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Virginia
NCAA women’s swimming and diving: Virginia wins record sixth straight NCAA title
Virginia has done it again, securing a sixth consecutive NCAA title in women’s swimming and diving.
The Cavaliers now hold the longest streak of national championships in Division I women’s swimming history. The exclamation point was an NCAA record in the 400 freestyle relay to close the meet, breaking their own mark set last month at the ACC championships.
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The Hoos were dominant all week and head coach Todd DeSorbo has built one of the greatest dynasties in women’s swimming history.
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Virginia won all five relays, a multitude of individual titles, and overwhelmed the rest of the field with elite depth. The Cavaliers show no signs of slowing down, and will return a plethora of talent in 2027.
Stanford and Texas battled to the end, with the Cardinal passing the Longhorns on the final day to secure national runners-up. Stanford picked up key event wins to stay in the 200 IM and 100 freestyle, defeating Texas by four points.
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After having a relay disqualified on Wednesday night, California continued to fight all week and secured a top-four finish. The Golden Bears squeezed past Tennessee by a point and a half while the Lady Vols secured fifth by 5 1/2 points over Michigan.
[Wednesday Recap | Thursday Recap | Friday Recap]
Here’s how the final night of finals unfolded:
Lucy Bell closes out her senior NCAAs with a second title
Senior Lucy Bell continued her standout meet with a victory in the 200 IM, touching in 1:52.09. Bell helped lead the Cardinal past Texas on the final day of competition.
California freshman Teagan O’Dell finished second, just ahead of her teammate Mia West, who took third. The two Golden Bears helped Cal jump into the top four.
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Louisville sophomore Anastasia Gorbenko placed fourth, followed by Texas sophomore Campbell Chase in fifth.
Virginia placed two swimmers in the championship final, with Aimee Canny finishing sixth and Leah Hayes placing seventh. UCLA senior Rosie Murphy rounded out the field in eighth.
Torri Huske goes 3-for-3, bests Moesch in 100 free
Stanford senior and three-time Olympic gold medalist Torri Huske powered to another NCAA title winning the 100 freestyle in 45.17. In one of the most anticipated races of the year, Huske defeated the loaded field in pool record fashion.
A pair of Cavaliers followed as Anna Moesch placed second in 45.54 and Sara Curtis third in 45.77. Indiana freshman Liberty Clark finished fourth in 46.11, just ahead of Camille Spink (Tennessee) in fifth at 46.28.
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Mary-Ambre Moluh (California) took sixth in 46.30, followed by Cadence Vincent (Alabama) in seventh.
Julia Dennis (Louisville) finished eighth.
Stoll wins 200 butterfly title
Texas’ Campbell Stoll claimed the 200 butterfly title in 1:50.26, holding off a tight field down the stretch. The race was closely contested, but it was Stoll who got to the wall first ahead of Indiana freshman Alex Shackell and Michigan junior Hannah Bellard. Stoll out-touched Shackell by less than two tenths of a second on the final stroke.
Virginia’s Tess Howley placed fourth in 1:51.69, followed by Stanford’s Caroline Bricker, who secured fifth.
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Tennessee scored crucial points in the event as two Lady Vols competed in the championship final. Sophomores Emily Brown and Ella Jansen finished sixth and seventh respectively. Cal’s Lilou Ressencourt rounded out the top eight finishers.
Claire Curzan sweeps NCAA backstroke titles
Virginia junior Claire Curzan completed an impressive backstroke double, winning the 200 back this evening in 1:46.10. Curzan closed her week in meet record fashion, one hundredth shy of her own NCAA record.
Wisconsin’s Maggie Wanezek finished second in 1:47.73, while NC State’s Erika Pelaez took third in 1:49.08.
Claire Jansen (Pittsburgh) placed fourth, with Michigan’s Bella Sims dropping down to fifth. Teagan O’Dell completed her Saturday double with a sixth place finish and Pelaez’s teammate Leah Shackley secured seventh. Indiana’s Miranda Grana closed out the championship final.
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Stanford freshman Ellie Cole wins platform diving with meet record score
Stanford freshman Ellie Cole delivered a meet-record performance to win platform diving with 399.80.
US Olympian Daryn Wright finished second representing Purdue. She was followed by Florida State’s Kayleigh Clark in third.
Minnesota’s Viviana Del Angel placed fourth, while Texas’ Bayleigh Cranford finished fifth.
Sofia Knight (North Carolina), Mia Prusiecki (Ohio State), and Camyla Monroy (Florida) rounded out the top eight.
Virginia completes relay sweep in NCAA record
Virginia closed the meet with a statement performance, winning the 400 freestyle relay in an NCAA-record 3:05.26.
