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Tara S

Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer makes history as NCAA’s winningest coach

January 25, 2024 by Tara S

By: Yi-Jin Yu | GMA

Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer is officially the winningest coach in NCAA history.

VanDerveer, 70, earned the record Sunday with Stanford’s win against Oregon State. The Stanford Cardinal beat the Beavers 65-56 in a home game at Maples Pavilion.

“Robin, it’s just a little bit surreal to be honest with you,” VanDerveer told “Good Morning America” co-anchor Robin Roberts on Monday. “You just take each game one at a time and I’ve loved coaching.”

“And you know, this was a really tough game,” VanDerveer continued. “Oregon State’s a great team and we had some players really step up. [Forward] Kiki Iriafen had 36 points. It was an awesome game and I was just really happy for our fans that we could do it at home. It was a full house and it was a great celebration. It was really amazing.”

Following Stanford’s victory, VanDerveer said she was impressed Oregon State also celebrated her achievement.

“I just also want to say that when I went through the line with the Oregon State players, each one of them congratulated me and I just thought that was first class,” VanDerveer said. “It was just an outpouring of love from the fans and it’s a little bit overwhelming. It was just really an awesome day.”

Stanford’s latest triumph brings VanDerveer to 1,203 wins, passing former Duke men’s coach Mike Krzyzewski for the most wins. Krzyzewski said in a statement afterward that VanDerveer was a “true guardian” of basketball.

“This is a tremendous accomplishment for Tara VanDerveer, who is already one of the most accomplished coaches in the history of basketball. This is yet another milestone to add to an amazing legacy,” Krzyzewski said. “More important than all the astounding numbers and career accomplishments, she’s positively impacted countless lives as a coach and a mentor. Tara remains a true guardian of our sport.”

VanDeveer said hearing from other top sports leaders like Krzyzewski has been “really meaningful,” too.

Throughout her four-decade career, VanDerveer has made it to the NCAA tournament 37 times, led her team to three national championships and even coached the USA Basketball National Team to an Olympic gold medal in Atlanta in 1996. But she’s most pleased with the growth of Stanford’s women’s basketball program.

“I’m most proud of the improvement and just the life impact that Stanford basketball has on the women I coach,” VanDerveer said. “I learned so much from the players on our team and to be at Stanford, around such great coaches, a great university and have my assistants that helped me. Basketball is a team sport and obviously I wouldn’t have accomplished this without great assistance and great, great, great players.”

As a coach, VanDerveer said she ultimately wanted to help young players become the “best versions of themselves.”

“I want to take them to a place that they can’t get by themselves,” she said. “I learned this, I think, from my piano teacher, where I was trying to teach myself and that was hopeless but I was making CDs in a year with a great piano teacher and I just want to help our team and each player be the best they can be.”

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Women in Sports, Women's Basketball, Women's Sports

Shiffrin gets career win 95 in first World Cup slalom 

January 23, 2024 by Tara S

JASNA, Slovakia (AP) — Mikaela Shiffrin earned her record-extending career win 95 by triumphing in a women’s World Cup slalom Sunday, a day after the American ski star’s main rival sustained a season-ending injury.

In the first race without Olympic slalom champion Petra Vlhova, Shiffrin edged out Croatian teenager Zrinka Ljutic by 0.14 seconds. Sweden’s Anna Swenn Larsson in third and Switzerland’s Camille Rast in fourth were the only other racers to finish within a second of Shiffrin’s time.

“We’re missing somebody really big today, we missed Petra a lot, so it’s wonderful that you stayed,” Shiffrin addressed the Slovakian spectators in a course-side interview.

It was Shiffrin’s fifth slalom win of the season and her 58th in total, a World Cup record for both men and women.

Shiffrin also set a record for most World Cup podiums in a single discipline with 82, having shared the previous best mark with Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark, who had 81 top-three results in slalom in the 1970s and ’80s.

Vlhova crashed and tore ligaments in her right knee in Saturday’s giant slalom near her hometown in the Tatra mountains.

Shiffrin and Vlhova have been dominating women’s slalom skiing for years and combined to win 14 of the last 15 races, including all eight this season, in a series only interrupted by Lena Duerr when the German triumphed at the Czech resort Spindleruv Mlyn a year ago.

“I don’t like it when (Vlhova) beats me but I love this battle. So, I’m wishing her a fast and strong recovery. This is really important for the sport, not just here in Jasna,” Shiffrin said.

“I have been thinking about her a lot the last 24 hours. For me, personally, over these years I have grown to love the battles with her. I think today she would have been so strong. So, I really miss watching her ski today and having that battle.”

Shiffrin built what looked like a comfortable lead of 0.52 seconds over Ljutic in the opening run, but almost came up short in the second.

“It was not easy on the second (run), now I feel the energy has gone,” she said. “I could hear (the fans) cheering for Zrinka, which was actually quite cool from the start to hear this noise. I knew she put down an amazing run and I had to push.”

Shiffrin was just 0.02 seconds ahead at the penultimate checkpoint, but had a strong finish to deny the Croatian her first win.

