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Spring Academic All-Big Ten Teams Announced

Story Links ROSEMONT, Ill. – A total of 169 Washington student-athletes from the eleven spring sports were named to the Spring 2025 Big Ten All-Academic list today, the conference office announced.   The Spring honorees come from the baseball, beach volleyball, men’s and women’s golf, men’s and women’s rowing, softball, men’s and […]

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ROSEMONT, Ill. – A total of 169 Washington student-athletes from the eleven spring sports were named to the Spring 2025 Big Ten All-Academic list today, the conference office announced.
 

The Spring honorees come from the baseball, beach volleyball, men’s and women’s golf, men’s and women’s rowing, softball, men’s and women’s tennis, and men’s and women’s track & field.
 
To be eligible for Academic All-Big Ten selection, students must be on a varsity team, have been enrolled full time at the institution for a minimum of 12 months and carry a cumulative grade-point average of 3.0 or higher.
 
Spring 2025 Big Ten All-Academic
 
Baseball (20)
Colin Blanchard • Senior • Communication
Colton Bower • Junior • Real Estate | Business Administration
Tommy Brandenburg • Senior • Marketing
Sam DeCarlo • Junior • Psychology
Josh Emanuels • Grad Student • Master of Information Management
Jase Evangelista • Sophomore • Pre Major
Jaxson Gore • Sophomore • Pre Major
AJ Guerrero • Senior • Political Science
Reilly McAdams • Senior • Communication
Gunnar Nichols • Junior • Pre Major
Sawyer Parkin • Senior • Communication
Carston Pearson • Sophomore • Pre Major
Jack Sand • Sophomore • Education Studies: Sport & Education
Peysen Sweeney • Senior • Political Science
Braeden Terry • Senior • Psychology
Boston Warkentin • Junior • Law, Societies & Justice
Cooper Whitton • Junior • Pre Major
Blake Wilson • Sophomore • Earth & Space Sciences: Geoscience
Will Woodward • Junior • Communication
Isaac Yeager • Junior • Real Estate
 
Beach Volleyball (7)
Brooke Balue • Sophomore • Real Estate
Reagan Peterson • Junior • Electrical & Computer Engineering
Piper Stephenson • Sophomore • Real Estate
Josie Ulrich • Senior • Master of Health Administration
Lauren Wilcock • Senior • Biology
Sarah Wilcock • Sophomore • Public Health: Global Health
Ella Wimmer • Sophomore • Communication
 
Men’s Golf (3)
Justin Hopkins • Senior • Applied Mathematics
Finn Koelle • Sophomore • Pre Major
Drew Warford • Senior • Postbaccalaureate Study
 
Women’s Golf (5)
Jenny Chang • Senior • Psychology
Jamie Hsieh • Senior • Business Administration
Kennedy Knox • Senior • Real Estate
Carmen Lim • Junior • Psychology
Vivian Lu • Sophomore • Pre Major
 
Men’s Rowing (33)
Matteo Belgeri • Sophomore • Pre Major
Giuseppe Bellomo • Sophomore • Pre Major
Marius Bjørn-Hansen Ahlsand • Senior • Political Science: Political Economy
Dimitri Chamitoff • Sophomore • Aeronautics & Astronautics Engineering
Luke Collins • Junior • History | Political Science
Lyle Donovan • Junior • Geography: Data Science
Nick Dunlop • Senior • Psychology
Harry Fitzpatrick • Senior • Communication
Sam Ford • Junior • Real Estate
Maggie Gibbons • Sophomore • Environmental Studies
Alex Gonin • Senior • Biology
Finn Griskauskas • Junior • Political Science: International Security | Sociology
Quinn Hall • Senior • Communication
Nikita Jacobs • Sophomore • Real Estate
Kieran Joyce • Senior • Economics
Klas Ole Lass • Sophomore • Environmental Science & Terrestrial Resource Management
Kiefer Law • Junior • Human-Centered Design & Engineering
Ryan Martin • Junior • Architectural Studies
Rory McDonnell • Sophomore • Political Science
Ewan Morrow • Junior • Economics
Billy Osborne • Sophomore • Environmental Studies
Henry Ramstad • Junior • Applied Mathematics: Data Science
Ben Shortt • Junior • Economics
Connor Shoup • Senior • Master of Public Administration
Addison Smee • Junior • Business Administration: Finance
Ryan Smith • Junior • International Studies | Political Science: Political Economy
Cameron Tasker • Junior • Political Science: Political Economy
Marc Tennesen • Junior • Chemistry | Atmospheric Sciences
Logan Ullrich • Senior • Postbaccalaureate Studies
Blake Vogel • Senior • Real Estate
Ethan Walsh • Junior • Real Estate
Jonathan Wang-Norderud • Senior • Economics
Lucas Woodruff • Senior • Master of Mechanical Engineering
 
