Sports
Wheelchair basketball player Steve Serio
As for what’s next beyond that, Serio isn’t sure.“It was great to live in Italy for eight months and to feel a little more connected to my roots,” Serio says. Serio, 37, knew going into the Paris Games that it would be his last Paralympics as a player, so he tried to soak in the […]

As for what’s next beyond that, Serio isn’t sure.“It was great to live in Italy for eight months and to feel a little more connected to my roots,” Serio says.
Serio, 37, knew going into the Paris Games that it would be his last Paralympics as a player, so he tried to soak in the entire experience.
“The sports-specific wheelchair I use costs ,000,” Serio says. “I’m hoping to help remove those hurdles for the next generation and help carry the Paralympic movement forward.”
Serio’s career has had no shortage of special moments. As co-captain, he helped lead the U.S. men’s wheelchair basketball team to gold medals at the 2016 Paralympics in London, the COVID-delayed 2020 Paralympics in Tokyo and finally again at the 2024 Paralympics in Paris.
Steve Serio, co-captain of the U.S. Men’s National Wheelchair Basketball team, says he never thought he would have the honor of being named a flag bearer for Team USA. And yet there he was with fellow para athlete Nicky Nieves, leading the 225-member Team USA Paris delegation down the famed Champs-Élysées during the opening ceremonies of the 2024 Summer Paralympic Games.
Not only will Paris be his final Paralympic Games, Serio also has decided to retire as a basketball player altogether.
“To be voted flag bearer among my peers, it’s one of the most special moments of my career,” Serio says.
Serio was selected to represent his country at the Paralympics for the first time at the 2008 Summer Games hosted in Beijing. The team finished fourth after losing to Great Britain in the bronze medal match. In 2012, he and the men’s team captured the bronze medal at the Summer Paralympics in London before the run of three gold-medal finishes in Rio de Janeiro, Tokyo and Paris.
During his senior year of high school in 2005, Serio was named tournament MVP after scoring 74 points in four games while leading the Lightning in the Junior National Wheelchair Basketball Championships. Soon after, he was one of 12 American players selected to represent the country at the 2005 World Junior Basketball Championships in Australia, where they took home the gold medal. In 2007, Serio and his American teammates again took home the gold, this time at the Parapan American Games in Brazil.
“The only thing I did differently was live in the moment and be present more,” Serio says. “The thing I’m going to miss about being a Team USA athlete isn’t the medals, it’s being around the guys, being in the huddle together.”
“It’s still early days,” Serio says. “It’s the first time in my life that I don’t have a specific goal. It feels scary and refreshing all at the same time.”
“I’ve accomplished everything I wanted to accomplish on the field of play,” Serio says. “The place I can give back to the sport that has given me everything is off the court.”
The article above appears in the January 2025 issue of the print version of Fra Noi. Our gorgeous, monthly magazine contains a veritable feast of news and views, profiles and features, entertainment and culture. To subscribe, click here.
Serio embraced all of the off-the-court moments with his teammates, like team meetings and all the meals they ate together.
Serio has enjoyed success throughout his basketball career. He began playing the sport at age 14 with the Long Island Lightning, the only competitive junior wheelchair basketball team in New York state. Within months of joining, he and his teammates took home the club’s first-ever tournament win.
Serio says he will continue to work with a number of sponsors and nonprofit organizations to raise awareness of the adaptive-sports movement.
Serio grew up in Nassau County on Long Island. He says both of his parents have Italian heritage, with ancestry scattered across Italy. In late 2023, Serio signed on with a basketball team based in Milan, Italy, as a way to get in shape for the Paris Games.
Sports
Sacha Velly & Caroline Jouisse Claim French Open Water Double
Sacha Velly & Caroline Jouisse Claim French Double At European Aquatics Open Water Swimming Cup 2025 The second leg of the European Aquatics Open Water Swimming Cup 2025 saw Sacha Velly and Caroline Jouisse claim a French double as they took the respective men’s and women’s titles at the Parque Urbano de Albarquel in Setubal, Portugal. […]

