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Seawolves set for 17 home dates in 2025

Story Links ANCHORAGE – The Alaska Anchorage volleyball team will take the Alaska Airlines Center court a record 17 times in 2025 as head coach Stacie Meisner unveiled the Seawolves’ upcoming schedule Wednesday. UAA’s 16 regular-season home matches are the most slated since the arena’s opening in 2014, and […]

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ANCHORAGE – The Alaska Anchorage volleyball team will take the Alaska Airlines Center court a record 17 times in 2025 as head coach Stacie Meisner unveiled the Seawolves’ upcoming schedule Wednesday.

UAA’s 16 regular-season home matches are the most slated since the arena’s opening in 2014, and the most for any Seawolf team since 1999.

“We are really excited to host some great competition for our fans early this season with the Alaska/Hawaii Challenge and the return of our Seawolf Invitational,” said Meisner, whose program led NCAA Div. II last season with over 1,600 fans per contest. “It should bring some energy to campus to start the year and put us in position for some great crowds when we hit conference play.”

Following the Aug. 23 Seawolf Alumni exhibition match, UAA will host key West Regional matches Aug. 28-30 against Hawaii Pacific, Chaminade and Hawaii Hilo in the Alaska/Hawaii Challenge, presented by Alaska Airlines. That event also includes Alaska Fairbanks against the Islands schools.

Three more non-conference tests await the next week when Biola, Cal State San Marcos and Minot State visit for the Seawolf Invitational, Sept. 4-6.

UAA concludes the non-league slate with three matches – including a showdown with Cal State San Bernardino – Sept. 11-13 in Fairbanks, before beginning the Great Northwest Athletic Conference campaign with a Sept. 18 road match at Seattle Pacific.

UAA hosts Western Oregon on Sept. 25 in its league home opener, and Saint Martin’s two nights later. Other key home dates include Oct. 16 against defending GNAC champ Central Washington, Oct. 31 against Alaska Fairbanks, Nov. 8 against traditional rival Western Washington, and Nov. 22 for senior day against Seattle Pacific.

Should the Seawolves advance to the NCAA West Regional Championships, those matches would be held Dec. 4-7 at a to-be-determined site.

Full-season and single-match tickets go on sale later this summer. Check GoSeawolves.com for updates and more information.

 



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U.S. Men Begin 2025 Dutch Tournament with a Pair of Sweeps

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 4, 2025) – The U.S. Men’s Sitting National Team opened the 2025 Dutch Tournament in style, posting back-to-back three-set wins on Friday in Assen, Netherlands. The defending silver medalists defeated the host nation, 3-0 (25-16, 25-17, 25-23) and Japan, 3-0 (25-20, 25-16, 33-31). MATCH STATISTICS vs. NETHERLANDSMATCH STATISTICS VS. JAPAN The […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 4, 2025) – The U.S. Men’s Sitting National Team opened the 2025 Dutch Tournament in style, posting back-to-back three-set wins on Friday in Assen, Netherlands. The defending silver medalists defeated the host nation, 3-0 (25-16, 25-17, 25-23) and Japan, 3-0 (25-20, 25-16, 33-31).

MATCH STATISTICS vs. NETHERLANDS
MATCH STATISTICS VS. JAPAN

The U.S. dominated Japan in kills (47-25) and aces (15-5), while Japan registered four more blocks (8-4).

Outside hitter Zach Upp was the leading scorer in the match with 20 points, including a match-high 16 kills to go with a block and three aces. Middle blocker Roderick Green led all players with three blocks and shared team-high honors with Jason Roberts with four aces. Green registered seven kills to finish with 14 points.

Outside hitter Eric Duda also reached double digits in kills with 11 and added an ace. James Stuck scored 10 points on nine kills and an ace. Roberts added three kills to his four aces for seven points.

Three aces by Green and a kill by Upp put the U.S. ahead 14-9 in the opening set against Japan. After the lead was cut to three points, 20-17, Green recorded a block and a kill on back-to-back plays to put the advantage back to five points. The U.S. served eight aces in the set.

A kill by Upp and an ace from Green put the U.S. ahead 17-11 in the second set. After Japan closed the gap to four points, 18-14, Upp recorded a kill and served for two more points to push the lead to seven points. Roberts produced a kill off the block and followed with an ace for a 23-15 lead. After surrendering the next point, the U.S. took a two-set lead on a pair of Japan hitting errors.

