Sports
USA Swimming Foundation Releases Community Impact Grants
USA Swimming, the national governing body for swimming in the United States, and its philanthropic arm, the USA Swimming Foundation, today announced the 2025 Community Impact Grant recipients. Nine additional USA Swimming member clubs will be receiving a $5,000 grant, eligible for renewal annually for up to three years. This year, 30 programs have received […]

USA Swimming, the national governing body for swimming in the United States, and its philanthropic arm, the USA Swimming Foundation, today announced the 2025 Community Impact Grant recipients. Nine additional USA Swimming member clubs will be receiving a $5,000 grant, eligible for renewal annually for up to three years.
This year, 30 programs have received $150,000 in funds to provide aquatic programming, support diverse coaches, and create competitive opportunities locally. This round of grants, funded by philanthropic giving, brings the total number of programs supported to 51, with a total impact of $540,000 distributed nationwide.
“USA Swimming and the USA Swimming Foundation are proud to continue to support funding opportunities to underserved communities to gain access to swimming,” USA Swimming Managing Director of Sport Development Joel Shinofield said. “USA Swimming clubs are community assets that provide children competitive swimming opportunities in neighborhoods, towns, and cities across the United States, and this funding allows them to expand those opportunities.”
The USA Swimming Foundation introduced the Community Impact Grant program in 2020 with the goal of providing access to competitive swimming for underrepresented swimming communities, supporting diverse coaches, and uplifting municipal community swim club programs within USA Swimming clubs. They focus on three areas of support:
- Creating partnerships between USA Swimming clubs and a facility or recreational organization that does not currently have a club;
- Supporting USA Swimming clubs led by women and/or diverse individuals; and
- Partnering USA Swimming clubs with Historically Black Colleges and Universities to create competitive programs for youth in campus pools.
Congratulations to the following programs who will be receiving 2025 Community Impact Grant funding:
Click here for the full list of Community Impact Grant funding recipients.
For more information on USA Swimming’s Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion efforts, please visit https://www.usaswimming.org/diversity.
To learn more about USA Swimming Foundation, please visit https://www.usaswimming.org/foundation.
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— The above press release was posted by Swimming World in conjunction with USA Swimming. For press releases and advertising inquiries please contact Advertising@SwimmingWorld.com.
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Florida Atlantic University Athletics
IRVING, Texas – The American Athletic Conference directors of athletics have approved the venues and host cities for the American Athletic Conference Men’s and Women’s Basketball Championships for the next three seasons. The 2026 Championships will be held at Legacy Arena at the BJCC in Birmingham, Alabama. The 2027 and 2028 championships will be held at the Yuengling […]

IRVING, Texas – The American Athletic Conference directors of athletics have approved the venues and host cities for the American Athletic Conference Men’s and Women’s Basketball Championships for the next three seasons.
The 2026 Championships will be held at Legacy Arena at the BJCC in Birmingham, Alabama. The 2027 and 2028 championships will be held at the Yuengling Center in Tampa, Florida.
Both venues will host the American championships for the first time.
“We are thrilled to bring our basketball championships to Birmingham and Tampa,” said American Athletic Conference Commissioner Tim Pernetti. “Our top priority when we began this bid process was to deliver the best possible experience for our student-athletes. The ability of Birmingham and Tampa to accommodate both championships and the year-round support that we will receive from their respective local committees will help to make these events an unforgettable experience for our players and fans.”
Legacy Arena at the BJCC is an 18,000-capacity arena that hosts national and international touring concerts, productions and sporting events each year and underwent a $125 million modernization in 2021. Most recently, the venue hosted the 2025 NCAA Women’s Basketball Regionals and the 2025 SEC Women’s Gymnastics Championships. The arena previously hosted the 2023 NCAA Men’s Basketball First and Second Rounds and will host that event again in 2028.
“We’re incredibly excited to welcome the American Athletic Conference to Legacy Arena,” said Tad Snider, executive director & CEO of the Birmingham-Jefferson Convention Complex. “With the recent NCAA Women’s Regionals, the 2023 Men’s First and Second Rounds, and another set of Men’s Rounds scheduled for 2027, Birmingham has firmly established itself as a premier destination for championship basketball. We’re proud to showcase our vibrant city and world-class venue, and we look forward to delivering an unforgettable experience for student-athletes, fans, and the entire American Athletic Conference community.”
The Yuengling Center hosts more than 300 events each year, including sporting events, concerts and family shows. It includes a 10,500-seat arena and has undergone more than $43 million in renovations since 2000. The Tampa Bay area has hosted the 1999 NCAA Men’s Final Four, four NCAA Women’s Final Fours (2008, 2015, 2019, 2025), NCAA Men’s First and Second Rounds (1983, 2003, 2008, 2011) and NCAA Men’s Regional Semifinals and Finals (1998).
“Tampa Bay has a rich tradition for hosting amazing college basketball events and this announcement in tandem with our friends at the American Athletic Conference is an exciting next chapter for us,” said Rob Higgins, executive director of the Tampa Bay Sports Commission. “Coming off the heels of our record-setting fourth NCAA Women’s Final Four in April and in anticipation of hosting the 2026 NCAA Men’s First and Second Rounds next March, our community is ready to roll out the red carpet for the members of the American Athletic Conference for an exciting run of men’s and women’s championship basketball at the Yuengling Center.”
The American’s membership in men’s and women’s basketball includes UAB, Charlotte, East Carolina, Florida Atlantic, Memphis, North Texas, Rice, South Florida, Temple, UTSA, Tulane, Tulsa and Wichita State. The American has produced four NCAA championship teams in basketball (three women, one men) as well as two Men’s Final Four teams, six Women’s Final Four teams and an NIT championship team. Five current members of The American (Charlotte, Florida Atlantic, Memphis, Temple, Wichita State) have reached the Final Four in men’s basketball, most recently Florida Atlantic in 2023.
Sports
Gamecocks Finalize 2025 Squad – University of South Carolina Athletics
COLUMBIA, S.C. – The 2025 Gamecocks volleyball roster is finalized, head coach Sarah Rumely Noble announced on Friday, May 30. South Carolina added six new members during the spring, four collegiate transfers and two high school prospects, to go along with six signed during the fall semester. “I am really excited how our roster came […]

