Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

Sports

Semifinal day at women’s water polo

Published

on


Day 13 Schedule

Classification 7-8
Match 45. 16:00.

Classification 3-4
Match 47. 17:35.

Classification 5-6
Match 46. 20:00.

Classification 1-2
Match 48. 21:35.

Overview

In classification matches, China reversed the result of last year’s Doha play-off, beating New Zealand 10-6. Great Britain defeated France for the second time after day-one round play, to take out 11th position.

Match Reports

Classification 9-10

Match 40, CHINA 10 NEW ZEALAND 6 (4-2, 2-1, 0-1, 4-2)

In Doha last year this match was also for ninth classification and the Kiwis won 16-15. Today China held sway for all of the match and finished with a flourish despite a multitude of Kiwi goals on target or hitting the frame.

China almost swam away with the match in the first quarter such was the ferocity of its attack. Yan Siya and two Zhou Shang forward goals had China at 3-0 by 4:46. It took two Morgan McDowall goals — the first off the left-post position on extra and the second on counter — and an Emily Nicholson centre-forward backhand  at 3:06 to level the score, However, a VAR review showed the ball was still in hand at the buzzer and the goal disallowed. It did slow the China charge, however. With eight seconds remaining, Zhang Yumian nudged the score to 4-2. Zhang Yumian started the second quarter from the top left. Nearly three minutes later, McDowall scored off the left post on extra again for 5-3. Yan Siya hit the crossbar on penalty at 1:09 but found a gap at 0:30 for 6-3 at halftime.

A Kiwi timeout at 5:48 yielded several shots at goal with McDowall picking up the rubbish and muscling in her fourth goal. As the thunder ripped through the city and rain and intruded the media tribunes, New Zealand had a challenge disallowed. Straight after the ball was stolen and Morgan went on the charge, gaining a penalty foul. China challenged — amazing since Angie Winstanley-Smith and Miki Oca, the respective coaches, chatted in the stands for a long period before the match. The challenge was lost and Millie Quin hit the right post. Tough defence denied both teams a goal before the final break.

The last period was excellent for China sneaking in two goals before McDowall stopped the trend with her four-metre strike. Shao Yixin countered for 9-5 and Emmerson Houghton converted a penalty after a violent action was challenged as two Chinese players left the water clutching their eyes. Wang Huan sent in a slider from well outside for 10-6 at 2:15, which proved to be the winner.

Match Heroes
McDowall
was the best in water by far with her dynamic play, gutsy intervention and power shooting, netting her  five of the Kiwis’ six goals. She finished the tournament with 19 goals. Emmerson Houghton, who scored the penalty was second with 14. For China, Zhang Yumian, Zhou Shang, Wang Huan and Yan Siya scored twice each. Yan was best for China with 15 goals and Shao Yixin, one today, took 10. Goalkeeper Shen Yineng stopped eight today and 50 for the week.

Turning Point
The opening three goals.

Stats Don’t Lie
China may have only scored one from three on extra but denied the Kiwis nine times from 11. China missed its one penalty shot and New Zealand one from two. China stole 11 to eight and shot 31 to 27.

Bottom Line
Two classy teams with a point to prove and both played strongly.

What They Said

Classification 11-12

Match 39, FRANCE 9 GREAT BRITAIN 14  (1-2, 3-4, 2-4, 3-4)

These two teams were meeting for the second time in Singapore with Great Britain having beaten France 12-9 on the first day of competition in their round clash. Today, it was a similar score at 14-9 but with a different dimension that included two French red cards. Whereas Britain was 2-1 ahead after the first period today, last week, France held the edge at 4-3. Tiziana Raspo opened for France from centre forward with Lily Turner on penalty and Katie Brown from the top deciding the period in Britain’s favour. Turner had her penalty attempt blocked at the top of the second quarter with Ema Vernoux making sure of her penalty chance at the other end. Anya Clapperton on extra from the top; Turner from the outside left and Kathy Rogers off a cross pass to the right post on extra rocketed Great Britain to 5-2. Vernoux converted another penalty foul for 5-3, much like in that first match. Valentine Heurtaux sent in France’s third penalty goal and Rogers dragged down a cross pass to the left post from the right on extra for 6-4 — the exact score as on day one. One of the keys to British supremacy was the nine saves from goalkeeper Sophie Jackson.

