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Men’s Water Polo Kicks Off 2025 Season at Triton Invitational

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LA JOLLA, Calif. — The No. 15 UC Santa Barbara Men’s Water Polo team gets the 2025 season underway with six matches at the Triton Invitational, hosted by UC San Diego, this weekend. The Gauchos will play twice a day for the next three days, beginning by facing George Washington and No. 10 San Jose State on Friday. Saturday brings clashes with La Verne and No. 2 USC, while contests with No. 20 Navy and Pomona-Pitzer will round out the weekend on Sunday.
 
WHEN AND WHERE TO WATCH
Tickets for the weekend are available now, and can be purchased by clicking here. There will not be a live stream or live stats for any of the Gauchos’ games this weekend, so stay tuned to UC Santa Barbara Men’s Water Polo on social media — @ucsbmwp on Instagram and @UCSBWaterPolo on X/Twitter — For score updates throughout the weekend. Start times for the Gauchos’ games are as follows. Santa Barbara is scheduled to take on George Washington at 12:10 p.m. and San Jose State at 5:30 p.m. Friday, La Verne at 10:40 a.m. and USC at 2:40 p.m. Saturday, Navy at 8 a.m. and Pomona-Pitzer at 1:20 p.m. Sunday.
 
2024 IN REVIEW
The Gauchos come into the 2025 season ranked as the No. 15 team in the Collegiate Water Polo Association’s national poll after finishing 2024 with a 15-12 record, falling to eventual conference champions Long Beach State in the first round of The Big West Championship. For a second year in a row, it was one of Santa Barbara’s highest-scoring seasons on record, with the Gauchos’ 376 goals being their fifth-best haul in any season ever. It was even better in terms of goals per game, with their 13.93 average second best in program history.
 
GAUCHOS TO KNOW
Santa Barbara’s 2024 offensive onslaught was led by 52-goal-scorer Brock Zamanian, who tallied more combined goals and assists than any Big West player (92). The 2024 All-America Honorable Mention is back to lead the offense again in 2025. Adam Gyenis was not far behind him, with 87 total points last season; Santa Barbara will have to replace the Hungarian in their attack this year. The leading candidate for that role is fellow European Danilo Dragovic, who tallied 70 points on 35 goals and 35 assists as a freshman in 2024. After getting a season of collegiate water polo under his belt, Dragovic got the opportunity to hone his skills against some of the top young talents in the world, representing Montenegro at the U20 World Championship in June.
 
Another hole for the Gauchos to fill in 2025 is at the center position, where Dom Brown is their only 2024 All-American not returning for this season. In his stead, Santa Barbara will look for Kai Ross to continue his promising trajectory. Ross featured in all 27 of the Gauchos’ games as a freshman last season and was excellent at earning power plays for Santa Barbara, finishing second on the team in exclusions drawn. If he can turn his goal-scoring output up a notch with more playing time this season, he could join Brown and 2023 Big West Player of the Year Dash McFarland in a growing line of dominant Gaucho centers.
 
Also, Ross will not have to hold down the post by himself, as newcomer William Pezold has the physical stature and eye for goal of a dominant force in the middle himself. A junior utility man, Pezold racked up 82 goals at UC Merced, 41 in each of his two seasons as a Bobcat. He will be licking his lips at a couple of this week’s matchups in particular; Pezold scored five goals in a game against Navy last season, three against La Verne and tallied three assists against Pomona-Pitzer. Pezold is also not the only newcomer poised to make an impact for Santa Barbara. Freshman attacker Charlie Johnson joins the Gauchos after an impressive high school career at Loyola High School in Los Angeles, earning All-America Third Team honors after leading the team in goals his senior season.
 
At the other end of the pool, there is perhaps no more nailed-down position than that of Gaucho goalie, where Levi Lentin returns for a third season as first-choice netminder. Now a redshirt senior, Lentin has been an All-Big West Second Team selection each of the last two seasons and is coming off a 2025 campaign in which he led the conference in saves. Behind him is Wyatt Pieretti, who featured in nine games last season, as well as redshirt freshman Haakon Lacy and Finn Byrne, a practice player promoted to the varsity roster for 2025.
 
