Connect with us

Sports

Wichita to host WBIT in 2026 and 2027

Story Links The NCAA announced that the 2026 and 2027 Women’s Basketball Invitation Tournament semifinals and finals will be at Charles Koch Arena on the Wichita State campus. This will be the first year that Wichita will host the final WBIT games. Wichita has experience hosting women’s basketball tournament games, most recently when it hosted a […]

Published

on

Wichita to host WBIT in 2026 and 2027

The NCAA announced that the 2026 and 2027 Women’s Basketball Invitation Tournament semifinals and finals will be at Charles Koch Arena on the Wichita State campus. This will be the first year that Wichita will host the final WBIT games. Wichita has experience hosting women’s basketball tournament games, most recently when it hosted a March Madness regional in 2022.

WBIT semifinals and finals will be broadcast on ESPN platforms. Below are the dates for the semifinals and finals in Wichita:

  • 2026: March 30 (semifinals), April 1 (final).
  • 2027: March 29 (semifinals), March 31 (final).

“We are delighted to bring the WBIT to Wichita,” said Lynn Holzman, NCAA vice president of women’s basketball. “Since the first WBIT in 2024, the postseason event has been a tremendous success for women’s basketball programs. With women’s basketball thriving, we are eager to build on this momentum in Wichita. The Wichita community has consistently supported NCAA basketball, twice hosting successful Division I women’s basketball tournament rounds. Its central location and accessibility make it an ideal location to continue growing this event.”

This will be the third year of the WBIT, with Minnesota taking home the WBIT trophy in 2025 and Illinois in 2024.

“Visit Wichita is honored to host, in partnership with Wichita State University, the 2026 and 2027 Women’s Basketball Invitation Tournament, bringing even more high-level women’s sports to Wichita,” said Josh Howell, vice president of sports development at Visit Wichita. “We are very excited to welcome — for the first time — this tournament that showcases some of the best in women’s basketball and delivers high-energy matchups that fans won’t want to miss. In addition to the positive local economic impact and national TV exposure, this is a great competition for basketball fans in the region to experience in person.”

“Wichita State is excited and honored to be selected as the host of the WBIT finals in 2026 and 2027,” said Brad Pittman, Wichita State senior associate athletics director. “We strive to provide memorable championship experiences both in our city and on our campus and have had the opportunity to host many successful external events over the last few years. We are excited to showcase the city of Wichita and our campus on a national stage, and to show the rest of the country the passion for women’s basketball that exists in Wichita.”

The WBIT postseason tournament is owned and funded by the NCAA. The Association provides 100 postseason opportunities for Division I women’s basketball teams through its two events (the 68-team championship and 32-team WBIT). Selections, pairings and the bracket for the 2026 WBIT will be announced March 15.
 

Print Friendly Version
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

U.S. Girls U19 National Team Falls to Bulgaria in Five Sets at 2025 World Championship

Colorado Springs, Colo. (July 6, 2025) – For the second match in a row, the U.S. Girls U19 National Team extended a match to five sets before falling, this time to Bulgaria, 3-2 (25-15, 16-25, 27-25, 13-25, 15-5) on Sunday at the 2025 FIVB Girls U19 World Championship in Osijek, Croatia. The U.S. (2-2) will […]

Published

on


Colorado Springs, Colo. (July 6, 2025) – For the second match in a row, the U.S. Girls U19 National Team extended a match to five sets before falling, this time to Bulgaria, 3-2 (25-15, 16-25, 27-25, 13-25, 15-5) on Sunday at the 2025 FIVB Girls U19 World Championship in Osijek, Croatia.

The U.S. (2-2) will complete pool play tomorrow, Monday, July 7, at 12:15 p.m. PT in a key matchup against Türkiye (2-2).

The U.S. dominated at the net with 16 blocks compared to just four for Bulgaria but was unable to overcome the deficits in kill. (60-51). Bulgaria served two more aces (9-7).

Outside hitter Suli Davis was one of four U.S. players in double figures, leading the team with 17 points on 12 kills, three blocks and two aces. Outside Kelly Kinney also registered 12 kills.

