Sports
Outsiders
Speaker 1(00:04):
Hello for Wonder Media Network. I’m Jenny Kaplan and this
is Womanica.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
This month, we’re talking about outsiders, women.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Who marched to the beat of their own drum and
rejected stereotypes about what women should be. Their aesthetic pioneers,
norm venders, and often some of the only women in
their field. In May of nineteen sixty five, a Life
magazine cover featured a blonde teenage girl performing an impressive
handstand on a skateboard. This was the signature move of
(00:34):
the first American professional female skateboarder.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
She helped push skateboarding.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Into the mainstream in the nineteen sixties, breaking into a
sport almost exclusively dominated by men. Please welcome Patti McGee.
Patti was born in August of nineteen forty five on
an army base near Tacoma, Washington, but she spent her
formative years near the beaches of southern California. Her mother
was a high school teacher and her father worked in
(01:00):
the army as a medic.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
Patty’s parents divorced when she.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
Was young, leaving Patty to be raised mainly by her
mother in San Diego. By the time Patty was a teen,
she’d taken to the waves, joining the Pump House Gang,
a surfing group of teenagers who later became the subjects
of a book by the same name. But surfing wasn’t
always available.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
On gloomy days.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
When the weather wouldn’t cooperate and the ocean played too rough,
surfers would turn to an alternative, surfing the streets, also
known as skateboarding. Patty’s brother made her first board by
taking the wheels off of her roller skates and screwing
them into a piece of wood. Patty and her skater
friends spent their days coasting around the hilly streets of
(01:43):
San Diego. Her progression was remarkably swift. By nineteen sixty four,
just two years after stepping onto a board, Patty had
established herself in the sport. She competed in the National
Skateboard Championship at Santa Monica Park. The course was set
with cones in neat rows and a narrow figure traced
on the pavement. The crowd buzzed at the edges, half curious,
(02:03):
half skeptical. No one really knew what to expect Patty.
Then she dropped into her next move, the handstand, balancing
upside down.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
As her board rolled beneath her.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
It was the first time anyone had done it in
a competition. Those were the days when tricks were born,
she later said. Patty was the first woman to win
the competition that same year, riding barefoot at forty seven
miles an hour. As Patty would say, no helmet, no pads,
no shoes, and no brains, she set the women’s speed
(02:35):
record for skateboarding. By that point in her life, Patty
was making approximately two hundred and fifty dollars a month,
making her one of the first professional skateboarders to be paid.
Her next opportunity came when Patty walked into a Hobie
surf shop owned by Hobart Altar, a renowned surfboard shaper
who’d expanded his business to include skateboards. It just so
(02:56):
happened that Hobart’s wife was in the hospital and he
had to fly to New York that same day, so
he asked Patty if she could babysit his two children.
In exchange, he would use photos from Patty’s skateboard championship.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
Win to promote the Hobie brand.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
Eventually, this led to Patty joining the newly established hobe
Super Surfers Skateboard Team and touring the country as their
Hoby Skateboards Demo Girl. These demos served as crucial introductions
to skateboarding for countless Americans who’d never witnessed this board
in person. During one of these tour events, a photojournalist
captured an iconic picture of Patty riding a skateboard in
(03:33):
her signature handstand move. Within a few days, the photo
was featured on the May nineteen sixty five cover of
Life magazine. The magazine cover propelled Patty’s career to new heights.
Television audiences across America saw her showcase her talents on
popular programs like The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Perhaps
(03:54):
her largest audience came during a performance at Dick Clark’s
World Team Fair in Chicago in nineteen sixty six, where
she skated before tens of thousands of enthusiastic young fans.
Through these appearances, Patty helped define not just women’s place
in skateboarding, but the public image of the sport itself.
As the nineteen sixties drew to a close, Patty’s focus shifted.
Speaker 2 (04:16):
To new horizons.
Speaker 1 (04:17):
The mountains caught her attention in nineteen sixty eight, and
she developed an interest in skiing. This passion prompted her
relocation to Tahoe in nineteen seventy with.
Speaker 2 (04:26):
Her first husband.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
They eventually divorced, and Patty moved to Cave Creek, Arizona,
where she raised her two kids and met her second husband.
During her hiatus from skateboarding, the sport underwent significant transformations,
including technical innovations like shock absorbent wheels and the emergence
of new skating styles. As her children were growing up,
Patty made her to pass on the sport to them.
(04:49):
One day, Patty organized a skateboarding event at her daughter’s
elementary school. Among the skaters performing was Tony Hawk. In
an interview, Patty’s daughter recalled, I think that was the
day I understood my mom was more special in the
skateboarding realm. Decades passed before Patty officially returned to the
skateboarding world. Two old skate peers, David Hackett and Steve Olsen,
(05:12):
encouraged her to get back on her board at fifty
five years old.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
Patty made her come back.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
Then, in two thousand and four, Patty and her daughter
collaborated to establish the original Betty Skateboard Company, a skate
apparel company aimed at supporting new generations of female skaters.
The company had an all girls skate team and included
members who would go on to compete in the Olympics.
In skateboarding culture, the term Betty became slang for female skaters.
