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Opinion: The Reliance-Disney Star Merger

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GV Krishnamurthy (GVK)
GV Krishnamurthy (GVK)

Reliance’s acquisition of Disney Star’s India business is more than a corporate transaction it’s a seismic event that is reshape India’s media and entertainment landscape. By uniting Disney+ Hotstar, Viacom’s and Disney Star’s entire television portfolio (including GECs, movies, music, and sports channels), premium sports rights, and an extensive distribution network under one umbrella, Reliance has forged an end-to-end powerhouse that spans content creation, distribution, and monetisation.

What’s Included in the Deal

  • Disney+ Hotstar: India’s leading OTT platform, with over 55 million paid subscribers.
  • Television Channels: Viacom’s and Disney Star’s portfolio including GECs (family-viewing channels), movies, music, and sports channels.
  • Sports Rights: Exclusive digital (IPL, ICC tournaments) and television rights for cricket arguably the crown jewel of Indian sports broadcasting.
  • Distribution Infrastructure: While not part of this acquisition, Reliance already owns JioFiber (broadband), JioCinema (OTT), DEN Networks, and Hathway (cable distribution). These existing assets give Reliance near-complete control over the “pipeline” from studio to sofa. Moreover, Reliance is in advanced talks with multiple other MSO’s across the country for potential acquisitions, further extending its grip on distribution and last-mile connectivity.

Industry Snapshot (2024–25)

  • Total M&E Market: ₹ 2.5 trillion (US $ 29.4 billion) in 2024, up 3.3 percent year-on-year.
  • Digital Media: Now the largest segment, contributing 32 percent of overall revenues (₹ 802 billion in 2024, +17 percent YoY).
  • Television: Under pressure revenues fell 4.5 percent in 2024 after a 2 percent drop in 2023.
  • OTT Platforms: The market reached ₹ 37,940 crore in FY 24–25, with Disney+ Hotstar and JioCinema leading in subscriber count and engagement.
  • Digital Advertising: Grew 21.1 percent in 2024 to ₹ 49,251 crore, driven by performance marketing and digital OOH.
  • Sports Industry: Valued at roughly US $ 52 billion, outpacing telecom in growth underscoring how premium cricket rights command top dollar.

Vertical Integration & Synergies

  1. End-to-End Control
  • Reliance now “owns the entire stack”: licensing Disney Star originals for Hotstar, producing Hotstar exclusives, airing Viacom’s/Disney Star’s prime-time shows, and controlling cable distribution (DEN, Hathway), broadband (JioFiber), and streaming (JioCinema).
  • This vertical integration grants unprecedented leverage over advertising inventory, subscription pricing, and promotional bundling.
  1. Digital Dominance
  • Merging Disney+ Hotstar’s 55 million + paid users with JioCinema’s free and paid tiers accelerates scale: Reliance can claim India’s largest OTT subscriber base, eclipsing Netflix, Prime Video, Zee5, SonyLIV, and MX Player.
  • In sports streaming especially IPL—Reliance will funnel all premium cricket rights through JioCinema/Hotstar (Now Jio Hotstar), making it nearly impossible for rivals to compete.
  1. Consumer Convenience (& Concerns)
  • A single “one-stop shop” could yield unified apps, bundled subscriptions, and integrated user accounts (watch history, recommendations, payments) across sports, movies, series, and live TV.
  • Conversely, fewer standalone subscription options, potential price hikes, and more aggressive ad loads could erode consumer choice over time.

The Upside: Scale, Simplification, Innovation

  • Unmatched Scale: Reliance is now India’s biggest content owner across TV, digital, and sports. Advertisers face a single entity controlling an estimated 70 percent of premium inventory across multiple screens.
  • Operational Synergies: Shared technology platforms (CDN’s, recommendation engines, ad servers), unified data analytics (viewership patterns across cable and OTT), and cross-promotion between Jio’s telecom user base and Disney Star’s loyal subscribers create cost efficiencies.
  • Content-Tech Fusion: Reliance can leverage Jio’s first-party data (demographics, broadband usage) to personalise recommendations on Hotstar/JioCinema potentially leapfrogging global OTT competitors on engagement.