Middle blocker Abbey Emch scored 11 points with five kills, two aces and sharing team-high honors with setter Genevieve Harris with four blocks. Outside hitter Devyn Wiest totaled 10 points on eight kills, a block and an ace.

Middle blocker Gabrielle Nichols scored seven points on four kills, two blocks and an ace, and outside hitter Lameen Mambu added six points on five kills and an ace.

“Another battle in Pool C tonight,” head coach Keegan Cook said. “Bulgaria has been excellent from the service line and some big serves in the fifth set. I’m extremely impressed by the performances of our athletes who entered the match, particularly our outside hitters. I’m looking forward to another great opportunity tomorrow with Türkiye.”

In the first set, the U.S. trailed by three points, 12-9, when Bulgaria went on a 10-3 lead to take over the set. Emch scored four points on two kills, a block and an ace.

The key point in the second set was with the U.S. clinging to a 13-12 lead. Davis hustled to retrieve an errant pass and Harris later scored on a block to spark a 6-0 run that put the U.S. up 18-12. With the score 21-14, Nichols scored, and Davis followed with back-to-back aces for a 10-point lead. Davis (two kills, two aces, one block) and Nichols (three kills, one block, one ace) each scored five points.

An ace gave Bulgaria an early 10-4 lead in the third set. The U.S. battled back and finally tied the score at 21. Davis made a one-handed dig and then scored to tie the set again at 22. The U.S. tied the set at 24 after fighting off two set points and fought off another set point at 25-24 before Bulgaria was finally able to string two points together. Davis led the U.S. with six kills with Wiest adding four.

The U.S. started the fourth set on a 7-2 run and never looked back. A Wiest ace and a Harris kill on an overpass made it 6-2 and sent Bulgaria to its first timeout. Davis scored on the next play and the lead was never less than five points after that. Davis again led the U.S., scoring five points on three kills and two blocks. Kinney recorded four kills, and Wiest added two kills and a block to her ace for four points.

Bulgaria scored the first two points of the fifth set and never trailed, building an 8-3 lead as the teams switched sides.

2025 U19 National Team Roster for World Championship

(Name, Pos., Birth Year, Height, Hometown, School, Region)
3 Jordan Taylor (MB, 6-5, 2007, Houston, Texas, University of Minnesota, Lone Star)
5 Lily Hayes (L, 5-9, 2007, Tampa, Fla., Berkeley Prep HS, Florida)
6 Suli Davis (OH, 6-1, 2007, Euless, Texas, Brigham Young University, North Texas)
8 Abbey Emch (MB, 6-3, 2007, New Waterford, Ohio, University of Pittsburgh, Ohio Valley)
10 Isabelle Hoppe (S, 5-8, 2008, Gibsonia, Pa., Pine Richland HS, Ohio Valley)
11 Kelly Kinney (OH/OPP, 6-2, 2007, West Palm Beach, Fla., The Kings Academy, Florida)
12 Genevieve Harris (S, 5-11, 2007, Raleigh, N.C, Cardinal Gibbons HS, Carolina)
13 Gabrielle Nichols (MB, 6-3, 2007, Winston Salem, N.C., Penn State University, Carolina)
16 Cari Spears (OH, 6-3, 2007, Dallas, Texas, University of Texas, North Texas)
17 Lameen Mambu (OH, 6-0, 2007, Chantilly, Va., Georgia Tech, Chesapeake)
19 Henley Anderson (OPP/OH, 6-3, 2007, Dripping Springs, Texas, Dripping Springs HS, Lone Star)
20 Devyn Wiest (OH, 6-3, 2007, Peoria, Ariz., University of Utah, Arizona)

Alternates
1 Izzy Mogridge (S, 5-11, 2007, Lutz, Fla., Berkeley Prep HS, Florida)
2 Charlotte Vinson (OPP, 6-2, 2007, Muncie, Ind., Yorktown HS, Hoosier)
4 Kalyssa Blackshear (MB/OPP, 6-4, 2007, Torrance, Calif., University of Louisville, Southern California)
7 Ayanna Watson (OH/OPP, 6-3, 2007, Henderson, Nev., Bishop Gorman HS, Southern California)
9 Natalie Wardlow (MB/OPP, 6-5, 2007, Lincoln, Neb., Lincoln Southeast HS, Great Plains)
15 Logan Bell (L, 5-11, 2007, Beech Grove, Ind., Roncalli HS, Hoosier)
18 Aniya Warren (L, 5-8, 2007, Lockport, Ill., Benet Academy, Great Lakes)

