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Stat of the Week

BY ALEX VIGDERMAN This year feels somewhat special to us at SIS because it’s the 10 year anniversary of a pretty cool honor, our Strike Zone Runs Saved research winning the Sloan Sports Analytics Conference’s award for the best research paper. The paper was called Who Is Responsible For A Called Strike? For those not […]

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Stat of the Week

BY ALEX VIGDERMAN

This year feels somewhat special to us at SIS because it’s the 10 year anniversary of a pretty cool honor, our Strike Zone Runs Saved research winning the Sloan Sports Analytics Conference’s award for the best research paper. The paper was called Who Is Responsible For A Called Strike?

For those not familiar, Strike Zone Runs Saved (SZRS) is our method of capturing catchers’ skill in gaining extra strikes by framing the pitch as it comes in.

The core concept is pretty simple. We start with an expectation for how likely the pitch is to have been a strike, and we compare that to what actually happened. That expectation takes into account handedness, the count, the location, and even how much the catcher’s glove had to move off its initial target. We then attach a run value which is basically the value of turning a ball into a strike, which is about a tenth of a run.

Here are the leaders among catchers who played at least five years in that span, both in total and per season.

Strike Zone Runs Saved leaders, 2015-24

Total SZRS
Tyler Flowers 68
Yasmani Grandal 66
Austin Hedges 64
Christian Vázquez 50
Roberto Pérez 33

Strike Zone Runs Saved per season leaders, 2015-24 (min 5 seasons)

SZRS per season
Tyler Flowers 11.3
Yasmani Grandal 6.6
Buster Posey 5.3
Austin Hedges 5.3
Christian Vázquez 5.0

Tyler Flowers is one of those players who is primarily known because of our ability to measure this skill, and you can see why. We talked with him a couple years ago about it, when Defensive Runs Saved turned 20.

 This range of years covered the back half of Buster Posey’s career, but that half a win (by WAR standards) per year of framing value makes a big impact for a player who didn’t play into his mid-to-late thirties.

Here are the year-by-year leaders in Strike Zone Runs Saved. Flowers either shared the lead or led outright four straight years.

Year-By-Year Leaders in Strike Zone Runs Saved

2015 to 2024

  SZRS
2015- Tyler Flowers 13
2016- Flowers & Yasmani Grandal 15
2017- Tyler Flowers 20
2018- Flowers, Grandal & Max Stassi 10
2019- Austin Hedges 18
2020- Yasmani Grandal 5
2021- Max Stassi 10
2022- Jose Trevino 12
2023- Hedges, Patrick Bailey & Francisco Alvarez 11
2024- Patrick Bailey 15

Our Strike Zone Runs Saved data actually dates back further than 10 years. We’ve been tracking it since the 2010 season. An overall leaderboard has Yasmani Grandal (87) at the top, followed by Flowers (85), Jonathan Lucroy (80), Russell Martin (72) and Posey (71).

Which organizations have developed framing the best?

 It’s hard to know what teams are doing in terms of specific player development practices, but we can try to get at it from different angles.

For example, over the last decade three teams set themselves apart in how much improvement their acquired players showed year-over-year. Players acquired by the Athletics, Yankees, and Brewers over this decade averaged improving by at least 5 runs saved per 900 innings caught. (We’d give more credit to the A’s and Brewers, though, because they did this across many more players.)

A team that falls just short of that distinction is the Diamondbacks, who had 18 catcher acquisitions and averaged just under 4 additional runs saved per 900 innings. That’s a big deal because they had some of the worst performance from homegrown catchers (-5 runs saved per 900 innings from 4 players).

Bringing up a successful player from your system might just be about the player’s talent, and we have a hard time teasing out those elements, but it’s still worth noting that the Guardians clearly outpace the rest of the league in average SZRS from homegrown players (7 runs per 900 innings). The Astros are the only team within a run of them (6.4 per 900 innings) and we should give credit to the Giants, who had similar production (5 runs per 900 inn) with more homegrown catchers (7 compared to 5 for the leaders).

How much better are today’s framers than catchers a decade ago?

The strike zone gets adjudicated differently over time, but we can approximate the change in how good catchers are by placing them into each other’s context.

In other words, we can throw pitch results from the catchers in 2014 (the year before the Strike Zone Runs Saved presentation) in with the 2024 season sample, or vice versa, and compare our evaluation in this blended environment to their original context.

