College Sports
Seattle’s new PWHL team could be ‘scary’ good
Seattle’s brand-new women’s pro hockey team is coming together. The yet-to-be-named franchise hired its first players, including league star and Olympic gold medalist Hillary Knight, last week. They added to the roster in yesterday’s expansion draft. KUOW’s Kim Malcolm checked in with Seattle Times reporter Kate Shefte for some PWHL hiring updates. This interview has […]
Seattle’s brand-new women’s pro hockey team is coming together. The yet-to-be-named franchise hired its first players, including league star and Olympic gold medalist Hillary Knight, last week. They added to the roster in yesterday’s expansion draft. KUOW’s Kim Malcolm checked in with Seattle Times reporter Kate Shefte for some PWHL hiring updates.
This interview has been edited for clarity.
Kim Malcolm: Let’s start with who got hired, and how the draft went. What stands out for you right now?
Kate Shefte: Let’s start with Hillary Knight. She is a living legend. Team USA captain, one of the most recognizable faces in the sport, and at 35 she just tied for the PWHL scoring lead with 29 points last season. She was a heck of a first player on this PWHL Seattle team. After her, they went out and signed Danielle Serdachny, who was a former Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award winner. That’s given to the top female college ice hockey player in the United States. And they signed Cayla Barnes, an Olympian at 19, the youngest player for Team USA, who won a national championship at Ohio State. She’s a young, very experienced defender who is probably going to anchor their blue line for years to come, perhaps. If this doesn’t get people excited for the PWHL in Seattle, I don’t really know what will.
And then the draft took place yesterday. One of our colleagues here at the station said it was, “SO AWESOME” to watch. Did you feel the same way? What stood out for you?
It just blew my mind how much talent they were picking up. They just kept adding to an impossible seeming degree. The new GM, Meghan Turner, really took advantage of these expansion draft rules and just signed a really enviable team. It’s not like they picked up the scraps here. If the goal was to make expansion teams competitive immediately, which supposedly it was, they succeeded. But that’s at the cost of ticking off the inaugural six teams, because some of them are just gutted. This will probably be the last expansion draft with that particular format.
And, the Hockey News has PWHL Seattle as the Walter Cup favorite next season, with just 12 players, half a team, signed. They have to fill in a little bit, build through the draft, build through free agency, get the rest of those roster spots filled up. But this is a heck of a blueprint for a very scary team. I have to think that they probably blew a lot of their budget already, so they might be kind of top heavy, but that’s a pretty small critique of this team. They look very, very good.
Such a strong start for a brand-new team here. But how good will it all be when they hit the ice? That’s kind of an X factor.
It really is. You never know. I mean, teams can look amazing on paper and then kind of fail to get out of the gate, but a lot of these players already have familiarity with each other. They signed Hillary Knight’s Boston Fleet teammate, Hannah Bilka. They dipped from every single team except for Minnesota. And so, a lot of these people know each other. And I like to think that that will translate. I’m sure they hope it does.
Before we let you go, Kate, the team doesn’t have a name yet. Are there any updates on what they could be called?
No updates. They have half a team. They really only have one official front office employee. That process is ongoing. Apparently, they’re close to hiring a coach. They said they’re comfortable with maybe going into the season, just as PWHL Seattle and PWHL Vancouver. That is how the inaugural six played their first season. They want to nail it. They want to get it right, you know, and especially in a city where the Kraken, I think we can safely say, no matter what they’ve done on the ice, the Kraken branding is very strong, and you want to match that energy. Not to plug it, but I did write a long history piece on the Seattle Vamps.
I was about to ask you. Do you think the Vamps would fly as a name now?
Personally, I would love it. I don’t think there’s anything scandalous about that word anymore, and it’s kind of a ‘wink wink’ to what the rest of the country thinks of us, which is ‘Twilight’ country. I think it would be hilarious and very cool and kind of powerful and kind of, you know, just kind of moody. I think it’s very Seattle. One thing, I know it has nothing to do with the water, and that wouldn’t really fit in with most of our teams. I will acknowledge that.
Listen to the interview by clicking the play button above.
College Sports
Hezly Rivera wins women’s all-around at U.S. Gymnastics Championships
If Hezly Rivera was the rookie on the 2024 U.S. Olympic gymnastics team, she was the veteran one year later, winning the U.S. Gymnastics Championships in New Orleans Sunday night with eight hit routines across two days of competition, taking home gold in the all-around, uneven bars, balance beam and floor. Olympic alternate Leanne Wong […]

