Sports
Star-studded class inducted to U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Hall of Fame
The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee inducted a star-studded class of legendary athletes Saturday evening (12 July) into the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Hall of Fame. The class of 2025 included eight individual Olympic and Paralympic athletes, including Serena Williams, Gabby Douglas, Kerri Walsh Jennings, and Allyson Felix, along with two teams, two legends, one […]

The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee inducted a star-studded class of legendary athletes Saturday evening (12 July) into the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Hall of Fame.
The class of 2025 included eight individual Olympic and Paralympic athletes, including Serena Williams, Gabby Douglas, Kerri Walsh Jennings, and Allyson Felix, along with two teams, two legends, one coach and one special contributor.
“It means the world. Being inducted in this class specifically is huge, and then just being inducted into this Hall of Fame in general is wild,” Walsh Jennings told Olympics.com prior to the ceremony in Colorado Springs, Colorado. “This class of Olympians is incredible.”
Another member of the class, Anita DeFrantz, was one of two legends added to the prestigious group Saturday.
The 72-year-old, who won bronze at the 1976 Olympic Games in rowing before breaking barriers in sports governance as the first African American and first woman elected to the International Olympic Committee, had a special surprise on hand for the occassion: IOC President Kirsty Coventry, who took office last month.
“I really wanted to try my best to be here, and we finally got that all figured out on, I think, Thursday evening about 5 p.m.,” Coventry told us. “I’m just really happy to be here and honour her. She deserves all of it.”
Said DeFrantz: “It’s just been quadruple-ly – if that’s a word – enhanced by the President of the IOC. I cannot believe she is here. It’s just wonderful.”
The other members of the class of 2025 are listed below:
Steve Cash (sled hockey), Susan Hagel (Para archery, Para track and field, wheelchair basketball), Flo Hyman (legend: indoor volleyball), Mike Krzyzewski (coach: basketball), Phil Knight (special contributor: Nike founder), Bode Miller (alpine skiing), Marla Runyan (Para track and field), the 2010 Four-man Bobsled Team, and the 2004 Women’s Wheelchair Basketball Team.
Sports
Myles Tyler – Track & Field Coach
Myles Tyler was named Assistant Coach for the Oakland men’s and women’s track and field team in November 2020. He will be responsible for the development of the sprints and relay group of student-athletes and will also serve as the team’s recruiting coordinator and academic liaison. Prior to Oakland, Tyler spent four years as […]

Prior to Oakland, Tyler spent four years as the Assistant Sprints and Relay Assistant Coach at Cleveland State where he helped nine student-athletes to podium finishes at the Horizon League Indoor and Outdoor Championships. He also served as the recruiting coordinator and academic liaison while developing student-athlete volunteer experience opportunities in the community.
Under Tyler’s direction, the Vikings set program records in the sprint, hurdle and relay events during every meet with multiple student-athletes setting personal records in numerous events.
During the 2020 indoor season, Tyler served as the Volunteer Assistant Coach at Oakland helping over 95 percent of the sprints group achieve seasonal and career personal bests at the 2020 Horizon League Indoor Championships.
Tyler helped guide Chanel Gardner, Briana Walker, Robin Lefevere and Hannah Coverdill to the 400m final marking the first time in program history four student-athletes qualified for the event final at the 2020 Horizon League Indoor Championship culminating with Gardner winning the title. This same group also went on to win the 4x400m relay title with a school record time of 3:50.49. Tyler also helped five student-athletes run under 58 seconds for the first time in program history and guide Marthea Vann-Scott to the second-ranked 60m dash school record time.
On the men’s side under Tyler’s direction, Junias Holmes, Justin Kudera, Malcolm McIntyre and Jimmie Williams claimed the 4x400m title with Williams also winning the 400m title at the 2020 Horizon League Indoor Championship. Three student-athletes also qualified for the 60m, 200m and 400m final and five earned All-Conference honors.
A native of Elyria, Ohio, Tyler earned a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Sports Management from Cleveland State in 2016. He currently resides in Rochester, Mich.
Sports
Man accused of faking his death to avoid rape charges is found guilty of sexual assault in Utah
By Canadian Press Aug 13, 2025 | 9:24 PM SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Rhode Island man accused of faking his death and fleeing the United States to evade rape charges was found guilty Wednesday of sexually assaulting a former girlfriend in his first of two Utah trials. A jury in Salt Lake County […]