As an example, Cal Raleigh saved 11 runs with his framing in 2024. If we threw 2014 catchers into the mix, by virtue of that comparison we’d have him estimated at about 14 Runs Saved.

Correspondingly, Mike Zunino tied for the MLB lead with 16 Strike Zone Runs Saved in 2014. If he had been compared to 2024 players, he would have been more in the 12-13 run range.

Because every catcher saw different pitches the changes wouldn’t be entirely consistent, but on average the gap is about 4 runs per 900 innings.

That might not feel like a lot, but it certainly manifests itself at the bottom end of the population. Just based on actual Strike Zone Runs Saved, there were four catchers in 2014 who were worse relative to their context than any 2024 catcher was last year. With this merged group, the bottom 18 catchers are all from 2014.

Next week, we’ll look at Strike Zone Runs Saved from another angle: how it evaluates the batter, pitcher, and umpire (yep, the stat can do that too). What can we learn about the players who had the most (and least) success over the last 10 years? And we’ll have notes on the umps too.

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36 Wolves Receive GNAC FAR Scholar-Athlete Award

Story Links 2024 25 GNAC-Wide FAR Award Recipients PORTLAND, Ore. — Western Oregon Athletics had a total 36 student-athletes receive the GNAC Faculty Athletic Representative (FAR) Scholar-Athlete Award Tuesday. The GNAC FAR Scholar-Athlete Award – presented by Barnes & Noble College – recognizes the incredible dedication […]

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PORTLAND, Ore. — Western Oregon Athletics had a total 36 student-athletes receive the GNAC Faculty Athletic Representative (FAR) Scholar-Athlete Award Tuesday.

The GNAC FAR Scholar-Athlete Award – presented by Barnes & Noble College – recognizes the incredible dedication to academics student-athletes hold. It honors all student-athletes of NCAA-affiliated teams – including Football, a Lone Star Conference team – who have achieved a cumulative grade point average at or above 3.85.

For the 2024-2025 Academic Year, Western Oregon had a total 36 student-athletes receive the award (26 female, 10 male), with 11 being repeat recipients. Women’s Track & Field teammates Amity Deters and Lindie Larson led the repeat Wolves – each receiving their fifth honor. Six Scholar-Wolves held a stunning 4.0 – the highest GPA possible – and are highlighted below in bold.

You can read the GNAC’s press release and view the complete list of conference award recipients with the links below.

GNAC-Wide list of award recipients | GNAC Release

 

 































WOU Female FAR Scholar-Athlete Recipients
Name Sport Academic Major Year GPA Hometown
Ally Beavers Soccer Business Sr. 3.85 Puyallup, Wash.
Taylor Brasfield Track & Field Business Fr. 3.91 Corvallis, Ore.
* Finley Buman Volleyball Environmental Science Jr. 4.00 Phoenix, Ariz.
*** Katie Chapman Track & Field Exercise Science Sr. 3.99 Lowell, Ore.
Jordyn Conrad Soccer Mathematics Sr. 3.94 Vancouver, Wash.
**** Amity Deters Track & Field Chemistry Sr. 3.99 Amity, Ore.
** Olivia Flack Track & Field Education Sr. 3.99 La Pine, Ore.
Sidney Friesen Volleyball Business Fr. 4.00 Salem, Ore.
Mya Fry Track & Field Interdisciplinary Studies Jr. 3.99 Salem, Ore.
Charlotte Gardner XC/Track & Field Biology Fr. 4.00 Newport, Ore.
* Kilinoelehua Helm Volleyball Exercise Science Jr. 3.93 Keaau, Hawaii
Maya Helmen Track & Field Business So. 3.91 Clatskanie, Ore.
Emma Higashi Soccer Public Health Jr. 3.97 Mililani, Hawaii
Kate Klobas Volleyball Business Fr. 4.00 Tillamook, Ore.
**** Lindie Larson Track & Field Social Science Sr. 3.94 Redding, Calif.
Alecia Lemeza Track & Field Exercise Science So. 3.99 Salem, Ore.
Malena Mathis Volleyball Business Fr. 3.95 Salem, Ore.
Amelia Merritt XC/Track & Field Business So. 3.93 Camas, Wash.
Ali Millspaugh Volleyball Public Health Fr. 3.96 Vancouver, Wash.
* Jessica Morgan Softball Business Sr. 3.98 Lewistown, Mont.
Gracie Nelson Softball Exercise Science Fr. 4.00 Kuna, Idaho
Kate Ronning Softball English Studies Sr. 3.98 Keizer, Ore.
Guinevere Rydberg Track & Field Psychology Sr. 3.93 Yakima, Wash.
Ciona Wells Basketball Public Health Fr. 3.96 Tacoma, Wash.
Lainie Wheeler Track & Field Business Fr. 3.91 Grants Pass, Ore.
Kameron Wimsatt Soccer Exploratory Studies Fr. 3.89 Redmond, Wash.

