“I was playing for Scarborough against Whitby,” says Zoe Aldcroft as the England women’s rugby captain pauses before the start of the World Cup this week and describes one of her formative experiences in the game. “I must have been 12 at the time as I was the only girl playing rugby and we were up at Whitby. It was the coldest day ever and the wind was whipping. There was such a steep slope at Whitby Rugby Club and they had this massive guy playing for them. Whenever he broke the line they always used to shout ‘Cannonball.’”
Aldcroft, the inspirational 28-year-old leader and lock forward, lets slip a gap-toothed grin as she remembers the scene. “He’d broken the line and, as the full-back, I was the last one between him and the try line. I knew I had to stop him so I dropped my shoulder and just nailed him. I think it stunned a lot of people.”
Did that crunching tackle mark a sea change in attitudes towards her as a girl playing boys’ rugby? “Definitely in respect of my teammates, which was something I really enjoyed,” she says. “I could see they trusted me and knew I could be just as tough as them.”
We soon move on to a far bloodier incident, which was even more of a test for the young rugby pioneer in North Yorkshire. “There was a different time, in training, where I collided heads with one boy. He started crying and I was holding it in, telling myself desperately: ‘Do not cry, do not cry …’ Then I got up as quick as I could and was ready to go again. I had to show I was stronger, tougher and could take playing with the boys.”
Aldcroft was always “super-sporty” but, before rugby, she also did ballet. “I was not as nimble as other ballet dancers” she says with a little laugh before explaining that she fell into rugby after her brother Jonathan switched sports from football. “I was down there watching him on the sidelines with my parents and the coach was like: ‘C’mon then. Get involved.’
“I thought ‘Yes’ and never looked back. The best thing is that, while I was the only girl that used to play there, Scarborough Rugby Club now have 50 girls playing under-13s, under-15 and a senior set-up for women’s rugby. It’s changed so much.”
There is such optimism and warmth in Aldcroft’s character that it is unsurprising she should regard the next six weeks as another definitive stage in a female sporting revolution: “This World Cup has the potential to change women’s rugby for ever. In England, over the last few years, we’ve been filling stadiums and this tournament will build momentum and so much excitement. If we do win the World Cup, it will change our lives and also all the young girls who are growing from grassroots levels into the professional side.”
The England squad has a northern heartbeat and it seems fitting that their opening group match this Friday should be against USA in Sunderland. “The other week we tried to pick a full XV of girls from the north,” Aldcroft says. “We added a couple from the Midlands and just about made it. That’s important because Sale are the only northern club in PWR [Premiership Women’s Rugby].”
Her husband, Luke Stratford, is the scrum coach for the women’s team at Sale Sharks. Aldcroft smiles ruefully when reminded Luke has said before that she worries about keeping her place, despite being World Rugby’s women player of the year in 2021and after winning 65 caps. “I have this impostor syndrome sometimes, but it makes me tick in a weird way. It makes me feel like I have to push myself again because you see so many times where life just changes quickly.”
Aldcroft is an intriguing mix. She carries a searing focus on the field, leading by example, while away from rugby she is relaxed and chatty. Some of her friends in the squad have described her as “the craziest girl” they know. “It’s probably because I’m super-dedicated and, playing rugby, I love the contact that maybe other people shy away from. I really go for it. But, off the pitch, I can be silly and fun and goofy.”
Jonny Wilkinson is her inspiration and during his playing career those last three words she uses to describe herself would never have applied to the obsessive No 10 who helped England win the men’s World Cup in 2003. “Years later I read one of his books,” she says, “and that instilled in me a little bit of his mentality. I related to it because I’m a perfectionist and obsessed with winning and being the best. I met him when I was on a tour and from then I was so interested in his way of thinking.”
Aldcroft smiles when asked if she told Wilkinson that she carries a knitted doll of him at the bottom of her match bag. “No, because I didn’t have my doll back then. But I always think a little like he did because I’m obsessed with my performance.”
I’ve heard that, as soon as she is alone after a game, Aldcroft will watch a recording of the match. “I still do that and it’s always the whole game. My husband’s like: ‘Switch off.’ I say: ‘Just let me watch this and then I can chill.’ I can’t relax until I’ve watched it and seen what I could have done better.”
Does she ever feel proud when watching herself? “Maybe more a feeling of relief. I’d say: ‘I’ve been OK, I’ve done my job.’ Maybe when I’ve finished rugby I’ll look back and think: ‘Oh. That was quite good.’”
Her most painful match remains the 2022 World Cup final against New Zealand – when England started the game in Auckland on the back of an unbeaten run of 30 victories. Aldcroft felt certain they would become world champions: “I wasn’t even nervous because I had absolutely no doubt. In my eyes there was no way we were losing that final.”
England were 14-0 up in 14 minutes but, soon afterwards, Lydia Thompson was sent off. Aldcroft was substituted after 29 minutes after a concussion and England ended up losing a gripping game 34-31. “It was a big lesson because you see how quickly a game can change and you have to fight against the unfairness as well. We had a chance to score a try from that last lineout; 99% of the time we would have caught it and gone over, but it didn’t happen.”