Toula Falvey scored on extra off the right-post position on the first British attack of the second half and Vernoux finished a clinical extra-player movement for 7-5. Brooke Tafazolli speared one down the left and Amelia Peters turned at the left post to goal at 4:33. Camille Radosavljevic pulled one back for France, although Izzy Howe finished an extra-player movement from top right on double extra at 0:23. A chance for France to narrow that margin failed when Heurtaux bounced into the crossbar on penalty, five seconds from the buzzer. At 10-6, it almost mirrored the first encounter when Britain led 11-6. Pasiphae Martineaud Peret had 11 saves for France at this stage and Jackson was on 12.

Controversy reigned in the final quarter as, after three and a half minutes when Heurtaux scored form the top, Vernoux was adjudged, with the use of VAR, to have allegedly kicked an opponent in the head in an earlier movement. Heurtaux’s effort was scratched, Vernoux sent from the pool deck (reluctantly) and Great Britain on a player up. It was Peters who scored, not on extra, for 11-7 and Radosavljevic made a penalty conversion. Soon after Arianna Banchi was red-carded (Ed: reason unknown), joining team-mate Vernoux in the “naughty box”. Another shot at extra attack yielded nothing and France called a timeout at 2:57, still in with a chance. Lou Jean-Michel converted extra for 11-8 and Turner put away another penalty shot. Britain called a timeout and Brown converted double extra. Emma Duflos did not wish to leave Singapore without a goal, so scored from centre forward at 0:52. Captain Rogers shovelled in a rebound off the second British shot at 0:14 and Britain had grasped 11th place.

Match Heroes
Britain’s Turner (18 in total) and Rogers (8) scored three each. Falvey scored once today for 10. Goalkeeper Jackson made 12 saves for 38 in Singapore. France’s Vernoux scored three for 15 and Radosavljevic three. Heurtaux, who scored one from nine today, was second best with 10 goals. Martineaud Peret also made 12 saves for 49 in all.

Turning Point
Britain coming from one down to 6-4 ahead at halftime and then 10-6 at the last break.

Stats Don’t Lie
Britain scored eight from 15 on extra and stopped five of seven. On penalties, France went four from five and Britain two from three. On steals, Britain made nine to eight and shot 37-34.

Bottom Line
Great Britain, with three wins here, was 11th in 2024 and France 14th, so one team advanced its position.

What They Said

Enjoy this article? Why not share…





Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Fantin’s Late Goal Lifts No. 4 Nittany Lions over No. 10 Cornell – Penn State

Published

on


UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – Matilde Fantin’s late third period goal lifted the No. 4 Nittany Lions over No. 10 Cornell on Tuesday evening to finish 18-1-0 in 2025.

HOW IT HAPPENED

  • With under five minutes to go in the game and on the power play, Maddy Christian skated into the offensive zone after receiving a pass from Sophie Morrow and she dropped it off to Matilde Fantin who sent a rocket just under the bar to score.

GOALTENDERS

  • Senior goaltender Katie DeSa made a season-high 35 saves in the victory. She is now tied with Josie Bothun ’24 for the program’s all-time shutout.
  • Cornell goaltender Annelies Bergmann made 31 saves in the loss.

STATS AND NOTES

  • Penn State won their sixth game over a ranked opponent, their most wins over ranked opponents in a single season.
  • Katie DeSa’s 34 saves is the most by a Nittany Lion goaltender since she had 38 against Mercyhurst on Dec. 7, 2024.
  • Matilde Fantin scored her eighth goal of the season, to lead all rookie skaters on PSU.
  • Penn State improves to 2-4-1 against Cornell all-time, snapping a three-game losing streak dating back to Oct. 13, 2022.
  • Maddy Christian has points in back-to-back games to bring her season total to 20.

UP NEXT

  • Penn State hits the road to face No. 2 Ohio State in the program’s first ever top-five matchup in Columbus, Ohio this weekend. Friday’s game is set for 6 p.m. and Saturday’s puck drop slated 3:30 p.m.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

2025 All Mountain Volleyball | Sports

Published

on


The Appalachian Newspapers’ 2025 All Mountain Volleyball Team is comprised of players from the 15th Region, Jenkins, Buckhorn, Knott Central, Perry Central, Hazard and Letcher Central.

The 2025 All-Mountain Volleyball Team was voted upon by the Appalachian Newspapers’ Randy White, Steve LeMaster and Adam Mahan.

