ANN ARBOR, Mich. — The University of Michigan men’s track and field team will host the Len Paddock Open on Friday (May 4) to close out its regular season schedule at U-M Track and Field Stadium. Field action will begin at 11 a.m. with the javelin throw, and track action will begin at 1 p.m. […]
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — The University of Michigan men’s track and field team will host the Len Paddock Open on Friday (May 4) to close out its regular season schedule at U-M Track and Field Stadium. Field action will begin at 11 a.m. with the javelin throw, and track action will begin at 1 p.m. with the 4x100m relay.
Notes
• The 800-meter run event squad is ranked No. 7 in the latest U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Event Squad Rankings, while the 1,500-meter run squad (No. 11) and the 3,000-meter steeplechase squad (No. 12) are just outside the top 10.
• The Maize and Blue closed its regular-season road slate at the Duke Twilight in Durham, N.C., on May 4, setting three top-10 program marks.
• Aiden Sullivan posted a personal-best time of 3:40.80 in the 1,500-meter run to finish 14th and come in at No. 7 on the program performers list. Riley Flemington finished 18th with a season-best time of 3:42.54, just 0.49 seconds short of his personal best time.
• In the pole vault, Liam Kinney comes in at No. 10 on the program performers list with a personal-best mark of 5.11 meters (16 feet, 9.25 inches) and a second-place finish.
• The 4x400m relay team of Lawrence Gilliam, Krish Gupta, John O’Reilly and Miles Brown placed first with a season-best performance of 3:06.92. The time is the No. 5 time on the program performers list and No. 6 in the conference.
• Nolan Clark won the 5,000-meter run with a personal-best time of 13:55.08, shaving nearly 10 seconds off his previous best.
• Aiden Felty recorded a season-best mark of 17.94m (58-10.25) in the shot put to finish third, while Tianhao Wei won the triple jump with a season-best mark of 15.64m (51-3.75).
Sam Parker Earns NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships East First Round Bid
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INDIANAPOLIS – For the first time since 2015, the Belmont University men’s track and field program will have a javelin thrower competing in the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. Redshirt freshman Sam Parker has qualified for next week’s 2025 NCAA East First Round in Jacksonville, Florida. It […]
INDIANAPOLIS – For the first time since 2015, the Belmont University men’s track and field program will have a javelin thrower competing in the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. Redshirt freshman Sam Parker has qualified for next week’s 2025 NCAA East First Round in Jacksonville, Florida.
It marks the first time since 2019 the Bruins have had a men’s field athlete earn a bid to the NCAA Outdoor Championships East First Round. Austin Landis (2014-15) was the last Belmont men’s javelin thrower to reach the NCAA East First Round and Stephen Gibson (2016-19) in the hammer throw was the Bruins’ last field athlete to qualify for the NCAA East First Round.
In his first season competing at the collegiate level, Parker has quickly become one of Belmont’s best javelin throwers in recent history. Surpassing 55 meters four times this spring, Parker won the Brent Chumbley Memorial Hilltopper Relays in late March before turning in his best throw this past Saturday at the Missouri Valley Conference Outdoor Championships. Coming a mere five inches from the school record, Parker launched a missile of 211 feet, 7 inches (64.50m) on his fourth throw for a silver medal.
A native of Oviedo, Florida (Circle Christian), Parker ranks 85th nationally in the javelin and will enter the NCAA East First Round seeded 33rd.
The NCAA Outdoor Championships East First Round takes place next Wednesday-Saturday, May 28-31 on the campus of the University of North Florida at Visit Jax Track at Hodges Stadium. Men’s events will be held next Wednesday, May 28 and next Friday, May 30.
The men’s javelin is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. CT/2:30 p.m. ET next Wednesday.
The top 12 finishers in each event at the NCAA East First Round will advance to the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships semifinals and finals, held Wednesday-Saturday, June 11-14 at historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon.
The NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships East First Round will be broadcast on ESPN+ and live results can be found at BelmontBruins.com.
How to Follow
Follow Belmont men’s track and field on social media – @BelmontXCTF on X, formerly Twitter, @belmontxctf and @belmontthrows on Instagram, and @BUXCTF on Facebook – for complete coverage of the Bruins. Stay up to date with all of Belmont’s athletic programs via the official app of the Belmont Bruins, available both in the Apple App Store and on Google Play.
Aussie water polo legend comments on rule evolution
Australian Tom Hoad holds a special place on the topography of the Water Polo Australia Ltd landscape, being its patron, life member, legend and hall of fame inductee. He is also at the pinnacle of aquatics, having been inducted to the International Swimming Hall of Fame (ISHOF) in 2011 as a contributor and helped run […]
Australian Tom Hoad holds a special place on the topography of the Water Polo Australia Ltd landscape, being its patron, life member, legend and hall of fame inductee.
He is also at the pinnacle of aquatics, having been inducted to the International Swimming Hall of Fame (ISHOF) in 2011 as a contributor and helped run two FINA World Championships (1991 and 1998).
He has contributed much to the sport since initially being selected for the 1960 Rome Olympics as a player, moving into a coaching role for the four Olympics after his playing years and then coaching all manner of teams to the current day as he looks after school kids in their development.
Just known as “Tom” by youngsters and peers alike, the multi-linguist has seen it all and been involved in the development of the rules at one stage. He has been consulted often by FINA and international coaches and referees on what he thinks about the rules.
Current Rules
Scoring Goals asked him what he thought of the current batch of rules.
“With regard to the new changes, which were instigated controversially, I think they are better than the old rules.
“The shortening the pool is an improvement, allowing more goals. It does away with transition time. (With the 30m pool) television cameras focused on the goalkeeper holding the ball. There was no activity on the ball and the goalkeeper would hold the ball for five-six seconds before making the release pass. It’s more television appropriate now.
“In Australia, we’ve played those rules (25 seconds possession and 15 seconds for the corner restart) and it’s made the extra-man (situation) much shorter and means they have to shoot quicker. More turnovers and much faster. Both teams have more opportunities to score goals, which means more players have to be more proficient at shooting.
“The Australian-New Zealand (World Aquatics Championships Oceania qualification series for men in April) games were very exciting. Shooting and ball handling are far more valuable than ever before,” Hoad said.
Image Source: Tom Hoad in 2025/Russell McKinnon/World Aquatics
Rule Evolution
Two sets of rules were considered post-World War II with a South American version and a European set, with Europe winning the debate. Former United States of America Water Polo and former ISHOF CEO Bruce Wigo is an ardent fan of changing rules for the better and has stated in the past that the South American version should have held precedence.
Hoad said that these rules meant players could have five ordinary fouls before being sent from the match, much like basketball, meaning no-one wanted to foul, thus reducing referee whistles. It made the game far more less contact, which I think is an important factor.
Debate in FINA at the time decided between how the Europeans were playing it and how the Americans were playing it.
As the sport was more popular in Europe in places like Sweden, France, Belgium and England where it began, Europe decided it was its decision, which Wigo maintains was the wrong decision.
“His logic makes sense to me,” Hoad said.
1950s And Beyond
“One of the major changes was that on the referee’s whistle you had to stop. That was then replaced with the game becoming much more mobile.
“There were a few limitations that the FINA Bureau gradually changed. One was with some logic behind it. Throw the ball over halfway. Before that you couldn’t. You played a two-two-two and because the goalkeeper couldn’t go over halfway, we had designated backs and designated forwards.”
Hoad travelled to Budapest in 1962, and enthused over the development of the sport there because of the thermal water.
“The Csaszar-Komjadi Sportuszoda pool was not chlorinated or filtered but was warm all year round. It was the first water polo-specific built pool in 1927. They built the indoor pool at Margaret Island in 1930 and the outdoor pool was filled with thermal water. Green thermal water. It was a huge advantage.”
