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Archives for July 2025

Ledecky’s 1500m dominance continues with gold at swimming worlds

July 29, 2025 by Tara S

Associated Press

SINGAPORE — Katie Ledecky has ceded a tiny bit of ground in other events, but she’s still unbeatable in the 1500-meter freestyle.

She won it again Tuesday in the swimming world championships in Singapore, finishing in 15 minutes, 26.44 seconds. Simona Quadarella of Italy took silver in 15:31.79 — a European record — with bronze for Lani Pallister of Australia in 15:41.18 in a very quick-paced race.

“I was just trying to get out fast, but comfortable enough that I could go from there,” Ledecky said. “I’m happy with the time and happy with the swim.”

“I love this race,” she added. “It was the race I broke my first world record in 2013. Lots of great races over the years.”

Ledecky was ahead of her world-record pace through 1,250 meters, pushed early by Pallister. It was Ledecky’s second medal in these games after taking bronze in the 400 free behind Canadian Summer McIntosh.

The numbers speak to Ledecky’s dominance, the most decorated female swimmer in history who has been on top for more than a decade.

With Tuesday’s swim she now owns 25 the top 26 times in history in the 1,500. Her time Tuesday was the fifth fastest, not far off her world record of 15:20.48 set in 2018.

It was her 22nd gold medal in a world championships and her 28th overall. Add to that nine Olympic gold medals and 14 overall. If you’re not counting, that’s 42 Olympic and world medals — 31 gold.

Watching from the stands was new International Olympic Committee President Kirsty Coventry. She was joined by former president Thomas Bach. Coventry was an Olympic gold medal winner for Zimbabwe in 2004 and 2008 in the 200-meter backstroke.

The Americans had the top qualifying times going into four finals and won one gold and three silver medals with very close finishes in all three.

The United States team has been battling what officials called “acute gastroenteritis” picked up at a training camp in Thailand before arriving in Singapore.

American head coach Greg Meehan said much of team had turned the corner.

“We’re taking it a day at a time,” he said in an interview with American network NBC. “Obviously, this is not how we thought the first few days of this competition would go. But I’m really proud of our team, our medical staff working overtime. You don’t want your medical staff working overtime.”

“If you were in our team area you would never know that the overall majority of the team has gone through something over the last few days,” Meehan added, saying the team “vibe” was good.

McIntosh, who won two gold medals the first two days, did not race on Tuesday, Day 3 of the competition.

Paris Olympic champion David Popovici of Romania won the 200-meter freestyle, overtaking American Luke Hobson in the last 50 meters for the victory. Popovici swam 1:43.53 with Hobson across in 1:43.84. Tatsuya Murasa of Japan was third in 1:44.54.

“I think it was better than the Olympics to be honest,” Popovici said of the victory. “You know why? Because I trained a lot for the Olympics. But this coming for a more relaxed year, easygoing year after the Olympics. I don’t know. I feel very proud of myself.”

Kaylee McKeown of Australia took the women’s 100-meter backstroke, closing over the last 50 to beat American Regan Smith. McKeown finished in 57.16 — just .03 off the world record held by Smith. Smith finished in 57.35 with bronze for American Katharine Berkoff in 58.15.

McKeown is the two-time defending Olympic champion in this race and also in the 200 backstroke. She also beat Smith a year ago in Paris with Smith taking silver.

Pieter Coetze of South Africa represents a new wave of contenders with the 21-year-old winning the men’s 100 backstroke in 51.85 seconds. Thomas Ceccon of Italy took silver in 51.90, with bronze for Yohann Ndoye-Brouard in 51.92. Ceccon is the world-record holder in 51.60.

In the last final of the night, Anna Elendt of Germany — swimming from Lane 1 — took the women’s 100-meter breaststroke in 1:05.19. American Kate Douglass took silver in 1:05.27, with bronze for Tang Qianting of China in 1:05.64.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

US Boxing Star Claressa Shields Defends Undisputed Heavyweight Crown

July 29, 2025 by Tara S

US boxer Claressa Shields continues to stand alone, after the two-time Olympic gold medalist successfully defended her undisputed heavyweight crown with a dominant win over New Zealand fighter Lani Daniels by unanimous decision on Saturday.