All Mountain 

Volleyball Player of the Year nominees:

Kylie Kinner — Paintsville

Miley Riddle — Shelby Valley

Lindy Gearheart — Pikeville

Taylor Baker — Knott Central

 

All Mountain Volleyball 

Player of the Year

Miley Riddle — Shelby Valley: Riddle had an outstanding junior season. She led the state in kills with 838 (Paintsville’s Kylie Kinner finished second with 828). Riddle helped Shelby Valley to its most successful season in school history as the Lady Wildcats finished the season with a 34-6 record. Shelby Valley won the 15th Region All “A” Classic and advanced to the state All “A” Classic Bronze Division finals, the 59th District Tournament, their first-ever 15th Region Tournament championship, a win over Knott Central in the opening round of the KHSAA Volleyball State Tournament and an appearance in the state volleyball quarterfinals.

 

All Mountain Coach of 

the Year nominees:

Misty Riddle — Shelby Valley

Dawn Kinner — Paintsville

Shae Cornett — Knott Central

 

 

All Mountain Coach 

of the Year:

Misty Riddle — Shelby Valley: Riddle helped Shelby Valley to its most successful season in school history as the Lady Wildcats finished the season with a 34-6 record. Shelby Valley won the 15th Region All “A” Classic and advanced to the state All “A” Classic Bronze Division finals, the 59th District Tournament, their first-ever 15th Region Tournament championship, a win over Knott Central in the opening round of the KHSAA Volleyball State Tournament and an appearance in the state volleyball quarterfinals.

 

All-Mountain 

Volleyball Team

Shelby Valley

Sahnia Linton

Talynn Johnson

Ryleigh Perry

Makaya Price

Lindsay Baldwin 

 

Paintsville

Kylie Kinner

Mallory May

Ella Wells

Addison Helton

Annabelle Blankenship

 

Pikeville

Lindy Gearheart

Carly May

Sophie Woods

Catharine Walters

Kyla Lee

 

East Ridge

Savannah Baldridge

Lily Stacy

Savannah Wallace

Olivia Stanley

 

Pike Central

Layla Johnson

Sadie Vaughn

Alyssa Hess

Molly Reed

Claire Stacy

 

Belfry

Baylor Hall

Makaylin Meade

Abrielle Swain

 

Phelps

Aerionna Pigman

Charity Mounts

Cloey Bevins

 

Johnson Central

Chloe Reed

Macie Clark

Mia Estep

Madi Conn

Leah Hall 

 

Martin County

No stats listed on the KHSAA website

 

Magoffin County

Karlee Wallen

Kellen Simpkins

Jaylee Reed

Abby Barnett

 

Betsy Layne

Jayden Jarrell

Jania Isom

Harlyn Slone

Aubrey Williams

Miley Burchett

 

Prestonsburg

Addison Wright

Ally Hamilton

Katie Slone

Kennedy Dixon

 

Floyd Central

Chloe Howard

Lydia Wallace

Caidence Lafferty

Rylee Daniels

Miley Thornsberry

 

Lawrence County

Brylee Stafford

Aryn Huffman

Kailyn Stacy

 

Hazard

Savannah Combs

Mallory Mitchell

Rachel Allen

Adyson Jent

 

Perry Central

Laney Davis

Lylah Sullivan

Meghan Asher

Kinley McGraner

Chloe Campbell

 

Knott Central

Taylor Baker

Zoe Miller

Samara Bailey

Ava Waddell

Avery Conley

 

Buckhorn

Ashlynn Adams

Chasity Turner

Haylee-Drew Blank

 

Jenkins

Abbigail Lilly

Peyton Wilder

Kassidy Bolling

 

Letcher Central

Evany Pack

Kelsi Holbrook

Calissa Lowe

Hanna Eldridge



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

KU signee Stanley set for All-America Game

Published

on








article image
Under Armour Next


Taylor Stanley



The new year will begin with a significant showcase for a player who could mean a lot to the Kansas volleyball team down the line.

Right-side hitter Taylor Stanley, a 2026 signee, will take part in the Under Armour All-America Game, an all-star match that purports to feature “the 28 best high school volleyball players in the country, hands down.” The event will take place at The Venue at UCF in Orlando, Florida, on Thursday and is set for livestreams on ESPN+ and the SportsCenter Next YouTube channel beginning at 3 p.m. Central Time.

Stanley will wear No. 23 for Team Roses, which is led by longtime Texas, USC and United States national team coach Mick Haley, as one of seven pin hitters on its roster. She is the only Kansan or KU pledge taking part in the event.

Stanley stands 6-foot-3 and has played for Blue Valley Southwest High School in Overland Park and the KC Power club team.

“Taylor definitely represents the best player in the area, and she’s choosing to be at her home school, and she wants to be a Jayhawk, KU coach Matt Ulmer said in a VBAdrenaline livestream for signing day, “and again hopefully people will want to follow that.”

