, and we have to guide them every step of the way”.


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Greece’s men crush Italy 17-11 to advance into water polo semis

Greece’s men’s water polo team has cruised their way into the semi-finals with a dominant 17-11 victory over Italy at the World Water Polo Championship in Singapore. The men’s team dominated in their match with the 2024 runner-up, taking advantage of Matteo Iocchi Gratta’s send-off in the first period to win the quarter-final and book […]

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Greece’s men’s water polo team has cruised their way into the semi-finals with a dominant 17-11 victory over Italy at the World Water Polo Championship in Singapore.

The men’s team dominated in their match with the 2024 runner-up, taking advantage of Matteo Iocchi Gratta’s send-off in the first period to win the quarter-final and book a ticket against Spain in the semi-finals on Tuesday 22 July.

The win marked an historic moment as both Greece’s men’s and women’s teams reached the semi-finals of the same competition for the first time in the history of the World Aquatic Championships (of which the water polo events are part of).

The men’s team started well, with Kakaris and Nikolaidis winning two penalties in the first few minutes (one of which was converted, and the other seeing Argyropoulos send the ball against the post) and Panagiotis Tzortzatos making consecutive saves.

The Greek team led 3-1 and, at 1.50 minutes before the end of the first quarter, Iocchi Gratta hit Argyropoulos in the head out of phase and the referees, after consulting the video, sent him off.

Playing for four minutes with a numerical advantage, the Greeks had a great opportunity and did not let it go to waste, surging into a 7-1 lead.

The numerical balance was restored, but the Italians seemed helpless to react.

The Greek defence was strong, with Tzortzatos especially standing out with a remarkable 16 saves, and the difference increased even more, with Nikolaidis putting them 9-1 ahead with an impressive 2-meter rebound.

The Italians made a desperate effort to get back into the game, reducing the deficit on various occasions (9-3 and 11-5), but despite the consecutive expulsions and the loss of players with three penalties, the Greek team managed the match well enough without ever being at risk of loss.

The eight minutes (with the typical home team Italy first): 1-6, 1-3, 4-4, 5-4



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Golden State Valkyries, WNBA fans cheer on for all

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U.S. President Donald Trump has called on the NFL’s Commanders and MLB’s Guardians to revive their former nicknames. “The Washington “Whatever’s” should IMMEDIATELY change their name back to the Washington Redskins Football Team,” Trump wrote in a post on his Truth Social account Sunday. “There is a big clamoring for this. Likewise, the Cleveland Indians, […]

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U.S. President Donald Trump has called on the NFL’s Commanders and MLB’s Guardians to revive their former nicknames.

“The Washington “Whatever’s” should IMMEDIATELY change their name back to the Washington Redskins Football Team,” Trump wrote in a post on his Truth Social account Sunday. “There is a big clamoring for this. Likewise, the Cleveland Indians, one of the six original baseball teams, with a storied past. Our great Indian people, in massive numbers, want this to happen. Their heritage and prestige is systematically being taken away from them. Times are different now than they were three or four years ago. We are a Country of passion and common sense. OWNERS, GET IT DONE!!!”

Washington and Cleveland have both used their respective nicknames since 2022. From 2020–21, the NFL franchise was known as the Washington Football Team.

Trump has previously spoken publicly about his preference for both the Commanders and Guardians to use their former names.

D.C. Stadium Deal in Trouble?

Roughly five hours after Trump’s first post Sunday, he weighed back in on Truth Social to insinuate that the Commanders’ deal to build a $3.8 billion domed stadium in Washington, D.C., could hinge on a name change.

“My statement on the Washington Redskins has totally blown up, but only in a very positive way,” Trump wrote. “I may put a restriction on them that if they don’t change the name back to the original ‘Washington Redskins,’ and get rid of the ridiculous moniker, ‘Washington Commanders,’ I won’t make a deal for them to build a Stadium in Washington. The Team would be much more valuable, and the Deal would be more exciting for everyone.”

There have already been some political tensions over the Commanders’ plans to build on the grounds of their former home, RFK Stadium. The franchise is seeking more than $1 billion in public funding from the D.C. Council. 

Commanders owner Josh Harris had previously thanked Trump for his support in the Commanders striking a deal to build a new $3.8 billion stadium in D.C. In May, Trump hosted the Commanders and NFL commissioner Roger Goodell at the White House to announce that the 2027 NFL Draft would be held in Washington, D.C.

Harris has previously said a change back to Washington’s former name wasn’t on the table. However, the franchise is leaning into its past, particularly around the reveal of new retro uniforms that will be used this season, which harken back to the team’s glory days of the 1980s and early 1990s. Washington used the Redskins nickname from 1937 to 2019, and they won Super Bowls in 1982, 1987, and 1991. 

