Sports
See where South Bend area boys volleyball teams wound up in sectionals
For the second time in the 2024-25 academic year, the IHSAA will crown an inaugural state champion. After the first ever girls wrestling season was a success in the winter, it’s now boys volleyball’s turn to get the IHSAA spotlight for the first time. All 136 teams competing in the first sanctioned season learned their […]
For the second time in the 2024-25 academic year, the IHSAA will crown an inaugural state champion.
After the first ever girls wrestling season was a success in the winter, it’s now boys volleyball’s turn to get the IHSAA spotlight for the first time. All 136 teams competing in the first sanctioned season learned their postseason fates Sunday, May 4, with the release of the sectional brackets.
The 16 sectionals will go from Tuesday, May 13 to Saturday, May 17. The 16 winners will advance to regionals Saturday, May 24, playing regional semifinal games in the morning and championship games at night. Regional sites this year are Valparaiso, Peru, Center Grove and Perry Meridian.
The four regional winners move onto state, where state semifinals and a championship game will be played Saturday, May 31, inside historic Mackey Arena on the campus of Purdue University in West Lafayette. The semifinal games will be in the morning and final at night, much like the regional setup.
Nine schools from the South Bend area are competing — two in the Michigan City sectional and seven in the Elkhart sectional. Both sectional winners will head to the Valparaiso regional. Here is how those brackets shook out. Full pairings can be found online at ihsaa.org.
Records as of May 4. All times listed for the Elkhart sectional Eastern.
Michigan City boys volleyball sectional bracket
(Game dates/times not provided before the draw show)
Match 1: La Porte (1-16) vs. Michigan City (8-12)
Match 2: Morgan Township (10-7) vs. Washington Township (13-3)
Match 3: Westville (7-17) vs. Tri-Township (0-8)
Match 4: South Central-Union Mills (13-5) vs. Chesterton (20-4)
Match 5: Kouts (11-5) vs. Game 1 winner
Match 6: Match 2 winner vs. Match 3 winner
Match 7: Match 4 winner vs. Match 5 winner
Championship: Saturday, May 17, time TBD
Elkhart boys volleyball sectional bracket (at Elkhart West campus/old Memorial HS)
Match 1: South Bend Adams (0-5) vs. Northridge (6-8), Tues. May 13, 6 p.m.
Match 2: Mishawaka Marian (0-6) vs. South Bend Saint Joseph (9-12), Tues. May 13, 7:30 p.m.
Match 3: South Bend Riley (12-14) vs. Elkhart (7-14), Wed. May 14, 6 p.m.
Match 4: Penn (9-9) vs. Warsaw (9-6), Wed. May 14, 7:30 p.m.
Match 5: Game 1 winner vs. Game 2 winner, Sat. May 17, 10 a.m.
Match 6: Game 3 winner vs. Game 4 winner, Sat. May 17, 11:30 a.m.
Championship: Saturday, May 17, 4 p.m., Sat. May 17, 4 p.m.
Sports
Men’s Water Polo Announces 2025 Schedule
Pepperdine men’s water polo has unveiled its highly anticipated 2025 schedule, which includes nine home matches at Raleigh Runnels Memorial Pool. Head coach Merrill Moses emphasized the tough competition in their upcoming season, with matchups against several top-tier teams, including NCAA defending champions UCLA and runner-up USC. The Waves will kick off their season at […]
Pepperdine men’s water polo has unveiled its highly anticipated 2025 schedule, which includes nine home matches at Raleigh Runnels Memorial Pool. Head coach Merrill Moses emphasized the tough competition in their upcoming season, with matchups against several top-tier teams, including NCAA defending champions UCLA and runner-up USC. The Waves will kick off their season at the Triton Invite and host big games against Princeton and UC Irvine. The schedule reflects Pepperdine’s commitment to competing in the West Coast Conference (WCC), where they look to shine in their third consecutive year. Support from the local community and fans is highly encouraged throughout the season.
By the Numbers
- Pepperdine will play nine home games during the 2025 season.
- The Waves face five of the eight teams from the 2024 NCAA Tournament, showcasing a challenging lineup.
State of Play
- The season opens at the Triton Invite on August 30-31.
- Key home matchups include Princeton on October 12 and UC Irvine on November 1.
What’s Next
As the season approaches, the team is focused on preparation for tough early matchups against prestigious programs, which will set the tone for the remainder of the season. The anticipation builds as fans await ticket information for home contests.