If Hezly Rivera was the rookie on the 2024 U.S. Olympic gymnastics team, she was the veteran one year later, winning the U.S. Gymnastics Championships in New Orleans Sunday night with eight hit routines across two days of competition, taking home gold in the all-around, uneven bars, balance beam and floor.
Olympic alternate Leanne Wong took silver in the all-around and gold on vault, followed by fellow alternate Joscelyn Roberson in third in the all-around and silver on floor.
“It means the world to me to take this national championship title home because I worked so hard for this,” Rivera told NBC after the competition. “It was not easy coming back after the Olympics. I took some time off, so much work in the gym, hard work, blood, sweat, tears, so I’m just so grateful that I’m here today.”
One year after the Olympics, Rivera’s fellow teammates were not in the picture on Sunday. Simone Biles and Sunisa Lee have both taken time away from elite competition. Jordan Chiles and Jade Carey both competed for UCLA and Oregon State, respectively, but have not returned to the elite level so far this year either. Who might stage a comeback — and when — remains unclear.
That means the field for October’s World Championships roster is wide open. The women’s team will not be named for a few weeks and will take into account selection events this fall, but this weekend’s performance will play a key role as well.
The men’s team, on the other hand, named its World Championships team on Saturday, based on Championship results this weekend. That squad will be led by 2024 Olympian Asher Hong, who won gold on vault, floor and rings and silver on parallel bars, and who won the all-around by nearly eight points, the largest margin in U.S. Championships history.
“I’m just grateful that all the training paid off,” Hong told NBC after the men’s competition. “It was a hard grind these past five weeks, I had a lot of hard trainings, but, you know, I came here with confidence. One of our mottos is ‘leave no doubt,’ and that’s what I wanted to do here today.”

Asher Hong celebrates after winning vault at the U.S. Gymnastics Championships on Saturday. (Stephen Lew / Imagn Images)
He will be joined by fellow Olympian Brody Malone, who won gold on parallel bars, silver on rings and bronze on pommel horse, horizontal bar winner Taylor Burkhart and pommel horse winner Patrick Hoopes. Silver medalists Brandon Dang (pommel horse) and Kameron Nelson (floor, vault), and bronze medalist Donnell Whittenburg (rings, parallel bars) round out the team.
Left off the team was 2024 Olympian Frederick Richard, who finished second in the all-around, but whose best single-event finish was third on high bar. Unlike in the Olympics, the 2025 World Championships will not feature a team competition — just medals for individual events. Olympic pommel horse hero Stephen Nedoroscik was also left off the team. He struggled with a fall in that competition — his only event — finishing fifth.
The yet-to-be-named women’s team will take into account results throughout the season. Just a few weeks earlier, U.S. Classic belonged to the newcomers, topped by Claire Pease and Simone Rose, with Roberson in third. But falls from Pease throughout the weekend landed her in 10th place. Rose finished in fifth, and Winter Cup winner Ashlee Sullivan finished in fourth.
That meant that Sunday, the Championships belonged to the veterans. Without a team competition, building a team for Worlds requires an eye toward the individual events, led by Rivera and Wong.
Also staging a comeback is Skye Blakely, who was having a breakout season in 2024 until an Achilles injury during the Olympic Trials forced her to withdraw from the competition. She spent the past year competing for the University of Florida alongside Wong, and in her first elite competition back since the injury, tied for first with Rivera on bars and secured second on beam, her only two events of the weekend.
(Photo of Hezly Rivera competing at the U.S. Gymnastics Championships in New Orleans on Sunday: Kyle Okita / Cal Sport Media via AP Images)
College Sports
SLU women's soccer back in action
College soccer is ready to kick off. At SLU, the Billiken women’s soccer team already has an exhibition under their belts. Author: ksdk.com Published: 10:07 PM CDT August 10, 2025 Updated: 9:58 PM CDT August 10, 2025 0