Guardians in Trump’s Crosshairs

Trump also added more thoughts about the Guardians in his second post Sunday.

“Cleveland should do the same with the Cleveland Indians,” he wrote. “The Owner of the Cleveland Baseball Team, Matt Dolan, who is very political, has lost three Elections in a row because of that ridiculous name change. What he doesn’t understand is that if he changed the name back to the Cleveland Indians, he might actually win an Election. Indians are being treated very unfairly. MAKE INDIANS GREAT AGAIN (MIGA)!”

Matt Dolan is the brother of Guardians chairman and CEO Paul J. Dolan, who has been the franchise’s controlling owner since January 2013. Larry Dolan, Matt and Paul’s father, died in February. Matt Dolan was a Republican member of the Ohio Senate from 2017 to 2024; he made unsuccessful bids for the U.S. Senate in 2022 and 2024.

Guardians president Chris Antonetti released a statement after Trump’s comments. “I understand there are very different perspectives on the decision we made a few years ago,” he said. “But it’s a decision we’ve made and we’ve gotten the opportunity to build the brand as the Guardians over the last four years and we’re excited about the future that’s in front of us.”

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‘Bagyong Baldo’ ravages PVL On Tour Passi

ILOILO, Philippines — Bagyong Baldo is in the City of Passi Arena.  Alyssa Valdez proved once more on why she’s called “The Phenom,” as she made it rain and stuffed the statistical sheet, recording a triple-double performance in the Iloilo leg of the 2025 Premier Volleyball League (PVL) On Tour last Sunday, July 20.  Valdez […]

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ILOILO, Philippines — Bagyong Baldo is in the City of Passi Arena. 

Alyssa Valdez proved once more on why she’s called “The Phenom,” as she made it rain and stuffed the statistical sheet, recording a triple-double performance in the Iloilo leg of the 2025 Premier Volleyball League (PVL) On Tour last Sunday, July 20. 

Valdez fired 19 points (16 attacks, and three aces), along with 11 excellent digs and 15 excellent receptions to lift the Cool Smashers past Chery Tiggo in four sets. 

The 32-year-old volleyball icon expressed her gratitude to the unwavering support of the Ilonggos, especially when Creamline absorbed a shocking loss against ZUS on the first day of the Iloilo leg.

“It’s my first time here in Passi. It’s great that we have our seventh man here also in Iloilo. It’s just so nice that we have lost the last game but the support is still solid on our second game,” she said.

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She made an all-around performance and flaunted her defensive side to fill up the absence of Bernadeth Pons, who is with the national beach volleyball team, and Tots Carlos, who has a minor injury.

With “Vintage Valdez” all over in social media, as she showed why she’s referred as the Philippine volleyball icon,  the former Ateneo de Manila University stalwart remained humble and credited her teammates.

“With the help of my teammates, and my coaches, hopefully, I’ll be more consistent and prepare more for the upcoming games,” she said while smiling and with satisfaction.

Coming off from back-to-back losses, an unfamiliar territory for Creamline, Valdez shared that the key to win against Chery Tiggo is to re-learn to enjoy volleyball again.

“Honestly, I think one thing that we realized, and we learned is that to enjoy the game and respect the game,” she said.

“We had a lot of lapses, and very specific lapses during our game (against ZUS) so we adjusted,” she added.

Creamline capped the first round with a 3-2 win-loss card.



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Stingers One-Point Loss in Quarter-Final Thriller

In the quarter finals of the World Aquatics Championships, the Australian Women’s Water Polo went down to World Cup champions Greece by one goal in the dying seconds of the game, 8-7. The scores were locked 7-7 with eight seconds left on clock, but the Aussie Stingers inexplicably turned over the ball and Greece managed […]

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In the quarter finals of the World Aquatics Championships, the Australian Women’s Water Polo went down to World Cup champions Greece by one goal in the dying seconds of the game, 8-7.

The scores were locked 7-7 with eight seconds left on clock, but the Aussie Stingers inexplicably turned over the ball and Greece managed to swim toward the Aussie goal, shooting from outside to beat the buzzer, scoring with two seconds left on the clock. 

There were never more than two goals separating the teams throughout the game, and while Greece were able to take narrow leads at the end of the second and third quarters, the momentum had certainly shifted the Aussies’ way in the final quarter. 

It was always going to be an emotion-charged game for the two sides, having faced off in the quarter finals at the 2024 Paris Olympics where Australia were able to take the win and go on to win the silver medal. But like Australia, the Greeks have a new look team and have already achieved strong results in this Olympic cycle. 

Newly named Aussie Stingers captain, dual Olympian and NSW Institute of Sport (NSWIS) scholarship holder Bronte Halligan, said naturally the team is devastated that they won’t have the opportunity to play for a World Championship medal. 

