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White Sox option struggling first baseman Andrew Vaughn to Triple

CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago White Sox optioned struggling first baseman Andrew Vaughn to Triple-A Charlotte on Friday. The team also optioned infielder Tim Elko to the minor league club and reinstated outfielders Andrew Benintendi and Mike Tauchman from the 10-day injured list prior to the game against the Texas Rangers. The 27-year-old Vaughn, in […]

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White Sox option struggling first baseman Andrew Vaughn to Triple

CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago White Sox optioned struggling first baseman Andrew Vaughn to Triple-A Charlotte on Friday.

The team also optioned infielder Tim Elko to the minor league club and reinstated outfielders Andrew Benintendi and Mike Tauchman from the 10-day injured list prior to the game against the Texas Rangers.

The 27-year-old Vaughn, in his fifth season, is batting .189 with five home runs and 19 RBIs in 48 games. The No. 3 overall pick in the 2019 amateur draft, he hit .246 with 19 homers and 70 RBIs in 149 games last year.

“He’s a guy that needs to drive the baseball,” general manager Chris Getz said. “Can drive the baseball. So, I think he’s actually looking forward to taking a step back, slowing things down. It’s a different competition level, different environment. Really get to work and not make adjustments at a high level like the major leagues is.”

Elko was 5 for 31 with three homers and five RBIs over 10 games after being called up from Charlotte on May 10.

Benintendi was batting .224 with five home runs and 12 RBIs entering Friday’s game. He has dealt with a variety of injuries, including a strained left calf that had sidelined him since May 4. He also missed much of spring training because of a broken right hand and spent time on the injured list in April because of a strained left adductor.

Tauchman opened the season on the injured list with a strained right hamstring and hurt it again running the bases on the final play in Chicago’s 3-2 loss at Cleveland on April 9. He had appeared in just three games after signing with the White Sox in December. ___

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

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U.S. Women’s Water Polo Announces Singapore Worlds Roster

U.S. Women’s Water Polo Announces Singapore Worlds Roster with 7 First-Timers The U.S. women’s water polo team announced its roster for the 2025 World Aquatics Championships on Friday, a group that includes just one holdover from the 2021 Olympics. Seven of the 15 athletes are making their World Championships debut, and seven are held over […]

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U.S. Women’s Water Polo Announces Singapore Worlds Roster with 7 First-Timers

The U.S. women’s water polo team announced its roster for the 2025 World Aquatics Championships on Friday, a group that includes just one holdover from the 2021 Olympics.

Seven of the 15 athletes are making their World Championships debut, and seven are held over from the squad that finished fourth at Paris Olympics last summer.

Amanda Longan is the lone holdover from an Olympic medalist team, the backup goalie on the Tokyo team in 2021. The Singapore group will not include such program mainstays as Maggie Steffens, Maddie Musselman, Ashleigh Johnson and Rachel Fattal.

Longan is one of seven players who were part of the Paris team, joining Tara Prentice, Jenna Flynn, Jovana Sekulic, Ryann Neushul, Jewel Roemer and Emily Ausmus. Seven players are taking part at their first World Championships: Anna Pearson, Julia Bonaguidi, Emma Lineback, Isabel Williams, Rachel Gazzaniga, Malia Allen and Ava Stryker.

Coach Adam Krikorian named a 15-person roster, with only 14 eligible to take part on any individual gameday. The U.S. is Group B and will open against China on July 10. It will play Netherlands and Argentina in group play.

The U.S. women are the reigning World Champions, having won the event at the 2024 World Aquatics Championships in Doha. The team lost in the quarterfinals of the 2023 event in Fukuoka, Japan, ending a streak of four straight titles that dated to 2015. The U.S. women have won eight world titles.

U.S. Women’s Water Polo 2025 World Championships Roster

  • Amanda Longan (Moorpark, CA/USC/NYAC)
  • Tara Prentice (Temecula, CA/UC Irvine/NYAC/Sabadell)
  • Anna Pearson (Irvine, CA/UCLA/SET)
  • Jenna Flynn (San Jose, CA/Stanford/NYAC)
  • Julia Bonaguidi (La Jolla, CA/California/San Diego Shores)
  • Jovana Sekulic (Belgrade, Serbia/Princeton/NYAC)
  • Ryann Neushul (Goleta, CA/Stanford/NYAC)
  • Jewel Roemer (Martinez, CA/Stanford/680 Water Polo)
  • Emma Lineback (Laguna Beach, CA/UCLA/SET)
  • Emily Ausmus (Riverside, CA/USC/NYAC)
  • Ella Woodhead (San Rafael, CA/Stanford/SHAQ)
  • Isabel Williams (Severna Park, MD/California/Glyfada)
  • Rachel Gazzaniga (North Tustin, CA/USC/SOCAL)
  • Malia Allen (Irvine, CA/UCLA/Panionios)
  • Ava Stryker (Santa Barbara, CA/USC/Santa Barbara 805)
  • Head Coach: Adam Krikorian
  • Assistants: Molly Cahill, Dan Klatt, Natalie Benson
  • Video Coach: Andrew Silva
  • Team Manager: Ally Beck
  • Sports Medicine Manager: Larnie Boquiren

