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Women's Sports

From crying in a food court to lifting the cup: Lion’s whirlwind week

May 29, 2024 by Tara S

By: Gemma Bastiani | AFL

Grand Final week was a rollercoaster of emotion for Dakota Davidson. For the first time, she lifts the lid on what really happened

FROM sobbing in the Carindale food court, to winning a second AFLW premiership, Brisbane’s Dakota Davidson experienced the full emotional gamut in the space of nine days last year.

Her Lions, perennial finalists, were forced to approach the 2023 season a little differently after significant player turnover in the previous trade period. But against the odds they had reached yet another preliminary final, hosting Geelong at Brighton Homes Arena.

Davidson had been key to that surge deep into finals, heading up a new-look forward line and playing career-best footy.

But just a quarter away from another Grand Final, Davidson buckled in what looked like a textbook anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture.

What ensued was a week of scans, second opinions, and a harsh spotlight on the key forward’s availability for Brisbane’s fifth Grand Final in eight seasons.

“I cried every night, it was just hectic,” Davidson told AFL.com.au.

“To go from tearing my ACL to playing in a Grand Final. It’s pretty mind-blowing.”

02:04

Dec 3 2023

‘No ACL, no worries’: Davidson never in doubt

Premiership Lion Dakota Davidson speaks to AFL.com.au about her final-quarter heroics after overcoming an injury scare throughout the week

Fearing the worst

In a see-sawing preliminary final against an impressive Geelong outfit, the Lions were up by four points as the seconds ticked down to the final break.

Davidson, who had kicked two important goals to that point, worked into the pocket to lay a tackle on Cats captain Meghan McDonald. In the contest Davidson’s leg folded awkwardly under the defender’s body.

As the siren blew, the Lion was still on the deck clutching her left knee with a pained look on her face.

Helped from the ground, the joint was tested by physios on the bench while tears streamed down her face.

“I remember them doing testing and they were like ‘brace for the worst’,” Davidson said.

01:45

Nov 25 2023

Davidson distraught after horror knee concern

Brisbane’s star forward Dakota Davidson is reduced to tears after succumbing to a cruel injury following this tackle

It was nearly a year to the day since the Lions’ Grand Final loss to Melbourne. On that day Brisbane captain Breanna Koenen injured her knee – a posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) – at the same ground, inside the same 50m arc.

In that game, Koenen’s injury sucked the air out of the side despite the defender’s strength to play through the pain.

The Lions, and specifically head of women’s football Breeanna Brock, weren’t going to allow a knee to impact the mindset of the group again, still with a quarter to play in a tight final.

“Bree Brock looked me dead in the eyes and she was just like ‘pull it together, show the girls nothing’s wrong, win the game and we’ll sort it out tomorrow’,” Davidson said.

“So, I went to the sheds and got my s*** together and then came back out and sat on the bench.”

Dakota Davidson celebrates after the preliminary final between Brisbane and Geelong at Brighton Homes Arena on November 25, 2023. Picture: AFL Photos

Once the game was over, and the Lions had edged out Geelong in a thriller, Davidson let the reality of her situation wash over her.

“I went home and just bawled and cried. Your doctors tell you to brace for the worst, so I’m trying to mentally set myself up for my season to be over, plus the 2024 season,” Davidson said.

“I can get really in my head about injuries.”

The aftermath

Davidson was sent for a scan the following day, before meeting with then-Brisbane AFLW player development manager Sally Young to work through the emotion of it all.

“I remember sitting in the Carindale food court just sobbing,” Davidson said.

“We tried to come up with a plan on how to do it. Where to go, how to go about it. It wasn’t just the footy, it was my off-season as well, thinking well into the future. I know you shouldn’t do that, but you’ve got to prepare.”

After that hard conversation, Davidson went to watch the other preliminary final, between North Melbourne and Adelaide, alongside her teammates that afternoon. That game was to decide Brisbane’s opposition for the Grand Final.

“I was with the girls and that’s when I got the phone call,” Davidson said.

“It was a whirlwind because I got, not the wrong news, but (the doctor) didn’t have the full prognosis. I got told ‘look, it’s probably an ACL but let me just get a second opinion’ and I just ran with that. I said ‘f*** I’ve done it’ but he said ‘no, just let me get a second opinion’.

“I gave myself five minutes alone to break down before I went back out to the girls.”

Brisbane players celebrate a goal during round five, 2023. Picture: AFL Photos/Getty Images

A mere hour later, however, another phone call brought better news.

“He got another person’s opinion and goes ‘you haven’t done it. You haven’t. The second opinion was you’ve torn your meniscus, so you have done something’,” Davidson said.

“He said he didn’t know how, judging by how I collapsed… I was the one per cent that hasn’t done it.”

She was reassured that, although it would be painful, playing through the injury would not cause any further structural damage.

Davidson was now wholly focused on getting herself right for the Grand Final in a week’s time.INDIGENOUS ROUNDDad’s bush tucker business connecting Lion to her roots

Speculation and elation

Since then-Western Bulldogs captain Katie Brennan’s suspension ahead of the 2018 Grand Final, there had not been so much intrigue around a player’s availability for an AFLW decider.

Davidson’s role in Brisbane’s attacking structure could not be overstated in 2023. The side’s leading goalkicker, she had played all but one game that season – only missing a round four clash with the Kangaroos through suspension – and provided a crucial target inside 50.