SCOUTING THE OPPONENTS
George Washington is coming off a 2024 campaign in which they went 17-9, falling to Navy in their conference semifinals but winning the third-place game against Wagner to enter this year on a win streak. They played just five Californian teams last season, going 2-3 with losses to Santa Clara, San Jose State and Pacific, and the Revolutionaries have never played the Gauchos. For this season, George Washington returns two of their four Mid-Atlantic Water Polo All-Conference selections from last year return in the shape of senior utility Adonis Vlassis and sophomore attacker Antonio Florena. The Revolutionaries will be without their all-conference goalie from last season following his graduation.
 
No. 10 San Jose State finished 2024 with a 17-7 record after being upset by California Baptist in the West Coast Conference Championship game, denying the Spartans a trip to the NCAA Tournament. One of those 17 wins came against the Gauchos in San Jose, 16-13, a second straight win for the Spartans in an all-time series which Santa Barbara leads, 18-13. Mateja Bosic, who tallied three goals and two assists in last season’s fixture, was named to the Preseason All-West Coast Conference team, as was goalkeeper Brendon Gyapjas.
 
La Verne will surely not be looking forward to facing the Gauchos on Saturday, as some of Santa Barbara’s all-time highest goal totals have come against the Leopards. Over their last five meetings, the Gauchos have out-scored La Verne, 125-24, including a 25-9 win in 2024. That was one of five games against Division I opponents for the Division III Leopards last season, all of which ended in defeat for La Verne. This weekend marks the beginning of a new era for the Leopards, as Robert Echeverria is set to begin his first season as head coach of La Verne Men’s Water Polo; he had been serving as interim head coach for both the Leopards’ men’s and women’s programs since January before being given the permanent post in July.
 
No. 2 USC is the biggest test for the Gauchos this weekend, with the Trojans beginning yet another trophy hunt after losing to arch-rivals UCLA in the 2024 National Championship. USC finished with a 23-6 record, including a win over Santa Barbara last October, and placed five players on All-America teams. Three of those All-Americans are back for 2025: goalie Bernando Herzer, driver Robert López Duart and utility Stefan Brankovic. When they faced the Gauchos last year, Brankovic scored twice and assisted twice, while Herzer made eight saves, but Santa Barbara was able to keep Duart off the scoreboard entirely. They will look to do the same and to earn their first win over the Trojans since 2019 on Saturday.
 
No. 20 Navy reached the MAWPC Championship game in 2024 but fell to the unbeaten Fordham team that took the world by storm last year. Still, the Midshipmen finished with a 22-10 record and have a star around which they can build in attacker Kiefer Black. Black earned All-America Honorable Mention for a second season in a row in 2024, and like Santa Barbara’s Dragovic, he spent his summer competing at the U20 World Championship, winning a silver medal. A La Jolla native, Black was teammates with Gaucho goalie Lentin for two years at La Jolla High School. When the two former Vikings face off on Sunday, it will be the first meeting between the Gauchos and Midshipmen since 2015.  
 
Pomona-Pitzer went 19-12 and won the SCIAC Regular Season Championship in 2024, but they were knocked out of the conference tournament by Chapman. The Division III Sagehens played 12 games against Division I opposition in 2024, including UCLA, Cal, and the Gauchos. They picked up wins over Mount St. Mary’s Air Force and LIU, all by wide margins, but lost their meeting with Santa Barbara. At the end of the season, Pomona-Pitzer placed two attackers — Zach Whitfield and Miles Chiang — on Division III All-America teams. Both are back for this season.
 
