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Australian women and children linked to ISIS return from Syria, arrests expected

SYDNEY, May 7 (Reuters) - A group of Australian women and children linked to the extremist group Islamic State arrived home on ‌Thursday after years in a camp in Syria, with some facing arrest ‌at the airport, Australian media reported.

Reuters

The Australian government said on Wednesday that four women and ​nine children who had been detained in northeast Syria planned to return to Australia, but would receive no government assistance.

One woman and her child arrived in Sydney on Thursday evening via Doha, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported. Police boarded ‌the plane and took ⁠the woman into custody, the Sydney Morning Herald reported. A second group touched down in Melbourne.

Local media said there was ⁠a heavy police presence at both airports in anticipation of their arrival.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke's office did not respond to a request for comment on ​the ​group's travel plans.

Australian Federal Police said earlier ​that some in the group ‌could be arrested and charged on arrival, while others might remain under investigation. The children are expected to enter community reintegration and support programmes.

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Some Australian women travelled to Syria between 2012 and 2016 to join their husbands, who had allegedly become ISIS members.

Following ISIS's territorial defeat in 2019, many ‌relatives of suspected fighters were detained in camps, ​including al-Roj in the northeast of the ​country where the latest Australian ​returnees were held, according to the ABC.

In January, the ‌United States began moving detained ISIS members ​out of Syria ​after the collapse of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, which had been guarding around a dozen facilities holding fighters and affiliated civilians, including ​foreigners.

The Australian government ‌repatriated four women and 13 children from Syrian camps in 2022.

About ​21 Australians remain in al-Roj, the ABC reported.

(Reporting by Renju Jose ​in Sydney; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

Australian women and children linked to ISIS return from Syria, arrests expected

SYDNEY, May 7 (Reuters) - A group of Australian women and children linked to the extremist group Islamic State arrived home on ‌Thursda...
It’s time for mass non-violent protests against Israel, says Palestinian ambassador to UK

ThePalestinianpopulation should launch widespread non-violent protest against the Israelioccupationin a bid to force a return to long-collapsed peace talks, thePalestinianambassador to London tellsThe Independent.

The Independent US

In an unusual break with protocol, Husam Zomlot, the ambassador of the newly recognized Palestinian state which has norecognised borders, describes such action as vital.

Speaking on theWorld of Troublepodcast, he says: “We must find a way that it becomes mass, because when you involve the entire society, you actually have the moral high ground and you actually can drainyour occupier[of its energy].”

Husam Zomlot, Palestine’s new ambassador to London, says the Palestinian population should launch widespread non-violent protest against the Israeli occupation (World of Trouble/The Independent)

His intervention comes as support forIsraelamongUSrepublicans has fallen and as Israeli settlers have launched a campaign of violence across theWest Bank, while anti-semitic attacks have roiled London and other parts of the UK.

The issue of protest is also being discussed in the UK as police review whether marches can take place, now that the national terror level in Britain has been increased to severe.

In a wide-ranging interview, Mr Zomlot, who is based in the Palestinian embassy in Hammersmith west London, describes growing up in aGazarefugee camp and moving to the UK as an adult.

Reflecting on decades of Israeli and Palestinian attempts to reach a peace deal, the ambassador admits that the Palestinian leadership made cardinal mistakes in the early 1990s, then under the head of the Palestine Liberation Organization, Yasser Arafat, when they officially agreed to end violence against Israeli targets.

”You call it violence. International law has a different [interpretation],” he says. “They call it resistance, and there was a UN general assembly resolution in 1973 giving the Palestinian people the right to armed resistance, defined very clearly in international law to be targeting the army of the occupation.”

Mr Zomlot argues that Arafat’s parent organization, the Palestinian National Liberation Movement - known by its Arabic acronym Fatah - agreed to end the armed resistance as part of the Oslo peace process that began in the early 1990s but claims it revealed “another Israeli trick”.

A Palestinian man inspects the site of an Israeli strike that targeted a police post, in Gaza City, May 5, 2026 (Reuters)

The Palestinians did not demand, nor get, a recognition of a state or its borders as a consequence of recognising the rights ofIsrael.

Reflecting on the current political state, he adds: “The key question is does Israel consider its presence in the Occupied Territory [Gaza and the West Bank] temporary or permanent?”

Hamas, the hardline militant Islamic Resistance, has opposed peace with Israel and used terrorist attacks to deliberately sabotage any hopes of normalisation over the last three decades. Zomlot dismissesitsviolence as a “distraction”, adding: “You’ll always have spoilers.”

Hamas is undergoing a change in leadership and while support for its extremist ideology fluctuates at no more than about 40 per cent among Palestinians, and often lower, it remains the most popular single party.

Mr Zomlot associates himself with Fatah, which is also changing its leadership through internal elections which will define the future of the Palestinian Authority (PA), the body that has limited powers over most Palestinians on the West Bank.

Mr Zomlot associates himself with Fatah, which is also changing its leadership through internal elections (World of Trouble/The Independent)

Israeli and international human rights groups have condemned Israel’s occupation of the West Bank since 1967 as “apartheid”.

A patchwork of towns and areas run by the PA where Palestinians have no rights under Israeli law sits in a landscape of growing Israeli dominance where Jewish Israelis are governed by Israeli law.

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Lately the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, has passed a law that mandates hanging for any Palestinians that kills a Israeli in an “act of terror” in the most racially explicit legislation for capital punishment on earth.

The Hamas atrocities of 7 October 2023, in which around 1,200 were killed and 250 taken hostage, provoked Israel’s deadly campaign in Gaza, in which 80,000 people were killed.

The relentless bombing of Gaza for two years, combined with ongoing Jewish settler violence on the West Bank has left many on all sides of the conflict to wonder whether Palestinian violence would become more widespread. Whether Fatah would return to war?

”We need to make sure that we find a way that is not war,” Mr Zomlot says. “But that has to be coupled with an international campaign similar to that of South Africa, to suck oxygen out of the settlements, out of the occupation... We cannot do it alone.

“Fatah understands that the first thing we need to do is the unity of our people and making sure our people remain on our land.

Yousef al-Jaabari, candidate of the Palestinian Fatah movement, casts his ballot at a polling station during municipal elections in the Israeli-occupied West Bank city of Hebron on April 25, 2026 (AFP/Getty)

“Now, the effective mode is nonviolent resistance, but we have to redefine resistance. It's important. Resistance is not just armed resistance.”

Until recently, efforts by pro-Palestinian groups to garner support for campaigns to boycott Israel, disinvest in Israeli companies and impose sanctions on its government have run into criticism that they were antisemitic.

But Zomlot toldWorld of Troublethat there were signs that Israel’s standing in theUSwas slipping.

Sixty per cent of Americans have an “unfavourable” view of Israel according to a recent Pew poll, a seven per cent rise in a year.

“All of a sudden the world has discovered that Israel is the root of all the issues in the Middle East and worldwide, and that Israel must be brought into compliance,” he claims.

“This conversation did not happen before, and it's happening here in Britain. It's happening in Europe, and certainly it's happening now in the US for the first time.

“We see not only the Democrats, but the Republicans having a serious conversation about the US-Israel relationship.”

Asked if that has been brought on by the invasion of Iran, he replies: “Yes, it has brought that back to the fore and then it brought it back to Iraq, and back to everything that happened. What is the interest of the US in this? What is the objective of this?”

Hard line Israelis under the Netanyahu government support the idea that the country is faced with such deep existential dangers from groups like Hamas and Hezbollah and regimes like the ayatollahs of Iran, that the country’s security can only be guaranteed by force.

Israeli security forces patrol during a military raid at the Qalandia refugee camp, south of the city of Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, on May 6, 2026 (AFP/Getty)

Mr Zomlot dismisses the idea: “They can’t punch their way to safety.

”Respect the people around you, and you will see different and better security. Think that your security comes from the insecurity of others. It doesn't work. Think that your security comes from all failed states around you. It doesn't work. That will produce for you groups that are way more even radical than the current groups.

“Think that by threatening to dismantle entire societies, it brings peace for you. Think again. The only way peace can come is by you thriving and everybody else thriving.”

It’s time for mass non-violent protests against Israel, says Palestinian ambassador to UK

ThePalestinianpopulation should launch widespread non-violent protest against the Israelioccupationin a bid to force a return to long-c...
Demolition begins at Bills' stadium as new Highmark Stadium powers up video boards

OneBuffalo Billsstadium has officially gone dark while another is beginning to light up.

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Power to Highmark Stadium was shut off Friday as demolition crews began dismantling the 53-year-old venue in Orchard Park. Across the street the Bills powered on the video boards at the new Highmark Stadium for the first time Wednesday.