“I hit Lani with some big shots,” said Shields following the win. “I broke her to the body, I broke her down to the head — I mixed it up on her.”

“Lani is just very, very tough, and I knew she would be tough just from watching her fights and I could tell she worked on her speed,” Shields acknowledged afterwards. “She fought a hard fight.”

With a 17-0 record, including three knockouts, Shields is the first boxer — man or woman — to achieve undisputed status in three weight classes.

“I’m ready for anyone. I want the biggest and best fights out there,” said Shields. “I’m going to stay at heavyweight and hopefully get the big fights with Franchon Crews, Che Kenneally.”

Even more, the ambitious 30-year-old is next targeting a fight with the undefeated Laila Ali, hoping to lure the 47-year-old out of retirement by putting up $15 million for the clash.

“Hopefully [Ali] saw the fight tonight and says, ‘You know what? I think I can take her,'” said Shields. “So, hopefully she saw it tonight and tells us yes, but I just want to make the best fights and the biggest fights, and that’s against whoever

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Boxing Tagged With: Claressa Shields

Lottie Woad Wins Scottish Open in Professional LPGA Tour Debut

July 29, 2025 by Tara S

Just Women’s Sports

British golfer Lottie Woad saw her star skyrocket on Sunday, as the 21-year-old phenom took the 2025 Scottish Open trophy — becoming the second player in three years to win in their professional LPGA debut in the process.

“I think it’s quite hard to do that, but very special to win in my first event,” Woad said after the win. “Everyone was chasing me today, and [I] managed to maintain the lead and played really nicely down the stretch and hit a lot of good shots.”

The debut win places Woad alongside US star Rose Zhang, who opened her career by lifting the 2023 Mizuho Americas Open trophy at 20 years old.

After previously refusing purses to maintain NCAA eligibility, the rising Florida State senior’s first pro payday totals $300,000 of the tournament’s $2 million overall payout.

Woad made even more history along the way, as her 21-under-par performance tied 2022 Scottish Open champion Ayaka Furue’s all-time record score at the tournament.

Second-place finisher Hyo Joo Kim — the world No. 8 South Korean star — capped her weekend performance a full three strokes behind Woad, who rose 38 spots to sit at No. 24 in the world rankings with her stunning victory.

Ultimately, with each of the 2025 LPGA Tour’s 19 tournaments thus far claiming a different winner — the longest stretch of parity in the organization’s 75-year history — the former world No. 1 amateur is arguably minting herself as this season’s breakout star.

Filed Under: Golf, Women's Golf

NMSU’s Emma Bunch earns prestigious collegiate golfing honor from LPGA

July 23, 2025 by Tara S

Nick Coppola | Las Cruces Sun-News

New Mexico State’s top female golfer has earned one of her most prestigious honors yet.

The LPGA Foundation named the Aggies’ Emma Bunch as the 2025 recipient of the Dinah Shore Trophy, which honors the world’s top female collegiate golfer based on academic and athletic achievements. The winner of the award must have a 3.2 GPA or higher, participate in at least 50% of her team’s events, have a scoring average of 78 or less, and “demonstrate leadership and community impact.”

Friends of Golf, who established the Dinah Shore Trophy in 1994 to honor the late LPGA and World Golf Hall of Famer Dinah Shore, will support NMSU’s women’s golf program with a $10,000 grant after the award was bestowed to Bunch.

Bunch won two individual titles this past season to give her an NMSU record seven in her career. She also finished tied for 11th at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, one of golf’s most prestigious amateur tournaments.

Bunch finished tied for first at the Conference USA Championships before losing a playoff to Western Kentucky’s Sydney Hackett, and was then named CUSA Player of the Year before taking part in her second-straight NCAA Regional. She is currently ranked No. 42 in the women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking.