“That’s a really tough result. As Bec [Rippon, Aussie Stingers Head Coach] put it ‘that quarter final water polo you’ve got to take stick in it right to the end’ and we did.  The Greeks also did that but we showed real heart out there and I couldn’t be more proud of our girls for water polo we put together out there tonight.”

“We put together four quarters of tough, hard on the line water polo and that’s all you can ask for as a Captain.  It’s a tough loss and it’s going to sting for a little bit, but the girls will hold their heads high knowing we did everything we could have. 

“Four of the girls in our team, it was their first quarter final, and quarter finals water polo at a World Championships is always tough, it’s do or die. The result didn’t go our way, but I think we can take a lot away from that game. 

“This is a stepping stone and we really want to build this squad, we have a lot more goals. I think it’s exciting to see where we are going to go over the next few years during this Olympic cycle,” she said. 

Rippon echoed Halligan’s sentiment, saying despite the disappointment of the loss, there is a lot they can build on from here as they set their sights on LA 2028. 

“We spoke about it before the game, that this is what we do all the hard work for, these big moments, and we go out there and leave everything we’ve got in the pool and I think we did that tonight. 

“It is a heartbreaking way to lose, but we did leave everything out there and I’m proud of the team.”

“We played them [Greece] in Paris, but they had a different group and a different style.  They’ve really changed since then and we saw that at the World Cup earlier this year and they have shown they are definitely a team to be reckoned with. This is not a surprise that they’re up here competing for the medals. 

“We came here with big ambitions so to not reach those is disappointing, but if I can just look at the games we’ve played and the things that we’ve learnt and the performances we’ve put forward, I’m proud. 

“We now need to go home and analyse this campaign as we continue to build towards LA 2028,” she said. 

The team includes multiple NSWIS scholarship holders such as Hayley BallestySienna GreenBronte HalliganSienna HearnDani JackovichTilly KearnsAlexie LambertGen Longman, and Olivia Mitchell, as well as NSWIS staff – Senior Sports Physiotherapist Bernie Petzel and Sport Performance Analyst Joshua Dipple.

Australia will now meet Japan on Monday 21 July at 6:00pm AEST in the classification matches. 

Water Polo Australia



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With its Olympic stars away, U.S. women's gymnastics' future takes the floor

Claire Pease, with a steely gaze, started her vault run and then launched into the air, smoothly landing a Yurchenko double full and giving her coach a casual high-five as she walked off the floor. She didn’t know it at that moment, but the rising U.S. gymnast had just clinched herself a title at an […]

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With its Olympic stars away, U.S. women's gymnastics' future takes the floor

Claire Pease, with a steely gaze, started her vault run and then launched into the air, smoothly landing a Yurchenko double full and giving her coach a casual high-five as she walked off the floor.

She didn’t know it at that moment, but the rising U.S. gymnast had just clinched herself a title at an event Simone Biles has won the last five times she’s competed in it.

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“Tell you what, this athlete right here,” NBC’s John Roethlisberger said on the Peacock broadcast, “get ready, U.S. championships. Get ready, world championships.”

At Saturday’s U.S. Classic, America’s top elite women’s gymnasts honed their skills ahead of next month’s U.S. gymnastics championships, all of it building up to the world championships in October. There was some nostalgia. An Olympic champion was in the field. A Simone finished on the podium. However, most of it felt very new, a glimpse into what the Olympic future might look like for Team USA.

At 16, Pease will head to the U.S. championships entrenched as a name to watch after beating Simone Rose, Joscelyn Roberson, 2024 Olympic team gold medalist Hezly Rivera and plenty of others Saturday.

Biles was in the building, but not to compete. She was watching from the stands with husband Jonathan Owens, cheering on the next generation. Like her Olympic teammates Sunisa Lee, Jordan Chiles and Jade Carey, Biles stepped away from elite competition this year after the grueling run to gold in Paris.

“It means the world,” Roberson, an alternate on last summer’s Olympic team, said of Biles’ presence. “I mean, she’s the busiest human ever. She was at the ESPYs two days ago. She called me and she was like, ‘OK, I have this, this and this, but if you really want me there, I’ll be there.’ And I was like, ‘I kind of really want you there.’ And she was like, ‘OK, so it’s done.’”

Claire Pease


Claire Pease competes during Saturday’s U.S. Classic. The 16-year-old won the event, a major tune-up to next month’s U.S. championships. (Courtesy of USA Gymnastics)

Taking a break is nothing unusual following an Olympics, but for Biles, Lee and Chiles — three pillars of Team USA’s success over the last three Olympic cycles — all have extra considerations weighing on them.