Women’s Rowing (43)
Zoë Bischoff • Senior • Public Health: Global Health
Carmel Bollag • Sophomore • Biochemistry
Luella Bowersock • Junior • Cinema & Media Studies
Paris Burbine • Senior • Food Systems, Nutrition & Health
Mira Calder • Junior • Chemistry
Mia Carter • Senior • Food Systems, Nutrition & Health
Jordyn Costello • Sophomore • Real Estate
Jane Cox • Senior • Art History
Alex Dessart • Junior • Sociology
Jordan Freer • Senior • Environmental Engineering
Caitlin Hane • Senior • Environmental Public Health
Olivia Hay • Senior • Food Systems, Nutrition & Health
Brianna Hoffman • Senior • Law, Societies, & Justice
Olivia Howe • Junior • Electrical & Computer Engineering
Taylor Inouye • Junior • Environmental Science & Terrestrial Resource Management
Allison Jakeway • Senior • Education Studies: Sport & Education
Zola Kemp • Sophomore • Pre Major
Ellen Koselka • Senior • History
Lilly Kurtz • Senior • Political Science: International Security
Carly Lauritzen • Senior • Biology
Danielle Lohrenz • Senior • History & Philosophy of Science
Cora Madison • Senior • Chemistry
Cami Martin • Junior • Anthropology
Perry McLoughlin • Junior • Pre Major
Cillian Mullen • Junior • Environmental Studies
Grace Murdock • Senior • Postbaccalaureate Study
Leah Nash • Senior • Food Systems, Nutrition & Health
Maddie Ohm • Senior • Environmental Public Health
Eliza Perry • Senior • Environmental Science & Terrestrial Resource Management
Izzy Peters • Senior • Economics
Camille Randall • Senior • Public Health: Global Health
Aisha Rocek • Junior • Geography
Megan Romesberg • Junior • Environmental Science & Terrestrial Resource Management
Kate Russ • Junior • International Studies
Sofie Sand • Senior • Biology
Isabelle Tinsley • Senior • Computer Science
Victoria Trentin • Sophomore • Chemical Engineering
Kalee Verd • Junior • Biology
Jess Weir • Junior • Education Studies: Sport & Education
Cait Whittard • Junior • Food Systems, Nutrition & Health
Scout Wilson • Senior • Food Systems, Nutrition & Health
Elisabeth Wu • Senior • Anthropology: Medical Anthropology & Global Health
Margaret Young • Junior • Anthropology: Medical Anthropology & Global Health
 
Softball (4)
Giselle Alvarez • Sophomore • Communication
Jing Gardner • Sophomore • Business Administration
Jadyn Glab • Sophomore • Education Studies: Social & Emotional Wellness
Haley Winckler • Senior • Food Systems, Nutrition & Health
 
Men’s Tennis (5)
Cesar Bouchelaghem • Senior • Economics
Brett Pearson • Junior • Business Administration
Ivan Sodan • Sophomore • Business Administration
Nedim Suko • Senior • Informatics
Dzianis Zharyn • Senior • Comparative History of Ideas
 
Women’s Tennis (4)
Catherine Gagnon • Sophomore • Pre Major
Alexia Jacobs • Sophomore • Pre Major
Erika Matsuda • Junior • Food Systems, Nutrition & Health
Zehra Suko • Sophomore • Food Systems, Nutrition & Health
 