By
Aug 13, 2025 | 9:24 PM
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Rhode Island man accused of faking his death and fleeing the United States to evade rape charges was found guilty Wednesday of sexually assaulting a former girlfriend in his first of two Utah trials.
A jury in Salt Lake County found Nicholas Rossi guilty of a 2008 rape after a three-day trial in which his accuser and her parents took the stand. The verdict came hours after Rossi, 38, declined to testify on his own behalf. He will be sentenced in the case on Oct. 20 and is set to stand trial in September for another rape charge in Utah County.
An obituary published online claimed Rossi had died on Feb. 29, 2020, of late-stage non-Hodgkin lymphoma. But police in his home state of Rhode Island, along with his former lawyer and a former foster family, cast doubt on whether he was dead. He was arrested in Scotland the following year while receiving treatment for COVID-19 after hospital staff in Glasgow recognized his distinctive tattoos from an Interpol notice.
He was extradited to Utah in January 2024 after losing an extradition appeal in which he claimed he was an Irish orphan named Arthur Knight who was being framed.
Sports
5 questions heading into the high school volleyball season
5 questions heading into the high school volleyball season Published 2:00 pm Thursday, August 14, 2025 Volleyball is a unique high school sport in Central Oregon, as seemingly all pockets of the region have found success on the courts. Six different Central Oregon schools have brought home state titles a combined 22 times. Five teams […]

5 questions heading into the high school volleyball season
Published 2:00 pm Thursday, August 14, 2025
Volleyball is a unique high school sport in Central Oregon, as seemingly all pockets of the region have found success on the courts. Six different Central Oregon schools have brought home state titles a combined 22 times. Five teams have won multiple state championships. And most of the titles have come within the past 30 years.
The Bulletin has already asked questions about the upcoming soccer and cross-country seasons, now here are the five big questions heading into the volleyball season:
1. Can Bend stay on top of the Intermountain Conference?
Since the Intermountain Conference reformed to its current iteration in 2022, Bend High has been the dominant force.
The Lava Bears have gone 28-2 in league play over the past three years and won the league outright each of those years. (Counting the 2021 season, when competing in 6A’s Mountain Valley Conference, the Lava Bears are 42-2 over the past four years.) Bend has also reached the Class 5A championship match two of the past three years.
The Bears lost three all-state players to graduation, including IMC Player of the Year and first-team all-state player Lucy Schuller. But Bend has proven over the past decade to be a team that retools as well as any program.
2. Can another IMC team make a tournament run?
Perhaps there is a little nostalgia for when teams in the IMC would square off in the state championship match, like in 2017 when Bend took down Summit. But it has been several years since an IMC team not named Bend has advanced past the opening round of the state tournament.
Outside of Bend, only two teams have reached the 5A volleyball tournament since 2022. Caldera made the state tournament for the first time in program history a year ago, but fell in the quarterfinals. Summit made it to the tournament in 2023, but had a similar fate. Ridgeview, which won the 5A title in 2019, has not made the tournament since 2021.
3. How does Crook County fit back into the IMC?
Crook County is returning to compete at the 5A level and is joining the IMC after competing in 4A’s Tri-Valley Conference.
The Cowgirls made the 4A state tournament each of the past three seasons and are coming off of a third-place finish last fall. Crook County was even a force when it was a 5A IMC team from 2018 to 2022, making two 5A tournament appearances and placing fourth in 2019.
It has been nearly 20 years since Crook County has been in the same conference as the Bend schools. It is worth nothing that during the Cowgirls’ run of eight-straight state titles between 2006 and 2013, Crook County beat both Summit and Mountain View twice in state championship matches.
4. Can Sisters find its way back?
For the first time since 2012, Sisters’ season ended before the state tournament, falling in the second round of the 3A playoffs last year.
Sisters has been one of the dominant volleyball programs in the state the past decade with four state titles since 2014, including one in 2023.
The Outlaws must replace three all-conference seniors from last year’s team. Sisters will also have its third coach in as many seasons, with Mahryahna Callegan, a Mountain View grad, taking over the program from Josh Kreunen.
5. Will boys volleyball become sanctioned?
Boys volleyball isn’t yet a fully sanctioned high school sport and is not played until the spring, but a decision will likely be reached in the next few months on whether or not boys volleyball becomes an official OSAA sport.
The Oregon School Activities Association plans to make the decision by early October. Boys volleyball spent the past two springs as an “emerging activity,” hoping to become a sanctioned sport just like girls volleyball.
Summit, Crook County and Central Christian were the only three Central Oregon schools to field a boys team last spring. Both Summit and Crook County went on to play in their classifications’ state title matches, with the Storm bringing home the 5A title.
Sports
Chinese tariff on canola seed comes into force as farmers hope for resolution
By Canadian Press Aug 14, 2025 | 1:01 AM REGINA — A Chinese tariff of nearly 76 per cent on Canadian canola seed is set to come into force today. The duty, announced Tuesday, has already caused the price of one of Canada’s most valuable crops to fall, wiping out millions of dollars in its […]