External expectation was that without Davidson, a Grand Final victory over a humming North Melbourne outfit seemed near-on impossible.

“I was very tense and anxious. We sat down as a group and I said to everyone ‘look, obviously the media has been hectic this week, I’m pretty overwhelmed’. I was just trying to focus on one of the biggest games of my career,” Davidson said.‘My teammates thrive off my energy’: The powerhouse Lion with eye-popping celebrations

Questions over her fitness continued to swirl until teams were announced that Friday.

Adding to the emotion of the week, on the Monday evening Davidson was named in the All-Australian side for the first time.

“I said to myself in the mirror after a week of preseason, I go ‘Daks, you’re going to make All-Australian this year’. I remember this very specifically,” Davidson said earnestly.

“I said ‘Daks, you’re going to make All-Australian, you’re going to be the best forward in the game’ and it sat with me. Before every game, or before I left for travel, I looked myself in the mirror and said it. Then I got named in the squad, and I kept manifesting it in the mirror.

“When I got named All-Australian, it was a pretty mind-blowing moment.”

Brisbane’s All-Australian players Ally Anderson, Dakota Davidson and Sophie Conway during the 2023 AFLW Awards on November 27, 2023. Picture: AFL Photos

The enjoyment of that moment was stymied, however, with focus quickly switching to doing all she could to be in the best possible shape for that Sunday’s Grand Final.

“I had physio, I had the ice machine, I had the compacts,” Davidson listed.

“I did everything in my capability, knowing that I could play if I passed the (fitness) test, so I did everything I could… I’d never had bigger quads in my life.”

Passing the fitness test meant she could play, but it didn’t mean it wouldn’t be without pain. Learning to adapt to that pain, and still be the powerful presence her team had come to know her as, was the next big challenge.

“I remember doing a little running session on the Wednesday with a bit of ‘S’ running and changing direction. It was pretty heavily strapped, and I could definitely feel it, but I was like ‘just wait for adrenaline. I’ll just wait for the adrenaline to start pumping’,” Davidson said.

Dakota Davidson at Brisbane training in November, 2023. Picture: AFL Photos

The big day

Soon enough, it was game day.

It was Davidson’s third Grand Final, so the build-up was familiar, outside the intense scrutiny on her knee.

“Everyone had faith in me, I’d been cleared, so I just had to mentally get myself out of that pain zone,” Davidson said.

“I wasn’t fully ready until I did the warm-up on game day. (Head coach Craig Starcevich) was like ‘take as much time as you need’… I did that, I felt alright, there were a few tweaks here and there, but I knew adrenaline would kick in.”

Dakota Davidson warms up ahead of the 2023 AFLW Grand Final. Picture: AFL Photos

From there, trying to take in the Grand Final was the focus, but it passed in a blur.

G-Flip performed before the game, with two former Lions forwards at their side. Erin Phillips was honoured after announcing her retirement a month prior. Fans packed into the sold-out stands of Ikon Park. Melbourne’s sun shone bright.

“I don’t even remember running out. I don’t remember what I was feeling, I don’t remember what I did, or who I looked at, or who I ran next to,” Davidson admitted.

But once the opening siren sounded with the roar of the crowd, Davidson’s focus was singular; do as much for the team as she could.

Statistically her opening half was a quiet one, but that didn’t worry her coach, Starcevich. A quiet word at the main break was all that was needed to keep Davidson’s head up.

“Craig actually came up to me at half-time and said ‘Daks, this is a game of moments, you haven’t had much obviously in the first half, but just relax. Your time will come, and when you do take it with both hands’,” Davidson said after the game.

Isabel Dawes and Dakota Davidson celebrate a goal during the 2023 AFLW Grand Final. Picture: AFL Photos

Her aggression and chatter continued throughout the third quarter, again generating little reward on the stats sheet, but she and her teammates knew they were on the right track.

“I went into three-quarter-time, and I didn’t feel like I had two touches, I didn’t feel like I hadn’t made an impact… I didn’t catch a ball, but I made it to contests, I tackled,” Davidson said.

And, as Starcevich had assured Davidson, taking your moment when it comes is all that was needed. That moment came early in the final quarter with Belle Dawes twisting out of danger on the boundary line and neatly hitting up the forward at the top of the attacking 50.

Down by seven points, but swiping back the game’s momentum, the Lions held their breaths as Davidson went back to take the set shot. One that was eerily similar to one she had missed in the Grand Final a year prior.

“I said to myself, ‘I’m kicking this goal’. I didn’t even realise how far out it was,” Davidson said.

Kick it she did, adding another six minutes later to put the Lions back in front. It was a lead they didn’t again cede for the day. At that point, her knee was merely an afterthought in premiership celebrations.

00:47

Dec 2 2023

Electrifying Davidson explodes with game-turning double

An injury-hampered Dakota Davidson steps up when Brisbane needs most with two huge marks and goals in the final term

After that hectic week, Davidson gave herself some time to just enjoy what she had achieved, the personal goals she was able to tick off as well as the club-wide success.

Once things had settled down, surgery to repair the torn meniscus in her knee took place in February, giving her plenty of time to be fit and firing for the official start of preseason in June.

But one eye is already on the prospect of becoming the first AFLW club to go back-to-back, and defying external expectation once more.

“We always get written off, but we love it,” Davidson said.

“We prefer that status.”