Lee, the 22-year-old all-around gold medalist at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, was diagnosed with a kidney disease in 2023 but returned to competition that summer and went on to add an all-around bronze in Paris. She has not said whether she will try for the Los Angeles Olympics, still three years away, but in an October Q&A held on Snapchat, she responded to a question about it by writing, “my body hurts … this sport kills me.”

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Chiles, the 24-year-old key piece of the Americans’ team medals in the past two Olympics, had a hard-luck time of it in individual competition in Paris. She posted the fourth-best qualifying score in the individual all-around competition. Still, she wasn’t allowed to compete in the final because she was the third American on the list. Olympic rules only allow two from each country to participate in the final.

Then, she appeared to win her first individual Olympic medal after her coach appealed her score in the floor exercise and got it raised enough to move her from fourth to third. However, a counter-appeal claimed the Americans were four seconds late in lodging their protest, and the International Olympic Committee announced it would award the bronze to Romania’s Ana Bǎrbosu instead. Chiles has not returned her medal, and the case is ongoing.

Chiles — like Carey, who also has not decided on 2028 — chose to compete at the NCAA level this season. She has one more year to go at UCLA and has said she’ll reevaluate her feelings on trying for L.A. after that.

And, of course, there’s Biles. At 28, the most decorated gymnast in history has 11 Olympic and 30 world championship medals. She led the U.S. to team gold in 2016 in Rio de Janeiro and again last summer in Paris. In between, there was the bout with the “twisties” — a mental block affecting awareness and control while doing aerial maneuvers — in Tokyo that led her to withdraw from competition there.

Biles, too, is undecided on trying for the 2028 Olympics, but her recent comments do not exactly sound like someone itching to come back.

“I’ve accomplished so much in my sport. For me to come back, it would really have to excite me,” she told French newspaper L’Equipe in April. “But 2028 seems so far away, and my body is aging. I felt it in Paris.”

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At the very least, the U.S. women will head to this year’s world championships without four of the gymnasts who have been so key to their success across the past three Olympics. And at least one of them may decide that the mental and physical toll of another Olympic run is not worth the commitment in a sport that beats up the body and generally leans younger.

For the next generation of names atop the leaderboard in Hoffman Estates, Ill., that means their time is arriving. Pease, the 16-year-old who won the junior championship at this event last year, made her statement Saturday. In her final rotation, she posted the night’s best vault score to surpass Rose for the top spot on the podium.

“More confidence, more consistency, and high execution scores,” Pease said of what she’s trying to improve over the summer.

Rose, the 17-year-old who said making last year’s Olympic trials proved to her that she belonged in the gym with the sport’s best, has now finished on the podium at two significant competitions this season after her bronze at February’s Winter Cup.

“I heard a little bit, but I just wanted to focus on me and the gymnastics,” she said of knowing where she stood heading into the last rotation. “I didn’t care about the outcome. I just focused on how I did.”

Roberson, who was part of Team USA’s gold medal squad at the 2023 world championships, finished with a sparkling turn on the bars to finish in third place. At 19, she’s still getting used to being the veteran in situations like this.

“A lot of times, before these meets, I would get nervous, and I’d be like, ‘Oh, they’re not watching me, they’re watching (Biles). Just chill out.’ But now, knowing that they were watching me, that made me extremely nervous. And I had to remind myself, ‘This is what you worked your whole life for.’”

Hezly Rivera


Hezly Rivera made the Olympic squad last year, winning gold in the team event. At 16, she was the youngest Team USA athlete in Paris. (Courtesy of USA Gymnastics)

Rivera, 17, was the headliner going into Saturday after being part of the Americans’ team gold in Paris. She struggled early, with a bad fall on the dismount from the uneven bars and a slip off the beam before turning it around on floor and vault.

“It definitely took a lot of mental strength for me,” said Rivera, who was the youngest member of Team USA’s delegation in Paris last year. “I just wanted to show myself and prove to myself how strong I am. Because I know I can do everything physically, it’s just a mental game at this point. So I’m glad I just switched the flip from bars and beam to floor and vault.”

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The U.S. Classic is just one piece of the team selection puzzle in the build-up to worlds. Athletes are still fine-tuning their routines and working up to the biggest stage. However, with Biles, Chiles, Lee and Carey away, the next generation has the stage right now.

And in three years, any one of them could be a new face competing in the Olympics.

“It’s definitely crazy,” Ashlee Sullivan, 18, said of being in the spotlight after posting the night’s top score on the beam. “I never really think that people care. I don’t really feel like people know me or people really watch me, so it’s kind of crazy to hear all that.”

(Top photo of, from left, Simone Rose, Claire Pease and Joscelyn Roberson: Courtesy of USA Gymnastics)

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