Japan used a 9-3 run to take what seemed to be insurmountable 20-12 in the third set before a ferocious U.S. comeback evened the set at 24.

A kill by Stuck cut the lead to five, 23-18, and then John Kremer served for four consecutive points with another Stuck kill cutting the deficit to two points and a Japan hitting error bringing the U.S within a point.

A kill by middle blocker Green and a Stuck ace fought off two set points and evened the set at 24. After fighting off another set point, a kill by Zach Upp gave the U.S. match point at 26-25. The U.S. faced three more set points and had two more match points before a Green kill and a Duda kill after another strong serve from Kremer finally ended the set and match.

vs. Netherlands

In the win over the Netherlands, the U.S. used a 32-19 advantage in kills and 10-5 in aces to earn the sweep. The teams were even in blocks with nine.

“The Netherlands are an exciting team to play and a really emotional team to play, which is great. What I like about those matches is any big play the Netherlands has can be a huge momentum swing, so it was a good test and a good way to start the tournament,” head coach Greg Walker said.

Upp led all players with 16 points on nine kills, a match-best five aces and two blocks. Green shared match-high honors with four blocks, adding four kills and two aces to also reach double digits with 10 points.

Duda contributed eight points on six kills and two blocks, Stuck recorded six kills, and Roberts finished with five kills.

The U.S. started the tournament strong, jumping out to an 8-3 lead against the Netherlands in the first set. A 5-2 stretch already leading 16-10 helped the U.S. pull away in the set. Seven aces keyed the second set win. The U.S. recorded 12 kills in the final set and benefited from 10 Netherlands errors. The Netherlands made a late run the third set to cut a five-point deficit to one before the U.S. prevailed.

“It is an interesting tournament because every day we are playing two matches, so our regular scout prep is a little tougher. It reminds me of VNL (Volleyball Nations League) with everybody trying to get new athletes in, trying to figure out where they stand,” Walker commented. “We had some flight complications coming in, so it was awesome to see the guys get right off the bus to play at a pretty high level. Yesterday we had scrimmages with Poland and Türkiye, and it was pretty exciting.”

Roster

No. Name (Position, Height, Hometown)
Dan Regan (OH, 6-0, St. Louis, Mo.)
Nick Dadgostar (L, 6-0, Sidney, Neb.)
Ben Aman (OH, 6-5, Edmond, Okla.)
Eric Duda (S/OH, 6-5, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.)
Alex Wilson (OPP/OH, 6-6, Saugerties, N.Y.)
James Stuck (S/OH, 6-5, New Kensington, Pa.)
10 Robbie Onusko(OH, 6-0, Daytona Beach, Fla.)
11 Roderick Green (MB, 6-3, West Monroe, La.)
14 John Kremer (L, 5-9, Buford, Ga.)
17 Zach Upp (OH, 6-5, Bartlett, Ill.)
20 Jason Roberts (OH, 6-3, Moncks Corner, S.C.)
22 Brett Parks(OH, 6-0, Miami, Fla.)
23 Will Curtis (S/L, 6-0, Cumberland, Maine)
49 Sam Surowiec (OH, 6-2, Everett, Wash.)

Coaches
Head coach: Greg Walker
Assistant Coach: Julie Allen
Assistant Coach: Dave Dantes
Assistant Coach: Kenzie Rombach
Performance Analyst: Sydnie Mabry
Athletic Trainer: Whitney Padgett

Schedule

July 4
USA def. Netherlands, 3-0 (25-16, 25-17, 25-23)
USA def. Japan, 3-0 (25-20, 25-16, 33-31)

July 5
USA vs Türkiye, 12 a.m., followed by playoffs

July 6
Playoffs



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SafeSport paid investigator’s way to training despite knowing he had problems

DENVER (AP) — Less than a week after the U.S. Center for SafeSport learned of allegations against an investigator for theft and harassment, it paid his way to agency headquarters for an all-staff training session that included after-hours socials where the center provided vouchers for drinks. The center would go on to fire the investigator, […]

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DENVER (AP) — Less than a week after the U.S. Center for SafeSport learned of allegations against an investigator for theft and harassment, it paid his way to agency headquarters for an all-staff training session that included after-hours socials where the center provided vouchers for drinks.