The Downside: Monopoly Risks, Creative Constraints, Market Distortion

  1. Agency Dynamics Shift
  • Historically, media agencies negotiated rates between multiple broadcasters and platforms. Now, with Reliance controlling both inventory (Viacom’s/Disney Star channels, Hotstar, JioCinema) and distribution (DEN, Hathway), bargaining power tilts heavily toward the seller.
  • “Rate cards” may become non-negotiable. Agencies will have little choice but to buy standardised packages; volume or loyalty discounts could vanish.
  1. Barrier to New Entrants
  • Startups or mid-sized OTT platforms will struggle to secure marquee content or premium sports rights. Content budgets must now compete not just on creative merit, but on distribution scale that few niche players can match.
  • Regional players need deep pockets or must carve hyper-niche segments (e.g., ultra-local language web series, micro-genres) to remain relevant.
  1. Regulatory Blind Spots
  • The Competition Commission of India (CCI) may face scrutiny over ultra consolidation: one entity controlling content creation, rights, advertising inventory, cable networks, broadband, and mobile distribution.
  • Cricket rights alone account for over half of Hotstar’s subscription revenue; funneling them exclusively through Jio platforms could be construed as anti-competitive, especially if bundled with telecom/broadband plans.

TV vs Digital: Is Traditional Media on Borrowed Time?

  • Linear TV’s Lingering Reach
  • Over 220 million TV households still rely on cable and satellite, especially in Tier II/III towns and rural areas. Broadcasters like Sun TV, Zee (Z), and Sony remain vital for regional GEC, movie, music, and sports content.
  • Yet, ad revenue on TV is in decline: a 4.5 percent drop in 2024 signals waning advertiser interest as digital viewership grows.
  • Digital Acceleration
  • Reliance’s play: shift viewers (and ad dollars) behind the paywall. Live sports, family-drama serials, and Bollywood blockbusters once free on TV now become premium digital offerings.
  • TV networks that can’t pivot risk losing viewer mindshare. Regional channels with strong local content can still thrive but only if they adapt distribution (e.g., launch affordable OTT tiers, partner with rural broadband initiatives).

Implications for Stakeholders

  1. Regional Broadcasters
  • Must invest aggressively in digital analytics, localised OTT platforms, and community engagement. Deep cultural resonance (dialects, folklore, hyper-local stories) will be their competitive moat.
  • Lower-cost subscription models tailored to sub-₹ 200 per month can win over price-sensitive viewers in Bharat.
  1. National Networks (Sony, Zee (Z), Viacom18, Sun TV, Enterr10 etc..)
  • Reassess partnerships: explore tie-ups with telecom or tech firms (e.g., partnering with Airtel, GenNext Technologies) for distribution.
  • Double down on original IP franchise series, reality shows with big-ticket sponsors, and co-productions with international studios to differentiate from Reliance’s mass-market offerings.
  1. Agencies
  • With price negotiation power eroding, agencies must pivot from “media buying” to “media advisory.” Clients will value data-driven insights: ROI-focused planning, attribution modelling, cross-channel synergy.
  • Emphasize programmatic efficiency and performance marketing where small-to-mid-tier publishers or digital-first platforms may still offer yield at competitive CPMs.
  1. Brands & Marketers
  • Initially, many may pay a premium to maintain reach especially during high-visibility events like IPL. But if ROI doesn’t justify costs, they will explore alternatives: influencer marketing, regional OTT tie-ups, or direct-to-consumer (D2C) digital campaigns.
  • Data transparency becomes paramount: brands will demand third-party viewability audits (e.g., Nielsen Digital Ad Ratings) to measure actual engagement rather than relying solely on Reliance’s dashboards.
  1. Content Creators
  • Big studios may receive first priority for budgets benefiting those who can deliver franchise-worthy content. Niche filmmakers, indie creators, and regional storytellers must forge alliances with alternative platforms (e.g., Hoichoi for Bengali, Aha for Telugu) or pivot to short-form verticals (YouTube, Instagram Reels) to stay visible.
  1. Consumers
  • Short-Term Gains: Consolidated bundling could drive down monthly subscription costs (e.g., “Jio + Hotstar bundle at ₹ 299/month” instead of separate ₹ 199 + ₹ 399 plans).
  • Long-Term Risks: Less diversity of choice. As content libraries consolidate, viewers may face higher renewal rates, bundled ad loads, and fewer alternatives. Subscription fatigue and churn could rise unless Reliance maintains clear value.