“I felt a little less on my timing than the first run,” Shiffrin said. “In the end, it was a really nice show because, for me, it was like pushing as hard as I could.”

Ljutic, who turns 20 next Friday, is regarded by many as a potential future star of the sport. Coming runner-up in Sunday’s race marked her career-best World Cup result, after one podium a year ago.

“It feels great, I’m really happy. I’m proud of myself for putting two really good runs and for managing this pressure in the second run,” Ljutic said. “I’m really sorry for Petra, she was skiing so well.”

With Vlhova out of the race, Shiffrin is close to wrapping up her eighth World Cup season title in slalom, leading third-ranked Duerr by 228 points with three events left. With a race win being worth 100 points, Shiffrin can secure the title at the next slalom in Soldeu, Andorra, on Feb. 11.

On Sunday, Duerr was 1.77 seconds off the lead in seventh.

Vlhova became the third former overall champion who had their season end prematurely this month. On the men’s side, Alexis Pinturault and Aleksander Aamodt Kilde underwent surgery for various injuries after they crashed at speed races in Wengen, Switzerland.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Olympics

NCAA No. 2 Iowa women dominate NAIA No. 1 Life 35-6, shut out Missouri Valley, 42-0 in Iowa Duals

January 23, 2024 by Tara S

by Teagan Schreiber, Iowa Athletics

IOWA CITY, Iowa – The second-ranked University of Iowa women’s wrestling team defeated Missouri Valley College and top-ranked NAIA, Life University in Carver-Hawkeye Arena on Sunday afternoon. The Hawkeyes outscored their opponents 77-47 in team points, recording five pins and ten technical falls.  

Iowa started its day of competition with a 42-0, win over Missouri Valley College. Emilie Gonzalez, Brianna Gonzalez and Alivia White all notched wins via pin over their opponents in the first period. Ava Bayless, Emily Frost and Lilly Luft recorded, 11-0, tech. falls, while Felicity Taylor, Ella Schmit, and Bella Mir downed their opponents with 10-0 tech. falls.  

The Hawkeyes kept the momentum going into final dual of the afternoon, capturing a, 35-6, win against NAIA National Duals Champions, Life University. Sterling Dias started things at 101 with a win over Devyn Gomez via a 10-0 tech. fall. Bayless downed Diana Gonzalez at 109, also earning a quick 10-0 tech. fall. B. Gonzalez worked a pin in 2:07 over Ariana Martinez at 116, followed by Taylor taking the 10-0 tech. fall against Anna Krejsa at 123.  

Life got on the board at 130 with Sarah Savidge earning a 11-0 tech. fall over Frost. Luft brought it back with a pin against Zaynah McBryde in 1:42. Reese Larramendy fought all six minutes against Jamilah McBryde, avenging her loss from Soldier Salute, with a 12-4 decision at 143. Marlynne Deede captured the win via decision, 3-1, in her second bout against Latifah McBryde this season at 155. Kylie Welker made quick work at 170 with a 10-0 tech. fall over Margaret Graham in 23 seconds. Jaycee Foeller closed out the day, taking the 2-0 decision over Madeline Welch at 191.  

HEAD COACH CLARISSA CHUN    

“Since November I feel like there has been a lot of positive feedback on our sport; how exciting it is, or how much action there is. Hosting these duals in Carver has allowed us to expand the circle of women’s wrestling and show the world what these women can do. Our women are strong, powerful, fast, all of the things. We want our fans to continue to show up and we want it to expand beyond Iowa. We are so grateful for the fans that show up and bring that energy to our program because our team feeds off of the energy that they bring.” 

 NOTABLES  

•              The Hawkeyes recognized their four seniors today; Allie Baudhuin, Sierra Brown Ton, Marlynne Deede, and Felicity Taylor.  

•              Iowa’s win against Missouri Valley College was its second shutout of the season (vs. Lindenwood, 43-0, Nov. 12, 2023).

•              Hawkeye wrestlers finished the day with a record of 19-1.

•              Iowa led with 157 total match points on the day. Life followed with 92, and Missouri Valley in last with 20.  

•              Iowa had the three fastest tech. falls on the day; Welker (0:23), Schmit (0:30), and Bayless (0:40).

UP NEXT  

The Hawkeyes will travel to Fort Wayne, Indiana, next weekend to compete in the Indiana Tech Warrior Duals and Open tournament. Iowa will open competition on Friday against Campbellsville at 2 p.m. CT inside of the Doug Edgar Indoor Track Facility. 

