Sports
Simone Biles calls Riley Gaines 'sick' over criticism of transgender athletes
Olympic gymnastics champion Simone Biles is going head-to-head with one of the most vocal opponents of transgender girls and women competing in female sports, former college swimmer Riley Gaines. Biles — the most decorated Olympic gymnast is history — called the former college athlete “sick” and a “sore loser” in a post on X Friday […]


Olympic gymnastics champion Simone Biles is going head-to-head with one of the most vocal opponents of transgender girls and women competing in female sports, former college swimmer Riley Gaines.
Biles — the most decorated Olympic gymnast is history — called the former college athlete “sick” and a “sore loser” in a post on X Friday night.
“You should be uplifting the trans community and perhaps finding a way to make sports inclusive OR creating a new avenue where trans feel safe in sports,” Biles, 28, wrote. “Maybe a transgender category IN ALL sports!!”
“But instead… You bully them,” Biles continued. “One things for sure is no one in sports is safe with you around!!!!!”
As a college swimmer, Gaines tied for fifth place in a competition with then-University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas, who is transgender, in 2022.
Since then, Gaines has largely built a career as a pundit in conservative media advocating against trans women competing in female sports, arguing that it is unfair to include them in competition and their inclusion is at times unsafe for other competitors.
Gaines, 25, has also built an enormous following on social media, with over 1.5 million followers on X, where she regularly lambastes and mocks transgender athletes.
On Friday, Gaines posted an image of a Minnesota girls high school baseball team, which supposedly includes a trans player. She appeared to taunt the player, referring to her as a boy, which appears to have elicited Biles’ response.
Gaines almost immediately responded to Biles’ criticism in a series of posts on X.
“This is so disappointing. My take is the least controversial take on the planet,” Gaines wrote. “Simone Biles being a male-apologist at the expense of young girls’ dreams? Didn’t have that on my bingo card.”
The issues of trans girls and women competing in female sports has become a lightning rod issue in the United States in recent years.
In February, President Donald Trump signed an executive order aiming to prohibit transgender women and girls from competing in female sports.
Before that, at least 27 states already had laws, regulations or policies banning transgender students from participating in sports consistent with their gender identities, according to the Movement Advancement Project, an LGBTQ think tank.
Sports
Jane Hedengren wins Gatorade Girls National Track and Field Player of the Year in surprise visit from Katelyn Tuohy
Jane Hedengren had plans to meet her future college coach for a quiet summer check-in over a cup of Joe. What she didn’t expect was a celebration. Instead of just chatting training plans with BYU coach Diljeet Taylor at a local coffee shop, the recent Timpview (Utah) graduate was greeted by family, friends and one […]