Sacha Velly & Caroline Jouisse Claim French Double At European Aquatics Open Water Swimming Cup 2025
The second leg of the European Aquatics Open Water Swimming Cup 2025 saw Sacha Velly and Caroline Jouisse claim a French double as they took the respective men’s and women’s titles at the Parque Urbano de Albarquel in Setubal, Portugal.
Following the first leg in Cyprus last month, 21 men and 10 women took to the pontoon at 11am local time for the 10km, six-lap race.
Velly surged to a well-measured victory in the men’s race, clocking 1:51:45.58 as he dropped Italy’s Fabio Dalu and Türkiye’s Berk Boz in a thrilling final lap of the 1.66km circuit.
Velly sat just behind the pace for much of the race, letting Dalu and others exchange the lead through the early and middle laps. He made his decisive move on the final lap where he overhauled Dalu. His back-end speed was too much for the Italian as he opened up a huge gap to take the win by 22 seconds with Dalu touching the panel in 1:52:08.52 and Boz in 1:52:10.72.
Also of note was Nathan Wiffen – twin of Olympic 800 free champion Daniel – who finished ninth on his open water debut in 1:53:54.17.

l-r: Lisa Pou, Caroline Jouisse, Giulia Berton: Photo Courtesy: Antonella Mannara/European Aquatics
Velly enjoyed a fine junior career that saw him claim the world and European junior open water titles in 2024. So far this year, the 20-year-old has finished second at the World Aquatics World Cup last week in Setubal as well as securing three top-six finishes including relay bronze at the European Aquatics Open Water Swimming Championships in Stari Grad.
Jouisse delivered a textbook performance, timing her finish to perfection in a race that saw the top three separated by less than three seconds.
Jouisse, who had already impressed with a strong swim in Setubal at the World Cup last weekend, earning bronze, touched in 2:00:57.09, holding challenges from Monaco’s Lisa Pou (2:00:58.97) and Italy’s Giulia Berton (2:00:59.88), who finished in second and third respectively. The trio exchanged positions through the race, staying within sight of each other through all six laps.
Turkey’s Su Inal, who took the 5km European Junior title at the Championships two days prior, led at multiple checkpoints and eventually finished fourth in 2:02:31.69, while Germany’s Lara Braun claimed fifth in 2:02:35.24.
The European Aquatics Open Water Swimming Cup 2025 returns for the third leg in Paris at the end of July. It then moves on to Barcelona, before the finale in Razanac at the end of September.
The event followed the European Aquatics Junior Open Water Swimming Championships 2025 that was also held in Setubal immediately prior.
There French duo Emile Mesmacque and Lou-Ann Gaudaire won their respective 10ks before both went on to clinch the knockout 3k sprint titles.
Greece also had a strong showing with Konstantinos Chourdakis and Nikolaos Kakoulakis won the boys’ 7.5 and 5k titles respectively while Napsugar Nagy (Hungary) and Su Inal (Turkiye) claimed the girls’ crowns.
Hungary sealed the Team Trophy after three days of racing and also topped the overall medal table with eight podium finishes – including two golds – and capped off their campaign with a memorable victory in the 4x1500m U16 Mixed Team event to underline their remarkable consistency across age groups and distances.
The penultimate race of the championships, the U19 Mixed Team relay, delivered an unforgettable three-way sprint to the finish where Italy edged out France and Hungary by just 0.07 seconds.
Sports
After losing both legs in crash, Middle TN volleyball player finds new purpose
Janae Edmondson was a standout high school athlete with big dreams until a tragic crash changed everything. Now, she and her family are speaking out about their journey. Inside the Edmondson home, you’ll find a lot of love — a family bond that’s always been strong and has only deepened through unimaginable tragedy. “We spend […]