U.S. Women’s Water Polo 2025 World Championships schedule

  • July 10: vs. China, 9:10 p.m. PT
  • July 13: vs. Netherlands 5:45 a.m. PT
  • July 14: vs. Argentina 6 p.m. PT
  • July 17: Crossover Round
  • July 19: Quarterfinal Round
  • July 21: Semifinal Round
  • July 23: Final Round



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Beatrice Chebet DEMOLISHES women's 5000m world record at Prefontaine Classic

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Beatrice Chebet DEMOLISHES women's 5000m world record at Prefontaine Classic


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U.S. Men to Play For Gold at 2025 Dutch Tournament After Three More Wins

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 4, 2025) – The U.S. Men’s Sitting National Team will play for the gold medal at the 2025 Dutch Tournament with three more wins on Saturday in Assen, Netherlands. The U.S. (5-0) began the day with a 3-1 (20-25, 25-17, 25-18, 25-9) Türkiye before sweeping Canada, 3-0 (25-19, 25-21, 25-20). The […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 4, 2025) – The U.S. Men’s Sitting National Team will play for the gold medal at the 2025 Dutch Tournament with three more wins on Saturday in Assen, Netherlands.

The U.S. (5-0) began the day with a 3-1 (20-25, 25-17, 25-18, 25-9) Türkiye before sweeping Canada, 3-0 (25-19, 25-21, 25-20). The U.S. Men’s Sitting Team clinched its berth in the gold medal match with a thrilling 3-2 (25-23, 25-12, 21-25 ,16-25, 15-13) victory over Poland.

MATCH STATISTICS vs. TURKIYE
MATCH STATISTICS vs. CANADA
MATCH STATISTICS vs. POLAND

vs. Türkiye

The U.S. finished with a 47-30 advantage in kills and 16-14 in blocks. Outside hitter Zach Upp recorded nearly twice as many aces as all other players combined with 13 of his team’s 16. Türkiye totaled four aces.

Upp led all players with 25 points with 11 kills and a block to go with his aces. James Stuck recorded a match-high 16 kills, adding a block and an ace.

Middle blocker Roderick Green finished with 12 points on eight kills and four blocks, and outside Ben Aman posted a match-high six blocks with three kills and an ace for 10 points.

vs. Canada

The U.S. finished with 34 kills compared to just 21 for Canada and held a slight edge in aces (13-10). Canada held the advantage in blocks (11-8).

Outside hitters Jason Roberts and Dan Regan were the top two scorers in the match. Roberts scored 16 points on eight kills, a match-best six aces and two blocks. Regan also delivered eight kills, adding four aces and two blocks for 12 points.

Alex Wilson was the third U.S. play to record eight kills and outside Sam Suroweic finished with six kills and an ace for seven points.

With a one-point lead at 13-12 in the first set, the U.S. went on a 7-0 run with Stuck serving to open up an eight-point lead. After Canada hoped to stop the momentum by taking a timeout at 17-12, Stuck responded with an ace.

The second set featured multiple ties until the U.S. took a two-point lead at 16-14. A Wilson kill extended the lead to three points, 18-15, and a pair of aces by Roberts stretched the lead to four, 21-17. Canada was unable to close the gap any closer than three points as the U.S. took a 2-0 set lead.

The U.S. started quickly in the third set, taking a 7-2 lead. The margin was seven, 14-7, when Canada scored five points in a row to close the gap to two. Canada pulled within a point on three occasions, the last being at 21-20, but the U.S. scored the final four points to complete the victory.

vs. Poland

The U.S. produced double-digit margins in kills (53-40) and aces (17-6), while Poland finished with eight more blocks (18-10).

Upp hit the 20-point mark for the second time in his two matches on Saturday, sharing match-high honors with teammate Green in kills (13) and leading all players with seven aces. Green added three blocks for 16 points.

Duda scored 15 points as one of three U.S. players to record a double-digit kill total with 12 to go with three aces. Aman finished with 10 points on four kills, three blocks and three aces.

Stuck totaled six points on five kills and a block, while Roberts scored five points on three kills and a pair of aces.

