Sports
Why Barbara Kendall backs women’s Olympic water polo campaign
In 2015, Barbara Kendall received the Sport NZ Leadership Award at the Halberg Awards.
Photo: Photosport Ltd 2015 www.photosport.co.nz
Five-time Olympian Barbara Kendall has thrown her weight behind the New Zealand women’s water polo team in their bid to qualify for the next Games.
The ‘White Caps’ believe they have a golden opportunity to qualify for Los Angeles 2028, with the Olympic quota for women’s water polo increasing from 10 teams to 12.
The team narrowly missed out on Paris 2024, falling just two goals short of Olympic qualification.
Women’s water polo was only added to the Olympics in 2000, with men’s water polo on the programme since 1900. No New Zealand team have ever qualified for the Olympics in the sport.
Kendall competed at five Olympic Games, winning gold, silver and bronze medals in windsurfing. She is now the White Caps performance coach and was introduced to water polo through her two daughters.
“They started playing at school and just loved it,” she said. “There was no-one at the school really managing it, so I just stepped in and ended up managing water polo for Whangaparāoa College, right up until both of them finished.
“I didn’t really know much about it, but I knew how to put a team together.”
Eldest daughter Samantha later joined the Atlantis City club in Auckland, where Kendall met White Caps head coach Angie Winstanley-Smith.
“What she was trying to achieve was a big dream with very little resource to try and get a team to the Olympic Games in Paris,” Kendall said. “There was no money, so it was pretty much a voluntary role, just building a plan and it’s taken a long time.
“She was, like, ‘Barbara, we’d love to have you on the team just supporting’ and I went, ‘Yep’.”
NZ women’s water polo team – the White Caps.
Photo: Catharyn Hayne Photography
NZ Water Polo chief executive Jan Shearer competed at three Olympics in sailing, winning a silver medal with Leslie Egnot at Barcelona 1992.
Olympian Polly Powrie joined the White Caps a couple of years ago as team manager. Powrie is a two-time Olympic medallist, winning gold at London 2012 and silver at Rio 2016, alongside teammate Jo Aleh in the women’s 470 sailing class.
England-born Winstanley-Smith represented Great Britain for 11 years, including the 2012 London Olympics, before retiring in 2014 and moving to New Zealand.
“Angie is an outstanding individual,” Kendall said. “Most people wouldn’t dedicate their life to it, it’s a real life calling.
“Then, when Jan became CEO, it was, like, ‘Right, I’m in’, because Jan’s an amazing operator, and then Polly joining as well. When you have really good operators in behind a good coach, who knows what can happen, so that was why I joined.”
Kendall knows what it’s like to prepare for Olympic qualification, but that’s brand new territory for the White Caps squad members. Some have spent time playing in the American college system on scholarships, some are coming from club level.
“Taking them from that level to actually what’s required when you step up into high performance systems is quite a big jump and some people don’t make it, because it’s relentless, it’s 24/7.
“It’s meticulous and so many boxes need to be ticked to ensure that you are operating under a high performance energy stream. It’s tiring and it’s really hard.”
Kendall enjoys working within a team sport.
“What a privilege to work with a group of female athletes striving to be their very best,” she said. “The dynamics are quite different, because you can have one person off and it can affect the whole team.
“They learn to understand their teammates, and what stresses them or what motivates them. They have to be able to adapt and have empathy.
“All those things you learn from a team sport, which you probably don’t learn from an individual sport, because it’s all about you, but in a team sport, you’ve got to look outside yourself a lot more.”
The NZ women’s water polo team at a training base in Auckland.
Photo: Supplied
Kendall said she had a “million stories” she could share about the realities of high performance sport, “based on everything I learnt in 25 years of travelling overseas, sleeping in cars, little support”.
“When you get to the end of it, you may not qualify for the Olympic Games,” she said. “You may not win a medal, but what you have learnt that has made you you, that’s priceless …and that’s where I come in.”
Kendall’s philosophy is to grow the person, then the athlete will flourish.
“In high performance sport, you go into pressure cooker situations and all your fears surface, so it’s how you embrace them and learn through them. It can be a really tough journey, so understanding that is actually when the most growth occurs, and you are much stronger and resilient from those times.”
The White Caps are currently on the road, gaining valuable experience in Europe against the world’s top teams, before heading to the world aquatics championships in Singapore.