Consequences for Brands

If Disney Star-Reliance hikes CPM’s for digital without improving transparent measurement or drives up CPRP’s for linear TV while viewership data remains opaque brands risk plowing budgets into “black boxes.” Over time, they may demand:

  • Independent viewability audits (to validate impressions and completion rates).
  • A/B testing of ad creatives (to optimise audience engagement).
  • Stronger ROI guarantees, such as pay-per-view or pay-per-action models, and performance-based buys.

The Bigger Picture: Beyond Media—A Market Realignment

While Reliance-Disney Star consolidation focuses on supply-side dominance, an equally powerful force looms on the demand side: agency consolidation. If Omnicom and IPG merge to become the largest holding company and WPP remains the other global giant then two behemoths (WPP and the combined Omnicom-IPG) would command most major brand budgets. The result? A duopoly on both supply (Disney Star-Reliance) and demand (WPP and Omnicom-IPG), controlling over 70 percent of market flow.

  • Ad Pricing: Will be “dictated, not negotiated.” Scarce premium inventory means standardised packages at premium price points; custom campaigns or bulk discounts become expensive.
  • Innovation at Risk: With giant duopolies focused on protecting margins, experimental or niche content may struggle to secure funding. Unless smaller players innovate in distribution (e.g., programmatic guaranteed, private marketplaces), creative diversity could shrink.
  • ROI Under Pressure :As transparent measurement erodes—both in TV (BARC controversies) and digital (no independent auditing)—brands may struggle to optimise spends. When ROI dips, they will shift budgets into alternative channels: performance marketing, influencer collaborations, regional platforms, or direct social engagement.

Final Thoughts: A New Era of Convergence and Competition

Reliance’s acquisition of Disney Star India isn’t just asset consolidation; it’s a strategic blueprint for the future of Indian entertainment. By owning content, distribution, data, and monetisation, Reliance is poised to define what a billion Indians watch, how they watch it, and at what cost. But with that power comes responsibility: to maintain competitive pricing, transparent measurement, and a diverse content slate across languages and genres.

The winners in this new paradigm will be those who:

  1. Embrace Transparency
  • Adopt independent measurement tools (third-party view ability, brand lift studies, A/B testing frameworks).
  • Provide granular insights into audience behaviour, cross-platform engagement, and incremental lift.
  1. Innovate at the Edge
  • Launch hyper-local or niche offerings whether a Tamil thriller anthology on Aha, a Marathi short-form series on MX Player, or a gaming-centric OTT hub targeting Gen Z.
  • Leverage emerging technologies (AR/VR matchday experiences, interactive storytelling) to differentiate.
  1. Prioritise Data-Driven ROI Models
  • Move beyond “reach and frequency” to “engagement and conversion.”
  • Offer performance-based advertising options (e.g., pay-per-click, pay-per-view) alongside traditional CPM/CPRP buys.
  1. Champion Consumer Choice
  • Bundle sensibly: avoid forcing consumers into “all-or-nothing” packages.
  • Maintain a freemium (ad-supported) tier for price-sensitive segments, while offering customisation for premium viewers.
  • At its core, media and entertainment exist to serve viewers and to amplify brands’ stories. If measurement and choice erode under duopolistic pressures, the entire ecosystem risks stagnation. Yet history shows that every Goliath makes room for a new David: a nimble competitor armed with deep local insights, a transparent value proposition, and a relentless focus on user experience.

The future belongs not to the largest checkbook, but to those who deliver transparent value at scale, in real time, and with unwavering focus on both viewer delight and brand performance. Let the new media game begin. But let’s remember: in every era of consolidation, there’s always room for innovative challengers who rewrite the rules.



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No. 1 Long Beach State Men’s Volleyball Wins NCAA National Championship – The562.org

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The Long Beach State men’s volleyball program lives by the slogan “expect greatness.” So when they took the court against UCLA in the NCAA Men’s Volleyball National Championship, they expected nothing less.

Featuring two of the top teams in the nation in a rematch of last year’s national championship, the match was expected to be intense and tightly contested. But the Beach put on a performance nothing short of greatness, avenging their championship loss with a commanding sweep over the Bruins at the Covelli Center in Columbus, Ohio. The Beach won 25-17, 25-23, 25-21.

