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UFC legend Jose Aldo clarifies boxing future after announcing MMA retirement at UFC 315

UFC Hall of Famer Jose Aldo addressed speculation he could return to fighting in the ring after UFC 315. Jose Aldo‘s last UFC hurrah didn’t disappoint against Aiemann Zahabi at UFC 315. In a fight that arguably could’ve gone in his favor on the judges’ scorecards, Aldo lost by unanimous decision to Zahabi in an […]

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UFC legend Jose Aldo clarifies boxing future after announcing MMA retirement at UFC 315

UFC Hall of Famer Jose Aldo addressed speculation he could return to fighting in the ring after UFC 315.

Jose Aldo‘s last UFC hurrah didn’t disappoint against Aiemann Zahabi at UFC 315. In a fight that arguably could’ve gone in his favor on the judges’ scorecards, Aldo lost by unanimous decision to Zahabi in an instant classic featherweight matchup.

After falling to Zahabi, Aldo announced his retirement from MMA for the second time, following his return from a multi-year hiatus at UFC 301. Aldo entered the UFC Hall of Fame in 2023 after his first retirement following a loss to Merab Dvalishvili at UFC 278.

While Aldo hung up the gloves on his MMA career, he didn’t immediately rule out returning to fighting in the boxing ring if the opportunity presents itself.

Photo by Cooper Neill/Zuffa LLC
Photo by Cooper Neill/Zuffa LLC

Jose Aldo talks boxing future after turning the page on MMA career

In between UFC stints, Aldo fought twice in the ring, fighting to a majority draw against former UFC foe Jeremy Stephens and defeating Esteban Gabriel Espindola by unanimous decision. His brief success in the ring opened potential opportunities to feature on Jake Paul-headlined cards.

But Aldo is ready to turn the page on his fighting career as a whole, and isn’t interested in continuing to grow in boxing anytime soon.

During a recent appearance on The Ariel Helwani Show, Aldo was asked about his future plans and whether or not he’d consider transitioning to the ring.

“I made the decision right then and there, win or lose, independent of the result, I was sure of what was gonna happen,” Aldo said.

“As you know, I stopped for boxing for a brief period of time and then there was something in my heart that touched me to go back to the UFC. I didn’t do it for the money. I did it to continue my story and my history because if it was for the money, I would have gone to another organization and got more money for it.

“Win or lose, the decision was made… I’m not fighting again. I have other things going on for me.”

As for what’s next for the UFC Hall of Famer, Aldo has several successful businesses outside of the cage, and anticipates a full-time transition to his portfolio. But Aldo has changed his mind on retirement before, and fight fans shouldn’t be surprised if he reverses course in the future.

Conor McGregor shared immediate reaction to former rival Jose Aldo’s retirement

One of those who paid tribute to Aldo following his retirement was Conor McGregor, who shared one of the most heated rivalries in UFC history with the former featherweight champion. McGregor called Aldo the ‘featherweight GOAT’ in sharp contrast to their past heated relationship during their fighting careers.

Former UFC middleweight champion Israel Adesanya also gave Aldo his flowers after UFC 315, calling the Brazilian a ‘legend’ in combat sports. Adesanya is working towards his own fighting comeback later this year after three consecutive losses in the cage.

Aldo retires from MMA with a 32-10 professional record, including wins against the likes of Frankie Edgar, Chad Mendes, and Kenny Florian.

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Cathedral Catholic duo leads All-CIF beach volleyball team

2025 All-CIF San Diego Section beach volleyball team Pair of the Year: Lauren Hanson and Jojo Wilson, Cathedral Catholic Hanson, a junior, and Wilson, a sophomore, helped the Dons to the CIF San Diego Section Open Division championship, beating archrival Torrey Pines in the finals. Cathedral Catholic finished 17-0. Wilson is verbally committed to Long […]

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2025 All-CIF San Diego Section beach volleyball team

Pair of the Year: Lauren Hanson and Jojo Wilson, Cathedral Catholic

Hanson, a junior, and Wilson, a sophomore, helped the Dons to the CIF San Diego Section Open Division championship, beating archrival Torrey Pines in the finals. Cathedral Catholic finished 17-0. Wilson is verbally committed to Long Beach State.