Behind the serving strength of Upp and Aman, the U.S. went on an 8-1 run to take a 16-7 lead in the first set. The lead grew to double digits,19-9, before Poland made a furious comeback to tie the match at 23.

Green stopped a four-point Poland streak to give the U.S. set point, and a hitting error secured the set for the U.S.

With a 10-7 lead in the second set, the U.S. scored eight of the next nine points for an 18-8 lead. Denying Poland a similar comeback to the first set, the U.S. scored six consecutive points for a 24-10 lead and took a 2-0 lead in the match three points later.

Poland scored the first four points of the third set and never trailed. At one point, the U.S. used a 5-2 run to cut the lead to two points, 19-17 but could not maintain the momentum after a delay of several minutes when the head official was clarifying information with the scorer’s table.

Poland ran out to 6-0 and 10-1 leads in the fourth set. The U.S. never got closer than seven points behind as the match headed to a deciding set.

An Aman kill put the U.S. ahead 6-3 in the fifth set and led Poland to call its first timeout. Duda registered a kill later in the set to extend the lead to four points, 10-6. After the teams exchanged the next two points, the U.S. took its biggest lead when Kremer hustled and made a great set for another Duda kill and a 12-7 lead.

Poland scored the next three points to lead head coach Greg Walker to call his first timeout. Duda scored again, this time off the Poland block, to make it 13-10. Once again Poland went on a three-point streak and tied the set at 13, completing a 6-1 run.

After Walker called his second timeout, Green scored off the block to set up match point, which the U.S. converted on a Poland hitting error.

Roster

No. Name (Position, Height, Hometown)
Dan Regan (OH, 6-0, St. Louis, Mo.)
Nick Dadgostar (L, 6-0, Sidney, Neb.)
Ben Aman (OH, 6-5, Edmond, Okla.)
Eric Duda (S/OH, 6-5, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.)
Alex Wilson (OPP/OH, 6-6, Saugerties, N.Y.)
James Stuck (S/OH, 6-5, New Kensington, Pa.)
10 Robbie Onusko(OH, 6-0, Daytona Beach, Fla.)
11 Roderick Green (MB, 6-3, West Monroe, La.)
14 John Kremer (L, 5-9, Buford, Ga.)
17 Zach Upp (OH, 6-5, Bartlett, Ill.)
20 Jason Roberts (OH, 6-3, Moncks Corner, S.C.)
22 Brett Parks(OH, 6-0, Miami, Fla.)
23 Will Curtis (S/L, 6-0, Cumberland, Maine)
49 Sam Surowiec (OH, 6-2, Everett, Wash.)

Coaches
Head coach: Greg Walker
Assistant Coach: Julie Allen
Assistant Coach: Dave Dantes
Assistant Coach: Kenzie Rombach
Performance Analyst: Sydnie Mabry
Athletic Trainer: Whitney Padgett

Schedule

July 4
USA def. Netherlands, 3-0 (25-16, 25-17, 25-23)
USA def. Japan, 3-0 (25-20, 25-16, 33-31)

July 5
USA def. Türkiye, 3-1 (20-25, 25-17, 25-18, 25-9)
USA def. Canada, 3-0 (25-19, 25-21, 25-20)
USA def. Poland, 3-2 (25-23, 25-12, 21-25 ,16-25, 15-13)

July 6
Gold medal match: USA vs. TBA, 7 a.m. PT



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Texas Tech continues massive athletics investment

The Texas Tech Red Raiders announced themselves as a major player in college athletics’ revenue-sharing era on Friday with a historic football signing. ESPN college football reporter Eli Lederman shared that 2026 five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo agreed to a staggering three-year, $5.1 million fully guaranteed contract for his commitment to Texas Tech. According to […]

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The Texas Tech Red Raiders announced themselves as a major player in college athletics’ revenue-sharing era on Friday with a historic football signing.

ESPN college football reporter Eli Lederman shared that 2026 five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo agreed to a staggering three-year, $5.1 million fully guaranteed contract for his commitment to Texas Tech.

According to 247Sports, Ojo is the top offensive tackle and No. 5 overall prospect in his class.

Per Lederman:

“The deal is believed to be one of the largest fully guaranteed revenue-sharing agreements in college football history under the recently approved federal settlement that allows college programs to pay their athletes directly.”

In February, ESPN’s Max Olson wrote about the program’s spending spree this offseason, which included On3.com’s top-ranked transfer portal class.

Per Olson, the Red Raiders spent over $10 million for its 2025 acquisitions, including linebacker David Bailey, defensive tackle Lee Hunter and running back Quinten Joyner.

Bailey led Stanford with seven sacks in 2024 and ranked fourth in NCAA in fumbles forced (five). Hunter tied for a UCF team-high 10 tackles for loss, while Joyner, a 2024 redshirt freshman at USC, averaged 7.6 yards per carry and scored four touchdowns last season. 

The Red Raiders aren’t solely spending heavily on their football roster.

As Lederman noted, Texas Tech softball pitcher NiJaree Canady also recently received her second million-dollar name, image and likeness deal with the university, another sign of the program’s serious push to establish itself as the premier Big 12 power.

A vacuum exists at the top following Oklahoma and Texas leaving for the SEC. In 2024, Arizona State football won the conference after being picked to finish last in the preseason by Big 12 media, which canceled all future preseason polls as a result.

No one knows what to expect from the conference moving forward, but Texas Tech is putting itself in a position to emerge near the top with its splurge. Money can’t buy championships, but it provides teams an easier path to contention.

The Red Raiders are clearly hungry to add to their total. In 2024, men’s track and field won the NCAA Indoor Championships, marking the third NCAA title in Texas Tech history.

Men’s track and field also won an outdoor championship in 2019, while women’s basketball earned Texas Tech its first NCAA championship in 1993.

The softball team came painfully close to winning the women’s College World Series in June, losing to Texas, 2-1, in the best-of-three championship series.

ESPN’s Football Power Index isn’t too high on the football squad being nearly as competitive this fall. The Red Raiders have an 8-4 projected win-loss record and 10.3 percent chance of reaching the 12-team College Football Playoff.

Texas Tech could be an afterthought on the gridiron in 2025, but Ojo’s massive signing is indicative of the program’s bright future.

The recent landmark House vs. NCAA settlement forever altered the college athletics landscape, and the Red Raiders have been one of the quickest to take advantage.





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Jorhat emerge champs in All Assam Aquatic meet

Our Sports Reporter GUWAHATI: Jorhat emerged as the champion in the 32nd All Assam Aquatic Championship, which concluded at the Sarusajai Sports Complex in the city today. Jorhat dominated the competition, amassing a total of 56 gold, 51 silver, and 36 bronze medals. Kamrup finished in second place with 35 gold, 38 silver, and 34 […]

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Our Sports Reporter

GUWAHATI: Jorhat emerged as the champion in the 32nd All Assam Aquatic Championship, which concluded at the Sarusajai Sports Complex in the city today. Jorhat dominated the competition, amassing a total of 56 gold, 51 silver, and 36 bronze medals.

Kamrup finished in second place with 35 gold, 38 silver, and 34 bronze medals, while Sivasagar secured third with 7 gold, 8 silver, and 13 bronze medals.

In water polo, Sivasagar took home the men’s and women’s titles, while Jorhat claimed the runners-up positions in both events.

Group Champions: 1. Men (open) – Banadip Medhi (Kamrup),  Women (open) – Disha Gogoi (Charaideo).  Group – I (Boys) – Sanskar Bhuyan (Jorhat),  Group – I (Girls) – Jahnabi Changmai (Kamrup). Group – II (Boys) – Prayash Gogoi (Jorhat) and Awad Aditya (Jorhat), Group – II (Girls) – Angarika Saikia (Jorhat)  and Bhoomika Kashyap (Jorhat).  Group- III (Boys)- Abhigyan Mohan (Jorhat),  Group-III (Girls) Kasturi Gogoi (Kamrup).

Also Read: Assam edge J&K 3-2 for second win in Sub-Junior Hockey Nationals

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University of Illinois Making Coaching A Priority

Big news coming out of the University of Illinois athletic department. They’ve been adding non-compete clauses to the most in-demand coaches’ latest contracts.  The 7 new coaching contracts all include non-competes.  Brad Underwood has a total non-compete clause for all of college basketball. He’s not going anywhere until the 2030s. Secondly, women’s basketball coach Shauna […]

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Big news coming out of the University of Illinois athletic department. They’ve been adding non-compete clauses to the most in-demand coaches’ latest contracts.  The 7 new coaching contracts all include non-competes.  Brad Underwood has a total non-compete clause for all of college basketball. He’s not going anywhere until the 2030s.

Secondly, women’s basketball coach Shauna Green has a Big Ten non/compete clause. She can’t be hired away by any team in the Big Ten, for any amount of money. Football coach Brett Bielema also has a Big Ten non-compete clause, along with women’s soccer coach Katie Hultin.

Per the Illini Inquirer, four coaches on campus now have full college non-compete clauses: Underwood, men’s tennis head coach Brad Dancer, track and field head coach Petros Kyprianou and women’s gymnastics head coach Josh Nilson. The clauses are tied to AD Josh Whitman’s tenure – they are in effect as long as he is athletic director. It costs more, but seems to ensure a lot of stability in key programs.



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