Apr 2, 2025; Evans, Georgia, USA; Emma Kaisa Bunch, of Denmark, reacts after her putt on No. 18 during the first round of the Augusta National Women's Amateur at Champions Retreat. Mandatory Credit: Katie Goodale - Augusta Chronicle/USA TODAY NETWORK

Outside of golf, Bunch maintains a 4.0 GPA while studying Biochemistry at NMSU. She mentors children ages 4-16 as a junior golf coach during summers and leads women’s golf clinics at NMSU. Bunch also volunteers at El Caldito Soup Kitchen, supports the Mesilla Elementary Jog-a-thon and organizes campus clean-up initiatives at NMSU.

“Being selected for the Dinah Shore Trophy is such a big honor, and I could not be more grateful,” said Bunch in an LPGA Foundation press release. “I am so proud to join a list of very accomplished women. None of it would be possible without the tremendous support I’ve gotten from NMSU and the Aggie community, and I am so happy to help spread the Aggie name and give back to the program.”MORE

Bunch will return for her final season at NMSU in the 2025-26 campaign and hopes to qualify for the LPGA Tour afterward. She hopes to use her biochemistry degree to conduct research or serve as a mental coach to help young athletes.

“Emma is as special as they come,” said NMSU women’s golf coach Danny Bowen. “She does everything with a smile on her face and with determination to give her best every day. This award would be given to a worthy person if it found its way to her.”

Filed Under: Golf, Women's Golf

‘There are no limits for excellence.’ Venus Williams champions a historic win at DC Open

July 23, 2025 by Tara S

Howard Fendrich, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — There are plenty of reasons why this particular victory by Venus Williams in this particular tennis match — just one of hundreds — resonated with so many folks.

That she’s 45, for one thing. Only one woman, Martina Navratilova, ever has won a tour-level singles match while older; her last victory came at 47 in 2004.

That Williams hadn’t entered a tournament anywhere in 16 months.

That she needed surgery for uterine fibroids.

And when asked Tuesday night after beating her 23-year-old opponent, Peyton Stearns, 6-3, 6-4 at the DC Open what message others might take away from that performance and that result, Williams was quick to provide an answer.

“There are no limits for excellence. It’s all about what’s in your head and how much you’re able to put into it. If you put in the work mentally, physically, and emotionally, then you can have the result,” she said. “It doesn’t matter how many times you fall down. Doesn’t matter how many times you get sick or get hurt or whatever it is. If you continue to believe and put in the work, there is an opportunity, there is space, for you.”

Williams has been winning at tennis for decades. Her pro debut came when she was 14. Her first Grand Slam title came at Wimbledon in 2000, less than a month after her 20th birthday.

She accumulated four major singles trophies before Stearns was born and eventually wound up with seven, five at Wimbledon and two at the U.S. Open, plus another 14 in women’s doubles — all with her sister Serena — and two in mixed doubles.

“I have so much respect for her to come back here and play, win or lose. That takes a lot of guts to step back onto court, especially with what she’s done for the sport,” said Stearns, who is ranked 35th and won NCAA singles and team titles at the University of Texas. “You have a lot behind you. You have accomplished a lot. And there is a lot of pressure on her and to kind of upkeep that at this age. So massive credit to her for that.”

There were challenges along the way for Williams, none more public than the diagnosis in 2011 of Sjögren’s syndrome, an energy-sapping auto-immune disease that can cause joint pain.

More recent was the pain from fibroids — noncancerous growths — and shortly before the DC Open, Williams said: “Where I am at this year is so much different (from) where I was at last year. It’s night and day, being able to be here and prepare for the tournament as opposed to preparing for surgery.”

As thrilled as the spectators — “Who I love, and they love me,” Williams said — were to be able to watch, and pull, for her under the lights Tuesday, other players were rather excited about it, too.

“I commend her so much for being out here,” said Taylor Townsend.

Naomi Osaka’s take: “She’s, like, the queen. There’s a royal air around her.”

“She’s one of the best athletes of all time,” Frances Tiafoe said. “Her and her sister, they’re not only great for the women’s game, not only great for women’s sports, but they are so iconic.”

Yet, there were some on social media who wondered whether it made sense for the tournament to award a wild-card entry to Williams instead of an up-and-coming player.