Coach of the Year: Huy Nguyen, San Marcos


First team

Name, School, Year

Lauren Hanson, Cathedral Catholic, Jr.

Jojo Wilson, Cathedral Catholic, So.

Holly Cassidy, Torrey Pines, Sr.

Kelly Randolph, Torrey Pines, So.

Ruby Partain, Carlsbad, Jr.

Havani Embry, Carlsbad, Jr.

Aurora Fernandez, Point Loma, So.

Caroline Tadder, Point Loma, Jr.

Kristen White, Scripps Ranch, Jr.

Riley McDonald, Scripps Ranch, So.


Second team

Name, School, Year

Maya Evens, Cathedral Catholic, Sr.

Mae Kordas, Cathedral Catholic, Sr.

Aubrie Dingman, Torrey Pines, So.

Parker Herrin, Torrey Pines, So.

Elyse Taschner, Scripps Ranch, Jr.

Emma Garrett, La Jolla, Jr.

Madisyn Parady, La Costa Canyon, Sr.

Kenidee Wax, Eastlake, So.

Kylie Osborne, San Marcos, Sr.

Alexis Schwartz, San Marcos, Sr.

Note: Team based on vote of Coaches Advisory Committee.



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University of Minnesota Athletics

MINNEAPOLIS – University of Minnesota Associate Head Coach Peter Miller was named the USTFCCCA Midwest Region Assistant Coach of the Year, the USTFCCCA announced on Friday. Miller coached Kostas Zaltos to a Big Ten and NCAA hammer throw title at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. For Miller, the regional honor is the eighth of his career in his […]

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MINNEAPOLIS – University of Minnesota Associate Head Coach Peter Miller was named the USTFCCCA Midwest Region Assistant Coach of the Year, the USTFCCCA announced on Friday. Miller coached Kostas Zaltos to a Big Ten and NCAA hammer throw title at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore.

For Miller, the regional honor is the eighth of his career in his 12th season at the ‘U’. Miller has cemented himself as the premier throws coach in the region, and also nationally, as the former Gopher thrower has coached at least one All-American in a throwing event on either the men’s or women’s side in all 12 seasons as a coach at Minnesota. The 2025 men’s hammer throw season goes down as a historic one with Angelos Mantzouranis’ NCAA silver medal pairing with Zaltos’ NCAA championship. The 1-2 finish in the men’s hammer throw made Minnesota the first team to do so since 2011 (Virginia Tech) at the NCAA Championships. With Miller’s coaching the duo of Zaltos and Mantzouranis finished the season first and second in nine of the 10 meets they competed in together. Miller’s coaching on the men’s side was not limited to Zaltos and Mantzouranis with the Golden Gopher men’s hammer throw group setting a new USTFCCCA ‘Event Squad’ record in the event as the first quartet (Zaltos, Mantzouranis, Schafer, Tzamtzis) to average over 70-meters (70.79m | 232-3). 

For more information on the Gophers, continue to check back with GopherSports.com. Keep up with the University of Minnesota cross country and track and field team on X, Instagram (@GopherCCTF) and on Facebook, so you do not miss any content during the season. 



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VanHootegem Joins Track & Field Coaching Staff

HOUSTON – Jim VanHootegem, a three-time USTFCCCA National Assistant Coach of the Year and Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year selection, has joined the University of Houston Track & Field program as an assistant coach, Director of Track & Field Will Blackburn announced Friday.   “This is the realization of a long-held aspiration to […]

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HOUSTON – Jim VanHootegem, a three-time USTFCCCA National Assistant Coach of the Year and Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year selection, has joined the University of Houston Track & Field program as an assistant coach, Director of Track & Field Will Blackburn announced Friday.
 
“This is the realization of a long-held aspiration to be a part of Houston Track and Field,” VanHootegem said. “I want to thank Eddie Nuñez, Lauren DuBois, Will Blackburn and Carl Lewis for this opportunity. I can’t wait to continue the great Cougar tradition of developing individual student-athletes to the highest levels and contending for team championships.  So much of my coaching has been based upon what I’ve learned from legendary coach Tom Tellez, and it’s an amazing honor to follow in his coaching footsteps.”
 

