Sports
Badminton England and the YONEX All England host celebration for Poul
Born in Denmark on 20th September 1965, Poul-Erik went on to become one of the most successful Danish badminton players in history. The three-time European champion, with titles in 1992, 1994 and 1996, led the way in putting Europe on the global badminton scene with Danes such as the reigning Olympic gold medallist Viktor Axelsen continuing […]


Born in Denmark on 20th September 1965, Poul-Erik went on to become one of the most successful Danish badminton players in history. The three-time European champion, with titles in 1992, 1994 and 1996, led the way in putting Europe on the global badminton scene with Danes such as the reigning Olympic gold medallist Viktor Axelsen continuing to fly that flag at the very highest level.
It was during this year too that he achieved possibly his greatest accolade, winning Olympic gold in Atlanta.
Badminton England CEO, Sue Storey, said: “Many years ago, when we were at the YONEX All England Open at Wembley – and Poul-Erik Hoyer won his first All England Championships.
The following year, Poul-Erik called time on his competitive badminton career, but remained rooted in the world of badminton.
He went on to win the title once more the following year in 1996.
Under his leadership, the sport continues to grow worldwide, with increased viewership, sponsorship as well as new tournament structures.
Defeating China’s Dong Jiong in the final, Poul-Erik became the first European male player to win an Olympic badminton singles gold medal.
The change that has been seen during his term as the President of the Badminton World Federation (BWF) is vast and a celebration hosted by Badminton England at the YONEX All England Open Badminton Championships earlier this month highlighted just how adored he is by the entire badminton family.
“Poul-Erik set the foundations and we’re just going to grow and grow from what he has done.”
The Badminton World Federation (BWF) President, Poul-Erik Hoyer is a sportsman that transcends the sport of badminton and his influence and impact should not be underestimated.
Then came his first All England title in the men’s singles in 1995 – an accomplishment so coveted, the tournament remains the pinnacle for all players.
“He has given his life to the sport of badminton. It was great to be able to offer our love and our thanks to him for the wonderful work that he has done at the celebration event we held in Birmingham during this year’s YONEX All England Championships earlier this month.
Poul-Erik first competed at the Olympic Games in Barcelona in 1992 – the year badminton made its Olympic debut – reaching the quarter-finals and paving the way for more Danish success in the years to follow.
To leave a legacy and make an impact is something most people strive for all their lives.
“The sport of badminton has moved on significantly during his tenure as President and I can’t wait to see where this is going to go in the future.
In 2007, he became the President of Badminton Denmark before being elected President of the BWF in 2013.
Sports
Despite War, Israel Prepares for Maccabiah, One of the Largest Sporting Events Globally
This summer’s Maccabiah Games mark the first major international event in Israel since October 7, 2023, spotlighting Jewish unity, Israeli resilience, and the power of sport The largest sporting event of 2025 is set to take place in Israel this June, with more than 7,000 participants from Israel and all around the Jewish world participating […]

This summer’s Maccabiah Games mark the first major international event in Israel since October 7, 2023, spotlighting Jewish unity, Israeli resilience, and the power of sport
The largest sporting event of 2025 is set to take place in Israel this June, with more than 7,000 participants from Israel and all around the Jewish world participating in 44 different sports in the 22nd Maccabiah Games. “That’s a message to the world from both Israel and world Jewry,” Amir Gissin, CEO of Maccabi World Union, the organization behind the games, told The Media Line. “We are here. We are here to stay. We’re stronger than ever. We did not break under the pressure. And what we are planning is a celebration of resilience and of unity. This is what the Maccabiah is about.”
These games will be the first since October 7, 2023, and the largest international event to take place in Israel since the attacks. The war has continued since that date, with 59 hostages still held in Gaza and Israel under constant threat from Iran’s proxy forces across the region. Just this week, a ballistic missile launched by Yemen’s Houthis struck an access road leading to Ben-Gurion International Airport, the country’s main gateway to the world, injuring six people. For Roy Hessing, CEO of the Maccabiah, it was clear that the war could not be a reason to cancel the games.
The message that we were very clear about it from the Israeli government to the leadership of Maccabi World Union was that we are not going to postpone or cancel the games. We should show everybody, everybody means the Israelis, the Jewish communities from around the world, and you know what, to our neighbors as well, that Israel is here to exist and we must think about joy and hope.