He spoke also of the three main Hungarian pools in Szentes, Szeged, and Szolnok while many other towns received a lot of thermal baths.
“It was one of the reasons Hungary, a landlocked country, became so proficient in water polo.
“When a Croatian, Bata Orlic, who hailed from Dubrovnik, saw what was available in Hungary, he insisted that Yugoslavia played all-year round when he returned as director of Yugoslav water polo.
“The Hungarians always beat Yugoslavia even though there was a lot of water polo played along the coast.
“The rules in first division in Yugoslavia stated that unless you had access to an indoor pool all year round, you could not play in first division. The idea was so they could beat the Hungarians, which they eventually did.
“Korcula had only an outdoor pool and won the Yugoslav premiership that year, including (Olympic silver medallist) Bobo Trifunovic, who coached in Perth.
“Korcula maintained it was a Serbian plot to get them out of the competition, which it wasn’t. That was the beginning of playing 12 months a year,” Hoad said. “Bit by bit, Yugoslavia improved their world status.”
FINA slowly made changes with the biggest following the European Championships in Utrecht in 1967. The public did not like seeing six playing on five. They introduced a foul after a foul. If you had three penalty points you were excluded. It was introduced without trialling. I said we should trial it first. It ended up being a disaster punishment that did not fit the crime. (You accumulated three points and then you got a penalty).
Image Source: Tom Hoad in 1994/Russell McKinnon/World Aquatics
“You could stop a certain goal (by pulling the leg of a counter-attacker) and only gained a third of a point penalty,” Hoad said.
“This rule was thrown out at the first opportunity and there was a lot of debate about it. There was nobody who was vehement that it should remain.”
Speeding forward to current times, Hoad said that “dead time” is reduced and swimming reduced.
The recent introduction of the shorter pool length and possession times for men have been greeted warmly by Hoad and laments that European competitions have not had a chance to play these rules. Only European men’s teams contesting the 2025 World Cup had a chance to play these new rules.
He pointed to the upcoming World Aquatics Championships in Singapore where the rules have been defined further with a 28-second possession time for men and women, plus an 18-second re-possession time.
“We’ll see after the World Championships how this turns out as no teams have had the chance to play these in competition.”
World Aquatics Technical Water Polo Committee Chair Tamas Molnar confirmed the rule change this week, stating that the 25m pool and 28-18-second combination would be played by both genders.
Hoad champions the recent Australian league finals in which the men’s gold-medal final finished 22-20 with USA import Hannes Daube scoring 12 goals, only two of which were penalty goals. Aussie Shark Luke Pavillard scored 10 goals in a finals encounter, four of which were penalty goals.
“I thought it was an improvement. Closer to basketball. The elimination of referees’ whistles is very difficult to achieve. I have listened to Bruce Wigo’s arguments and I think they have traction,” Hoad said.
I was coached by an eight-time Olympian.
A lesson he taught me will stick with me for life.
In 2011, I was 3 years into my junior water polo career.
I’d been playing for a club called the Dolphins when the coach of a competitor club and 8-time Australian Olympian, Tom Hoad,… pic.twitter.com/pRZGXuIUxm
Editor’s Note:Tom Hoad has been inducted to the Western Australia Sporting Hall of Champions (1996), Water Polo Australia Hall of Fame (2009), the International Swimming Hall of Fame (2011), and the Sport Australia Hall of Fame (2021).
Falcons complete their first sand volleyball season | Sports
Congratulations to the Forest Lake Christian Falcons varsity sand volleyball team for ending the season on top! The Falcons finished first overall; they were undefeated as a team. The Falcons’ doubles A team was undefeated. The B team was six and one, and the C team went five and two. The Falcons faced off against […]
Congratulations to the Forest Lake Christian Falcons varsity sand volleyball team for ending the season on top! The Falcons finished first overall; they were undefeated as a team. The Falcons’ doubles A team was undefeated. The B team was six and one, and the C team went five and two. The Falcons faced off against the John Adams Academy Patriots, Sierra Academy of Expeditionary Learning/Ghidotti Fire Wloves, Encina Bulldogs, and the St. Mary’s Rams.