VanHootegem (pronounced van-OTT-eh-ghem) will coach the horizontal jumps after spending two seasons at South Plains College. During his time with the Texans, he was named the 2025 USTFCCCA Indoor Track & Field Assistant Coach of the Year and helped guide the team to three team NJCAA National Championships, including seven individual National Championship titles.
 
We just got even better as an overall program with Jim’s addition,” said Blackburn. “He brings years of experience as both a head coach and assistant, having led the program to win team National Championships titles at the NCAA and NJCAA levels. Our program is built on representing the University of Houston at the highest level in the Big 12, NCAA Championships and on the international level. Jim understands the rich history of Houston Track &Field, and we are excited to have him join the program.”
 
In his career, VanHootegem has helped guide his programs to 15 National Team Championship titles and 27 conference team titles. Additionally, VanHootegem produced 138 All-American honors as an event coach and 63 honorees as a head coach.
 
His coaching accolades include the 2016 Big 12 Conference Women’s Outdoor Head Coach of the Year, three USTFCCCA National Assistant Coach of the Year, three USTFCCCA Regional Assistant Coach of the Year honors and five Big East Conference Coaching Staff of the Year recognitions.
 
VanHootegem brings a wealth of Big 12 experience as he served as the head coach at Oklahoma for six seasons from 2013-19. He guided 83 Sooners to NCAA Championship berths, 62 collected All-America accolades and 28 won individual or relay Big 12 titles. Additionally, 65 student-athletes earned All-Academic honors from the USTFCCCA.
 

From 2004-2013, VanHootegem served as an assistant coach at Texas A&M where the Aggies won seven NCAA team titles, 22 individual NCAA Champions and 14 conference crowns. VanHootegem was named the 2009 Men’s National Assistant Coach of the Year and a 2012 Mondo Regional Assistant Coach of the Year by the USTFCCCA.
 
VanHootegem was an assistant coach at Miami from 2001-04, where he won five conference titles and was a member of the Big East Coaching Staff of the Year on five separate occasions.
 
As a student-athlete at North Central College, VanHootegem helped lead his squad to a pair of NCAA Division III national championships and two third-place finishes. He is a seven-time All-American and was named the team’s most valuable athlete and a team captain.
 

A native of Kewanee, Ill., VanHootegem earned his bachelor’s degree in physical education from North Central College. He is currently a USTFCCCA Academy instructor for the jumps curriculum. Van Hootegem is a certified strength and conditioning coach by the USTFCCCA Academy and is Level II certified in the USA Track & Field Coaching Education Program.
 
VanHootegem is married to the former Carmen Melendez, and they have three children, Tori, Quin and Olivia. The VanHootegems also have two granddaughters, Eden and Hazel.
 
SUPPORT YOUR COOGS
Fans can make a direct impact on the success of Houston Track and Field by supporting LinkingCoogs – UH’s very own NIL collective – and by joining the Podium Club which provides support directly to Houston Track and Field for needs beyond its operating budget.

STAY CONNECTED

Fans can receive updates on #HTownSpeedCity by following @UHCougarTF on X and catch up with the latest news and notes on the team by clicking LIKE on the team’s Facebook page at UHCougarTF or on the team’s Instagram page at @uhcougartf.

 

– UHCougars.com –





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Marquette wins water polo district championships | Sports

The Marquette Mustangs earned a 14-7 win over Kirkwood in Walker Natatorium at Kirkwood High School to win the water polo championship. (Photo provided) Photo provided The Marquette Mustangs are the Missouri Water Polo district champions again. The Mustangs earned a 14-7 win over Kirkwood in Walker Natatorium at Kirkwood High School. Marquette finished 24-1. […]

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Marquette water polo

The Marquette Mustangs earned a 14-7 win over Kirkwood in Walker Natatorium at Kirkwood High School to win the water polo championship. (Photo provided)




The Marquette Mustangs are the Missouri Water Polo district champions again.