College soccer is ready to kick off. At SLU, the Billiken women’s soccer team already has an exhibition under their belts.
College Sports
With LSU days ahead, Rivera captures U.S. Gymnastics Championship in New Orleans – Crescent City Sports
NEW ORLEANS — The future of LSU gymnastics ascended the Big Easy’s podium. Hezly Rivera, a gold medalist in last year’s Paris Olympic Games at just 16 years old, took home the all-around women’s title to cap the Xfinity U.S. Gymnastics Championships on Sunday. It’s her second time on top of the event in three […]

NEW ORLEANS — The future of LSU gymnastics ascended the Big Easy’s podium.
Hezly Rivera, a gold medalist in last year’s Paris Olympic Games at just 16 years old, took home the all-around women’s title to cap the Xfinity U.S. Gymnastics Championships on Sunday.
It’s her second time on top of the event in three years, also emerging victorious in 2023.
Rivera dazzled a Smoothie King Center crowd to score a winning 112, just clear of Florida’s Leanne Wong (111.2) and Arkansas’s Joscelyn Roberson (109.6).
The now 17-year-old Rivera led by a razor-thin two tenths entering the second and final day of senior women’s events. She dropped below Wong after her vault but gracefully corkscrewed ahead on uneven bars and never looked back.
Her decisive floor routine wasn’t spotless, but with a gleaming smile and high level of difficulty, Rivera locked up the all-around crown. Bearing the weight of heavy expectations as the sole Olympian to take part, she delivered.
“It means the world to me,” Rivera said. “I’ve worked so hard for this. It was not easy coming back after the Olympics. I took some time off. So much hard work in the gym, blood, sweat, tears. I’m just so grateful that I’m here today.”
After gold medaling the balance beam in last year’s Olympic Trials, Rivera dominated on Sunday to earn top marks. The New Jersey native didn’t medal in vault but tied for first in uneven bars and prevailed in floor after two rotation days.
Her teammate in Paris, Jordan Chiles, presented her with gold for her floor routine win.
While she verbally committed to LSU last September, Rivera won’t compete in Baton Rouge until 2027. However, her shimmering resume can give Tiger faithful hope for more national titles after the program’s first in 2024.
The victory also bodes well for a return to the Olympic stage, set for 2028 in Los Angeles.
This weekend was just a sneak peek.
“I feel like we all had support from each other, the crowd and the gymnast,” Rivera said. “It was a very good spot to have championships. I was really excited to compete here, and I can’t wait to compete in Louisiana in the years to come.”
Annalisa Milton, another future LSU gymnast, also took part in the senior women’s slate.
Rivera’s demonstrative day concluded the gymnastics world’s triumphant return to New Orleans, which hosted the U.S. Championships for the first time in 30 years. The next generation of gymnasts put outstanding skills on display and brought together a host of past, present and future Olympic athletes, coaches and judges.
Caroline Moreau (Keller, Texas) took the junior women’s title on Sunday afternoon, while Maksim Kam (Muskego, Wis.) and Asher Hong (Tomball, Texas) topped the men’s junior and senior divisions on Saturday.
After hosting last year’s SEC Championships, New Orleans is gradually inserting itself as a home for sports of the olympiad. This event also continues the city’s successful run of athletic spectacles, following Super Bowl LIX and UFC 318.
“We want the people of New Orleans to come out and see this event, get in here and pack these seats,” LSU gym coach Jay Clark told WDSU on Wednesday. “You’re going to see some of the most incredible athletes in the world do the things that are just superhuman, and make it look easy.”
College Sports
IN PICS: Ex LSU Star Olivia Dunne Enjoys Beach Time Wearing Cheetah Print Bikini in New Jersey
Former artistic gymnast for the LSU Tigers, Olivia Dunne, recently had a day out with her friend Lily Chee. Dunne, who boasts over 5.4 million followers on Instagram alone, often puts up her life updates on social media. This time, Dunne went to a beach in New Jersey with Chee. She posted multiple pictures from […]