Coach Emily O’Neill attributes the team’s success to their dedication to learning a new sport. “Every time they get a chance to be on that court, they are at lunch after school. Many of our kids play multiple sports, and they’ll be playing after those practices. The news of a sand team has spread like wildfire. We’re looking into developing a coed team as well. Very excited for next year!”
Water polo coach accused of retaliation after abuse probe
On April 8, Stanford announced to investigation participants that an external investigator had been hired to conduct an investigation into men’s water polo head coach Brian Flacks for alleged retaliation against his players following an initial investigation that closed in February, clearing Flacks of emotional abuse allegations. Letters to the University sent between August and […]
On April 8, Stanford announced to investigation participants that an external investigator had been hired to conduct an investigation into men’s water polo head coach Brian Flacks for alleged retaliation against his players following an initial investigation that closed in February, clearing Flacks of emotional abuse allegations.
Letters to the University sent between August and May by parents of players raised concerns about Flacks’ abusive behaviors, intimidation and retaliation. One letter considered by the University as a part of the first investigation, which was reviewed by The Daily, alleged that Flacks’ punishments included “public shaming and belittling, vicious and intense shouting, manipulative psychological mind games, and limiting playtime.”
Families and players now accuse Flacks of retaliation against the players who participated in the initial abuse investigation.
In a public statement made in April, Flacks’ attorney wrote, “He has been fully exonerated and this matter is appropriately closed. Any allegations of retaliation against players are as preposterous as they are false. It is unfortunate that such a false cloud should continue to hang over both the coach and Stanford as they both deserve better.”
Flacks — a UCLA water polo walk-on — served as head coach at Harvard Westlake High School’s Water Polo from 2011 until he was hired by Stanford in 2022. The Daily reached out to Flacks for comment but was told that he could not provide comment due to the ongoing investigation.
“When [my son] enrolled at Stanford and joined the Stanford water polo team, we entrusted both the University and the team with his physical and psychological well-being. We were profoundly disappointed,” a family formerly associated with the team wrote in a statement to The Daily. They chose to be anonymous for fear of retaliation against their family.
In April, two former and 13 current players wrote letters of support for Flacks following the launch of the second investigation. Water polo team captain CJ Indart ’25 wrote in a statement to The Daily that the letter “was written and signed without any involvement or pressure from the coaching staff. The individuals who signed said statement did so on their own volition.”
30 parents of players also wrote and signed a letter of support for Flacks, writing that “a supermajority of parents support Brian Flacks.”
Danielle Pittman, whose son Riley Pittman ’25 was the team’s 2024 senior captain, labeled Flacks’ treatment as a case of “tough love” and likened him to former Alabama football coach Nick Saban.
“I don’t think it’s accurate to say [Flacks is] unfair. I’m not gonna say that kids didn’t get upset because I think athletes in all programs across the nation and in other countries get upset too. I just think it’s the nature of the beast,” Pittman said.
The first investigation began in the fall following letters written to the University by parents of current and former players on the team. In one of the letters sent in September, which was reviewed by The Daily, parents alleged that “Flacks clearly does not believe in any ‘positive coaching’ and has said to the team he doesn’t believe in positive feedback. He does believe in practicing under constant and immense pressure, with only negative or critical feedback, and has demonstrated limited patience for any behaviors other than strict obedience to his authoritarian practices.”
In a statement to the San Francisco Chronicle, a University spokesperson said that Flacks received a letter at the conclusion of the investigation, which “did not substantiate the claims that were raised” in the initial investigation.