The Mustangs earned a 14-7 win over Kirkwood in Walker Natatorium at Kirkwood High School.

Marquette finished 24-1. The win made it back-to-back championships and third overall. Water polo for girls began in 2021.

Coach Claire Maniscalco said there was no pressure on her girls to repeat.

“We set the same input goals every year, focusing on training and how we work. We don’t pay attention to results,” Maniscalco said. “We do the work and accept whatever results happen. Our kids are great at buying into the program’s approach.”

In the regular season, Marquette defeated Kirkwood 15-3.

Going into the final, Maniscalco said her girls were not overconfident.

“Confidence is earned by putting in the work. This year’s team really trained hard,” Maniscalco said. “What we refer to as the right way. They earned the confidence they brought into the championship game.”

The keys to the victory, Maniscalco said, were the Mustangs’ defensive and offensive disciplines. 

In the win, cousins Neveah Kerber and Cassidy Kerber played well. Cassidy, a sophomore, scored six goals. Neveah, a senior, scored five goals.

“Their power on offense stands out and the hard working movement defense lead by (junior) Olivia (Brzyski) in the goal and Isla (Sattler) mirroring their top shooter and effectively limiting her scoring chances stood out. Our four first year starters (Sattler, Dani Hume, Avery Anthony and Gabby Silasi) really bought into and learned zone help defense and executed amazingly.”

The Mustangs lose only Neveah Kerber to graduation.

“The sport is growing so competition gets stronger each year,” Maniscalco said. “We have two players returning who were first team all-district two years in a row now and a third who made second team this year. We’ll be in a good position to compete again next year.”

 



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Salt Lake Community College to cut track and field programs after banner season

TAYLORSVILLE — One of the more successful athletic programs at Salt Lake Community College has been discontinued after just three seasons. The Bruins have discontinued both the indoor and outdoor track and field programs, the state’s largest two-year college confirmed to KSL.com Friday afternoon after a banner year for the sport on the Taylorsville campus. […]

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TAYLORSVILLE — One of the more successful athletic programs at Salt Lake Community College has been discontinued after just three seasons.

The Bruins have discontinued both the indoor and outdoor track and field programs, the state’s largest two-year college confirmed to KSL.com Friday afternoon after a banner year for the sport on the Taylorsville campus.

“After thorough evaluation, this decision reflects broader institutional priorities and financial challenges,” the school said in a statement. “It was made after careful consideration and in no way reflects negatively on our student-athletes, who have represented the college with excellence and dedication.”

Athletes on scholarship and those who have signed letters of intent prior to the announcement will have their scholarships honored for the upcoming 2025-26 academic year, a spokesperson for the school said.

SLCC will continue to field a men’s and women’s cross country team, and “has no plans to discontinue cross country,” per the college.

Salt Lake is in the early days of new athletic leadership under Gary Veron, a former associate athletic director at BYU over student-athlete experience and NIL who replaced long-time athletic director Kevin Dustin after a decade in charge.

Prior to his time in Provo, Veron held several positions at BYU-Hawaii, including interim athletic director and associate athletic director for compliance and student-athlete welfare.

SLCC head coach Isaac Wood, who led the Bruins to three cross country national championships in his first three seasons and dual men’s and women’s national titles last year with the program, could not be reached for comment.

The 2023 National Junior College Athletic Association national coach of the year of the Bruins was coming off arguably the most successful season in the combined program’s short history, including national championships in both men’s and women’s cross country. It was the second consecutive title for women’s cross country, which also won the NJCAA half-marathon title in the fall.

Emerald Kehr, one of the stars of the 2023 national champions who prepped at West High, went on to sign with LSU after finishing second nationally in cross country and top five in the NJCAA in the mile, 3,000 meter and 4×800-meter relay.

Salt Lake sophomore JaQuavious Harris finished first overall to pace the men’s team in 23:30.7. The Cheraw, South Carolina, native then signed a professional running contract with Saucony and still competes and trains regularly with the local Run Elite Program.