 















WOU Male FAR Scholar-Athlete Recipients
Name Sport Academic Major Year GPA Hometown
Kyle Babcock Football Criminal Justice Sr. 3.88 Springfield, Ore.
* Ethan Bothwell XC/Track & Field Business So. 3.91 Hillsboro, Ore.
Carson Evenson Football Business Fr. 3.86 Salem, Ore.
David Garcia Soccer Computer Science Fr. 3.85 Salem, Ore.
Michael Gibson III Football Business Jr. 3.89 Canby, Ore.
Dominic Hankins Football Exercise Science Sr. 3.91 Klamath Falls, Ore.
* Elwood Hosking XC/Track & Field Public Health Sr. 4.00 Phoenix, Ore.
* Nathan Hurtado Soccer Exercise Science Sr. 3.99 Tucson, Ariz.
** James Lackey Track & Field Exercise Science Sr. 3.97 Newport, Ore.
Braydon Olson Basketball Business Fr. 3.90 Chehalis, Wash.

***** – Six-Time FAR Award Recipient | **** – Five-Time FAR Award Recipient | *** – Four-Time FAR Award Recipient | ** – Three-Time FAR Award Recipient | * – Two-Time FAR Award Recipient

What is a FAR?

A faculty athletic representative (FAR) is a member of the faculty at an NCAA member institution who has been designated to serve as a liaison between the institution’s faculty and the athletic department. The FAR serves as a representative of the institution in conference and NCAA affairs. The role of the FAR is “to ensure that the academic institution establishes and maintains the appropriate balance between academics and athletics.” Western Oregon’s FAR is Amy Hammermeister Jordan.


 



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Sask Provincial Beach Volleyball in Lloydminster, July 12-13

Over 20 teams from across Saskatchewan, including 13 from Lloydminster, will participate in the Sask Beach Volleyball Provincials at Bud Miller Park, July 12-13. This is the third stop in the Sask Beach Volleyball tour and the first time Lloydminster has been included on the circuit. The sand at Bud Miller Park got an upgrade […]

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Over 20 teams from across Saskatchewan, including 13 from Lloydminster, will participate in the Sask Beach Volleyball Provincials at Bud Miller Park, July 12-13.

This is the third stop in the Sask Beach Volleyball tour and the first time Lloydminster has been included on the circuit. The sand at Bud Miller Park got an upgrade for last year’s Saskatchewan Summer Games, making it one of the best in the province.

It will be a round robin format in each division with three set matches and a winner in each division.

The teams will see action in the following divisions:

  • Five x U14/U15 Men
  • Six x U16/U17 Men
  • Eight x U14/U15 Women
  • Seven x U16/U17 Women

“Two Lloyd teams to look out for are U17 male pair Jory Wagner and Konlan Topp, who are defending Provincial silver medalists and winners of the Lloydminster tournament at the end of June. The other team is U15 female pair Britt Willis and Paige Kvill, who also train out of the Lloydminster Rustlers Beach Volleyball Program and have had top-three finishes at all our local events,” says organizer Matt Peck.

The action spikes from 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. on Saturday, and from  9:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m. on Sunday.



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Four ‘Bows Headed to Water Polo World Championships

Story Links HONOLULU — Four members of the University of Hawai’i women’s water polo program are slated to compete for their countries at the World Aquatics Championship in Singapore.   Ema Vernoux and Camille Radosavljevic were named to France’s roster for the world championship and Agatha Weston and Gabrielle Doyle will play […]

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HONOLULU — Four members of the University of Hawai’i women’s water polo program are slated to compete for their countries at the World Aquatics Championship in Singapore.
 
Ema Vernoux and Camille Radosavljevic were named to France’s roster for the world championship and Agatha Weston and Gabrielle Doyle will play for New Zealand.
 
The women’s water polo competition begins on July 10 and runs through July 23. New Zealand will compete in Group A with Australia, Italy and host Singapore. France will be in Group D with Spain, Great Britain and South Africa.
 