The second investigation into alleged retaliation against players for sparking the first investigation came amid a wave of athletic staff turnover across sports departments. Just two weeks after the close of the first investigation, former athletic director Bernard Muir resigned. One month later, former head football coach Troy Taylor was fired due to an investigation into his bullying of female athletic staffers.
Another participant in the investigation who chose to remain anonymous due to fear of retaliation raised questions about the independence of the investigators hired for both investigations. The initial abuse investigation was conducted by a law school friend of Stanford’s Deputy General Counsel. The ongoing investigation is being conducted a former attorney at Stanford’s Office of the General Counsel until 2024.
“It is difficult to think of an independent investigator that could be less independent than one who was a senior internal lawyer in Stanford’s Office of General Counsel until last year and worked for Stanford for five of the last 10 years,” the investigation participant said.
According to a parent letter written to the University, Flacks allegedly obtained confidential information from the first investigation’s reports, including information about which players took part in the first investigation. These players were promised confidentiality by the University.
The University and Flacks’ attorney denied this claim. In a statement to The Daily, the University wrote that they “did not provide a copy of the report” to Flacks.
In a letter to the University used in the first investigation, parents also accused Flacks instructing the players to take the 2023 Anonymous Annual Survey, where athletes provide feedback on their athletic experience, in the presence of the coach. The letter further alleged that players were warned not to give negative feedback and were told to conduct the survey with Flacks in the room.
A source close to Flacks who chose to remain anonymous due to the ongoing investigation called the claim “absolutely false.”
“In at least one [call with a parent], Coach Flacks represented that the Athletic Director told him his job was secure as long as the student-athletes were happy[sic]. To assure the parents that the student-athletes were happy, Coach Flacks further represented that the most recent Annual Survey of feedback from the student-athletes was the best one in 22 years,” a parent of a player wrote in a letter to the University.
In an email to a parent reviewed by The Daily, Stanford’s assistant vice president for employee and labor relations Phung Truong wrote that she did not believe the survey would be conducted in 2024.
At least one player removed himself from the team due to the alleged hostile environment created by Flacks, according to March 30 letters to University administration and athletic directors that have been reviewed by The Daily. The University denied comment on this matter, citing the ongoing investigation.
“How many more need to be driven out, silenced, or retaliated against before Stanford takes action? These high achieving student-athletes deserve better. It’s time to acknowledge the hiring mistake — no one gets it right 100% of the time. It’s time for real accountability and leadership that reflects the values of Stanford: integrity, experience, and respect. These student-athletes deserve a coach who meets the highest standard — not one who undermines their well-being,” one of the investigation participants wrote in an email to The Daily.
Players and their families are still participating in interviews for the ongoing investigation.
This article has been updated to reflect that in addition to the student letters of support, 30 parents of players also signed a letter of support for Flacks.
This article has been updated to better reflect the content and the dates of the letters sent by parents to the University, as well as the timeline of the University’s second investigation. It has also been updated to include the timing of the Anonymous Annual Survey and to better reflect the information allegedly distributed regarding the initial investigation.
Jones, Deal Highlight #20 Women’s Track & Field After First Day at NCAA Outdoor Championship
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GENEVA, OHIO – The #20 Rowan Women’s Track & Field team finished day one of the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Championships at the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio. UPDATED RESULTS Nyla Jones qualified for the 400 meter hurdles finals after the freshman placed ninth (1:02.36) in […]
GENEVA, OHIO – The #20 Rowan Women’s Track & Field team finished day one of the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Championships at the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio.
UPDATED RESULTS
Nyla Jones qualified for the 400 meter hurdles finals after the freshman placed ninth (1:02.36) in the preliminaries.
Izzy Deal was 12th in the javelin with a top mark of 38.92 meters.
Other action on Thursday saw the 4×400 relay disqualified in the prelims.
On Friday, Deal will be back at it as the graduate student competes in the shot put.
Sports betting isn't just a man's game now. Meet the women making wagers.
Ladies, place your bets. Women now represent nearly a third of all sports bettors, according to Morgan Stanley’s most recent sports betting survey. They’re also placing slightly bigger bets than their male counterparts, on average: $51.1 vs. men’s $48.6. Wagering has gained enough traction among women that there’s even a dedicated online community for them: […]
Ladies, place your bets. Women now represent nearly a third of all sports bettors, according to Morgan Stanley’s most recent sports betting survey. They’re also placing slightly bigger bets than their male counterparts, on average: $51.1 vs. men’s $48.6. Wagering has gained enough traction among women that there’s even a dedicated online community for them: Betting Ladies.
Like so many activities that were once deemed vices in the U.S. (think: bourbon, weed and even porn), the internet has brought gambling — and sports betting, in particular — out from the male-dominated shadows and into mainstream American life. Now women are getting in the game.
Below, three women share how they got into gambling and why it’s more about the thrill than the money. Introducing … the ladies who bet.
‘It’s opening up and becoming more inclusive’
Val Martinez has been gambling since she was a teen in the U.K. (where it was legal). Now, she runs the Betting Ladies website for women in the U.S. (Photo Illustration: Oscar Duarte for Yahoo News, photos: courtesy of Val Martinez, Getty Images)
Val Martinez has been placing bets since she was a teenager living in the United Kingdom. She and her girlfriends would place the occasional bet on soccer games or horse races they attended. “It was just kind of normal and fun,” Martinez tells Yahoo Life.
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Back then, sports betting like Martinez was engaging in for entertainment wasn’t exactly legal here in the United States. For most of U.S. history, gambling wasn’t strictly banned at the federal level, but the majority of states had laws against it (a notable exception was Nevada, which re-legalized betting and casino gaming in 1931). Meanwhile, gangs and shadowy operators cornered the market on bookmaking. In 1992, former NBA star turned U.S. senator Bill Bradley sponsored and helped pass a federal ban on sports betting. For 26 years, the prohibition stood, but it was eventually thrown out as unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2018.
That same year, Martinez moved to the U.S, eyeing the “baby industry” of American sports gambling both as a recreational bettor and as an entrepreneur, she says. She sought out educational information about betting in her new home that was geared toward women and light on jargon. “But in the beginning it was a land grab for the main target demographic,” which was, of course, men, Martinez says.
That didn’t dissuade her. She’d spent most of her career in banking, which had also been male-dominated. “With the evolution of women coming to the workplace, now you see a lot more women in investment banking, and it’s the same in sports betting,” she says. “Now it’s opening up and becoming more inclusive.”
Still, there wasn’t a home base for the kind of information and camaraderie that Martinez was looking for, so she made one. Betting Ladies was founded in 2022 and has grown to include about 1,000 members, according to Martinez. “It’s a mixed bag of pro bettors looking for different strategies, and new bettors who have never placed a wager before and are trying to understand what the fuss is all about,” she says.
‘I love a good underdog’
Cristina Sarria places small bets as a kind of vote of confidence in the teams and players she wants to see win — even if odds are low. (Photo Illustration: Oscar Duarte for Yahoo News, photos: courtesy of Cristina Sarria, Getty Images)
Cristina Sarria, a 43-year-old stay-at-home mom, is more of a novice than a seasoned bettor. By her own admission, Sarria is not trying to place particularly strategic bets. She doesn’t do a lot of research and plays parlays (a high-risk kind of combined wager, in which multiple “legs,” or bets, are tied into one, and the bettor loses the whole gamut if any one bet doesn’t go their way). But Sarria also doesn’t bet much money, and isn’t really in it for profit.
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Sarria grew up playing tennis, met her husband playing flag football in college and describes herself as competitive. But these days, there’s always a race or game on TV in their house, because her husband is a fan of NASCAR, basketball and football. “We watch them a lot, so having a little stake in the game makes it more fun, and there’s some fun sports stories that happen,” she tells Yahoo Life. That’s a big part of the draw for her: “I love a good underdog story. I just want to see them win.” And Sarria loves it when her unlikely bet hits, and she gets to prove male counterparts wrong, or demonstrate her sports-savvy.
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She started gambling about three years ago, more or less on a whim. She put money on the underdog to win the Super Bowl that year (she doesn’t remember which year, or which team she hung her hat on). To her surprise and delight, however, she and her team won. Not long after, she saw an ad for Fanatics, an online sportsbook (which had the largest share of women bettors compared to other major companies, according to the Morgan Stanley report) that was looking for beta testers. She received a number of free “promo” bets — companies sometimes give their bettors money to gamble with to entice them to play) — which Sarria placed on March Madness matchups. “It’s so fun to bet on those, because there’s always some upset, some crazy games,” she says. Sarria has been making bets almost daily, usually in the $5 to $10 range, ever since.
What was a whim for Sarria is by design for sports betting companies. When Yahoo Finance asked FanDuel CEO Amy Howe about women sports bettors, she described the demographic as representing a “huge opportunity” and a “big priority” for the company. Companies’ efforts to draw in female bettors seem to be paying off, and shifting how women gamble, Lia Nower, associate dean of research at Rutgers University’s Center for Gambling Studies, tells Yahoo Life. “Historically, women started [gambling] in their 40s and 50s, largely because they went to casinos with friends,” Nower says. “That changed with online gaming; women are gambling in response to advertising on TV.”
And they’re starting earlier, with many taking up sports betting in college, around the same time men typically do. Sportsbooks are also cashing in on the rising interest in women’s sports. The ascendence of WNBA megastar Caitlin Clark, in particular, has been credited with the nearly 600% increase in betting (by people of any gender) on women’s college basketball seen by leading site BetMGM.
‘I loved the horses, but betting makes it a challenge’
After growing up in a family of Kentucky horse trainers, Michele Fischer got interested in the betting side of the racetrack, and the sportsbooks. (Photo Illustration: Oscar Duarte for Yahoo News, photos: courtesy of Michele Fischer, Getty Images)
Michele Fischer, 52, says she “basically grew up at the race track” in her Kentucky hometown, where her parents trained race horses. When she’d accompany her family to the track to see the fruits of their labor, Fischer learned to read the Daily Racing Form, a newspaper for horse enthusiasts. The Racing Form publishes the results of races and performances of various horses, which helps racegoers determine what their wagers should be. “It was fun to pick horses,” says Fischer. “I loved the sport of it, I loved the horses, but betting makes it a challenge.”
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While most people actually betting on the races when she was growing up were men, women were often the ones working directly with the horses, Fischer explains. When she’d go to the track as a child and young woman, “people would assume I was there for the fashion,” she says. Similarly, when she was younger, “when we wanted to talk about women in sports, we [used to] slap something pink on it, or dumb it down,” she says. “We’re not dumb!” Sports betting content is taking women more seriously, she says.
And it’s working. Women’s participation has nearly tripled since 2022, according to Morgan Stanley’s latest report on sports betting in the U.S. The share of women who said they had gambled in the past month has risen from 11% in 2022 to 23% in 2024.
Gambling is “not a career for me,” says Fischer, who adds that she isn’t a particularly good bettor. But the gambling industry has become her job (she is vice president of U.S. content services for SIS, a U.K.-based online sportsbook company). Neither she nor Sarria gamble with an expectation of making a lot of money, even though there’s some evidence that women are savvier bettors than men. Off the clock, Fischer places relatively low bets, and loves to take friends with her to the track to see the horses and learn to bet. “It’s no pressure; they just ask a lot of questions and the next time they ask a few more, and that’s how you create fans,” Fischer says. “It’s like book club!” Except that these ladies are here for the sportsbook club.
If you or someone you know may be struggling with a gambling addiction, the National Problem Gambling Helpline at 800-522-4700 is available 24/7 and is fully confidential. This gambling hotline connects callers to local health and government organizations that can assist.