“The message that we were very clear about it from the Israeli government to the leadership of Maccabi World Union was that we are not going to postpone or cancel the games,” Hessing, who played water polo professionally for many years and later ran the Israeli Water Polo Association, told The Media Line. “We should show everybody, everybody means the Israelis, the Jewish communities from around the world, and you know what, to our neighbors as well, that Israel is here to exist and we must think about joy and hope.”
The event is set to be defiant and hopeful, but it will also acknowledge the tragedy of October 7 and the war that followed. “The opening ceremony, as well as some other activities, are going to be very emotional, very important. We’re not going to have the Maccabiah like a long Memorial Day for October 7 victims, but we are going to salute them, and it’s going to be a unique one,” Hessing said.
Gissin and Hessing spoke to The Media Line from the Maccabi World Union headquarters in Ramat Gan’s Kfar Maccabiah complex. Maccabi leadership operates from the headquarters, not only preparing for the Maccabiah, but also running the worldwide movement of nearly half a million members in 70 countries.

Opening ceremony, Maccabiah 2022. (Maccabi World Union)
Walking through the corridors of the building, Gissin, a former consul general of Israel in Toronto who joined the Maccabi movement more than 50 years ago, stopped to appreciate the photos on the walls tracing the Maccabiah’s history back to its first games in 1932.
The third Maccabiah, which took place in 1950, was the first to be held in the State of Israel. “That was a moving event, many visitors from abroad,” Gissin said. “But for me, it was significant that in this Maccabiah, 75 years ago, my father participated and won a gold medal in the field hockey competition. The interesting thing was that in the field hockey team, out of the 11 players, six were from my family—my father, his three brothers, and two cousins.”
A few steps down the hall are photos from the ninth Maccabiah Games, held in 1973—the same year that Gissin joined Maccabi Tzair, the organization’s youth movement.
“I was testing to participate in the drills that were in the opening ceremony, and I was not accepted. So, big trauma. So I had to come back to the movement on the bigger and higher positions. So this is what I do right now, trying to fix the trauma of the ninth Maccabiah,” Gissin joked.
Kfar Maccabiah isn’t just the headquarters for Maccabi movement leaders and the site of historical remnants from previous games. For months after the attacks, Maccabi World Union turned the complex into a sanctuary for survivors of the attacks and evacuees from the border area. In recent months, the headquarters has housed returning hostages and their families as part of their path to recovery.
Through our reach and Maccabi clubs all over Israel, and through our center, Kfar Maccabiah, the Maccabiah village, we’ve had the chance since October 7 to host and help all segments of Israeli society who needed help the most, the evacuees, the Nova survivors, and as it is now well known, the returning freed, kidnapped and their families.
“Through our reach and Maccabi clubs all over Israel, and through our center, Kfar Maccabiah, the Maccabiah village, we’ve had the chance since October 7 to host and help all segments of Israeli society who needed help the most, the evacuees, the Nova survivors, and as it is now well known, the returning freed, kidnapped and their families,” Gissin said.
The ongoing war contributes to the importance of bringing together Israelis and world Jewry for a sporting competition, but it also contributes to the logistical challenges.
Even before the war, putting on such a huge event wasn’t easy. Gissin said that the Maccabiah has 95% of the number of athletes participating in the Olympics, but only 3% of the Olympics’ budget. With a budget of 200 million shekels, or around $55 million, it is significantly smaller. “We walk carefully on a tightrope,” he said. “We need to be very careful with expenditure.”
Hessing noted that the event brings in the equivalent of around $95 million for Israel. “Economically, it’s really good for the State of Israel, especially while we’re talking about after COVID and after war,” he said.
Tourism to Israel was just bouncing back from the pandemic when the October 7 attacks took a heavy toll on the industry. Having 30,000 participants and their supporters staying in Israeli hotels will be a boon for the industry, Hessing said.
“We really help the hotels, the accommodation centers, to be fully booked,” he explained. “If you try to book a bed from July 1 until July 22, you won’t be able to find a lot of space in Israel. Doesn’t matter where you are going to try to find it.”
Unlike in the Olympic Games, which host their athletes in a central Olympic village, during the Maccabiah Games, “the entire country becomes the Olympic village,” Hessing said.
Part of the benefit of hosting participants all around the country is that they will have the opportunity to see the less familiar face of Israel. “They have a great experience to understand better how Israel works, to understand its periphery as well,” Hessing explained, noting that those staying in the north will have the opportunity to visit the Druze city of Daliyat al-Karmel and get to know Israel’s Druze population better.
Hessing said that the last time an event with such a high level of production was set to take place in Israel was on October 7, 2023, when Bruno Mars was going to perform in Tel Aviv.