It marks a fourth national championship in program history and the first since the Beach went back-to-back in 2018-2019. Head coach Alan Knipe has been a part of each national championship with the program, one as a player in 1991 and now his third as a coach here in 2025. Knipe later announced his retirement in 2025, finishing his legendary career on top.

“It’s incredible. The feeling absolutely never gets old,” Knipe said. “I’m so proud of the guys and everything they did all season long. With what we went through with our lineups and our roster, and pretty much a brand new team at the beginning of the year, losing three starters along the way, and changing guys’ positions. [These guys] handled it so well and I’m so proud of them.”

The match started and ended in the same way, and it’s the same way it’s been all season: Moni Nikolov. The National Player of the Year opened the match with his first of four aces and swung on an overpass for a kill at match point to seal the win. He finished the match with six kills on .300 hitting and had a match-high 27 assists.

“It’s such a relief. I wanted this win more than anything else,” Nikolov said. “I’m so glad that I got to share these emotions with our coaches in the whole team. It was the first time I actually started crying tears of joy so it truly meant so much to me.”

The fourth NCAA Men’s Volleyball National Championship comes in the Beach’s 11th championship appearance in program history, in what was a dominant season through and through. The Beach was ranked No. 1 in the nation for the last 14 weeks. It’s their third men’s volleyball championship in the last seven years, but it’s the first for Bobby Smitheran as athletic director.

“I’m so happy for the young men in our program because they’ve represented Long Beach and Long Beach State,” said Smitheran. “They’ve done it with heart and with class I’m just so proud of the way they’ve competed. To be the number one ranked team for as long as they have, that’s difficult to give that kind of bullseye on your back and to finish it off the way they did I’m just so happy for them.”



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Fall 2025: Varsity volleyball – Grosse Pointe News

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Aneta Kucerova Represents Asheville at International Road Race

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PEUERBACH, Austria – Sophomore Aneta Kucerova of the UNC Asheville cross country/track and field programs represented Asheville and Czechia by competing in the Run of the Aces International Road Race. 

The Run of the Aces originated as the “Run of Champions” at the New Year’s Eve Run in the summer of 1989. Olympic champions, world champions, European and African champions, as well as countless national champions from more than 30 nations, have attended the International Raiffeisen New Year’s Eve Run ever since. The “Run of Champions” is the sporting showdown of the international stars of the running scene – world-class running up close.

Kucerova ran the 5,100m race in 17:50.23 and finished in 14th. 

The official results are available here. 

Kucerova and the Bulldogs officially open indoor track and field season on Saturday, Jan. 10, in the UNC Asheville Collegiate Opener at Tryon International. 



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Jocelyn Pringle – University of Miami Athletics

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Get To Know U:
Get To Know U is a series that introduces the newest members of the Miami Hurricane Track & Field family. With this edition of Get To Know U, we get a chance to meet Jocelyn Pringle.

Name:  Jocelyn Pringle
Hometown:  Jacksonville, Florida
Previous School:  East Carolina
Year in School: Junior
Major:  Communications

Four Questions
Q: Why did you choose Miami?
A: I chose Miami to finish out my athletic career because I wanted to be part of a program that pushes me to grow and compete at the highest level. Coach Young and Coach Deem and what they have built here made it an easy choice. Plus, my teammates make it easy to be myself every day. And honestly, I couldn’t stay away from the sunshine state any longer… I was starting to forget what palm trees looked like. 

Q: How has your time at Miami been so far?
A: I love Miami so much. It’s been so nice being back, closer to home. The school is so beautiful, i cant get enough walking around going to my classes and being outside for practices.

Q: What has been your favorite part of being a Hurricane?
A: I love being a Hurricane because it is the people I’m surrounded by make all the difference. My coaches and teammates are incredibly supportive and dedicated, and their drive pushes me to give my best every day.

Quick Hits
Favorite Athlete: Kobe Bryant
Favorite Meal: Cuban food with yucca, tostones and pulled pork
Favorite Movie: The Great Gatsby
Favorite Music Artist: Drake or 21 Savage
My first pets were:  A guinea pig named Abraham
The farthest place from home I’ve been is:  Oklahoma
In my spare time, I like to: Go to the beach or hang out with my friends
My nicknames is: Jo, Jojo





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A Quarter-Century Of Memorable Bulldog Moments

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By John Frierson
Staff Writer

As the first 25 years of the century come to a close, let’s take a look back at some of the most memorable moments, plays, seasons and achievements in Georgia athletics from 2000 through this year. There are far more than 25 worthy of remembering and relishing — a list of 100 certainly would have been possible — but below are 25 spread across all of the Bulldogs’ sports.

These aren’t ranked, just listed randomly, and quite a few humdingers, from Sony Michel’s game-winning touchdown run to win the Rose Bowl to a multitude of Olympic moments of glory by former Bulldogs, were left off to whittle the list down to 25. And at the rate that current and former Georgia student-athletes and teams are achieving great things, the list for 2050 is going to be spectacular.

25 Moments From The Past 25 Years

Football: Ringo Seals 2021 National Championship With INT

Let’s start with the one that probably comes to mind first for many Georgia fans. On Jan. 22, 2022, the Georgia football team captured its first national championship since 1980 with a 33-18 win over Alabama in Indianapolis. It was cornerback Kelee Ringo’s 79-yard interception return for a touchdown late in the game that sealed the victory — Georgia trailed 18-13 with 10:14 left in the game — and secured the Bulldogs’ long-awaited national title.

Equestrian: Program Makes Its Debut In 2002, Many Championships Follow

Georgia’s equestrian team didn’t have to wait long for its first national championship. The program was founded in June of 2001 and began competing in 2002 under the only head coach it has ever had, Meghan Boenig. The Bulldogs won the national title in their first two seasons and have added six more, including in 2025.

Baseball: 2008 Bulldogs Win All Major SEC Awards, Reach CWS Final

The 2008 season was a special one for Georgia baseball, with Gordon Beckham being named both the SEC Player of the Year and SEC Scholar-Athlete of the Year, Joshua Fields named SEC Pitcher of the Year, and David Perno named the SEC Coach of the Year. The Bulldogs advanced all the way to the College World Series finals that season for the second-best finish in program history, and Beckham and Fields were later selected in the first round of the 2008 MLB Draft.

Softball: Puailoa Walk-Off Blast Beats No. 1 Florida, Sends Bulldogs to 2016 WCWS

On the other diamond, Georgia’s softball team advanced to the Women’s College World Series in dramatic fashion in 2016. Facing No. 1 Florida in Gainesville in the Super Regional, Kaylee Puailoa sent the 16th-seeded Bulldogs to Oklahoma City with a pinch-hit walk-off home run. Georgia won the first game in the series and was down 2-1 and down to its final strike against the two-time defending national champs when Puailoa hit a two-run blast over the wall in center field.

Men’s Tennis: Boeker Captures Triple Crown in 2001

One of the greatest players in Georgia tennis history, Matias Boeker not only led the Bulldogs to the 2001 NCAA team title, he also won the NCAA singles and doubles (with partner Travis Parrott) championships, In the modern era of NCAA men’s tennis, since 1977 when the team tournament was added, only two players before Boeker had ever achieved the triple crown — and nobody has done it since. Boeker won the NCAA singles title again in 2002, and he was inducted into the ITA Men’s Tennis Hall of Fame in 2017.

Track and Field: Women and Men Win NCAA Titles in 2018

It’s fair to say that 2018 was the best year ever in the long history of Georgia’s men’s and women’s track and field programs. At the NCAA Indoor Championships in March, the women’s team captured the program’s first national championship. In June, the men’s team won its first national title at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. At the Indoors, Georgia went 1-2-3 in the long jump, with Kate Hall winning the title, Keturah Orji placing second and Tara Davis third, and Orji won her third straight triple jump title, to help propel the Bulldogs to the championship. At the Outdoors, Denzel Comenentia won the hammer throw and the shot put to help put Georgia on top.

Gymnastics: GymDogs Send Yoculan Leebern Out With Fifth Straight Title

The most accomplished program in Georgia history is gymnastics, which has won 10 NCAA team championships. On April 17, 2009, legendary coach Suzanne Yoculan Leebern ended her career with a fifth straight national title. From 1984-2009, Yoculan Leebern built Georgia into the gold standard of success, with 10 NCAA titles and 16 SEC crowns. The 2009 team featured five All-Americans, a record of 32-1, and a trio of individual NCAA titles for Courtney Kupets Carter (more on her later).

Swimming and Diving: Shealy, Kowal Lead Bulldogs to Second Straight NCAA Title

In 1999, Kristy Kowal won a pair of NCAA breaststroke titles to help lead the Georgia women’s program to its first national championship. The following year, the Bulldogs made it two in a row, with Kowal winning two more breaststroke titles and the 200-meter individual medley, as well as teaming up to win the medley relay. Courtney Shealy joined her on that winning relay squad and also won individual titles in two freestyle events and the 100 backstroke. The Georgia women made it three straight in 2001 and have added four more NCAA team titles since.

Women’s Tennis: Bulldogs Win Two National Titles in 2025

Georgia’s women’s tennis program has been a national powerhouse for the past three decades, but the 2025 season was one of the best in school history. The Bulldogs captured the ITA National Indoor title in February, dropping just two matches en route to the championship, and followed that by winning the SEC tournament and then storming through the NCAA tournament. In six NCAA matches, Georgia won five of them 4-0, including the final against rival Texas A&M, which had knocked off the Bulldogs in the 2024 NCAA final.

Soccer: Bulldogs Win Program’s First SEC Tournament in 2023

It didn’t take long for Keidane McAlpine to lead the Georgia soccer team to its first conference championship. Hired in December 2021, McAlpine began a swift turnaround in 2022 that included a return to the NCAA tournament for the first time since 2014. In 2023, the Bulldogs had their best season in program history, winning their first SEC East Division title and then winning the SEC tournament. Georgia rallied from deficits against Kentucky and Texas A&M to reach the title game, and then played stellar defense against Arkansas in the final to win 1-0. The Bulldogs went on to reach the Sweet 16 of the NCAA tournament for only the second time in program history.

Women’s Golf: Bulldogs Surge Past Duke For 2001 NCAA title

At the 2001 NCAA Women’s Golf Championships, Georgia trailed Duke by four strokes heading into the final round before mounting a big rally to win the program’s first national title. The Bulldogs got off to a hot start and had moved ahead by three strokes by the sixth hole, and Duke never got closer than two strokes the rest of the way. Four golfers finished among the top 20 on the individual leaderboard, with Reilley Rankin tying for 10th, Laura Henderson and Angela Jerman tying for 13th and Summer Sirmons tying for 18th.

Men’s Basketball: Bulldogs Win Wild 2008 SEC Tournament

The 2008 SEC men’s basketball tournament was unlike any other. The event was disrupted by bad storms in the Atlanta area, forcing the games to move from the Georgia Dome to Georgia Tech’s Alexander Memorial Coliseum. Georgia won four games in three days to win the title, beating Ole Miss in overtime in the opening round. Before the Bulldogs tipped off against Kentucky, a tornado hit the Georgia Dome, delaying the game a day and forcing the move to Tech’s arena. Georgia beat Kentucky and Mississippi State on the same day, and then knocked off Arkansas in the final.

Women’s Basketball: Nolan and Miller Twins Selected In First Round of 2001 WNBA Draft

On April 20, 2001, Georgia’s Kelly and Coco Miller and Deanna Nolan were selected in the first round of the WNBA Draft. Nolan went on to win three WNBA titles with Detroit and was the Finals MVP in 2006, while Kelly Miller won a title with Houston in 2007. In the finals of the 2001 SEC tournament, Kelly Miller hit a jumper with .8 seconds left to beat Vanderbilt, 62-60, and lift the Lady Bulldogs to their first conference tourney title since 1986.

Volleyball: Record Crowd of 8,719 Packs The Steg

Playing in front of a record crowd of 8,719 fans at Stegeman Coliseum on Oct. 17, 2025, the Georgia volleyball team earned a 3-2 win over Alabama. The huge turnout set a new program and NCAA volleyball state attendance record, topping last season’s record high of 8,376. As senior Estelle Haugen said after the match, five-setters take their toll physically and mentally. “We felt the crowd push us to that five-set” victory, she said.