Vernoux and Radosavljevic will again compete for France after representing their home country at the Paris Olympics last summer. Vernoux made history by scoring France’s first goal in the nation’s Olympic debut, then began her collegiate career by leading the Rainbow Wahine with 78 goals on her way to earning Big West Freshman of the Year and ACWPC honorable mention All-America honors.
 
Radosavljevic was a starter for much of her junior season and contributed 17 goals, 13 assists, 19 steals and 14 field blocks. Along with playing in the Olympics, she also competed for France in the last two World Aquatics Championships in 2023 in Fukuoka, Japan and 2024 in Doha, Qatar.
 
Doyle also played in last year’s world championship in Doha before earning a place on the Big West All-Freshman team in her first season at UH. She posted 15 goals and 10 assists and finished second among UH’s field players with 34 steals.
 
Weston was a member of the Big West All-Freshman team in 2024 after posting 19 goals, 14 assists and 29 steals. She redshirted this past season while recovering from an injury.
 
Doyle and Weston will be joined on New Zealand’s roster by former ‘Bows Bridget Layburn and Elizabeth Gault.

The schedule and results for the world championship can be found at worldaquatics.com.

 

#WahineWP



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Here are the 2025 finalists for The Bowerman in track and field

Share Here’s what you need to know about the men’s and women’s finalists for The Bowerman — the Heisman of track and field. The finalists are the top three vote-getters for the annual award presented to the most outstanding athletes in collegiate track and field. The finalists come after a long indoor and outdoor track […]

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Here’s what you need to know about the men’s and women’s finalists for The Bowerman — the Heisman of track and field. The finalists are the top three vote-getters for the annual award presented to the most outstanding athletes in collegiate track and field. The finalists come after a long indoor and outdoor track and field season filled with elite performances. The 2025 winner will be announced on December 18 at the 2025 USTFCCCA convention.

Men’s finalists

Your 2025 men’s Bowerman finalists are Jordan Anthony, Nathaniel Ezekiel and Ja’Kobe Tharp. Here’s a quick breakdown for each from the 2025 season.

Jordan Anthony | Arkansas

Men’s 100m final – 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships

Men’s 60m – 2025 NCAA indoor track and field championships

Anthony is the third finalist in Arkansas’ men’s program history, joining 2016 winner Jarrion Lawson and 2022 finalist Ayden Owens-Delerme.

Season Accomplishments

  • NCAA Indoor 60m champion
  • NCAA Outdoor 100m champion
  • SEC Indoor 60m champion
  • SEC Outdoor 100m champion
  • SEC Outdoor 200m champion
  • SEC Outdoor Team champion
  • No. 2 fastest all-conditions 100m in NCAA history
  • No. 3 fastest 60 meters in NCAA history

MORE BOWERMAN: Every watchlist from 2025 | How the watch lists predict the award’s winner | History

Nathaniel Ezekiel| Baylor

Men’s 400m hurdles final – 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships

Ezekiel is the first Baylor athlete to be named a finalist.

Season Accomplishments

  • NCAA Outdoor 400 hurdles champion
  • Big 12 Indoor 400 meter champion
  • Big 12 Indoor 4×400 meter relay champion
  • Big 12 Outdoor 400 hurdles champion
  • No. 3, No. 7, No. 8 and No. 9 fastest outdoor 400 meter hurdles in NCAA history
  • No. 7 fastest indoor 400 meters in NCAA history
  • Undefeated against collegiate competition in the 400 meter hurdles in 2025

Ja’Kobe Tharp | Auburn

Men’s 110m hurdles final – 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships

Men’s 60m hurdles – 2025 NCAA indoor track and field championships

Tharp is the first Auburn athlete to be named a finalist.

Season Accomplishments

  • NCAA Indoor 60m hurdles champion
  • NCAA Outdoor 100m hurdles champion
  • SEC Indoor 60m hurdles champion
  • No. 5 fastest 110 hurdles in NCAA history
  • No. 8 fastest 60m hurdles in NCAA history

Women’s finalists

Your 2025 women’s Bowerman finalists are Pamela Kosgei, Doris Lemngole and Savannah Sutherland. Here’s a quick breakdown for each from the 2025 season.

Pamela Kosgei | New Mexico

Women’s 5000m final – 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships

Women’s 10K finals – 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships

Kosgei is the first New Mexico athlete to be named a finalist.

