Connect with us

Sports

No. 18 Eagles advance to ASUN Semifinals after grueling three-match day

Story Links Championship Central ASUN Bracket FORT MYERS, Fla. — Florida Gulf Coast University beach volleyball advanced to the Atlantic Sun Conference Semifinals after a grueling three-match, rain-filled Friday in Huntsville, Alabama. FGCU survived fourth-seeded North Alabama 3-1 in the loser’s […]

Published

on


FORT MYERS, Fla. — Florida Gulf Coast University beach volleyball advanced to the Atlantic Sun Conference Semifinals after a grueling three-match, rain-filled Friday in Huntsville, Alabama. FGCU survived fourth-seeded North Alabama 3-1 in the loser’s bracket, setting up a rematch with second-seeded North Florida at 12 p.m. Saturday and a chance to face top-seeded Stetson in the championship.

FGCU struggled in the quarterfinals, the first match of the day, against No. 17 North Florida in the winner’s bracket, dropping into the loser’s bracket to face fifth-seeded Jacksonville. With the season on the line, an hourlong weather delay gave FGCU extra time to rest. The match began around 4 p.m., and FGCU swept JU 4-0 to stay alive and face fifth-seeded North Alabama in the final match of the day.

The Eagles started strong against UNF on court 5, with Sydney Majick and Erin Miller going up 7-2 and 16-12, but the pair lost in straight sets. On court 1, Kaitlyn Luebbers and Nicole De Oliveira showed flashes of a brewing upset in the opening frame. The duo used a 5-0 run to take a 21-20 lead but fell in the opening set.

The Eagles’ top pair was up 17-16 in the second set, but the duel went unfinished as the Ospreys clinched the match 3-0 with straight-set victories on courts 3, 4 and 5. FGCU’s lone set victory occurred on court 2, courtesy of Alexis Keeter and Ava Lilliquist.

FGCU dominated Jacksonville in the win-or-go-home match. The Eagles won three opening sets 21-12 en route to four straight-set sweeps. Luebbers and De Oliveira (court 1), Dietz and Thompson (court 4), and Majick and Miller (court 5) led the charge.

The North Alabama match came down to the wire, but an experienced Eagles squad prevailed in the third match of the day. FGCU won set 1 on Courts 3, 4 and 5. Jaci Carpenter and Emma Soncrant gave FGCU a 1-0 advantage on Court 3, winning 21-16 and 26-24.

The remaining four courts headed to a third set. With the season teetering, courts 2, 4 and 5 were tied 8-8 in the final set. Andrea Dietz and Mia Thompson pulled out a win on court 4, giving FGCU a 2-0 lead.

North Alabama secured a point moments later on Court 2, outlasting the Eagles 15-13.

Two points later, Luebbers blocked match point on court 1 as she and De Oliveira came back from a one-set deficit to win 15-13, clinching the match 3-1 and setting up a semifinal rematch with North Florida on Saturday. Court 5 went unfinished, though just a couple points away from completion.

The winner of the No. 3 FGCU vs. No. 2 North Florida semifinal will face top-seeded and No. 14-ranked Stetson at 2:30 p.m. on ESPN+.





Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Rondina, Pons notch back-to-back wins in China

Cherry Ann Rondina (second from left) and Bernadeth Pons (second from right) pose for a photo with their Japanese counterparts in the 2025 Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour Futures in China. | Rebisco Volleyball photo CEBU CITY, Philippines — Cebu’s very own Cherry Ann “Sisi” Rondina continued her strong showing in the 2025 Volleyball World […]

Published

on


Rondina Pons China volleyball

Cherry Ann Rondina (second from left) and Bernadeth Pons (second from right) pose for a photo with their Japanese counterparts in the 2025 Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour Futures in China. | Rebisco Volleyball photo

CEBU CITY, Philippines — Cebu’s very own Cherry Ann “Sisi” Rondina continued her strong showing in the 2025 Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour Futures after scoring back-to-back wins in the main draw on Friday, June 20, in Qidong, China.

Rondina, teaming up with Bernadeth Pons in Pool D of the women’s main draw, stunned the Japanese duo of Nayu Motomura and Kana Motomura with a dominant 21-17, 21-10 win.

Earlier that day, they opened their campaign with a commanding 21-14, 21-17 victory over the home team of Mei-Mei Lin and Hong Xie.