Kendall will rejoin the team there, after a quick detour to watch daughter Aimee Bright compete at the 2025 iQFOiL world championships in Denmark. Bright is one of New Zealand’s top young windfoilers, a newer evolution of windsurfing.
Stacked with Olympic experience
New Zealand sailors Jo Aleh and Polly Powrie (right) at the Olympics.
Photo: PHOTOSPORT
Winstanley-Smith, who started coaching the team in 2017, appreciates that she has now got a management team stacked with Olympic experience.
One of her assistant coaches is Eelco Uri, a former Dutch player, who competed at the 1996 and 2000 Olympics with the Netherlands men’s team.
Winstanley-Smith said of Kendall: “Anyone who meets Barbara, it’s impossible not to feel energised.
“She’s been to five Olympics, she works with the IOC. Ultimately, what she brings is, ‘Yes, this is high performance, but it’s fun, we choose to be here’,” she said.
“She challenges the environment, and gets us to look at each other as people and how we can connect, and how everyone is different and how we navigate that within a team, so she’s been gold in that respect for me.”
Shearer spent three years as CEO of Snow Sports NZ, before taking charge of NZ Water polo in 2021, when Covid was having a big impact. She is also board chair of Canoe Racing NZ.
Winstanley-Smith’s first three months of communication with Shearer was over Zoom, when Auckland was in lockdown.
“She came in, and just provided a support for me and a guidance in the New Zealand high performance environment, and her connections and ability to get stuff done is just incredible.
“Immediately, her knowledge and expertise, she came from Snow Sports and we’ve all seen the success they have had, and also Canoe Racing New Zealand, so two organisations she’s been involved with who’ve had a lot of Olympic success, I don’t think that’s by chance.”
Jan Shearer (left) and Leslie Egnot at the Barcelona Olympic Games, 1992.
Photo: PHOTOSPORT
Winstanley-Smith said Powrie was the most unassuming, laid-back person she had ever worked with.
“So level-headed, which is fantastic for me, because she balances my ADHD out, so it’s great,” she laughed.
“She just loves being involved in sport, but not for the limelight. The girls can sit down at breakfast in tournament and chat through, ‘What was the morning like before you went out to sail your last race and won gold’ – those key moments that Polly has lived that she can bring real-life experience.”
White Caps captain Jessica Milicich, 29, has been in the squad for nine years and said missing out on Paris was difficult, but it made them confident they could make it.
She said having so much Olympic experience around the team was invaluable.
“Having Angie lead our programme has been really important for us,” Milicich said. “We wouldn’t be in the position that we are today without her.
“She’s really driven the women’s programme forward in the time that she’s been head coach. I’ve never met anyone as technically capable as her.
“She understands what you’re going through in high-pressure moments, she is very calm in times of stress, she is just so valuable and we are lucky to have someone like her involved.”
Jessica Milicich of the NZ women’s water polo team.
Photo: Deep Blue Media
Milicich said also having Powrie and Kendall in their camp filled them with confidence.
“They both came to the Doha world champs with us last year and the impact that they had was so positive, so all of our feedback was that we wanted them to be involved moving forward.
“Barbara creates an atmosphere where she brings out the best in everyone. She is really focussed on how we can perform as a group and individually at our best, so I think that is really important, because when you get to those international moments, she has so much experience and value to offer.
“Then Polly is just awesome. Having the two of them, I think we are very fortunate, and I don’t think you’d look across any other staff or team management, and have the same kind of experience or value.”
Traditionally, Europe produces strong water polo teams like Hungary, Greece and Italy. USA is strong in women’s water polo and Australia won silver in Paris last year.
“For us to break in to that upper tier, we are a little bit further away, so the more we get exposed to those kind of teams, the better,” Milicich said.
Water polo is now one of 10 recognised team sports under the High Performance Sport New Zealand programme, which has bumped up their funding.
“Singapore is one of our first world championships where we haven’t had to do much fundraising,” Milicich said. “It’s covered, but normally, it has been self-funded.
“To get to this point where we can now move forward and hopefully continue to grow the sport is really exciting.”
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Sports
Bri Tillman Named Assistant Coach for Augusta Track & Field and Cross Country
AUGUSTA, Ga. – Augusta University head track & field and cross country coach announced the hiring of Bri Tillman as the program’s assistant coach for men’s and women’s track & field and men’s and women’s cross country.