She signed with KU in November and, according to her school newspaper, is set to enroll early, meaning she will join the Jayhawks not long after taking part in the All-America Game. VBAdrenaline.com ranks Stanley as the No. 12 overall player in the class and the No. 1 opposite.

“I don’t know what you don’t like about her,” Ulmer said on the livestream. “I really think there’s everything that you would want in an opposite. She can absolutely bring that. She can also score from the left, she can score from the back row, I mean, she’s going to be a six-rotation point scorer, and we know the names of the people that can do that at a high level, and I think that’s what she can bring.”

She has spent time representing the U.S. at the youth level, as she played with the under-19 national team, which competed above its age group at the 2025 FIVB Women’s U21 World Championship in Surabaya, Indonesia, in August. The U.S. went 7-2 with a ninth-place finish.

At KU, Stanley will be part of a six-player class that also includes pin hitters Tessa Dodd, Avery Poulton and Ryan Sadler and middle blockers Cydnee Bryant and Jaeli Rutledge. She may see significant action right away on the right side, in part because of the qualities Ulmer described and in part because of the offseason departure of all-conference opposite Jovana Zelenović.






PREV POST

26 Jayhawk athletes to know in ’26






NEXT POST

KU signee Stanley set for All-America Game








Author Photo

Written By Henry Greenstein


Henry is the sports editor at the Lawrence Journal-World and KUsports.com, and serves as the KU beat writer while managing day-to-day sports coverage. He previously worked as a sports reporter at The Bakersfield Californian and is a graduate of Washington University in St. Louis (B.A., Linguistics) and Arizona State University (M.A., Sports Journalism). Though a native of Los Angeles, he has frequently been told he does not give off “California vibes,” whatever that means.









Link

Continue Reading

Sports

St. Cloud State Athletics Names Wolters Kluwer Athletes of the Month for December

Published

on


ST. CLOUD, Minn. – St. Cloud State Athletics recognized two student-athletes as the Wolters Kluwer Athletes of the Month for December. Men’s Basketball sophomore guard Luke Winkel (Ankeny, Iowa) was named Male Athlete of the Month while Volleyball junior outside hitter Shelby Kimm (North Liberty, Iowa) was named Female Athlete of the Month for their performances during the month.
 
Luke Winkel’s December Highlights

  • Averaged 22.0 points, 4.5 rebounds, 4.8 assists, and 1.5 assists.
  • Shot 44.7% from the field, 43.6% from three, and 74.2% from the free throw line.
  • Tallied his first career double-double with 27 points and 11 assists against Wayne State.
  • Scored a then career-high 29 points against Concordia-St. Paul to go with six assists.
  • Totaled a new career-high of 30 points with seven rebounds and five steals against Sioux Falls.
  • Helped lead the Huskies to a 5-0 start in the NSIC for the first time since 2008-09.
  • SCSU went 4-2 in December and are tied for third in the NSIC with a 5-2 conference record.
  • Currently fourth in the NSIC in scoring and assists.

Shelby Kimm’s December Highlights

  • 3 MP: 3.38 digs/set, 2.69 points/set, 2.38 kills/set, 0.46 blocks/set, one double-double
  • Produced 19 digs and seven kills in the Huskies 3-1 win over No. 17 Missouri Western in the NCAA Round of 64/Central Region Quarterfinals. Her 19 digs were tied for the second most in a single match this season and it was her sixth straight match with double digit digs.
  • Recorded 11 kills and eight digs in SCSU’s 3-1 win over No. 2 and Central Region Host, Nebraska Kearney in the NCAA Round of 32/Central Region Semifinals. It was her 21st match with 10+ kills.
  • Notched an 18-dig, 13-kill double-double with three block assists in the Huskies five-set loss to No. 6 Concordia-St. Paul in the NCAA Sweet 16/Central Region Championship. It was her 17th double-double of the season. It was also her fifth match with 18+ digs and her 13th match with 13+ kills.
  • Named to the AVCA All-America Second Team, AVCA All-Central Region Second Team, D2CCA All-Central Region First Team and NCAA Central Region All-Tournament Team.
  • Named to CSC Academic All-District® Team, NSIC All-Academic Team of Excellence and NSIC All-Academic Team.
  • Helped the Huskies earn a No. 5 ranking in the final AVCA/TARAFLEX Division II Poll for the second consecutive season and third time in program history.
  • Helped SCSU tie its program record for NCAA Tournament wins in a season with two and advance to the NCAA Round of 16/Central Region Championship for the second consecutive season and third time in the past four seasons.