The Bruins followed up the feat in March, when freshman Jayden Holdsworth won the NJCAA indoor 3,000-meter championship. The redshirt freshman from Orem surged to the front of the pack in 600 meters to become the second individual champion in the men’s track and field program’s short history and pace an eighth-place finish at the national meet.

In the outdoor season, Michael Maiorano and Melanie Anderson won championships in the men’s and women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase, respectively, and American Fork native Jayden Fitzgarrald finished runner-up in the 5,000 meters. In all, 19 athletes earned NJCAA All-American status.

SLCC men’s cross country and track and field fielded 39 athletes on its roster last year, the majority of whom were from the state of Utah, with all but 11 of them coming from the state of Utah.

The Salt Lake women’s program lists 30 players on its roster — all but six of whom come from the Beehive State.

With the move, SLCC will sponsor four men’s sports and six women’s sports, as well as cheer/spirit squads and varsity esports rosters.

Salt Lake Community College swept the men's and women's NJCAA Division I cross country national championships, Saturday, Nov. 9, 2024, in Richmond, Virginia.
Salt Lake Community College swept the men’s and women’s NJCAA Division I cross country national championships, Saturday, Nov. 9, 2024, in Richmond, Virginia. (Photo: Courtesy, SLCC)



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Players ask for space for Beach Volleyball

Recreation Commission forwards Moraga Canyon recommendations The Piedmont Recreation Commission forwarded its input on the Moraga Canyon Specific Plan at the Commission’s June 18 meeting. Also at the meeting, a group of Piedmont High School beach volleyball players spoke out asking the Commission to consider space for a facility to host matches and practices in […]

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Recreation Commission forwards Moraga Canyon recommendations

The Piedmont Recreation Commission forwarded its input on the Moraga Canyon Specific Plan at the Commission’s June 18 meeting.

Also at the meeting, a group of Piedmont High School beach volleyball players spoke out asking the Commission to consider space for a facility to host matches and practices in Piedmont. The team just completed its third season and has no practice facility in town, with commutes of 40 minutes each way to a facility in the town of Moraga.

The Moraga Canyon Specific Plan involves a potential development on the north part of town around Coaches Field. Housing could be build but the plans also include improvements to Coaches Field, including expanding it to the size needed to host Under-14 year old soccer, including spectator stands, bathrooms and the like. The current is grass and hosts multiple sports including soccer, baseball and softball. The new field would potentially have artificial turf with overlays for baseball and soccer. It could also host lacrosse and other sports.

The Commission voted 5-0 to send a recommendation back to the City Council for the improvements, which did not include a beach volleyball facility.

Daisy Tran, who will be a junior in the fall, was one of the players who spoke at the meeting.

“I believe that having our own courts locally would create a stable foundation for further team improvement,” Tran said. “Local courts would open many opportunities for people of all ages to build community through playing beach volleyball.”

Coach Justin Hoover said he had 72 players express interest in trying out for the team this past Spring, but only eight were able to play. He attributed that dropoff to not having a facility in Piedmont. Rising sophomore Allyson Huynh said, “I was one of those 72 girls who had signed up to play beach volleyball. However because my parents were unable to contribute to the carpool, I was unable to play.”

Although the players were speaking to the agenda item on the Moraga Caynon Specific Plan, the site is unlikely to be open to a beach volleyball facility. Plans have been drawn up on the idea of improving the site for its current usage. Further, it’s unknown where exactly the housing would be built – there are no proposed projects yet. In theory, someone could eventually propose a court on the city-owned property. But it seems unlikely at this point in the process, which began in 2023.

“It was not a recreation facility that was identified by the city council when they approved the recreation facility as part of the plan,” Piedmont Director of Planning & building Kevin Jackson explained.

Hoover said his team’s appearance was mainly to raise awareness of the problem.

“I did not go in thinking we’re going to get a volleyball court,” he said. “I did go in trying to make sure they know we’re here.”

The players all talked about the rising popularity of the sport – both indoor and beach volleyball have seen massive increases in participation in recent years. They also all spoke of the commute time denying kids the opportunity to play.

“It would be such a shame to see all the love for the sport go to waste since we didn’t have a stable facility,” said Fiona Olsen, a rising junior.

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