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Men's Golf Wraps Up Regular Season At Princeton Invitational

Aidan Farkas shot 75-74/149 (+7) and tied for 29th.• Thomas Larkin and Christian Matt finished tied for 38th with scores of 74-77/151 (+9) and 76-75/151 (+9), respectively.• Noah Moelter finished tied for 55th place after shooting 81-74/155 (+13).• Keller Mulhern rounded out the five-man squad with a score of 82-82/164 (+22) and tied for 74th.• As a team, the Hawks shot 306-300/606 (+38) […]

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Men's Golf Wraps Up Regular Season At Princeton Invitational

Aidan Farkas shot 75-74/149 (+7) and tied for 29th.
Thomas Larkin and Christian Matt finished tied for 38th with scores of 74-77/151 (+9) and 76-75/151 (+9), respectively.
• Noah Moelter finished tied for 55th place after shooting 81-74/155 (+13).
• Keller Mulhern rounded out the five-man squad with a score of 82-82/164 (+22) and tied for 74th.
• As a team, the Hawks shot 306-300/606 (+38) and placed 11th in the 14-team field.
• Princeton won the team title by 13 strokes with a score of 289-277/566 (-2).
• Individually, Princeton’s Reed Greyserman won medalist honors by three strokes with a score of 69-68/137 (-5).
• The Princeton Invitational was held at the par-71 Springdale Golf Club (6,458 yards).

Up Next
The Hawks open Atlantic 10 Championship play starting Tuesday, April 22.

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Coach of the Year, Pair of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year, Freshman of the Year, and Seven All-Conference First Team Honors Among LMU’s WCC Accolades

Story Links LOS ANGELES – LMU Beach Volleyball continues to accumulate a significant number of West Coast Conference season awards, and 2025 continued that trend. The Lions have received Coach of the Year, Pair of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year, Freshman of the Year, seven All-Conference First Team Honors, […]

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LOS ANGELES – LMU Beach Volleyball continues to accumulate a significant number of West Coast Conference season awards, and 2025 continued that trend. The Lions have received Coach of the Year, Pair of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year, Freshman of the Year, seven All-Conference First Team Honors, three All-Conference Second Team Honors, and an All-Freshman Team Selection.
 
For the fifth season in a row, LMU has claimed the WCC Pair of the Year. Isabelle Reffel and Magdalena Rabitsch have broken the program record with 36 wins so far this season.
 
In addition to her All-American selection, Chloe Hooker has become the fifth Lion in a row to earn WCC Defensive Player of the Year honors.
 
Following his sixth-consecutive WCC Championship, Head Coach John Mayer has now been named WCC Coach of the Year six consecutive times dating back to 2019.
 
In her first season on the courts at LMU, Tanon Rosenthal has earned WCC Co-Freshman of the Year honors. Rosenthal has won 34 duals this year and lost only five. In additional to her individual accolade, Rosenthal has also been named to the All-WCC First Team and All-Freshman WCC Team.
 
The 10-member All-WCC First Team featured seven Lions. Reffel, Hooker, and Rosenthal were joined by Lisa Luini, Anna Pelloia, Michelle Shaffer, and Abbey Thorup as All-Conference First Team Performers.
 
The All-WCC Second Team included Giuliana Poletti Corrales, Vilhelmiina Prihti, and Magdalena Rabitsch. In total, all 10 of LMU’s starters were named to either the All-WCC First or Second Team.
 
The #4 Lions will open the NCAA Championships Friday morning at 8:00 AM CT / 6:00 AM PT against #13 Florida Atlantic. The match will air live on ESPN2 from Gulf Shores, Ala.
 
2025 NC beach volleyball championship format
The 2025 NC beach volleyball championship bracket will consist of 16 teams, with eight making it as automatic qualifiers via conference championships. The selected teams will be seeded Nos. 1-16 in the bracket.

The championship will then be played in single-elimination duals with 10 student-athletes split into five pairs from each team. The dual meet match is formatted in five best-of-three sets, pairs matches, with each pairs match being worth one point.

For more information on the sport’s championship format, click or tap here

 

Donate Today:

Fans interested in making a contribution to the Lions Athletic Fund can do so by clicking here. Your gift will help provide a transformational student-athlete experience athletically, academically, and culturally for every LMU student-athlete. We appreciate your continued support of LMU Athletics. 

 

Follow Along With The Action:

For complete coverage of Loyola Marymount University athletics, visit LMULions.com. We encourage you to follow along with all the action on social media as well. Follow along by following us on Twitter, liking us on Facebook, and following us on Instagram.

 

 

 





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Carpinteria coach Karl Fredrickson steps down | Sports

Karl Fredrickson, the Carpinteria High School boys basketball and water polo coach, announced he would be stepping away from both roles due to what he said was a “very positive shift in his professional responsibilities” that made it impossible for him to dedicate the time needed to coach both programs going forward. Fredrickson took over […]

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Karl Fredrickson, the Carpinteria High School boys basketball and water polo coach, announced he would be stepping away from both roles due to what he said was a “very positive shift in his professional responsibilities” that made it impossible for him to dedicate the time needed to coach both programs going forward.

Fredrickson took over as the head coach of the boys water polo program in 2023, leading the Warriors to back-to-back Citrus Coast League championships in his two seasons in charge. Last year, he became head coach for boys basketball, helping the team finish second in league and giving the team a memorable first-round playoff win over its longtime rival, Bishop Diego.

Coach Fredrickson called the decision “bittersweet,” and gave a statement of gratitude to the players, parents, coaches and Warrior community that poured in support over the past two years. “Your unwavering support has meant the world to me, and I am grateful for the trust you placed in me as your coach,” he said.

“Although I’m sad to be stepping away, I’m excited about the future of the programs and the success that lies ahead,” Fredrickson said. “I will always be cheering for Carpinteria’s continued success.”

Carpinteria High School Athletic Director Pat Cooney said Fredrickson was a “fantastic addition to the athletics department” and a “wonderful representative of Carpinteria High School.”

“He is a great advocate for students and a champion for education-based athletics,” Cooney added. “He leaves some big shoes to fill.” 

Carpinteria is currently seeking Fredrickson’s replacement, though boys water polo will not begin play until after the summer break, while boys basketball does not begin its next season until winter 2025. Applications are open at edjoin.com.



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Wade sees trouble for men’s volleyball after GCU shutdown

HONOLULU — Charlie Wade doesn’t have to squint to see a storm on the horizon. Even as the Hawaii men’s volleyball program leader accepted his third career Big West Coach of the Year honor on Tuesday — a little more than a week out from his second-ranked, second-seeded team’s NCAA Tournament opener in Ohio — […]

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HONOLULU — Charlie Wade doesn’t have to squint to see a storm on the horizon.

Even as the Hawaii men’s volleyball program leader accepted his third career Big West Coach of the Year honor on Tuesday — a little more than a week out from his second-ranked, second-seeded team’s NCAA Tournament opener in Ohio — he was keen to weigh in on a destabilizing event in the sport.

Grand Canyon University, a Division I member of the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation in men’s volleyball, announced on its Instagram account on Monday that its 17-year program was being converted from a varsity sport to a club sport.


What You Need To Know

  • University of Hawaii men’s volleyball head coach Charlie Wade was named the Big West Coach of the Year on Tuesday for the third time in the last four years
  • Wade commented on Grand Canyon University’s decision to discontinue its men’s volleyball program effective immediately, saying he thinks it will be the first of many moves by schools grappling with how to fund athletic departments on the cusp of the House v. NCAA settlement that will allow schools to directly pay student-athletes and increase scholarships
  • UH is preparing to head to the NCAA Tournament in Columbus, Ohio, next week with its quarterfinal against either Penn State or Daemen on May 8
  • Meanwhile, UH players Finn Kearney, Tread Rosenthal, Justin Todd and Kainoa Wade were named to the USA Volleyball U21 national team for competitions this summer

“It’s unfortunate, obviously, for men’s volleyball, but I think it’s what I’ve said all along,” Wade told Spectrum News at a meet-and-greet event for the Braddahhood Grindz NIL collective at Giovanni Pastrami in Waikiki. “Men’s Olympic sports are going to be the first ones on the chopping block.”

The GCU announcement — with comments on the post turned off — came as universities are grappling with how to fund sports with increased scholarship allotments and the ability to directly pay student-athletes with the pending House v. NCAA settlement.

GCU posted: “In a rapidly evolving college athletics landscape, GCU is constantly evaluating how it can best position itself as a Division I athletic department and a university. The move will allow GCU to focus on supporting its remaining 20 athletics programs at the highest levels in their respective conferences.”

The Antelopes won the MPSF in 2024.

The Phoenix school, a former member of the PacWest Conference, said it will continue to honor athletics scholarships to impacted student-athletes who wish to finish their academic careers there, but would also help those looking to transfer.

The announcement coincided with the start of the spring window of the NCAA men’s volleyball transfer portal. A feeding frenzy ensued.

“I think all the coaches thought, who can they get? Which good players are going to be in the market?” Wade said. “And look, I talked to one of the (GCU) coaches there today, and I think we all empathize with them, but … it wasn’t if, it’s when. It’s going to be more of this coming. This is just the beginning. I will be shocked if over the next two, three years, we don’t see more (schools) cut men’s volleyball.”

Grand Canyon, like UH, is set to become a full member of the Mountain West Conference in 2026. UH is to remain an affiliate member of the Big West in men’s volleyball, a sport that had 27 Division I institutions at the time of GCU’s decision.

Wade pointed out that it’s not just men’s volleyball at risk — Cal Poly cut its men’s and women’s swimming and diving programs in March — as schools begin to invest more heavily in a smaller number of sports.

“I’d say it’s the state of collegiate athletics in 2025,” he said. “Grand Canyon has money. You got to be judicious on which sports you’re going to support. And reality is, you’re going to see athletic departments become smaller because the cost of doing business keeps going up. So you can’t have 20-something, even some of the departments with 30-something sports — I think you’re going to see those come down.”

Wade’s conference coach of the year honor was his third in the last four years.

He became UH’s career program wins leader at last week’s Big West tournament at the Stan Sheriff Center. The Rainbow Warriors (26-5) won both of their matches for the title; the semifinal win over UC Irvine broke Wade’s tie with Mike Wilton and gave him his 317th victory.

Long Beach State setter Moni Nikolov was named the Big West’s Player of the Year and Freshman of the Year. LBSU was given the No. 1 seed to the NCAA Tournament as an at-large selection.

“Individual (awards) goes towards guys are on successful teams, whether you’re the player, the coach, whatever,” Wade said. “When your team’s being successful, those are the guys are in line to get individual awards. So that happens to be the case right now, and I think we’d all trade any of the individual awards for the trophy that’s being handed out (May 12) in Columbus.”

UH opens the Ohio State-hosted tournament May 8 against the play-in winner of Penn State and Daemen.

4 UH players picked to U.S. junior national team

USA Volleyball on Tuesday selected four Hawaii players to its 2025 U21 Men’s National Team that will compete in the Pan American Cup and FIVB Championship this summer.

Setter Tread Rosenthal, pin hitters Finn Kearney and Kainoa Wade and middle Justin Todd were named to the 24-player roster. All had some degree of prior experience with the national team.

In addition, Punahou alumnus Kahale Clini of UCLA was named to the team. UCLA coach John Hawks will lead the group.

The U21 Pan Am Cup takes place in Calgary, Canada, from Aug. 3-11. Training for it will happen July 27-Aug. 2 in Colorado Springs, Colo. The U21 FIVB tournament takes place right afterward, with training Aug. 7-17 in Colorado Springs and the competition in Jiangmen, China, Aug. 19-Sept. 1.

Brian McInnis covers the state’s sports scene for Spectrum News Hawaii. He can be reached at brian.mcinnis@charter.com.





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Evan Silberstein not retained as head beach volleyball coach | Ka Leo

Head beach volleyball coach Evan Silberstein will not be retained after his contract expires at the end of May, ending his four-year stint as the head of the program.   Tanner Haworth / Ka Leo O Hawaiʻi University of Hawaiʻi Athletics announced that head beach volleyball coach Evan Silberstein would not be retained Wednesday morning. Silberstein […]

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evan silbertein.JPG

Head beach volleyball coach Evan Silberstein will not be retained after his contract expires at the end of May, ending his four-year stint as the head of the program.  




University of Hawaiʻi Athletics announced that head beach volleyball coach Evan Silberstein would not be retained Wednesday morning. Silberstein was the head coach of the program for four seasons where he led the Rainbow Wahine to three straight NCAA Tournament berths before going 14-21 in 2025 for a career record of 89-59. 

“We have decided to move in a different direction with our beach volleyball program,” acting athletic director Lois Manin said. “We appreciate everything Evan has given to this program as both an assistant and head coach and we wish him well.”

 Silberstein has been a part of the beach volleyball staff for 11 seasons, spending his previous seven years as an assistant to former head coach Jeff Hall where the team saw national success and back-to-back trips to the NCAA Tournament semi-finals. 

Rainbow Wahine assistant coach Nick Castello will serve as interim head coach for the beach volleyball team until a new coach is named.



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Taylor Hagenah And Malia Gementera Earn First Team All-America

LONG BEACH, Calif. — In their third season as the top pair for Long Beach State, Taylor Hagenah and Malia Gementera were named First Team All-America by the American Volleyball Coaches Association. This is the second year in a row the pair has earned the top honor.   The duo has added to their impressive resume […]

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LONG BEACH, Calif. — In their third season as the top pair for Long Beach State, Taylor Hagenah and Malia Gementera were named First Team All-America by the American Volleyball Coaches Association. This is the second year in a row the pair has earned the top honor.  

The duo has added to their impressive resume this season as they have collected 33 more wins. Gementera and Hagenah have taken down top talent from Stanford, LMU and Cal Poly among others. With their record this season, they are the winningest individuals in program history. They sit at 95 wins with another season yet to play. 

The duo will look to add to their first flight dominance at the NCAA Tournament. 



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No. 10 Cal Heads To NCAA Championship

BVB4/30/2025 2:08 PM | By: Cal Athletics Bears Face Seventh-Seeded Texas On Friday The No. 10 California beach volleyball team (27-9) is set for its fourth straight NCAA Championship in Gulf Shores, Alabama. The Golden Bears face seventh-seeded Texas (27-9) in the first round Friday at 11 a.m. PT.   The […]

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Bears Face Seventh-Seeded Texas On Friday

The No. 10 California beach volleyball team (27-9) is set for its fourth straight NCAA Championship in Gulf Shores, Alabama. The Golden Bears face seventh-seeded Texas (27-9) in the first round Friday at 11 a.m. PT.
 
The tournament will follow a single-elimination format. The first two days of competition will be aired on ESPN2 with the final day being broadcast on ESPN. Live streams of all five courts can be found on ESPN+.
 
The Bears and Longhorns split the regular season series 1-1 with each team winning a dual that came down to the final court. Cal handed Texas its first home loss of the season on March 21 and was one of just two teams to accomplish the feat.
 
Cal won its first-round matchup in each of the last two years, defeating Long Beach State twice. Texas will be making its NCAA Championship debut. The winner will go on to face the victor between No. 2 TCU and No. 15 Georgia State on Saturday at 10 a.m. PT.
 
NCAA CHAMPIONSHP (May 2-4)
Gulf Shores, AL
Tournament Central
 
Wednesday
Game 1: #7 Texas | 11:00 a.m. PT | ESPN2/ESPN+
 
SHERMAN, DONLEY NAMED AVCA FIRST TEAM ALL-AMERICANS
Junior Portia Sherman and sophomore Emma Donley became the first Bears in program history to be named AVCA First Team All-Americans on Wednesday.
 
Cal’s court-one pair has enjoyed a successful season in the top spot of the lineup, boasting a 27-7 overall record. The two Bears have won 17 of their last 20 matches, 11 of which have come against ranked opponents. They have 16 total ranked wins on the year, including a dual-clinching win over reigning national champion USC.
 
On April 13, the duo broke the program record for most wins on court one by a single pair with their 22nd and did so in its first season together.
 
A DOZEN DUBS
On April 18, the Bears broke the program’s all-time win streak record with their 12th straight victory. A 5-0 win over No. 19 Washington broke a record set back in 2018. The streak featured eight ranked wins and spanned from March 21- April 18.
 
DREIBHOLZ MAKES HISTORY
Senior Ella Dreibholz became the program’s all-time wins leader with her 84th career victory on March 1. Playing alongside fellow senior Ella Sears as the 4s pair, the two Ellas defeated the Sacramento State pairing of Victoria Marthaler and Mia Guevara 21-13, 21-14. Dreibholz collected 28 wins as a freshman, 25 as a sophomore, 25 more as a junior, and boasts a 26-7 record this year. On April 18 she became the first Bear to reach 100 wins and now sits at 104.
 
INAUGURAL MPSF SEASON
After spending the last nine years in the Pac-12, the Golden Bears are officially in their MPSF era. Many familiar faces make up the new conference, including Oregon, USC, Stanford, UCLA, and Washington. Grand Canyon joins the mix this year and a quartet of top-tier teams in Florida State, LSU, South Carolina, and Texas will join in 2026.

THE STAFF

Meagan Owusu is in her ninth season in charge of the program in 2025. Under her leadership, the Bears have moved into the national conversation of NCAA beach volleyball, finishing last season as the seventh-ranked program, which is a school record. Cal has now finished in the top 12 for seven consecutive years. Joseph Mayer is in his fourth season overall with the team. He became the program’s associate head coach in July 2023 while former volunteer coach Dancer Styles was promoted to assistant coach. The coaching trio helped bring Cal to new heights with its second consecutive NCAA Championship win in its third straight appearance last year.

STAY POSTED

For further coverage of Cal beach volleyball, follow the Bears on Instagram (@calbeachvb) and Twitter (@calbeachvb).

 





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