Season Accomplishments

  • NCAA Outdoor 5000 meter champion
  • NCAA Outdoor 10,000 meter champion
  • Mountain West Indoor mile champion
  • Mountain West Indoor 3000 meter champion
  • Mountain West Indoor 5000 meter champion
  • Mountain West Outdoor 5000 meter champion
  • Mountain West Outdoor 3000 meter steeplechase champion
  • Mountain West Indoor team champion
  • Mountain West Outdoor team champion
  • No. 2 fastest outdoor 5000m in NCAA history
  • No. 2 and No. 3 fastest 10,000m in NCAA history
  • No. 6 fastest 3000m steeplechase in NCAA history
  • No. 6 fastest indoor 5000m in NCAA history
  • Undefeated against collegiate competition in the outdoor 5000 meters and outdoor 10,000 meters in 2025

Kosgei’s cross country accolades do not count towards her resume for The Bowerman.

RECORDS: Every collegiate track and field record broken in 2025

Doris Lemngole | Alabama

Women’s 3000m steeplechase final – 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships

Women’s 5000m – 2025 NCAA indoor track and field championships

Lemngole is the first Alabama athlete to be named a finalist.

Season Accomplishments

  • NCAA Indoor 5000 meter champion
  • NCAA Outdoor 3000 meter steeplechase champion
  • NCAA 3000m steeplechase record
  • NCAA Indoor 5000m record
  • SEC Indoor 5000 meter champion
  • SEC Outdoor 3000 meter steeplechase champion
  • SEC Outdoor 5000 meter champion
  • No. 1, No. 3, No. 4 and No. 11 fastest 3000m steeplechase in NCAA history
  • No. 5 fastest indoor 3000m in NCAA history
  • Undefeated against collegiate competition in the steeplechase

Lemngole’s cross country accolades do not count towards her resume for The Bowerman.

Savannah Sutherland | Michigan

Women’s 400m hurdles final – 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships

Sutherland is the first Michigan athlete to be named a finalist.

Season Accomplishments

  • NCAA Outdoor 400 meter hurdles
  • NCAA 400 meter hurdles record
  • Big Ten Indoor 400 meter champion
  • Big Ten Outdoor 400m hurdles champion
  • No. 1 and No. 8 fastest 400m hurdles in NCAA history
  • Undefeated against collegiate competition in the 400 meter hurdles

Who should be the 2025 Bowerman finalists in NCAA track and field?

NCAA track and field beat reporter Stan Becton breaks down who should be the Bowerman finalists in 2025.

READ MORE

Here are the Bowerman frontrunners entering the 2025 NCAA outdoor championships

Stan Becton takes a look at the top Bowerman candidates ahead of the 2025 NCAA track and field championships.

READ MORE

Here are the potential repeat NCAA outdoor track and field champions in 2025

The 2025 Division I men’s and women’s outdoor track and field championships will see seven returning champions attempt to defend their titles.

READ MORE





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Kentucky Picked to Win SEC, Four on Preseason All-SEC Team – UK Athletics

LEXINGTON, Ky. – The Kentucky Volleyball team was picked by the 16 Southeastern Conference head coaches to win the league in the annual preseason poll, it was announced Tuesday afternoon. Additionally, the Wildcats received four spots on the All-SEC preseason team, the most of any team in the conference. Kentucky received nine of the 16 […]

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LEXINGTON, Ky. – The Kentucky Volleyball team was picked by the 16 Southeastern Conference head coaches to win the league in the annual preseason poll, it was announced Tuesday afternoon. Additionally, the Wildcats received four spots on the All-SEC preseason team, the most of any team in the conference.

Kentucky received nine of the 16 first-place votes with Texas, who was picked second, gathering six first-place votes and Texas A&M receiving one. Kentucky received 218 points, beating out Texas by two points, who collected 216 points in the preseason poll, as the Wildcats were selected to win what would be their ninth-straight SEC championship. Texas A&M was picked third with Missouri (fourth) and Florida (fifth) rounding out the top five.

The All-SEC Preseason Team consists of the top 15 vote-getters in the SEC from the coaches, regardless of position and Kentucky had a league-high four on the team with Brooke Bultema, Brooklyn DeLeye, Eva Hudson and Molly Tuozzo all earning spots on the team. For DeLeye, she is coming off winning SEC Player of the Year in 2024 and will be looking to become the second player at Kentucky to win SEC Player of the Year twice in 2025, her junior year, as she would join Leah Edmond who did it in 2018 and 2019 in her final two years at UK.