Janae Edmondson was a standout high school athlete with big dreams until a tragic crash changed everything. Now, she and her family are speaking out about their journey.
Inside the Edmondson home, you’ll find a lot of love — a family bond that’s always been strong and has only deepened through unimaginable tragedy.
“We spend a lot of time together. Probably too much for her with Mom and Dad,” Francine Edmondson said.
Their lives changed forever in 2023 during a trip to St. Louis for Janae’s volleyball tournament.
“It will never leave. Something you can’t unsee,” Francine said.
They were walking downtown, headed back to their hotel, when disaster struck.
“The car snatching Janae out of my hand and pinning her against a parked car. Hearing the screams that she can’t feel her legs. Looking down to see they were completely severed,” James Edmondson said.
James’s quick thinking and military background helped save his daughter’s life, though he still struggles with the moment.
Janae was crushed from the waist down. More than 30 surgeries later, and after finishing physical therapy, she is in remarkably good spirits.
“I don’t think too much ahead or dwell on the past or anything like that. I go day by day,” Janae said.
Now 20 years old, she’s coaching volleyball and attending Middle Tennessee State University.
“I coach at MIDTN, my old club that I played at, and we’re coaching 13,” Janae said.
The man who changed her life, Daniel Riley, was sentenced to nearly 19 years in prison. He was out on bond and wearing a GPS monitor with dozens of violations — and shouldn’t have been behind the wheel.
After two years, the Edmondsons settled with the city of St. Louis for $450,000.
Janae’s medical costs are in the millions, but Missouri law caps civil damages at just over $517,000 — no matter what a jury might award.
“The people cared, not the city. [The city] didn’t care or have enough compassion to say, ‘You know what? We’ve changed her life. What should we do?’” Francine said.
When things became overwhelming, they leaned on faith.
Through it all, Janae’s parents say they couldn’t be prouder of their daughter.
“She could’ve withdrawn and went into a shell,” James said.
But that’s not who she is.
“If I didn’t have the mindset that I still have, I’d be not where I am — with my ability to walk and all that,” Janae said.
“Lean on God. He’s going to get you through it,” she added.
The Edmondsons are deeply grateful for the support they’ve received from the Middle Tennessee community and beyond. They say this journey would’ve been nearly impossible without it.
Now, Janae is giving back — helping with MTSU’s volleyball camp this summer, where student-athletes from across the country will be attending. She’s also getting more comfortable with her prosthetics.
This story was reported on-air by Aaron Cantrell and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

Longtime breakfast tradition continues for friends who met through Big Brothers Big Sisters mentorship
This is a beautiful story of chosen family, proving a father figure doesn’t have to have biology in common to make a difference in a child’s life. The story of De’Andre and Alex will remind you that our relationships help determine the course of our lives. And that being supportive of someone – through a meal, a shared experience or even swim lessons can make all the difference.
– Rebecca Schleicher
Sports
Milwaukee Track & Field Sweeps Horizon League Spring Scholar-Athlete of the Season Honors
Story Links INDIANAPOLIS – The Horizon League announced its Spring Scholar Athletes of the Season, with the Milwaukee track & field program sweeping the honors. Divine Aniamaka was named the Male Scholar-Athlete of the Season, while Natalie Block earned Female Scholar-Athlete recognition. Block has been a consistent presence on […]