The center would go on to fire the investigator, Jason Krasley, who would be charged on those counts and also later be arrested for sex crimes allegedly committed while he was at his previous job, a vice cop for the Allentown, Pennsylvania., police department.

The center’s handling of the Krasley matter triggered an inquiry by Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and played a key role in the firing of CEO Ju’Riese Colon in April.

These before-undisclosed details about how the center responded when it found out about the allegations against Krasley – one from an incident in 2019 and another from 2024 – lend more insight into its handling of a sensitive employment matter that ended up sending shockwaves through the center and the Olympic community.

In responses to questions from The Associated Press, SafeSport explained Krasley was allowed to participate in the event because “the Center adhered to directives from law enforcement to not take any actions that could alert the investigator to a criminal investigation.” Krasley is free on bond as his cases await trial. His attorney has said Krasley is innocent of the charges.

The center fired Krasley on Nov. 15, more than two months after the training sessions. Not until an AP report in December did Krasley’s arrest for theft and his firing from the center become public. Another AP report in January revealed that Krasley had subsequently been arrested for charges including rape and sex trafficking.

Three employees who also attended the training and social events, which spilled over into some after-hours drinks at the hotel bar where the out-of-towners were staying, confirmed to AP that Krasley was there and that none were made aware of the legal troubles that were beginning to pile up for the investigator. None reported any inappropriate contact from Krasley,

The people who told AP about the training did not want their names used for fear it could impact their jobs.

Trauma-informed training courses but also a “Joyologist”

The center, which was established in 2017 to handle abuse allegations in Olympic sports, said the training included sessions about trauma-informed practices, department presentations by staff, an update on the Center’s strategic plan, and various team-building activities.

“Given the difficult subject matter staff deal with on a daily basis, the Center prioritizes employee well-being,” the center’s email said.

One of the well-being sessions involved a presentation from a person described as a “Joyologist.”

A person who attended that session said it lasted about 90 minutes, and included exercises in which employees made small puppets and played games of “Rock, Paper, Scissors.”

The center said the session “was facilitated by a medical doctor and focused on understanding the science of joy and improving individuals’ quality of life, approach to work, and interaction with colleagues.”

Employees were also told, according to people present, that attendance at the after-hours mixers was expected.

For the first night, employees were given two vouchers for food and two for drinks at an indoor-outdoor restaurant-bar near downtown Denver with beach volleyball and other games. No drink vouchers were given for the second night, but attendance was, once again, expected at a pub in south Denver where Krasley and dozens of other Center employees attended.

Arrests, expenses caught attention of key senator

Nearly four months after the training, the string of arrests became public and caught the attention of Grassley, the chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, who sent a letter to Colon in February seeking answers about considerations that went into the center’s hiring of the vice officer. Among the revelations was that during the hiring process, the center had been made aware of internal investigations into Krasley while he worked at the force, but hired him anyway.

“You conceded that this was ‘concerning information’ but hired him nonetheless after being unable to ascertain additional information,” Grassley said in an April letter to the center seeking follow-up.

The case, Colon explained to Grassley, had been based on statements from an alleged victim who later recanted.

The center hired Krasley in April 2021. On Sept. 5, 2024, it said in a letter to the senator, it became aware of allegations against Krasley – one in 2019 for allegedly stealing money seized in a drug bust he participated in, another in June 2024 for harassment, using lewd language and other charges.

That revelation came four days before most of the center’s 133 employees, many of whom work remotely across 33 different states, descended on Denver for a week’s worth of training sessions based at agency headquarters.

“This decentralized model is necessary based on the scope of our work and budget,” the center said in its email to AP. “As such, the annual event is important as it brings together the entire team for training, wellness, collaboration, and team building.”

In a follow-up letter to April Holmes, the board chair who became interim CEO after Colon’s departure, Grassley pinpointed the center’s $390,000 travel budget in 2023 as among some “expenses that seem excessive for a non-profit organization.”

Holmes responded, explaining “as an organization with national jurisdiction, travel is critical to executing the Center’s mission.”