We work on the Maccabiah actually a few months after the previous Maccabiah, which means that we have around three and a half years to prepare ourselves for this event, from the Israeli government to the different municipalities, from hiring so many employees and having many people are coming to be volunteers at the Maccabiah.
“Behind the scenes, it’s a crazy event,” he said. “We work on the Maccabiah actually a few months after the previous Maccabiah, which means that we have around three and a half years to prepare ourselves for this event, from the Israeli government to the different municipalities, from hiring so many employees and having many people are coming to be volunteers at the Maccabiah.”
Logistical hurdles range from running competitions safely in the heat of Israel’s summer to ensuring that the thousands of participants are always close to a bomb shelter in case of sirens. “I do believe that when we look at the big picture, we Israelis, we live here. We’re used to this situation,” Gissin said. “It’s a society that is ready to deal with many situations. And when our guests are coming, we’ll do our utmost to keep them safe.”

(L-R) Isaac Herzog, Joe Biden, and Yair Lapid at the Maccabiah 2022 opening ceremony. (Maccabi World Union)
Gissin noted that a city that hosts the Olympics will likely do so only once, or at most, perhaps once every 50 years, which means everything must be learned and executed from scratch. “We have an Olympic-size event in Israel every four years. So the level of experience of the people that run it is very, very high,” he said. “So when I look at the Maccabiah as a whole, I’m saying we’re well equipped to do it and to do it right.”
Hessing said that interest in participating in the Maccabiah remains strong, despite the rise in global antisemitism. “The Jews that are coming from the diaspora, and of course the Israelis, are waiting for the Maccabiah,” he said. “They are getting their recognition. In a few sports, they prefer to come to compete at the Maccabiah instead of going to compete at the world championships—in swimming, for example. And especially in these times, they understand that we need them now more than ever, and that it’s the right place for them to come and to compete and to show solidarity.”
Still, athlete numbers have decreased this year, with around 7,000 participants from around 50 countries, down from around 10,000 participants from nearly 65 countries in the 2022 games. That decrease is likely the result of security challenges, lack of flights, and high travel costs. Around 30% of the participants in the games are under 18, and many parents are wary about sending their children to Israel under such circumstances.
Fundraising has also been a challenge for Maccabi World Union. Despite support from the Israeli government, private sponsors, and organizations like the Jewish Agency for Israel and the Jewish National Fund, the Maccabiah is still “not where we want to be in terms of fundraising,” Gissin said.
Not all countries with Jewish communities will be sending delegations to the games, such as Iran, which has a Jewish population of around 8,000. The Turkish delegation, which has attended previous games, hasn’t yet received permission from the government to attend, Hessing said.
I do believe that by the end of the day, we’ll find the right formula, the right way that they will be able to represent Turkey and be part of the games. It’s not too late. We still have three months to work on it. I can tell you that we’re doing all efforts in order to bring them here and I really hope to see them because as we said before, sports is the bridge between everything and we should try to bring them here to celebrate life, to celebrate together as one big Jewish family, and we want to see the Turkish delegation as part of this joy and hope as well.
“I do believe that by the end of the day, we’ll find the right formula, the right way that they will be able to represent Turkey and be part of the games,” he continued. “It’s not too late. We still have three months to work on it. I can tell you that we’re doing all efforts in order to bring them here and I really hope to see them because as we said before, sports is the bridge between everything and we should try to bring them here to celebrate life, to celebrate together as one big Jewish family, and we want to see the Turkish delegation as part of this joy and hope as well.”
This year, athletes for team sports from countries with small delegations will be allowed to participate in a team made up of athletes from all countries under the banner M25. “There are many small communities that we want to give the opportunity to compete at the Maccabiah,” Hessing said, citing Paraguay’s 1,000-person Jewish community and Serbia’s 3,000-person Jewish community as two examples. Some countries’ delegations may be as small as one or two athletes, he said.
“We don’t want to miss each and every single Jewish guy or girl that wants to come to compete at the games,” Hessing continued. “We are doing our research in order to make sure that we contact them and they will be here this summer.”

Beach volleyball, Maccabiah 2022. (Gilad Kavalerchik)
While the athletes coming from abroad are all Jewish, all Israeli citizens are eligible to compete in the games. “It means that around 10% of the Israeli delegation are not Jews, and it is amazing for us because we want to live in a place that on the football national team, we have all the Israelis—from Druze to Arabs to Muslims, and of course to Israeli Jews,” Hessing said.