NCAA #2 Iowa 42, Missouri Valley College 0 

101 — Emilie Gonzalez (I) pinned Sage Beltran (M), 0:57                                         

109 — Ava Bayless (I) tech. fall Hailey Holland (M), 11-0                                          

116 — Brianna Gonzalez (I) pinned Laura Lincoln (M), 1:40                                      

123 — Felicity Taylor (I) tech. fall Ashley Whetzal (M), 10-0                                      

130 — Emily Frost (I) tech. fall Chase Kiel (M), 11-0                                                 

136 — Lilly Luft (I) tech. fall Aniseta Acosta (M), 11-0 

143 — Ella Schmit (I) tech. fall Willow Barnes (M), 10-0                                           

155 — Bella Mir (I) tech. fall Elia Falcetti (M), 10-0                                                  

170 — Haley Ward (I) decision Kelani Corbett (M), 7-0                                            

191 — Alivia White (I) pinned Tylah Allen (M), 1:16  

NCAA #2 Iowa 35, NAIA No. 1 Life University 6     

101 — Sterling Dias (I) tech. fall Devyn Gomez (L), 10-0                                              

109 — Ava Bayless (I) tech. fall Diana Gonzalez (L), 10-0                                   

116 — Brianna Gonzalez (I) pinned Ariana Martinez (L), 2:07                           

123 — Felicity Taylor (I) tech. fall Anna Krejsa (L), 10-0                                     

130 — Sarah Savidge (L) tech. fall Emily Frost (I), 11-0                                      

136 — Lilly Luft (I) pinned Zaynah McBryde (L), 1:42                                         

143 — Reese Larramendy (I) decision fall Jamilah McBryde (L), 12-4               

155 — Marlynne Deede (I) decision Latifah McBryde (L), 3-1                           

170 — Kylie Welker (I) tech. fall Margaret Graham (L), 10-0                              

191 — Jaycee Foeller (I) decision Madeline Welch (L), 2-0 

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

2023-24 high school individual state champions list, as of January 15, adding in Indiana girls champs

January 16, 2024 by Tara S

Gary Abbot | USA Wrestling

Once again, USA Wrestling will publish regular updates on the 2023-24 state high school champions for both boys and girls.

Winning a state high school title is an amazing achievement for a high school student-athlete. We will post the champions from official state high school championships for boys, as well as the girls who have won official state high school titles, as well as the recognized state competitions which are not run by their state high school association. We will also post the team champions at the state level as available. As available, we will include the state champion’s year in school and final record.

This week, we add the Indiana girls state champions, who competed in Kokomo this past week. New Haven, led by state champions Julianna Ocampo (110) and Ysabelle Ocampo (115) won the team title.

Below are the girls state champions from Alaska. State champions will be updated on a weekly basis until the state championship season has been completed in mid-March.

Indiana State Championships

at Kokomo, IN. January 13

100 – Kendall Moe (Hamilton Heights) 27-3, So.

105 – Heather Crull (Northeastern) 22-0, Jr.

110 – Julianna Ocampo (New Haven) 22-1, Jr.

115 – Ysabelle Ocampo (New Haven) 25-2, Fr.

120 – Sophia Buechner (Terre Haute North Vigo) 20-3, Sr

125 – Rose Kaplan (West Lafayette) 24-5, Sr.

130 – Kyra Tomlinson (Noblesville) 22-1, Sr.

135 – Maddie Marsh (Pendleton Heights) 14-0, Fr.

140 – Aleksandra Bastaic (Highland) 16-6, So.

145 – Elly Janovsky (Lake Central) 34-0, Sr.

155 – Mallory Winner (Jay County) 26-0, Jr.

170 – AvaLyn Mosconi (Southport) 26-0, Jr.

190 – Jaiah Oneal (Brownsburg) 23-8, Sr.

235 – Varzidy Batchelor (Northview) 26-1, Sr.

Team Champion – New Haven

PREVIOUS CHAMPIONS (in alphabetical order)

Alaska State Championships

At Anchorage, Alaska, Dec. 15-16

Div. I Boys

103 – Noah Justice (Colony) 34-5, Fr.

112 – Lincoln Werner (Student Wrestling Development Program) 34-4, Fr.

119 – Anan Siackhasone (South Anchorage) 36-4, Sr.

125 – Jacob Strausbaugh (Soldotna) 37-1, Jr.

130 – Deshawn Barbee (East Anchorage) 23-1, Sr.

135 – Matthew Mitchell (Colony) 26-1, Sr.

140 – Kenton Cooke (East Anchorage) 26-0, Sr.

145 – Cody Vansiegman (Palmer) 26-5, Sr.

152 – Trevor Michael (Soldotna) 23-3, Jr.

160 – Aaron Concepcion (South Anchorage) 27-0, Sr.

171 – Roth Powers (South Anchorage) 42-1, Sr.

189 – Kaelan Vesel (Palmer) 28-3, Jr.

215 – Spencer Johnson (Chugiak) 31-2, Sr.

285 – Arnold Baffour (Service) 16-4, Sr.

Team champion – South Anchorage

Div. II Boys

103 – Tommy Jarnig (Seward) 30-4, Jr.

112 – Ridge Conant (Seward) 30-8, Fr.

119 – Dylan McCambly (Dillingham) 14-2, Jr.

125 – Daylon Brown (Quinhagak) 18-4, Sr.

130 – Hunter Forshee-Kurtz (Seward) 37-5, Jr.

135 – Paul Dyment (Bethel) 25-9, Sr.