Former artistic gymnast for the LSU Tigers, Olivia Dunne, recently had a day out with her friend Lily Chee. Dunne, who boasts over 5.4 million followers on Instagram alone, often puts up her life updates on social media.
This time, Dunne went to a beach in New Jersey with Chee. She posted multiple pictures from her day out at Monmouth Beach on her Instagram story, and can be seen wearing a cheetah print bikini.
In the first picture, Dunne and Chee posed with their backs facing the camera as a wave hit them. In the second picture, which was originally uploaded on Chee’s IG story, and Dunne reposted it, they can be seen smiling at each other. The pictures can be seen below:


Chee is a New York-based actress, model, and social media influencer. As seen on Dunne’s third IG story, they went on a road trip. Sitting in the back of a car, Chee posed for the picture with a bag of Popup Bagels in her hands.
There were other boxes from the same place kept on their seat as well. Dunne captioned her story:
“road trip essentials:”
Chee later reposted the image on her profile with a comment:
“too good @popupbagels [fire emoji]”

In the most recent picture on Chee’s Instagram, the two friends can be seen posing for a picture inside what appeared to be a club.

Olivia Dunne is one of the most popular gymnasts who made millions of dollars during her college stint through NIL deals. After college, she transitioned toward modeling and has already graced several magazine covers.
Dunne is also a Sports Illustrated swimsuit model. Despite all her success, the 22-year-old also faced some harsh trolling and name-calling on the internet.
Olivia Dunne opened up about her struggles
During an appearance on Stephanie McMahon’s “What’s Your Story” podcast, Dunne revealed how she struggled with body image issues due to social media. She said:
“I did have a very big male audience at the beginning of my college career. And that was hard. It was hard to feel like people were watching me, judging me. I’ve definitely have had some problems with some body issues.” (34:48)
Dunne explained that gymnastics is one of the sports where the athlete ends up developing a lot of muscles. Notably, she received a lot of disheartening comments from her male audience.
“When I first started posting, men were like, ‘I do not like those muscles.’ They were calling me a linebacker, they were calling me a football player.”
Dunne struggled to understand why someone would comment on her if they claim to not like what she does. Eventually, she got a grip on how social media works and started ignoring those people. Dunne has been in a long-term relationship with Pirates pitcher Paul Skenes.
Read More:
Paul Skenes’ Girlfriend Olivia Dunne Poses in Blue Swimwear as She Embraces Summer Break at Long Beach Island
Paul Skenes’ Girlfriend Livvy Dunne Shares Snaps From Scenic Malibu Trip
College Sports
2025 Monks Women’s Basketball Season Review
Story Links STANDISH, Maine – The Saint Joseph’s College women’s basketball team turned in another strong campaign in 2024–25, posting a 21-7 overall record and a 12-2 mark in Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC) play under 32-year Head Coach Mike McDevitt ’83. The Monks secured the #2 seed in the 2025 GNAC […]