INDIANAPOLIS – The Horizon League announced its Spring Scholar Athletes of the Season, with the Milwaukee track & field program sweeping the honors. Divine Aniamaka was named the Male Scholar-Athlete of the Season, while Natalie Block earned Female Scholar-Athlete recognition.
Block has been a consistent presence on the Horizon League All-Academic team, earning the distinction four times throughout her career, including this season for both indoor and outdoor track. She is also a three-time member of the College Sports Communicators Academic All-District Team. A biomedical science major, Block graduated with a 3.56 undergraduate GPA and currently holds a 3.95 GPA in graduate school.
On the track, the Franklin, Wis., native delivered yet another record-breaking campaign. Earlier this month, she qualified for the NCAA Track & Field Championships in Eugene, Ore., earning Second Team All-American honors in the 400m hurdles with a time of 56.92. She also claimed Horizon League titles this spring in both the 100m and 400m hurdles.
In just his second season with the Panthers, Aniamaka is pursuing his degree in biomedical engineering. This spring, he earned his first Horizon League All-Academic Team selection for the outdoor season and was previously named to the league’s Fall Academic Honor Roll in his first eligible semester. He currently holds a 3.84 undergraduate GPA through four semesters at Milwaukee.
Aniamaka won the Horizon League championship in the triple jump with a mark of 15.39m. He was the only student-athlete in the conference to surpass the 15-meter mark this season, doing so six times during the outdoor campaign. He qualified for the NCAA West Regionals, where he broke the program record with a leap of 15.42m.
The Scholar-Athletes of the Season awards are presented three times each year to a total of six student-athletes across all Horizon League-sponsored sports. Aniamaka and Block join Lainey Higgins of women’s soccer, who was named the Fall Scholar-Athlete of the Season in mid-December.
This marks the first time Milwaukee has swept the Scholar-Athlete of the Season honors since the fall of 2021, when Ari Miller (volleyball) and Paolo Gratton (men’s soccer) claimed the awards.
Sports
Women’s Volleyball Adds Trio to 2025 Roster
Story Links HONOLULU — University of Hawai’i women’s volleyball head coach Robyn Ah Mow announced the additions of three newcomers to the Rainbow Wahine roster for the 2025 season — outside hitter Ravyn Dash, middle blocker Makena Biondi and libero/defensive specialist Kāhea Moriwaki. “We are looking forward to Ravyn, Makena and […]

HONOLULU — University of Hawai’i women’s volleyball head coach Robyn Ah Mow announced the additions of three newcomers to the Rainbow Wahine roster for the 2025 season — outside hitter Ravyn Dash, middle blocker Makena Biondi and libero/defensive specialist Kāhea Moriwaki.
“We are looking forward to Ravyn, Makena and Kahea joining the program this coming fall,” Ah Mow said. “All three will add to the depth and competitive culture in our gym.”
Dash, a 6-foot sophomore, joins the Rainbow Wahine after playing for Houston Christian in 2024. She played in 74 sets over 22 matches and started eight matches as a freshman with the Huskies. She posted 171 kills, averaging 2.31 per set, and was in on 35 total blocks. She put away a season-high 21 kills on 38 attempts to hit .395 in a five-set win over Lamar and had 16 kills in another five-set duel with Texas Tech.
Originally from Benbrook, Texas, Dash joined the 1,000-kill club at Benbrook Middle-High School while earning district MVP honors in three seasons. She also earned Academic All-State honors during her prep career.
Biondi joins the Rainbow Wahine from Agoura High School in Agoura Hills, Calif. The 6-foot-5 middle ranks among the program’s tallest recruits in program history and an all-league selection last season after posting 132 kills and 53 blocks as a senior. Her father, Matt Biondi, is an 11-time Olympic swimming medalist, including eight golds, and is a member of the International Swimming Hall of Fame and U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame.
Moriwaki, a 5-foot-3 libero, helped Punahou School reach the Hawai’i High School Athletic Association Division I final in 2023 and posted 37 digs over four matches in the state tournament. She closed out her high school career with a 26-dig performance and was an All-Interscholastic League of Honolulu and Honolulu Star-Advertiser All-State honorable mention pick in 2024.
The trio join an incoming class that includes three transfers (middle blocker Bri Gunderson, setter Audrey Hollis, and defensive specialist Leilani Lopez) and a freshman (outside hitter Cha’lei Reid) who enrolled at UH in January and took part in the team’s spring practices.
2025 Rainbow Wahine Volleyball Incoming Class
Player | Pos | Ht | Yr. | Hometown (High School/Last School) |
Makena Biondi | MB | 6-5 | Fr. | Agoura Hills, Calif. (Agoura HS) |
Ravyn Dash | OH | 6-0 | So. | Benbrook, Texas (Benbrook HS/Houston Christian) |
Bri Gunderson | MB | 6-3 | Sr. | Ladera Ranch, Calif. (San Juan Hills HS/BYU/Eastern Washington) |
Audrey Hollis | S | 6-0 | So. | Colorado Springs, Colo. (Rampart HS/UC San Diego) |
Leilani Lopez | L/DS | 5-8 | Jr. | Torrance, Calif. (Redondo Union HS/Cal State Fullerton) |
Kahea Moriwaki | L/DS | 5-3 | Fr | Mililani, O’ahu (Punahou School) |
Cha’lei Reid | OH | 6-0 | Fr. | Lā’ie, O’ahu (Kahuku HS) |
#HawaiiWVB
Sports
Laguna Beach’s Fischer sisters honored with USA Water Polo retirement ceremony
Makenzie Fischer was a record-setting water polo player at every stage of her career. Her U.S. national team coach, Adam Krikorian, explained why rather succinctly. “She could, on any moment’s notice, be the best player in the world in any phase of the game,” Krikorian said. “Whether it was defending the center, playing perimeter defense, […]

