
April Ross returns to USA Volleyball as beach national teams head of coaching
April Ross is returning to USA Volleyball as head of coaching for beach national teams after retiring from competition last November.
'I'm honored to join USA Volleyball in this new role and look forward to working with our coaches and athletes to continue the legacy of success on the international stage,' Ross said in a press release. 'I've always believed in the power of collaboration, and I'm excited to be part of a team that shares that vision.'
Ross won an Olympic medal of every color with three different partners: silver with Jen Kessy in London, bronze with Kerri Walsh Jennings in Rio and gold with Alix Klineman in Tokyo.
As her competitive career wound down, Ross turned to coaching. She was the head coach at El Camino College in her native Southern California this past season.
In her new role, Ross' duties include 'supporting the professional development of beach national team coaches, enhancing their training, competition preparedness, and the performance of our top American athletes on the international stage,' according to USA Volleyball.
The U.S. won at least one beach medal at each of the first seven Olympics to include the sport — from Atlanta 1996 through Tokyo 2020 — with seven total gold medals in that span. The top U.S. beach teams at the Paris Games exited in the quarterfinals.
For LA 2028, beach volleyball returns to its spiritual home of Southern California. Alamitos Beach in Long Beach will host competition.
Nick Zaccardi,

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Hamilton Spectator
32 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Hockey rides into offseason with full-on buzz, a threepeat bid and Olympics ahead
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'Everybody wrote us off from the start of the playoffs,' veteran winger Brad Marchand said after becoming a two-time champion . 'They had everybody beating us in every round. We just had that fire. We knew we had something special.' Matthew Tkachuk, whose arrival in the summer of 2022 along with coach Paul Maurice coincided with Florida becoming an NHL powerhouse, went as far as to use the 'D' word. 'We've got to be a dynasty now,' Tkachuk said. 'Three years in a row finals, two championships. This is a special group.' Retired goaltender Cory Schneider called the Panthers 'one of the best teams I think I've seen in my lifetime.' 'They're the epitome of depth, skill, structure,' said Schneider, who worked the final as an NHL Network analyst. 'A lot of teams have good players. but it takes the attention to detail and the sacrifice to do it all the time. 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'Getting another opportunity to bring generations that have a Sidney Crosby and a Connor McDavid together to play internationally, it's just great for the fans and great for hockey,' Armstrong said. 'Players are so excited to be part of this. ... It's neck and neck with the Stanley Cup right now of wanting to win that event.' Tkachuk was named to the U.S. team along with brother Brady. With the two becoming household names for new fans after the fight-filled 4 Nations, it feels a little like hockey is in its Tkachuk era. Italy is the next stop on their journey. '4 Nations was good, and hopefully Olympics will be great, as well,' said Matthew after becoming a two-time Cup champion. 'I feel I've been the luckiest guy in hockey.' ___ AP NHL:


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Hockey rides into offseason with full-on buzz, a threepeat bid and Olympic-size showdowns ahead
The 4 Nations Face-Off in February was meant to provide a taste of international competition a year before the Winter Olympics because it had been nearly a decade since the NHL's top players were able to represent their countries in the same tournament. Instead, the pace and quality of games captivated sellout crowds, with millions tuning in to watch. In the immediate aftermath of his team beating the U.S. i n the final in overtime, Canada general manager Doug Armstrong met up with American counterpart Bill Guerin in the hallway, shook hands and had a message that was bigger than one game. 'He said it best: Hockey was the big winner,' Guerin recalled. 'Obviously Canada won that championship, but the sport of hockey, the game, was the big winner.' Hockey is seeing a surge in popularity and buzz, fed by the 4 Nations tournament, Alex Ovechkin's stirring run to the NHL career goals record and the Florida Panthers repeating as Stanley Cup champions to set up a threepeat bid next season. Up next are the draft and free agency, with Mitch Marner and playoff MVP Sam Bennett among the top players available, and anticipation is building for the NHL's return to the Olympics for the first time since 2014. 'For all of us, I think we're just really proud of being a part of this bigger picture and growing the game and getting it more on the forefront,' Guerin said. 'The game's never been in a better spot.' 4 Nations success The NHL and NHLPA wanted to stage a World Cup but plans were pushed back until this year with a pared-down version involving the U.S., Canada, Sweden and Finland. Commissioner Gary Bettman referred to it as an appetizer, and no one knew exactly what to expect. 