Changes were made at center following Krasley’s dismissal

After the Krasley episode became public, the center took a number of steps, including:

  • Commissioning a third-party law firm to audit cases Krasley resolved, and working with experts in trauma-informed care to make sure those who interacted with him receive appropriate communication and support.
  • Enhancing its code of ethics and adding an ethics clause to all letters offering employment.
  • Strengthening hiring practices, including ensuring each final candidate for a job meets with the CEO for a final interview.
  • Requiring checks of the National Decertification Index, which keeps track of certificate of license revocations relating to officer misconduct.

This culminated with the firing of Colon in April. Last month, the center held a series of seven community outreach programs with athletes, survivors and Olympic sports leaders.

The center said it has also informed employees of mental-health resources available in the wake of Krasley’s arrest “and has notified staff of both internal and independent mechanisms for reporting any concerns related to the investigator.”

___

AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports





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World Aquatics global webinars on women’s health continue to promote education and communication on menstrual cycle

World Aquatics launched the global webinar series dedicated to women’s health in April 2025, following strong engagement on the topic during the World Aquatics Swimming Championships (25m) 2024 in Budapest. Olympic Swimming gold medallist Pernille Blume (Denmark) and Open Water Swimming Olympian Caroline Jouisse (France) led the session, and provided powerful testimonies on menstrual stigma […]

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World Aquatics launched the global webinar series dedicated to women’s health in April 2025, following strong engagement on the topic during the World Aquatics Swimming Championships (25m) 2024 in Budapest.

Olympic Swimming gold medallist Pernille Blume (Denmark) and Open Water Swimming Olympian Caroline Jouisse (France) led the session, and provided powerful testimonies on menstrual stigma in sport and management of menstrual cycle-related symptoms.


Image Source: Marton Csanadi/World Aquatics

“The key takeaways from this webinar are that both physical and psychological symptoms related to the menstrual cycle can be expected, as well as potential side effects associated with hormonal contraception. Intense symptoms that impact daily activity should not be considered as normal, and identifying when symptoms occur and trying different strategies to manage them is recommended,” Jouisse summarised.

The session was interactive throughout, and featured a series of polls on the participants’ main symptoms of the menstrual cycle and when they most feel the effects of those symptoms.

A range of symptoms were identified through the polls, with common symptoms including mood swings, abdominal pain or menstrual cramps, lower back pain and menstrual fatigue.

“I think the cycle can be truly empowering. One thing for sure is that everything changes in nature, and for women we have to learn how to go through change every month. That makes women highly empowered and strong mentally”

By Pernille Blume

Elite coach Tom Rushton offered a coach’s insight on how to support female athletes, and sport scientist Marine Dupuit from the French Institute of Sport Performance also joined the session to present research on how the menstrual cycle can affect performance.

Rushton underlined the need for coaches to build relationships and strong communication with their athletes.

“I think as a coach when you have something that is impacting your performance in training or competition, you are going to start to look at the causes and what you can do to help alleviate that. Educating yourself on things like the menstrual cycle can be helpful. It might not be the first thing I would think of as a cause for some symptoms because I haven’t experienced that, so knowing the menstrual cycle could be a reason for that is really important,” he said.


Image Source: World Aquatics’ global webinar series on women’s health builds on the strong engagement on the topic during the World Aquatics Swimming Championships (25m) in Budapest (Marton Csanadi/World Aquatics)

The webinar discussed potential strategies to help manage menstrual cycle-related symptoms, including nutritional strategies based on anti-inflammatory food, iron-rich food, tryptophane-rich food and magnesium-rich food, therapeutic strategies to reduce pains, and ways to promote a healthy sleep routine.

Stretching strategies, specific warm-ups to reduce injury risk, ways to reduce stress, and how to adapt communication and training were also outlined.

“There is no miracle solution to manage symptoms, there is a lot of trial and error to find what works for you”

By Marine Dupuit

The next global webinar focused on women’s health will take place on Tuesday 23 September, and discuss the topic of “Optimising training and performance across the menstrual cycle”.

Further resources on how the menstrual cycle affects elite female athletes can be found here.

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Former Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey charged with 5 counts of rape

Former Arsenal defensive midfielder Thomas Partey faces five counts of rape and one count of sexual assault, the Metropolitan Police Service announced Friday. Three different women are involved in the charges. Two counts of rape are related to one woman. Three counts of rape were reported by a different woman. The one charge of sexual […]

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Former Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey charged with 5 counts of rape

Former Arsenal defensive midfielder Thomas Partey faces five counts of rape and one count of sexual assault, the Metropolitan Police Service announced Friday.