Men’s Track & Field (21)
Prestin Artis • Senior • Design: Visual Communication
Mathis Bresko • Senior • Postbaccalaureate Study
Isaac Briggs • Sophomore • Pre Major
Cruize Corvin • Sophomore • Real Estate
James Crabtree • Junior • English
Leo Daschbach • Senior • Master of Education in Intercollegiate Athletic Leadership
Thom Diamond • Sophomore • Pre Major
Jamar Distel • Senior • Communication
Jonathan Frazier • Sophomore • Pre Major
Tyrone Gorze • Sophomore • Pre Major
Nathan Green • Senior • Real Estate
Boden Hanley • Sophomore • Pre Major
Roman Hutchinson • Sophomore • Pre Major
Evan Jenkins • Junior • Construction Management
Tim Luebbert • Junior • Economics | Political Science: Political Economy
Jack Olsen • Senior • Early Childhood & Family Studies
Simon Park • Senior • Master of Public Administration
Jami Schlueter • Senior • Sociology
Will Schneider • Junior • Pre Major
Trevontay Smith • Sophomore • Pre Major
Matthew Wilkinson • Senior • Electrical & Computer Engineering
 
Women’s Track & Field (24)
Rachel Bir • Senior • Public Health: Global Health
Ella Borsheim • Junior • Bioengineering
Sara Borton • Senior • Psychology
Alyssia Brown • Junior • Landscape Architecture
Kapiolani Coleman • Sophomore • Pre Major
Yvonne Colson • Senior • Electrical & Computer Engineering
Julia David-Smith • Senior • Biology
Chloe Foerster • Junior • Biology
Tori Herman • Senior • Real Estate
Danielle Hunter • Senior • English: Creative Writing
Brianna McInnis • Junior • Economics
Amanda Moll • Sophomore • Business Administration
Hana Moll • Sophomore • Business Administration
Rhonda Newton • Junior • So, Societies & Justice
Sophie O’Sullivan • Senior • Postbaccalaureate Study
Saydi Orange • Junior • Biology
Elle Rutherford • Senior • Mathematics
Ashley Schroeder • Junior • Civil Engineering
Moa Segerholt • Junior • Communication: Journalism and Public Interest
Anna Terrell • Junior • Political Science
Kaia Tupu-South • Senior • Mechanical Engineering
Ava Washburn • Sophomore • Pre Major
Josephine Welin • Senior • Design | Applied Computational Mathematical Sciences
Avril Wilson • Senior • Earth & Space Sciences
 





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BYU Roundup: Batista, U.S. U19 boys volleyball win Pan Am gold | News, Sports, Jobs

The U.S. Boys U19 National Team completed an impressive run with a 3-0 (25-20, 25-21, 25-18) victory over host Mexico to win the gold medal at the 2025 NORCECA U19 Pan American Cup on Sunday night in Cuernavaca. After dropping its first set of the tournament, the U.S. ran off 15 consecutive set wins. The […]

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The U.S. Boys U19 National Team completed an impressive run with a 3-0 (25-20, 25-21, 25-18) victory over host Mexico to win the gold medal at the 2025 NORCECA U19 Pan American Cup on Sunday night in Cuernavaca. After dropping its first set of the tournament, the U.S. ran off 15 consecutive set wins.

The U.S. dominated statistically with 45 kills to 29 and an 11-4 advantage in blocks. There were only three aces in the match with the U.S. earning two of them.

Tournament Most Valuable Player and outside hitter Blake Fahlbusch (USC) led all players with 17 points on 15 kills and two blocks. Opposite Corbin Batista (BYU) also produced 15 kills. Isiah Powell (Penn State) continued his dominant play in the middle with six blocks, two more than Mexico, and five kills for 11 points. Powell was named the tournament’s best blocker.

Middle blocker Dante Cayaban (Ball State) finished with nine points on six kills, a block and two aces. He was chosen as the tournament’s best server. Five U.S. players recorded at least six digs with libero Ben Bayer (Long Beach State) and Batista leading the way with nine each. Bayer, who shared match-high honors with 10 successful receptions, was selected as the best receiver at the championship.

Outside hitter Logan Hutnick totaled nine successful receptions and seven digs. Setter Brett Novak (Lindenwood) scored three points on two kills and a block while running the powerful U.S. offense.

The U.S. scored five consecutive points to turn a one-point lead into a six-point advantage, 15-9, in the first set. A Batista kill made it 13-9, followed by a Powell block after scrambling defense by the U.S., and Fahlbusch completed the run with a kill off the block.