COLUMBIA, S.C. – The 2025 Gamecocks volleyball roster is finalized, head coach Sarah Rumely Noble announced on Friday, May 30. South Carolina added six new members during the spring, four collegiate transfers and two high school prospects, to go along with six signed during the fall semester.
“I am really excited how our roster came together heading into the fall,” Noble said. “Our returners made huge strides in the gym in the short time we had together in the spring and they set the tone for our team this fall. They did a great job of creating and maintaining our culture every day. I’m excited to integrate our new players into our system and culture. They will collectively bring a great deal of athleticism, competitiveness, and desire to win.”
The newcomers join six letter winners from the 2024 roster, including starting setter Sarah Jordan (9.91 assists per set, 8th in the SEC), SEC All-Freshman honoree Victoria Harris (4.04 digs/set, 6th in the SEC) and senior Alayna Johnson (500 career kills).
The team’s 2025 spring signees are:
Ava Leahy
- 6-1 middle from Charlotte, N.C.
- Spent two seasons at Appalachian State, appearing in 52 matches and 195 sets in Boone.
- Named second-team All-Sun Belt Conference in 2024.
- Totaled 365 kills (1.87 k/s) with a hitting percentage of .243.
- Defensively, had 150 total blocks.
- Recorded double-figure kills in 11 matches as a sophomore, including a career high 22 kills against Marshall on Nov. 9, 2024.
- Played for the Carolina Union Volleyball Club.
- Daughter of Margaret and Brian.
- Has three siblings: Grace, Will, and Violet.
The group joins four incoming freshmen that signed in the November period and two mid-year transfers that trained in Columbia during the spring semester:
Lina Merz
- 6-2 pin hitter from Dresden, Germany.
- Played at the club level for VC Olympia Dresden since 2020-21.
- Helped her team win the national U20 championship and Vice-Champion at the U18 level in 2022. Her team finished third at this year’s German U20 National Championship.
- Intends to major in International Business.
- Daughter of Gerit and Steffen.
- Has one brother, Jonas.
- Her grandfather was a member of the German National Team in rowing, winning Olympic gold medals at the 1968 and 1972 games.
Sydney Davis
- 6-0 middle from Orlando, Fla.
- Played at the club level for Gamepoint Volleyball, helping the team to a top finish of 2nd place at the 2021 AAU Nationals.
- Named to the 2023 Junior Volleyball Association’s World Challenge All-Tournament Team, a 2024 Triple Crown tournament Show Stopper and 2024 USA Volleyball Nationals Supernova.
- Attending Timber Creek high school in Orlando, coming off a senior season where she hit .474 with 211 kills.
- Set her high school record for blocks in a season in 2021.
- Florida Athletic Coaches Association 2024 all-state honoree.
- Intends to major in Public Health.
- Daughter of Daryl and Cathy.
- Has one brother, Daryl.
- Her father Daryl is in the UCF athletics hall of fame for basketball, as is her cousin Jermaine Taylor, who also played in the NBA.
Anne Bradley Bing
- 5-8 defensive specialist from Gastonia, N.C. Played at the club level for Stars Volleyball Club, which were two-time Mideast Qualifier champions and two-time Southern Exposure tournament champions.
- Stars made the USA Volleyball National tournament four years in a row and had multiple top finishes in the gold bracket at AAU Nationals. Most recently, her Stars team finished third in their division at USA Volleyball’s 18s Junior Nationals.
- Helped Gaston Day School win the North Carolina 2A state championship as a senior, the second state title of her career.
- Leaves her high school as one of the most well-rounded players in its volleyball program’s history, holding school records for career digs, single-season kills and single-season assists.
- A four-time all-state honoree.
- Intends to major in Public Health.
- Daughter of Derek and Rebekah.
- Has two sisters, Sidney and Emily Charles.
Kaia Pixler
- 6-0 setter from Phoenix, Ariz.
- Played at the club level for Arizona Storm Elite VBC, winning five USA Volleyball nationals titles in a six-year span (13s, 14s, 16s, 17s and 18s).
- While leading her club team to the open division title at USA Volleyball’s 18s Junior Nationals, she also made the division’s All-Tournament team.
- Was a four-year varsity letterwinner at Sunnyslope High School, finishing her career with a number of major statistical milestones, most notably going over 2,500 assists and 100 service aces.
- Daughter of Chris and Michael.
- Has one brother, Kal.
- Her mother Chris played volleyball at Texas Tech and her father Michael played volleyball at Arizona State and Long Beach State.
Emily Beeker
- 6-5 middle blocker from Hendersonville, N.C.
- Spent four seasons at Tennessee, playing in 47 matches.
- Played in 43 sets during the 2024 campaign, totaling 60 kills with a .396 hitting percentage.
- Has one season of eligibility remaining.
- Daughter of Angela and Thomas Beeker.
- Her brother, Ben, played basketball at Carson-Newman and her father played basketball at Mars Hill.
Laiya Ebo
- 6-1 pin hitter from Washington, D.C.
- Played for two seasons at Butler, highlighted by a 2024 season with 154 kills over 85 sets played.
- Has two seasons of eligibility remaining.
- Majored in political science at Butler, recently earning a place on the College Sports Communicators’ Academic All-District team.
- Daughter of Milford and Lois Ebo.
- Has two siblings, Mark and Lauren.
- Her brother Mark played football at Holy Cross from 2016-19 and her sister Lauren played college basketball at Penn State, Texas and Notre Dame between 2018 and 2023.
For continued updates on the team, follow Gamecockvolley on X/Twitter and GamecockVB on Instagram.
Sports
Eagles win 2 all
Selfless service to community In service, Carpenter was a dedicated volunteer with numerous nonprofit organizations, consistently giving back to FGCU and the local community. After Hurricane Ian struck in 2022, she contributed and coordinated more than 30 hours of volunteer work to assist local students and residents. She also led the bone marrow registration initiative […]
Sports
Women’s Water Polo’s Piovan Named ACWPC Third Team All-American, Four Others Earn Honorable Mentions
Story Links CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Five members of the Harvard women’s water polo team – Niki Piovan, Ruby Hodge, Orli Cooper, Maya O’Dea, and Emma Gilbert – have earned ACWPC All-American honors, the association announced today. The five selections mark the most in a single season in program history. Rookie Niki Piovan led […]