Given Patty’s pioneering role, many in the community came to
(05:41):
regard her as the first Betty, an acknowledgment of her
status as a trailblazer in the sport. The skateboarding landscape
Patty re entered had evolved dramatically from the one she’d left.
What began as a casual offshoot of surf culture had
developed into a global phenomenon, with professional competitions, corporate sponsors,
(06:02):
and international participants. Despite these advancements, female skaters still face
challenges regarding recognition and equal treatment, issues pattied encountered from
the beginning of her career. The skateboarding community formally acknowledged
Patty’s historical importance in twenty ten, when she became the
first woman inducted into the Skateboarding Hall of Fame. Skateboarding
was officially introduced into the Olympics in Tokyo in twenty
(06:24):
twenty one. Patty passed away three years later in twenty
twenty four, at the age of seventy nine. Tributes poured
in from across the skateboarding community, and professional skaters spanning
multiple generations acknowledged her foundational influence in the sport. All month,
We’re talking about Outsiders. For more information, find us on
Facebook and Instagram at Wamanica Podcast special thanks to Liz Kaplan,
(06:48):
my favorite sister and co creator.
Speaker 2 (06:49):
Talk to you tomorrow.

Sports
Wisconsin’s Carter Booth has F-bomb after volleyball upset vs. Texas
Dec. 15, 2025, 8:46 a.m. ET
Perhaps no one is more hyped about the No. 3 Wisconsin Badgers upsetting No. 1 Texas during the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament than star Carter Booth.
On Sunday, the Badgers unleashed an elite game plan to get a dominant 3-1 win in the Elite Eight over the Longhorns. The victory was the 13th straight win for Wisconsin, which now has a date in the Final Four in Kansas City later this week. After the match, Booth was still amped up during an ESPN interview when she dropped a pretty big F-bomb.
“I refuse to [ expletive] lose,” she said matter-of-factly.
MORE WOMEN’S SPORTS:Caitlin Clark thankfully looks like herself again at Team USA practice
Booth, realizing her error, immediately apologized and kept going. “But I refuse. I refuse! And this team refuses,” she explained. The best part actually isn’t the middle blocker’s unplanned F-bomb. It’s outside hitter Mimi Colyer standing next to Booth. Colyer seemingly appeared stunned at the slip for a millisecond, but jumped in to support her teammate. “Yeah! Yeah!” she hysterically said while nodding in agreement.
Here’s the video of Booth’s ESPN interview.
She said what she said.
Sports
Can Pitt volleyball use favorable path to finally get over Final Four hump?
Sports
Legendary Lincoln Lutheran volleyball coach Sue Ziegler retiring
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – After 28 successful seasons of leading the Lincoln Lutheran volleyball program, Sue Ziegler is retiring. The legendary head volleyball coach announced the decision during a team meeting on Monday.
Ziegler is a 6-time state champion (2004, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024) and member of the Nebraska High School Hall of Fame. In 2021, she was recognized as the AVCA National High School Coach of the Year. Ziegler totaled 624 wins over her career, which ranks among the state’s all-time leaders.
Ziegler’s teams reached the NSAA State Tournament 15 times, including each of the last nine years. Prior to the 2024 season, Lincoln Lutheran dedicated its court to the longtime volleyball coach.
Lincoln Lutheran said the search for a new head coach will begin immediately.
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Copyright 2025 KOLN. All rights reserved.
Sports
Loyola Chicago Leads MIVA in Preseason Poll
CHICAGO – The Midwestern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association (MIVA) named Loyola Chicago as the No. 1 favorite in the league’s preseason poll, announced on Monday. Ryan McElligott, Daniel Fabikovic and Aleksandar Sosa tabbed spots on the Preseason All-MIVA Team.
The MIVA Preseason Poll and All-MIVA Team are voted on by the nine MIVA head coaches.
After finishing the 2025 season as the MIVA regular season and tournament champions, the Ramblers claim the top spot with 75 points and five first place votes. MIVA Tournament runner-up Ohio State ranks second and Ball State rounds out the top three.
Senior setter McElligott led both the NCAA and the MIVA in assists in 2025, totaling 1,1016, earning him All-MIVA First Team and All-Tournament Team, and an AVCA All-American Honorable Mention. He added 75 kills, 69 total blocks and 32 service aces.
Fabikovic was a menace on the court last season, starting all 29 matches and seeing action in 105 sets where he contributed 343 kills, the most amongst returning Ramblers. The junior outside hitter tallied 403.5 points during his sophomore campaign which earned him All-MIVA First Team and All-Tournament Team as well as a back-to-back AVCA Second Team All-American nod.
Sosa, a junior transfer from Quincy, was named to the 2025 All-MIVA Second Team after leading the Hawks in points, kills and aces. The opposite finished fifth in the MIVA in kills per set and fourth in points per set and posted double-digit kills in 18 matches, including 15 straight to cap the season.