'We all went in hoping it was going to be a great event,' Armstrong said, 'and it ended up being better than anyone could have expected.' Canada's star-studded power play of Connor McDavid, Sidney Crosby, Nathan MacKinnon, Cale Makar and Sam Reinhart connecting on a tic-tac-toe passing goal less than a minute into the opening game against Sweden served notice that the play would be at the highest level. The U.S. and Canada had three fights in the first nine seconds, and geopolitical cross-border tensions with crowds booing anthems and more put the 4 Nations in an unexpected spotlight. Fans were riveted. The final became one of the hottest tickets in Boston sports history, and more than 9 million watched in the U.S. and nearly 11 million in Canada. Not bad for a tournament that never happened before and may never happen again. The GR8 chase Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals took center stage as he chased down Wayne Gretzky's record of 894 goals, a feat that had long seemed unapproachable. Despite missing more than a month earlier in the season because of a broken left leg, he was in striking distance by late March. Still scoring at an absurd pace at 39 years old, Ovechkin went on a tear and tied the mark at home on a Friday night that became a celebration of his career. Two days later, he got No. 895 in New York against the Islanders, with Gretzky, Bettman, his mother, wife, children and more there to congratulate him. '(It is) the biggest accomplishment that the world of hockey has seen a very long time,' longtime teammate T.J. Oshie said. 'This record is going to be here for a while.' Ovechkin, now at 897 goals, is set to play his 21st NHL season and add to his total. Panthers repeat Florida had the 11th-most points out of the 16 teams that reached the playoffs and started each round on the road. Didn't matter. The Panthers got through Tampa Bay in five games, Toronto in seven and Carolina in six to reach the final for a third consecutive year. They then beat McDavid and the Edmonton Oilers again, this time in six to go back to back. 'Everybody wrote us off from the start of the playoffs,' veteran winger Brad Marchand said after becoming a two-time champion. 'They had everybody beating us in every round. We just had that fire. We knew we had something special.' Matthew Tkachuk, whose arrival in the summer of 2022 along with coach Paul Maurice coincided with Florida becoming an NHL powerhouse, went as far as to use the 'D' word. 'We've got to be dynasty now,' Tkachuk said. "Three years in a row finals, two championships. This is a special group.' Retired goaltender Cory Schneider called the Panthers 'one of the best teams I think I've seen in my lifetime.' 'They're the epitome of depth, skill, structure,' said Schneider, who worked the final as an NHL Network analyst. 'A lot of teams have good players. but it takes the attention to detail and the sacrifice to do it all the time. Teams want to play easy hockey sometimes and get their chances, but Florida does that while also committing to playing a complete brand of team hockey.' BetMGM Sportsbook lists the Oilers as a slight favorite to win next season's championship over the Panthers. The NHL hasn't had a three-peat since the New York Islanders won four in a row from 1980-83. Draft and free agency The league is having its first in-person, de-centralized draft in Los Angeles on June 27-28. The New York Islanders after winning the draft lottery have the first pick, and new general manager Mathieu Darche could pick defenseman Matthew Schaefer, an inspirational story off the ice. With the salary cap getting the first of several big jumps thanks to record attendance and revenue (increases to $95.5 million this summer), player movement could be fast and furious. Free agency opens July 1, and teams in markets from New York and Toronto to Los Angeles, Anaheim and Utah have cap space to use. Milan-Cortina Olympics The 12 countries taking part — Russia is banned — have already unveiled the first six players on their Olympic rosters. The International Ice Hockey Federation has released the schedule of games, with the men's tournament starting Feb. 11, 'When you're growing up when you're watching as a kid, it's Stanley Cup finals and it's Team Canada,' said Reinhart, who scored four goals in Florida's Cup-clinching game the day after getting named to Canada's roster. "Those are the two things that you dream about playing for. To have that opportunity is pretty exciting.' The NHL went to five consecutive Games from 1998-2014, then skipped 2018 and pulled out in 2022, leaving teams those years without any active league players. Milan-Cortina will be the first Olympics for players like McDavid, MacKinnon, Auston Matthews and Jack Eichel. 'Getting another opportunity to bring generations that have a Sidney Crosby and a Connor McDavid together to play internationally, it's just great for the fans and great for hockey,' Armstrong said. 'Players are so excited to be part of this. ... It's neck and neck with the Stanley Cup right now of wanting to win that event.' Tkachuk was named to the U.S. team along with brother Brady. With the two becoming household names for new fans after the fight-filled 4 Nations, it feels a little like hockey is in its Tkachuk era. Italy is the next stop on their journey. '4 Nations was good, and hopefully Olympics will be great, as well,' said Matthew after becoming a two-time Cup champion. 'I feel I've been the luckiest guy in hockey.'


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Stagwell CEO Mark Penn on how Sport Beach became ultimate Cannes Lions destination for athletes and celebs: ‘Bigger and better'
CANNES — The hottest ticket at Cannes Lions was Stagwell's Sport Beach. For the third straight year, the multi-day sports, fandom and marketing event returned to the Cannes International Festival of Creativity — and, for the first time, served as the 'official sports partner' of the festival from June 16-19. It was the premier destination for both current and retired professional athletes, celebrities and executives to meet, collaborate and get creative while enjoying scenic views of the French Riviera. 7 Sport Beach is the hottest ticket of Cannes Lions. Erik Messori 7 The Post's Jenna Lemoncelli (l.) speaks with Mark Penn (r.) at Sport Beach in Cannes. Erik Messori This year's starry roster featured the likes of Basketball Hall of Famer Carmelo Anthony, 23-time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams, retired professional soccer player and Olympic gold medalist Megan Rapinoe, four-time WNBA champion Sue Bird, World Series champ Alex Rodriguez and three-time NBA champion Dwyane Wade, to name a few. Stagwell chairman and CEO Mark Penn has the formula figured out when it comes to marrying sports, news and entertainment. 'I think when we started three years ago, we were Stagwell — who knew Stagwell?' Penn told The Post. 'We were an up-and-coming holding company that really nobody knew. And we had to say, well, 'How are we going to get ourselves known?' What are we gonna create?' 'I put it out to the agencies, give us some ideas. And they came up with the idea of Sport Beach, some folks at [full-service creative agency] 72andSunny, and we said 'yes,' and best to do in the corporate team, ran it, and the first year it was just a clear success.' 7 Carmelo Anthony speaks at a panel at Sport Beach. Erik Messori Penn then detailed the path to building on that success. 'I always talk about 'Godfather' syndrome. Okay, well, the first one was really path-breaking. The second one was the best. And then you have to worry that the third one went downhill. So, I think we met the challenge, the third is not downhill,' he said. '… I think in general, too, the economy is better. I think more people are here, more people are in a good mood to go hear about sports. And so I think we aimed for bigger and better, and we got bigger and better.' Penn's career spans 40 years in market research, advertising, public relations, polling, and consulting. He has advised top world leaders, including presidents, led companies and written two bestselling books. 7 Of Sport Beach, Mark Penn told The Post, 'We aimed for bigger and better, and we got bigger and better.' Erik Messori A self-described 'news junkie,' Penn explained why he was intentional in leaning heavily into sport when it came to launching Stagwell's Sport Beach. 'I think the world is made up of news junkies, sports junkies and entertainment junkies,' he said. 'I personally am more of a news junkie. But I have to recognize that they were right, that this was a moment for sports, because sports is a very unifying element in our culture. 'No matter what team you root for, you actually feel you have something in common with the people who are rooting on the other side. And you come together, I think, in the admiration of the winner in sports… and plus, it was a very practical thing. 'The athletes needed to get closer to the brands, because many of the athletes now are saying, 'You know what, my career is not just the couple of years I can play at the top of my game. But I need a long life in terms of a brand for representing what I've done.' And the brands are super interested in getting close to the athletes, so we also created a marketplace for that.' 7 Alex Rodriguez (c.) was among the panelists at Sport Beach in 2025. Ella Pellegrini One of the many indicators that Stagwell's Sport Beach was a success early on was that athletes weren't just attending and participating in a panel and leaving — they stayed and continued to come back year after year. Anthony, Bird and Rapinoe have participated in Stagwell's Sport Beach since its inception in 2022. 'I think the first year, you're giving people a promise and it doesn't exist,' Penn said. '… But the first thing we thought would happen is [that] the athletes would come in and they'd be here for a half hour, and as soon as their panel was over, they'd cut out. This is just not what happened. 'This is cool. And they hung out, and they got to know us all here at Stagwell, and now it became a regular thing, like this is part of their year, to come show up, so I'm really pleased it worked out that way.' The world's top athletes and entrepreneurs essentially had trust and believed in Penn, taking a gamble on the idea he and his team at Stagwell were presenting. 7 Carmelo Anthony has been part of Sport Beach since its inception. Erik Messori 'It wasn't that we gave them an incredible sales job or had million-dollar checks, it really was that they… came to enjoy it, their agents said, 'Hey, this is good for you and your career. Where else are you going to get 50 brands together in a room that you can talk to?' 'So I think all of those things made sense, but I think there was a personal element here where they frankly felt comfortable. And also, where else do they kind of get to meet fellow athletes, really across all of these different sports at the same time, with the same goal of what kind of life are we going to have after sports?' Penn moderated the 'Future of News: Why News Junkies are the Real MVPs' panel on Wednesday, which unpacked the business case for investing in high-quality media environments of news — a topic that is close to him. 7 The scene from Sport Beach at Cannes Lions. Erik Messori '… So we did a big study and we placed the same ad in all sorts of different environments and across different news stories, a sports story, an entertainment story, a presidential campaign story. We did the same, okay? All this stuff about the brand safety, you wouldn't want Boeing to have an ad in the middle of the India story. I mean, there are certain things. But by and large, it was bunk, right? And close to 40 or 50 percent, I think, of CMOs and companies don't advertise on news. So, as a result, good journalism is not supported. '… We need to get CMOs advertising in news, sports, and entertainment based on the results, not on a false sense of brand safety. Otherwise it means, frankly, paywalls have to be higher or there will be fewer journalists and fewer journalistic outlets.' Penn went on to tease a special surprise on the final day of Stagwell's Sport Beach on Thursday. 'Come and be here for the closing,' he said. 'We usually say the biggest secret, the most interesting kind of event for the end.'