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Long Beach Poly Beach Volleyball Wins CIF-SS Championship in Comeback Fashion Against Canyon – The562.org

The562’s coverage of high school volleyball in 2025 is brought to you by the MLP’s Bay Area Breakers. The562’s coverage of Long Beach Poly is sponsored by Bryson Financial. The Long Beach Poly beach volleyball team may find itself down — but never out. It wasn’t the first time the Jackrabbits had trailed during their playoff […]

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The562’s coverage of high school volleyball in 2025 is brought to you by the MLP’s Bay Area Breakers.

The562’s coverage of Long Beach Poly is sponsored by Bryson Financial.

The Long Beach Poly beach volleyball team may find itself down — but never out.

It wasn’t the first time the Jackrabbits had trailed during their playoff run, and Saturday’s CIF-SS Division 3 championship at Long Beach City College was no different. Poly fell behind 2-1 against Canyon and even faced set point in the decisive match — with the entire season on the line.

The Jackrabbits eventually battled back to win it 3-2, claiming the program’s first-ever beach volleyball championship.

“I wouldn’t want it any other way. 3-2. Just tight and neck-to-neck like that,” said Poly Court 1 starter Aleeya Salima. “That’s just Poly.”

“It was a battle from beginning to end,” head coach Litara Keil said. “I don’t think there was ever a break for relief and I think this whole playoff series it’s been like that where we’re down and we have to come back and the girls have come back on top every single time.”

It all came down to Poly’s Simone Millsap and Alyssa Luna on Court 4, playing in the final match still underway with the overall score tied 2-2. The pair were locked in a tight third set against Canyon’s Hannah Hoang and Erin Ly, even trailing 14-15 while facing match point.The Jackrabbits fought back to earn a match point of their own, and sealed the championship with a Millsap ace.

Remarkably, it was the second time in as many matches that Millsap and Luna had been the last team standing. Just days earlier in the semifinals, they found themselves in the same high-pressure situation — delivering the deciding point to send them to Saturday’s championship.

“It feels amazing,” said Millsap. “The last few points in the semifinals and this game I was just visualizing my teammates running in and how amazing it would feel to win. So I felt that if I could channel that energy into my serve, we were gonna win.”

“When you have your people cheering you on it is easy to feel motivated and secure,” added Luna. 

Luna was moved up from junior varsity this season and has made her impact felt during Poly’s championship run. She’s had the luxury of placing alongside one of the Jackrabbits’ senior captains in Millsap.

“They’re the most sane team out of all five courts,” said Keil of the duo. “Their energy is sane and calm the whole time. That just shows a lot from Simone and her maturity, and Alyssa being a JV puller that got pulled up is insane. She’s just so calm and her demeanor in those pressure moments helped both of them pull through at the end.”

The only other match to go to three sets was on Court 1, where Aleeya Salima and Londyn Foster came back to reverse sweep Canyon’s Ellie Nguyen and Jordyn Roberts. 

“I had no doubt,” said Salima. “We just had to trust each other and understand that we have each other’s back in situations like these. What’s done in the dark comes to light and I’m so glad. Win or lose we told each other to play with our hearts and that’s what we did.”

The CIF-SS championship is the 132nd in school history, more than any other school, and the first since the girls’ indoor volleyball championship. Salima played a big role in both of those wins and reflected on adding another championship to her resume.

“It feels awesome, honestly,” she said. “All glory to God. He’s the one behind this and I can’t thank Him enough.”

The Jackrabbits first win of the day came on Court 3 when Lauren Foster and Taimane Poe defeated Remington Glenn and Kedzie Kranz. The pair contributed to what was the quickest match of the day with a dominant sweep.

Canyon found a win on Court 2 from Rylie White and Kendall Vanderplow who took down Giselle Millsap and Dayna Lagafuaina. London Kenyon and Emma Vesa also won for Canyon on Court 5 against Finley Stuart and Vivienne Irwin.

In just the fourth year of the sport, a CIF-SS championship marks a major milestone for Keil and her program. She hopes the beach volleyball culture at Poly will continue to grow.

“It took a while to change the environment and culture of the program,” said Keil. “We were very serious when we stepped in to take over and it wasn’t reciprocated. So I hope winning CIF changes that and makes a statement that we’re serious and we’re here to work and make a change.”

Full Match Results:

Court 1: Aleeya Salima/Londyn Foster (Poly) def. Ellie Nguyen/Jordyn Roberts (Canyon) 13-21, 21-17, 15-11

Court 2: Rylie White/Kendall Vanderplow (Canyon) def. Giselle Millsap/Dayna Lagafuaina (Poly) 21-11, 21-13

Court 3: Lauren Foster/Taimane Poe (Poly) def. Remington Glenn/Kedzie Kranz (Canyon) 21-12, 21-11

Court 4: Simone Millsap/Alyssa Luna (Poly) def. Hannah Hoang/Erin Ly (Canyon) 23-21, 16-21, 17-15

Court 5: London Kenyon/Emma Vesa (Canyon) def. Finley Stuart/Vivienne Irwin (Poly) 21-17, 21-18



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Chase Burns to make MLB debut for Cincinnati Reds Tuesday

Jun 22, 2025, 01:32 AM ET Open Extended Reactions Chase Burns, the No. 2 pick in the 2024 MLB draft who has excelled at three levels of the minor leagues this season, will be promoted next week so that he can make his major league debut for the Cincinnati Reds. Burns, a right-handed starter who […]

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Chase Burns to make MLB debut for Cincinnati Reds Tuesday

Chase Burns, the No. 2 pick in the 2024 MLB draft who has excelled at three levels of the minor leagues this season, will be promoted next week so that he can make his major league debut for the Cincinnati Reds.

Burns, a right-handed starter who is the No. 12 prospect in ESPN’s Top 50, will take the mound Tuesday at home against the New York Yankees.

Burns, 22, relies on an upper-90s fastball, and his 86 to 90 mph slider is possibly the best breaking ball in the minor leagues. He has made 13 starts in his professional career, the last of which came with Triple-A Louisville.

The Reds have had an up-and-down season, but at 39-38, they are still in the hunt for a National League wild-card berth, and Burns will bring added intrigue to the star-laden series against New York. Cincinnati has lost three in a row heading into Sunday’s series finale with the St. Louis Cardinals before it opens a homestand with the Yankees Monday night.

Burns is 7-3 with a 1.77 ERA and 89 strikeouts in 66 minor-league innings. Prior to his 2024 selection, he pitched in the SEC for Tennessee Volunteers and the ACC for Wake Forest.

“We’re trying to give ourselves every chance to win and be in this, and right now, we feel like Chase gives us the best chance, and it’s time to go,” Reds general manager Brad Meador told the Cincinnati Enquirer.

While the Reds have been inconsistent offensively this season, their pitching has been solid. Through Friday’s loss, the Reds were 16th overall in team ERA at 3.90 and 10th with a 1.23 WHIP. But they placed left-hander Wade Miley on the injured list Friday and had to author a bullpen game Saturday.

“Trying to figure out when the time is right is always the toughest part. You never know for sure when a guy’s ready,” Meador said. “But he’s obviously pitched as well as you could possibly hope in the first year of professional baseball, and he seems to be getting stronger. Even when a guy’s ready, you never know, but he’s passed every test. I don’t think he’s going to be overwhelmed by the situation, for sure.”

Pitching for Double-A Chattanooga this season, Burns went 6-1 with a 1.29 ERA in eight starts before landing in Louisville. On Tuesday at Great American Ball Park, he is likely to oppose New York’s Carlos Rodon, who is 9-5 this season with a 3.10 ERA.

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LEVELED UP: Recent success takes McAuley track and field up to Class 2 | Local Sports

McAuley Catholic High School’s boys track and field team has leveled up. The Warriors have used their growth over recent years in running and throwing events to breed success at the state level. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in […]

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McAuley Catholic High School’s boys track and field team has leveled up.

The Warriors have used their growth over recent years in running and throwing events to breed success at the state level.


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Why the SEC, Big Ten impasse over CFP format for 2026 matters to everyone

The offseason is definitely not the slow season as yet another week delivered news impacting both the Pac-12 legacy schools and other universities across the region. Here are four developments you might have missed. 1. CFP negotiations stall Nitty gritty: The Big Ten and SEC control the model for the College Football Playoff starting in […]

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The offseason is definitely not the slow season as yet another week delivered news impacting both the Pac-12 legacy schools and other universities across the region.

Here are four developments you might have missed.

1. CFP negotiations stall

Nitty gritty: The Big Ten and SEC control the model for the College Football Playoff starting in the 2026 season and have not found common ground. The former wants a 16-team field based on automatic bids for the power conferences (the so-called 4-4-2-2-1 model) while the latter favored the 5+11 format that’s heavy on at-large bids.

During a meeting this week in Asheville, N.C., commissioners Tony Petitti of the Big Ten and Greg Sankey of the SEC decided a restart is in order.

“I wouldn’t say there’s a leading contender right now,” CFP executive director Rich Clark told reporters, “but they’re taking a fresh look at it.”

Why it matters: The CFP impacts everything in college football, and the model for 2026 has been the hottest topic in the sport for months. The impasse at the top of the governance structure creates the possibility, however remote, that the event won’t expand (to 14 or 16 teams) and, instead, will remain at 12. (That’s our preference, by the way.)

The commissioners are facing a Dec. 1 deadline to notify ESPN of any adjustments for 2026, when a new contract cycle begins. That might seem like plenty of time, but Petitti and Sankey, along with Jim Phillips of the ACC and Brett Yormark of the Big 12, have been discussing possible alterations for months and gotten nowhere.

Whatever format the Big Ten and SEC ultimately select will have sweeping implications for every major college conference, from the Big 12 and ACC to the Pac-12 and Sun Belt.

A model based on automatic qualifiers, for example, would free up the SEC and Big Ten to create a regular-season crossover series. That, in turn, would limit their opportunities to schedule non-conference matchups with teams in other leagues, particularly the ACC and Big 12.

There are other ramifications — too many to detail here, in fact.

Just know that distrust of the selection committee is rampant and common ground will continue to be elusive for the Big Ten and SEC. And they have the only votes that matter.

2. Commissioners mull new start date for football

Nitty gritty: Commissioners from the Football Bowl Subdivision conferences discussed moving the official start of the season up one week, to what is commonly referred to as Week 0: the Saturday before Labor Day weekend.

(If the change had been in place for the 2025 season, for example, everyone would start play Aug. 23. Instead, the season begins in full force Aug. 30.)

Why it matters: The Week 0 discussion has received little attention over the years but is one of the most important issues in the sport. In fact, it’s the key to unlocking the jammed postseason calendar.

College Football Playoff expansion to 12 teams created substantial overlap with the final weeks of the NFL season and playoffs. Last year, for instance, two CFP opening-round games (on Dec. 21) were up against a mammoth NFL doubleheader (Chiefs-Texans and Steelers-Ravens).

That’s a fight college football cannot win and should avoid at all costs.

(Another issue: Playing the semifinals on a random Thursday and Friday to get out from under the NFL’s wild card weekend.)

Starting the season earlier would reduce the frequency of CFP conflicts with the NFL’s stretch run. It would create an earlier date for the national championship. (The title game for the 2026 season is scheduled for Jan. 25, 2027.) And it would allow more mid-December flexibility for additional opening-round games if the CFP expands to 14 or 16 teams.

The move to Week 0 needs to happen for the betterment of the postseason — August is the key to December — which means the change will take years to implement, if it happens at all.

3. Washington State downsizes track and field

Nitty gritty: The Cougars announced Monday a competitive shift “to a distance-focused approach,” meaning they will no longer sponsor field events and will reduce the “number of sprint and hurdle opportunities.”

Why it matters: The canary is chirping, except it’s not in a coal mine — it’s trapped in a financial vise brought about by the revenue-sharing era in college sports.

With a maximum of $20.5 million being shared with athletes, schools must make hard choices about sponsoring the dozens of Olympic sports programs that lose money. (Only football and men’s basketball generate a profit.)

Washington State isn’t the first Division I school to announce a reduction in sponsored sports — Utah is cutting beach volleyball; UTEP has eliminated women’s tennis — and assuredly won’t be the last.

In other instances, Olympic sports could have funding reduced to the point they essentially become club teams.





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Utah Royals 1st NWSL team to 10 losses this season after falling 4-1 to Seattle

SANDY — Based on the postgame mood, you wouldn’t have guessed the Utah Royals had just lost their 10th game of the season. The NWSL’s last-place squad reached the midpoint of its season with a 4-1 loss to the Seattle Reign in its 13th game of the year Saturday at America First Field. The home […]

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SANDY — Based on the postgame mood, you wouldn’t have guessed the Utah Royals had just lost their 10th game of the season.

The NWSL’s last-place squad reached the midpoint of its season with a 4-1 loss to the Seattle Reign in its 13th game of the year Saturday at America First Field.

The home team was outmatched from wire-to-wire against the top-five team from Washington, giving up goals in the sixth, 16th, 66th and 91st minutes.

For a brief moment near the end of the first half, it looked like a comeback could be underway when Bianca St-Georges scored her third goal of the season for Utah, but it wasn’t to be.

The goal, which moved St-Georges into a tie with Brecken Mozingo for the team lead in goals, was the only one in the cards for the Royals on Saturday, despite leading the visiting team 14-10 in total shots.

The Royals enter the midseason break on an eight-game winless streak and a four-game losing streak, with the next league fixture not until Aug. 3. But still, a sense of optimism and belief remained with players and coach during press conference comments.

Perhaps it’s because the break gives the team time to recover from a brutal start to the season that featured two season-ending injuries and take another step in building “from the bottom out,” as head coach Jimmy Coenraets described it.

“Make sure you kind of just detach from the game and you get some time by yourself,” Coenraets said of his advice to players heading into the break. “I just want everyone to come back in the best possible headspace.”

The real reason for the optimism, however, is likely because Utah is approaching this season as one piece of a much larger puzzle. Coenraets said that since the Miller family took over team ownership in April, he has felt supported in building a foundation for what he called “a sustainable future.”

“Ever since the change, there was one clear message, and that’s, ‘Let’s build a foundation, and let’s build upon the foundation that we are building the next six months,'” Coenraets said. “We want to be competitive as much as we can, but we also want to make sure that by being competitive, we’re actually building for the future and not giving up the future to just get results.”

Utah will play a pair of friendlies against the San Diego Wave to break up the month-long break and several Royals will continue playing games with their respective national teams, including Ally Sentnor and Mandy McGlynn with the USWNT and Janni Thomsen joining Denmark for the UEFA Women’s Euro tournament.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.



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Minjee Lee's KPMG Women's PGA Championship Round 3 was 'remarkable'

June 21, 2025 08:02 PM Watch the best moments from the third round of the PGA Tour Champions’ third major, the Kaulig Companies Championship, at Firestone South. 0

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Minjee Lee's KPMG Women's PGA Championship Round 3 was 'remarkable'

June 21, 2025 08:02 PM

Watch the best moments from the third round of the PGA Tour Champions’ third major, the Kaulig Companies Championship, at Firestone South.

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Former Kansas State athletics director Steve Miller dies at age 81

Kansas State football coach Chris Klieman talks about roster limits Kansas State football coach Chris Klieman talks about his frustration with a lack of clarity over roster limits for the 2025 season. Former Kansas State athletics director Steve Miller, who helped sow the seeds for a historic turnaround in Wildcats football, died on June 15 […]

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Former Kansas State athletics director Steve Miller, who helped sow the seeds for a historic turnaround in Wildcats football, died on June 15 at his home in Portland, Oregon at the age of 81, according to a K-State news release.

Miller spent nine years at K-State — five as head track and field coach (1981-86), one as associate AD and director of the Mike Ahearn Scholarship Fund (1987-88) and the last three as athletics director. But he was best known for the Nov. 30, 1988, hiring of Bill Snyder as Wildcats’ football coach, which led to the resurrection of a program once described by Sports Illustrated as “Futility U.”

A celebration of life for Miller has been planned for 3 p.m. PT on July 7 at the Ritz Carlton in Portland.

“We are saddened to learn of the passing of Steve Miller, a true K-Stater who led our department during some of the most critical times in our history,” K-State athletics director Gene Taylor said in a statement. “Obviously his hiring of coach Snyder is well documented, but he also was a longtime figure in the track and field world and was a leader in that space for decades.

“From the first time I met Steve he became a trusted friend and over the last few years provided me great guidance and advice from his vast experience in the sports industry. He will truly be missed, and our thoughts and prayers are with his family.”

While credited with bringing future hall of famer Snyder to Manhattan as a first-time college head coach, Miller was a decorated coach in his own right. In 2005, he was inducted into the U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Hall of Fame.

His 23-year career in track included 21 as head coach at Bloom Township High School (1965-76), Cal Poly (1976-81) and K-State. After leaving Manhattan, he served as an administrator with Nike, the Professional Bowlers Association and Agassi Graf Holding, and as a faculty member at the University of Oregon.

In addition to Snyder, Miller hired Dana Altman as men’s basketball coach in April of 1990.

Miller was born in Chicago on Sept. 9, 1943, and competed in track and football at Bradley University before a brief stint in the NFL with the Detroit Lions. He is survived by his wife Suzanne, daughter Claudine and son Christopher.

Arne Green is based in Salina and covers Kansas State University sports for the Gannett network. He can be reached at agreen@gannett.com or on X (formerly Twitter) at @arnegreen.



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