Filed Under: Australian Football, Australian Rules Football, USAFLA, Women in Sports, Women's Sports

Thriving Through Sport

May 7, 2024 by Tara S

THE TRANSFORMATIVE IMPACT ON GIRLS’ MENTAL HEALTH

Women’s Sports Foundation

This new report examines the relationship between girls’ sport participation and mental health. The data provides strong evidence that in high quality sport settings, playing sports can help lower depression and anxiety and enhance peer relationships and meaning and purpose. The study helps to identify the aspects of the sport setting that drive these outcomes, including levels of autonomy, coach relationships and more. The report also explores the unique qualities of sport relative to other extracurricular activities as well as the connection between them. Findings from the report are integrated into policy and practice recommendations that demonstrate how they can be applied in the field.

Thriving Through Sport Executive Summary

Report Data Highlights

Infographic

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

Softball and baseball on same day! Woman makes NCAA history

April 10, 2024 by Tara S

Melanie Martinez-Lopez | MLB

Jillian Albayati continues to be a pioneer for women in the game of baseball.

On Sunday, she became the second player in collegiate history — and the first in Division II — to play baseball and softball on the same day when she accomplished the feat for Cal State San Marcos.

According to the San Diego Union-Tribune, the Cal State San Marcos baseball team was down four pitchers, including three starters, and were considering open tryouts in the middle of chasing the California Collegiate Athletic Association title.

Softball coach Stef Ewing immediately thought of Albayati, a right-handed pitcher for baseball and a third baseman for softball.

The move made sense, given Albayati began to play baseball when she was 3 years old — and she played throughout high school. The All-CIF pitcher from Anaheim went 20-0 with a 1.68 ERA in her high-school career, all while hitting .360.

“I piped up and said, ‘We’ve got Jill on our team, and she played high school baseball,’” Ewing told San Diego Union-Tribune reporter Kirk Kenney. “She pitches and plays third base for the U.S. Women’s National Baseball Team. She can throw.’”

It was not the first time Albayati made a mark on women’s baseball.

She was selected to play in the inaugural Trailblazer Series. It was created in 2017 to provide girls with an opportunity to play baseball with other girls in a highly competitive environment.

The following year, Albayati participated in the 2018 Girls Baseball Breakthrough Series, a program that focuses on developing girls who play baseball.

Now, she has once again made her mark nearly seven years later — this time, just days before the 2024 Trailblazer Series gets underway on Saturday.

When Albayati was offered the opportunity to pitch in a baseball game Sunday for Cal State San Marcos — a first for Division II sports (Christina Elsbury did it last year for Division III Gallaude) — there was no hesitation. According to the Union-Tribune, she threw a bullpen session on Friday to showcase her skills, and soon after, Albayati was added to the roster.

“We’re in a place where we’re pretty banged up on the mound,” Cougars baseball manager Jose Garcia told the newspaper. “It’s not asking her to come in and pitch in high-leverage situations. It’s more to give us a cushion, to eat some innings and help keep everybody as healthy as possible.”

Albayati’s complete game

When Sunday came around, the 5-foot-6 Albayati was ready to pitch in.

First came the softball game against Cal State Monterey Bay. After celebrating her teammate’s walk-off grand slam in a dramatic 4-3 win, the sophomore switched out of her softball jersey and sprinted over to the nearby baseball field. She was called in from the bullpen two batters into the ninth inning.

Albayati was not intimidated by the seven batters she faced. She allowed two runs (one earned) off three hits and one walk to close out the inning.

She then returned to the softball field after her collegiate baseball debut for the second game of a doubleheader. She went 2-for-6 in the softball team’s 4-2 victory to help the club complete the sweep — before once again returning to the baseball dugout to end her day.

“It’s just amazing,” Albayati said to Kenney. “I’m so grateful for the opportunity to be able to do that.”

Albayati hopes to be able to continue playing both sports, but she told Ewing her priority is softball.

“But I know her love is baseball,” Ewing said. “I thought we made a kid’s career in more ways than you can imagine by having her go out there. … We made her dream come true today.”

With both teams on the road an hour away for the next series, there is a chance she may travel with the baseball team while the injured pitchers continue to recover.

The newspaper also reported that Albayati was invited to pitch for the Savannah Bananas over the summer.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, baseball, Softball, Women in Sports, Women's Sports

We always thought of exercise as a punishment — now it feels like fun

March 26, 2024 by Tara S

By: Ella Glover | Metro UK

Before Jasmine Thomas took up surfing, her mental health was at a low point.

In the midst of the pandemic, she found herself slipping into a depression.

‘It was nice to have Zoom calls with friends when we couldn’t do it in person, but one thing led to another and the next minute I’m drinking alcohol, smoking cigarettes and taking drugs,’ says Jasmine, 24.

‘And all because I was bored and too lazy to leave the house for my daily exercise. In the end, I had to start therapy.

‘The pandemic was a real turning point in my life. It made me realise I needed to focus on myself, my health and my happiness and to stop trying to please everybody else.’

After saving up during lockdown, the Welsh born Jasmine embarked on an 18-month trip to Asia back in 2022. This is where she discovered the sport that would ‘save [her] life’: surfing.

Jasmine thomas surfing
Jasmine went from no exercise at all to surfing every day (Picture: Jasmine Thomas)

‘I’m happiest when I’m by the sea and there’s good weather,’ she says. 

‘It doesn’t feel like exercise because I’m having fun even on the bad days.

Jasmine found surfing through her boyfriend, who is an avid surfer. 