The demolition team has already begun tearing into portions of the old stadium, with local Buffalotelevision footagethis week showing heavy equipment working near the West End Suites entrance while rows of seats have already been removed. Large dumpsters filled with steel beams and debris could also be seen outside the stadium.

The Billsposted a videoof offensive linemen Alec Anderson and Chase Lundt learning to use an excavator to assist with slicing into the bleachers.

The old building spans more than 900,000 square feet and rises about 140 feet above ground level.

The Bills confirmed demolition officially began after power to the building was cut off.

“Demolition is underway, and as part of the process, power was disconnected at the former stadium, as scheduled, on May 1,” the team said in a statement. "The project is slated for completion by March of 2027."

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The stadium hosted Bills games for 53 seasons after opening in 1973 as Rich Stadium. Its final Bills game was played Jan. 4 against the New York Jets.

Unlike some stadium demolitions around the country, the Bills are not planning an implosion of the structure. Instead, demolition will occur gradually through a mechanical teardown process using heavy equipment.

Breeze National is serving as the demolition contractor while Arc Building Partners is leading the project, accordingThe Buffalo News.

Before demolition began, the Bills partnered with CollectibleXchange to remove and sell pieces of stadium history including seats, signs, turf and goal posts to fans looking for memorabilia from the team’s longtime home.

Once demolition is completed, the former stadium footprint is expected to be filled to grade and used primarily for parking, though the Bills have also discussed the possibility of future development around the stadium complex.

Bills test video boards at new Highmark Stadium

The Bills posted drone footage andphotoson social media Wednesday showing the initial test of the 4k-quality displays at new Highmark Stadium.

The $2.1 billion stadium has a footprint of 1.35 million square feet and will feature a heated natural grass field and a steel canopy with a snow-melt system. The new venue is on track for completion in July.

This article originally appeared on Rochester Democrat and Chronicle:Highmark Stadium demolition begins after power shut off

Demolition begins at Bills' stadium as new Highmark Stadium powers up video boards

OneBuffalo Billsstadium has officially gone dark while another is beginning to light up. Power to Highmark Stadium was shut off F...
MHSAA approves seeding for district, regional rounds of prep football playoffs

A change is coming this fall to how the Michigan High School Athletic Association seeds teams for the state football playoffs.

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The MHSAA announced on Wednesday that football teams will be seeded in a regional model where the eight teams in a regional will be ordered by number of playoff points.

Cass TechÕs Corey Sadler Jr. (1) breaks up a pass intended for Catholic CentralÕs Samson Gash (5) in the first half. Detroit Catholic Central takes on Cass Tech in Division 1 MHSAA football finals at Ford Field in Detroit on Nov. 30, 2025.

The Nos. 1, 4, 5 and 8 seeds in a regional will be paired in one district, while the Nos. 2, 3, 6 and 7 seeds will be in the other district within the regional. The winner of the two districts would then face each other in the regional final.

The change came upon a recommendation by the MHSAA Football Committee and will take effect this year.

It’s not a major change, given each of the eight divisions for the state football playoffs will still have 32 teams, with them being broken down into four-team districts and eight-team regionals.

The pairings are chosen are based on geography and proximity, and what the new change might do is make sure that the odds of matchups between the top two point-getters in a region take place in the regional final, rather than in a district final or even district semifinal.

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“I think it’s a great idea,” said Birmingham Brother Rice head coach Aaron Marshall, who was the head coach of Southfield A&T’s Division 1 state championship team in 2023 and will have one of the state’s best teams come the fall. “If the top two teams in your regional are right down the street from each other, they might have to play each other right away. Being able to separate that benefits everybody.”

Jackson Lumen Christi head coach Herb Brogan, who might become the state’s all-time winningest coach this season, said while it’s not a monumental change, it should be beneficial.

“Honestly, six in one, half dozen in the other,” he said. “It’s probably not going to change things dramatically. You’ve got to beat whoever you are playing wherever you are playing them. But it makes it more difficult for two really good teams to match up against each other early on, which is a good thing.”

The first day of official practice for the football season is Aug. 10, with the playoffs slated to start on Oct. 30.

Keith Dunlap is a freelance writer.