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The team of Madi Mintenko, Curzan, Moesch and Curtis re-broke the fastest time in history, closing out the meet with yet another NCAA title. Moesch had a standout 45.61 split to vault the Cavaliers to a new record.
Stanford finished second while Texas took third in 3:07.02. California’s fourth-place finish was the reason the Golden Bears finished in the top four, while Indiana placed fifth in a tightly contested final.
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Virginia
Five charged after Virginia Beach Police conduct human trafficking operation
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) — Five people were charged after Virginia Beach Police conducted a two-day human trafficking and vice operation on July 3, according to the Virginia Beach Police Department.
The department’s Special Investigations Bureau conducted the operation, which was aimed at identifiying human trafficking victims, reducing the demand for commercial sex and targeting individuals seeking to exploit or recruit children for prostitution.
Detectives used many investigative techniques to proactively identify individuals involved in criminal activity related to prostitution, human trafficking and offenses against children. The operation was conducted in Virginia Beach, involving personnel from all of the bureau’s squads.
As a result of the operation, five people were identified and charged with offenses ranging from solicitation of prostitution to sex trafficking and crimes involving minors. Two vehicles and U.S. currency were seized during the operation. Other people were connected to victim services through Samaritan House.


The operation led to the following people being charged:
- Shane Carter, 28, of Norfolk, was charged with solicitation of prostitution.
- Robert Harris, 64, of Virginia Beach, was charged with solicitation of prostitution and assault and battery.
- Larry Pittman, 53, of Portsmouth, was charged with sex trafficking and use of electronic devices to facilitaate certain offenses involving minors.
- Kenric Frazier, 46, of Portsmouth, was charged with sex trafficking, use of electronic devices to facilitate certain offenses involving minors and solicitation of child pornography.
- Cameron Lewis, 24, of Norfolk, was charged with solicitation of prostitution.
Investigators also developed leads about people who are suspected of trafficking and exploiting others for commercial sex. Those are now active and ongoing investigations. There may be more charges and arrests pending further investigation and consultation with the Virginia Beach Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office.
If you’re a human trafficking victim or know someone who is, you can report it to the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888.
Virginia
Dragas responds to accusations of having unfair advantage in quest to buy VB National
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) — Helen Dragas, CEO of Dragas Companies, said she does not feel her company had an “unfair advantage” in pursing a deal to buy Virginia Beach National Golf Club.
Rather, Dragas said her team took the initiative to put forward the “the “best competitive proposal we could.”
Next month, Virginia Beach City Council could vote to sell the 270-acre 18-hole course to Dragas, who along with Texas-based Century Golf, would redesign and refurbish the course. Dragas would then build nearly 660 housing units on the southern end of the property, and build a new childcare center.
Dragas’ proposal, titled “Princess Anne Landing,” was one of nine total groups who responded to the city’s request for proposals regarding of the future of the course.
Still, many on both social media and in public comments have accused the longtime housing developer of having the upper hand, given that she had the city sign a non-disclosure agreement in 2024, more than a year before the city’s intentions of possibly selling the course became public.
As part of an interview Tuesday with 10 On Your Side, Dragas was asked about those accusations and other questions. Responses are edited for style and brevity purposes.
REPORTER: You’ve heard some of the criticisms … sitting through the public hearings. … How do you take it when people say that you got an unfair advantage?
DRAGAS: I say that we invested thousands of hours of hard work and due diligence watching public hearings, media council meetings, digging into those engineering studies that I referenced before that showed the deficiencies, … understanding the comprehensive plan, the Historic Overlay District, the ITA situation, all that. There’s a lot of complexity there and we invested a lot of time and energy to develop the best competitive proposal we could. We never knew we would see it, and we still don’t know if we’ll see a single cent of that investment back. And that’s competition and that’s initiative, and we live in a country that’s always rewarded initiative. And we took it. And while others might have been spending their time on other projects or other endeavors, this is what we were doing. So we didn’t receive any nonpublic information. We just did our homework and I think we tried to solve a lot of problems in one proposal: housing, homeownership, childcare, golf course, you know, redesign and refresh and reinvestment and a future tax stream for the course. So we think we come up with something that provides benefit, not just at offers, but to a lot of other constituents in the city as well. We’re really proud of it.
REPORTER: You were telling me that … long before even the auditors report, you had your eye on that that parcel and thought it would be good for houses. Correct?
DRAGAS: Well, we always knew that there was that section that … could handle some housing, yes. And others did as well. There were other rentals. There was another unsolicited proposal or two. And then I think about half of the respondents to the proposal included housing.
Under the terms that have been negotiated between City Council and economic development staff for months in closed session, Dragas would purchase the roughly 270 acre course for $17.9 million from the city. The city will, in turn, give the $17.9 million back to Dragas, along with $1.8 million from the Virginia Beach Development Authority, to go towards an estimated $38 million golf course redevelopment.
On top of the nearly $20 million the city would give the development team for the golf course work, the city could contribute up to nearly $8 million in public infrastructure along Tournament Drive and Princess Anne Road, to include turn lanes, streetscape improvements, utility relocations, and a sewer extension.
REPORTER: Why does it need to be a public-private partnership?
DRAGAS: So right now the city has millions of dollars in deferred renovation — $7.7 million in identified stormwater deficiencies and remaining clubhouse and facilities repair. That doesn’t cover anything about renovating a 30-year-old course. And … everything needs a renovation, refurbishment at some point in its life, physical life. And so, this course needs that. There’s also public infrastructure that serves the entire area right there. So there’s some Virginia Beach Development Authority parcels that sit there and the first tee … as you probably know, is that land is going to be dedicated to the First Tee. There’s sanitary sanitary sewer infrastructure that serves all those parcels that was originally connected to be temporary, and that was almost 30 years ago. So the city has, I think, some deferred public infrastructure costs as well. What our proposal does is take the city off the hook for future maintenance liabilities. They’re actually going to come out of pocket less than they would if they just did the stormwater and the clubhouse repairs that were made, and in exchange, the city will have a $3.4 million a year tax revenue stream, a completely refreshed and refreshed renovated golf course, a badly needed child care facility and then, of course, the homes, homeownership opportunities for over 600 families.
Virginia
Three Things We Hope to Learn About Virginia Tech At ACC Media Days
Virginia Tech football head coach James Franklin and three players — defensive tackle Kemari Copeland, safety Tyson Flowers and running back Marcellous Hawkins — will be present Thursday at the 2026 ACC Kickoff at the Hilton Charlotte Uptown (Charlotte, N.C.). Here are three things I think Hokies fans should hope to learn about the Hokies at media days, centered around which players will be taking questions.
No. 1: How has it been incorporating new athletic director Brian White?
White was named the university’s new athletic director and vice president in June; he previously served in the same roles at Florida Atlantic University. Under the helm of White, the men’s basketball team, coached by Dusty May — he later won a NCAA title with Michigan, and he’s now the head coach of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks — made it to the Final Four in the 2022-23 season. While White’s chops lie more in hoops, his influence on football could also arrive via the chips that he’s surrounded with around the Hokie Club. Virginia Tech has made an effort in finding replacements for its university president (Tim Sands) and athletic director (Whit Babcock), and it’s also procured a record $75 million investment, the majority of which is directed towards the athletic department. How that process of integrating White, who specializes in finances, is going is one of the more intriguing notes to cover.
No. 2: Is there anyone on the secondary that jumps out to either Franklin or Flowers?
The secondary remains one of the more fascinating position groups on Virginia Tech’s roster entering the 2026 season. While Flowers is the established veteran and unquestioned leader of the unit, there are plenty of snaps available around him following offseason departures. Media days won’t provide a depth chart, but they can offer insight into which younger defensive backs have separated themselves during summer workouts.
It will be interesting to hear if there’s a specific player who has caught his attention. Cornerback Joshua Clarke could be one to watch given that he projects into the two-deep after a torn ACL cost him the 2025 campaign. Whether it’s Clarke, an experienced transfer acclimating to Blacksburg like Troy transfer Jaquez White or a younger corner beginning to emerge, those types of comments often provide an early indication of how the coaching staff and players view the rotation before preseason camp begins.
The same goes for Franklin. Coaches are naturally careful with personnel discussions in July, but even subtle praise can be revealing.
No. 3: How does the running back/defensive line depth shape up?
Virginia Tech operated slightly short-handed at running back for the duration of fall camp, missing true freshman Messiah Mickens throughout. Hawkins was hobbled, and though he went through several individual workouts, he did not play in the spring game. How he’s doing is one of the points to note, and while it doesn’t appear to be a serious injury at first glance, clarity is always helpful.
As for the defensive tackle room, Emmett Laws is currently out with an undisclosed injury that defensive coordinator Brent Pry did not go into more detail on. Any update on his availability would be encouraging, particularly for a defensive front that is counting on developing quality depth behind its projected starters. Kemari Copeland and Elhadj Fall appear to be the likely starters at tackle, but beyond Aycen Stevens being at one of the edge spots, who starts at the other is yet to be determined.
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