‘I feel the time passes so quickly, you go in thinking you’ve only been in the water for 30 minutes and then next thing you know it’s three hours later and your arms are tired from all the paddling.’

She quickly went from doing zero exercise to surfing everyday, and even when she can’t surf due to the weather conditions, she is still motivated to stay healthy for when she’s ready to get back on the board.

On top of that, she says, surfing gives her purpose: ‘I get excited about my weekends now knowing that I’m going to head to the beach, exercise, meet up with friends, eat food and watch the sunsets.

‘Now my boyfriend and I go to the beach and surf together, hype each other up, helping each other to improve techniques and just generally build a strong bond whilst creating memories.

‘It’s funny because I travel to see the world and culture, he travels because of the surf spots, so surfing has made us decide a lot of our travel locations from Thailand, Bali, Australia, Portugal, Morocco.

‘I guess it’s not just about the exercise, it’s everything that comes with it.’

Jasmine Thomas holding a surf board
‘Surfing saved my life’ (Picture: Jasmine Thomas)

Government guidelines for adults aged 19 to 64 suggest getting at least 150 minutes of moderate intensity activity a week or 75 minutes of vigorous intensity activity a week, as well as two days of strengthening activities for all the main muscle groups.

But not everybody enjoys generic forms of exercise like strength training in the gym or running. 

It goes without saying that exercise is difficult, especially for beginners, but if it’s boring and unfulfilling, too? It’s no wonder that just one in 20 adults in England exercise their muscles enough. 

But, finding something you love to do, be it a team sport, a community-based exercise class, a niche form of exercise or something else, can help you to reframe exercise as something fun — the physical benefits are simply a bonus of doing something you enjoy. Doing so can help to reframe exercise from something that you have to do – a chore – to something that you want to do: a privilege. 

‘Reframing exercise gives us the ability to see where exercise can be an addition to our lives, beyond a single target or objective we are looking to achieve,’ psychologist and wellbeing consultant Lee Chambers previously told Metro.co.uk.

‘It also helps us see the opportunities exercise can provide and be more open to trying new experiences and meeting new people.’

He continued: ‘It can ignite your competitive side, distract you from the feeling of exertion, help you build that social network that provides so much more than moving your body, and also helps you to harness the benefits of play, connection and enjoyment.

Join the country’s biggest running club (even if you’re a walker)

Joining parkrun is free – it doesn’t matter if you’re a keen runner, a jogger, a walker, a social stroller or are keen to volunteer and cheer from the sidelines.

Did we mention it’s free (tick) and you only need to do it once (tick tick).

‘It can shift from punishment to self-care, from an obligation that you dread to an activity that you gain joy from.’

Since she was young, Sarah Rose Bright has had a tricky relationship with exercise. 

‘I was never good at competitive sports and I was always one of the last kids picked in the team sports sessions [at school], so I started bunking off classes,’ the love, sex and intimacy coach tells Metro.co.uk. ‘Because of that I didn’t have a great relationship with exercise.’

Beyond walking – which she has always loved – and practising yoga ‘on and off’, Sarah, 50, from Somerset, couldn’t find a method of exercise that would stick. 

That is until 2012 when, at the age of 39, Sarah discovered chi gung (also known as qigong), a traditional Chinese energy practise involving a system of coordinated body-posture and movement, breathing, and meditation. 

Sarah, chi gung practitioner
‘I plan to do chi gung for as long as I physically can’ (Picture: Sarah Rose Bright)

Sarah first started practising chi gung through public classes taught by her now-fiance, Graeme.

TRENDING FOR YOU

When his classes stopped, Sarah found another chi gung instructor, Barry Spendlove, and stuck with him for 10 years.

‘All the exercise I’ve done over the years from dancing classes to sports at school, had an element of competitiveness or goal attached to them, such as playing in the school tournament or dancing in the school show,’ says Sarah.

‘I never enjoyed that pressure.’

Conversely, Sarah feels she is able to practise chi gung simply because she loves it and it feels good.

‘It is so relaxing,’ she adds. ‘Even doing a few minutes can transform how I feel.’

Over the years, Sarah has grown extremely passionate about chi gung, even training as an instructor, not because she wanted to teach it but because she loved it so much and wanted to keep learning about it. 

Sarah also uses chi gung as a motivator to make other healthy changes in her lifestyle, like only drinking alcohol around two times per year and taking long walks in the countryside, doing yoga and weight training in the week

Now, at the age of 50, Sarah says exercise is more important than ever.

‘As I headed to 50, my body started to change in gentle ways, and these made me aware of how important it is to look after my body,’ she says.

Sarah, qigong practitioner
‘At the age of 50, exercise is so important to me’ (Picture: Sarah Rose Bright)

‘As someone who didn’t look after their body for years, it is now a priority to me.

‘Whenever I’ve met people in their 70s and 80s who practice to chi gung regularly, they have a sparkle and a vibrancy that is unmistakable.

‘I want to be that person in my old age.

‘I plan to do chi gung for as long as I physically can.’

Lexi Thawley, 27, a PhD student from Manchester also found motivation for other, more generic, forms of exercise through something a little more niche – training in martial arts.

‘I find that now when I do strength training or cardio, I’m doing it because it will actually improve my ability in something I care about, not just because I feel like I have to,’ she says. 

Lexi
‘Martial arts allows you to connect with people in a way that I don’t think a lot of other forms of exercise do’ (Picture: Lexi Thawley)

Lexi says she had a ‘complex’ relationship with exercise for most of her life. 