Coaches
Head Coach: Keegan Cook (Minnesota)
Assistant Coach: Alyssa D’Errico (Utah)
Assistant Coach: April Sanchez (New Mexico)
Performance Analyst: Jon Wong (Florida State)
ATC: Cherryl Bueno (Coast to Coast AthletiCare)
Team Lead: Courtney Smith (NTDP)

2025 FIVB Girls U19 World Championship Schedule
All times Pacific/Osijek, Croatia
Matches live on VBTV and Volleyball World YouTube

July 2: USA def. Spain, 3-1 (22-25, 25-16, 25-12, 25-23)
July 3: USA def. Peru, 3-0 (25-19, 25-18, 25-18)
July 4: Poland def. USA, 3-2 (25-23, 23-25, 25-17, 25-27, 16-14)
July 6: Bulgaria def. USA, 3-2 (25-15, 16-25, 27-25, 13-25, 15-5)
July 7: 12:15 p.m. USA vs. Türkiye
July 8: TBA Round of 16
July 11: TBA Playoffs/Quarterfinals
July 12: TBA Playoffs/Semifinals
July 13: Finals



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

new dinosaurs, same old problems – The Daily Eastern News

Luke Brewer (Rob Le Cates) Kicking off the “big three” of blockbuster films this month (“Jurassic World Rebirth,” “Superman” and “The Fantastic Four: First Steps”), “Jurassic World Rebirth” doesn’t make for a strong start as it’s just the same familiar beats we’ve all seen before.  I’ve been turned off from the Jurassic franchise ever since […]

Published

on


Luke Brewer (Rob Le Cates)

Kicking off the “big three” of blockbuster films this month (“Jurassic World Rebirth,” “Superman” and “The Fantastic Four: First Steps”), “Jurassic World Rebirth” doesn’t make for a strong start as it’s just the same familiar beats we’ve all seen before. 

I’ve been turned off from the Jurassic franchise ever since “Jurassic World” (2015) but decided to give the franchise the benefit of the doubt with the latest installment being rather separate from everything prior, allowing for a truly individualistic story to be told. 

The film follows the rich pharmaceutical agent Martin Krebs (Rupert Friend) enlisting Zora Bennett (Scarlett Johansson), Dr. Henry Loomis (Jonathan Bailey) and Duncan Kincaid (Mahershala Ali) to infiltrate the island where genetic testing for the original Jurassic Park was done. 

I wish I could say these actors are entertaining to watch together, but that couldn’t be further from the truth. 

Not a single one of them has chemistry with another and all of their scenes are plagued by questionable writing that often has them repeat something already said or explicitly tell the audience what’s happening. 

It’s not even like the film is trying to hold the audience’s hand, it’s more so like the film was trying to explain to the kids in my theater what was happening as if they couldn’t gather that from just paying attention. 

The film’s first half-hour starts off pretty slow, but the plot picks up once the crew starts their task of retrieving blood samples from the three largest living dinosaurs across the sea, land and air to create a revolutionary drug that could increase humanity’s lifespan. 

Seems simple enough, right? Well, not so fast. 

This island features a mix of mutated and regular dinosaurs that attack the main crew often as per usual with this franchise. 

I was never a huge fan of the mutated dinosaurs, so balancing the two here really helps the film feel more in line with the Jurassic Park trilogy as the fear instilled by the more recognizable dinosaurs is front and center once again. 

The same could’ve happened with the mutated dinosaurs, but the trailers sold away all of that from the very beginning. 

One mutated dinosaur is designated the D-Rex and only really appears briefly in the opening scene and throughout the third act.  

Knowing it was coming thanks to the trailer ruined that part of the film. If the trailers omitted the scenes with the D-Rex, there would’ve been a lot more horror to go along with it. 