Jane Hedengren had plans to meet her future college coach for a quiet summer check-in over a cup of Joe. What she didn’t expect was a celebration.
Instead of just chatting training plans with BYU coach Diljeet Taylor at a local coffee shop, the recent Timpview (Utah) graduate was greeted by family, friends and one of the biggest names in women’s distance running – former NC State star and professional runner Katelyn Tuohy.
That’s when Hedengren learned she’d been named the 2024-25 Gatorade National Girls Track and Field Player of the Year.
“It’s a big honor,” Hedengren said. “I think there’s a lot of incredible women that are working in the country and have had some great performances this year, and so it was really exciting to receive this award and receive it from such an established track athlete herself and phenomenal person. So overall, just really excited and grateful.”
Katelyn Tuohy is widely recognized as one of the most dominant U.S. distance runners of her generation. As a high school standout, she became the first athlete ever to win both the Gatorade National Girls Cross Country and Track & Field Player of the Year awards in the same year, and went on to claim five Gatorade Player of the Year titles in total. At NC State, she earned four NCAA individual championships, set collegiate records in the indoor mile (4:24.26) and 3,000 meters (8:35.20), and helped lead the Wolfpack to a string of team national titles.
She previously presented the 2023-24 Gatorade National Girls Cross Country award to Colorado standout Addison Ritzenhein (Niwot High, Niwot Colorado), said the nerves were still there despite this being her second time delivering the surprise.
Tuohy turned pro in December 2023 by signing with Adidas, and wasted little time making an impact: she ran a 4:25.54 mile to open the 2025 indoor season, set an NCAA-era outdoor 5K personal best of 15:03.12 in 2022, and earned her first professional victory at a meet in Los Angeles.
“I was still very nervous, because I know how special this award is,” Tuohy said. “This is about Jane and her day, and I just wanted to make sure I was contributing to her special day.”
Though they had never met before the surprise, Tuohy and Hedengren quickly found common ground. With Hedengren headed to BYU and Tuohy now racing professionally, they joked that it likely won’t be the last time their paths cross on the track.
Hedengren capped off one of the best prep seasons in recent memory this spring. She shattered the national high school record in the mile at the Brooks PR Invitational with a time of 4:30.76 – breaking Polly Plumer’s iconic mark that had stood since 1982. She also won national titles in the 800 and mile at New Balance Nationals and was the only high school girl to qualify for the U.S. Olympic Trials in the 1500 meters.
But despite all the wins, medals and records, it’s been the preparation behind the scenes that Hedengren said made the biggest difference.
“I tried to set up my routine in a way that positively contributed to my athletics in a seamless way,” she said. “Just coming back to the basics of really trying to dial in my nutrition and my sleep and not skipping kind of the most valuable parts of performance. And yes, like the little accessory things I was trying to do as well … but I think just having the main thing be the main thing, and trying to come into races with lots of belief and an open mind to what was possible.”
Hedengren, who began running through a local track group in elementary school, said the sport’s simplicity is what first pulled her in – and what continues to keep her grounded.
“You’re just out there racing, trying to get the most out of yourself,” she said. “It’s pretty amazing to have competitors to compete against and try to get the most out of one another. I think it’s really cool that you can just put in this work and kind of see where you’re heading, and that that work will speak for itself on race day.”
She credits her dad, an All-American runner himself, with helping guide her through the mental and emotional side of competition.
Her father, John D. Hendegren, was an NCAA All-American distance runner at BYU and is now a chemical engineering professor at the university. He was inducted into the BYU Athletics Hall of Fame in 2015 and still holds the school record for most CoSIDA Academic All-America honors with five. She credits him with helping guide her through the ups and downs in all aspects of life.
“He’s been able to share lots of valuable lessons, and is just one step ahead of me in this whole process, or a few steps,” Hendengren said. “It’s really, really awesome to have him in my corner. A great person in my life.”
Tuohy – now a pro – said she’s confident Hedengren is ready for the next chapter at BYU.
“I kind of already understand that she’s already so dialed in doing everything correctly,” Tuohy said. “So I guess my best advice would be to continue to lean on her people and enjoy the process. When I look back at college and high school, the memories I have aren’t breaking records or running fast, it’s going on trips with my friends or just goofing around, having a great time.”
As Hedengren gets set to begin her NCAA career in the fall, she’s keeping a wide lens on her goals – focusing on gratitude and long-term growth more than short-term results.
“I want to have a good transition to college and key into that development,” she said. “It’s so vital for young women. And just taking my time with the sport. I’ve got lots of time, so I just want to enjoy myself. I want to treat those around me with kindness and respect and just, yeah, have hopefully a good college career and try to keep an open mind within racing and keep that gratitude for the sport that I love so much.”
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Sports
Marist’s Christian Teresi tops list of local volleyball All-Americans
When he was in grade school, Christian Teresi would take car rides with his father, Marty, to and from volleyball practices and matches. The soundtrack to those trips often was a particular tune: “Humble and Kind” by Tim McGraw. “He would always play that song and that’s how he raised me,” Teresi said of his father. […]