DC Open chairman Mark Ein said it took him about two seconds to respond “Of course” when Williams’ representative reached out in April to ask whether a spot in the field might be a possibility.

A reporter wanted to know Tuesday whether Williams took any satisfaction from proving doubters wrong.

“No, because I’m not here for anyone else except for me. And I also have nothing to prove. Zip. Zero. I’m here for me, because I want to be here,” she said. “And proving anyone wrong or thinking about anyone has never gotten me a win and has never gotten me a loss.”

Filed Under: Tennis, Women's Tennis

Liberty Duo Sabrina Ionescu, Natasha Cloud Cash in with WNBA All-Star Sweep

July 23, 2025 by Tara S

Liberty fans enjoyed their fill at the 2025 WNBA All-Star weekend, as teammates Sabrina Ionescu and Natasha Cloud executed a New York sweep of Friday’s 3-Point Contest and Skills Challenge titles.

Cloud took home the Skills Challenge trophy with a winning time of 36.4 seconds — just 1.1 seconds faster than second-place finisher Erica Wheeler of the Seattle Storm.

Ionescu then nabbed her second career 3-Point Contest title with a final-round score of 30, tying retired Chicago Sky guard Allie Quigley for the second-best single-round record in the event’s history. Ionescu’s 37 points to win the 2023 edition still stands as the event’s all-time mark.

“It’s fun — I was so excited for [Cloud],” Ionescu said after her win. “We were talking about it before we even came out here, about being able to participate in it together and cheer each other on.”

The hefty prize pool raised the stakes for both players, with a heightened $55,000 going to the Skills Challenge winner while the 3-Point Contest champ picked up $60,000.

Cloud credited her motivation to securing a property down payment with Liberty teammate and partner Isabelle Harrison, saying “You’re gonna get that house.”

As for Ionescu, her winner’s check will be fulfilling a pre-competition promise she made to rookie contender Sonia Citron, who will receive half of Ionescu’s earnings while the other half goes to charity.

“That takes a lot of courage to be able to do that [3-Point Contest] as a rookie…I was really proud of her,” said Ionescu after the competiton. “The other half will go to my foundation to continue to be able to give back in communities that mean a lot to me.”

Filed Under: Women's Basketball

Boxing Champion Katie Taylor Takes Third Straight Win Over Amanda Serrano

July 16, 2025 by Tara S

Undisputed super lightweight champion Katie Taylor defeated Amanda Serrano in the boxing legends’ third-straight fight on Friday, winning the highly-anticipated rematch by majority decision.

In front of 19,721 fans in Madison Square Garden, Taylor capped the pair’s rivalry just over three years after meeting in the first-ever women’s headliner fight at the iconic New York venue.

“I can’t believe that this is my life,” said Taylor after the clash. “I’m headlining the show at Madison Square Garden. I’m looking back on the whole journey. What an absolute, what an amazing life. These are nights that I dreamed of as a kid and sitting here again as a winner. I’m so happy, so grateful.”

While the 39-year-old Irishwoman retained her world championship titles in the bout, Taylor had to battle as the 36-year-old Puerto Rican, who holds world titles in over four weight classes, kept the 30 rounds tight.

While Taylor ultimately took home top honors, Most Valuable Promotions co-founder and CEO Nakisa Bidarian, whose company presented the Friday event, made it clear that “Nobody lost tonight.”

The night’s biggest winner was the sport itself, as Taylor and Serrano’s third and final contest led an all-women’s card with 17 world titles on the table — a historic moment that Taylor does not take for granted.

“We created history together three times,” Taylor said about Serrano. “My name will always be embedded with hers forever. I’m very, very happy about that.”

“What we’ve been able to create over these last few years has been unbelievable,” she continued. “It’s amazing to have a rival like that in the sport. And this has brought [the world to] an event like this tonight, an all-female card, because of what myself and Amanda have been able to do to produce over the last few years.”