Horror is something this franchise has been lacking for a long time, and I really wish this was the film that capitalized on it. 

For example, there is a subplot involving a family stranded on the island that adapts a raft sequence from Michael Crichton’s “Jurassic Park” novel that the original film was based on.  

This scene is rather tense and engaging but all the horror aspects of it feel ripped away to keep things PG-13. 

Despite this, there are some positives to “Jurassic World Rebirth” that I hadn’t felt from the franchise in a long time. 

The cinematography is really strong as intense scenes are typically shot wider to allow for the scale of the dinosaurs and the environments to be a part of the tension. 

On the flip side, there are plenty of calming wide shots that feature Alexandre Desplat utilizing the iconic motifs created by John Williams to freeze the audience in awe while creating new works that fit a variety of emotions whether it be wonder or sadness. 

The design of the film is also incredible and has been a strong suit of the franchise from the very start.  

If you’ve seen anything from this franchise before, you can guess what everything looks like pretty well, but the mutated dinosaurs are truly stunning. 

Despite the short appearances, the D-Rex having a design inspired by the Rancor from Star Wars made it a standout among the rest. 

Aside from the occasional mutant dinosaurs, “Jurassic World Rebirth” isn’t anything that different from what the franchise has already shown us. 

The plot continues to follow a group going to a dinosaur-infested island and trying to escape the acting and writing aren’t strong whatsoever, but the cinematography and design still capture like always. 

Failing to do anything unique with this film results in it feeling like the same old, same old. 

Rating: 2/5 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Longford AC athlete’s take home national U20 track and field medals

Longford AC had a number of athletics securing medals at the national U20 track and field championships. Robin Og Murphy won gold in the U20 3000m walk in a time of 14:49. A third national title for Murphy this summer having won gold at the school’s and Juvenile championships. Emma Brennan won silver after a […]

Published

on


Longford AC had a number of athletics securing medals at the national U20 track and field championships.

Robin Og Murphy won gold in the U20 3000m walk in a time of 14:49. A third national title for Murphy this summer having won gold at the school’s and Juvenile championships.

Emma Brennan won silver after a strong performance in the 3000m Steeplechase. Brennan posting 11:22.39 behind Dearbhla Allen of St. Peters in Lurgan.

Whereas, Sean Grealy ran well in the 100m but narrowly missed out on a qualifying place.

Precious Akpe-Moses of Blackrock AC stole the headlines in the sprints with a pair of impressive wins in the U20 100m and a championship record of 23.66 in the 200m.

Sean Doggett of Athenry AC came out on top in what was a hugely competitive field in the men’s 400m. Doggett claimed gold while clocking a time of 47.08.

Nick Griggs (CNDR Track Club) made a winning return to national championship action to win the U23 800m (1:52.46), while Eimear Maher (DSD) set a CR in the U23 1500m (4:22.80).

Records also fell in the walks as Aisling Lane of Mullingar Harriers recorded a time of 13:54.98 in the U23 3000m walk, while Matthew Newell (Tuam AC) stormed his way to gold in the U20 5000m walk in 20:43.96,



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

USC-bound Lane Kiffin daughter Presley and volleyball co-eds rock pickleball fits

Presley Kiffin is enjoying her summer before heading to USC where she’ll represent the Kiffin name once again as a Trojans volleyball player. The college-bound Presley, 18, is the younger daughter of Ole Miss Rebels football coach Lane Kiffin and his reconciled wife Layla Kiffin. While the rest of the family — including mom — […]

Published

on


Presley Kiffin is enjoying her summer before heading to USC where she’ll represent the Kiffin name once again as a Trojans volleyball player.

The college-bound Presley, 18, is the younger daughter of Ole Miss Rebels football coach Lane Kiffin and his reconciled wife Layla Kiffin. While the rest of the family — including mom — will be in Oxford, Mississippi, dad is proud of his USC-bound daughter. He wasn’t rocking the Trojans gear, but he did show up to her high school graduation in his favorite Ole Miss blazer after taking a selfie with 20-year-old daughter Landry in the place USC famously fired him at.