He described the games as a fantastic opportunity for athletes, especially for the thousands of Maccabiah participants who are 18 and under, many of whom are competing in their first international event.
“There are some scouts that can see them and take them from Israel or the other way around, from the United States or from other countries to come and to compete for the State of Israel, and all of a sudden to become official players, athletes for the different national teams for Israel,” Hessing said.
The Maccabiah Games have the ability to change the life of a young athlete, but they also hold a broader geopolitical significance. In 2022, President Joe Biden attended the Maccabiah opening ceremony.
There’s a chance that President Donald Trump will attend this year’s game, Gissin said. “It’s too early to declare names of dignitaries coming, but I think that the international profile of the Maccabiah today is higher than ever,” he said. “And we do get a lot of inquiries and interest from different places in the world. So I’m sure it will not be boring. The opening ceremony is going to be quite an event.”
Bringing international attention to Israel and the Jews for an event like the Maccabiah Games means something different since October 7, with antisemitism on the rise and as Israel has become increasingly isolated internationally and divided internally.
“My worries as an Israeli citizen and as a Jew are, where are we going to be both internally in Israel, where is the Israeli society going to be with the terrible division that we have right now, and where is the Jewish world going to be facing this very wild wave of antisemitism? These are the challenges,” Gissin said. “This is what worries me. And our role as Maccabi World Union and as those who run the Maccabiah is to make it the best event possible, because that will be our way to help bring Israelis together and Israelis and Jews together.”
That way of thinking went into the theme for this year’s Maccabiah: “More Than Ever.” Hessing said that this Maccabiah is set to be the most important and meaningful one in the event’s history, helping Israelis become less cynical and more solidly Zionist.
“I truly believe that those that came to Israel to show solidarity, we must and we want to hug them back, and the Maccabiah will be an amazing opportunity for us, the Israelis, to say thank you, to all the Jewish communities, to the leadership that they showed and to the amazing help that they gave to the State of Israel,” he said.
Nothing will stop the Maccabiah. Nothing will make us go backwards and say, no, actually let’s postpone or let’s cancel. That will not happen. The Maccabiah is going to take place here in Israel. We’re going to have 10,000 athletes marching in Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, and I think that that will be the best message that we can send the world and the Jewish people.
“More Than Ever” is also a call for the Maccabiah Games to go on, no matter what. “Nothing will stop the Maccabiah. Nothing will make us go backwards and say, no, actually let’s postpone or let’s cancel,” Gissin said. “That will not happen. The Maccabiah is going to take place here in Israel. We’re going to have 10,000 athletes marching in Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem, and I think that that will be the best message that we can send the world and the Jewish people.”
Sports
WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD FINISHES 7TH AT NJAC CHAMPIONSHIPS
Story Links Ewing, NJ: The Ramapo College women’s outdoor track and field team competed at the 2025 NJAC Outdoor Track & Field Championships this weekend hosted by the College of New Jersey. The two-day meet was held on May 3rd and 4th. The 4x100m relay team placed fourth overall with […]
Ewing, NJ: The Ramapo College women’s outdoor track and field team competed at the 2025 NJAC Outdoor Track & Field Championships this weekend hosted by the College of New Jersey. The two-day meet was held on May 3rd and 4th.
The 4x100m relay team placed fourth overall with a combined time of 49.98 seconds, which also qualified them for the AARTFC. The team was made up of Ashley Gordon, Gorospe, Bryanna Shepperson, and Williams. The 4x400m relay team also qualified for the AARTFC with a time of 4:05.52 as they placed fourth overall. The team was made up of Abby Petrolia, Williams, Victoria Romanov, Lynell Thomas.
Shepperson grabbed a third-place finish in the high jump when she cleared a personal best of 1.52m to earn six points for the team. Jessica Branham finished eighth overall in the high jump when she cleared 1.42m. Zoey Cassavell placed fifth overall in the 5k race to secure four points with a time of 18:48.38 while she placed sixth in the 1500m in 4:52.5. Jasmin Silva-Vargas posted a personal best time of 5:09.74 in the 1500m race. Williams recorded personal bests in the prelims of the 200m (27.24 seconds) and 400m (1:00.73). Gorospe recorded a personal best time in the 100m prelims in 13.09 seconds. Barbara Exilus qualified for the finals of the 400m hurdles with a fifth-place finish in the prelims in 1:06.65. In the 5k race, Kiera Gregory posted a personal best time of 20:19.67.