Kentucky’s 2025 season kicks off Saturday, August 30 at Lipscomb in a 3 p.m. ET match in Nashville before playing in the first-ever Broadway Block Party at Bridgestone Arena against Nebraska at Noon ET on ABC. The home season for UK open Sept. 13 against SMU as part of a four-team event with UK, SMU, Houston and Purdue.

SEC Preseason Coaches’ Poll

  1. Kentucky (9)
  2. Texas (6)
  3. Texas A&M (1)
  4. Missouri
  5. Florida
  6. Tennessee
  7. Oklahoma
  8. LSU
  9. Georgia
  10. Ole Miss
  11. Arkansas
  12. Vanderbilt
  13. Auburn
  14. South Carolina
  15. Mississippi State
  16. Alabama

Preseason All-SEC Team

Jaela Auguste (MB, Florida)

Brooke Bultema (MB, Kentucky)

Brooklyn DeLeye (OH, Kentucky)

Eva Hudson (OH, Kentucky)

Molly Tuozzo (L, Kentucky)

Jurnee Robinson (OH, LSU)

Nia Washington (OH, LSU)

Mokihana Tufono (S, Ole Miss)

Maya Sands (L, Mizzou)

Alexis Shelton (OH, Oklahoma)

Caroline Kerr (S, Tennessee)

Emma Halter (L, Texas)

Torrey Stafford (OH, Texas)

Ifenna Cos-Okpalla (MB, Texas A&M)

Logan Lednicky (OPP, Texas A&M)

 

For the latest on UK Volleyball, follow the Wildcats on Twitter and Instagram at @KentuckyVB.





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Vodafone Launches Rally Tally to Bridge UK’s Digital Divide

One week into The Championships, Wimbledon, it’s not just the 18-shot rallies between Carlos Alcaraz and Fabio Fognini that are captivating audiences. It’s also the flurry of messages between fans, whose passion for the sport plays out in group chats as much as it does in the stands. New research from Vodafone reveals […]

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One week into The Championships, Wimbledon, it’s not just the 18-shot rallies between Carlos Alcaraz and Fabio Fognini that are captivating audiences. It’s also the flurry of messages between fans, whose passion for the sport plays out in group chats as much as it does in the stands.


New research from Vodafone reveals that these ‘message rallies’ – rapid-fire bursts of conversation – are lighting up more than a third (35%) of Brits’ group chats on a daily basis with debates over favourite athletes and teams sparking some of the nation’s longest streaks, second only to family catch-ups and weekend plans.




Comarch
Comarch


Over half (52%) of sports fans say they use their group chats to stay on top of the action, with one-in-five (20%) Brits admitting they have a dedicated group chat just to rally back-and-forth about sport.


The data also shows fans are spending just as much time chatting about matches with friends as they are watching them, with some message rallies hitting an impressive 74 back-and-forths during a single game. Top triggers include controversial umpire decisions (28%); team and player performances (28%); and the all-important points celebrations (25%).


Vodafone believes connectivity is essential and everyone should have access to the opportunities it brings, and as the Official Connectivity Partner of The Championships, Wimbledon, it’s turning this year’s on-court action into real-world impact. Through the launch of the Rally Tally challenge, the Nation’s Network is pledging up to 25,000 donated connections, matched to the average rallies recorded by IBM across the show courts.


The initiative is part of Vodafone’s everyone.connected programme, which is on track to help four million people and businesses cross the digital divide by the end of 2025.


With its partners, Vodafone has already helped over 3.5 million people and businesses cross the digital divide, donating mobile connectivity and technology to those who need it most. The company also provides free support to upskill businesses and communities, while offering targeted, affordable tariffs and services to make being connected easily accessible.


Nicki Lyons, Chief Corporate Affairs and Sustainability Officer


In today’s always-on world, rallying messages back-and-forth with friends has become second nature. Whether it’s a flurry of texts during a nail-biting match, a stream of emojis in a group chat, or brainstorming with a colleague, these conversations keep us connected to the people and moments that matter. But while millions of us enjoy everyday message rallies, not everyone can. That’s why we’re launching the Rally Tally challenge at this year’s Championships, as part of our everyone.connected programme, pledging to donate connections to those who need it most.



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