140 – Daniel Steffensen (Kenai Central) 31-3,

145 – Myles Campbell (Redington) 33-6, Sr.

152 – Keegan Hanson (Wrangell) 29-1, Sr.

160 – Dalton Henry (Haines) 21-3, Jr.

171 – Richard Didrickson (Mt. Edgecumbe) 18-2, Jr.

189 – Bryant Holloway (Craig) 24-0, Sr

215 – Aiden Ojala (Sitka) 23-5, Sr.

285 – Uatahouse Tuifua (Barrow) 21-0, Sr.

Team champions – Seward

Girls

100 – Jessica LeClair (Soldotna) 28-2, Jr.

107 – Valarie McAnelly (Soldotna) 30-6, Fr.

114 – Megan Spencer (Lathrop) 21-2, Sr.

120 – Rowan Peck (Soldotna) 34-8, Fr.

126 – Saoirse Cook (Homer) 27-1, So.

132 – Kaytlin McAnelly (Soldotna) 42-5, Sr.

138 – Daisy Hannevold (Soldotna) 37-3, Jr.

145 – Amelia Fawcett (Colony) 29-0, Jr.

152 – Jahzara O`Neil (Dimond) 4-0, Sr.

165 – Jessailah Thammavongsa (South Anchorage) 24-0, Jr.

185 – Roane Cook (Homer) 27-1, Sr.

235 – Manusiu Muti (Barrow) 17-0, Sr.

Team champions – Soldotna

Filed Under: Women's Wrestling, Wrestling, Youth Sports

When a world record puts the icing on the cake for gold medal Paralympians

January 16, 2024 by Tara S

The ultimate aim of an elite Para athlete is to become a Paralympic champion, to have that gold medal round the neck as validation of years of sweat and tears competing on the biggest stage.

To stand on the centre of the podium may be a dream come true but why stop there?

Winning is the priority but doing it with a world record time, well, that is just a perfect bonus.

Sports like swimming, athletics, cycling, rowing, often see many world records at the Paralympic Games, rivals pushing each other harder, faster. Barriers are smashed down every edition and that is likely to happen again at Paris 2024.

At Rio 2016 there were 177 events in athletics and 69 world records set.

Four years later, at Tokyo 2020, there were 167 events in athletics and 45 world records claimed.

There were 152 swimming events at Rio and more than 60 world records broken.

At Tokyo 2020 there were 146 swimming events and 70 world records broken. Cycling saw 25 official world records established at the Izu Velodrome. In total, 48 were broken as some were lowered several times over the 51 events.

Rio recap

Gold medalist Anna Stetsenko of Ukraine celebrates on the podium at the medal ceremony for the Women's 100m Backstroke - S13 on day 10 of the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games
Anna Stetsenko (Ukraine) won a gold medal and broke an old-standing world record in Rio 2016. @Buda Mendes/Getty Images

Records tend to tumble anyway when it comes to the pool but Rio 2016 proved to be a watershed for some of the oldest records.

Bradley Snyder (USA) and Ukraine’s Anna Stetsenko (UKR) demolished two of the longest-standing marks in the sport.

Snyder broke the 30-year-old world record held by countryman John Morgan in the men’s S11 100m freestyle to take his third Paralympic gold medal in a time of 56.15 seconds.

“It is something that I have been trying very hard to do during the last three years. And to break that record was a remarkable experience,” Snyder said.

We inspire each other to push each other even harder – Bradley Snyder 

“I know I will not be the world record holder for long. There are many athletes and we inspire each other to push each other even harder.”

Stetsenko bettered the mark set by Germany’s Yvonne Hopf in the women’s 50m freestyle S13 at Atlanta 1996 Paralympic Games, touching in 27.34 seconds, just 0.04 faster.

“I can’t say that I was really surprised because I trained a lot for it. I felt a delight, happiness and lots of positive emotions which overwhelmed me that moment,” Stetsenko said.

As mentioned before, there were 152 swimming events at Rio and more than 60 broken world records. 

The dominating star of the Rio Aquatics Centre was China’s Wenpang Huang, who swam world record times in S3 and SB2 events in the 50m freestyle, 50m breaststroke, 200m freestyle and 200m individual medley. Tragically he died in a car accident in 2018.

Durand, the legend

A female Para athlete celebrates after winning her race at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games
Cuban Omara Durand is the fastest female Para athlete in the world and has set several world records. @Alex Pantling/Getty Images

Looking back to the Brazilian edition of the Games, the best was saved to last as the final day of the athletics programme saw seven world records broken.

The headlines belonged to Cuba’s Omara Durand, the sprinter who never stops winning. The fastest female Para athlete on the planet won the 400m T12 to add to her 100m and 200m titles. She did it with her third world record of the Games.

She posted a time of 51.77 seconds knocking over a second off her qualifying run two days earlier. Durand also reduced her own 100m T12 record to 11.40 seconds.

Tokyo 2020 was a great success for the Cuban too and who would bet against the eight-time gold medallist breaking even more records in Paris?