The hire marks the first full-time assistant coaching position in the history of Augusta University’s track & field and cross country programs.
Tillman, a native of Augusta, Georgia, returns home following a decorated competitive career and a long-standing connection to Augusta University. She is a graduate of the Academy of Richmond County, where she emerged as a standout sprinter and multi-event athlete. During her high school career, she was a 400-meter Region Champion, Garden City Champion, and a multi-event state qualifier. She was also recognized for her leadership and service, earning the CSRA All-Star Community Service Award and being named Georgia’s Most Positive Track Athlete.
Tillman began her collegiate career at Indiana Tech before transferring to Coastal Carolina University. As a student-athlete, she earned All-America honors three times, won two national championships, and placed on Coastal Carolina’s Top 10 list in the indoor 300 meters.
Her connection to Augusta University dates back to her high school years, when she volunteered through the Volunteen Board. She continued her involvement with the university as a VolunJag during her freshman year of college and later returned to Augusta following her undergraduate studies to volunteer with the Jaguars’ track & field program.
“I am excited to continue supporting Augusta University’s student-athletes and remain committed to uplifting my local community,” said Tillman. “This program and this city mean a great deal to me, and I’m grateful for the opportunity to give back.”
Tillman will assist with coaching responsibilities across all track & field disciplines and support both the men’s and women’s cross country programs.
Fans of Jaguar Athletics can subscribe to the email listserve by clicking here. Fans can follow Augusta University at www.augustajags.com and receive short updates on Facebook at Augusta University Athletics and on Twitter at @AugustaJags
Sports
2025 NCAA volleyball Final Four preview: Matchups, starters, X-factors
Updated Dec. 16, 2025, 6:46 a.m. ET
The 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament intensifies as the Final Four begins with two matches in at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City on Thursday and the national championship on Sunday.
All four No. 1 seeds (Kentucky, Pitt, Texas and Nebraska) swept their opponents in the Sweet 16. In the Elite Eight, it was a different story. Kentucky swept No. 3 Creighton, and Pitt topped No. 3 Purdue, earning a trip to its fifth consecutive Final Four. Texas A&M stunned undefeated Nebraska, and Wisconsin upset Texas to punch their tickets.
The best high-level volleyball of the year is days away. Here’s a preview of the Final Four, including matchups, lineups and X-factors to keep an eye on.
(Number before team name represents its tournament seed)
No. 1 Pitt vs. No. 3 Texas A&M
Thursday, Dec. 18: 6:30 p.m. ET (ESPN)
Pittsburgh Panthers starting lineup
Head coach: Dan Fisher
- 3 Emery Dupes | L/DS 5-6 – Redshirt Senior
- 5 Olivia Babcock | RS 6-4 – Junior
- 8 Blaire Bayless | OH 6-2 – Junior
- 10 Marina Pezelj | OH 6-1 – Freshman
- 13 Mallorie Meyer | L/DS 5-7 – Sophomore
- 17 Brook Mosher | S 6-0 – Redshirt Senior
- 20 Abbey Emch | MB 6-4 – Freshman
- 21 Bre Kelley | MB 6-4 – Redshirt Senior
X-factor: Brooke Mosher, setter
Mosher’s development throughout the season and into the NCAA tournament has been on full display. The Illinois transfer is an outstanding setter with a vicious serve that showed up when the Panthers needed it most. With a fifth consecutive trip to the Final Four on the line, Mosher rattled off back-to-back service aces against Purdue to send Pitt to Kansas City. She finished her superb Elite Eight match with four kills on .500 hitting, an incredible 47 assists, three service aces, seven digs and four blocks. Don’t sleep on Mosher.
Texas A&M Aggies starting lineup
Head coach: Jamie Morrison
- 37 Kyndal Stowers | OH 5-11 – Sophomore
- 1 Ifenna Cos-Okpalla | MB 6-2 – Senior
- 2 Addi Applegate | L/DS 5-5 – Freshman
- 9 Logan Lednicky | OPP 6-3 – Senior
- 12 Ava Underwood | L/DS 5-7 – Senior
- 16 Maddie Waak | S 5-10 – Senior
X-factor: Emily Hellmuth, outside hitter
Coming off the bench, outside hitter Emily Hellmuth helps the Aggies keep a balanced attack on offense, and when she gets going, she’s hard to stop. She’s third on the team in total kills and her powerful swing is her secret weapon. Hellmuth’s ability to shine in big moments is what has helped the Aggies make the Final Four. She was critical to the Aggies’ success against No. 1 Nebraska during the Elite Eight, providing 13 kills, two aces and four blocks. Her best tournament outing came against Campbell. She finished with 10 kills on 15 swings and a .667 hitting percentage.
No. 1 Kentucky vs. No. 3 Wisconsin
Thursday, Dec. 18: Time TBD (ESPN)
Kentucky Wildcats starting lineup
Head coach: Craig Skinner
- 6 Kassie O’Brien | S 6-1 – Freshman
- 7 Eva Hudson | OH 6-1 – Senior
- 10 Kennedy Washington | MB 6-0 – Sophomore
- 11 Molly Berezowitz | DS 5-5 – Junior
- 12 Molly Tuozzo | L 5-7 – Junior
- 15 Lizzie Carr | MB 6-6 – Redshirt Junior
- 17 Brooklyn DeLeye | OH 6-2 – Junior
X factor: Lizzie Carr, middle blocker
Outside hitter duo Brooklyn DeLeye and Eva Hudson rightfully garner a lot of attention. Still, for Kentucky to make a push for a national championship, one of the keys may be middle blocker Lizzie Carr. The redshirt junior is a glue player who quietly gets the job done. She’s had multiple efficient performances during the NCAA tournament. Her best day came during a magnificent outing against Cal Poly in the Sweet 16, where she finished with 11 kills on 15 swings (with a .667 hitting percentage) and six crucial blocks.
Wisconsin Badgers starting lineup
Head coach: Kelly Sheffield
- 1 Una Vajagic | OH 6-0 – Redshirt Sophomore
- 7 Kristen Simon | L 5-8 – Freshman
- 15 Mimi Colyer | OH 6-3 – Senior
- 17 Alicia Andrew | MB 6-3 – Redshirt Senior
- 24 Charlie Fuerbringer | S 5-11 – Sophomore
- 32 Grace Egan | RS 6-1 – Redshirt Sophomore
- 52 Carter Booth | MB 6-7 – Senior
X-factor: Una Vajagic, outside hitter
Mimi Colyer and Carter Booth garner a lot of attention, but it’s Una Vajagic who is the unsung hero for the Badgers. She quietly works in the background and has had double-digit kills in each of her last three NCAA tournament matches, including 13 kills on .444 hitting and 11 digs against Stanford. The Badgers’ outside hitter also helps the team’s passing game, which they’ll need in the Final Four.
Sports
Volleyball Has Four Players Earn College Sports Communicators Academic All-District® Honors
FULL COLLEGE SPORTS COMMUNICATORS RELEASE
GREENWOOD, Ind. – Four UNC Asheville volleyball student-athletes have earned Academic All-District® honors from College Sports Communicators, the organization announced Tuesday (Dec. 16).
Payton Rolfsen, Michelle Thao, Baylor Herlehy, and Albertine van der Goot represented UNC Asheville on this year’s All-District list. To qualify for Academic All-District honors, student-athletes must be at least a sophomore academically and athletically, maintain a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.5, and appear in at least 90 percent of their team’s competitions or start in at least 66 percent.
Thao earned her second consecutive Academic All-District honor after being named to last year’s list. She was also named Big South Co-Libero of the Year, marking the first Libero of the Year honor in program history and the first on-the-court Big South major award for the program since 2000, when Kelly Budnik earned Freshman of the Year honors. UNC Asheville previously had Scholar Athlete of the Year recipients in 2023 (Ona Elkins) and 2021 (Grace Volk).
During the 2025 season, Thao played in all 30 matches and 110 sets, recording 523 digs (4.75 per set), 26 service aces, and an impressive .954 reception percentage across 585 receptions. She reached the 1,000-career-dig milestone on Oct. 17 and earned Big South Libero of the Week honors three times. Thao was also named to the Big South All-Tournament Team after helping lead the Bulldogs to their first Big South Conference Championship appearance since 2006.
Rolfsen led Asheville’s offense with 565 assists, averaging 5.28 per set. She finished second on the team with 27 service aces and totaled 18 blocks on the season. Her performance in the Big South Conference Tournament earned her All-Tournament Team honors.
In 22 matches, Herlehy recorded 137 kills and led the Bulldogs with 92 total blocks.
Van der Goot was named to the Big South All-Academic Team and earned Big South Honorable Mention recognition. She finished the season second on the team with 231 kills (2.12 per set) and ranked second in total blocks with 87.
About Women’s Athletics Presenting Partner First Bank
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Sports
Three Herd Volleyball Student-Athletes Named to CSC Academic All-District Team
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. – Marshall University Volleyball student-athletes Elli Barry, Marae Reilly and Bella Thompson were named to the College Sports Communicators Academic All-District Team on Tuesday.
To be eligible, the student-athlete must maintain a 3.50 GPA, be at least a sophomore and have played in 90 percent of the team’s matches or started 66 percent of the contests.
Barry, a senior from Huntington, played in all 30 matches making 25 starts with 186 points, 162 kills and 41 blocks. Registering five contests with 10 or more kills, Barry recorded a season-high 13 in a win over UMES on September 12.
Reilly, a sophomore from Lakewood, Colorado, finished with the second-most blocks on the team at 61 while finishing third on the squad in points, 215.5, and kills, 168, playing in all 30 matches, including 29 starts. Reilly recorded a season-high 13 kills against Gardner-Webb on September 20.
Thompson, a senior from Mooresville, North Carolina, was one of just two players on the team to start all 30 matches this season as she led MU with 727 assists and registered 229 digs across 109 sets. The setter registered a season-high 50 assists against Gardner-Webb on September 20.
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Sports
Kent State Places Four on CSC Academic All-District® Volleyball Team
KENT, Ohio – Kent State student-athletes Greta Bolognini, Adalynn Ginley, Mackenzie McGuire and Christina Vigil and have been named to the 2025 Academic All-District® Volleyball teams, selected by College Sports Communicators (CSC).
The award recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the court and in the classroom. In order to be eligible for selection, a student-athlete must have reached sophomore athletic status and either competed in 90% of the team’s games or started in at least 66% of games while maintaining a 3.50 or higher cumulative grade point average.
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Sports
WEEK TWO CIAA INDOOR TRACK AND FIELD ATHLETES OF THE WEEK
Charlotte, NC (December 16, 2025) – Week Two of CIAA Indoor Track and Field continued to showcase high level performances as competition intensified across early season meets. The conference saw distance excellence and strong field event execution as athletes built momentum heading deeper into the indoor season. The CIAA recognizes two student athletes for their standout performances during the week.
WOMEN’S TRACK ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Faith Kiplimo, Fayetteville State
Sophomore distance runner Faith Kiplimo delivered a breakthrough performance at the JDL Early Bird Meet, recording a personal best time of 4:51.07. Her effort earned a second place finish overall while setting a new Fayetteville State school record. The mark also met the NCAA Division II provisional qualifying standard and currently ranks Kiplimo No. 1 in the Atlantic Region and No. 5 nationally in Division II. Her performance continues to establish Fayetteville State as a force in women’s distance events.
WOMEN’S FIELD ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Sheree Wright, Fayetteville State
Senior high jumper Sheree Wright opened her season with a strong and composed showing at the JDL Early Bird Meet. Wright cleared 1.57 meters (5-01.75) to earn a fourth place finish in a competitive field. Her consistency and execution highlighted an encouraging start to her indoor campaign and provided a solid foundation as the season progresses.
Media Contact
Anna M. Butzlaff
Associate Commissioner, Strategic Communications
Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA)
abutzlaff@theciaa.com
About the CIAA
Founded in 1912, the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) is the first, and longest running, African American athletic conference in the United States and one of the most recognized conferences in Division II. The CIAA conducts 14 championships attended by more than 150000 fans from around the country. The Basketball Tournament has been honored as a 2019 Champion of Economic Impact in Sports Tourism by Sports Destination Management for both 2018 and 2019.
Headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, the CIAA is governed by the Presidents and Chancellors of its 12 member institutions: Bowie State University, Bluefield State University, Claflin University, Elizabeth City State University, Fayetteville State University, Johnson C. Smith University, Lincoln University of Pennsylvania, Livingstone College, Shaw University, Virginia State University, Virginia Union University, and Winston Salem State University. For more information on the CIAA, visit theciaa.com and follow us on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.
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