Makenzie Fischer was a record-setting water polo player at every stage of her career.
Her U.S. national team coach, Adam Krikorian, explained why rather succinctly.
“She could, on any moment’s notice, be the best player in the world in any phase of the game,” Krikorian said. “Whether it was defending the center, playing perimeter defense, on the counterattack, playing six-on-five, shooting from the perimeter, she could literally be the best player in the world.”

Makenzie Fischer makes comments to fans and family during a ceremony Friday where she was honored for her career on the U.S. national team.
(Don Leach / Staff Photographer)
She holds the Laguna Beach High girls’ water polo career scoring with 456 goals, winning two CIF Southern Section titles in 2014 and 2015. Three championships at Stanford University followed, along with Cutino Award nods in 2019 and 2022 for the nation’s top collegiate women’s water polo player.
Fischer is also Stanford’s all-time leading scorer with 288 goals, and won Olympic gold medals at the 2016 Rio Olympics and 2020 Tokyo Olympics alongside her younger sister Aria to only help cement that legacy.
Both Makenzie and Aria Fischer were honored Friday night with a retirement celebration ceremony, prior to the U.S. national team playing an exhibition match against Spain at Irvine’s Woollett Aquatics Center.

Team USA attacker Emma Lineback looks to shoot during Friday’s exhibition match against Spain.
(Don Leach / Staff Photographer)
“I love the water polo community,” said Makenzie, 28, who actually retired back in 2022 after helping Stanford win the national championship, in a pre-match interview. “It’s been a huge part of my life. It’s fun to see all of the national team girls and be reintroduced to the spirit of what I really love, which is the team aspect of everything. It’s kind of fun to put a bow on everything, because water polo was a really big part of my life and something that still means a lot to me.”
She now remains in the Bay Area working as a mechanical engineer.
Aria Fischer, the 2023 Cutino winner who won three CIF championships at Laguna Beach and three NCAA titles at Stanford, was unable to be at Friday’s ceremony. Makenzie said her younger sister, now 26, is working at a production company in London.
Family members present included parents Erich and Leslie. Erich Fischer, who still coaches at Laguna Beach, was a two-time national champion in water polo at Stanford himself and an Olympian in 1992.