Durand, who originally set her T12 200m world record of 23.03 seconds in Doha in 2015, finally broke it in Japan with a time of 23.02 seconds.

The future is bright

So, what will we see at Paris 2024? More world records, certainly. American runner Nick Mayhugh was a hugely exciting prospect at Tokyo, and he is not afraid to state his aim of more world records having finished with three.

He also won three gold medals from his four events in the T37 class.  In the men’s 200m, Mayhugh broke the world record for the second time with his time of 21.91. It was his third world record of Tokyo 2020.

The footballer turned athlete confirmed his spot in the final of the 100m with a world record sprint of 10.97 seconds in the qualifying heats becoming the first T37 runner to beat the 11-second barrier. In the final he lowered his time again, recording 10.95.

“I expected things to happen the way they did in Tokyo. I have worked for it and I had world record times written and taped on my wall,” Mayhugh said after his success.

Power point

Three women posing for photos on the podium with their medals
Folashade Oluwafemiayo (center) won the gold medal and set a world record in the 86 kg category in Para Powerlifting in Tokyo 2020. @Hiroki Nishioka/WPPO

There were 20 Para powerlifting events at both Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020. Nine world records were broken in the Brazilian edition of the Games and just two in the Japanese one. The latter came by the efforts of Guo Lingling and Folashade Oluwafemiayo.

China’s Lingling will be favourite to break a world record or two in Paris, having gone from strength to strength since making her Paralympic Games debut in Tokyo.

She set a world record of 109kg in the 41kg event at Tokyo 2020. Her starting lift was 105kg (a Paralympic record) and she failed once at 108kg before making it. She then succeeded in an extra world record attempt at 109kg.

The other world record holder, in the 86kg category, was Nigeria’s Oluwafemiayo, who beat her own world record twice before using a fourth and final attempt to set a mark of 152kg.

Expect rowing world records

Rowing is likely to produce world records at Paris 2024 after the changes to the rules. Tokyo 2020 was the first time the Para crews raced 2,000m (instead of 1,000m) to put the sport in line with able-bodied world rowing.

The standard is rising very quickly, and world’s best times are being set constantly. It seems inevitable that records will go in the ‘City of Light’.

There are five events scheduled including, for the first time, the PR3 mixed double sculls.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Paralympics

Rutgers Women’s Basketball lands 2024 Five-Star G Kiyomi McMiller

January 8, 2024 by Tara S

Alec Crouthamel • TheKnightReport

In the wake of facing off against star Caitlin Clark, the Rutgers women’s basketball team landed another star in the form of a verbal commitment from five-star guard Kiyomi McMiller, who joins signee Zachara Perkins in the team’s 2024 recruiting class.

McMiller, who is in her second season playing at the Life Center Academy in Burlington, New Jersey, chose the Scarlet Knights over the likes of Ole Miss, Florida State, and Temple.

The 5-foot-9 point guard is currently ranked 22nd in the country according to espnW’s recruiting rankings.

On the court, McMiller is at her best with the ball in her hands as a scoring guard. She has great speed with the ball and elite handles to get past defenders and find an open look, even drawing (lofty) comparisons to former NBA star Jamal Crawford with her ability to dribble in space with the ball. Appropriately nicknamed “The Product”, arguably McMiller’s best trait is her creativity on the court, with or without the ball.

“I’m inspired by both of my parents,” she told Business of College Sports. “I get my creativity from my dad and my grandmother, which carries over to my dribbling. I’m always in the gym with my mom and dad working on my game.”

She’ll join a stacked guard room with youth and experience mixed in at Rutgers, with contributors such as Kaylene Smikle, Mya Petticord, Lisa Thompson, and Jillian Huerter. Head coach Coquese Washington, formerly a guard herself in college and in the WNBA, is putting together a room of guards that can attack off the perimeter to either set up teammates or take it themselves for the score.

Similarly, off the court, McMiller has also become a trailblazer. Back in February, she became the first high school athlete to sign a Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deal with the iconic Jordan Brand. Bringing that brand recognition to Piscataway will put more eyes on the program, and Rutgers as a whole.

The Silver Spring, Maryland native grew up in a basketball family, as both of her parents coached at nearby Montgomery College. Her father, Mike, also joined on at Life Center Academy as an assistant coach.

“It’s a dream come true being with the brand that stands for the same passion that I have for the game,” she said. “I look forward to encouraging basketball players to use their creativity and platform to define their purpose.”

McMiller and Perkins currently make up the program’s 2024 class, but Washington and the staff may not be done yet. Fellow five-star guard Mikayla Blakes, ranked tenth in the class, also has Rutgers among her finalists. There’s plenty of familiarity with the program, as Blakes attends Rutgers Prep in Somerset, and current Scarlet Knight Antonia Bates played for the Argonauts out of Easton, Pennsylvania.

Both Blakes and McMiller were listed as two of the top scorers in the class by espnW, and adding both players would bring a lot of attention and hype to a Scarlet Knights program looking to get back on track in the Big Ten.