When he was in grade school, Christian Teresi would take car rides with his father, Marty, to and from volleyball practices and matches.
The soundtrack to those trips often was a particular tune: “Humble and Kind” by Tim McGraw.
“He would always play that song and that’s how he raised me,” Teresi said of his father. “It was all about being humble.”
Even when the awards keep coming.
On June 25, both the Junior Volleyball Association and the American Volleyball Coaches Association announced their All-America teams. The Marist setter/opposite hitter from Mount Greenwood was named on the first team for both organizations.
Both Teresi and RedHawks teammate Nathen Toth made it to the JVA All-National first team for the Class of 2025.
Marist’s Briggs Corona made the JVA’s All-National team for the Class of 2027.
Teresi was also named to the first team by the AVCA, while Sandburg’s Jermiah Aro made the second team along with Toth.
Marist’s Jordan Vidovic was named the High School Coach of the Year by AVCA after leading the RedHawks to their second straight IHSA state championship and finishing second in the nation in the AVCA poll.
Even with collecting the All-America awards, Teresi emphasized staying humble.
“A lot of people don’t even win one, so I am grateful,” Teresi said. “Both my dad and coach Vidovic have told me to be thankful for the awards but put them to the side because there is always room for improvement.
“I’m extremely happy about getting the awards, don’t get me wrong. But I feel like there is way more improvement to be done.”
The Ohio State commit finished off his Marist career with a senior season that featured 638 assists, 359 kills, 212 digs, 86 blocks and 28 aces.
His career assist total of 3,258 is third on the IHSA all-time list. Second is Vidovic, who had 3,704 for Brother Rice from 2002-2005.
“It’s been a fun road,” Vidovic said of coaching Teresi. “His first couple of years were eerily similar to my experience as a player. We both started playing volleyball at such a young age. We had similar freshman seasons and we had similar sophomore seasons.
“To get to challenge him to further that, I remember my own experience and I told him, ‘You gotta avoid this and you gotta avoid that buckle down on this.’ To get to work together was fun the last two years to get over the hump in some ways because I was in similar situations.”
Vidovic is also glad for Toth and Corona.
“To have multiple capable players like that kind of explains the season,” he said. “It’s pretty cool for them to enjoy that together. To see them get recognized across the board basically is just another great cap on the season. It’s well-deserved.”
Teresi, Toth, Marist’s Delvin Biggs, Sandburg’s Will Ashim and Oak Lawn’s Oisin Walsh have their eyes on a national championship.
They were scheduled to open play for the Adversity South club this week in the AAU Boys National Volleyball Championships in the 18 Open division. That’s the top division in the tournament.
Related
Sports
Cuban women’s volleyball team denied U.S. visa to compete
HAVANA — The Cuban women’s national volleyball team was denied a chance to play in a tournament in Puerto Rico following the new visa restrictions imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump. The Cuban Volleyball Federation said last week that the team, comprising 12 athletes, a referee and several coaches, had their visa request denied and […]

HAVANA — The Cuban women’s national volleyball team was denied a chance to play in a tournament in Puerto Rico following the new visa restrictions imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump.
The Cuban Volleyball Federation said last week that the team, comprising 12 athletes, a referee and several coaches, had their visa request denied and will be unable to attend the tournament later this month.
“The disappointment is huge because I train every day, every hour of training is leading up to this and dedicate myself to it,” national team player Laura Suarez told The Associated Press. “It’s really disappointing not to be able to participate in the competition, which is what I’ve been preparing myself for.”
Cuba was scheduled to play in the NORCECA Women’s Final Four tournament in Manatí, Puerto Rico. The tournament includes Puerto Rico, Mexico and Costa Rica and it awards ranking points toward qualification for the Volleyball Nations League.
“We were focused on the competition because it’s right there,” said Dayana Martínez, another player. “Arriving at the embassy and being denied the visa affects us a lot because that competition gives us points to improve our ranking,”
The Cuban team’s coach, Wilfredo Robinson, said the decision means his team is likely to miss out on the Nations League.
“The competition grants points for each match and at the end it all adds up,” Robinson said. “In September, we have another tournament and if we get there needing to achieve 80 or 100 points we are not going to be able to do it.”
The United States added Cuba to a list of 12 countries with restrictions for entering the U.S. or its territories, effective from early June. It includes nationals from Afghanistan, the Republic of Congo, Iran, Venezuela and other nations.
“Denial of visas is part of a racist and xenophobic list of visa restrictions,” Cuban foreign minister Bruno Rodriguez wrote on his X account.
In a message sent to The Associated Press, the U.S. Embassy in Cuba stated that, according to its privacy policies, it could not comment on specific cases but that directives were being implemented to secure the borders and protect U.S. communities and citizens.
The Cuban women’s national team won back-to-back world championships in 1994 and 1998. It also won three Olympic golds in a row in Barcelona 1992, Atlanta 1996 and Sydney 2000.
The U.S. measures are likely to impact many more Cuban athletes who depend on international competitions, some on American soil, to qualify for major championships and the Olympics, which is set to take place in Los Angeles in 2028.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to KTLA.
Sports
Spain and Greece to battle for gold at Women’s U16 European Water Polo Championships
Spain took down Italy in the semi-finals on Wednesday in Istanbul. Photo: Nikola Krstic/European Aquatics Greece claimed a dominant win against Hungary, while Spain had to give it all to down Italy in a hard-fought match in the semi-finals of the Women’s U16 European Water Polo Championship in Istanbul. In the end, the two unbeaten […]