The Roadrunners return to action on Friday, May 9th when they host the Last Chance Twilight at the Athletic Center starting at 5pm. The team will also honor their senior class.
Sports
Men’s Volleyball Places Five On All-America Team
Story Links HONOLULU – The University of Hawai’i men’s volleyball team placed five players on the AVCA All-America team, including two on the first team — setter Tread Rosenthal and outside hitter Adrien Roure. In addition, opposite Kristian Titriyski was selected to the second team while libero ‘Eleu Choy and middle […]

HONOLULU – The University of Hawai’i men’s volleyball team placed five players on the AVCA All-America team, including two on the first team — setter Tread Rosenthal and outside hitter Adrien Roure.
In addition, opposite Kristian Titriyski was selected to the second team while libero ‘Eleu Choy and middle blocker Kurt Nusterer were honorable mention.
The five honorees are tied for the second-most in a single season behind a program-record six in 2023 and marks the eighth time in the last nine years that the Rainbow Warriors had at least four student-athletes honored.
Rosenthal is the only player among the group to have received prior All-America recognition as he was selected honorable mention last season. The sophomore from Austin, Texas ranks No. 3 nationally in assists per set (10.65 avg.) while directing the No. 5-ranked offense (.343).
Roure, a freshman from Lyon, France, is second on the team in kill average (3.14 per set) in 30 starts this season. He leads the team with 20 matches of 10+ kills and was selected as the Most Valuable Player of last week’s Big West Championship.
Titriyski, a freshman from Sofia, Bulgaria, is among the nation’s leaders in kills (4.24 avg.) and points (5.50 avg.). He also leads the team in aces per set (0.45 avg.) and has three matches of 20+ kills this season.
Nusterer, a junior from Indianapolis, Ind., leads the team in blocks with a 1.02 per set average and has career-bests of 1.26 kills per set, hitting at a .463 clip. Choy, a senior from Honolulu, leads the team with a 1.68 digs per set average and is the only player to start all 31 matches this season.
All five were also selected to the All-Big West Team announced two weeks ago – Rosenthal, Roure, and Titriyski on the first team while Choy and Nusterer were named honorable mention.
#HawaiiMVB
Sports
National Champions! TCU Takes Home Program’s First Title
Story Links GULF SHORES, Ala. – For the first time in program history, TCU, the tournament’s No. 2 seed has won a national championship in beach volleyball after defeating No. 4 LMU 3-2 Sunday morning at the Beach of Gulf Shores. In a battle of two programs looking for their first national […]

GULF SHORES, Ala. – For the first time in program history, TCU, the tournament’s No. 2 seed has won a national championship in beach volleyball after defeating No. 4 LMU 3-2 Sunday morning at the Beach of Gulf Shores.
In a battle of two programs looking for their first national championship, it was TCU that avenged two losses earlier this season to LMU to win TCU Athletics’ ninth national title.
The Horned Frogs received wins from all three AVCA Top Flight honorees as Anhelina Khmil/Ana Vergara, Sofia Izuzquiza/Allanis Navas and Daniela Alvarez/Tania Moreno recorded points for TCU.
TCU’s winningest pair, this season, Izuzquiza and Navas, won at No. 3, 21-16, 21-13 to remain perfect for the championship at 4-0. The freshman and senior duo end their first time year at TCU 26-2.
Khmil and Vergara won at No. 4, 21-14, 21-19, to finish the season undefeated at 21-0. The duo has tallied 41 wins together all-time.
In a storybook ending, the Olympians, Alvarez and Moreno clinched the match for TCU. After taking a year off and coming back to Fort Worth, the duo three-set thriller at the No. 1 spot, 18-21, 21-15, 15-6. The two have never lost a dual in the four years they’ve been to NCAA Tournament.
TCU completes its historic season on a win streak of 12 with a record of 32-5.
Sports
ROADRUNNERS PLACE FIFTH OVERALL AT NJAC CHAMPIONSHIPS
Story Links Ewing, NJ: The Ramapo College men’s outdoor track and field team placed fifth overall with 46 points. The Roadrunners competed at the two-day meet hosted by the College of New Jersey. The 4x400m relay team grabbed a third-place finish with a combined time of 3:20.71 while they also qualified […]

Ewing, NJ: The Ramapo College men’s outdoor track and field team placed fifth overall with 46 points. The Roadrunners competed at the two-day meet hosted by the College of New Jersey.