This article originally appeared on The Detroit News:MHSAA approves seeding for district, regional rounds of high school football playoffs

MHSAA approves seeding for district, regional rounds of prep football playoffs

A change is coming this fall to how the Michigan High School Athletic Association seeds teams for the state football playoffs. The...
What we don't know about Ole Miss football after Pete Golding's first spring practice

OXFORD —Ole Miss footballhas completed its first spring under the direction of coachPete Golding.

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The Rebels are coming off a chaotic, successful season that featured a coaching change and a run to the College Football Playoff semifinals.

The biggest offseason question was settled in a legal battle. Star quarterback Trinidad Chambliss isset to returnafter suing the NCAA.

Ole Missis bringing in the No. 2-ranked transfer portal class and is shaping up to be a contender in 2026. Spring practice was the start of depth chart battles.

Here's what we don't know about Ole Miss football after spring practice.

Will Pete Golding, Ole Miss be penalized for tampering?

One storyline that is carrying on through the offseason is out of Ole Miss' control.

On Jan. 23, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said the Rebels had broken the rules in their transfer portal recruiting of linebacker Luke Ferrelli. He is a transfer from Cal who enrolled atClemsonand began practicing, according to Swinney, before flipping to the Rebels.

Golding was later asked if Swinney's allegations were correct.

"There's two sides to every story," Golding said. "I'm not going to sit up here and use the podium as a grandstand and all of that. That's why there is enforcement. That's why we have our compliance office. They do all that."

Swinney said he submitted his claims to the NCAA. The NCAA has not yet issued a ruling.Ross Dellenger of Yahoo Sports reportedon March 12 that Big Ten executives want to pause tampering cases until rules can be modernized, but the NCAA is not stopping enforcement.

There isprecedentfor punishment ranging from probation and fines to recruiting restrictions and suspensions.

Who will lead Ole Miss in sacks after Princewill Umanmielen transferred?

There's no clear top pass rusher for the Rebels, but the roster is stocked with contenders. Will one emerge as a game-wrecker?

Although Princewill Umanmielen transferred to LSU after leading the Rebels with nine sacks, the next three with the most sacks return in Kam Franklin (5), Will Echoles (5) and Suntarine Perkins (4.5).

The transfer portal provided an infusion of edge rushing talent. Oregon's Blake Purchase (2 sacks in 2025), Jonathan Maldonado (5) and Alabama's Jordan Renaud are big parts of the No. 2-ranked transfer portal class.

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Golding, a longtime defensive coordinator, confirmed he will still call defensive plays in 2026.

Who is the backup quarterback behind Trinidad Chambliss?

Chambliss is returning, but it's a new-look quarterback room behind him.

Redshirt freshman Deuce Knight, a former five-star recruit from Lucedale, transferred from Auburn. Senior Walker Howard is back in Oxford for a second time. He played for Ole Miss from 2023-24 before transferring to Louisiana in 2025. He missed most of the season with anoblique injury.

Sophomore AJ Maddox, who played as a backup in two games in 2025, returns, along with sophomore Maealiuaki Smith, freshman Rees Wise, Central Arkansas transfer quarterback Jack Patterson and Tennessee State transfer George Hamsley.

Goldingdid not announce a backupduring spring practice. He said Knight continued to flash in camp, and that Howard is a strong veteran leader. Golding said Maddox needs to find more consistency.

How will Pete Golding handle discipline after Ole Miss football arrests?

Three Ole Miss football players have been arrested in the last two weeks.

LSU transfer offensive lineman Carius Curne wasarrested in Arkansason April 25 and faced six charges.

Curne was guilty on a no-contest plea of reckless driving, fleeing on foot and speeding, according to court records. The other three charges of improper passing (driving on the shoulder), possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substancewere dropped. Curne paid a fine of $2,150.

Two 2026 signees − quarterbackRees Wise, 18, and running backDamarius Yates, 19 − werecharged with DUIand reckless driving on May 3, according to the Lafayette County Sheriff's Department arrest docket. Yates also was charged with speeding.

Curne projected to have the biggest role of the three in the 2026 season. He is a contender to earn one of the vacated starting tackle jobs.

There's a lot of time before the season begins for any in-house discipline.

"Obviously it's a legal matter," Golding said of Curne's case on April 27. "We're still gathering information on it. Really can't speak on that right now. We'll let the legal process run its course and see what happens."

Ole Miss has declined comment on the Wise and Yates arrests.

Sam Hutchens coversOle Missfor the Clarion Ledger. Email him at Shutchens@gannett.com or reach him on X at @Sam_Hutchens_

This article originally appeared on Mississippi Clarion Ledger:Ole Miss football, Pete Golding questions after spring practice

What we don't know about Ole Miss football after Pete Golding's first spring practice

OXFORD —Ole Miss footballhas completed its first spring under the direction of coachPete Golding. The Rebels are coming off a cha...
Jacksonville track crowns seven champions at FHSAA Class 1A meet

Heading to the podium a champion once more, this time on the track, Harrison Kozlowski savored the latest triumph in Providence's charge to the head of Florida's distance running pack.

USA TODAY

"Wewon in cross [country]and now we won again," he said after Providence rolled to the 4x800-meter relay championship. "So that's nice."

Built for distance, the Stallions outran the best of the Sunshine State in the long events to capture four events at the Florida High School Athletic Association Class 1A track and field championships on May 6.

Providence's success, leading to an third-place team finish for the boys and fourth for the girls, highlighted a banner day of seven event victories for Jacksonville athletes on a scorching afternoon at the University of North Florida's Hodges Stadium.

Providence's Sam Loftin carries the baton to victory in the boys 4x800 relay during the FHSAA Class 1A high school track and field championships in Jacksonville, Florida, on May 6, 2026. [Clayton Freeman/Florida Times-Union]

Sam Loftin captured the boys 800,Sean Cunninghamraced away with the 3,200, Coral Sklenicka grabbed the win in the girls pole vault and the 4x800 quartet of Cunningham, Kozlowski, Charley West and Loftin pulled away at the end for first in 7:59.12.

"Coming in, we kind of knew we had the best chance to win," Loftin said. "So the whole point was just to control the race the whole time."

Also on top for the First Coast were Bishop Snyder's Kalia Bing in the girls long jump and Daniel Hoff in the boys 400, and Trinity Christian's Ja'Khari Jackson in a memorable Conqueror 1-2 in the boys high jump with teammate Nate Branch.

DISTANCE DELIGHT FOR STALLIONS

By now, Providence's long-distance mastery is no secret.

It started with the boys 4x800 relay and kept on going: Cunningham led wire-to-wire in the 3,200, crossing in 9:10.63 for a 16-second cushion. Loftin employed perfect timing in the 800, winning in 1:55.02 to edge St. John Neumann's Logan Bartelt by 0.13 seconds.

And Providence gathered distance points throughout the night as well, with a second in the girls 4x800, Loftin's third in the 1,600 behind Melbourne Holy Trinity's Evan Spreitzer and Kozlowski's fourth in the 3,200. It wasn't quite enough to unseat a Spreitzer-led Holy Trinity from the top spot, but it improved on last year's team finishes of fourth (boys) and sixth (girls).

The Stallions' Grayson Jackson took third in the boys discus, Caroline Collins was second in the girls discus and Avenlee Loewen came third in the girls javelin.

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Providence's Coral Sklenicka clears the bar in the girls pole vault during the FHSAA Class 1A high school track and field championships in Jacksonville, Florida, on May 6, 2026. [Clayton Freeman/Florida Times-Union]

The distance runners weren't the only winners for Providence. Sklenicka, who entered with the No. 3 seed in the pole vault, said she was just hoping to finish on the podium.

But after nailing her first five attempts, the latter the deciding one at 11 feet, 3 3/4 inches, she found herself a state champion.

"I can't believe I won it," she said. "I'm just really excited."

BING, HOFF WIN FOR BISHOP SNYDER

Bishop Snyder's Kalia Bing (96) lands in the girls long jump during the FHSAA Class 1A high school track and field championships in Jacksonville, Florida, on May 6, 2026. [Clayton Freeman/Florida Times-Union]

Bishop Snyder's Bing acknowledged the 2026 season hasn't always been easy, but she came through when it mattered most.

Entering her final attempt only half an inch out of first place, she launched a leap of 19 feet, 4 3/4 inches to grab first place by more than six inches over Ella Helm of Indian Rocks Christian.

"While I was doing the jump, I was relaxing, like, 'This is my last jump and I'm just going to go for it,'" Bing said.

A few hours later, it was Cardinals teammate Hoff on top of the boys 400, outracing the pack around the final corner and winning in 47.65. The sophomore, attempting a sprint triple, also came third in the 100 and fourth in the 200.