By
Aug 14, 2025 | 1:01 AM
REGINA — A Chinese tariff of nearly 76 per cent on Canadian canola seed is set to come into force today.
The duty, announced Tuesday, has already caused the price of one of Canada’s most valuable crops to fall, wiping out millions of dollars in its value.
It comes a year after China launched an anti-dumping investigation into Canadian canola.
The investigation was in response to Canada’s 100 per cent tariff on Chinese electric vehicles, and the two countries have since hit each other with various levies.
Sports
Crimson Hawk Student Athletes Recognized by DII Athletics Directors Association
Story Links CLEVELAND, Ohio – As announced by the Division II Athletic Directors Association on Thursday, the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference earned the most student athletes recognized with the 2024-24 Academic Achievement Awards. Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP) had 130 of the 2051 PSAC Student Athletes Recognized. To be recognized, the […]

CLEVELAND, Ohio – As announced by the Division II Athletic Directors Association on Thursday, the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference earned the most student athletes recognized with the 2024-24 Academic Achievement Awards. Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP) had 130 of the 2051 PSAC Student Athletes Recognized.
To be recognized, the student athlete must have a cumulative grade point average of 3.5 or higher, attend a minimum of four semesters of college, and be an active member of their team.
According to the release sent out by the PSAC, this is the sixth time in seven years that the PSAC has led the nation in the number of student-athletes recognized. 2,051 is nearly 300 more than the next conference, and the conference saw a 6.88 % increase in student-athletes nominated. IUP is one of 11 PSAC institutions with at least 100 student-athletes nominated.
Follow the link to read the complete release by the PSAC.
Sports
Women's Soccer Falls to UCF 2
BIRMINGHAM – UAB women’s soccer (0-1) fell in its home opener 2-1 against UCF (1-0) at PNC Field. The Knights were the first to score on Thursday night when Liz Worden found the back of the net off a corner kick in the 22nd minute. At the 35th minute UCF’s Rajanah Reed recorded the Knights second goal with […]


BIRMINGHAM – UAB women’s soccer (0-1) fell in its home opener 2-1 against UCF (1-0) at PNC Field.
The Knights were the first to score on Thursday night when Liz Worden found the back of the net off a corner kick in the 22nd minute. At the 35th minute UCF’s Rajanah Reed recorded the Knights second goal with an assist from Gabi Berchon.
UAB got on the board late in the first half with a goal in the 41st minute. Freshman Rebecca Sierra scored her first collegiate goal with an assist from Lauren Lucero to make the score 2-1 heading into halftime.
The second half went scoreless with both teams playing stout defense. UCF was able to get off five shot in the second while the Blazers had two shots. UAB’s junior Leah Parsons saw her first collegiate start in goal with the Green and Gold and had five saves on the night.
Up next, the Blazers face their first road test as they travel to Johnson City, Tennessee to take on ETSU. Kickoff is set for noon CT.
2025-26 GOLD CARD
The 2025-26 Gold Card is on sale. The 2025-26 Gold Card will get you access to all home events for Women’s Soccer, Men’s Soccer, Volleyball, Women’s Basketball, Softball, and Baseball (Regions Field & Young Memorial). This card is not valid for American Conference or NCAA Championship events.
YOUR SUPPORT FUELS SUCCESS!
With your help, Blazer Student-Athletes are given the resources, tools, and opportunities they need to achieve greatness. Every contribution you make directly supports our teams, ensuring they excel not only on the field but in the classroom as well. We invite you to renew your support to UAB Athletics today and for more information on ways to show your generosity through the Blazer Scholarship Fund, capital initiatives, and sport specific giving go to blazerboosters.com or call us at (205) 996-9969.
FOLLOW THE BLAZERS
For more information on the UAB women’s soccer team, follow @UAB_WSOC on X and Instagram.
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