With a 2-0 record, Rondina and Pons advanced to the quarterfinals, where they were scheduled to face Hungary’s Stefania Flora Kun and Lilla Villám as of this writing.

On the men’s side, fellow Cebuano Rancel Varga and his partner Ronniel Rosales suffered a setback in Pool B after falling to Belgium’s Kyan Vercauteren and Joppe Van Langendonck, 19-21, 16-21.

Before the loss, Varga and Rosales made quick work of China’s Ang Wan and Kongquan Xing with a 21-15, 21-9 win.

Meanwhile, the pair of Sunny Villapando and Dij Rodriguez also bowed out after a hard-fought 18-21, 17-21 loss to Lin and Xie of China. The duo earlier outlasted Motomura and Nayu in a grueling three-setter, 21-14, 21-23, 15-11.



Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.



Your subscription has been successful.

Read Next

Disclaimer: The comments uploaded on this site do not necessarily represent or reflect the views of management and owner of Cebudailynews. We reserve the right to exclude comments that we deem to be inconsistent with our editorial standards.





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Sam TaylorSports reporter: COMMENTARY: ‘This is never what college sports were meant to be’

Jun. 21—Washington State sprinter Brooke Lyons had just learned through a 10-minute Zoom meeting that the Cougar track and field team was about to be cut in half and that her coach was out of a job. In shock, she typed a question into the chat only to be interrupted by WSU Athletics administrators ending […]

Published

on


Jun. 21—Washington State sprinter Brooke Lyons had just learned through a 10-minute Zoom meeting that the Cougar track and field team was about to be cut in half and that her coach was out of a job.

In shock, she typed a question into the chat only to be interrupted by WSU Athletics administrators ending the meeting.

Advertisement

“I think that the way it was handled was just disrespectful to the athletes that have worked so hard and have fought for this program and committed so much time and effort into it,” Lyons said.

WSU athletic director Anne McCoy informed the members of the WSU men’s and women’s track and field teams that the program would shift to a “distance-first approach,” cutting field events such as throwing and pole vaulting and significantly scaling back sprints and hurdles.

Assistant coaches Julie Taylor (throws), Gabriel Mvumvure (sprints) and Derick Hinch (hurdles) were let go. They learned their fates about half an hour before the student-athletes learned theirs, Lyons said.

Lyons said WSU Athletics leadership simply stated what was going to happen and did not offer an explanation.

Advertisement

However, Lyons and her teammates are perfectly aware of why WSU is doing what it is doing.

They just don’t agree with it.

Joshua Lyons is a 1997 WSU graduate. He was a proud father of a WSU student-athlete, but will soon find himself wearing another school’s colors when his daughter, Brooke Lyons, who owns the Cougars’ 100-meter record, finds a different school.

“The breadth and depth of the college sports that have been offered historically allow people to develop (a) sense of community,” Joshua Lyons said. “If we go to a system of college athletics that only includes the revenue-producing sports, you’re going to destroy an ecosystem — the very ecosystem that supports those revenue-producing sports.”

Advertisement

In fairness to McCoy and WSU’s leadership, I don’t think they are particularly happy about scaling back track either.

In the weeks since the House vs. NCAA settlement — which in part allows schools to directly pay athletes through revenue sharing — athletic department heads have scrambled to figure out what that exactly means for their institutions.

The settlement enables schools to spend up to $20.5 million in revenue sharing with student athletes — the majority of that going to football and basketball players.

McCoy said in January that WSU would provide the football program with a $4.5 million pot to share with players.

Advertisement

With WSU Athletics experiencing an over $11 million budget decline from two years ago — its last full year in the 12-school Pac-12 Conference — and the media rights earnings of the new Pac-12 expected to be far below the traditional conference earnings, WSU Athletics must make hard choices.

This choice was to gut a historically successful WSU program that owns one of WSU’s two NCAA national championships.

There is no universe where scaling back track and field can be seen as a “good thing,” despite WSU’s official statement framing the move as a way to give the program “the best opportunity to remain competitive at the conference and national levels in distance events.”

While years of less-than-ideal decisions at the school, conference and national levels ushered in this reality, there is no single person worthy of 100% of the blame either.

Advertisement

Daily headlines, straight to your inboxRead it online first and stay up-to-date, delivered daily at 7 AM

However, while McCoy and her team are not responsible for how WSU got into this situation, they are accountable for how WSU responds to it.

