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GULF SHORES, Ala. — Third-ranked and top-seeded UCLA (30-6) is in Gulf Shores, Ala., for the 2025 NCAA Beach Volleyball Championship (May 2-4) at Gulf Place Beach. The Bruins will face 16th-seeded Chattanooga (26-5) on Friday, May 2 at 10:00 a.m. CT/8:00 a.m. PT. The dual will be televised live on ESPN2. THIS WEEK’S SCHEDULE Opponent: No. 16 Chattanooga […]

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GULF SHORES, Ala. — Third-ranked and top-seeded UCLA (30-6) is in Gulf Shores, Ala., for the 2025 NCAA Beach Volleyball Championship (May 2-4) at Gulf Place Beach. The Bruins will face 16th-seeded Chattanooga (26-5) on Friday, May 2 at 10:00 a.m. CT/8:00 a.m. PT. The dual will be televised live on ESPN2.

THIS WEEK’S SCHEDULE

Opponent: No. 16 Chattanooga (26-5)

Links: LIVE STATS | WATCH DUAL | COURT 1 | COURT 2 | COURT 3 | COURT 4 | COURT 5

Location: Gulf Place Beach | Gulf Shores, Ala.

Date: Friday, May 2, 2025

Time: 10:00 a.m. CT/8:00 a.m. PT

TV: ESPN2

Series History: First ever meeting | Streak: n/a

BRUINS IN THE NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP

UCLA is making its ninth NCAA Tournament appearance in 2025 and has won two national titles (2018 and 2019). The Bruins set a school, Pac-12, and NCAA record with 40 wins during the 2018 and 2023 campaigns. UCLA is 26-11 (.703) all-time in duals at the NCAA Championship and has three second-, two third- and one fifth-place finish in addition to the two national titles. Additionally, the Bruins have a 233-144 (.618) record in total sets played during the NCAA Championship.

BRUINS AGAINST THE 2025 NCAA FIELD

UCLA plays one of the most difficult schedules in the country every year and this year’s slate was no different, having faced teams in the 2025 NCAA Championship field a total of 24 times out of 36 completed duals for a record of 18-6 (.750). The Bruins were just 9-6 (.600) against the Top 5 seeds and 9-0 against teams seeded sixth through 16th. On the year, UCLA went 2-1 vs. No. 2 TCU, 3-1 vs. No. 3 Stanford, 2-1 vs. No. 4 LMU, 1-2 vs. No. 5 USC, 1-1 vs. No. 6 Cal Poly, 2-0 vs. No. 7 Texas, 2-0 vs. No. 8 Florida State, 1-0 vs. No. 9 Long Beach State, 2-0 vs. No. 10 California, 2-0 vs. No. 11 LSU, 0-0 vs. No. 12 North Florida, 0-0 vs. No. 13 Florida Atlantic, 0-0 vs. No. 14 Boise State, 0-0 vs. No. 15 Georgia State, and 0-0 vs. No. 16 Chattanooga.

2025 AVCA ALL-AMERICANS

The UCLA Bruins have four players represented on the 2025 AVCA All-America teams, as announced by the AVCA, which unveiled its 13th annual Collegiate Beach All-America Teams on April 30. This year, the first and second teams include 16 members each, and the 32 players honored represent 12 schools. UCLA has now produced 30 AVCA All-Americans. The Bruins’ court one pair of junior Maggie Boyd and freshman Sally Perez were both named AVCA First Team All-Americans. It marked the third-straight year that Boyd has made the First Team. Perez was the only freshman in the country to earn First Team accolades. The duo is 28-4 (all on court one) on the year entering the NCAA Championship. UCLA’s court two pair of graduate Peri Brennan and senior Natalie Myszkowski landed on the Second Team. For Brennan, it was her third-straight Second Team All-America plaudits while it was the first for Myszkowski. A quartet of schools each have four All-Americans. That group includes Cal Poly, Stanford, UCLA, and USC.

BRUINS SWEEP 2025 MPSF AWARDS

The UCLA Bruins swept the 2025 MPSF Beach Volleyball postseason awards as announced by the league on May 1. Junior Maggie Boyd was named Player of the Year, her partner on court one, Sally Perez, was named Freshman of the Year, the duo was named the MPSF Pair of the Year, and Bruin Head Coach Jenny Johnson Jordan was tabbed the Coach of the Year.

Boyd (Flower Mound, TX) earned the inaugural MPSF Beach Volleyball Player of the Year award. Boyd has played on court one for 32 of UCLA’s 36 matches. She takes a 29-4 record (.879) into the NCAA Tournament, including 28-4 on court one and 1-0 on court two. She is currently on an 11-match win streak, including an unbeaten MPSF Tournament, completing a stretch of seven wins over the top-five in April. Of her 29 wins, 25 have come against ranked opponents (24 with Sally Perez on court one), including 17 wins against the top-10, and 10 wins over top-five competition. Boyd earned two MPSF/Molten Pair of the Week awards (Apr. 15 & Mar. 11). Her second honor was following the Bruins’ capturing of the Center of Effort Challenge in San Luis Obispo, in which she went 4-0, including handing Daniela Alvarez and Hailey Hamlett of No. 1 TCU their first loss of the year. Boyd’s first weekly award came after she and the Bruins went 4-0 at Stanford’s Midseason Rumble, which also earned her and Perez AVCA National Pair of the Week honors.