Aldcroft stresses that “the culture around the team had to change and, since Mitch [former All Black head coach John Mitchell] came in, we’ve become a completely different team. We’ve worked massively on our culture, on our bond as a team. We were tight [in 2022] but not to the level that we are now. It’s something we’ve really tried to develop as, the tighter you are as a team, the harder you want to fight for each other on the pitch.
“We’ve done a lot of work in telling the stories of our lives. We want to have conversations that go into a deeper part of our teammates’ life and know them down to their roots. Knowing what makes each other tick makes such a difference.”
Some members of Aldcroft’s squad have extraordinary personal stories – none more so than Meg Jones who, in March, spoke to me in moving detail about the death of her parents within the space of four shattering months. “Meg is the strongest person I’ve known,” Aldcroft says. “Before her mum and dad died, she stood up and spoke about how her mum was an alcoholic. Lots of people in the room hadn’t known because she’d kept that to herself for so long. When her parents died, it was something she wanted to address with the group and she was completely open. We know when she needs a moment and we support her as best we can.”
Jones is the vice-captain, alongside Marlie Packer, and there is also a wider leadership group. “We all have different attributes and different relationships with different people in the team. It brings us together and allows people to elevate themselves and be empowered.”
Our conversation moves in different tangents and Aldcoft is amused as she remembers her husband wearing shorts to their wedding. They recently celebrated their first anniversary and she describes how, when they first met outside a nightclub in Gloucester, she was 20. “Luke was in fancy dress, dressed as a woman,” Aldcroft says drily, “in a long skirt and a top bought from the charity shop.”
Luke knew she was an England international and, having diligently pursued her, they eventually began to go out and were married last summer. Aldcroft wore an elegant white wedding dress, but her new husband cut a different figure in a sky blue jacket, white shirt, silver bow-tie and navy-blue shorts. “He hates wearing trousers, even in minus conditions,” Aldcroft says. “So that was his one condition – wearing shorts on the wedding day. I had to think what would look good with shorts and as soon as the wedding was done the tie was off and the flip-flops were on. It helps that I’m super-chilled as well.”
It is almost as distinctive that England’s World Cup captain is keen to become a podiatrist after her rugby career. “This summer I did my foot-health course as a starter and I think I want to do a degree in it. It’s a lot about joint alignment, your gait, and also chopping away scaly skin and sorting out in-grown toenails. My Dad’s feet are the worst. He’s got a big fat corn and I love scraping it out. Honestly, just making bad feet good? I love that.”
We return to the serious stuff. England won their seventh successive Six Nations in April. But they nearly blew a 31-7 lead in the final match against France and scraped home 43-42. “That was the best thing that could have happened,” Aldcroft says. “That second half showed we’re not there yet. So this pre-season we’ve really dug in and gone for it. When we’ve got our foot on their throat we can’t ease off.”
England, with Aldcroft playing flank, dispatched France with conviction in their final warm-up match before the World Cup, winning 40-6 away from home. It was their 27th consecutive win. They also beat New Zealand convincingly, 49-31, last October and Aldcroft picks out the reigning champions, along with France and Canada, as England’s biggest threat: “We know that, when it gets to the World Cup, New Zealand switch it on again. So it’s important we stay ahead of our game.”
The Red Roses squad watched the semi-final and final together as England’s Lionesses won the Euros and she says: “It’s an amazing time for women’s sport and now it’s our turn to do our bit and grow rugby in England.”
There is just time for one last question. Will England win the World Cup? Aldcroft’s answer is as swift as it is resolute: “I believe that we will.”
Trevell Jordan couldn’t have been happier with where he was.
The Mesa, Ariz., native was a roughly 30-minute drive from home at nearby Grand Canyon University, playing volleyball as a freshman for a school that was coming off an appearance in the semifinals of the NCAA Championships.
Jordan started 21 matches before missing the last four with an injury and was named to the All-MPSF Freshman Team. The Lopes were eliminated in the semifinals of the MPSF Tournament, but despite an 18-10 season, the plan was to run it back.
“We were a really young team, so we were pumped for the upcoming season,” Jordan said. “We had already made a bunch of plans of all the things we were going to do together to get ready.”
One meeting that came on a couple of hours’ notice and lasted all of five minutes changed everything.
“It came out of the blue, on one Sunday morning, where our coach texted our group chat and (wrote) the (athletics director) wants to meet with you guys,” Jordan recalled. “This was over the summer and half our team already left for home and we got to the meeting thinking it was going to be about what it was going to be like next year with the coaches. The AD walked in, said we are cutting your program, and we got two questions off before she booked it out of the room. It was quick.”
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Suddenly, Jordan had to find somewhere else to play volleyball. He had chosen Grand Canyon because it was so close to home.