Bottom Line
Pepperdine’s ambitious 2025 water polo schedule highlights the team’s goal of competing at the highest level and underscores the importance of community support to enhance the home game experience.
Sports
Oklahoma’s toppled softball dynasty, in context of other college sports
Until Saturday Newsletter | This is The Athletic’s college football newsletter. Sign up here to receive Until Saturday directly in your inbox. Today in college football news, the Mrs. and I have been rebuilding our CD collections from scratch … inspired by our kid, who’s started one of her own. CDs are so unbelievably back. […]

Until Saturday Newsletter | This is The Athletic’s college football newsletter. Sign up here to receive Until Saturday directly in your inbox.
Today in college football news, the Mrs. and I have been rebuilding our CD collections from scratch … inspired by our kid, who’s started one of her own. CDs are so unbelievably back.
Dynasties: Oklahoma softball’s place in college history
Yesterday, one of the greatest dynasties in major college sports history saw the end of its current title streak, though we’ll let future seasons determine whether the dynasty itself has run its course.
In the Women’s College World Series semifinals, big-money upstart Texas Tech — which had never won even a conference title in this sport until this season — knocked off four-time reigning champion Oklahoma. On a walkoff, no less. Having spoiled what would have been the third rivalry finale in four years between OU and Texas, the Red Raiders will take the shot themselves. Still plenty of juice, though, since few schools hate Texas more than Tech does. (The best-of-three starts tomorrow night.)
With history’s longest softball title streak now officially dusted, where does it stand in college sports history? Well, since this is college sports, there are about a million ways to answer that. All according to the NCAA’s records:
- Among all Division I title streaks, the longest was Arkansas’ 12-year run in men’s indoor track and field, beginning in 1984.
- If we limit it to just DI team sports that draw big crowds (a la modern softball), it’s UCLA basketball hitting seven in a row from 1967 onward.
- Division I football’s best streak ever was — of course — North Dakota State’s five from 2011 through 2015. (The Bison might have since started yet another run, winning their 10th last season.)
- In FBS football, the answer would be … a big mess. The last widely recognized three-peat was 1930s Minnesota, while I’d argue the only consensus-ish streak of five belonged to 1880s Yale.
- If we include every sport in every level of the NCAA, then hang on to your freaking hats, because Ohio’s Kenyon College had the two longest ever: 31 and 17 in a row for its men’s and women’s swimming and diving programs, both lasting from the 1980s and into the 2000s.
- As for the longest current streak, it belongs to Middlebury College’s Division III field hockey campaign, now seven years strong. This is the Vermont school’s second Until Saturday mention in 2025. Just setting up shop around here.
Coach Patty Gasso’s softball Sooners didn’t put together a streak long enough to hurdle some of the biggest records in the books, but they also managed to challenge for a fifth straight title despite playing in The Portal And NIL Era. This season, their previous star Jordy Bahl was the DI Player of the Year for her home-state Huskers, and the Texas Tech team that finally took OU down was led by million-dollar ace NiJaree Canady.
(Nobody’s heart is breaking for any SEC power in any sport, but still. It’s reasonable to wonder whether staying on the very top is even harder now. Salute.)
Quick Snaps
Frisbee emoji? No, it’s a blue chip, you see. Today, Grace Raynor ranks all 25 No. 1 recruits of the 2000s. I can stop selling this link now, because you’ve already clicked it.
Three days ago, it would’ve cost Bill Belichick $10 million to leave his job at North Carolina. As of this week, it’d cost just $1 million. Still hasn’t coached a game yet!
Jim Leavitt, USF’s founding coach who then led the Bulls to their momentary No. 2 ranking in 2007, left the program on very bad terms in 2010. He’s now joining the athletic department’s hall of fame, alongside late basketball coach Amir Abdur-Rahim.
Lots of slow starters in recruiting, like Alabama down at No. 45. Not without precedent at this point in the calendar, but still.
- For teams looking to vault upward in the rankings, look to the hills of … Idaho? Averaging about one blue-chipper per year these days, plus three-stars drawing a lot more attention than they used to.
“It’s little (stuff) like this. That’s not typical for 3. Watch 8. That’s the stuff I watch this game and go, hmmm … Why aren’t we playing as hard as we usually play? If this was Ohio State, Adon would knock the crap out of him.” — Marcus Freeman with Pete Sampson, explaining Notre Dame‘s loss to NIU while demonstrating how coaches watch film.
We Meet Again: Why the Big Ten is into the auto-bids thing
As we talked about last week, the current “50 million automatic College Football Playoff bids for the Big Ten and SEC, plus scraps for the other powers” plan isn’t necessarily the SEC’s favorite.
As SEC commissioner Greg Sankey has noted, four auto-bids for his league in a 16-team field could actually decrease the SEC’s number of contestants. But … wouldn’t roughly the same be true for the Big Ten? In that case, why would the B1G want this at all?
As Scott Dochterman explains, it all goes back to the exact same thing the Big Ten has been yelling at the sky for nine years now: Its teams play one more conference game per year than the SEC’s or ACC’s do. Scott writes:
“Without uniform scheduling, Big Ten officials are concerned that an open (five automatic bids and 11 at-larges) plan would cause more schools to ease up on their nonconference slates rather than play other power-conference schools; one recently called it a ‘race to the bottom.’”
Hmm. In general, this version of college football’s eternal strength-of-schedule debate has been non-stop since the CFP era began, with everybody saying each offseason that SOS should matter more, but then nobody liking it once the season begins and a three-loss team ranks ahead of a two-loss team.
As for the perpetual Big Ten vs. SEC sub-debate, by any schedule-strength metric, Big Ten and SEC teams annually play schedules that are about as comparable overall as any you’ll find anywhere in such a sprawling sport.
- In the upcoming season, for instance, Team Rankings judges Texas and Ohio State as having the hardest slates. They even play each other. College Football News has Florida at No. 1, followed by Wisconsin. Bill Connelly’s rankings start with three SEC teams, likewise followed by Wisconsin. In ESPN’s, the easiest schedule in either league is Maryland’s at No. 61 out of 136.
- To be clear, this disparity does complicate things. Having a longer conference schedule automatically means a larger number of losses to distribute throughout league records, which can make the middle and bottom of that league look weaker than it is. (Then again, in certain years, it can artificially inflate the top.) Regardless, expanding to nine games was not something anyone else forced the Big Ten to do in 2016.
(As always, because it’s impossible to discuss any of this without hearing a specific charge: I’m not an SEC alum. I’m a Conference USA alum who was raised to root for an ACC rival of an SEC team. My list of annoyances with the SEC happens to not include this one, and nobody hoodwinked me into thinking that. I still love you.)
(Top photo: Sarah Phipps / The Oklahoman / USA TODAY NETWORK)
Sports
Meadville sweeps South Fayette in PIAA Class 2A boys volleyball opener
Meadville celebrates a D-10 boys volleyball title with interviews Watch Meadville celebrate the D-10 2A boys volleyball championship with interviews. MEADVILLE — South Fayette’s boys volleyball team made its PIAA tournament debut on June 3. Meadville made sure the greatest season in the Lions’ brief history concluded with that achievement. The Bulldogs began their official […]


Meadville celebrates a D-10 boys volleyball title with interviews
Watch Meadville celebrate the D-10 2A boys volleyball championship with interviews.
MEADVILLE — South Fayette’s boys volleyball team made its PIAA tournament debut on June 3.
Meadville made sure the greatest season in the Lions’ brief history concluded with that achievement.
The Bulldogs began their official defense as the state’s best Class 2A program with a first round sweep of the WPIAL third seeds. They advanced to the June 7 quarterfinals with a 25-23, 25-11, 25-15 home victory.
Meadville (16-0) will face Ambridge, another District 7 opponent, in that round. The Bridgers swept District 8’s Obama Academy 25-17, 25-12, 25-5 in their match at Pittsburgh.
South Fayette (16-6) competed in a state match for the first time since the program began five years ago.
Contact Mike Copper at mcopper@timesnews.com. Follow him on X @ETNcopper.
Sports
SCSU Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Brings Home Three USTFCCCA NCAA DII Regional Awards
Story Links NEW HAVEN, Conn. – Southern Connecticut Men’s Outdoor Track & Field brought home three NCAA Division II Regional Awards for the 2025 season, as announced by the USTFCCCA. Cameron Belton was named the East Region Field Athlete of the Year, John Wallin was named the East Region Coach of […]

NEW HAVEN, Conn. – Southern Connecticut Men’s Outdoor Track & Field brought home three NCAA Division II Regional Awards for the 2025 season, as announced by the USTFCCCA. Cameron Belton was named the East Region Field Athlete of the Year, John Wallin was named the East Region Coach of the Year, and Bernardo Mbaya was named the East Region Assistant Coach of the Year. All three winners also won the award for the 2025 Indoor season.
Cameron Belton capped off his phenomenal 2025 season by completing the indoor/outdoor sweep of the East Region Field Athlete of the Year. He finished the season with a personal-best mark, throwing 18.87m to grab silver at the NCAA DII Shot Put Championship, earning All-American honors for the second time after doing the same at the Indoor Championships. That is the second-best throw in SCSU Program History. This season, he was named the NE10 Indoor and Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year, the USTFCCCA Indoor and Outdoor East Region Field Athlete of the Year, and the NE10 Outdoor Most Outstanding Field Performer. Through both the indoor and outdoor seasons, Belton never placed lower than third in a Shot Put competition.
John Wallin took home the Men’s Coach of the Year honors, also completing the season sweep. In his 15th year as Head Coach at Southern Connecticut, he led the Owls to their ninth-straight NE10 Championship, winning 10 events. Southern also earned one First-Team (Belton) and two Second-Team (Lawrence Hicks, Osaretin Osagie) All-America honors from the NCAA DII Outdoor Championships.
In his first year transitioning to coaching, Bernardo Mbaya saw major success. He coached the Owls’ throwers to combine for 49 points at the Northeast 10 Conference Championships, helping Southern Connecticut win the team title. His top athlete, Cameron Belton, won the NE10 Shot Put and Discus titles and finished second in the shot at the NCAA DII Outdoor Championships.
Sports
PIAA volleyball and lacrosse roundup: Ambridge advances to quarterfinals
Riverside’s Zach Hare discusses perfect game in WPIAL Championship Riverside pitcher Zach Hare discuses his perfect game in the WPIAL Class 3A Championship game against Quaker Valley. The PIAA boys volleyball and girls lacrosse postseason got underway for two Beaver Valley schools on June 3. Here is a look at how the two area teams […]

Riverside’s Zach Hare discusses perfect game in WPIAL Championship
Riverside pitcher Zach Hare discuses his perfect game in the WPIAL Class 3A Championship game against Quaker Valley.
The PIAA boys volleyball and girls lacrosse postseason got underway for two Beaver Valley schools on June 3. Here is a look at how the two area teams fared in their opening round matchups.
PIAA 2A girls lacrosse first round
Wyomissing 18, Quaker Valley 7
Quaker Valley gave Wyomissing everything that it could handle as it fell to the undefeated District III champion in the first round.
The team finishes the year 11-6, closing a strong campaign, qualifying for the state playoffs for the second time in three seasons.
PIAA 2A boys volleyball first round
Ambridge 3, Obama Academy 0
Ambridge shook off its WPIAL Class 2A championship loss to Shaler by sweeping City League champion Obama Academy on the road to open up its PIAA playoff run.
The team rolled through the match with a 25-17, 25-12 and 25-5 wins in the three-set victory. The team will now face District 10 champion Meadville at a site and time to be determined on June 7.
Sports
SCSU Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Wins Three USTFCCCA NCAA DII Regional Awards
Story Links NEW HAVEN, Conn. – Southern Connecticut Women’s Outdoor Track & Field brought home three NCAA Division II Regional Awards, as announced by the USTFCCCA. Hannah Caiola was named the East Region Track Athlete of the Year, Melissa Stoll Funaro was named the East Region Coach of the Year, and […]

NEW HAVEN, Conn. – Southern Connecticut Women’s Outdoor Track & Field brought home three NCAA Division II Regional Awards, as announced by the USTFCCCA. Hannah Caiola was named the East Region Track Athlete of the Year, Melissa Stoll Funaro was named the East Region Coach of the Year, and Brian Nill was named the East Region Assistant Coach of the Year.
Caiola, who hails from Glastonbury, Connecticut, earned First-Team All-America honors in the 400 meters at the NCAA DII Outdoor Championships. Earlier in the season, Caiola starred at the NE10 Championships with individual titles in both the 200 meters and 400 meters, and a tote on the winning 4×100 relay. She also won the award for the 2025 indoor season.
Stoll Funaro, in her 13th year as Head Coach at Southern Connecticut, led the Owls to the team title at the Northeast 10 Conference Championships, winning 11 events and scoring 246 points. Southern Connecticut also had one First-Team All-America at the NCAA DII Outdoor Championships – Hannah Caiola in the 400 meters.
Nill, in his 10th year as assistant coach at Southern Connecticut, coached the Owls’ middle- and long-distance runners to combined for 76 of the team’s 246 points in winning the team title at the Northeast 10 Conference Championships. Four of his athletes also earned All-New England honors at the NEICAAA Championships.
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