Filed Under: Boxing, Martial Arts

Lottie Woad Turns Pro Following Near-Win at 2025 Evian Championship

July 16, 2025 by Tara S

English amateur Lottie Woad plays a shot at the 2025 Evian Championship.
Amateur Lottie Woad finished tied for third at the 2025 Evian Championship. (Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

Amid her historic summer on the links, English amateur and rising Florida State senior Charlotte “Lottie” Woad is officially turning pro, accepting LPGA membership two days after nearly topping the 2025 Evian Championship leaderboard.

One week after becoming the first amateur to win a European Tour tournament since 2022 — with the 21-year-old taking the 2025 Irish Open title by a massive six-stroke margin — Woad came within one stroke of becoming the first amateur to win an LPGA major in 58 years.

Sunday’s finale saw world No. 25 Grace Kim emerge as the 2025 Evian Champion, with the Australian taking the title following a playoff with Thailand’s No. 2 Jeeno Thitikul.

Both Kim and Thitikul finished the tournament at 14-under-par, while Woad trailed a single stroke behind to tie 2021 Evian winner and Australia’s No. 5 Minjee Lee for third-place in the LPGA Grand Slam.

Unlike Lee, who banked $547,200 for her efforts, Woad’s amateur status means she had to forgo what would have been her share of the $8 million purse.

“I did have a look after and was like, ‘oh no,'” joked Woad about Lee’s check.

England's Lottie Woad watches her drive at the 2025 Evian Championship.
Lottie Woad will make her professional debut at the 2025 Scottish Open. (Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

Woad to make pro debut next week

That all changes now, though, as Woad’s finish made her the first player eligible to join the LPGA through the governing body’s new lite Amateur Pathway (LEAP) program, in which top young golfers amass points to earn pro membership.

While the world’s highest-ranking amateur initially said she would take the week to weigh turning pro with returning to Florida State for her final NCAA year, Woad made her decision to turn pro Tuesday morning.

In addition to accepting the LPGA membership, she will also join the European Tour in 2026 — an invite Woad earned with her Irish Open win.

“I have only reached this point in my career through the help and support that I’ve received from so many people and organisations over many years,” Woad wrote in an Instagram post thanking her family and coaches. “I am very excited about this next chapter.”

Woad’s next chapter is imminent, as the world No. 64 announced her professional debut at the 2025 Scottish Open next week.

The field of established golf pros are already on notice, with Sweden’s No. 30 Madelene Sagström warning that “[Woad is] going to take European and American golf by storm very soon.”

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Golf, Women's Golf

Iga Świątek Makes History With 2025 Wimbledon Championship Win

July 16, 2025 by Tara S

just womens sports

New world No. 3 tennis star Iga Świątek won her first Wimbledon Championship on Saturday, needing only 57 minutes to dominate US finalist No. 7 Amanda Anisimova 6-0, 6-0 to top the 2025 London Slam.

To date, Świątek has never lost a Grand Slam final.

Saturday’s title is the 24-year-old’s first tournament win this season and the sixth Grand Slam trophy of her career alongside her four French Open wins and her 2022 US Open victory.

Świątek is now the first woman to win Wimbledon without dropping a single game in the final in over 100 years, with Saturday’s performance joining only Dorothea Lambert Chambers’s 1911 London title win over Dora Boothby in that elite club.

Even more, Świątek and legendary German star Steffi Graf are now the only women’s players to win a Slam by a perfect 6-0, 6-0 scoreline in the Open Era, with Graf doing so at the 1988 French Open.

“[It’s] pretty surreal,” said Świątek afterwards. “I’m just proud of myself because… who would have expected that?!”

With grass proving to be one of the trickiest surfaces in the modern calendar, Świątek is now the eighth straight first-time Wimbledon women’s champion, and the first to hail from Poland.

“Today I just wanted to enjoy the time that I had on the Centre Court and enjoy the last hours of me playing well on grass, because who knows if it’s going to happen again,” she said. “I just focused on that, and I really had fun.”

While Świątek celebrates, the tennis world will now switch back to the hardcourt — many players’ preferred surface — as the 2025 US Open kicks off next month to wrap up the Grand Slam calendar.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Tennis, Women's Tennis

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