Never did he ever think his next journey would take him to an island six hours away in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
“It was a big move to come across the ocean over here,” Jordan said.
Ultimately it was his connections to a bunch of players on the team that led to the 6-foot-10 sophomore middle blocker joining the Rainbow Warriors in the fall.
He knew sophomore hitter Finn Kearney, who grew up in nearby Phoenix, and also played with setter Tread Rosenthal, Justin Todd and opposite Kainoa Wade with Team USA.
Jordan was on the United States U21 team that won a bronze medal for the first time ever at the FIVB World Championships in China in August with Wade and Rosenthal.
“It was a really cool experience and achievement, especially for me. I didn’t make the first two USA teams. I was on the alternate roster, sadly, but I think that lit a fire underneath me for this last one,” Jordan said. “It really brought a better version out of me getting cut from those other two tryouts, and when I went in there, I went in with the mentality of, ‘I want to play.’”
That’s the same mentality Jordan is bringing into the practice gym at UH as he tries to crack the starting lineup on a loaded Hawaii team ranked No. 2 in the country in the preseason AVCA rankings entering today’s home opener against New Jersey Institute of Technology at Bankoh Arena at Stan Sheriff Center.
Hawaii lost Kurt Nusterer — who had one year left of eligibility but left to pursue a major career opportunity — in the middle but returns sophomore Ofeck Hazan. UH also landed a 7-foot freshman in Roman Payne and has Justin Todd, another Team USA alum who can play both on the outside and in the middle.
Jordan landed in Hawaii for the first time in August when he came to start school.
Off the court, the biggest difference was getting used to the palm trees and the tropical climate after spending his whole life growing up in the desert.
On the court, Jordan is used to playing with some of the best players in the country in his experiences with the USA team.
Compared to his one year at Grand Canyon, the major difference is the daily grind that comes in the practice gym.
“We’re all talented and there is for sure a standard that has been set to the highest bar that we have,” Jordan said. “And that’s why you have to come into the gym every day to compete. There’s always going to be someone better than you, so that’s why you want to play to the best of your ability every day in the gym and get as much out of each other as you can.”
TREVELL JORDAN
6-10, Soph., Middle Blocker
All-MPSF Freshman Team (at Grand Canyon)
Hit .889 for Team USA to win bronze at FIVB World Championships
DeLand won its sixth consecutive district title and made the furthest postseason run in the Volusia-Flagler area in 2025.
The Bulldogs advanced to the Region 1-7A semifinals but had to play Winter Park, the No. 1 team in Florida. DeLand’s season came to an end there, but it was still a successful campaign for one of the area’s perennial powers.
Libero/Defensive Specialist: Ava Bessette, Iola, sr.
Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
The 2025 Marion County girls volleyball season was one to remember. We saw breakout performances from outside hitters all over the Ocala area. The Trinity Catholic Celtics went undefeated in the county while fielding one of the program’s most talented rosters. Forest made history with its ninth county title in a row under head coach Jim Collins.
The season was much more than those leading lines. We saw scores of volleyball players give their all in hopes of having the best season of their careers. Now that the ball is no longer in play, the Star-Banner is ready to unveil the latest edition of all-Marion County volleyball players.
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – It’s not uncommon for athletes to transfer schools in this era of collegiate sports.
However, for new University of Hawaii middle blocker Trevell Jordan, it wasn’t a move he was expecting to make.
Jordan — who has U.S. National team experience — had a stellar freshman season at Grand Canyon University, playing in all 21 of the Lopes’ matches as a freshman, amassing 111 kills and 67 blocks.
In April, the GCU team was blindsided when the school announced that it would no longer sponsor the sport.
“None of us saw it coming, like it was out of the blue,” Jordan said. “Went into this meeting thinking it was just gonna be how like next year was gonna go, and then that’s what they dropped the bomb, and like the meeting was like five minutes before they left.”
It was reclassified as a club sport with GCU putting out a release saying that the move was to stay competitive with other NCAA Division I programs.
Grand Canyon just joined the Mountain West Conference, a league that does not carry men’s volleyball.
With the abrupt shutdown, it left the entire Lopes roster looking for a new home, with many players catching the eyes of coaches around the country.
Jordan found his way to Manoa.
“He had offers to go to every top program in the country and ironically they were pushing him to make a fast decision,” UH head coach Charlie Wade said. “They pushed him towards us because I was the one saying, ‘hey, I’m in for the long haul, I want you here, take your time to figure it out.’”
Jordan is now getting accustomed to volleyball in the islands as he joins a squad with big aspirations in 2026.
UH ended last season one game shy of the National Championship.
“The difference in commitment here with the fans, the program, the school, as at GCU, we didn’t get as much love as we did like any other sport,” Jordan said. “It’s been really cool, the team and squad has been really inviting, so they’ve been working with me to get more like accommodated to here.”
Jordan and the ‘Bows open the 2026 season on Friday, the first of two home matches against the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
First serve is set for 7 p.m. Hawaii time.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.