Sports
UNLV’s Krishna Jayasankar Earns All-America Track & Field Honorable Mention
The Mountain West Conference have announced their Outdoor Track and Field All-America Team honors. The UNLV Rebels found themselves with only one member of their outdoor track and field team to be named to the team. Discus thrower Krishna Jayasankar was named as an honorable mention to the All-America team thanks to her 18th (52.99m/173-10) […]

The Mountain West Conference have announced their Outdoor Track and Field All-America Team honors. The UNLV Rebels found themselves with only one member of their outdoor track and field team to be named to the team. Discus thrower Krishna Jayasankar was named as an honorable mention to the All-America team thanks to her 18th (52.99m/173-10) discus throw. This is a great accomplishment for the Indian track star.
What a season for 𝐊𝐫𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐧𝐚 𝐉𝐚𝐲𝐚𝐬𝐚𝐧𝐤𝐚𝐫!
❤️ NCAA Qualifier w/program-record discus throw in West Regionals
🩶 First Indian women’s thrower to qualify for the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships
❤️ Honorable Mention honoree#BrickBy🧱 #BEaREBEL pic.twitter.com/5Aq9HwBgMw— UNLV Track & Field/Cross Country (@unlvtfxc) June 14, 2025
Jayasankar hails from a city called Chennai, Tamil Nadu. In 2022, she became the first female discus thrower from India to receive an NCAA Division 1 scholarship. She went to Texas El Paso after leaving her junior college before transferring prior to the 2023 season to join the Rebels. She has one year of eligibility left as he she prepares for her senior season in 2025 – 2026.
There is no doubt that she was the top performer on the UNLV outdoor track and field squad. Earlier this month she qualified for the 2025 NCAA National Outdoor Championships. Her seventh place finish at the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championship West Regionals at College Station, Texas earned her the trip to Eugene, Oregon for the Championships. She participated in two flights of the discus throw at the event but did not medal.
Coming off an outstanding season that earned her an All-America Team honor, she will look to build off that to do even bigger things in her final year of eligibility as a senior with the Rebels.
Sports
Andrija Prlainović for B92.sport, announcement of the semi-final WC Serbia – Hungary
That semi-final match is scheduled for 15:35, and the experienced Andrija Prlainović, a former Serbian water polo player who conquered the planet with the national team and won everything there is to win, is sending support and optimism to Uroš Stevanović’s team. One of the best ever in this sport, who has collected a […]

That semi-final match is scheduled for 15:35, and the experienced Andrija Prlainović, a former Serbian water polo player who conquered the planet with the national team and won everything there is to win, is sending support and optimism to Uroš Stevanović’s team.
One of the best ever in this sport, who has collected a total of 33 medals under the cap of Serbia, of which two consecutive Olympic golds, is quite satisfied with how Serbian water polo players look at this global competition.
“We look convincing and safe, it’s a pleasure to watch from the sidelines and cheer. It’s been a long time since the national team looked this good, safe and powerful. Since 2016-2017, I don’t think the national team has looked this good in a tournament. I’m optimistic before the semi-finals and before the continuation of the tournament,” begins Andrija Prlainović’s story for B92.sport.

Peđa Milosavljević/Starsport
On the way to the semi-finals, Serbia recorded two victories against South Africa and Romania, lost to Italy in the group after the penalty shoot-out and captain Nikola Jakšić’s dismissal, and that defeat meant the match was more in the knockout phase, where our team first eliminated Japan (21:14) in the round of 16.
“There were different moments when that 2023 quarter-final with Italy was played, compared to the group game, now we are in a better composition. Neither Mandić nor Ćuk were playing then. Now we are here with both of them and with players who won Olympic gold, who are now full of confidence and that is one of the reasons why we look like this. You can see that the players are playing freely, they do not lack confidence and everything really looks good. It is always good to have a strong the opponent in the group, just to see what the current state of consciousness of the players, of the team is, how the team will react to those difficult moments, phenomena that cannot really be influenced, to the referee’s decisions and to the opponent”, Prlainović is clear.
“Changing the rules? That’s in our favor?”