Greece claimed a dominant win against Hungary, while Spain had to give it all to down Italy in a hard-fought match in the semi-finals of the Women’s U16 European Water Polo Championship in Istanbul. In the end, the two unbeaten sides will clash for the title on Thursday.
Women’s U16 European Water Polo Championships
Day 6 Semi-Finals – Istanbul, Türkiye
Wednesday 2 July 2025
Greece 15-12 Hungary
Italy 10-13 Spain
5-8th Classification Semi-Finals
Türkiye 10-7 Germany
Netherlands 19-8 Croatia
9/10th Final
Serbia 14-13 Czechia
11th/12th Final
Ukraine 9-10 Romania
13th-15th Play-off
Slovakia 7-5 Malta
Women’s U16 European Water Polo Championships
Day 7 Finals – Istanbul, Türkiye
Thursday 3 July 2025
(Local times shown)
Bronze Medal Game
18:30 Hungary v Italy
Gold Medal Game
20:00 Greece v Spain

In Wednesday’s first semi-final, the Greeks were superior to the Hungarians all over the pool and their composed game secured the win practically by the end of the third period.
In the first quarter, the Magyars managed to climb back from time to time to trail by one, but in a span of two minutes the Greeks hit three from distance to make it 8-4 and never looked back.
A missed Greece penalty didn’t slow down their march, as they played on a different level to the Hungarians, both in attack and in defence.
All in all, the Greeks netted six in the second period to lead 11-6 and they even increased the gap in the third, as the Magyars couldn’t really outplay them in any situation.
Indeed, Hungary scored from six on fives twice only after regaining the ball and pushing it through the virtual goal line (once together with the defender…) – while the Greeks came up with flawless finishes.
Hungary had a late surge when they scored three in a row to come back to 15-12, but they were unable to add any more in the last four minutes and the Greeks could celebrate their fifth straight victory in Istanbul.

Some expected something similar in the second semi-final, as the Spaniards have seemed invincible so far in Istanbul.
However, the Italians stunned them with a strong start, and Margherita Minuto was on fire, hitting three goals in quick succession to put her team 4-2 up.
The Spaniards came back to even shortly before the first break, but it was clear it wouldn’t be the usual easy-going game they had enjoyed on the previous days.
Spain added two more to make it 4-6 at the start of the second, but their 0-4 run was soon halted by Minuto and later Francesca Lucignani joined her to equalise for 6-6.
After a Julia Vilaseca strike, Lucignani quickly levelled again for 7-7, then Daniela Penalver hit one from action to retake the lead for Spain and Italy missed a six on five, so it stood 7-8 at half-time.
The third brought a grand defensive battle, as the goals dried up for a while, especially for the Italians. Two fierce bouncers gave Spain the momentum, as they went up by three for the first time.
Still, just when Spain may have thought they had finally gained control, a great action goal from Rebecca Novella and another hit from Sara Pulvirenti hauled the Italians back into the game, as they trailed 9-10 with eight minutes remaining.
Again, a Spanish bouncer from the left wing did the damage two minutes into the fourth, and this came seconds after Italy had missed a crucial extra, which could have brought them level.
Instead, Penalver’s fine goal doubled Spain’s lead. Lucignani pulled one back from a six on four, but the Spanish reply came immediately, as Julia Vilaseca also converted an extra for 10-12.
Italy kept fighting, but couldn’t really penetrate Spain’s defence, while their rivals could afford missing a couple of six on fives, before a lucky goal – from a rebound after a missed penalty – secured Spain’s win 1:01 before the final buzzer.

In the crossovers among the losing quarter-finalists, the Netherlands outclassed Croatia. The Dutch dominated right from the beginning and won convincingly with their captain Marjoelin de Gier hitting six.
They will play against Türkiye for the 5th place, as the host side outpowered the Germans with a great run in the third that saw them storm into a 9-3 lead, which was enough to sail away with another memorable win.
Serbia claimed the 9th place by downing Czechia. The Serbs led 14-10 after three periods, and even though the Czechs had a great spell in the fourth – reducing the gap to a single goal in three minutes – they couldn’t score any more in the remaining five.
The match for the 11th place also saw a close contest between Ukraine and Romania. Ukraine came back from four goals down to level the score at 9-9 with 1:47 remaining, but Maria Stan hit the winner for Romania 46 seconds from time.
For the lower ranks, Slovakia downed Malta by two goals to set-up a decisive match against France for the 13th place, while Malta finished in last place after their second loss in the 13th-15th round robin.