RELATED: Lane Kiffin’s USC-bound daughter Presley shares prom fit recreating childhood photo

Presley Kiffin and Layla Kiffin

Presley Kiffin and Layla Kiffin / Lane Kiffin/Instagram

Presley loves to show off her dance skills with TikTok videos like her backyard shake, as well as crush fits like her one for Coachella with a dramatic new hairdo.

She has been spending time with mom like their chill beach selfie over 4th of July weekend, and now on the pickleball court rocking fits with “D1 picklers” in a post mom shared on Instagram.

RELATED: Lane Kiffin’s daughter shows off USC-bound excitement in matching Trojans fit

Layla Kiffin (left) with Presley Kiffin (right) and friends

Layla Kiffin (left) with Presley Kiffin (right) and friends / Layla Kiffin/Instagram

Layla Kiffin with Presley Kiffin and friends

Layla Kiffin/Instagram

It looks like all had a good time and there were no rolled ankles to hinder them in volleyball.

Speaking of that, Presley just went to college orientation and will enroll at USC in the fall with volleyball season coming up. For now, she can enjoy more beach days and pickleball friend hangouts with mom.

Presley Kiffin

Presley Kiffin/Instagram

Enjoy free dish of rich and fabulous players with The Athlete Lifestyle on SI

Holy cow: Vanessa Bryant and daughter Natalia look amazingly similar on vacation

What a perk: Brittany Mahomes shows off baby Golden Chiefs fits from adoring fan

Frat vibes: 65-year-old Magic Johnson has epic toga party on Greece yacht with Cookie

Hollywood diet: Lakers star Luka Doncic looks completely different in skinny photo

Nice surprise: Paige Bueckers shocks ‘girlfriend’ Azzi Fudd in full cowboy fit



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

US Track and Field Star Makes Quiet Statement After Overcoming Injury-Riddled Career for Prefontaine Comeback

“From 2016 through 2019, I was flying to different countries and seeing different doctors.” Trayvon Bromell’s words about his injuries are a terrifying reality. He knows the pain of dealing with injuries and the impact it has on being able to compete. Just a year ago, he felt the heartbreak of missing out on Olympic trials […]

Published

on


From 2016 through 2019, I was flying to different countries and seeing different doctors.” Trayvon Bromell’s words about his injuries are a terrifying reality. He knows the pain of dealing with injuries and the impact it has on being able to compete. Just a year ago, he felt the heartbreak of missing out on Olympic trials because of injuries. Months later, he had to pull out of the USATF indoor championships. Yet, he persevered. When the electrifying track and field star stepped onto the Prefontaine Classic track with a fire in his eyes, he finished a gritty third in a stacked 100-meter field. Clocking in at 9.94 seconds to secure the third spot in the 100-meter field behind Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson (9.85) and Great Britain’s Zharnel Hughes (9.91), for a sprinter who’s been battling injuries since his teens, this wasn’t just a race; it was a statement.

The Eugene crowd felt the weight of his comeback, a moment years in the making for the 30-year-old who once blazed a 9.76-second personal best. Trayvon Bromell’s performance wasn’t about stealing the spotlight but proving he’s back, healthy, and hungry for more. So, what’s driving this resilient sprinter to keep pushing forward?

Bromell’s journey hasn’t been easy. From 2017 to 2021, injuries battered him, with last year’s setback testing his resolve. “It’s tough. I think more so mentally,” he shared in a candid post-race interview with Citius Mag.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

“I’ve been dealing with injuries since I was like 14.” Yet, he’s never been one to dwell on the pain. Instead, Bromell leaned on his optimism and a tight-knit support crew. “I know I can get through it if I just had the right team around me,” he said, emphasizing how “a lot of the healing comes from the people you have around you.” But how does he stay so upbeat despite the setbacks?

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

That third-place finish at Pre Classic, trailing Thompson’s blistering 9.85 and Hughes’ season-best 9.91, wasn’t just a result, it was preparation. “I definitely feel 100%. Didn’t feel anything in the race,” Bromell beamed, thrilled to test himself against a field of this caliber. “This is the type of environment I want to be in prior to the USA,” he added, already eyeing the bigger stage. His mindset is unshakable: “I’m always going to think there’s a light at the end of the tunnel.” With the USA Championships looming, Bromell’s not just running, he’s chasing those big moments he’s built for. Can he carry this momentum to the national stage and beyond? Meanwhile, he had quite a return in Rome.

Bromell blazes to explosive run in Rome

Well, Trayvon Bromell lit up the Stadio Olimpico on June 6, 2025, blazing to a world-leading 9.84 seconds in the men’s 100m at the Rome Diamond League. The 29-year-old American, a two-time Olympian, surged out of the blocks with a 0.112 reaction time, leaving rivals like Fred Kerley (10.06, fifth) and Ferdinand Omanyala (10.01, third) in his dust.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

This was Bromell’s fastest legal run since 2022, snatching the world lead from Kenny Bednarek’s 9.86. After years of injuries, this felt like a resurrection. So, what fueled this stunning comeback? Bromell’s journey has been a battle against setbacks, from Achilles surgeries to a 2024 adductor injury that sidelined him for the U.S. Olympic Trials. But what’s next for this reborn sprinter?

Bromell’s eyes are locked on the USA Championships, aiming to secure a spot for the 2025 World Championships in Tokyo. “This is the type of environment I want to be in prior to the USA,” he said after the Prefontaine Classic. With his health restored, he’s poised to dominate. Can Bromell carry this momentum to Tokyo and claim gold?



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

US Supreme Court agrees to hear cases over state policies on gender

The US Supreme Court on Thursday agreed to hear cases over state policies concerning the public school-funded sports teams that transgender students may join. The plaintiffs, two transgender women students named Lindsay Hecox and Becky Pepper-Jackson (BPJ), sued Idaho and West Virginia officials, respectively, on the basis of Title IX and Equal Protection Clause violations. They sought […]

Published

on

US Supreme Court agrees to hear cases over state policies on gender

The US Supreme Court on Thursday agreed to hear cases over state policies concerning the public school-funded sports teams that transgender students may join.

The plaintiffs, two transgender women students named Lindsay Hecox and Becky Pepper-Jackson (BPJ), sued Idaho and West Virginia officials, respectively, on the basis of Title IX and Equal Protection Clause violations. They sought to join their respective schools’ female cross-country and track teams. Hecox and BPJ have secured temporary and permanent injunctions, respectively, from lower federal appeals courts blocking their respective state restrictions. Idaho and West Virginia officials petitioned the Supreme Court to review the lower courts’ decisions under the correct application of Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause.

The students had requested that the Supreme Court hold off on deciding whether to grant the petition until their United States v. Skrmetti case was decided, as an alternative to denying the petition. The court issued its ruling on June 18 and held that Tennessee’s law banning puberty blockers and hormone therapy on transgender minors does not violate the Equal Protection Clause.

In April 2020, Hecox was attending Boise State University (BSU) as a freshman when she filed her lawsuit. She has sought to block the enforcement of Idaho’s House Bill 500. BJP was an upcoming middle school student when she filed her lawsuit in May 2021. She has sought to block the enforcement of the Save Women’s Sports Act passed in April 2021. BPJ’s birth-assigned sex was male, but she has publicly identified as a girl since third grade and has been taking puberty-blocking medication.

The ACLU has joined in representing the plaintiffs. Senior Counsel for the ACLU’s LGBTQ & HIV Project Joshua Block stated in a press release:

Categorically excluding kids from school sports just because they are transgender will only make our schools less safe and more hurtful places for all youth. We believe the lower courts were right to block these discriminatory laws, and we will continue to defend the freedom of all kids to play.

Attorney General John McCuskey said in a statement, “It’s a great day, as female athletes in West Virginia will have their voices heard. The people of West Virginia know that it’s unfair to let male athletes compete against women; that’s why we passed this commonsense law preserving women’s sports for women.”

Idaho was the first state in the nation to issue a ban on transgender women joining female public school sports. More than twenty other states have followed suit in implementing similar sport restrictions on transgender women.

The Supreme Court will begin to hear cases that have been granted certiorari in its next term, starting October 6, 2025.

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending