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A positive influence, and a huge victory total

Naperville Central coach Andy Nussbaum was all smiles after the Redhawks won the 2009 Class 4A Benedictine University supersectional softball championship in Lisle, 2-0 over Bartlett. DAILY HERALD FILE PHOTO When asked about major milestones, veteran coaches have a stock answer. Naperville Central’s Andy Nussbaum was ready. “First of all, it means I’m old,” said […]

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Naperville Central coach Andy Nussbaum was all smiles after the Redhawks won the 2009 Class 4A Benedictine University supersectional softball championship in Lisle, 2-0 over Bartlett.
DAILY HERALD FILE PHOTO

When asked about major milestones, veteran coaches have a stock answer.

Naperville Central’s Andy Nussbaum was ready.

“First of all, it means I’m old,” said Nussbaum, who by beating Plainfield Central in an April 8 softball game earned his 1,500th victory spanning Redhawks softball and girls basketball.

His 758 softball wins entering Wednesday rank eighth all-time on Illinois High School Association records. His 746 basketball wins also rank eighth.

Like coaches always do, Nussbaum thought more about it.

“Honestly, it’s pretty gratifying,” he said. “It just gives me the opportunity to remember all the players we’ve ever had who have played here, both softball and basketball,” Nussbaum said Tuesday on the team bus bound for St. Charles East.

“I just hope that I’ve been a positive influence not only as far as softball and basketball are concerned but as an educator, that I’ve been a good example. At least that’s what I hope,” he said.

If he weren’t, the first baseman on his first softball team in 1984, Mary Baumgartner, wouldn’t have come up to say hello at a recent game.

And Naperville Central principal Jackie Thornton and athletic director Jeff Plackett likely wouldn’t have bothered to watch Nussbaum get win No. 1,500 last month.

“The relationships, really, are what endure,” said Nussbaum, also an assistant Redhawks football coach since 1981.

His back-to-back Class AA girls basketball titles in 2003 and 2004 are memorable, too, with arguably the best female player ever, Candace Parker.

Naperville Central coach Andy Nussbaum celebrates a 65-63 triple-overtime win over Naperville North at the 2018 Class 4A Naperville Central regional championship.
DAILY HERALD FILE PHOTO

He has yet to hoist the big trophy in softball, but his 1989 team finished second in Class AA and his 2009 team was fourth in Class 4A.

Nussbaum coaches a third team, too, his seven children: Christian, Joe, Carly, Jessica, Amy and the twins, who will graduate from Naperville Central on May 18, Aaron and Daniel.

All of them played one or more sport all four years in high school, and Daniel is a 12-season athlete. Except for Joe, who is in the Air Force, all the older Nussbaum children are teachers and/or coaches.

They keep their dad young. So does being around high school students, which is why Nussbaum hopes to continue coaching at Naperville Cental after his scheduled retirement as a teacher in 2028.

“We’ll take that bridge when we come to it, I guess,” he said. “I love doing what I’m doing. I love teaching statistics, I love coaching. Just walking through our hallways … there’s life in our hallways.”

 
Hersey girls water polo coach Megan Brownley has won 310 matches, and counting, over 17 seasons.
Joe Lewnard/jlewnard@dailyherald.com

Way up there

Megan Brownley also achieved a coaching milestone — 300 victories as Hersey’s girls water polo coach.

Up to 310 entering Wednesday’s match against Libertyville, that stands as No. 5 all-time on IHSA records.

At 15-4-1, the Huskies are ranked No. 6 in the state by illpolo.com. (Stevenson is No. 1, Naperville North No. 2, York No. 5.) Sectional champions each of the last four seasons, Hersey placed fourth at the state tournament in 2021 and 2023.

The secret of Brownley’s success: “Working with the girls and building your program, your family, team-first. The wins come after that,” she said.

“At the end of the day, I’ve been really lucky in my 17 years of coaching, I’ve just had real nice groups of girls. Talent and winning has come kind of secondary to that.”

One sign of a quality coach and that family atmosphere is when former players stay in the game. Brownley has 2018 graduate Madison Burkhalter as an assistant. After volunteering at Hersey last season, Claire Lutz is now assisting at Prospect.

Hersey practices and plays its home games at Prospect. Brownley’s 310 wins have come without a pool at Hersey.

“People don’t believe me,” said Brownley, married to Hersey baseball coach Walter Brownley.

It’s not the pool that makes it happen.

“It’s all of them in the pool and putting it all together,” she said. “Kudos to them and the great groups of kids I’ve been able to have. It doesn’t come without that. They come first.”

Dig route

Judson University in Elgin is breaking ground this Saturday on the Scislowski Family Football Facility, a complex next to the university’s Lindner Fitness Center.

The Scislowski Facility will replace Judson’s original football offices and provide locker rooms, position meeting rooms, a team film room and player lounges.

“This is a game-changer for our program,” Judson coach Quintin Demps said in a release.

Beforehand, Judson will dedicate the Flynn Football Offices, inside its university building. Named in honor of alumnus and university trustee Shawn Flynn, these new offices will be the headquarters of Eagles football.

Also, at 1 p.m. the Eagles will play their spring football game at Judson’s own Dawson Field. Judson plays its regular-season games on Saturdays at Streamwood High School’s Millennium Field.

doberhelman@dailyherald.com



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Bradley runner Jack Crull all-American

Bradley runner Jack Crull is a first-team all-American. The senior finished sixth place overall Friday in the 1,500-meter finals at the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon, earning one of eight first-team all-America spots. It is the highest NCAA championship finish in Bradley track and field history, according to the school’s […]

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Bradley runner Jack Crull is a first-team all-American.

The senior finished sixth place overall Friday in the 1,500-meter finals at the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon, earning one of eight first-team all-America spots.

It is the highest NCAA championship finish in Bradley track and field history, according to the school’s online record book.

Crull finished the race in a personal-best 3 minutes, 47.61 seconds — in an incredibly tight race that had less than half a second between first and eighth place. Crull’s time was just .35 behind national champion Nathan Green of Washington (3:47.26).

Crull advanced to the final with a surprise heat win on Wednesday, taking the second heat in what was then a personal-best 3:40.51. He came into the outdoor championships ranked 85th in the nation in the event.





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BVB | Gaels Ink SoCal Product Zoe Joshua

Story Links MORAGA, Calif. — Saint Mary’s Volleyball continues to build up their 2025-26 squad with youthful talent, adding freshman Zoe Joshua out of Notre Dame High School in Sherman Oaks. Unlike most prep players, Joshua focussed purely on beach while playing for the Knights, giving her loads of experience on the […]

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MORAGA, Calif. — Saint Mary’s Volleyball continues to build up their 2025-26 squad with youthful talent, adding freshman Zoe Joshua out of Notre Dame High School in Sherman Oaks. Unlike most prep players, Joshua focussed purely on beach while playing for the Knights, giving her loads of experience on the sand despite coming in as just a freshman.

With numerous tournament wins to her name including the the 18u AVP and the 18u Walker Beach, Joshua concluded her pre collegiate beach career by being named the Mission League MVP after leading Notre Dame Sherman Oaks to an undefeated regular season and a trip to the CIF Southern Section DII Tournament. Standing at 5-8 and left hand dominant, Joshua will bring another dynamic dimension to Saint Mary’s Beach Volleyball

Joshua originally committed to the University of Utah, but after the discontinuation of their program, re-opened her recruiting and selected Saint Mary’s to be the place to call home for the next four years. 

“Zoe  is a 5’8″ left-handed defender who has achieved notable success in her beach volleyball career!” noted Head Coach Janice Harrer, “Her passion and persistence are qualities that will bring her success in the classroom and in competition!  She brings notable experience on the sand, and we look forward to what she will bring to the SMC program!”

Now with four true freshmen coming in for the 2025-26 season, the Gaels truly have set the building blocks for success in the near and far future.

#GaelsRise



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Alekna Places Second In Discus For First-Team All-America Honors

Al Sermeno/KLC fotos Mykolas Alekna, one of the best athletes in Cal history, closed out his Golden Bear career Friday with a second-place finish at the NCAA Championships. T&F6/13/2025 8:52 PM | By: Cal Athletics Two-Time World Medalist Battles In Clash Of Olympians EUGENE, Ore. – Coming into […]

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Alekna Places Second In Discus For First-Team All-America Honors


Al Sermeno/KLC fotos

Mykolas Alekna, one of the best athletes in Cal history, closed out his Golden Bear career Friday with a second-place finish at the NCAA Championships.


Two-Time World Medalist Battles In Clash Of Olympians

EUGENE, Ore. – Coming into day three of the NCAA Outdoor Championships, just one man from California track & field had yet to compete: discus world record-holder Mykolas Alekna, who hoped to follow up second- and third-place finishes at his first two NCAA Championships with a title for the Golden Bears. All knew nothing would come easy, however, as his main opponent in the ring was the No. 2 discus thrower in the history of the NCAA: Oklahoma’s Ralford Mullings, who had posted a best mark of 69.13m (226-9) in March at the Clyde Littlefield Texas Relays and, like Alekna, was a finalist at the 2024 Olympic Games.
 
Competing third in the initial order, Alekna took an early lead with a first-round throw of 66.44m (218-0), while Mullings’ first throw came off his hand short and wobbly; the reverse happened in the second round, as the Cal graduate took an intentional foul while Mullings moved into second place with a throw of 65.92 (216-3). The Jamaican native then took the lead for good in the third round after another Alekna foul, the discus finally falling at 67.70m (222-1) to break a 33-year-old meet record.
 
The next three throws featured multiple personal bests in a battle for third place, prompting several cries of admiration from the crowd. USC’s Racquil Broderick, who was one of just two men to qualify from the first flight, unleashed a throw of 63.31m (207-8) in round five, after which Virginia Tech’s Uladzislau Puchko responded with a 63.94m (209-9) to surge ahead. Neither of them ultimately challenged for the top two spots, which came down, as billed, to Alekna and Mullings: Alekna’s fourth throw sailed farther than any of his previous attempts but was ultimately ruled foul, while his fifth throw improved his mark to 66.77m (219-0).
 
Alekna’s sixth throw crashed into the right side of the cage, ricocheting off the pole with a resounding clong. Mullings, his victory assured, then launched a personal-best rocket of 69.31m (227-4) for the final exclamation point.
 
In addition to becoming the first man in world history to surpass the 75-meter mark in the discus as well as a three-time top-three NCAA finisher, Alekna’s outstanding career at Cal includes an Olympic silver medal, two World medals, and two European medals; his 2022 gold in the latter made him the youngest European champion in history at just 19 years old, while his silver at the 2022 World Championships enshrined him as the youngest world medalist in history. He appeared on The Bowerman Watch List 23 times – the most by any thrower in the history of the award and third-most among all men – and broke eight facility records and 10 meet records throughout his four years as a collegian to cement himself as one of the greatest throwers of all time.
 
2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships – Day Two Results
Men’s Discus Final – 2. Mykolas Alekna 66.77m/219-0
 
 
UP NEXT
Olympic discus thrower Caisa-Marie Lindfors will close out Cal’s outing at the NCAA Outdoor Championships, competing in Flight Two of the women’s discus Saturday. The event is scheduled to begin at 12:30 p.m. PT.
 
STAY POSTED

For complete coverage of Cal track & field, follow the Bears on X/Twitter (@CalTFXC), Instagram (@caltfxc) and Facebook (@Cal Cross Country/Track and Field).
 





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Brookline captures first volleyball state title since 1992 – Boston Herald

WESTWOOD – The Needham boys volleyball team started Friday night firing on all cylinders on a stage the program – making its fifth straight Div. 1 state final appearance – is quite used to. But Brookline, in its first trip since it last won a state championship in 1992, wouldn’t be denied of the ultimate […]

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WESTWOOD – The Needham boys volleyball team started Friday night firing on all cylinders on a stage the program – making its fifth straight Div. 1 state final appearance – is quite used to.

But Brookline, in its first trip since it last won a state championship in 1992, wouldn’t be denied of the ultimate glory any longer.

Anchored by junior setter Alec Smagula (49 assists, four blocks, three kills) and senior outside hitter Kris Vaivars (27 kills), the top-seeded Warriors (25-1) shook off a rocky start to end a 33-year title drought with a 3-1 win (20-25, 27-25, 25-22, 25-15) over the No. 3 Rockets in a Div. 1 state final that lived up to its billing.

Resilience and late-game composure were staples for Brookline all year, so it was fitting for its first lead of the match to come in extra points of the second set, and for that to spark wins over the next two frames inside a jam-packed Xaverian High School.

“Right now, it’s surreal,” Vaivars said. “That fourth set, the emotions – it was crazy. This is something I worked for for my whole high school career. Coming close, going to the semifinals (in 2023), quarters (last year), for it to finally come true in my senior year … it’s amazing.”

Not much could go wrong for Needham early in each of the first two sets, twice taking a 6-1 lead.

Brookline's Kristaps Vaivers spikes the ball during the MIAA Div. 1 boys volleyball championship match. Brookline edged Needham, 3-1. (Libby O'Neill/Boston Herald)
Brookline’s Kristaps Vaivers spikes the ball during the MIAA Div. 1 boys volleyball championship match. Brookline edged Needham, 3-1. (Libby O’Neill/Boston Herald)

Outside hitters Matt Cloonan (14 kills) and Will Rozman (12 kills) got off to hot starts, pairing with stellar blocking and passing to keep the Warriors at a safe distance for all of a 25-20 first set. Countless intense battles at the net and high-intensity defense filled every frame, but Needham’s efforts prevailed more consistently.

Much of the same success continued in the second, though Brookline punched back with a few big runs to tie the score at 9-9, and then at 18-18. Smagula and Vaivars played central parts, but the all-around contributions from right-side Conor Christopher (nine kills, block), middles Luka Gallucci (three kills, three blocks) and Liam Raybould (five kills, three blocks), and outside hitter Amir Tomer (nine kills, two blocks) were critical.

First-year head coach Lexi De La Cruz couldn’t say enough about the spark off the bench either, as junior Sebi Levi had some good passes and sophomore Jacob Lam eventually took over the libero role after the second set.

“Jacob Lam, the 10-grader that just came in to the libero – at this stage – it was amazing,” De La Cruz said. “He didn’t play the whole season. … He was a key factor.”

Side-out volleyball followed from there, and Needham twice had set-point lined up. Service errors on both extended it, and Smagula’s assist to Tomer paired with his ensuing block to even up the match.

Brookline's Kristaps Vaivers celebrates after scoring the final point in the MIAA Div. 1 boys volleyball championship match. (Libby O'Neill/Boston Herald)
Brookline’s Kristaps Vaivers celebrates after scoring the final point in the MIAA Div. 1 boys volleyball championship match. (Libby O’Neill/Boston Herald)

“We knew we had no choice,” Vaivars said. “We had to come out, we’re playing for our lives, we’re playing for our careers. We knew that we were a better team, so we just locked in and did it.”

“(Needham) came out strong, I was expecting that,” De La Cruz added. “My team kept fighting. … The job was done in the second set. We were down 24-23. If we don’t win that set, we don’t win the match.”

Will McDonald, Cloonan, Rozman and the defense kept the rock-fight going in the third set for Needham, but Vaivars erupted in pockets to separate the Warriors for a lead as large as 17-11. The Rockets clawed back, but the Vaivars’ ninth and 10th kills of the set secured a 25-22 win and a 2-1 lead.

“I knew we had to win that third set,” Vaivars said. “I knew the ball was coming to me. I knew what I had to do.”

What can’t be lost from the set, though, was the three-year starter who assisted Vaivars all 10 times – as well as Christopher’s four kills in the span.

“(Smagula), for me, was the MVP of the day,” De La Cruz said. “He was really smart on the way to use his best weapon. He used his best weapon when he needed it, and when he opened the game – just like the last set – everyone was scoring. He had a game plan, he stuck with it, and today, for me, he was the best player on the court.”

Brookline took off from there, using a 13-3 run to build a 20-9 lead in the deciding fourth set.



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Holly Roberts Will Play for New Zealand at World Aquatics U20 Championships

Story Links LA JOLLA, Calif. — UC San Diego women’s water polo standout Holly Roberts has been selected to play for the New Zealand Women’s U20 National Team that will compete at the 2025 World Aquatics Women’s U20 Women’s Water Polo Championships.  Roberts is one of 14 players from New Zealand […]

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LA JOLLA, Calif. — UC San Diego women’s water polo standout Holly Roberts has been selected to play for the New Zealand Women’s U20 National Team that will compete at the 2025 World Aquatics Women’s U20 Women’s Water Polo Championships. 

Roberts is one of 14 players from New Zealand that will travel to the event, which is scheduled for August 10-16 in Salvador, Brazil.

She recently wrapped her first season as a Triton, which culminated in her earning a spot on the Big West All-Freshman Team.

Roberts was one of seven UC San Diego players that saw action in all 31 games. The center finished with 14 goals and 13 assists for 27 points. Her assist total was the fifth-highest on the team. Defensively, Roberts recorded five field blocks and 17 steals, which ranked tied for second and eighth, respectively, on the roster. She netted a season-high four goals against No. 14 Michigan and rang up four points with a goal and three assists versus No. 4 California.

Hailing from Auckland, Roberts joined fellow Kiwi Lucia Doak on the Triton roster in 2025.

Roberts competed for Baradene College of the Sacred Heart in high school.

UC San Diego, which climbed to a No. 9 national ranking, finished its campaign with a 17-14 overall record and a 4-3 mark in Big West play. The Tritons served as the fourth seed in the Big West Championship, where they defeated fifth-seeded UC Santa Barbara in a quarterfinal before falling to top-seeded Hawai’i in a semifinal.

——

About UC San Diego Athletics

After two decades as one of the most successful programs in NCAA Division II, the UC San Diego intercollegiate athletics program began a new era in 2020 as a member of The Big West in NCAA Division I. The 23-sport Tritons earned 30 team and nearly 150 individual national championships during its time in Divisions II and III and helped guide 1,400 scholar-athletes to All-America honors. A total of 84 Tritons have earned Academic All-America honors, while 38 have earned prestigious NCAA Post Graduate Scholarships. UC San Diego scholar-athletes exemplify the academic ideals of one of the world’s preeminent institutions, graduating at an average rate of 91 percent, one of the highest rates among institutions at all divisions.

 



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No. 13 Track and Field’s Blackwood wins 400mH bronze at NCAA Championships

Story Links EUGENE, Ore. – The No. 13 Texas men’s track and field team was led by Kody Blackwood’s third-place finish in the 400-meter hurdles at the NCAA Track and Field Outdoor Championships at Hayward Field. Texas finished 34th in the team standings scoring nine points. Blackwood scored six team points with his […]

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EUGENE, Ore. – The No. 13 Texas men’s track and field team was led by Kody Blackwood’s third-place finish in the 400-meter hurdles at the NCAA Track and Field Outdoor Championships at Hayward Field. Texas finished 34th in the team standings scoring nine points.

Blackwood scored six team points with his third-place finish in the 400mH and finished with a personal best time of 48.66. The junior’s time is the 12th-fastest time in school history and improved his spot at No. 3 on UT’s All-Time Performer List.

Sophomore Xavier Butler was seventh in the 200-meter dash finishing with a time of 20.39 and scored two team points. Butler finished the season as the program record holder with his time of 20.02.

The 4×100-meter relay of Kendrick Smallwood, John Rutledge, Almond Small and Butler were eighth finishing in 39.10. The quartet earned USTFCCCA First Team All-America honors for the finish. It marks back-to-back seasons the Longhorns earned First Team honors.

Sophomore Osawese Agbonkonkon reached his first NCAA Championships in the high jump and finished tied for 19th after clearing 2.10m (6-10.75) on his second attempt. Kelsey Daniel joined Agbonkonkon as the lone field participants taking on the triple jump and finished 12th with a jump of 15.53m (50-11.50).

Texas Scorers:

Nina Ndubuisi – Shot Put – 3rd (6 pts)

Kody Blackwood – 400mH – 3rd (6 pts)

Aaliyah Foster – Long Jump – 7th (2 pts)

Xavier Butler – 200m – 7th (2 pts)

Kendrick Smallwood, John Rutledge, Almond Small, Xavier Butler – 4×100 – 8th (1 pt)

All-America Honors:

Nina Ndubuisi – Shot Put – 3rd – First Team

Aaliyah Foster – Long Jump – 7th – First Team

Xavier Butler – 200m – 7th – First Team

Kendrick Smallwood, John Rutledge, Almond Small, Xavier Butler – 4×100 – 8th – First Team

Chrystal Herpin – Shot Put – 11th – Second Team

Kelsey Daniel – Triple Jump – 12th – Second Team

Mackenzie Collins – 400mH – 17th – Honorable Mention

Osawese Agbonkonkon – High Jump – T-19th – Honorable Mention

Holly Okuku – 200m – 21st – Honorable Mention



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