Team USA’s Emily Ausmus makes an inside pass against Spain during Friday’s match.
(Don Leach / Staff Photographer)
“I think it’s fun to have water polo as a common thread,” Makenzie Fischer said. “He clearly loves it, he’s still coaching. It’s always been a fun part of our family. We love watching the Stanford games, the national team games. It’s kind of fun to be able to transition to a new role as a spectator, have a little bit less of a front seat but still be able to talk about it with him. It’s definitely something that bonds us, for sure.”
Team USA edged defending Olympic gold medalist Spain in the exhibition match that followed the ceremony, 9-8.
Jenna Flynn led the Americans with three goals, while Ryann Neushul scored the match-winning power play goal with 1:06 remaining. Goalkeeper Amanda Longan made 13 saves.

Team USA goalie Amanda Longan makes a save up close against Spain during Friday’s exhibition match.
(Don Leach / Staff Photographer)
The match was the first international match of the new quad for Team USA, which finished fourth at the Paris Olympics last summer.
“We are a newer team, which is super exciting, and I think it gives us a lot of wiggle room,” said Flynn, who plays for Stanford and was a member of the Paris Olympics group last year. “Spain is a super-talented team, and that competition between the U.S. and Spain is just really strong for as long as I’ve been in the water polo world. It’s definitely a privilege to come here and explore with this young team, but against such good competitors.”
Laguna Beach alumna Emma Lineback had a goal, an assist and a field block for Team USA. Lineback, a left-handed attacker coming off a second-team All-American season for UCLA as a redshirt junior, was aiming for a spot on the Paris squad but was not selected.

Team USA attacker Rachel Gazzaniga scores the game’s first goal against Spain on Friday.
(Don Leach / Staff Photographer)
Now, she said she has a short-term goal of making the U.S. roster for her first World Aquatics Championships next month in Singapore.
“It makes you rethink what the little wins are, because you’re playing with the best of the best every day,” Lineback said of being back with the national team. “It pushes you to work really hard, harder than you think is possible. That was kind of my motivation to come back, because I knew that I wasn’t done growing. I just love this environment. It really is special. College is great, but the buy-in here is just different.”
Spain beat Team USA 7-5 on Sunday in the second of the two-match exhibition series, led by a hat trick from Paula Camus. Emily Ausmus led the Americans with a pair of goals.
Team USA opens play at the World Aquatics Championships on July 10, with a match against China.

Members of the Team USA women’s water polo national team wear shirts in honor of Makenzie and Aria Fischer prior to Friday’s match.
(Don Leach / Staff Photographer)
Sports
Pair of Jackson Runners to Compete at the College Level
Not one but two Jackson distance runners will be headed to the East Coast to compete at the college level, as Jack Overbay will be attending Bates College in Maine, and Boomer Weisman will be going to Wesleyan University in Connecticut. Both of these young men competed in cross country, indoor, and outdoor track in […]

Not one but two Jackson distance runners will be headed to the East Coast to compete at the college level, as Jack Overbay will be attending Bates College in Maine, and Boomer Weisman will be going to Wesleyan University in Connecticut. Both of these young men competed in cross country, indoor, and outdoor track in their prep careers.
Overbay was 11th at the 2024 4A State Cross Country Meet in Cheyenne in 16.56.70, and he displayed marked improvement from his junior year when he finished 39th. At the State Outdoor Track Championships, Overbay took 3rd in the 4A 800 meters in 1.56.58 and was 5th in the 1600 in 4.26.95. He took 6th place in the 4A 800 meters at the State Indoor Track Championships in 2.01.29 and was 16th in the 1600.
Weisman competed at the 4A State Cross Country Meet and took 30th in 2024 and 21st in his junior season. At the Outdoor Championships in May, Weisman was 10th in the 4A 3200 meters in 9.50.24 and 13th in the 1600 with a clocking of 4.33.17. On the indoor track circuit, Weisman placed 10th in the 4A 1600 and 15th in the 3200.
Both Overbay and Weisman ran in the Nike Cross Country Nationals in Boise, and both will be competing at the next level in the New England Small College Conference, which is in Division III.

Boys State Cross Country Meet Recap
Boys State Cross Country Meet Recap
Gallery Credit: Frank Gambino
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