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Five members of the Harvard women’s water polo team – Niki Piovan, Ruby Hodge, Orli Cooper, Maya O’Dea, and Emma Gilbert – have earned ACWPC All-American honors, the association announced today. The five selections mark the most in a single season in program history.
Rookie Niki Piovan led the way with a third-team selection, becoming the program’s first to earn that distinction since 2023 and only the third in Harvard history. Piovan was one of two standout first-years on the Crimson roster this season, finishing with 58 goals and 48 assists. Her 106 points helped earn her CWPA Rookie of the Year and CWPA Tournament Rookie of the Tournament honors.
Hodge, Cooper, O’Dea, and Gilbert were all named ACWPC Honorable Mention selections. Hodge, O’Dea, and Gilbert earned the honor for the second consecutive year after playing pivotal roles in Harvard’s historic season.
Cooper, the second standout rookie on the team, was recognized following a record-setting season in goal. She broke the program’s single-season saves record and was named the Most Outstanding Player at the CWPA Tournament.
Sports
11 Pro Athletes Who Pivoted To An Unexpected Career After Retiring
Some professional athletes make enough money during their career to never have to work a day for the rest of their lives after calling it quits, and many others keep busy by getting a job in the media, as a coach, or in a front office. However, there are plenty of others who’ve turned their […]

Some professional athletes make enough money during their career to never have to work a day for the rest of their lives after calling it quits, and many others keep busy by getting a job in the media, as a coach, or in a front office. However, there are plenty of others who’ve turned their attention to a wildly different pastime.