Filed Under: AOTM, Athlete Spotlight, Women's Basketball, Women's Sports, Youth Sports Tagged With: Kiyomi McMiller

Rutgers women’s basketball lands a 5-star recruit in Kiyomi McMiller

January 8, 2024 by Tara S

By Kristian Dyer via Rutgers Wire

Kiyomi McMiller committed to Rutgers women’s basketball on Saturday afternoon, giving the Scarlet Knights the highest-ranked recruit since head coach Coquese Washington took over the program.

A five-star guard, McMiller is ranked the No. 22 player in the nation by ESPNW. She is a part of the 2024 recruiting class.

McMiller plays for Life Center Academy (Burlington, New Jersey). Through 11 games this season, she is averaging 29.5 points and 5.9 rebounds per game.

Playing a strong schedule both nationally and in-state, Life Center is currently 5-7 on the season.

She is the second-highest-ranked recruit in the nation in the 2024 class behind five-star guard behind Mikayala Blakes. ESPNW ranks Blakes as the ninth-best recruit in the nation.

For Washington, this is a huge recruiting win for her and the program. Landing a top-tier in-state target who is ranked among the best players in the nation is certainly an important building block for the Scarlet Knights

Filed Under: AOTM, Athlete Spotlight, Women's Basketball, Youth Sports Tagged With: Kiyomi McMiller

Kate Douglass took different strokes to swimming success

January 5, 2024 by Tara S

By: Nick Zaccardi | NBC Sports

Kate Douglass went from squeezing onto the Tokyo Olympic team by two hundredths of a second in 2021 to becoming arguably the world’s most versatile swimmer in 2023, winning six medals at July’s world championships.

At USA Swimming’s annual Golden Goggles awards in November, Douglass shared the stage with Katie Ledecky as co-Female Athlete of the Year winners.

Douglass made the 2023 World team in freestyle, breaststroke and individual medley events. No American woman has swum all of those disciplines over an Olympic career. Douglass could do it over five days in Paris in July. She is an NCAA champion in the butterfly, too.

The 22-year-old native of suburban New York looked ahead to 2024 in a September goal-setting session with Todd DeSorbo, her coach at the University of Virginia.

“I said I wanted to make the Olympic team in multiple events,” Douglass recalled, “and kind of be as dominant as I can this summer.”

“She loved doing things correctly and challenging herself to see how fast you can go using perfect technique,” said Carle’ Fierro, who coached her then. “I would set goals for her, and then once she was close to that goal, I would set another one.”

Westchester swimmers received rubber ducks for personal bests or remarkable efforts in practice. Douglass’ mom, Allison, estimated she collected more than 50.

In January 2015, the reward was ice cream after Douglass qualified for her first Olympic Trials less than two months after her 13th birthday. At the same meet, she took photos with Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte (images courtesy Fierro).

Around that time, she spent 16 months wearing a back brace for 16 hours a day to treat moderate scoliosis. Douglass said that was likely the biggest challenge of her life to this point. She lugged the brace to her first Olympic Trials in 2016, where she raced four events with a best finish of 32nd as one of the youngest swimmers at the meet.

Douglass then spent her last two years of high school swimming at Chelsea Piers Aquatic Club in Stamford, Connecticut. Her coach there, Jamie Barone, had trained with Michael Phelps in the early 2000s at North Baltimore Aquatic Club.

“I watched Phelps go from an unknown 15-year-old to who he is. I swam at a national, international caliber for quite a while, and never in my life have I seen a swimmer move through the water the way Kate Douglass moves through the water,” Barone said of her efficient and deceptively effortless strokes. “She cuts through the water like a knife.”

Swimswam ranked her the No. 1 high school recruit of the class of 2019 in one of their 1,000-plus articles tagging her over the last decade.

Douglass considered schools in California, the longtime hotbed of women’s swimming, but ultimately stayed closer to home at the University of Virginia.

The Cavaliers were coming off a 12th-place finish at NCAAs and a coaching change, hiring DeSorbo to lead a program for the first time.

“She wasn’t going to college to try to make an Olympic team,” Allison said. “(Douglass and DeSorbo) matured together.”

Three more in Swimswam’s top 16 of the class of 2019 also went to Charlottesville. Virginia has since three-peated as national champion, with Douglass turning pro (but not moving) after sweeping all seven of her events at last March’s NCAAs (three individual, four relay).

“She takes days off,” DeSorbo said, “but mainly because I force her to. She gets really anxious and stressed if she feels like she’s not doing enough.”

The nerves were there on the fourth night of the Tokyo Olympic Trials, where the top two make the team in each individual event.

Douglass, after placing third in the 100m butterfly, was seeded second going into the final of the 200m individual medley, a race she hated at the time. It was a hard event for her, and it caused anxiety.

Still, she considered it her last real chance to qualify, though she still had other races remaining.

“That was kind of the first time I’ve ever really been under that kind of pressure,” she said. “Making the team was something I kind of never really believed that I’d do. I just didn’t really want to set that goal for myself and be disappointed.”