The 4x400m relay team grabbed a third-place finish with a combined time of 3:20.71 while they also qualified for the AARTFC. The team was made up of Anthony Gentile, Mark Shinkorenko, Terrell Lockett, and Logan Natale. In the 100m dash prelims, Brandon Balcacer finished 9th in 10.84 seconds with an AARTFC qualifying time. Nbubuisi Okeh clocked in with a personal best time of 11.04 seconds while JC Mendoza also posted a personal best of 11.08 seconds. In the prelims of the 400m hurdles, Matt Suero finished second to advance to the finals in 54.52 seconds while he set a new personal best in the finals in 53.79 seconds to finish fourth overall. Braden Holm placed fourth in the shot put with a AARTFC qualifying mark of 14.75m.
The 4x100m relay team recorded a combined time of 42.50 seconds to qualify for the AARTFC. The team was made up of Balcacer, Mendoza, Okeh, and Gentile. In the 1,500m race, Julian Mignone posted a personal best time of 4:08.69 for a ninth-place finish overall. In the 5k, Migone clocked in at 16:21.01 to finish 12th overall. Sebastiano Secades recorded a personal best mark in the long jump in 6.27m. Natale clocked in at 49.09 seconds in the 400m dash for a new personal best. In the 800m race, Michael Mohr clocked in with a new personal best of 1:57.78, finishing in eighth-place overall.
Day One Recap: Sebastian Pross won the hammer throw on day one 2025 NJAC Outdoor Track & Field Championships this afternoon at the College of New Jersey. Pross, who won his second hammer throw title of his career, posted a mark of 51.66m (169′ 6″) to win the event and earn 10 points for the Roadrunners. Holm earned NJAC Runner-Up with a second-place finish in the hammer throw. Holm posted a mark of 48.21m (158′ 2″) to earn eight points for the team. In the javelin, Nick Palmadesso posted one point for the team with an eighth-place finish as he recorded a throw of 49.30m (161′ 9″).
The Roadrunners return to action on Friday, May 9th when they host the Last Chance Twilight at the Athletic Center starting at 5pm. The team will also honor their senior class.
Sports
Five Waves Earn AVCA Men’s Volleyball All-America Honors
Story Links MALIBU, Calif. – Five members of the sixth-ranked Pepperdine men’s volleyball team have been honored as AVCA Division I-II Men’s Volleyball All-America selections, as announced by the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) on Monday. Outside hitter Ryan Barnett was named to the AVCA First Team, while Cole Hartke and Jacob Reilly […]

MALIBU, Calif. – Five members of the sixth-ranked Pepperdine men’s volleyball team have been honored as AVCA Division I-II Men’s Volleyball All-America selections, as announced by the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) on Monday. Outside hitter Ryan Barnett was named to the AVCA First Team, while Cole Hartke and Jacob Reilly earned Second Team honors. Gabe Dyer and James Eadie received Honorable Mention accolades.
“This is a tremendous accomplishment for these young men and a testament to the work they’ve put in all season,” said Pepperdine head coach Jonathan Winder. “To have five recognized by the AVCA reflects the depth, talent, and unity of this group.”
Barnett ranks in the top-25 nationally in four statistical categories: aces per set, hitting percentage, kills per set and points per set. The redshirt-junior leads the Waves kills per set (3.65) and is second on the team in points per set (4.37). He recorded double-digit kills in 21 of 22 matches played, including a season high 23 kills in the MPSF Tournament championship against USC. Barnett also tallied 45 aces and 119 digs on the year.
Hartke is the highest scoring freshman in the country, averaging 4.38 points per set. The freshman totaled 335 kills in 92 sets, hitting at a .310 clip. He averaged 3.64 kills and 0.52 blocks per set.
Reilly, a junior libero tallied 185 digs this season and collected a season high 12 digs in the MPSF Tournament championship against USC. He also added 42 assists in 28 matches. Reilly also completed the MPSF regular season as the most efficient libero in the conference, recording the least amount of reception errors and resulting in a .958 reception percentage.
Dyer directed the Pepperdine offense to a .328 team hitting percentage, which ranks eighth in NCAA Division I-II. He averaged 9.66 assists per set and added 29 blocks, 176 digs, and 9 service aces over 29 matches.
Eadie recorded 124 kills (1.61 per set) while hitting .410 across 23 matches. He leads the waves with .974 blocks per set while gathering a total 0f 75 on the season.
Pepperdine plays in the NCAA Quarterfinals on Thursday, May 8 in Columbus. The No. 6 and fifth-seeded Waves take on No. 7 and fourth-seeded Loyola Chicago at 4:30 PT.
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