VSS/UNIQA/Slobodan Sandić
In the quarterfinals, there was a duel with the United States of America, where the Olympic champions safely and smartly secured a triumph (14:9), in which way they advanced towards the four best selections on the planet and scheduled a duel with the Hungarians.
“That game in the round of 16 was quite good for us. It was good for us that we had Japan and we didn’t have free time, but a game that requires seriousness and maximum commitment, and we prepared well for that. We played very well against the USA from start to finish.”
Apart from the additional match in the play-off for the quarter-finals, the new water polo player from Radnički from Kragujevac also points out that the changed rules benefit the Serbian water polo players, who adapted to the new game system quite quickly.
“The players got used to it very quickly. We, our best players, like the smaller pitch and less swimming. I’m thinking of Jakšić, Mandić, Ćuk, and our centers like it, too. Vico, especially, likes the smaller pitch. As for the rule change, I would say that we, as a national team, benefited from it. It certainly didn’t hurt us. And now, what those rules will bring to the average viewer and what the goal of the rule change is, I don’t know. There are no people in the stands, as it looks to people on television – I believe it looks very similar to the way it looked in the early years and the last decade. I don’t see any big changes there, nor will a large number of people start watching water polo because of the change in the rules,” Andrija points out.
The duel with Hungary, which defeated Croatia (18:12) in the quarter-finals and left the current world champion without the opportunity to defend the gold won in Doha 2024, will show whether all the pieces have been put together in the Serbian mosaic.
Uroš Stevanović’s team was preparing for the WC with the Hungarians in Budapest, when Serbia narrowly lost 13:12, and the last time the two teams met in a major competition was at the Olympic Games in Paris, when the northern neighbors were also better (17:13).
“We are the dominant team in today’s water polo”

VSS/UNIQA/Slobodan Sandić
Hungarian shooting rhapsody or Serbian solid defense – Prlainović has no dilemma.
“We are the best there, for sure. The best in the world water polo when it comes to defense, both positionally, probably with one player less, but especially positionally. One on one in the game, we are the dominant team, especially now with Wapenski, who is a returner and who brought great quality and defense in the attack. We are the dominant team in today’s water polo. I expect and believe that we can stop all this the best that Hungary has,” the former Serbian representative points out.
“What you said, you are right, the Hungarians are first of all a shooting team with good swimmers. They solve those situations very quickly with shots from 5, 6, 7 meters. I think they will have a lot of headaches to stop our attacking options. So I really expect us to find ourselves in the final, based on what I have seen. I am optimistic about the semi-finals with, of course, respect for the Hungarian team, which played very well in this tournament, which came close to beating Spain in the group”.

VSS/UNIQA/Slobodan Sandić
“They beat Croatia by a big margin, where they were constantly in the lead from the second quarter. It is a team with a lot of well-coordinated players, who know each other very well. Most of them have been in Ferencvaros for many years. They have won trophies with the club and with the national team. They are not inexperienced players, although the team is quite young, but there are good water polo players among them who have been there for many years in the national team. The opponent for all respect, and also the biggest rival in history. That is why this is really water polo classic. It can’t be more than that,” says Andrija, who was asked if it would be “better” for us to have Croatia on the other side.
“No, it’s more or less irrelevant in the semi-finals. It’s impossible to get to the semi-finals in a competition like this. The four best teams are currently there”.
“Spain is the favorite, but I’m not writing the Greeks off”
Spain and Greece will meet in the first semi-final at 11:35.
“I was expecting Spain, because they are the number one favorite in terms of composition, along with Serbia. The Greeks are a surprise. Of the first seven from Paris, they lack Vlahopoulos and Papanastasi, in my opinion, their two best players. They made a feat here by reaching the semi-finals, and well deserved. They also played quite good two games in the group, although they lost both times, but when they needed to against Italy, they took advantage of the recklessness of the Italian player, the brutality, they separated at the beginning and then they kept it up until the end. They play at a high pace, but I wouldn’t write off the Greeks. They know that they will beat the Spaniards, the role of the favorites is nothing.”
Sports
Sixteen Individuals, Both Teams Earn USTFCCCA All-Academic Honors
LOS ANGELES – A total of 16 UCLA track and field student-athletes earned All-Academic distinctions for the 2025 NCAA Division I track field seasons, as announced by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA). Both the men’s and women’s squads also qualified as All-Academic Teams. To earn the designation, the cumulative GPA […]