‘I really enjoyed exercising, but I didn’t feel very confident about it, or about my body in general,’ she says.

‘I didn’t have a great relationship with my body growing up.

‘I’ve always been bigger and I think growing up in the early 2000s, when there was such a toxic culture around body image, definitely played into it.

‘I wasn’t very present in my body and I felt a lot of shame about how it looked and how it moved, so I just thought sport wasn’t for me.’

This all changed when she started going to Brazilian jiu jitsu, mixed martial arts (MMA) and kickboxing lessons around three years ago. 

‘Not only is it great for improving your confidence and empowering you, especially because you know how to defend yourself, but people are also open about the condition of their body, whether that’s in terms of injuries or making weight for competition.

‘Conversations about weight and body image and how that affects you in sports can be quite taboo, and the fact that they’re normalised within martial arts is really nice.’

On top of that, Lexi has been able to meet and connect with so many different people through her sport, something she doesn’t think would have been possible without it. 

‘It’s really cool, both in terms of enjoyment as well as having fun and making friends from all walks of life,’ she says.

‘This sport really allows you to connect with people in a way that I don’t think a lot of other forms of exercise do.’

This is the thing about finding an exercise-based hobby — it’s about so much more than just exercise. From finding community to developing a passion, there are so many hidden benefits to seeing exercise as more than just something to tick off a list.

Filed Under: Women in Sports, Women's Sports

SYDNEY TIEMANN NAMED 2024 USA LACROSSE D-II WOMEN’S PRESEASON PLAYER OF THE YEAR

February 5, 2024 by Tara S

By: USA Lacrosse Magazine 

A banner 2023 has Tiemann and Maryville positioned for more success.

Maryville attacker Sydney Tiemann is the USA Lacrosse Division II Women’s Preseason Player of the Year, USA Lacrosse Magazine announced Friday. Tiemann also secured Preseason Attacker of the Year honors.

Tiemann buried 115 goals in 2023, a Division II single-season record. She added 156 draw controls, 36 ground balls and 18 caused turnovers on top of her offensive production.

“She was a game changer for us,” Maryville head coach Melissa Gyllenborg said. “She’s a great leader.”

Maryville earned an NCAA tournament berth but fell to UIndy in the first round. With Tiemann back for another season, hopes are high for more.

Continue below to see the three other players with preseason positional recognition.

USA Lacrosse’s 2024 D-II Women’s Preseason All-Americans

PRESEASON ATTACKER OF THE YEAR 

Sydney Tiemann, Maryville

Tiemann broke the NCAA Division II single-season record with 115 goals in 2023 and led the nation with 5.75 goals per game. Her monster season included at least three goals in 18 of 20 contests.

PRESEASON MIDFIELDER OF THE YEAR 

Hannah Stanislawczyk, West Chester 

With 210 career goals, including 92 last season, Stanislawczyk has a chance to become only the second player in Division II history to reach 300 goals. She even has an outside chance of breaking the all-time Division II goals record of 310.

PRESEASON DEFENDER OF THE YEAR 

Alexandra Quinn, Pace

Quinn was one of the defensive anchors of the 2023 national championship for Pace, ranking among the team leaders with 118 draw controls, 29 caused turnovers and 35 ground balls. She helped the Setters lead the NE10 in scoring defense at 7.91 goals allowed per game.

PRESEASON GOALIE OF THE YEAR 

Jessica Gorr, West Chester

Gorr is coming off a stellar 2023 season in which she finished fourth in the nation in boths goals-against average (7.61) and save percentage (.522). She owns a career record of 33-2 as a starter.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Lacrosse, Women's Sports

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

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

30 Under 30 2024: Meet The Athletes And Executives Leading Sports Into The Future

December 12, 2023 by Tara S

These all-stars are expanding their industry into new sports, technologies and demographics.

Shannon Rhodes says she’s “one of one,” but that’s not a boast. A senior director with the NBA, leading a team that builds apps for the league, the 29-year-old Rhodes notes, sadly, that there just aren’t many other women at the intersection of sports and software engineering.

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JAMEL TOPPIN FOR FORBES

“My aim,” she says, “is to be one of many.”

Rhodes isn’t the only one redefining what success looks like in the sports world. Washington Wizards forward Kyle Kuzma, 28, cofounder of the fast-growing sports drink brand Barcode, and Los Angeles Chargers running back Austin Ekeler, 28, who has his own fantasy football show and frequently streams himself playing video games, are helping expand athletes’ opportunities off the field. Meanwhile, Kelly Sherman, 28, is aiding that effort from the agency side, working with WME Sports’ content division to launch media companies for athletes.

Diana Flores, 26, captain of Mexico’s women’s national flag football team, is bringing attention to a new sport—one that’s headed to the 2028 Summer Olympics. And Jason Spector, 29, is introducing fans to new technologies, merging artificial intelligence with gambling as CBS Sports’ lead data scientist.

ll six are members of Forbes’ 2024 30 Under 30 class in the Sports category, highlighting the all-star athletes, innovative founders and accomplished business professionals defining the future of the industry. Candidates—who had to be 29 or younger as of December 31, 2023, and could not have been previously named to a Forbes 30 Under 30 continental list—were reviewed by a panel of judges featuring some of the sports world’s biggest players: Devin Booker, the Phoenix Suns’ star shooting guard and an alum of the 2022 30 Under 30 list; Sal Galatioto, founder and president of investment bank Galatioto Sports Partners; Carolyn Kindle, CEO and co-owner of Major League Soccer’s St. Louis City SC; and Renee Montgomery, a two-time WNBA champion as a player who has transitioned to ownership with the Atlanta Dream.

Two of this year’s Under 30 listers—Lauren Esrig, 29, of the Voice in Sport Foundation and Alison Reed, 28, of Women in Sports Tech—work with nonprofits creating new opportunities for women in the industry. Natalie White, 25, founder of Moolah Kicks, is also thinking about inclusivity, but with an entrepreneurial twist: Her company makes performance basketball sneakers designed specifically for female feet. Also in the world of women’s basketball, Minnesota Lynx forward Napheesa Collier, 27, is serving as an advisor for a new league for high schoolers while aiming to launch a new professional league during the WNBA offseason.

Those efforts, and the momentum sweeping across women’s sports more broadly, helped land 18 women among the list’s 30 members.

Along with gender equality, racial diversity is also a growing concern in the industry, with KB Partners senior associate Matt Howard, 29, noting, for instance, that he is among a small group of Black investors in venture capital. But here, too, the 30 Under 30 honorees intend to make a difference. Tennis star Jessica Pegula, 29, for example, now sits on the board of the Asian American Pacific Islander Tennis Association. In all, 15 members of this year’s list identify as people of color.

“As a young Black man, I am passionate about working in a profession that allows me to work predominantly with Black men that are considered culture drivers and sometimes even leaders in our community,” WME Sports basketball agent Isiah Turner, 29, says, adding, “I also believe that in today’s society, one of the best ways to create change is through economics, and that is one of the things that drives me every day to be successful.”

Other sports luminaries from the 2024 list include Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, 26; Minnesota Timberwolves shooting guard Anthony Edwards, 22; and Olivia Dunne, 21, who leads a dual life as an LSU gymnast and as one of the faces of the NCAA’s new NIL marketing era.

Victoria Arlen, 29, who recovered from two serious neurological conditions to win four Paralympic medals and join ESPN as an on-air host, shared her motto with Forbes, and it is surely one her fellow Under 30 listers can relate to, even under less life-threatening circumstances: “Face it, embrace it, defy it, conquer it.”

29 | Tennis Player

Jessica Pegula

Tennis loves a teenage prodigy, whether it’s Rafael Nadal, Serena Williams or Coco Gauff. Pegula, though, had to wait, and work, for her success, not cracking the top 100 in the world rankings until 2019, when she was 24. Next came a meteoric rise to No. 3 in singles in 2022 and No. 1 in doubles in 2023. “Looking back four years later about where my mindset was, I don’t know if I really, truly believed it,” she says. “It’s just been a very long journey.” That trek began in Buffalo, New York, where Pegula’s parents, Terry and Kim, are the billionaire owners of both the NFL’s Bills and the NHL’s Sabres. Pegula can more than stand on her own now, however, making an estimated $6 million from endorsements and appearances on top of $6 million in 2023 prize money. She also owns a skin care line, Ready 24, and sits on the board of the Asian American Pacific Islander Tennis Association. “Athletes are becoming more than one-dimensional, becoming many different things and showing their interests on and off the field,” she says. “And I think it’s great.”

27 | Forward

Napheesa Collier

Napheesa Collier, who took most of the 2022 WNBA season off after welcoming her first child, returned to the court in 2023 and got right back to dominating, finishing fourth in scoring and seventh in rebounding. Working with fellow WNBA star Breanna Stewart, she is also launching a new league called Unrivaled to play during the WNBA offseason, and she will serve as an advisor for Overtime Select, a new league for high schoolers.

25 | Outfielder

Ronald Acuña Jr.

In his six seasons in the majors, Ronald Acuna Jr. has helped the Braves win six division titles, displaying Ruthian power, lightning speed and seemingly limitless swagger. Among his accolades: the 2018 National League Rookie of the Year Award, four All-Star selections and, most recently, the 2023 NL MVP Award. He is the first player ever to post 40 home runs and 70 steals in a single season.

25 | Outfielder

Ronald Acuña Jr.

In his six seasons in the majors, Ronald Acuna Jr. has helped the Braves win six division titles, displaying Ruthian power, lightning speed and seemingly limitless swagger. Among his accolades: the 2018 National League Rookie of the Year Award, four All-Star selections and, most recently, the 2023 NL MVP Award. He is the first player ever to post 40 home runs and 70 steals in a single season.

29 | TV Host

Victoria Arlen

Two rare neurological conditions left Victoria Arlen in a vegetative state for nearly four years, and doctors believed her chances of survival were slim. But she recovered to win four medals in swimming at the 2012 Paralympics and joined ESPN as on-air talent in 2015 at age 20. She now hosts shows including “SportsCenter” across the network’s platforms and also appears on “American Ninja Warrior Junior” on NBC’s Peacock.

29 | Cofounder

Austin Barone

Austin Barone is CEO and handles sales and business development for Just Play Solutions, a workflow and automation platform he cofounded in late 2014 while playing football at the University of Kansas. Barone says Just Play has helped coaches and sports organizations adapt to a new digital age, offering features including automated scouting and advanced data analysis.

28 | Senior Manager of Brand and Content Strategy

Robyn Brown

After Brittney Griner was detained in Russia in February 2022, Robyn Brown devoted the Mercury’s social channels to raising awareness and telling Griner’s story, with the #WeAreBG campaign driving 103 million impressions, she says. For a follow-up in 2023, Brown led the social strategy for DT10K, a campaign around Diana Taurasi becoming the first WNBA player to reach 10,000 points.

22 | Swimmer

Kate Douglass

Kate Douglass had one of history’s most dominant collegiate careers in any sport, becoming the first Division I swimmer to win three individual national titles in three different strokes and piling up 15 NCAA titles during her time at the University of Virginia. At the international level, she won a bronze at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 and piled up nine medals between the 2022 and 2023 world championships.

21 | Gymnast

Olivia Dunne

Olivia Dunne has been an all-American on uneven bars at LSU, but she is better known as one of the faces of college sports’ NIL era, with more than 12 million followers between TikTok and Instagram. She has long-term partnerships with brands including Vuori, American Eagle and Motorola, and Forbes estimates that she made $2.3 million over the 12 months ending in June.

22 | Shooting Guard

Anthony Edwards

Anthony Edwards appeared as the trash-talking antagonist in Adam Sandler’s 2022 basketball film “Hustle,” foreshadowing a breakout year in which he earned his first NBA All-Star selection with the Timberwolves and led Team USA in scoring at the 2023 FIBA World Cup. Edwards, the NBA’s No. 1 overall pick in 2020, also recently released his first signature shoe, with Adidas.

29 | Director of Strategy and Development

Lauren Esrig

Working with the Voice in Sport Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to equity and access to sport for girls, Lauren Esrig has built a Title IX micro-grant program to address gaps at U.S. schools. Noting that only 3% of sports science research is conducted with female athletes, she has led investments in studies focused on women with Stanford and Harvard, and she helped secure Adidas as a research partner.

28 | Running Back

Austin Ekeler

Austin Ekeler has risen from an NCAA Division II star at Western Colorado and an undrafted NFL rookie to starring for the Chargers. Off the field, he has a fantasy football show with Yahoo Sports and has frequently streamed himself playing video games on Twitch, helping earn him a reputation as one of the most “interactive” athletes. He also recently launched fan-engagement platform Eksperience.

29 | Senior Associate

Matt Howard

At KB Partners, a $127 million sports-tech-dedicated investment fund, Matt Howard shoulders major responsibilities, leading and negotiating deal terms, observing on boards and supplying updates to limited partners. A former team captain for Penn basketball, he also continues to mentor young players and speaks on panels focused on preparing young athletes for college.

26 | Quarterback

Diana Flores

Diana Flores, who picked up flag football as an 8-year-old, went from playing in the NFL’s grassroots program in Mexico to participating in the league’s flag championships and, in 2022, leading her country to a 39-6 blowout of the U.S. to win gold at the World Games. She now serves as a global ambassador for the NFL and is the first Under Armour athlete in her sport

27 | Brand Consulting Executive

Stasia Foster

Stasia Foster is a sports marketer working in the sports consulting division at CAA, providing strategic advice to brand clients including Bose, New Balance and JPMorgan Chase on sports league and property sponsorships, talent partnerships and experiential marketing strategies. She was also one of the first CAA sports consulting representatives to participate in, and later graduate from, CAA Elevate, the firm’s agent training program.

26 | Quarterback

Lamar Jackson

Lamar Jackson, the NFL’s MVP for the 2019 season, signed a five-year, $260 million extension with the Ravens in May after representing himself in negotiations. His $72.5 million signing bonus, which set an NFL contract record, made him football’s highest-paid player for 2023. Off the field, he has a personal clothing brand, a restaurant and a production company and record label.

24 | Professional Skateboarder

Tyshawn Jones

Tyshawn Jones doesn’t skate in competitions but is known as New York’s king of street skating for his jaw-dropping videos, including a production for Supreme that earned him Thrasher Magazine’s 2018 Skater of the Year Award. (He claimed the honor again in 2022.) He started signing sponsorships at age 13 and is also active as an entrepreneur, with a board company, a parts provider, an underwear line and a restaurant.

28 | Forward

Kyle Kuzma

On the court, Kyle Kuzma is a versatile forward, now playing on a four-year, $102 million contract. Off it, he cofounded the fast-growing sports drink Barcode, which made a splash by signing fellow NBA player Victor Wembanyama as an ambassador. Kuzma also created a lifestyle brand, Childhood Dreams, and has collaborated with Puma on two apparel collections

28 | Global Consumer Direct Marketing Lead For Women’s Running

Darcy McFarlane

A former pro soccer player, Darcy McFarlane led key digital and physical product launches for Nike around the 2023 Women’s World Cup, including the Phantom Luna cleat and the company’s first athlete workouts for Netflix. In an earlier role, she was product marketing manager for the Nike Running and Training Club apps, helping develop the shoemaker’s first adaptive workouts

25 | Water Polo Player

Maddie Musselman

Maddie Musselman won Olympic gold in 2016, finishing as Team USA’s second-leading scorer at age 18, and she was named tournament MVP at the Tokyo Games in 2021 as the U.S. claimed another title. She has also racked up four world championship golds, cementing her as the best athlete in her family, no small feat considering her father was an MLB pitcher and her mother played college soccer.

28 | Director of Program Operations

Alison Reed

A former soccer player at the U.S. Air Force Academy and a military veteran, Alison Reed says she always found herself the only woman in the room and decided to become an advocate to help women land leadership roles themselves. She now runs the fellowship program for Women in Sports Tech, a nonprofit helping businesses diversify talent pipelines and create more inclusive cultures

29 | Basketball Data Science And Scheduling Lead

Patrick Harrel

Patrick Harrel leads the NBA’s game scheduling optimization, using data to route road trips more efficiently to reduce the travel burden on NBA players. He has also helped design and implement the NBA’s Covid restart in 2020 and its new play-in and in-season tournaments, and he serves as a league representative on the Competition Committee, which recommends rule changes each year

25 | Founder

Natalie White

Natalie White is CEO of Moolah Kicks, which produces sneakers specifically designed for female basketball players. Through a partnership with Dick’s Sporting Goods, Moolah’s first production run debuted in more than 140 stores, helping create the retailer’s first women’s basketball wall, and the brand now appears in more than 500 stores and is expanding its direct-to-consumer channel.

21 | Forward

Angel Reese

Angel Reese led LSU to its first-ever women’s basketball national championship in 2023, earning the NCAA tournament’s Most Outstanding Player Award to go with first-team all-American honors. She has also become one of the most marketable stars of the NCAA’s new NIL era, appearing in Sports Illustrated’s Swimsuit Issue and partnering with brands including Coach, Reebok and PepsiCo’s Starry.

29 | Connected Engineering Lead

Shannon Rhodes

Shannon Rhodes’ teams have launched nine global NBA apps on 12 connected device app stores and worked on the Los Angeles Clippers’ new streaming app, ClipperVision, powered by the NBA app. Previously, she worked on the software engineering team at ESPN, catching the company’s attention, she says, with her senior project at Villanova, which was to automate the first-and-ten line with a $10 camera for high schools

23 | Sprinter

Sha’Carri Richardson

Sha’Carri Richardson missed the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 after a failed drug test drew her a one-month suspension; she was later lauded for speaking openly about how she used cannabis to cope with Olympic qualifying and the death of her biological mother. After a disappointing 2022 season, she took gold in the 100 meters at the 2023 world championships with the fifth-fastest time ever. She also won bronze in the 200.

28 | Agent

Kelly Sherman

After starting in the mailroom at WME, Kelly Sherman became the first agent in the company’s sports content division, building top athletes’ media businesses. She helped Peyton Manning build Omaha Productions, playing a role in the creation of the “Manningcast,” and she has been involved with the companies of notable athletes including LeBron James and Draymond Green, as well as the Kobe Bryant Estate.

23 | Forward

Sophia Smith

Although the U.S. failed to accomplish its goal at the 2023 Women’s World Cup, Sophia Smith was the breakout star for a team in transition, posting two goals and an assist. She has been even more dominant at the club level: The NWSL’s No. 1 overall draft pick in 2020, she led the Portland Thorns to the NWSL title in 2022 and earned league and championship MVP honors

29 | Lead Data Scientist

Jason Spector

Jason Spector developed Sportsline AI, an artificial intelligence model that predicts scores and player stat lines for the NFL, the NBA, the NHL, MLB and most of the world’s biggest soccer leagues. Once he could demonstrate that it could outperform professional handicappers, he says, he joined CBS Sports’ “Early Edge” podcast to give out betting picks

29 | Agent

Isiah Turner

Isiah Turner signed his first NBA client, Josh Christopher, while in law school in 2021 and has represented picks in the last two NBA drafts as well, with Jabari Walker and Gradey Dick. Turner has also helped his agency place clients in European, Asian and Latin American leagues and played a key role in recruiting young talent as NIL clients.

29 | Chief Growth Officer

Tom Weingarten

Tom Weingarten, who started as an intern in 2015, now serves as chief growth officer at sports media company Overtime, where he leads its social media strategy across 80-plus accounts. (He actually joined the company before it was called Overtime and was among its first ten employees.) Weingarten also has a role as on-air talent, interviewing players and speaking on podcasts.

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

Brynn King Breaks NCAA Pole Vault Record

December 7, 2023 by Tara S

ROBERTS WESLEYAN Athletics

AKRON, Ohio – The indoor track and field season started off with a bang for Roberts Wesleyan pole vaulter Brynn King as the grad student broke the NCAA Division II pole vault record with a clearance of 14-feet 5-1/2-inches.
 
King broke the 14-year old NCAA record in her first-ever meet with the Redhawks while at the Akron Haynes Lancaster Open on Friday evening hosted by the University of Akron. The record was previously held by Katelin Rains of Minnesota State set on Feb. 21, 2009 with a vault of 14-feet 5-1/4-inches. King is now the top vaulter in NCAA DII and has the second-best mark in any division of the NCAA.
 
“I felt great going into the meet today,” King said. “I have been seeing a lot of technical improvement in practice and was ready to go out, have that meet atmosphere and excitement and see what kind of bars I could jump. It is really exciting to have the D2 record now, we had set that as a goal for me this year and it is really exciting to be able to cross that off the list.”
 
King, who is a transfer student from Duke University came to Roberts to train under Olympic gold medalist Jenn Suhr. The coach and athlete duo have their expectations set high for both the indoor and outdoor track and field seasons.
 
“I have been jumping some big bars in practice and didn’t execute as well as I wanted to this meet,” King said. “So we have some high expectations for the rest of the season and am planning on much bigger bars coming real soon.”
 
Roberts track and field will travel to Grand Valley State on Dec. 8 for the GVSU Holiday Open.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Track and Field, Women's Sports

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