An out-of-system kill by Batista gave the U.S. a 23-17 lead, another Powell block made it 24-20, and Cayaban put a ball down to give the U.S. the opening set. Batista recorded five kills in the set and Powell also scored five points with three blocks and a pair of kills.

The second set was close throughout with Mexico holding a slim 18-17 lead. A Fahlbusch kill and block regained the lead for the U.S. After a Mexico kill tied the set again, the key point of the set saw the U.S. make several point-saving defensive plays until a Batista kill gave the U.S. the lead for good.

Consecutive blocks by Fahlbusch and Powell made it 22-19, and Fahlbusch’s sixth kill and eighth point of the set extended the lead to four points, 23-19. Powell and Batista recorded kills to end the set with the U.S. ending on a 6-2 run to go up two sets.

The U.S. used a 4-0 run, capped by a Novak block, to give the U.S. a 10-5 lead in the third set. Kills by Batista gave the U.S. six-point leads at 14-8 and 16-10. Mexico went on a 5-2 run to cut the margin to three points, 18-15, but it would be as close as it got.

Powell’s fifth and sixth blocks of the match and two Fahlbusch kills accounted for the final four U.S. points with Fahlbusch clinching the championship with his 15th kill and 17th point. Batista led the U.S. with six kills in the set and Fahlbusch added five.

BYU commit selected in MLB Draft

Middle infielder Jaiden LoRe (5-11, 180) was selected in the fifth round of the Major League Draft by the Baltimore Orioles.

The BYU commit from Phoenix, Ariz., was the 154th selection in the draft. As a senior at Corona Del Sol High School, LoRe hit .418 on 46 hits, collecting 19 RBI, 14 doubles, one triple and four home runs while stealing nine bases. Playing primarily at shortstop, LoRe handled 97 chances with just two errors for a fielding percentage of .979 and also contributed 29 assists. In 110 at-bats, LoRe had just four strikeouts. He is graded as the No. 5 player in Arizona and No. 2 shortstop by Perfect Game. He is also graded as the 189th best player in the country and the 54th-best shortstop.

Hucks promoted to new position for BYU women’s basketball

Head coach Lee Cummard has announced the promotion of graduate assistant Dallin Hucks to Director of Video and Strategy.

“Coach Hucks has been and will continue to be a valuable asset to our team,” said Cummard. “Dallin has been with the team for several years: first as a manager, then as a graduate assistant and now as Director of Video and Strategy. He has shown that he is all in for this team, these athletes and is 100 percent committed to helping this program succeed. I am excited to see how he will help our team grow this season.”

Hucks joined the BYU women’s basketball program for the 2020-21 season as a practice player/manager. A year later, he was tasked with assisting coaches with film breakdown of upcoming opponents, offensive tendencies and set plays.

Hucks stepped away from BYU women’s basketball for a year to finish his bachelor’s degree. While completing his degree, Hucks served as an assistant coach to nine-time Utah State Champion and former Cougar men’s assistant coach Quincy Lewis at Lehi High School.

Upon graduating from BYU with a degree in Physical Education Coaching and a minor in Spanish, Hucks rejoined the Cougar program as a graduate assistant. He finished his second season as a GA and was responsible for opponent film breakdown, scout team preparation and in-game opponent analytics.

Hucks is from American Fork, Utah, where he played high school basketball with former BYU men’s basketball’s Spencer Johnson. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in physical education teaching/coaching and a minor in Spanish teaching from Brigham Young University in 2023. In May 2025, Hucks was married to Gabriela Ulloa.

Copyright © 2025 Ogden Newspapers of Utah, LLC | www.heraldextra.com | 1200 Towne Centre Blvd. STE 1058, Provo, UT 84601



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Lance Bingham – Director of Track & Field and Cross Country – Track and Field Coaches

A familiar face returned to Liberty Mountain with Lance Bingham taking over as Liberty’s Director of Track & Field and Cross Country for the 2020-21 athletics year. During his first five seasons at the helm, Bingham has coached the Flames to eight Conference USA and 12 ASUN Conference team titles between track & field and […]

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A familiar face returned to Liberty Mountain with Lance Bingham taking over as Liberty’s Director of Track & Field and Cross Country for the 2020-21 athletics year.

During his first five seasons at the helm, Bingham has coached the Flames to eight Conference USA and 12 ASUN Conference team titles between track & field and cross country. He has coached 20 All-Americans, including Liberty’s first relay team (2022 men’s 4 x 100) ever to garner All-America honors at the NCAA Division I level. The spring 2021 women’s cross country team became the first team in program history to reach the NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships.

 

Specifically within the events Bingham oversees for the Flames (decathlon, heptathlon, pole vault and high jump), Katie Urbine finished 10th in the women’s pole vault at the 2024 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field Championships. That made her Liberty’s first women’s track & field athlete ever to become an NCAA Division I All-American during her freshman season.

 

Most recently, Meredith Engle placed 12th in the pentathlon at the 2025 NCAA Division I Indoor Track & Field Championships, becoming the Lady Flames’ first All-American in that event. Liberty also placed 1-2-3-4 in both the 2025 CUSA indoor heptathlon and outdoor decathlon competitions.

Bingham has earned five CUSA Coach of the Year honors and 10 ASUN Coach of the Year awards during his time with the Flames.

After serving as head track & field and cross country coach for four seasons at Abilene Christian University (2016-20), Bingham returned home to Liberty where he previously served 18 seasons under head coach Brant Tolsma.

The Flames’ head coaching role is Bingham’s third stint at Liberty. He first joined the track & field staff as an assistant coach for six seasons from 1995-2001 and then served as associate head coach of the program for 12 more years from 2004-16.

During his time leading the cross country and track & field programs at Abilene Christian, Bingham coached 25 NCAA West Preliminary Round qualifiers, five cross country all-region honorees and four NCAA Championship participants.

To close out his tenure in Texas, Bingham guided Abilene Christian’s men’s and women’s programs to a pair of third-place finishes at the 2020 Southland Conference Indoor Track Championships.

The Wildcats’ men’s squad finished in third place at the 2019 and 2020 Southland Conference Indoor Track Championships, the program’s best finish since rejoining the league in 2013. The third-place performance for the women’s team in 2020 was the team’s second-best finish in the last seven years.

During the outdoor championships, Bingham guided the men’s squad to back-to-back Southland runner-up performances in 2018 and 2019.

In cross country, Abilene Christian captured the Southland women’s team title in 2017 and sent a pair of women’s runners to that year’s NCAA national meet.

While serving as Liberty’s associate head coach during the 2004-16 seasons, Bingham helped guide Liberty men’s and women’s track & field teams to a combined 33 conference titles. Bingham has been a part of the Liberty coaching staff for all three IC4A championship seasons (1996, 2007 & 2008) in program history.

In 2009-10, Bingham helped Liberty become only the ninth school in NCAA Division I history to complete a conference “Double Triple.” The Flames captured Big South titles in men’s cross country, indoor track & field and outdoor track & field, in addition to women’s cross country, indoor track & field and outdoor track & field.

During his last time at Liberty, Bingham’s coaching responsibilities included the hurdles, pole vault and multi events. During eight of his 12 seasons, Bingham helped Liberty send at least one athlete to the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field Championships.

In 2012, Bingham coached Kolby Shepherd (pole vault) to a tie for fifth place and All-America honors at the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field Championships. Shepherd arrived at Liberty with just a 14-0 high school pole vault personal best.

Off the track, Bingham accompanied Liberty student-athletes on a number of foreign missions trips. During the summers of 2009, 2012 and 2015, he and his wife, Kelly, were part of the Liberty track & field group which traveled to Kenya.

Three of Bingham’s charges (Jon Hart, Clendon Henderson and Brandon Hoskins) qualified for the 2008 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field Championships. Additionally, Henderson took part in the U.S. Olympic Trials that year.

As a result, Bingham was duly recognized as the 2008 U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) Southeast Regional Men’s Assistant Coach of the Year.

During his first time away from Liberty, Bingham spent three years (2001-04) as the head coach at South Plains Junior College in Levelland, Texas, where he was named the 2004 National Junior College Outdoor Coach of the Year.

At South Plains Junior College, Bingham’s athletes won 13 individual national championships and earned 33 All-America honors in track and cross country, while the 2002 women’s marathon squad won the national championship. On two separate occasions, his men’s teams earned a third-place finish at the national championship meet.