Both the men’s and women’s squads also qualified as All-Academic Teams. To earn the designation, the cumulative GPA for all student-athletes on the institution’s NCAA Squad List for Indoor and/or Outdoor Track and Field must be 3.0 or higher on a 4.0 scale.
The full list of All-Academic Bruins and the award’s criteria can be found below.
2025 USTFCCCA All-Academic Athletes
Ka’Leila Abrille
Di’Niko Bates
Kris Emig
Angus Harrington
Ailish Hawkins
Sydney Johnson
Mia Kane
Kojo Manu
Rose Pittman
Parker Raymond
Taylor Snaer
Jake Stafford
Jana van Schalkwyk
Sonia Virk
Bella Witt
Jeremy Zammit
USTFCCCA All-Academic Criteria
The academic criteria for the award are as follows:
– Minimum cumulative grade point average of 3.25 on a 4.0 scale, including the most recent grading period, certifiable by either NCAA Faculty Rep or NCAA Compliance Coordinator or Registrar’s Office.
– The student-athlete must have completed at least two (2) semesters or three (3) quarters at the nominating institution.
The athletic criteria for the award are as follows:
– For the indoor season: must have finished the season ranked in the top 96 in any championship individual event, or in the top 48 in any championship relay event, for the most recent indoor season, certifiable by their place on final season performance lists on TFRRS for Indoor Track and Field (including performances achieved outside the qualifying window during the indoor season).
– For the outdoor season: must have participated in any round of the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships (the Preliminary Championship Competition and/or the Final Championship Competition) or for the multi-events, must have finished the season ranked in the top 48 in the East or top 48 in the West for the most recent outdoor season, certifiable by their place on the NCAA Division I descending order list on TFRRS for Outdoor Track and Field.
Sports
Lion Volleyball reveals 2025 schedule
Story Links 2025 Lion Volleyball Schedule 2025 Lion Invitational Tournament Central COMMERCE – The East Texas A&M University volleyball team has unveiled its full schedule for the 2025 season on Tuesday morning. The Lions enter their fourth season in […]