 

2025-2026 Wolters Kluwer Athletes of the Month
September

October

  • Austin Burnevik (Men’s Hockey)
  • Ellie Primerano (Women’s Soccer)

November

  • Dominic Ducato (Wrestling)
  • Jaylee Strickland (Women’s Soccer)

December

For all the latest on St. Cloud State Athletics, stay tuned to SCSUHuskies.com and follow the Huskies on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Three Husker Newcomers Set for Under Armour Next All-America Match – University of Nebraska

Published

on


Three incoming Nebraska volleyball student-athletes will compete in the 2026 Under Armour Next All-America Match on New Year’s Day at The Venue on the campus of UCF in Orlando.

 

Gabby DiVita will play on Team Pearls, while Jayden Robinson and Keoni Williams will be on Team Roses. 

 

The Under Armour Next All-America Match will be streamed live on the SCNext YouTube Channel at 3:30 p.m. CT on Jan. 1, with ESPNU re-airing the event at 6 p.m. CT on Jan. 4.

 

The Under Armour Next All-America match features some of the nation’s best high school seniors as they prepare to join some of the top college volleyball programs in the country. This elite class has committed to 16 different colleges.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

2025 All-Westbank Volleyball Team – Crescent City Sports

Published

on


Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Name School Position Class
Adelynn Creath Academy of Our Lady MB Senior
Lillian Daviss Academy of Our Lady OH Senior
Zhoey Johnson Academy of Our Lady MB Sophomore
Kaitlynn Riley Academy of Our Lady OH Sophomore
Raya Dickinson Belle Chasse S Junior
Brelan Fremin Belle Chasse L Junior
Illeana Austin Edna Karr L Senior
Morgan Ellis Edna Karr S Senior
Laikyn Sabio Fisher OH Senior
Sophia Briscoe John Ehret L/DS Senior
Kiley Davis John Ehret OH Sophomore
Jes’Unique Murdock John Ehret MB Freshman
Dakota Sylve L.B. Landry MB Senior
Addison McGuire South Plaquemines MB Junior
Ny’Jae Barnes Thomas Jefferson MB Senior
Devin Hubbard Thomas Jefferson MB Junior
Kyra Harriet Young Audiences MB Senior

Individual Honors

Offensive MVP:
Lillian Daviss, Senior — Academy of Our Lady

Defensive MVP:
Brelan Fremin, Junior — Belle Chasse



Link

Continue Reading
Motorsports3 weeks ago

SoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener

Motorsports3 weeks ago

Donny Schatz finds new home for 2026, inks full-time deal with CJB Motorsports – InForum

Rec Sports4 weeks ago

Black Bear Revises Recording Policies After Rulebook Language Surfaces via Lever

Rec Sports4 weeks ago

How Donald Trump became FIFA’s ‘soccer president’ long before World Cup draw

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

David Blitzer, Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment

NIL3 weeks ago

DeSantis Talks College Football, Calls for Reforms to NIL and Transfer Portal · The Floridian

Sports4 weeks ago

Elliot and Thuotte Highlight Men’s Indoor Track and Field Season Opener

Motorsports4 weeks ago

JR Motorsports Confirms Death Of NASCAR Veteran Michael Annett At Age 39

Motorsports3 weeks ago

Rick Ware Racing switching to Chevrolet for 2026

Sports3 weeks ago

#11 Volleyball Practices, Then Meets Media Prior to #2 Kentucky Match

Technology4 weeks ago

23 عاما من الفضائح السياسية والجنسية منذ انقلاب حمد بن خليفة.. استغلال الفتيات الصغيرات في الدعارة.. ضبط ابنة رئيس وزراء قطر خلال ممارستها لجنس الجماعي.. ملامح الحكم تتخبط بين المنفي وتدخلات النساء

NIL4 weeks ago

Colleges ponying up in support of football coaches, programs

Motorsports3 weeks ago

Nascar legal saga ends as 23XI, Front Row secure settlement

Sports4 weeks ago

West Fargo volleyball coach Kelsey Titus resigns after four seasons – InForum

Technology4 weeks ago

23 عاما من الفضائح السياسية والجنسية منذ انقلاب حمد بن خليفة.. استغلال الفتيات الصغيرات في الدعارة.. ضبط ابنة رئيس وزراء قطر خلال ممارستها لجنس الجماعي.. ملامح الحكم تتخبط بين المنفي وتدخلات النساء

Most Viewed Posts

Trending