UP NEXT
The Gauchos and Sagehens will get to see each other again next weekend, as Santa Barbara heads to the Inland Empire Classic, Sept. 5 and 6. The Gauchos will face Occidental and Fresno Pacific in Redlands next Friday, and Pomona-Pitzer and Concordia Irvine in Claremont next Saturday.
 



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I hear Jamie Morrison from Texas Volleyball and appreciate his sentiments… “I care less about mistakes and more about responses” And this is fine and fair…but we also have to care deeply about…

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I hear Jamie Morrison from Texas Volleyball and appreciate his sentiments…

“I care less about mistakes and more about responses”

And this is fine and fair…but we also have to care deeply about mistakes. Quality of action-execution at the adult elite level of sport matters.

I’m being purposefully facetious- I know he knows this and I know he cares about this. I highlight it because I want to suggest a way to show you want to minimise mistakes in your team.

Attention…

It starts with focus of attention.

Attention is arguably the most important mental skill in high performance sport. Actions are heavily mediated by it…in fact they’re constantly mediated by its duration, direction, and strength. Technical actions, tactical actions (decisions), and physical actions constantly mediated by attention.

Coaches should be greedy with relation to attention. They should place high demands on players taking control of their attention, executing with attention, guiding it appropriately and robustly. By doing so players lessen a propensity to make mistakes.

My thesis here is obvious – many (but not all) mistakes are as a result of low attention – a disconnection from the game. High performance sport requires a high attention – focused and connected to the game no matter what.

So…

Whilst it’s understandable to give players leeway for error (especially as such an approach promotes freedom and creativity)…coaches would do well to drive player attention – it’s control…it’s duration and direction.



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Spartans Back In MW Action Versus Lopes On Sunday – SJSU Athletics – Official Athletics Website

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BACK TO MOUNTAIN WEST ACTION:  After a brief break for the Christmas holiday, the San José State women’s basketball team returns to action this Sunday with a Mountain West game against Grand Canyon at the Provident Credit Union Event Center. Both teams enter the game looking for their first conference win of the season. The Spartans fell at Wyoming, 83-60, while GCU fell to UNLV, 61-60, in a home game for the Lopes.

San José State enters Sunday’s game looking to extend a winning streak after defeating Sacramento State, 61-56, on December 21. Maya Anderson led all scorers with a career-high 29 points in the win.

Sunday’s game is the first of three SJSU plays this week. The Spartans play at Utah State Wednesday afternoon to end 2025. The team starts 2026 with a home game against New Mexico on January 3 at 2 p.m.

ABOUT GRAND CANYON:  The Lopes enter Sunday’s game with a 1-10 overall record and 0-1 mark in the Mountain West. The Lopes opened conference play by pushing defending champion UNLV to the brink before falling 61-60 in the final minute of the game. The team’s only win of the season came against SMU, 76-60, on November 18. Head coach Winston Gandy is in his first season at the school.

Series Record – First meeting

CAREER DAY FOR M. ANDERSON: Maya Anderson recorded her best scoring game as a Spartan with 29 points in the team’s 61-56 win over Sacramento State on December 21. She was 12-for-21 from the field and 2-for-7 from three-point range. Anderson scored 19 of her 29 points in the first half, including 10 points in the first quarter.

M. ANDERSON LEADING THE SPARTANS: 

Maya Anderson leads San José State in scoring with 152 points, 12.9 per game. She has led the team in points scored in six games including a career-best 29 points in a win over Sacramento State. She has scored in double figures in eight games this season..

Anderson also leads the team with 71 rebounds, 5.9 per game. She has led the team in boards in four games – 8 at BYU, 9 against UC Santa Barbara, 12 versus Cal State Monterey Bay and 7 against Sacramento State.

NATIONAL RANKINGS: Through December 22, the Spartans rank in the top-100 nationally in five categories.