The high jump, meanwhile, belonged to Trinity. Jackson and Branch were the last ones standing, and Jackson finally cleared 6 feet, 11 1/2 inches — nearly four inches past his prior personal best — for first place.

"He's always pushing me, so shout out to him," Jackson said.

In the statewide standings, Palm Beach Gardens Benjamin retained its girls title ahead of St. Petersburg Northside Christian, 62-53, in a battle not decided until Benjamin's second place in the concluding 4x400 relay. Northside Christian's Eliana Black achieved the 800-1,600 double, and Keymani Dillingham of St. Stephen's Episcopal also set an FHSAA meet record of 1:00.27 in the girls 400 hurdles.

This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union:Providence track & field wins four trophies at FHSAA Class 1A meet

Jacksonville track crowns seven champions at FHSAA Class 1A meet

Heading to the podium a champion once more, this time on the track, Harrison Kozlowski savored the latest triumph in Providence's c...
Northern Nevada's top girl swimmers to watch at Regional meet

The Class 5A and 3A Regional swim meet is set for Thursday (diving), Friday and Saturday (swimming) at Moana Springs Community Aquatic Center in Reno.

USA TODAY Reno High's Addison Sala  is shown  competing in the 200 IM in the state swim meet on Saturday, May 17, 2025 at Moana Springs Aquatic Center in Reno. Spanish Springs swimmers Ella Baker and Olivia Holt

The Moana Springs Community Aquatic Center will host both the diving and swimming competitions. The Center is located at 240 W. Moana Lane.

  • Regionals for diving are Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at Moana Springs.

  • Prelims for swimming are Friday beginning at 2 p.m. at Moana Springs.

  • Finals for swimming are Saturday at 11:45 a.m. at Moana Springs.

Spanish Springs swimmer Aliya Martinez

In both Class 5A and Class 3A, the top four individual finishers in each event and the top four relay teams in each event advance to the state championship meet.

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Galena swimmer Marni Kraemer

State meet

The 2026 Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association Classes 5A and 3A boys and girls State Swimming and Diving Championships are scheduled for May 15 at UNLV’s Buchanan Natatorium (diving) and May 16 at Pavilion Center Pool in Las Vegas (swimming).

Here are some of the top girls swimmers expected to contend for Regional titles this week

Mila Rabinowitz Spanish Springs swimmers Aliya Martinez, Olivia Holt, Raven Santana and Ella Baker.

Top Northern Nevada high school girl swimmers

  • Addison Sala, senior, Reno High; committed to Alabama; 2025 state champion in 200 IM and 100 backstroke. She also won the 200 IM as a freshman and as a sophomore.

  • Marni Kraemer, junior, Galena; commited to Minnesota for Fall 2027. Sala and Kraemer finished first and second respectively in both the 200 IM and 100 backstroke at the 2025 high school state meet. Kraemer competes in back, breast and IM.

  • Lili Quevedo, sophomore, Bishop Manogue; her first season competing for her high school, she is a breaststroker and her 100 breaststroke best time is a little more than 2 seconds faster than the winning time from last year. She will be a strong contender at Regionals and State.

  • Mila Rabinowitz, sophomore, Reno High; she is the top distance freestyle swimmer in the area, and swims the fly.

  • Hannah Ingram, sophomore, Carson; could be the strongest fly swimmer in the area this year.

  • Larkin Russell, senior, Carson,; sprint and freestyle, committed to Vermont.

  • Brooklyn Shull, senior, Bishop Manogue; committed to Fairfield University (Connecticut).

  • MacKenzie Pierce, senior, Bishop Manogue, committed to Long Island University.

  • Ella Baker, senior, Spanish Springs.

  • Audrey Evers, freshman, Spanish Springs.

  • Ari Frydman, junior, Spanish Springs.

  • Kayda Gale, junior, Spanish Springs.

  • Olivia Holt, sophomore, Spanish Springs.

  • Aliya Martinez, senior, Spanish Springs.

  • Raven Santana, junior, Spanish Springs.

  • Lexi Tognoni, junior, Spanish Springs.

This article originally appeared on Reno Gazette Journal:Northern Nevada's top girl swimmers to watch at Regional meet

Northern Nevada's top girl swimmers to watch at Regional meet

The Class 5A and 3A Regional swim meet is set for Thursday (diving), Friday and Saturday (swimming) at Moana Springs Community Aquatic ...

 

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