2026 MIVA Preseason Poll
1. Loyola Chicago – 73 (5)
2. Ohio State – 68 (2)
3. Ball State – 63 (1)
4. Lewis – 57 (1)
5. McKendree – 52
6. Lindenwood – 33
7. Purdue Fort Wayne – 24
8. Northern Kentucky – 19
9. Queens – 16
2026 Preseason All-MIVA Team (alphabetical by team)
Lucas Machado – Ball State
*Patrick Rogers – Ball State
Oguzhan Oguz – Lewis
Nico Paula – Lewis
Ryan McElligott – Loyola Chicago
Daniel Fabikovic – Loyola Chicago
Aleksander Sosa – Loyola Chicago
Yadiel Diaz – McKendree
Nate Flayter – McKendree
Stanislaw Chacinski – Ohio State
Shane Wetzel – Ohio State
Logan Muir – Purdue Fort Wayne
*Preseason Player of the Year
Sports
Assistant Athletic Trainer in Salem, WV for Salem University
Details
Posted: 15-Dec-25
Location: Salem, West Virginia
Type: Full-time
Categories:
Sports Medicine
Sports Medicine – Athletic Training
Sector:
Collegiate Sports
The Assistant Athletic Trainer is responsible for assisting the Head Athletic Trainer in maintaining and representing a NCAA Division II athletic program that supports student recruitment and enhances the educational experience and personal growth of the student-athletes. Will cooperate with the Head Athletic Trainer to manage assigned teams and all aspects based on strict adherence to the University’s Department of Intercollegiate Athletics Policies and Procedures. Equally responsible for conducting all activities in accordance with all state and federal regulations, accreditation standards and the University’s policies and procedures, all conference and NCAA regulations consistent with the highest ethical standards.
Position Requirements: The role includes providing coverage for assigned teams during practices and games, as well as overseeing regular treatment and rehabilitation sessions. It also involves assisting other personnel and departments with data collection and problem solving, and participating in departmental activities such as staff meetings, training sessions, orientations, and campus or community events, while being available for representational and public relations duties. Additional responsibilities include supporting the planning and administration of practices and contests to promote successful seasons, assisting with team travel, and facilitating player interactions with Athletic Training, Sports Information, and Compliance staff. The position also requires counseling student-athletes on academic success and responsible citizenship, upholding the highest ethical standards, and adhering to all relevant state and federal regulations, accreditation requirements, and University, conference, and NCAA policies. Other duties may be assigned as needed.
- Bachelor’s degree in athletic training or related field
- BOC Certified/WV Licensed or eligible to apply
- Valid Driver’s license/qualified to operate a passenger vehicle up to 12 or 15 passenger van consistent with university insurance regulations.
- Excellent oral and written communication and computer skills required
- Outstanding time-management skills with ability to multi-task in a fast-paced environment
- Excellent communications and interpersonal skills. Able to work effectively with people from global, diverse cultures and different socio-economic and cultural backgrounds
- Commitment to the balance of academic and athletic achievement and integration in a small university setting is essential.
About Salem University
The Mission of Salem University is to prepare global citizens with broad knowledge, marketable professional skills, and the ability to make decisions with integrity.
Connections working at Salem University
https://ncaamarket.ncaa.org/jobs/21896714/assistant-athletic-trainer
Sports
Texas volleyball loses middle blocker Ayden Ames
Less than 24 hours after Texas volleyball’s season ended with a loss to Wisconsin in the NCAA Tournament regional finals, middle blocker Ayden Ames reportedly intends to enter the transfer portal.
Ames becomes the first Longhorn to announce her intention to enter the portal, and she’ll be just the second regular member of the rotation not returning next season. Libero Emma Halter, the lone senior starter for a Texas team that went 26-4 this season, will next play for the Indy Ignite of Major League Volleyball.
Ames’ exit was first reported by On3.
A 6-foot-4 blue-chip recruit from the Dallas suburb of Prosper who once competed for the under-19 U.S. national team, Ames became a regular part of the lineup over the past two seasons after flipping from Nebraska to join Texas late in the 2024 recruiting cycle.
She enrolled in the spring of 2024 and immediately established herself as a key component of the Longhorns’ lineup. Texas coach Jerritt Elliott even called her “the most complete middle I’ve ever had as a freshman,” a powerful statement from a coach who has worked with All-Americans such as Asjia O’Neal, Molly McCage and Chiaka Ogbogu.
As a freshman, Ames started all 27 games and 96 sets for the season and finished second on the team with 88 blocks and was fifth on team with 150 kills and 1.56 kills per set average. She played in 29 of Texas’ 30 matches this season, but her numbers dipped slightly to 149 kills and 1.52 kills per set with a team-high 109 blocks.
In Sunday’s loss to Wisconsin, Elliott replaced Ames with freshman middle blocker Taylor Harvey after Texas dropped the first two sets. Ames didn’t have a kill or a block against the Badgers.
Pending any more portal exits for Texas, Harvey and redshirt sophomore Nya Bunton will enter the offseason as the only middle blockers on the Longhorns’ roster. Both saw extensive action this season, with Bunton ranking second on the team with 61 blocks.
Texas didn’t sign any middle blockers in its touted 2026 recruiting class, which means the position will likely be a top portal target for Elliott and his staff.
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