Men’s Golf: Bulldogs Capture Program’s Second NCAA Title in 2005

In 2005, men’s golf won the program’s second NCAA title, and head coach Chris Haack was named the National Coach of the Year. That team featured numerous future PGA Tour winners in Chris Kirk, Kevin Kisner and Brendon Todd. Those three, plus teammates Richard Scott and David Denham, were all named All-Americans.

Football: “Hobnail Boot” Play Beats No. 6 Tennessee in 2001

Any list of former Georgia radio legend Larry Munson’s greatest calls during his extraordinary career is going to include his classic play-by-play of Georgia’s 26-24 win at Tennessee on Oct. 6, 2001. After quarterback David Greene hit running back Verron Haynes in the end zone for a game-winning 6-yard touchdown with five seconds left, Munson produced one of the greatest lines ever: “We just stepped on their face with a hobnail boot and broke their nose — we just crushed their face!”

Men’s Tennis: Isner Leads Bulldogs To Undefeated Season In 2007

In 2006, the Georgia men’s tennis team was undefeated heading into the NCAA finals against Pepperdine. The Bulldogs came up short that day against the Waves, and star junior John Isner didn’t want to end his great Georgia career that way. Isner came back for his senior season rather than turning pro, and led the Bulldogs all the way to an undefeated season and the ITA National Indoor and NCAA team titles. Georgia was dominant throughout the 2007 season, going 32-0 despite playing 18 teams ranked in the top 25. Isner went on to a long pro career that included 16 tournament titles, reaching the finals of Wimbledon in 2018. and a career-high ATP Tour ranking of No. 8. Isner and legendary Georgia coach Manuel Diaz will be inducted into the ITA Hall of Fame in May 2026, when the NCAAs return to the Dan Magill Tennis Complex.

Swimming and Diving: Bulldogs Take Gold, Silver In 400 IM at 2021 Olympics

Former Georgia swimming and diving head coach Jack Bauerle had countless special moments in his long career, but few rival what happened at the Tokyo Olympics. On July 24, 2021, former Bulldogs Chase Kalisz and Jay Litherland finished first and second in the men’s 400-meter individual medley. Kalisz, the silver-medalist in the event in 2016 and the NCAA champion in 2013 and ’16, was the heavy favorite in the event and won in 4:09.42. Litherland rallied in the final leg to place second with a time of 4:10.28. Another former Bulldog, Hali Flickinger, won bronze in the women’s 400 IM that same day.

Baseball: Condon Has Season For the Ages In 2024

In 2024, Charlie Condon had one of the best seasons ever, winning the Dick Howser Trophy and the Golden Spikes Award, the top awards in college baseball, and earning consensus National Player of the Year honors. He was the third player in NCAA Division I history to lead the country in batting (.433) and home runs (a school-record 37), and he led the nation in slugging percentage (1.009). And on July 14, he became the highest draft pick in program history when he was selected third overall by the Colorado Rockies.

Softball: In 2014, Georgia Won First SEC Softball Tournament Title

Entering the 2014 SEC softball tournament in Columbia, S.C., as the No. 5 seed, Georgia had to go through fifth-ranked Florida and sixth-ranked Alabama to advance to the title game. The Bulldogs blanked Florida 2-0 and knocked off the Crimson Tide 5-3, and then got a gem from pitcher Chelsea Wilkinson in the final against Kentucky. She struck out nine batters in the Bulldogs’ 5-2 win, while Geri Ann Glasco went 3-for-4 at the plate with a home run and two RBIs to help lift the Bulldogs to their first SEC tourney title.

Track and Field: Orji Caps Legendary Career With Bowerman Award

On Dec. 20, 2018, Keturah Orji capped one of the greatest careers in Georgia athletics history by becoming the program’s first winner of The Bowerman award, which is the top honor in track and field. She was also named the 2018 NCAA Woman of the Year, and she helped the Bulldogs win the program’s first NCAA team title by winning the triple jump and placing second in the long jump. The most accomplished women’s field event student-athlete ever, she won seven NCAA triple jump titles (three indoor, four outdoor) and the outdoor long jump in 2018. Orji placed fourth in the triple jump in the 2016 Olympics in Rio, seventh at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 and ninth in Paris in 2024.