STANDISH, Maine – The Saint Joseph’s College women’s basketball team turned in another strong campaign in 2024–25, posting a 21-7 overall record and a 12-2 mark in Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC) play under 32-year Head Coach Mike McDevitt ’83. The Monks secured the #2 seed in the 2025 GNAC Tournament.
REGULAR SEASON:
After a 1-2 start, the Monks hit their stride with four straight wins over in-state rivals University of New England, Husson University, UMaine-Farmington, and the University of Southern Maine, improving to 5-2 heading into the holiday break.
The Royal Blue opened the new year on a high note, defeating Salve Regina and the host Rams to capture the Framingham State University Tournament title. Those victories sparked a six-game winning streak that lifted St. Joe’s to an 11-4 record heading into a non-conference clash with nationally ranked #4 Bowdoin College on January 21st. The Monks attempted to shake off a tough first quarter but ultimately the Polar Bears came away with the win in Brunswick.
The Monks quickly bounced back, winning eight of their next nine games—all against GNAC opponents—to close the regular season and lock down the #2 seed in the conference tournament.
POSTSEASON:
Saint Joseph’s battled through the GNAC playoffs, earning a 72-65 quarterfinal win over Emmanuel College and a 67-60 semifinal victory against Albertus Magnus College. With those triumphs, the Monks advanced to the GNAC Championship for the ninth consecutive year and the 11th time overall.
In a March 1st rematch of the 2024 championship, St. Joe’s faced #4 University of Saint Joseph on Mike McDevitt Court. This time, however, the Monks struggled to find their shooting touch, hitting just 1-of-14 from beyond the arc, and dropped a hard-fought 66-59 decision to the Blue Jays.
A LEGEND STEPS DOWN:
Nobody knew it at the time, but the 2025 GNAC Championship contest will go down as the last college women’s basketball game coached by McDevitt, who announced his retirement from coaching several weeks later.
McDevitt stepped aside after 33 (32 at SJC, one at USM) years on the women’s basketball bench with a 667-231 (.743) career record while winning 20 or more games 22 times and never enduring a losing season.
McDevitt closed his career as one of the most accomplished coaches in NCAA Division III women’s basketball history. Over more than three decades at the helm, he guided the Saint Joseph’s College program to 19 league titles, including six in the Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC), and led the Monks to 14 national tournament appearances—seven each in the NAIA and NCAA Division III.
Widely respected across the NCAA basketball coaching community, McDevitt was recognized with 15 conference or regional Coach of the Year honors. His accolades include six GNAC Coach of the Year awards, three Maine Women’s Basketball Coaches Association distinctions (1999, 2017, 2018), and the 2018 New England Women’s Basketball Coaches Association Coach of the Year award.
On April 16, 2025, Saint Joseph’s announced that Chris Woodside, who spent the past five seasons as an assistant under McDevitt, had been selected to take over as head coach.
NOTEWORTHY INDIVIDUAL PERFORMANCES:
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Grad student Angelica Hurley (Groveland, Mass.) enjoyed her finest season, averaging 15.3 points, 7.1 rebounds, and 3.4 assists while shooting 41.4% (146-355) from the field, 39.5% (81-205) from three-point range, and 83.6% (56-67) from the free-throw line. She started all 28 games and set career highs in scoring average, FG%, 3FG%, and FT%, earning First Team All-Conference and First Team All-State accolades.
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Junior forward Grace Ramsdell (Wells, Maine) turned in a strong campaign, averaging 14.9 points and 6.3 rebounds while shooting 44.2% (160-362) from the floor, 29.5% (33-112) from beyond the arc, and 87.8% (65-74) from the stripe. Her efforts earned Second Team All-Conference and Second Team All-State recognition.
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Junior guard Elisabeth Stapelfeld (Brookline, N.H.) averaged 9.5 points per game and led the team in field goal percentage at 47.8% (99-207).
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Junior guard Logan Brown (Brunswick, Maine) shot 45.8% (55-120) from three-point range — the second-best single-season mark in program history — and led the conference in long-range accuracy.
MILESTONES & RANKINGS:
Milestones:
Hurley, who produced 1,529 points, 900 rebounds, 392 assists in 118 career games, is the only player in program history to tally at least 1,500 points, 800 rebounds, and 300 assists; she capped her career ranked fifth in program history in rebounds, seventh in points, and eighth in assists.
NCAA Rankings:
- 17th in three-pointers per game (8.3)
- 20th in free throw percentage (75.4%)
- 25th in rebound margin (8.1)
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