Watch all the action live from Istanbul for free on the European Aquatics TV channel, which can be found by clicking here. For the full results/tables and schedule, click here.
Gergely Csurka for European Aquatics
Sports
NCAA launches summer walk-on transfer portal in adjustment to House settlement ruling
Tuesday was the start of the revenue-sharing era in college athletics after the House v. NCAA settlement was passed on June 6. The biggest change has been schools paying student-athletes for the first time ever and a new NIL clearinghouse that will attempt to clean up direct pay-for-play. However, this settlement almost failed to pass […]

Tuesday was the start of the revenue-sharing era in college athletics after the House v. NCAA settlement was passed on June 6. The biggest change has been schools paying student-athletes for the first time ever and a new NIL clearinghouse that will attempt to clean up direct pay-for-play. However, this settlement almost failed to pass due to roster limit designations. That caused the NCAA to adjust on the fly.
Judge Claudia Wilken wanted walk-ons or any other player on a roster to have their spot saved for the duration of their college eligibility. That meant that these collection of players were to be grandfathered in for this new era. Now NCAA member institutions must classify what players on their roster are a part of this group.
The NCAA has essentially created a walk-on waiver.
Schools now must tag the players receiving this waiver. Those that become a “Designated Student-Athlete (DSA)” would have been cut from the roster if the roster limits immediately went into play. Once on the DSA list, those student-athletes are eligible to transfer this summer without conditions, and “must be released from their contract prohibition(s)” with their current school. That transfer portal window opens on July 7 and will close on August 5.
Do not expect rosters to drastically change this summer across all sports, but there will be some more player movement heading into the 2025-26 school year. Players currently on scholarship will not be allowed to transfer in this window.
Teams are shifting around how they roster-build moving forward by obeying the roster limits, but also bolstering roster depth with walk-ons who will remain in college athletics for the next couple of years.
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Sports
U.S. Girls U19 National Team Opens 2025 World Championship with Win
Colorado Springs, Colo. (July 2, 2025) –The U.S. Girls U19 National Team, the reigning world champion, opened the 2025 FIVB Girls U19 World Championship title with a 3-1 (22-25, 25-16, 25-12, 25-23) win over Spain on Wednesday in Osijek, Croatia. The U.S. (1-0) will face Peru on Thursday, July 3 at 12:15 p.m. PT. With […]