Gymnastics: Kupets Carter Has Greatest Career In History

Courtney Kupets Carter is one of the greatest gymnasts in NCAA history. She won the Honda Award in 2007 and 2009, as well as the Honda Broderick Cup in 2009. A 2004 Olympian before she arrived at Georgia, Kupets Carter won NCAA all-around titles in 2006, ’07 and ’09, as well as the 2007 vault title, the 2009 floor title, and the bars and beam titles in 2006 and ’09. By the time Kupets Carter’s GymDogs career was over, she’d won three NCAA all-around titles (she missed one NCAAs with an injury), two bars titles, two beam titles, and one title each on bars and beam. She was also part of four straight national championship teams from 2006-09.

Swimming and Diving: Bauerle Leads US Women’s Team in Beijing Olympics

At the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, China, Georgia’s Jack Bauerle was the head coach of the U.S. women’s team — a team that saw former Bulldog Kara Lynn Joyce earn two silver medals and Allison Schmitt earn a bronze. The American women won 14 medals in Beijing, the most of any nation. Eight other Bulldogs also swam in the Games. Bauerle also served as an assistant coach on U.S. squads at the 2000, 2016 and 2020 Games, and was a personal coach in 2004 and 2012. In 2022, Bauerle retired after 43 years, having led the Georgia women’s team to seven NCAA team titles (1999, 2000, ’01, ’05, ’13, ’14, ’16).

Women’s Tennis: Vidmanova Completes Career Triple Crown

Dasha Vidmanova did it all during her extraordinary Georgia women’s tennis career. In 2025, she wrapped up her time with the Bulldogs by leading the team to the ITA National Indoor and NCAA championships. In 2024, Vidmanova won a pair of NCAA titles, first capturing the program’s first doubles title with partner Aysegul Mert in May and then winning Georgia’s fourth NCAA singles crown in November. At the 2025 NCAA Championships, Vidmanova went undefeated in singles and doubles to earn MVP honors. She also won the Honda Award for women’s tennis for the 2024-25 season.

Football: Bulldogs Make It Two In A Row

On Jan. 9, 2023, the top-ranked Georgia football team dominated No. 3 TCU 65-7 in the College Football Playoff National Championship Game at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif., winning the first back-to-back national titles in the CFP era and securing an undefeated season at 15-0. It was a fitting finale for quarterback Stetson Bennett, who was named the Offensive Player of the Game in all four CPF games during the 2021 and ’22 seasons. Against TCU, Bennett threw for 304 yards and four touchdowns and ran for a pair of scores as the Bulldogs scored on their first six possessions to blow the game wide open from the outset. Defensive back Javon Bullard intercepted a pair of passes and recovered a fumble to earn Defensive Player of the Game honors.

Assistant Sports Communications Director John Frierson is the staff writer for the UGA Athletic Association and curator of the ITA Men’s Tennis Hall of Fame. You can find his work at: Frierson Files.



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No. 2 Wilson Three-Peats as CIF State Track & Field Champions – The562.org

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The Wilson girls’ track and field team was crowned state champions for the third year in a row, and for the third straight year, they’re at the top of our Top 10 Long Beach Sports Moments of the Year.

The three-peat makes Wilson just the third girls’ team to ever win three consecutive CIF State championships, and the first to do so since Long Beach Poly won four in a row through 2011.

The championship is the sixth for the Wilson girls’ program and moves them into second place in state history for most titles. It also marks the third consecutive championship for Wilson—only five schools have ever won three state titles, let alone done so consecutively.

Loren Webster was the first to earn points for the Bruins at the CIF State Finals in Clovis, and she did so in a big way. The senior claimed her second consecutive state title in the long jump, setting a new personal record in her final high school meet with a mark of 21 feet, ¼ inch.

Kaylin Edwards picked up a pair of podium finishes in the 300m hurdles and 100m hurdles, and was also the third leg of Wilson’s state champion 4x400m relay team. Edwards ran a 40.61 for second place in the 300m hurdles and a 13.79 in the 100m hurdles for third.

Brooke Blue, Alene Washington, Edwards, and Saniah Varnado ran a 3:36.75 in the 4×400—four seconds clear of second place.

The Bruins also had a boys’ state champion in junior Wyland Obando, who ran a 1:51.24 in the 800m for a come-from-behind win. He also competed in the 4x400m and 4x800m relays.





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