Douglass trailed second place by 1.03 seconds after the first 100 meters. She then powered home in her two best strokes — breast and free — to out-touch Madisyn Cox by two hundredths for the second and final Olympic spot behind Virginia teammate Alex Walsh.

“After I made it, I was like, oh, this is legit,” she said, “and then I think that I kept that momentum going.”

In Tokyo, Douglass rallied from sixth place at the midpoint to grab bronze by 11 hundredths of a second. Upon returning home, she donated a bunch of Olympic swag to Westchester Aquatic Club.

In 2022, she took a break from the 200m IM. She won 200m breast bronze at worlds instead.

Then came the summer of 2023. At the U.S. Championships, she won the 100m free and 200m IM, placed second in the 200m breast and third in the 50m free and 100m fly. At worlds, she took 200m IM gold and 200m breast silver, was fourth in the 100m free and anchored four medal-winning relays. Her six medals tied for the most of any swimmer.

“The variety of events that Kate can be competitive on an international level is, as far as I know, unrivaled in swimming history,” Barone said.

Douglass said in November that she will probably race four events at June’s Olympic Trials. She will likely skip the 100m fly even though it’s held on days one and two, and she would have no other events until day four. If trials go well, she can become the first American woman to swim six events at an Olympics (including relays) since Missy Franklin swam a record seven in 2012.

Kate Douglass’ Possible Olympic Trials Schedule

DateSessionEventRound
June 18Day100m FreestyleHeats
Night100m FreestyleSemifinals
June 19Day200m BreaststrokeHeats
Night100m FreestyleFinal
Night200m BreaststrokeSemifinals
June 20Night200m BreaststrokeFinal
June 21Day200m Individual MedleyHeats
Night200m Individual MedleySemifinals
June 22Day50m FreestyleHeats
Night50m FreestyleSemifinals
Night200m Individual MedleyFinal
June 23Night50m FreestyleFinal

“I can’t remember if she said it or I said it, but I think one of the big goals is to try and break the world record in the 200m IM,” DeSorbo said. The world record is 2:06.12. Douglass is the sixth-fastest woman in history at 2:07.09.

Douglass is also working toward a master’s degree in statistics. Her busy summer included a remote data analytics internship with Dell Technologies.

In a Nov. 3 Virginia swimming Instagram Q&A, she said, “I see retirement in the near future. I don’t know when, but it’s coming. And I’m looking forward to it,” according to Swimswam.

She later clarified it was sarcasm.

“I always joke about retiring because I’m like, I can’t wait for retirement,” she said. “But at the same time, I mean, I have no idea. I definitely wouldn’t retire after this summer.”

Douglass admires Maya DiRado, who decided before her first Olympics in 2016 that it would be her final meet. DiRado won gold in her last race, then began a career as a business analyst at age 23. Douglass met DiRado to learn more about that transition.

“She’s so talented and also knows that there’s plenty to life after swimming,” DiRado wrote in an email, “which I hope young athletes, coaches, and parents appreciate when they watch her next summer.”

Filed Under: AOTM, Swimming Tagged With: kate douglass

Cherotich – the “small Faith” inspired to rising heights by Kipyegon

January 3, 2024 by Tara S

Mike Rowbottom | World Athletics

For the athlete that Faith Kipyegon calls “small Faith”, it has been a very big year.

At the age of 19, Faith Cherotich – the rising talent who has recently been mentored by the multiple world and Olympic champion Kipyegon – is a senior world medallist in the 3000m steeplechase and reigning world U20 champion.

She is also the women’s World Athletics Rising Star awardee for 2023.

“I am very happy and proud to receive this award,” Cherotich said shortly before receiving her honour at the Prince’s Palace of Monaco, where ‘big Faith’ received the World Athlete of the Year award for women’s track after setting three world records and earning two world titles.

Kipyegon has set a dizzyingly high bar in 2023. But one day, perhaps, Cherotich – who had only finished her studies at school two weeks before the Monaco event  – can hope to operate at a similar level in the No.1 Olympic sport.

“Faith Kipyegon has been mentoring me on how to be a good athlete,” she said. “I want to be a champion, to follow her. She has been teaching me a lot. I really appreciate it.

“It was a very good year for me. It was my first World Championships and I was happy with how I ran. It was a good race for me.”

Faith Kipyegon and Faith Cherotich at the World Athletics Awards 2023

Faith Kipyegon and Faith Cherotich at the World Athletics Awards 2023 (© Mattia Ozbot)

The year had begun for her at the World Athletics Cross Country Championships in Bathurst, Australia, where she helped Kenya earn silver in the women’s U20 team event, missing out on an individual medal by one place.

Having finished third in the previous year’s Wanda Diamond League Final, where her time of 9:06.14 moved her to third on the world U20 all-time list, Cherotich began her 2023 Diamond League season by finishing third in the opening meeting in Doha.

But a few weeks later her progress was traumatically undermined when the car she was travelling in – en route to compete in another Diamond League meeting – was involved in a collision with a runaway truck, leaving her with minor injuries and concussion.