Three different women are involved in the charges. Two counts of rape are related to one woman. Three counts of rape were reported by a different woman. The one charge of sexual assault comes from a third woman.

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All the alleged incidents reportedly took place between 2021 and 2022, while Partey was a member of Arsenal. Police opened an investigation into Partey in February 2022, after police received the first report of rape.

Partey’s lawyer, Jenny Wiltshire, said the midfielder “denies all the charges” and “welcomes the opportunity to finally clear his name,” per The Independent. Wiltshire added Partey has cooperated with police throughout their investigation.

Partey’s contract with Arsenal expired Monday, and the 32-year-old was reportedly fielding offers from Juventus, Barcelona and Fenerbahce, per Sky News. He spent five years with Arsenal after joining the team on a £45.3m deal. He scored nine goals in 109 starts with the team.

Prior to joining Arsenal ahead of the 2020-21 season, Partey played for Atlético Madrid. He was also loaned to Mallorca and Almería during his tenure with Atlético Madrid. Partey has also starred with the Ghanian national team since 2016.

Partey is set to appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Aug. 5.

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Saint Lucia’s U-21 Beach Volleyball Stars Set for World Championship Qualifiers in Punta Cana

Photo via MYS A formidable quartet of young beach volleyball athletes is flying the Saint Lucian flag high this week as they head to Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, to compete in the NORCECA Under-21 Beach Volleyball World Championship Qualifiers from July 3 to 7, 2025. Representing the island are two elite teams: […]

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Photo via MYS

A formidable quartet of young beach volleyball athletes is flying the Saint Lucian flag high this week as they head to Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, to compete in the NORCECA Under-21 Beach Volleyball World Championship Qualifiers from July 3 to 7, 2025.

Representing the island are two elite teams:

  • Men’s Team: Rio Victor and Peter Emmanuel
  • Women’s Team: Ericka Gaspard and Clio Phillip
  • Head Coach: Terry Verdant

These athletes have earned their place on the sand through exceptional performances at recent regional tournaments.

In June, Gaspard and Phillip captured the Eastern Caribbean Volleyball Association (ECVA) Under-21 Beach Championship title in commanding fashion. They overcame Antigua and Barbuda’s duo, Jaya Carr and Jassania Joseph, in a thrilling two-set final, winning 21-11, 23-21. Their performance was marked by precision, poise, and impressive court chemistry, earning them the admiration of the Caribbean volleyball community.

On the men’s side, Victor and Emmanuel showcased fierce determination and athleticism. The pair secured silver medals after a competitive showdown against Dominica’s Bill Frederick and Mervin Mingo in the ECVA final. Though they fell in straight sets (21-17, 21-15), the Saint Lucian duo demonstrated strength and skill that signal great potential on the international circuit.

As they prepare to face off against some of the region’s best, the Saint Lucian delegation carries not just hopes for qualification—but also the pride of a nation rallying behind their rising stars.



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2025 All-County Girls’ Outdoor Track & Field | Sports

Girls’ Co-Athletes of the Year Leanna Rogers & Haille Dry, North East, Seniors Both Rogers and Dry captured their first-ever state titles as members of the Indians and won multiple championship meets in their respective disciplines throughout the spring. Rogers captured her Class 2A title in the 1,600-meter run (5:09.76) and added a third-place finish […]

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Girls’ Co-Athletes of the Year

Leanna Rogers & Haille Dry, North East, Seniors

Girls’ Coach of the Year

Jill McKay, Rising Sun

Emma Bare, Rising Sun, Sophomore

Sarah Beck, Bohemia Manor, Sophomore

Aria Besong, North East, Sophomore

Katie Callaghan, Rising Sun, Senior

Isabella Chavis, Rising Sun, Senior

Madi Cleary, Rising Sun, Senior

Jillian Gallano, Perryville, Senior

Mikayla Horst, Rising Sun, Sophomore

Adelyn Huber, Rising Sun, Freshman

Ayva Jacobs, Perryville, Sophomore

Skylar Pizzulli, Bohemia Manor, Senior

Colbie Rondone, Perryville, Junior

Kylie Schoff, Bohemia Manor, Freshman

Maya Stoneking, Elkton, Senior

Honorable Mentions



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