Colorado Springs, Colo. (July 2, 2025) –The U.S. Girls U19 National Team, the reigning world champion, opened the 2025 FIVB Girls U19 World Championship title with a 3-1 (22-25, 25-16, 25-12, 25-23) win over Spain on Wednesday in Osijek, Croatia.
The U.S. (1-0) will face Peru on Thursday, July 3 at 12:15 p.m. PT.
With lopsided wins in the second and third sets, the U.S. dominated statistically in a competitive match with margins of eight in kills (42-34) and aces (11-3) and seven in blocks (15-8).
Four U.S. players reached double digits in points with middle blocker Gabrielle Nichols scoring 14 points on nine kills, four blocks and an ace, and outside hitter Cari Spears leading the squad with 13 kills and adding an ace for 14 points as well. Setter Genevieve Harris ran the offense while contributing a block and two aces.
“The feeling of wearing the flag across our chest is unmatched. We had a battle in the first match, but we are now onto processing our mistakes, celebrating the coups and improving our overall game to be prepared for the next challenge,” Harris said.
Opposite Henley Anderson recorded a match-high five blocks, including three key blocks in the fourth set, to go with seven kills for 12 points. Middle Jordan Taylor totaled 10 points on five kills, three blocks and two aces.
The U.S. took a quick 10-5 lead in the first set before Spain returned from a timeout to score eight of the next nine points. From there, there were multiple lead changes and the only three-point difference the rest of the way came when Spain won the set. Nichols recorded three blocks in the set and added a kill, and Kelly Kinney scored three points on kills.
With an 8-7 lead in the second set, the U.S. went on a 10-2 run to take a nine-point lead. Devyn Wiest served for six consecutive points with two of the team’s five aces in the set. Taylor scored four points on two kills, a block and ace, while Spears led all players with four kills.
An emphatic Nichols kill out of the middle put the U.S. up 6-1 to begin the third set. Spain as close as five points,10-5, but a Taylor ace culminated a 4-1 run that pushed the lead to eight points, 14-6. Spain was only able to put back-to-back points together once the rest of the set. Outside hitter Lameen Mambu led the way with five points on two kills, two blocks and an ace. Nichols and Spears each delivered four kills.
Spain seemed poised to send the match to a fifth set when it took a 19-14 lead in the fourth set, but the U.S. went on a 9-2 run keyed by strong blocking to take a 23-21 lead. Four of the U.S.’s final nine points came on blocks. Anderson recorded three blocks and three kills for six points. Nichols scored four points on three kills and a block. Spears served for four points, one on an ace, to bring the U.S. within one point (19-18) and scored on three kills in the set.
2025 U19 National Team Roster for World Championship
(Name, Pos., Birth Year, Height, Hometown, School, Region)
3 Jordan Taylor (MB, 6-5, 2007, Houston, Texas, University of Minnesota, Lone Star)
5 Lily Hayes (L, 5-9, 2007, Tampa, Fla., Berkeley Prep HS, Florida)
6 Suli Davis (OH, 6-1, 2007, Euless, Texas, Brigham Young University, North Texas)
8 Abbey Emch (MB, 6-3, 2007, New Waterford, Ohio, University of Pittsburgh, Ohio Valley)
10 Isabelle Hoppe (S, 5-8, 2008, Gibsonia, Pa., Pine Richland HS, Ohio Valley)
11 Kelly Kinney (OH/OPP, 6-2, 2007, West Palm Beach, Fla., The Kings Academy, Florida)
12 Genevieve Harris (S, 5-11, 2007, Raleigh, N.C, Cardinal Gibbons HS, Carolina)
13 Gabrielle Nichols (MB, 6-3, 2007, Winston Salem, N.C., Penn State University, Carolina)
16 Cari Spears (OH, 6-3, 2007, Dallas, Texas, University of Texas, North Texas)
17 Lameen Mambu (OH, 6-0, 2007, Chantilly, Va., Georgia Tech, Chesapeake)
19 Henley Anderson (OPP/OH, 6-3, 2007, Dripping Springs, Texas, Dripping Springs HS, Lone Star)
20 Devyn Wiest (OH, 6-3, 2007, Peoria, Ariz., University of Utah, Arizona)
Alternates
1 Izzy Mogridge (S, 5-11, 2007, Lutz, Fla., Berkeley Prep HS, Florida)
2 Charlotte Vinson (OPP, 6-2, 2007, Muncie, Ind., Yorktown HS, Hoosier)
4 Kalyssa Blackshear (MB/OPP, 6-4, 2007, Torrance, Calif., University of Louisville, Southern California)
7 Ayanna Watson (OH/OPP, 6-3, 2007, Henderson, Nev., Bishop Gorman HS, Southern California)
9 Natalie Wardlow (MB/OPP, 6-5, 2007, Lincoln, Neb., Lincoln Southeast HS, Great Plains)
15 Logan Bell (L, 5-11, 2007, Beech Grove, Ind., Roncalli HS, Hoosier)
18 Aniya Warren (L, 5-8, 2007, Lockport, Ill., Benet Academy, Great Lakes)
Coaches
Head Coach: Keegan Cook (Minnesota)
Assistant Coach: Alyssa D’Errico (Utah)
Assistant Coach: April Sanchez (New Mexico)
Performance Analyst: Jon Wong (Florida State)
ATC: Cherryl Bueno (Coast to Coast AthletiCare)
Team Lead: Courtney Smith (NTDP)
2025 FIVB Girls U19 World Championship Schedule
All times Pacific/Osijek, Croatia
Matches live on VBTV and Volleyball World YouTube
July 2: USA def. Spain, 3-1 (22-25, 25-16, 25-12, 25-23)
July 3: 12:15 p.m. USA vs. Peru
July 4: 12:15 p.m. USA vs. Poland
July 6: 12:15 p.m. USA vs. Bulgaria
July 7: 12:15 p.m. USA vs. Türkiye
July 8: TBA Round of 16
July 11: TBA Playoffs/Quarterfinals
July 12: TBA Playoffs/Semifinals
July 13: Finals
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