That is to say that the optics of a 10-minute Zoom meeting, in which 18-24-year-olds learn that their or their teammates’ athletic pursuits will no longer be supported by WSU, followed by little communication or dialogue, are not great and could have been easily avoided.

Would a question-and-answer period during the Zoom meeting have changed the outcome of numerous current athletes and alumni scorning the university? No, probably not.

Advertisement

However, student-athletes, many of whom have moved across the country or the world to entrust their athletic and academic careers to an institution, deserve a little more grace than that.

“We were upset because they said they had known for weeks but didn’t tell us because a few of us had made it to Nationals and were still competing,” WSU sprinter Ashley Hollenbeck-Willems said.

The WSU track and field program has consistently produced national champions. While some of the program’s most decorated athletes were distance runners, four out of the five athletes to represent WSU at Nationals this past year were sprinters, comprising a 400-meter relay team.

One of those relay team members, Mason Lawyer, set the WSU record in both the indoor and outdoor 200-meter dash this year and competed in the 100 and 200 at Nationals.

Advertisement

Days following WSU “limiting” his events and not renewing his coach’s contract, Lawyer is in the transfer portal.

He joins a slew of WSU athletes in the portal, including Hollenbeck-Willems and Lyons, who must cancel leases and figure out their next steps without the assistance of significant name, image and likeness deals or, for many track athletes, the benefit of full scholarships.

It also leaves three coaches and their families in a similar state of transition.

Coaches and pundits alike warned that Olympic sports could suffer drastically as schools attempt to reorder their budgets to prioritize revenue sharing.

Advertisement

Track and field was the first WSU sport affected. It almost certainly won’t be the last.

WSU, along with the rest of college athletics, is in uncharted waters.

Before any more programs drown at sea, the powers that be — college presidents and athletic directors, conference commissioners and TV executives — should come to terms with the weight of their actions and do everything they can to reverse course.

That won’t happen because TV executives are getting everything they want and everyone else is just trying to survive.

College sports may never be the same again and no one should be spinning it into a positive or spending any energy not attempting to fix what is clearly broken.

Advertisement

“This is never what college sports were meant to be,” Brooke Lyons said. “College sports are meant to build a spirit and community within the universities. Obviously, now we’re seeing it’s just kind of tearing them apart, and it’s lost its purpose. And I think people need to realize that quick, or else there’s going to be a lot more issues like this.”

Perhaps the powers that be in college athletics should start listening to the college athletes themselves.

Taylor can be reached at 208-848-2268, staylor@lmtribune.com, or on X or Instagram @Sam_C_Taylor.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Page not found | Racine County Eye

Get the best of Racine County Eye directly in your email inbox. Wisco Spotlight Things to do, arts, culture and entertainment news. Delivered Wednesdays and Fridays. Daily Newsletter The latest stories, delivered to your inbox 7 days a week. Continue Link 0

Published

on


Get the best of Racine County Eye directly in your email inbox.








Link

Continue Reading

Sports

U.S. Women Dominate the Netherlands in 2025 VNL Week Two

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 21, 2025) – The U.S. Women’s National Team put together its strongest performance of the 2025 Volleyball Nations League (VNL) with a 3-0 (25-18, 25-22, 25-19) victory over the Netherlands on Saturday in Belgrade, Serbia. The U.S. (3-4) returns to the court tomorrow, June 22, against France at 7:30 a.m. PT. […]

Published

on


COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 21, 2025) – The U.S. Women’s National Team put together its strongest performance of the 2025 Volleyball Nations League (VNL) with a 3-0 (25-18, 25-22, 25-19) victory over the Netherlands on Saturday in Belgrade, Serbia.

The U.S. (3-4) returns to the court tomorrow, June 22, against France at 7:30 a.m. PT.

“We want to come out and put back-to-back matches together. I don’t think we’ve really been able to do that. France is doing a nice job right now and playing at a very high level,” U.S. head coach Erik Sullivan said.

The U.S. led in every statistical category with 10 more kills (49-39) and two more blocks (6-4) and aces (4-2). The U.S. Women committed just 14 errors in the match with the Netherlands making 16. The U.S. hit .330 or better in each set.

Veteran middle blocker Dana Rettke hit at a 56 percent efficiency rate for the match with 11 kills and just one error in 18 attacks. She recorded seven points on six kills and a block in the third set with five coming on slide attacks off consistently good sets from Saige Ka’aha’aina-Torres.