Peter Casey-Imagn Images
It’s easy to say you’d opt to rest on your laurels if you were a pro athlete who made the kind of money that ensures you’ll never have to worry about your finances again, but there aren’t many people who find satisfaction in an aimless existence where you simply float through life for decades on end.
There are a ton of former athletes who probably didn’t need to get another job after they left their sport behind only to decide to pursue another career, and more than a few of them opted to embark down a path most people probably wouldn’t have seen coming.
Here are some of the most interesting examples.
Jake Plummer: Mushroom Farmer

John Leyba-Imagn Images
Career Earnings: ~$59 million
Jake Plummer was about as close to the definition of average that you can get during a 10-year NFL career where the quarterback spent six seasons with the Cardinals and another four with the Broncos (he posted a 69-67 record as a starter).
Plummer became a vocal advocate for medical marijuana after he retired in 2007, and he’s gone all-in when it comes to throwing his support behind natural therapies since then.
The QB who was nicknamed “The Snake” eventually co-founded Umbo, a company that makes mushroom-based supplements, alongside former UFC fighter Rashad Evans.
That venture inspired him to gain a deeper understanding of the fungi, and he’s expanded his knowledge with the help of the mushroom farm he owns in Colorado.
Drew Bledsoe: Winemaker

Lou Capozzola-Imagn Images
Career Earnings: $80 million
Drew Bledsoe may be best remembered as the guy who got replaced by Tom Brady right before the Patriots entered Dynasty Mode, but that’s a bit of a disservice to a man who had enough talent to spend 14 seasons in the NFL as a quarterback.
The Washington native used some of his earnings to buy property in Walla Walla before opening the Bledsoe Family Winery that produces vino under two different labels: Doubleback and Bledsoe-McDaniels.
Bryant Reeves: Cattle Farmer

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Career Earnings: $55 million
Bryant Reeves was an Absolute Unit, as the seven-footer who weighed upwards of 300 pounds played basketball at Oklahoma State before spending six seasons as a member of the Grizzlies.
The Oklahoma native lived up to his “Big Country” nickname in more ways than one—including his decision to buy a 300-acre ranch where he built his dream home near the banks of the Arkansas River.
Reeves turned the property into a cattle ranch where he resides with his family while taking care of the animals that serve as their primary source of income now that he’d put basketball behind him.
Jared Allen: Curler

Tim Heitman-Imagn Images
Career Earnings: $98 million
Jared Allen spent 12 years in the NFL as a defensive end for the Chiefs, Vikings, Bears, and Panthers and was a sack machine who left football behind in 2016.
However, it didn’t take him very long to find a new passion in the form of…curling, the sport that’s really only thrust into the spotlight every four years at the Winter Olympics.
Allen initially teamed up with a few other guys who played in the NFL in the hopes of qualifying for a spot in the Olympics. He hasn’t checked that box, but in 2024, he partnered with a couple of Canadian curlers to purchase the rights to the Grand Slam of Curling.
Mookie Wilson: Truck Driver

Frank Becerra Jr/USA TODAY / USA TODAY NETWORK
Career Earnings: N/A
Mookie Wilson played in the MLB for 12 seasons and is probably best remembered as the guy who hit the ball that skipped through Bill Buckner’s legs during the 1986 World Series.
He stayed involved with baseball by working as a coach after he retired, but in 1999, he started to pursue a new gig in the offseason with the help of a tractor-trailer truck he bought to start making deliveries around the United States.
Wilson didn’t need the extra cash but decided to start hauling stuff because he enjoyed the journeys the job took him on, saying the money was really just a bonus.
Randy Johnson: Photographer

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Career Earnings: $175 million
Randy Johnson was a force to be reckoned with on the mound during a Hall of Fame career where the 6’10” man who was deservedly known as “The Big Unit” racked up over 300 wins and 4,875 strikeouts (putting him behind only Nolan Ryan for the most of all time) during his 22 MLB seasons.
Johnson was no stranger to having cameras pointed on him when he was pitching, and he got to get a taste of what it’s like to the be the person on the other side of the lens when he started his own photography company—one with a logo that features a dead bird as a nod to the most infamous moment of his career.
Ken Griffey Jr.: Also A Photographer

Kyle Terada-Imagn Images
Career Earnings: $172 million
Randy Johnson emerged as one of the best pitchers in the MLB around the same time Ken Griffey Jr. cemented himself as one of its most electric sluggers, and the latter also spent a grand total of 22 seasons in the league en route to being inducted into the Hall of Fame.
That’s not the only thing they have in common, as “The Kid” also took up photography in retirement—a development that first came to the attention of many people in 2025 when he gained the credential required to be one of the few people who are permitted to snap pictures at The Masters.
Mark Hamilton: Doctor

Scott Rovak-Imagn Images
Career earnings: $3 million
Mark Hamilton never came close to becoming a household name during his brief time in the MLB, as he only appeared in 47 games during the two seasons when he was a member of the Cardinals at the start of the 2010s (he did get a World Series ring for his contributions in 2011).
Hamilton called it quits after being cut by the Triple-A affiliate for the Braves in 2014, but he already had a backup plan in mind: medical school.
The infielder managed to get his degree at Hofstra’s Zucker School of Medicine. He initially planned to be an orthopedic surgeon but decided to switch to interventional radiology and currently practices on Long Island.
Junior Bridgeman: Restaurant And Soda Mogul

Brian Bohannon / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Career Earnings: $3 million
Junior Bridgeman spent 12 seasons in the NBA (10 with the Bucks and two more with the Clippers) and had a solid career despite coming off the bench for the bulk of it.
He was still playing when he got the chance to invest in a Wendy’s franchise in Chicago in 1984, and when he retired three years later, he opened one of his own in Brooklyn.
That marked the start of an empire where Bridgeman would come to operate more than 160 Wendy’s locations and close to 120 Chili’s outposts that he eventually leveraged to buy a bottling plant that distributed Coca-Cola.
It was widely believed he was worth well over $1 billion before he passed away in 2025.
Roger Staubach: Real Estate Mogul

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Career Earnings: $500,000
Roger Staubach spent 11 seasons playing quarterback for the Cowboys and led the team to two Super Bowl victories during a tenure where they played in The Big Game on five occasions (he was also named the MVP of Super Bowl VI).
The QB started planning for life after football while he was still playing in the NFL, as he knew he’d have to find another job to support himself and his family once he hung up his cleats due to the underwhelming nature of the salaries that were handed out during the era he played.
Staubach started studying real estate management in the offseason before retiring and ended up doing very well for himself while running The Staubach Company, which sold for over $600 million in 2008.
Byron White: Supreme Court Justice

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Career Earnings: ~$50,000
This one is a bit of a throwback, and “unexpected” probably isn’t the right word to use here based on his background.
With that said, I’m not sure how I can’t include a man who initially made a name for himself as a football player before ending up behind the bench in the Supreme Court.
White excelled at football and academics at the University of Colorado, as he was an All-American halfback and Rhodes scholar who postponed his term at Oxford so he could play in the NFL.
The man who was dubbed “Whizzer” led the league in rushing during his rookie season with the team that would eventually become the Steelers in 1938, but he stepped away from football the following year so he could pursue a law degree at Yale.
He ended up playing for the Lions for two more seasons before joining the Navy in WWII. He never returned to football, but he did embark on a law career that peaked when John F. Kennedy appointed him to the Supreme Court in 1962—a post he held for over 30 years before retiring in 1993.
Sports
Ben Colello Tabbed as USTFCCCA East Region Women’s Assistant Coach of the Year
Story Links MEDFORD, MA (May 30, 2025) – Tufts University women’s track and field assistant coach Ben Colello was named the USTFCCCA Division III Women’s Outdoor Track and Field East Region Assistant Coach of the Year after helping the Jumbos to five All-American honors under his guidance. In just his first […]

MEDFORD, MA (May 30, 2025) – Tufts University women’s track and field assistant coach Ben Colello was named the USTFCCCA Division III Women’s Outdoor Track and Field East Region Assistant Coach of the Year after helping the Jumbos to five All-American honors under his guidance.
In just his first year with the Tufts program, Colello made his mark on the Jumbos instantly as he coached athletes to three new school records in the long jump, triple jump and javelin. Throughout the season, he coached the multis and all the field events except pole vault. At the NCAA Division III Championships, Colello had four athletes earn six entries into the competition where they earned five All-American finishes. The triple jump combo of Jordan Andrew and Elysse Cumberland were ranked No.1 in the national #EventSquad rankings.
Colello is the first Tufts assistant coach to receive the USTFCCCA honors since Steven Fleagle was named East Region Women’s Assistant Coach of the Year in 2022. Under his guidance, the Jumbos are in a fantastic position to continue to improve next season.
–JUMBOS–
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