“I had an accident in a car,” she said. “But then I recovered, and I had three weeks to train before the World Championships trials. I was able to qualify, so that was good.”

In the final at the World Athletics Championships Budapest 23, she was the last in the field to hold on to the eventual respective gold and silver medallists, Bahrain’s Winfred Yavi and her fellow Kenyan Beatrice Chepkoech, the 32-year-old world record-holder.

Cherotich finished almost five seconds clear of her nearest rival, Ethiopia’s Zerfe Wondemagegn, clocking a personal best of 9:00.69.

Faith Cherotich at the World Athletics Championships Budapest 23

Faith Cherotich at the World Athletics Championships Budapest 23 (© Getty Images)

In the first Diamond League meeting after the World Championships, in Zurich, Cherotich was again third behind Yavi and Chepkoech.

And in a super-fast Diamond League Final in which the world champion set an area record of 8:50.66 and Chepkoech followed her home in a season’s best of 8:51.67, Cherotich broke the nine-minute barrier with a personal best of 8:59.65. That time in Eugene places Cherotich 11th on the senior world all-time list.

Valentijn Trouw from Global Sports Communication, who manages Cherotich’s career, is quietly confident of her continuing progress.

“I think she is going to be a future star,” he said. “She has all the ingredients. It reminds me – we are here with Faith Kipyegon and Faith Cherotich, and Faith Kipyegon 10 or 12 years ago was coming into athletics like Faith Cherotich is coming into athletics now.

“She is extremely talented. But besides that, she has a good mentality, she is calm and she is composed. She knows what she wants and she is coming in gradually in a very nice way but has the future on her side.

“She has incredible opportunities. But she has had a tough year this year because she had a quite serious car accident at the beginning of the year,” he added. “She was on her way to Eldoret to take a flight for one of the Diamond Leagues and a truck hit the car and that took her out for about six weeks.

“Everybody survived in a good way but with some injuries. But Faith had to take some rest because she had some minor injuries, including concussion. We needed to make sure she took it really easy and didn’t start back too quickly.

“Then she had a very short time to come up to the trials and she made the team, and then she had time to build on that and be ready for the World Championships.”

Faith Cherotich at the Diamond League meeting in Doha

Faith Cherotich at the Diamond League meeting in Doha (© Matthew Quine / Diamond League AG)

It further proved her positive mindset.

“In those kinds of situations, you see how somebody is handling the situation. And to be honest, I have never seen her panicking,” Trouw continued. “She is always calm, she accepts life as it comes and makes the best out of it. And with that attitude, plus her talent, she can achieve anything.

“Many times, for us from the outside, if you look at how an athlete is handling those kinds of situations you see also how they are behaving when they are under immense pressure in an Olympic final or going for a record in the Diamond League – it is very telling.

“Faith stayed extremely calm and accepted advice from the team around her. I think she joined our team two years ago. She was at school and she was showing some great potential in cross country. 

“She helped win team silver at the World Cross Country Championships – and she expected a little more, but she did well.

“She is still very young, but you feel there is so much inside that if we go slow she can have a 15- or 20-year career and go a long way.”

Asked if her securing a senior medal in Budapest had surprised him, Trouw added: “No. It could have happened that she ran fourth, fifth or sixth and still ran a good race. But to try to go for a medal was realistic. Because after the trials, she still had the time to prepare for the World Championships. 

“Some people, you don’t need to tell them what to do in a competition because their intuition is such that they know what to do. And she is somebody that senses extremely well what she can do and what she can’t do. 

“And so tactical races – be it fast, be it slow – it doesn’t matter so much for her because she is very much herself and she knows how much fuel is inside to bring it in a good way to the finish line.

“So far, I have not seen her making any tactical mistakes, where you would say: ‘You should have done this different’. And that, combined with her strength and talent, means she can do good things in championships.”

Kenya's Faith Cherotich on her way to the world U20 3000m steeplechase title in Cali

Kenya’s Faith Cherotich on her way to the world U20 3000m steeplechase title in Cali (© Oscar Munoz Badilla)

Prior to the World Championships, it had appeared that Cherotich’s predecessor as world U20 champion – her 20-year-old compatriot Jackline Chepkoech – stood a better chance of reaching the podium in Budapest. Jackline Chepkoech ran a PB of 8:57.35 in London in the lead up and then placed ninth in Budapest.

“I think both Faith and Jackline are the future for Kenya in the steeplechase,” said Trouw. “We help them both. They don’t train together, but they are very good together when they are in the Diamond League. They share the room together and they are friendly, but they don’t train together.

“Faith is still a bit younger and newer to athletics and to settings like this. But at the same time, she is very much herself, and that helps not just in life in general, but also in sports.

“As for her coach, we are now looking for someone to take her career forward. So far, she has been in school and she had a local coach who has been overseeing her. For 2024 she would like to get more experience in the Diamond Leagues, and to run consistently under nine minutes, and to go for a good result at the Paris 2024 Olympics.

“She just wants to make the next step in athletics. But she is in a phase of her career where things can go fast.”

Mike Rowbottom for World Athletics

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight

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