Blocks PG – 51st 4.6 pg

Three-Point Attempts PG – 62nd 24.3 pg

Rebounds – Defensive – 90th 27.0 pg

WHO WANTS TO SCORE TONIGHT? Through 12 games this season, six different Spartans have led the team in scoring. Maya Anderson has led the team in scoring in six games, while Rylei Waugh led the team in three games. Amira Brown scored 12 points in the win at CBU, while Gabriela Pato scored 11 to lead the Spartans at No. 21 Washington. Katarina Anderson came off the bench at California and scored 10 points to lead SJSU. Stella Sgro scored a career-best 12 points off the bench at Wyoming.

UP NEXT: San José State finishes 2025 with a game at Utah State this Wednesday, December 31. Tip time is set for 1 p.m. MT/12 p.m. PT at the Dee Glen Smith Spectrum.

#AllSpartans



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Win Mikasa balls by filling in the 2025-26 Club Survey!

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Give your views by filling in the Volleyball England 2025-26 Club Survey and you could win VW200 Mikasa balls for use during training and matches. 

The survey has been distributed today (27th December) to club administrators, with spot prizes of two balls given out at key milestones. 

The survey takes just 15 to 20 minutes to complete, and, by participating, your club is helping to shape the future direction of the sport in this country. 

To complete the survey, check your club’s admin email inbox for the relevant link. 

“The information gleaned from the Club Survey remains invaluable in shaping Volleyball England’s future planning and delivery,” said Oliver Hudson, Volleyball England’s Project lead for Data and Insights. 

“The more clubs who are able to give their thoughts and opinions, the easier it is for us as the national governing body to respond to the needs of the sport, so we’re always extremely grateful to those clubs that fill out the survey.” 

The survey will remain open until 31st January 2026, after which the data will be anaylsed and key findings communicated across the organisation and its sub-groups before a summary of findings will be released to clubs.  

If you have any questions or need assistance with the Club Survey, please email o.hudson@volleyballengland.org.



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College track: Mount Pleasant’s Gabe Feldmann running with a purpose | The Hawk Eye – Burlington, Iowa

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PELLA — Central College track and field junior Gabe Feldmann of Mount Pleasant hasn’t let cystic fibrosis slow him down on the track or his generosity off the track to raise support for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.

An inherited genetic disease, cystic fibrosis impacts the lungs, digestive system and other organs in the body. A build-up of thick, sticky mucus can lead to breathing problems, infections and digestive issues by blocking ducts and airways.

Depending on the weekend, Feldmann typically competes in races that range from the 200-meter dash all the way up to the 800-meter run. His focus is on the 400 meters, an event he has completed 13 times in his first two years at Central.

Breathing is an important part of all running events, but especially the 400.

“You breathe hard in a 400,” he said. “You feel it right in the chest.”

He completed the lap around the track in 51.62 seconds at the American Rivers Outdoor Championships in 2025, placing 22nd. He also was on the fifth-place 4×400-meter relay squad at that same meet.

Feldmann was approached by the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation about using his college athletic experience as a platform to raise money. Starting earlier this fall and running through the end of the Dutch season in early May, Feldmann is posting content on his Instagram account (@gabetracksdowncf) and thanking supporters who have donated to the foundation.

“It was the option that really stuck out to me,” he said. “I work out every day no matter what for track, but I’m still raising money doing what I do normally.”

He’s working towards clocking in at 48 seconds in the 400 this year.

“My goal is to run a 48 this year,” he said. “If I’m able to do that, I’ll be able to tell everybody who supported me in this that they were there with me.”

Raising money for the foundation is not new to the Feldmann family, who ran fundraising events in Mount Pleasant from 2016-2023.

Money isn’t the only motivation for Feldmann, who also wants to inspire other people with cystic fibrosis to chase big goals.

“I said I was never going to let being born with cystic fibrosis limit me.” he said. “I’ve been an athlete my whole life. If I could show any other kid that having cystic fibrosis doesn’t have to hold them back, that would be super cool. It’s the entire goal.”



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EKU Volleyball Adds Two Transfers For 2026 Season

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RICHMOND, Ky. – Eastern Kentucky University’s volleyball team has added two transfers for the 2026 season – Audrey Hudson, an outside hitter transferring from Wright State University, and Alexis Bull, a middle blocker/right side transferring from the University of Texas at Arlington.
 
“I’m so excited to add Audrey and Alexis to our program,” EKU Head Coach Johnna Bazzani said.  “They both come from championship programs.  That alone is going to help elevate and raise the standard in our gym!”
 
The 5-foot-10 Hudson will be a junior in 2026.  In her first season at Wright State, she played in five matches before suffering a season-ending injury.  In 2025, Hudson played in 18 matches and started three times.  She averaged 0.83 kills and 1.62 digs per set.
 
Hudson, a Fort Wayne, Indiana native, played high school volleyball at Bishop Dwenger and club volleyball for Munciana.  She helped Bishop Dwenger capture a 3A State Championship in 2020.  She was a second team all-state pick in 2022 and a first team all-conference selection as a senior in 2023.
 
Bull will be a senior in 2026.  She played in 42 matches over three seasons at UT Arlington.  As a junior this past season, Bull averaged 1.03 kills and 0.66 blocks in 19 matches.  She led the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) with an average of 0.41 aces per set.  Bull had a season-best six blocks at Louisiana and a season-high seven kills against Jackson State.
 
The 6-foot-2 Magnolia, Texas native was a 4-year member of the AVCA Phenom Watch List during her high school career at Oak Ridge and Magnolia.  She recorded 878 kills, 280 blocks and 123 aces during her prep career.  Bull was chosen as First Team All-Montgomery County and as the District 19-5A Offensive Player of the Year in 2022.
 
EKU tied for second in the Atlantic Sun Conference standings this season and advanced to the ASUN Tournament championship match.   The Colonels have won 20 or more matches in three straight seasons, the first time the program has accomplished that since 2003-05.

 



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Wyoming Area’s Taylor Gashi commits to Army for track and field

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Taylor Gashi just needed to find the sport that gave her the best chance at achieving the goals for her future.

High-level youth gymnastics competition gave way to years of work on the volleyball court that continued even after a development in Gashi’s freshman year at Wyoming Area pointed her on the right path.

“With track and field, I kind of knew a few years back,” said Gashi, who on Dec. 15 formalized her commitment to attend the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and compete in the sport. “Volleyball has been a part of my life longer than track and field. Freshman year, I placed second in district for triple jump so that was kind of a wake-up call for my coaches and my family that this could probably go somewhere far.”

Gashi expects to concentrate on the long jump and triple jump while competing at Army West Point, but her overall athletic ability means she could potentially help the team in the heptathlon, a combination of events she tested and did well at with a Lehigh Valley club team last summer. As a junior at Wyoming Area, Gashi finished 20th in the state in Class 3A in the triple jump after taking silver medals in District 2 in the triple jump and discus and a bronze in the long jump.

Once Gashi realized track and field was her best option for a college sport, the rest fell into place.

“That same year, I also got to experience going to West Point for a football game,” she said. “One of my good friends brought me there. Both of my parents had been in the military, so the military was never something I was opposed to doing.”

Gashi learned more about the athletic program’s status on the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I level, leading to her verbal commitment in September.

“It was kind of everything I had been looking for and track and field was something that could get me there,” she said.

Gashi will report to West Point for plebe summer, beginning her military duties before academics start next fall. Accepting her nomination to the academy means a five-year military commitment after she is done with school.

While at Wyoming Area, Gashi has kept busy not just in multiple events in track and field, but in multiple sports.

In volleyball, Gashi was a four-year starter, earning first-team, all-star status from Wyoming Valley Conference coaches this fall after previously receiving honorable mention.

After taking last year off, Gashi is back on the swim team this winter, specializing as freestyle sprinter.

Unsure of a major, Gashi has interest in looking into military intelligence and aviation.

“Those are the two that really strike interest for me,” she said.



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