“This group has so much great energy and is so willing to adapt, adjust and get better. I’m proud of how they have been able to rise up to this challenge. I know this is a lot of their first VNLs, and it’s been so much fun to play with them and have that experience with them,” Rettke commented. “In general, I’m just proud of the way this group has continued to get better every single day whether that is a match or a practice.”

Outside hitter Logan Eggleston led all players with 14 points on a match-high 13 kills and a block. She hit .480 with only one error in 25 attacks and shared match-best honors with seven successful receptions.

Opposite Madi Skinner totaled 13 points on 10 kills, two blocks and an ace. Outsider Sarah Franklin delivered nine kills. Libero Lexi Rodriguez equaled a match-high with 11 digs, Skinner added six and Ka’aha’aina-Torres finished with five.

“I thought there were moments in that match where in the past couple of matches we’ve let it get away from us that we made a progression and grew in that space today,” Sullivan remarked. “We’re talking about the process, not worrying about the results, and that showed today.”

Trailing 7-5 early in the first set, the U.S. scored the next six points and rolled the rest of the set. A block and kill by Skinner followed by a Franklin kill off hands made it 11-7 and forced a Netherlands timeout. The U.S. Women hit .370 in the set, which included a kill by opposite Logan Lednicky on her 21st birthday. Eggelston led a balanced attack that saw five U.S. players score two points or more with four kills.

The second appeared to be a near replay of the first set when the U.S. used a 7-0 run to turn a one-point deficit into a 17-11 lead. Eggleston scored three of the final four points in the run, one off a set from Franklin, another on a swipe off the block, and the third on a roll shot.

Setter Rachel Fairbanks made her VNL debut in style, serving an ace when she entered the match to make it 19-12. A Franklin kill gave the U.S. a 21-14 lead before the Netherlands ran off six consecutive points to cut the lead to one. With a narrow 22-21 lead, the U.S. scored a key point when Skinner took advantage of no libero in the back row, placing a shot in the middle of the court.

Another Franklin kill gave the U.S. set point at 24-22 and the set ended as the Netherlands struggled with an Igiede serve. Eggleston recorded six kills in the set, while Skinner scored six points on five kills and a block.

The Netherlands jumped out to an early three-point lead for the third set in a row, but Rettke scored four points in a 6-1 U.S. run, the final two on slides. The U.S. lead was just one point, 12-11, when Brionne Butler’s smart play to push the ball into an empty back court put the lead back to two points and the Netherlands got no closer.

Eggleston scored on a block and then a deep push shot to make it 17-13. Rettke’s seventh point of the set gave the U.S. a 22-18 lead and a Franklin call off a one-handed set from Ka’aha’aina-Torres made it 23-19. Skinner closed out the match with back-to-back kills.

Week Two Roster for 2025 VNL

U.S. Women’s Preliminary Roster for 2025 VNL
No. Name (Pos., Ht., Hometown, College, USAV Region)
6 Morgan Hentz (L, 5-9, Lakeside Park, Ky., Stanford Univ., Pioneer)
7 Lexi Rodriguez (L, 5-5, Sterling, Ill., Univ. of Nebraska Great Lakes)
8 Brionne Butler (MB, 6-4, Kendleton, Texas, Univ. of Texas, Lone Star)
9 Madisen Skinner (OH, 6-2, Katy, Texas, Univ. of Kentucky and Univ. of Texas, Lone Star)
13 Amber Igiede (MB, 6-3, Baton Rouge, La., Univ. of Hawaii, Delta)
15 Rachel Fairbanks (S, 6-0, Tustin, Calif., Pitt, Southern California)
16 Dana Rettke (MB, 6-8, Riverside, Ill., Univ. of Wisconsin, Great Lakes)
21 Roni Jones-Perry (OH, 6-0, West Jordan, Utah, BYU, Intermountain)
22 Sarah Franklin (OH, 6-4, Lake Worth, Fla., Univ. of Wisconsin, Florida)
24 Olivia Babcock (Opp, 6-4, Los Angeles, Calif., Pitt, Southern California)
28 Logan Lednicky (Opp, 6-3, Sugar Land, Texas, Univ. of Texas A&M, Lone Star)
29 Molly McCage (MB, 6-3, Spring, Texas, Univ. of Texas, Lone Star)
32 Saige Ka’aha’aina-Torres (S, Honolulu, Hawaii, Univ. of Texas, Aloha)
33 Logan Eggleston (OH, 6-2, Brentwood, Tenn., Univ. of Texas, Southern)