Perez (Apex. NC) earned the inaugural MPSF Beach Volleyball Freshman of the Year award. Perez has played on court one for 32 of UCLA’s 36 matches, taking a 28-4 record (.875) into the NCAA Tournament, including a 10-match win streak. Of her 28 wins, Perez has partnered with Maggie Boyd to defeat 24 ranked opponents, including 17 wins against the top-10, and 10 wins over top-five competition. Perez was unbeaten in the MPSF Tournament, completing a stretch of seven wins over the top-five in April. Perez earned two MPSF/Molten Pair of the Week awards (Apr. 15 & Mar. 11). Her second honor was following the Bruins’ capturing of the Center of Effort Challenge in San Luis Obispo, in which she went 4-0, including handing Daniela Alvarez and Hailey Hamlett of No. 1 TCU their first loss of the year. Perez’ first weekly award came after she and the Bruins went 4-0 at Stanford’s Midseason Rumble, which also earned her and Boyd AVCA National Pair of the Week honors.

Johnson Jordan earned the inaugural MPSF Beach Volleyball Coach of the Year award. The Bruins take the top seed to the 2025 NCAA Tournament with a 30-6 record (.833). UCLA has posted 25 wins over AVCA ranked opponents, 10 wins over the Top-10, and seven wins over the top-five which included the final three matches of the regular season. Additionally, UCLA has spent the entire season ranked in the AVCA’s Top-three, and ranked either first or second since late February. UCLA picked up five of the nine MPSF/Molten Pair of the Week awards, as well as an AVCA National Pair of the Week recognition for Maggie Boyd and Sally Perez (Mar. 9), and placed three of its four all-conference student-athletes on the first team.

Additionally, Boyd and Perez were joined by graduate Peri Brennan as First-Team All-MPSF selections. Brennan’s partner on court two, senior Natalie Myszkowski was the lone Bruin to earn Second-Team All-MPSF honors. Brennan and Myszkowski have gone 29-6 on the year (27-6 on court two and 2-0 on court one).

Perez also landed on the MPSF All-Freshman team where she was joined by Bruin Alexa Fernandez. Fernandez is 19-13 on the year going 17-8 on Kaley Mathews (1-0 on court three, 14-8 on court four, and 2-0 on court five), 2-4 with Tessa Van Winkle (all on court four), and 0-1 with Kenzie Brower (on court three).

BRUINS SWEEP 2025 MPSF AWARDS

The American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) named Jose Loiola as the AVCA National Assistant Beach Coach of the Year on May 1, 2025. Loiola just completed his second season as an assistant with the UCLA beach volleyball team in 2025, helping the Bruins earn a No. 1 seed in this weekend’s NCAA Championship.

  • Loiola and the Bruins arrive in Gulf Shores as the top seed in the NCAA Championship after going 30-6 during the 2025 season.
  • This is the beach volleyball Hall of Famer‘s second year as an assistant under Bruin Head Coach Jenny Johnson Jordan.
  • He has helped the Bruins to the No. 1 ranking in the AVCA Beach Poll in seven of the 11 weeks this season.
  • The 2025 UCLA team had four players earn AVCA All-American honors: Maggie BoydPeri BrennanNatalie Myszkowski, and Sally Perez.
  • This is Loiola‘s first AVCA Assistant Coach of the Year award.

UCLA Head Coach Jenny Johnson Jordan also earned this distinction in 2019.

MPSF BEACH VOLLEYBALL CHAMPIONSHIP RECAP

The top-seeded Bruins finished third in the inaugural 2025 MPSF Beach Volleyball Championship (April 23-25). UCLA opened with a 3-0 win over ninth-ranked California in the semifinals (April 24) but fell to third-ranked Stanford, 3-1, in the winner’s bracket final (April 24). Fifth-ranked USC defeated UCLA, 3-1, in the finals of the contender’s bracket (April 25), eliminating the Bruins from the tournament.

BOYD, PEREZ NAMED MPSF/MOLTEN BEACH PAIR OF THE WEEK AGAIN

UCLA junior Maggie Boyd (Flower Mound, Texas) and freshman Sally Perez (Apex, N.C.) have been named the MPSF/Molten Pair of the Week as announced by the league office on April 15. The Bruin duo went 4-0 to help UCLA win all four duals and capture the Center of Effort Challenge crown in San Luis Obispo, Calif. (April 11-12). UCLA opened with a 3-2 win over No. 4 LMU with Boyd and Perez winning in straight sets, before the pair defeated No. 12 Arizona State in straight sets. Day two began with the Bruins knocking off No. 1 TCU, 3-2, with Boyd and Perez rallying for a three-set win after dropping the first set, which handed Daniela Alvarez and Hailey Hamlett their first loss of the year. The top pair concluded the tournament with a straight-set win over No. 5 Stanford. This is the second MPSF award for Boyd and Perez this season.

BRENNAN, MYSZKOWSKI NAMED MPSF/MOLTEN BEACH PAIR OF THE WEEK

UCLA graduate student Peri Brennan (Laguna Beach, Calif.) and senior Natalie Myszkowski (Manhattan Beach, Calif.) have been named the MPSF/Molten Pair of the Week as announced by the league office on March 18. The Bruin duo helped UCLA go 6-0 last week with four wins over ranked teams. The Bruins defeated (RV) Concordia and Morehead State, 5-0 (Mar. 11) before heading to Manhattan Beach to host the East Meets West Invitational (Mar. 14-15). There, the Bruins took down No. 12 Texas and No. 11 LSU 4-1 on day one, and beat No. 8 Florida State and No. 19 FIU 5-0 on day two. Myszkowski and Brennan went 6-0 on the week without dropping a set. They went 5-0 on court two and 1-0 on court one, and only allowed their opponents to reach 17 in three of the 12 sets they played. This is the second MPSF award for Brennan and Myszkowski.

BOYD, PEREZ NAMED MPSF/MOLTEN BEACH PAIR OF THE WEEK

UCLA junior Maggie Boyd (Flower Mound, Texas) and freshman Sally Perez (Apex, N.C.) have been named the MPSF/Molten Pair of the Week as announced by the league office on March 11. The UCLA duo played a pivotal role in the Bruins’ 4-0 team record at the inaugural MPSF Midseason Rumble at Stanford (March 7-8), where the court one pair was also unbeaten. Boyd and Perez secured the team-clinching dual victories over No. 5 Stanford and No. 9 California, which included a 5-1 run at the end of set three for the win over Cal. The duo also finished off the 5-0 team sweeps with their top court wins over Oregon and No. 16 Grand Canyon. This is the first MPSF award for Boyd and Perez.

BOYD, PEREZ NAMED AVCA/CBVB NATIONAL COLLEGIATE BEACH PAIR OF THE WEEK

Junior Maggie Boyd (Flower Mound, Texas / Marcus HS) and freshman Sally Perez (Apex, N.C. / Middle Creek HS) have been named the AVCA/CBVB Collegiate Beach Pair of the Week as announced by the AVCA on March 10. This is the second AVCA/CBVB weekly national honor for Boyd and the first for Perez. Boyd and Perez played a pivotal role in UCLA’s impressive performance at the inaugural MPSF Midseason Rumble where the Bruins went 4-0, as did this tandem. Boyd and Perez showcased their resilience and skill by securing crucial victories at No. 1. They clinched the dual against No. 5 Stanford and No. 9 California and completed the 5-0 sweeps over Oregon and No. 16 Grand Canyon.

BRENNAN, MYSZKOWSKI NAMED MPSF/MOLTEN BEACH PAIR OF THE WEEK

UCLA graduate Peri Brennan (Laguna Beach, Calif.) and senior Natalie Myszkowski (Manhattan Beach, Calif.) were named the MPSF/Molten Beach Pair of the Week as announced by the league office (Feb. 25). The Bruin duo helped UCLA go 5-1 (all against Top-12 teams) to win the Outrigger Duke Kahanamoku Beach Classic for the fourth consecutive year in Honolulu, Hawaii (Feb. 20-22). The No. 2 pair also went 5-1 in the tournament, including the clinching point of the Bruins’ win over No. 2 TCU in straight sets, 21-17, 29-27. They also posted straight-set wins over No. 12 Hawai’i (21-14, 21-8), No. 7 LMU (23-21, 21-16), and No. 1 USC (21-14, 23-21), and had a three-set victory over No. 11 Arizona State (21-9, 19-21, 15-13). This is the first-ever recognition of any kind presented in MPSF Beach Volleyball. For Brennan, this is her fourth weekly conference award (three-time Pac-12 Pair of the Week; March 21, 2023, March 19, 2024, April 16, 2024), and for Myszkowski, this is her third (two-time Pac-12 Pair of the Week; March 22, 2022, April 2, 2024).

RETURNING STARTERS

The Bruins return seven of 10 starters from last year’s second-place team at the NCAA Championship that saw UCLA end the year with an overall record of 35-7. The Bruins lost the services of Lexy Denaburg (33-7 overall, 133-36 career), Devon Newberry (32-7 overall, 103-27 career), and Jaden Whitmarsh (25-13 overall, 110-29 career). UCLA also lost the services of reserve Rileigh Powers (3-1 overall, 95-29 career). The seven starters returning include: from court one, All-American Maggie Boyd (33-7 overall and 60-13 career), from court two, Peri Brennan (32-7 overall, 69-12 career), from court three Kenzie Brower (26-15 overall, 26-15 career), and Jessie Smith (24-13 overall, 77-30 career), from court four Tessa Van Winkle (26-13 overall and 56-24 career) and from court five Ensley Alden (29-6 overall and 29-6 career) and Natalie Myszkowski (30-6 overall, 69-15 career).

RETURNING BRUINS LOOKING TO MAKE AN IMPACT

The Bruins also return a starter from the 2022 season in Sophie Moore (2-1 overall, 43-12 career). There are two additional players coming back from last year’s team and ready to compete for a spot in the Bruins’ lineup. This group includes Madeline Bonanni (1-0 overall, 1-0 career), and Reagan Hope (2-0 overall, 21-12 career). Additionally, Jayla Shanks (0-0), Ky Vaickus (0-0), Taylor Ford (0-0), Hannah Fleming (0-0), Harper Cooper (0-0), and Kaley Mathews (0-0) all return looking to make an impact in 2025.

FRESH FACES

The Bruins also brought in a trio of young players that will all debut in 2025. The class includes Sally Perez (Apex, N.C./Middle Creek HS), Alexa Fernandez (Friendswood, Texas./Lutheran South Academy), and Adelina Okazaki (San Diego, Calif./Point Loma HS).

NO DUAL PARTICIPATION

For the fifth time in program history (and fifth consecutive year), the UCLA beach volleyball program does not have a single player from the Bruins’ indoor volleyball team currently playing on the roster. UCLA only has one player with collegiate indoor experience in senior transfer Reagan Hope (Oregon in 2021-22).

A BRUIN SHALL LEAD US

In her 12th year with the Bruins and second season as UCLA’s Head Coach in 2025, Jenny Johnson Jordan sports an overall record of 65-13 (.833).She served three seasons as the Associate Head Coach at UCLA prior to assuming the lead role. She guided the Bruins to second-place finishes at the Pac-12 Championship and NCAA Championship with an overall record of 35-7 in her first year as the mentor. An Olympian, a National Champion, and a UCLA Hall of Famer (2018), Johnson Jordan won NCAA titles as both a player (1991 – indoor) and a coach (2018 and 2019 – beach). Jordan was inducted into the CBVA Hall of Fame (Nov. 3, 2018) and was named the AVCA National Assistant Beach Coach of the Year on May 9, 2019.

ASSISTING TRIPLE J

Jose Loiola: Beach volleyball Hall of Famer (CBVA in 2014 and International Volleyball Hall of Fame in 2017) and USA Beach Volleyball National Team head coach Jose Loiola returns for his second season an assistant coach. He was named the AVCA Collegiate Beach Assistant Coach of the Year on May 1, 2025. Loiola was a volunteer assistant coach for the Bruins in 2021, helping guide UCLA to a Pac-12 Championship and NCAA runner-up finish. After Loiola’s previous season with the Bruins, he went on to coach 2020 Olympian Tri Bourne and also served as head coach of the USA Volleyball squad that won gold at the 2021 U19 World Championships. In 2022, he coached Miles Partain and Andy Benesh to gold at the FIVB Challenger Dubai.

Kelly Reeves: UCLA standout, Kelly Reeve, the Bruins’ first-ever All-American in beach volleyball (2013) returns for her second season as an assistant coach. In addition to her playing career, Reeves has developed a coaching career in all levels of the sport, including juniors, collegiate, USAV development, and amateurs. In 2022, Reeves helped the LMU Lions finish 4th at the NCAA Beach Volleyball Championship, the best finish in the program’s history. That same year, Reeves was a recipient of the Thirty Under 30 Beach coaches award from the AVCA. Reeves is also a National Champion, helping the Bruins win the indoor title in 2011. She has played on the AVP since 2016 and has also competed on the NORCECA Tour and FIVB World Tour.

MPSF BEACH VOLLEYBALL, THE FIRST SEASON

The Bruins have moved into the MPSF for beach volleyball starting with the 2025 season. UCLA will be joined by California, Grand Canyon, Oregon, Stanford, USC, and Washington. In 2024-25, the MPSF will sponsor competition in 15 Intercollegiate Olympic sports, while serving 86 teams from 46 universities across 14 states. MPSF teams compete primarily at the NCAA Division-I level in men’s and women’s water polo, indoor track and field, gymnastics, swimming and diving, fencing, beach volleyball, and men’s volleyball. MPSF teams are eligible to compete in the NCAA Championships with men’s and women’s water polo, men’s volleyball, and beach volleyball conference champions earning automatic qualification. The MPSF’s newest sports–beach volleyball, men’s rowing, and men’s and women’s wrestling–make their debut seasons in the conference in 2024-25.

MPSF BEACH VOLLEYBALL EXPANDING IN 2026

The MPSF has announced the addition of Florida State, LSU, South Carolina, and Texas to its beach volleyball programs, giving the conference 11 teams beginning with the 2026 season. The Seminoles, Tigers, Gamecocks, and Longhorns, who are competing in their final season in the Coastal Collegiate Sports Association (CCSA) this year, will each be making their first-ever appearance in any sport in the MPSF. The MPSF’s inaugural beach volleyball season in 2025 features California, Grand Canyon, Oregon, Stanford, UCLA, USC, and Washington. The first edition of the MPSF Beach Volleyball Championship will be held at Spiker Beach in Huntington Beach, Calif., April 23-25, 2025.

A TRIO OF BRUINS CHASING 100 CAREER WINS

Three Bruins are seeking to reach 100 career wins in 2025 and two of them are all currently tied for 11th place on the UCLA career wins list with 98 victories. Those two include graduate Peri Brennan and senior Natalie Myszkowski. Senior Jessie Smith is currently in 14th place with 91 victories. Four-time All-American, Lexy Denaburg, became the UCLA all-time leader in career victories last year with a win over Stanford in the semifinals of the contender’s bracket of the 2024 Pac-12 Championship.

1. Lexy Denaburg (133, 2020-24)

2. Abby Van Winkle (128, 2019-23)

3. Izzy Carey (123, 2016-19)

4. Savvy Simo (119, 2017-21)

5. Lea Monkhouse (117, 2019-22)

6. Megan McNamara (111, 2016-19)

7. Jaden Whitmarsh (110, 2019-24)

8. Nicole McNamara (109, 2016-19)

9. Devon Newberry (103, 2019-24)

10. Elise Zappia (102, 2015-18)

11. Peri Brennan (98, 2021-25)

11. Natalie Myszkowski (98, 2022-25)

13. Rileigh Powers (95, 2020-24)

14. Jessie Smith (91, 2022-25)

15. Lily Justine (87, 2017-20)

UCLA AS NO. 1 AND VS. NO. 1

As the No. 1 team in the country, UCLA has gone 134-19 (.876) all-time, and is 9-9 (.500) against USC when the Bruins are No. 1. The first time UCLA was ranked No. 1 came in April of 2018 and since then, UCLA has been ranked No. 1 for multiple weeks every season, including going 16-1 in 2018, 31-3 in 2019, 7-2 in 2020, 13-3 in 2021, 12-2 in 2022, 19-3 in 2023, 17-2 in 2024, and 15-3 in 2025 as the nation’s top-ranked team.

The UCLA Bruins are 12-20 (.375) all-time against the top-ranked teams in the country. UCLA began 0-5 against the nation’s top-ranked programs (2013-16) before breaking through with its first-ever win over a No. 1 team in the 3-2 home win over then top-ranked Pepperdine on March 30, 2016. Here’s a breakdown of the Bruins against the No. 1 teams: Pepperdine 2-3; TCU 2-0; USC 8-17.

The Bruins have been involved in No. 1 vs. No. 2 matchups 30 times in program history with a 12-18 record (.400) in those meetings. Interestingly, UCLA is just 3-11 (.214) as the top-ranked team in those matchups but 9-7 (.563) as the underdog.

MORE ON RANKINGS

  • UCLA has been ranked in the AVCA Poll in 122 of 123 weeks.
  • UCLA has been ranked No. 1 in 42 of 123 weeks (Leaders: USC 50, UCLA 42, Pepperdine 17, TCU 9, LSU 4, Florida State 1, Hawai’i 1).
  • Only seven teams have ever been ranked No. 1: USC (50, last 2/13/25), UCLA (42, last 4/22/25), Pepperdine (17, last 3/26/18), TCU (9, last 4/29/15), LSU (4, last 3/2/21), Florida State (1, last 3/16/21), Hawai’i (1, last 3/10/15).
  • UCLA has been ranked in Top 3 in 89 of 123 weeks (Leaders: USC 98, UCLA 89, Florida State 45, Pepperdine 45, TCU 29, Hawai’i 19).
  • UCLA has been ranked in Top 5 in 106 of 123 weeks (Leaders: USC 120, UCLA 106, Florida State 105).
  • Since 2018, no team has been ranked No. 1 for more weeks than the UCLA Bruins (42). Others: USC (27), TCU (9), Pepperdine (4), LSU (4), Florida State (1).


POLLING THE BRUINS

UCLA slid two spots to No. 3 in this week’s 2025 AVCA Collegiate Beach Volleyball Poll (April 29).

AVCA COLLEGIATE BEACH VOLLEYBALL POLL (April 29, 2025)
























Rank

School (First-Place Votes Adjusted)

Total Points Adjusted

Record

Previous Week

1

TCU [9]

537

28-5

2

2

Stanford [8]

530

31-8

3

3

UCLA [10]

523

30-6

1

4

Loyola Marymount [1]

473

35-6

4

5

USC

433

26-10

5

6

Cal Poly

415

29-7

6

7

Texas

396

27-9

7

8

Long Beach State

356

27-11

10

9

Florida State

346

25-12

8

10

California

315

27-9

9

11

LSU

280

24-12

11

12

Arizona State

251

22-14

12

13

Grand Canyon

201

23-11

13

14

North Florida

181

26-10

17

15

FAU

167

21-14

16

16

Stetson

149

25-11

14

17

Georgia State

110

22-16

18-T

18

Hawai’i

63

14-21

15

19

Florida Gulf Coast

56

22-13

18-T

20

Washington

53

17-18

20

Others receiving votes: Boise State (20), Tulane (14), Texas A&M-Corpus Christi (3), Coastal Carolina (2), FIU (2), Utah (2), South Carolina (1) and Concordia (1).

Dropped Out: None

Next Poll: May 6 (Final 2025 Poll)

 



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Words of Wisdom from the Class of 2025

As senior year comes to a close, members of the Class of 2025 are reflecting on what they’ve learned—both inside and outside the classroom. From time management tips to lessons in friendship and confidence, their advice offers a glimpse into the highs and lows that defined their high school experiences. Linda Gabele: Be Open and […]

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As senior year comes to a close, members of the Class of 2025 are reflecting on what they’ve learned—both inside and outside the classroom. From time management tips to lessons in friendship and confidence, their advice offers a glimpse into the highs and lows that defined their high school experiences.

Linda Gabele: Be Open and Reach Out

Taylor Bentley / M-A Chronicle

“Be open to meeting new people and try to connect with them as well,” Gabele said.

Gabele also encourages students to step outside their comfort zones. “Stay locked in and make friends with people you normally wouldn’t be with,” she said. “It’s easy to stick with familiar faces, but some of the most meaningful friendships come from unexpected places.”

Casey Watkins: Try, Connect, and Slow Down

Taylor Bentley / M-A Chronicle

For Watkins, high school has been centered around connection, effort, and reflection. One of his most meaningful experiences has come from being on a team. “Being part of a sports community like water polo is a sense of brotherhood, and it’s so awesome,” he said.

He also encourages others to take initiative socially. “You should never be shy. You can’t go out and make friends without trying,” Watkins added. “Definitely try to make the best out of every difficult situation, and don’t forget to slow down and enjoy the time.”

Kasra Motamedi: It’s Okay, Just Keep Going

Taylor Bentley / M-A Chronicle

Senior Kasra Motamedi has learned a lot—sometimes the hard way. “Talk to your teachers when something is wrong. Teachers want you to succeed and they don’t want you to fail,” he said.

Motamedi also regrets waiting too long to finish assignments. “I wish I didn’t procrastinate as much,” he said. “I wouldn’t have had so much stress and I’d be able to have more fun.”

For Motamedi, keeping perspective is key. “It will be alright in the end—what college you go to, your friends, and everything else,” he said.

Don’t care too much about what people think. I used to think too much about what others thought, and it would ruin my mood. I’d even change how I act in front of others,” Motamedi shared.

Juliana Gamez-Diaz: Don’t Hold Back, and Study Hard

Taylor Bentley / M-A Chronicle

To Gamez-Diaz, social advice is just as important as academic tips. “Don’t be scared to talk to new people and  to do things that are embarrassing,” she said. “If you’re too scared to be embarrassed, you can hold back on a lot of things.”

When it comes to academics—especially in a big school—her biggest takeaway is the value of focused studying. “Focusing a lot on doing deep studying is better because multi-tasking is just a waste of time,” she explained.  “If you’re so distracted, it takes like hours to do things, but like, if you’re in deep focus, you can get it done in, like a small amount of time. Short forms of content and, like, TikTok, it’s like, it’s like your attention span decreases.”

Lainey Egnal: Stay Organized

Taylor Bentley / M-A Chronicle

If there’s anyone who figured out how to manage senior year wisely, its Lainey Egnal. As a Dance Team captain juggling college applications and a social life, Egnal found that planning ahead made all the difference. “Do as much as you can as a junior and the summer before senior year,” she said.

“You have UCPIQS (personal insight questions) and the Common App questions summer before senior year. If you get those done, by the time you get to first semester senior year, all you have left is supplementals,” she explained. “It will make your life ten times easier.”

“Don’t stress too much about doing something all the time, usually you are doing exactly what you need to be doing,” Egnal concluded.

Phoebe Matin: Live while you can

Taylor Bentley / M-A Chronicle

Matin encourages underclassman not to waste their time worrying about the wrong things. “Don’t care what other people think,” she said. “Do what you can to have a good time and live—these years go by so quickly.”

Her favorite memories were not made in the classroom, but rather outside with friends. “Go out on the Green and play spikeball with your friends,” she said. “The small, joyful moments stick the most.”

Alessandro Delfin Novoa: Work Hard and Enjoy

Taylor Bentley / M-A Chronicle

Alessandro Delfin Novoa has one big tip for balancing academics and fun: plan ahead. “Take all of your hard classes your junior year,” he said. “Taking hard classes junior year means you can enjoy your senior year.”

For Novoa, authenticity remains crucial in high school. “Just stay true to yourself. High school goes by a lot faster than you think, and I feel like every moment you have to make the most of it,” he said.

His biggest piece of advice? Embrace failure. “Don’t be afraid to fail. I feel like part of my high school journey was definitely shaped by my downs,” he said.



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LA28 Olympics adds Honda to top sponsorship tier in push towards US$2.5bn sales target

Deal also covers Team USA and includes media buy with NBC LA28 has now secured as many sponsors in 2025 as it did during whole of last year Automotive category made available to local organising committee after Toyota chose not to renew IOC TOP deal Japanese carmaker Honda has been named a founding partner of […]

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LA28 Olympics adds Honda to top sponsorship tier in push towards US$2.5bn sales target

  • Deal also covers Team USA and includes media buy with NBC
  • LA28 has now secured as many sponsors in 2025 as it did during whole of last year
  • Automotive category made available to local organising committee after Toyota chose not to renew IOC TOP deal

Japanese carmaker Honda has been named a founding partner of the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, making it the first brand to join the event’s top sponsorship tier in nearly four years.

Financial terms of the deal, which also sees Honda become the official automotive sponsor of Team USA for the next two Olympics, have not been disclosed. However, it has secured the highest designation available for local sponsors of LA28, with Delta Airlines reportedly paying US$400 million to become the inaugural founding partner of the Games in 2020.

Comcast is currently the only other founding partner of LA28 after Salesforce opted to end its sponsorship less than three years into the deal.

As part of the agreement, Honda will supply a suite of vehicles to help transport athletes, officials and other stakeholders during the Games, offering an opportunity to showcase the company’s electric range, such as its upcoming Honda 0 Series and Acura RSX.

Honda, which first established a presence in the US in Los Angeles in 1969, will also benefit from a multi-platform media collaboration with NBCUniversal, which will spotlight the brand during its coverage of both Milano Cortina 2026 and LA28. 

Local organisers have a stated aim of securing US$2.5 billion in sponsorship revenue for LA28 and are planning to have US$2 billion of that total secured by the end of 2025.

John Slusher, who is the chief executive of US Olympic and Paralympic Properties, the joint venture selling combined partnerships on behalf of LA28 and the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC), told Sports Business Journal (SBJ) that the deal with Honda means more than US$1.5 billion have now been generated from sponsorship sales.

Meanwhile, speaking to the Los Angeles Times, LA28 chairman Casey Wasserman said the backing of Honda was both financially and strategically significant.

“As a privately funded games, our mandate is to generate the revenue we need to produce these Games,” Wasserman said. “The biggest line item of that is sponsorship revenue. To be able to announce another big partner with a really spectacular brand who has been invested in Southern California for a long time is both [financially] important but also, in many ways, strategically important.

“It’s another brand that sees the power of our Olympic platform to tell their story in a community that’s very important to that industry that they’ve been invested in for a long time.”

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UH women’s water polo adds 2 Europeans

Select an option below to continue reading this premium story. Already a Honolulu Star-Advertiser subscriber? Log in now to continue reading. The University of Hawaii women’s water polo program, coming off back to back appearances in the national semifinals, announced two signings Monday. Coach James Robinson, entering his second season at the helm, said Asimina […]

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Sandi Rodriguez – Director of Student Athlete Services (Baseball, Soccer, Indoor/Beach VB, Softball) – Softball Support Staff

Sandi Rodriguez was named Assistant Director of Student Athlete Services in October 2018 after serving as the Administrative Assistant to Soccer, Softball and Tennis programs since 2015.  Her current sport oversight includes Baseball, Soccer, Softball, Tennis, Beach Volleyball, & Indoor Volleyball. Prior to this appointment, Rodriguez served as an Administrative Assistant for Women’s Basketball, Men’s […]

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Sandi Rodriguez was named Assistant Director of Student Athlete Services in October 2018 after serving as the Administrative Assistant to Soccer, Softball and Tennis programs since 2015. 

Her current sport oversight includes Baseball, Soccer, Softball, Tennis, Beach Volleyball, & Indoor Volleyball.

Prior to this appointment, Rodriguez served as an Administrative Assistant for Women’s Basketball, Men’s Golf, Women’s Golf, Soccer, Softball, and Tennis from July 2015. 

The Gray, LA. native, began her career as the McNeese Academic Study Lab Coordinator from January 2011 – June 2013. She received her Associate degree from McNeese in December 2010 and her Bachelor degree in December 2012. 

Rodriguez is deeply involved in the community serving multiple roles within Pack 107 as a committee member, unit fundraising chair, unit advancement chair, and a pack administrator.

Rodriguez and her husband Jason have one son, Braedon. 

 



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Demarshay Johnson Jr. Joins Beach Men’s Basketball

LONG BEACH, Calif. – Long Beach State Men’s Basketball has secured the commitment of Demarshay Johnson Jr., as the big man will reunite with Chris Acker, transferring to the Beach from San Diego State.   Demarshay Johnson Jr. | Center | 6-10, 220 | Richmond, Calif.   A high-level Division I transfer with experience and […]

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LONG BEACH, Calif. – Long Beach State Men’s Basketball has secured the commitment of Demarshay Johnson Jr., as the big man will reunite with Chris Acker, transferring to the Beach from San Diego State.
 
Demarshay Johnson Jr. | Center | 6-10, 220 | Richmond, Calif.
 
A high-level Division I transfer with experience and familiarity with Chris Acker from their time together at San Diego State, Johnson comes to the Beach after four seasons with the Aztecs program, where he played in 39 games as a depth option in the post. Johnson appeared in 14 games as a junior, setting career highs of eight points and eight rebounds while playing at San Diego State. Coming out of high school as the No. 27 center in the nation, Johnson led Salesian College Prep to three TCAL titles.
 
Acker on Johnson:
“I had the pleasure of coaching Demarshay for three seasons at San Diego State. Each year I saw his drive and competitive spirit grow. He is now ready for the opportunity to take a major step forward. I saw him take huge strides in games last season where he was a huge reason why San Diego State won some of those games. His IQ, athleticism, and versatility defensively will help our defense take a major step forward this season. He’s also shown flashes of being able to impact games on the offensive end as well.”
 
The addition of Johnson Jr. gives Long Beach State another Division I transfer, joining Isaiah Lewis and Shaquil Bender as commits for the 2025-26 squad. He joins returner Derrick Michael Xzavierro and highly touted incoming freshman Dallas Washington in what should be an exciting front court next season.
 



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Gator legend Jac Caglianone receives long awaited call

The Kansas City Royals announced Sunday night they are calling up their top prospect — MLB’s No.10 prospect overall — former Gators first-baseman Jac Caglianone. Caglianone has been making his rounds in pro baseball. The left-handed power bat has been dominating the minor leagues — and can now dominate in the majors. Caglianone was a […]

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Gator legend Jac Caglianone receives long awaited call

The Kansas City Royals announced Sunday night they are calling up their top prospect — MLB’s No.10 prospect overall — former Gators first-baseman Jac Caglianone.

Caglianone has been making his rounds in pro baseball. The left-handed power bat has been dominating the minor leagues — and can now dominate in the majors.

Caglianone was a dynamo at Florida. In his three years at UF, he broke countless records. Not only did he have the record for the most home runs hit in a season, but he also broke the career record with 75 home runs at UF — one more than Matt Laporta‘s 74.

Life After College

Caglianone’s power has translated well to pro ball. Since getting drafted last July, he has climbed his way through the minors. He started his career playing for the Quad City River Bandits in 2024. In 29 games, he batted .241 with two home runs and 14 RBIs.

He then got called up to the Royals’ Double A affiliate — the Northwest Arkansas Travelers. During his time in Northwest Arkansas, he played 38 games batting well above .300 and hit the cover off baseballs with nine home runs and 43 RBIs. This quick offensive explosion got him a call up to Triple A with the Omaha Storm Chasers.

In just 12 games as a Storm Chaser, he continued his offensive tear — hitting .319 with 6 home runs and 13 RBIs including five home runs in his first four games.

Power Outage

The Royals have been getting their wins from their pitching staff. Kansas City’s team ERA is 3.13 — fourth best in baseball — and their strikeout to walk ratio as a team is just under 3-1. They are currently above .500, sitting at 31-29.

However, their run-scoring ability has left a lot to be desired. Kansas City has struggled to get their bats going all year. In 60 games played, the team has 198 runs scored on the season — tied for second worst in baseball.  Kansas City also only has 34 home runs on the season — one less than the amount of homers Caglianone hit in his last year at UF and the least in the MLB.

Royals’ manager Matt Quatraro believes Caglianone could be a major spark for a struggling offense.

“He’s super talented,” Quatraro said during Spring Training. “When you see him step out onto the field, you can see that he’s athletic… he moves around the bag well and the power clearly stands out.”

What’s Next for Cags?

The Royals have an off day before they hit the road. They will start their six-game road trip in St. Louis to take on their in-state rival Cardinals.

Caglianone is expected to make his major league debut tomorrow and it’s something that Gator fans and Royals fans have been looking forward to since draft day. He will be joining former Gator Jonathan India in the big leagues. First pitch at Busch Stadium is set for tomorrow at 7:45 p.m.

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