COMMERCE – The East Texas A&M University volleyball team has unveiled its full schedule for the 2025 season on Tuesday morning.
The Lions enter their fourth season in NCAA Division I, being eligible for the NCAA Tournament for the first team in the Division I era and serve as hosts for the Southland Conference Tournament.
In total, the Lions host 12 matches in the Field House during the regular season, including the Lion Invitational on August 29-30, which features East Texas A&M along with Providence, Little Rock, and North Texas.
“We cannot wait to get the season underway! Our non-conference schedule will give us the opportunity to test our team, as it is a tough schedule with three Power Four conference opponents and some teams that have a high RPI,” said third year coach Joe Morales.
“However, to get to the elite side, we must play tough teams as well as have some rest built in. We scheduled one match a day and in some cases only two a week outside of our home tournament.”
Prior to the start of the regular season, the Lions hold their annual Blue and Gold Scrimmage on August 20 (6:30 p.m.) and welcome UT Tyler for an exhibition match on August 23 (2 p.m.).
The Lion Invitational kicks off the season as East Texas A&M takes on Providence at 1 p.m. on August 29 and Little Rock at 7 p.m. The next day, the Lions play host to North Texas at 2 p.m. Full schedule of the six-match Lion Invitational can be found HERE.
In the second weekend of the season, the Lions head to Phoenix to take part in the Grand Canyon Classic, playing the hosts, Lopes, on September 5 at 7 p.m. mountain time, Northern Arizona at 3 p.m. mountain time on September 6, and Washington State at 11 a.m. mountain time on September 7.
Non-conference play continues September 11-13 with a pair of matches in Fort Collins, Colorado. East Texas A&M faces Colorado State at 6 p.m. mountain time on September 11. The Rams won the Mountain West a year ago and played in the NCAA Tournament.
The trip to Colorado concludes on September 13 against Notre dame at 1 p.m. mountain time. The final stretch of non-conference play starts with a two-match set in Coralville, Iowa, hosted by Iowa on September 19-20.
The Lions play Iowa at 6 p.m. on September 19 and Lindenwood at 2 p.m. on September 20. Lindenwood won the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament last season, but competed in the National Invitational Volleyball Championship as it is in the same re-classifying class as East Texas A&M. Both teams are eligible for the NCAA Tournament for the first time this season.
East Texas A&M faces Abilene Christian on September 22 at home to close out non-conference play at 6:30 p.m. The two teams play each other for the 57th time and first time in Commerce since 2012. The Lions came out on top in a five-set thriller during the 2023 season in Abilene.
The 18-match Southland Conference schedule remains the same for the Lions as announced earlier this year. East Texas A&M plays host to HCU (Sept. 25), UIW (Sept. 27), Nicholls (Oct. 15), SFA (Oct. 23), Lamar (Oct. 25), Northwestern State (Nov. 8), A&M-Corpus Christi (Nov. 13), UTRGV (Nov. 15), while facing A&M-Corpus Christi (Oct. 2), UTRGV (Oct. 4), New Orleans (Oct. 9), Southeastern (Oct. 11), McNeese (Oct. 18), HCU (Oct. 30), UIW (Nov. 1), and Northwestern State (Nov. 6) on the road.
Morales added, “our conference schedule is a better one for everyone with the travel and logistics from the last two years. This will be better for our student-athletes. It will hit a little more extra this year as we are now eligible for the NCAA tournament and that has been the standard from the beginning.”
For the first time since 2019, the Lions will play the conference tournament at home as they host the eight-team SLC Tournament on Nov. 21-23 in the Field House.
The winner of the SLC Tournament receives an automatic bid into the NCAA Tournament, which begins on December 4, and Championship Weekend is scheduled for December 18-21 in Kansas City, Missouri.
More information on season and single match tickets for the Lions will be released in the coming days.
2025 LION VOLLEYBALL SCHEDULE
Date | Opponent | Site | Time |
AUG. 20 | BLUE & GOLD SCRIMMAGE | COMMERCE | 6:30 p.m. |
AUG. 23 | UT TYLEREXH | COMMERCE | 2 P.M. |
AUG. 29 | PROVIDENCE1 | COMMERCE | 1 P.M. |
AUG. 29 | LITTLE ROCK1 | COMMERCE | 7 P.M. |
AUG. 30 | NORTH TEXAS1 | COMMERCE | 2 P.M. |
Sept. 5 | at Grand Canyon2 | Phoenix | 7 p.m. MDT |
Sept. 6 | vs. Northern Arizona2 | Phoenix | 3 p.m. MDT |
Sept. 7 | vs. Washington State2 | Phoenix | 11 a.m. MDT |
Sept. 11 | at Colorado State | Fort Collins, Colo. | 6 p.m. MDT |
Sept. 13 | vs. Notre Dame | Fort Collins, Colo. | 1 p.m. MDT |
Sept. 19 | at Iowa | Coralville, Iowa | 6 p.m. |
Sept. 20 | vs. Lindenwood | Coralville, Iowa | 2 p.m. |
SEPT. 22 | ABILENE CHRISTIAN | COMMERCE | 6:30 P.M. |
SEPT. 25 | HCUSLC | COMMERCE | 6:30 P.M. |
SEPT. 27 | UIWSLC | COMMERCE | 1 P.M. |
Oct. 2 | at A&M-Corpus ChristiSLC | Corpus Christi | TBA |
Oct. 4 | at UTRGVSLC | Edinburg | Noon |
Oct. 9 | at New OrleansSLC | New Orleans | 6:30 p.m. |
Oct. 11 | at SoutheasternSLC | Hammond, La. | Noon |
OCT. 15 | NICHOLLSSLC | COMMERCE | 6:30 P.M. |
Oct. 18 | at McNeeseSLC | Lake Charles, La. | 11 a.m. |
OCT. 23 | SFASLC | COMMERCE | 6:30 P.M. |
OCT. 25 | LAMARSLC | COMMERCE | 1 P.M. |
Oct. 30 | at HCUSLC | Houston | 6:30 p.m. |
Nov. 1 | at UIWSLC | San Antonio | Noon |
Nov. 6 | at Northwestern StateSLC | Natchitoches, La. | 6:30 p.m. |
NOV. 8 | NORTHWESTERN STATESLC | COMMERCE | 11 A.M. |
NOV. 13 | A&M-CORPUS CHRISTISLC | COMMERCE | TBA |
NOV. 15 | UTRGVSLC | COMMERCE | 11 A.M. |
NOV. 21-23 | SLC TOURNAMENT | COMMERCE | TBA |
Dec. 4-6 | NCAA Tournament-First & Second Round | Campus Sites | TBA |
Dec. 11-14 | NCAA Tournament-Regionals | Campus Sites | TBA |
Dec. 18-21 | NCAA Championship Weekend | Kansas City, Mo. | TBA |
EXH – Exhibition Match
1 – Lion Invitational
2 – GCU Classic
SLC – Southland Conference Match
-ETAMU-
Sports
U.S. Olympic committee issues ruling on transgender women in sports
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee has effectively barred transgender women from competing in women’s sports, telling the federations overseeing swimming, athletics and other sports it has an “obligation to comply” with an executive order issued by President Donald Trump. The new policy, announced Monday with a quiet change on […]


COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee has effectively barred transgender women from competing in women’s sports, telling the federations overseeing swimming, athletics and other sports it has an “obligation to comply” with an executive order issued by President Donald Trump.
The new policy, announced Monday with a quiet change on the USOPC’s website and confirmed in a letter sent to national sport governing bodies, follows a similar step taken by the NCAA earlier this year.
The USOPC change is noted obliquely as a detail under “USOPC Athlete Safety Policy” and references Trump’s executive order, “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” signed in February. That order, among other things, threatens to “rescind all funds” from organizations that allow transgender athlete participation in women’s sports.
U.S. Olympic officials told the national governing bodies they will need to follow suit, adding that “the USOPC has engaged in a series of respectful and constructive conversations with federal officials” since Trump signed the order.
“As a federally chartered organization, we have an obligation to comply with federal expectations,” USOPC CEO Sarah Hirshland and President Gene Sykes wrote in a letter. “Our revised policy emphasizes the importance of ensuring fair and safe competition environments for women. All National Governing Bodies are required to update their applicable policies in alignment.”
The National Women’s Law Center put out a statement condemning the move.
“By giving into the political demands, the USOPC is sacrificing the needs and safety of its own athletes,” said that organization’s president and CEO, Fatima Goss Graves.
The USOPC oversees around 50 national governing bodies, most of which play a role in everything from the grassroots to elite levels of their sports. That raises the possibility that rules might need to be changed at local sports clubs to retain their memberships in the NGBs.
Some of those organizations — for instance, USA Track and Field — have long followed guidelines set by their own world federation. World Athletics is considering changes to its policies that would mostly fall in line with Trump’s order.
A USA Swimming spokesman said the federation had been made aware of the USOPC’s change and was consulting with the committee to figure out what changes it needs to make. USA Fencing changed its policy effective Aug. 1 to allow only “athletes who are of the female sex” in women’s competition and opening men’s events to “all athletes not eligible for the women’s category, including transgender women, transgender men, non-binary and intersex athletes and cisgender male athletes.”
The nationwide battle over transgender girls on girls’ and women’s sports teams has played out at both the state and federal levels as Republicans portray the issue as a fight for athletic fairness. More than two dozen states have enacted laws barring transgender women and girls from participating in certain sports competitions. Some policies have been blocked in court by those who say the policies are discriminatory, cruel and unnecessarily target a tiny niche of athletes.
The NCAA changed its participation policy for transgender athletes to limit competition in women’s sports to athletes assigned female at birth. That change came a day after Trump signed the executive order intended to ban transgender athletes from girls’ and women’s sports.
Female eligibility is a key issue for the International Olympic Committee under its new president, Kirsty Coventry, who has signaled an effort to “protect the female category.” The IOC has allowed individual sports federations to set their own rules at the Olympics — and some have already taken steps on the topic.
Stricter rules on transgender athletes — barring from women’s events anyone who went through male puberty — have been passed by swimming, cycling and track and field. Soccer is reviewing its eligibility rules for women and could set limits on testosterone.
Trump has said he wants the IOC to change everything “having to do with this absolutely ridiculous subject.” Los Angeles will host the Summer Games in 2028.
The Associated Press contributed to this story.
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Sports
Sarussi has MVP final season for UIC women’s track
Ally Sarussi (Courtesy of UIC Athletics) Ally Sarussi had quite a senior sendoff with the Washington University women’s track and field team as part of its 2024 NCAA Division III national team champion. The 2020 Lyons Township High School graduate, however, still had one season of eligibility and a graduate degree to pursue. “I was […]


Ally Sarussi had quite a senior sendoff with the Washington University women’s track and field team as part of its 2024 NCAA Division III national team champion. The 2020 Lyons Township High School graduate, however, still had one season of eligibility and a graduate degree to pursue.
“I was going to take a gap year, but then I kind of thought I have an opportunity to run another year,” Sarussi said. “I love track a lot so I might as well take the opportunity while getting my degree.”
As a grad student this spring, Sarussi had her best individual season for the University of Illinois Chicago. She was named the team’s Most Valuable Performer and athletic department’s Female Newcomer of the Year for non-freshmen after qualifying for the NCAA Division I postseason in the 1,500-meter run following her lifetime-best, school-record 4:19.35 at the Missouri Valley Conference Meet.
Sports
MTSU Athletics saddened by passing of former Volleyball coach Matt Peck
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Middle Tennessee Athletics is saddened to learn of the passing of former Blue Raider Volleyball coach Matt Peck. The seasoned coach spent 12 seasons in Murfreesboro, where he helped build the Blue Raiders into a championship program. “There are a lot of banners hanging in AMG that are due to Matt and […]

“There are a lot of banners hanging in AMG that are due to Matt and his staff’s efforts,” said MTSU Director of Athletics Chris Massaro. “We reached the pinnacle in volleyball by going to the Sweet 16, which is one of the deepest postseason runs any of our teams have had in an NCAA Tournament.
“Under his leadership, we were nationally competitive with anybody we were on the court with, and to have six consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances speaks volumes to the kind of coach he was, the kind of players that were here and the kind of success we had at that time. My thoughts and prayers are with those who are close to Matt, his family, his friends, and all the former players who helped raise a lot of those banners.”
Peck’s accomplishments in over 20 years of coaching were long and distinguished. After a three-year stint as a Graduate Assistant with the Purdue men’s volleyball team, Peck became the head coach at Wayne State University in 1987, compiling a 231-135 record and two NCAA Tournament appearances over seven seasons. He was then hired as the head coach at the University of North Alabama in 1995 where he proceeded to build a Division II powerhouse. Over nine seasons at UNA, Peck accumulated a record of 312-61, securing eight straight NCAA Tournament appearances, four Elite Eights, two Final Fours and the 2003 NCAA Division II National Championship.
In 2004, Peck took over as the leader of the Blue Raider volleyball program. He went on to become the winningest coach in program history with a 208-141 record across 12 seasons. During his tenure at Middle Tennessee, Peck led Middle Tennessee volleyball to six consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances, an NCAA Sweet 16, four Sun Belt Tournament Championships and two Sun Belt regular season titles.
After his time at MTSU, Peck continued to grow the game of volleyball coaching at the club level, where he inspired younger generations and shared his love for the game.
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