Prior to his tenure at South Plains, Bingham served as an assistant coach at Liberty for six seasons (1995-2001), where he was primarily responsible for assisting with multi-event athletes and field events. During his first stint as an assistant coach for the Flames, he coached seven Division I All-Americans.

During his competitive days, Bingham was an All-American decathlete at South Plains Junior College, finishing second at nationals in both 1982 and 1983, when he posted a personal-best score of 7,510 points. He went on to compete at Texas Tech, where he also played football.

In 2016, Bingham was inducted into the NJCAA Coaches Association Hall of Fame, honoring his many accomplishments as both a coach and former student-athlete at the junior college level.

Bingham graduated cum laude from Texas Tech in 1985 with a bachelor’s degree in physical education and earned his masters of education from Sul Ross State University in Alpine, Texas.

Bingham and his wife of more than 30 years, Kelly, have two children: Brittany Werth and Cody. Kelly currently serves as an online professor at Liberty, teaching graduate level education classes.

Brittany is a former Liberty heptathlete (2009-10), who now serves as a missionary. Cody is a former Liberty decathlete (2011-15), who was part of the track & field coaching staff at Abilene Christian with his father for two years and is now a full-time pastor.



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Postponed open water swimming events set to start at worlds

SINGAPORE (AP) — Open water swimming at the World Championships is set to start a day late following two delays in Singapore because of “water quality levels exceeding acceptable thresholds.” World Aquatics and locals organizers issued a statement Wednesday saying the women’s and men’s 10-kilometer events would start in the afternoon. Organizers said analysis of […]

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SINGAPORE (AP) — Open water swimming at the World Championships is set to start a day late following two delays in Singapore because of “water quality levels exceeding acceptable thresholds.”

World Aquatics and locals organizers issued a statement Wednesday saying the women’s and men’s 10-kilometer events would start in the afternoon.

Organizers said analysis of water quality samples collected late Tuesday met standards for the competition to begin.

The men’s 10-kilometer event is set to start as scheduled Wednesday at 1 p.m. local time (0500 GMT). The women’s 10-kilometer event, which was to have opened the program Tuesday and then initially rescheduled for Wednesday morning, will follow men’s race.

Other open water events are scheduled for Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Local organizers said three samples taken along the competition course at Sentosa, near the Singapore Strait, at 5 p.m. local time (0900 GMT) Tuesday showed “significant improvement, with levels of E. coli falling between the ranges of ‘good’ to ‘excellent’ according to World Aquatics regulations.”

Open water swimming was an issue in last year’s Olympics in Paris with concerns about water quality in the Seine River. It was also an issue at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 and the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

Water polo competition at the worlds is underway at an indoor venue.

The main event of the championships is eight days of swimming competition in the pool, which opens on July 27.

___

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





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Ava Stryker Scores 8 Goals for Team USA in Group Play at World Championships | Sports

San Marcos alum Ava Stryker poured in a game-high six goals to lead the U.S. Women’s National Water Polo Team to a 26-3 rout of Argentina in its final group-play match Monday at the World Aquatics World Championship in Singapore. The six goals was a career best for Stryker as a senior national team member. […]

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San Marcos alum Ava Stryker poured in a game-high six goals to lead the U.S. Women’s National Water Polo Team to a 26-3 rout of Argentina in its final group-play match Monday at the World Aquatics World Championship in Singapore.

The six goals was a career best for Stryker as a senior national team member. She had two goals in an earlier group-play win over China.

Team USA went 3-0 in the group and advanced to the quarterfinals on Saturday against either Great Britain or Japan at 2:35 a.m. PT.  Live streaming of all USA matches will be available on Peacock (login required).

In their other pool-play games, Team USA defeated China, 15-7, and Netherlands, 11-9. Santa Barbara’s Ryann Neushul scored two goals against each opponent.



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MLB union tells international players to carry immigration documents at all times

ATLANTA — The Major League Baseball Players Association has recommended that players keep their immigration documents on them at all times in the wake of President Donald Trump’s border policies, including last month’s ban on travel from 12 countries. “It is a concern,” union head Tony Clark said Tuesday prior to the sport’s All-Star Game. […]

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MLB union tells international players to carry immigration documents at all times

ATLANTA — The Major League Baseball Players Association has recommended that players keep their immigration documents on them at all times in the wake of President Donald Trump’s border policies, including last month’s ban on travel from 12 countries.

“It is a concern,” union head Tony Clark said Tuesday prior to the sport’s All-Star Game. “It is challenging on multiple levels, but we continue to communicate with our guys and assure them, whether they’re at the minor-league level or at the major-league level, this is how best to protect yourself.”

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The union has immigration lawyers on staff, Clark said.

Commissioner Rob Manfred said he worries “about anything that could be disruptive to the very best players in the world being out on the field,” but said that because all players from foreign countries have visas, he hasn’t seen any evidence of disruption at this point.

“When the administration first started talking about border issues and the fact that there was going to be limitations, we did have conversations with the administration,” Manfred said. “They assured us that there was going to be protections for our players, for example, going back and forth between the U.S. and Canada. They told us that was going to happen, that’s what happened.”

Manfred met with Trump in person in April.

The travel ban includes an exception for athletes, coaches, support staff and immediate relatives “for the World Cup, Olympics, or other major sporting event as determined by the Secretary of State.”

In June, the Los Angeles Dodgers said they denied United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers use of their parking lots. The attempt by ICE officers to use the parking lots came soon after the Dodgers had scheduled an announcement to explain their plans to assist communities impacted by the immigration crackdown. At the time, the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement that Customs and Border Protection “vehicles were in the stadium parking lot very briefly, unrelated to any operation or enforcement” and that the activity “had nothing to do with the Dodgers.” ICE said in a statement that the agency was never at Dodger Stadium.

Both ICE and CBP are overseen by DHS.

Clark said the commissioner’s office and the union are giving players the same advice.

“Educated players make educated decisions,” he said.

(Photo of Clark and Manfred: Daniel Shirey / MLB Photos via Getty Images)

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World Aquatics Championships: E. coli bacteria to blame for postponed Sentosa open water race

Hours before the event was due to begin on Tuesday, it was announced that the race would be postponed as water quality levels failed to meet “acceptable thresholds”, organisers said. In a press release in the early hours of Tuesday, World Aquatics announced that the decision was made in the “utmost interest of athlete safety”. […]

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Hours before the event was due to begin on Tuesday, it was announced that the race would be postponed as water quality levels failed to meet “acceptable thresholds”, organisers said.

In a press release in the early hours of Tuesday, World Aquatics announced that the decision was made in the “utmost interest of athlete safety”.

The race, which was planned for 8am on Tuesday, is now scheduled for 10.15am on Wednesday. Singapore Olympian Chantal Liew and youngster Kate Ona were scheduled to compete in the race.

The decision followed a review involving representatives from World Aquatics, the Singapore 2025 Organising Committee, the World Aquatics Sports Medicine Committee and the World Aquatics Open Water Swimming Technical Committee, said World Aquatics.

“While testing in recent days has consistently shown water quality at the venue to meet World Aquatics’ acceptable thresholds, analysis of samples taken on Jul 13 surpassed these thresholds,” said the sport’s governing body in a press release.

“The decision to postpone racing was made in the best interests of athlete health and safety, which remains World Aquatics and the Singapore 2025 Organising Committee’s top priority.”

National head coach Gary Tan said he and his athletes were informed of the postponement at about 11.45pm on Monday.

“Our team promptly communicated the update to the affected athletes and worked with them on next steps,” he said.

Mr Tan, who is also the performance director of swimming at Singapore Aquatics, said postponements were not uncommon in international open water swimming competitions.

“Our athletes are well accustomed to managing such changes. They remain in good spirits, and while the race will now take place at a later time slot, they have trained under similar conditions and are well prepared to adapt.”

At last year’s Paris Olympics, pollution in the Seine after heavy rains caused the men’s triathlon race to be postponed for a day, after swimming practice sessions were cancelled two days in a row.

There are plans in place should contamination levels continue to exceed acceptable standards, said Mr Nowicki.

“We have a variety of different options that we can use in so far as locations that we’ll look at. It could be in Sentosa, it could not be in Sentosa. It’s not something that we’re planning right now,” he added.

“So it’s bit premature to talk about alternative sites on or off Sentosa.”



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