Reserve
27 Ella Powell (S, 6-0, Fayetteville, Ark., Univ. of Washington, Delta)

Coaches
Head Coach:  Erik Sullivan
Assistant Coach: Mike Wall
Second Assistant Coach: Brandon Taliaferro
Second Assistant Coach: Tayyiba Haneef-Park
Second Assistant Coach: Joe Trinsey
Team Manager: Rob Browning
Team Doctors:  William Briner, James Suchy, Chris Lee, Andrew Gregory
Physiotherapist: Kara Kessans
Physical Trainers: Shawn Hueglin, Shannon Boone
Mental Performance Coach: Andrea Becker, Katy Stanfill
Performance Analyst: Virginia Pham

Week 2 Schedule: Belgrade, Serbia (all times PDT)
Matches will be shown on VBTV, Big Ten Network and/or CBS Sports Network. Please check listings for BTN and CBSN.

June 18 USA def. Serbia, 3-2 (25-22, 25-20, 22-25, 22-25, 15-11)
June 19 Poland def. USA, 3-1 (20-25, 25-20, 25-17, 25-18)
June 21 USA def. Netherlands, 3-0 (25-18, 25-22, 25-19)
June 22 at 7:30 a.m. vs. France

Week 1 Results: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
June 4 Italy def. USA, 3-0 (25-13, 25-13, 30-28)
June 5 Brazil def. USA, 3-0 (25-18, 25-17, 25-19)
June 6 Czechia def. USA, 3-2 (23-25, 20-25, 25-17, 25-20, 27-25)
June 8 USA def Korea, 3-0 (25-13, 28-26, 25-17)



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Emma Myall Named Head Coach of UC Santa Barbara Women’s Water Polo

UC Santa Barbara has named Emma Myall the permanent head coach of its women’s water polo program, removing the interim title she held during the 2025 season. The announcement was made Wednesday by Director of Athletics, Kelly Barsky. “Emma Myall has demonstrated leadership and worked to establish a competitive culture within our program,” said Barsky […]

Published

on


UC Santa Barbara has named Emma Myall the permanent head coach of its women’s water polo program, removing the interim title she held during the 2025 season. The announcement was made Wednesday by Director of Athletics, Kelly Barsky.

“Emma Myall has demonstrated leadership and worked to establish a competitive culture within our program,” said Barsky in a press release. “We look forward to building on this foundation in the seasons ahead.”

Myall was appointed interim head coach shortly before the start of the 2025 season. Under her leadership, the Gauchos finished with a 16–13 record, including wins over ranked opponents such as Loyola Marymount, Brown, and Cal State Northridge.

Myall joined the Gauchos as an assistant coach in 2024. She previously coached at Pacific, where she was a student-athlete on the women’s water polo team and a volunteer assistant with the men’s team. In 2021, she helped the men’s program reach the Golden Coast Conference Championship match. 

Myall holds a degree in Sports Science and Sports Education from Pacific and a master’s degree in Management Entrepreneurship from Durham University in the United Kingdom. She is originally from Lafayette, California.

Huge Protest in Santa Barbara Says ‘No’ to King Trump



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Nygaard reflections on photographing 2024-2025 Pirate track and field

CLICK gallery to enlarge and view at your own pace / See also Foster on photographing Pirates By Jamie Nygaard Over my 32 years behind the camera, one truth has become clear: it’s not just about the action. It’s about the relationships—the quiet moments behind the scenes, the camaraderie between competitors, the traditions and quirks […]

Published

on


CLICK gallery to enlarge and view at your own pace / See also Foster on photographing Pirates

By Jamie Nygaard

Over my 32 years behind the camera, one truth has become clear: it’s not just about the action. It’s about the relationships—the quiet moments behind the scenes, the camaraderie between competitors, the traditions and quirks that make each athlete unique. The way an athlete bites their necklace for comfort. The lucky socks. The verse on their spikes. The pre-race prayer.

These are the moments you don’t see from the stands—but they are the soul of the sport.

As Don Schweingruber once said, “It’s all about relationships.” And I couldn’t agree more.

These athletes may run against each other, but they also cheer for one another. They push each other to be better, form friendships across lanes and school lines, and show us that sportsmanship and connection matter just as much as medals.

Being part of this world—as a mom, as a photographer, as a fan—has been one of the greatest honors of my life. And I can’t wait to see where these incredible young people go next.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending