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Baby Giant, host of Gen Z influencers back 1Pacman party-list

1Pacman Party-list official FB page shows Baby Giant taking front line with Milka Romero and top althletes including Gilas Pilipinas game-changer Justin Brownlee, volleyball favorite Aby Marano, and court star Scottie Thompson MANILA, Philippines – Social media sensation Renz Joshua Baña—better known as “Baby Giant”— successfully shows 1Pacman’s “Champion Moves”  with comedic flavor, doing sporting […]

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1Pacman Party-list official FB page shows Baby Giant taking front line with Milka Romero and top althletes including Gilas Pilipinas game-changer Justin Brownlee, volleyball favorite Aby Marano, and court star Scottie Thompson1Pacman Party-list official FB page shows Baby Giant taking front line with Milka Romero and top althletes including Gilas Pilipinas game-changer Justin Brownlee, volleyball favorite Aby Marano, and court star Scottie Thompson

1Pacman Party-list official FB page shows Baby Giant taking front line with Milka Romero and top althletes including Gilas Pilipinas game-changer Justin Brownlee, volleyball favorite Aby Marano, and court star Scottie Thompson

MANILA, Philippines – Social media sensation Renz Joshua Baña—better known as “Baby Giant”— successfully shows 1Pacman’s “Champion Moves”  with comedic flavor, doing sporting poses such as shadow boxing and jumping over hurdles. 

Standing just 2 feet 1 inch tall but with millions of online followers, Baby Giant’s voice carries weight.

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In posts that have gone viral, he urged fans to back 1PACMAN, saying, “They believe in us—whether you’re big, small, or somewhere in between. Let’s give our support to those who never gave up on athletes and dreamers like me.”

Renz, who also rose to acting fame with his invitation from no less than Coco Martin to be part of a long-standing TV series, has joined the growing wave of influencers and sports personalities who communicate 1PACMAN Party-list’s push for “Champion sa Sports, Champion sa Buhay.”

A slate of Gen Z influencers, lifestyle vloggers, and popular athletes on TikTok and Instagram from all over the Philippines show solidarity with aims of youth empowerment, sports development, and inclusive progress through 1Pacman Party-list.

“When young voices rise, we listen—and we act,” said 1Pacman first nominee Milka Romero, a former Ateneo football team captain and currently team owner of two professional women’s sports teams.

“1Pacman is here for every Filipino with heart, and hope,” she added.



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Penn knocks off Saint Joseph in inaugural IHSAA boys volleyball sectional

ELKHART ― Bryan Forbes had a day to remember Saturday. The Penn High School senior led his team to an IHSAA boys volleyball sectional title Saturday afternoon in the inaugural state tournament series for the sport. He then was making a clean and quick exit in his tuxedo following the championship match in Tubbs Gymnasium […]

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ELKHART ― Bryan Forbes had a day to remember Saturday.

The Penn High School senior led his team to an IHSAA boys volleyball sectional title Saturday afternoon in the inaugural state tournament series for the sport.

He then was making a clean and quick exit in his tuxedo following the championship match in Tubbs Gymnasium at Elkhart High School to attend Penn’s prom that night.

“Honestly, this is probably one of my best days ever,” said Forbes in the Penn locker room as he dressed in his tux. “I got to play my favorite sport and win a sectional with some of my best friends, and now I get to go have fun at the prom.”

It was a good day indeed for the experienced Forbes, a six-foot outside hitter with an impressive skill set to go with a huge competitive streak.

Forbes set the tone as the Kingsmen topped Saint Joseph 25-23, 25-20, 9-25, 25-10. The Kingsmen (13-10) advance to the Valparaiso Regional on Saturday, May 24 to play the Michigan City Sectional winner. The Michigan City sectional final was later Saturday night.

The Huskies, who will lose seven seniors, finish at 14-14 after a fourth loss to the Kingsmen this season.

Penn, which had to outlast Riley 3-2 in the second semifinal match Saturday morning, seized the momentum in the title tilt. The Kingsmen trailed 22-19 in the opening set before rallying for the win. Sophomore Kelan Whitehouse, a 6-3 outside hitter, came up huge at crunch time for Penn with three kills downs the stretch for the win.

“We had to dig deep in the semifinals earlier, and we had to remember that in set one in this match,” said Penn coach Kelley Watts, who coaches the Kingsmen with her husband, Mark. “We’ve drilled on getting through the highs and the lows in a match. We pushed through in that first set.”

The Kingsmen, who have three seniors, led 19-14 in set two before the Huskies rallied within 22-20. Junior Christian Bonner delivered a key kill late as Penn scored the final three points to go up 2-0.

The Huskies, who got strong play from senior Logan Gutermuth and fine serving from junior Colin Penn, rolled to a 14-4 lead in the third set. The Huskies closed out the set on a high to cut the Penn lead to 2-1.

The final set saw the Kingsmen regroup and take a 13-2 lead as Forbes set the tone. After an animated talk with his team following the third set, the high-flying Forbes crushed a huge kill early in the fourth and final set, following with a fist pump.

The emotional leader of the Kingsmen then helped his squad close out the match. Penn won the title when 6-6 sophomore Liam Carter had a block for match point.

“The way he (Forbes) plays, we play as a team,” stated Watts. “He just has a competitive spirit and a determination. I thought that Liam (Carter) was huge for us in the middle. Logan (Warner) had some strong hits too and Christian Bonner, who joined our team late, was a huge spark.

“To win this is absolutely huge in what is does for the future of our program in building it. At Penn, it’s all about never settling and pushing for excellence in everything. That’s the tradition there.”

Forbes admitted that he had a lot of fun in this one.

“This means a lot to me,” Forbes said. “I love this game. I’ve been playing it since I was nine. My mom is a coach, so I’ve always been around volleyball. I’m very competitive.

“It was very important to win the first set. We had to get our focus up to do that. I knew this would be a tough match. St. Joe wanted it and told me they were going to beat us this time.”

The Huskies, who beat Northridge 3-0 in the first semifinal Saturday, had lost to Penn 3-1, 2-1 and 3-1 during the regular season.

“I could not be prouder of a group,” said St. Joe coach Dani Gaff. “The most impressive thing was how they won that third set. Would we have liked to win that first set? Yes. But I prefer to live in the what’s next and not the ‘would of, should of, could of.’ My players just put together a statement win in that third set after going down 2-0. I was just real proud of them for that. Their energy was so impressive.

“Penn is a great team. They are well-rounded, especially Forbes. No. 7 (Kelan Whitehouse) did a great job for them too. My team just showed improvement in so many areas this season.”

Penn beat Riley 18-25, 19-25, 25-14, 25-16, 15-13 in the second semifinal after St. Joe bested Northridge 25-18, 25-22, 25-13. Riley finished at 15-16 and Northridge at 9-11.



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Geebs: Browning celebrated at 16th Street Hermosa Beach paddleout

Greg Browning’s paddleout at 16th Street in Hermosa Beach spanned generations, from Haggerty’s Surf Club legends to South Bay Boardriders Club groms. Browning’s stoke for surfing, both in front of and behind the camera inspired and bound South Bay surfers in a kinship that transpired all differences “No sad shit,” Browning made his brother Jeff […]

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Greg Browning’s paddleout at 16th Street in Hermosa Beach spanned generations, from Haggerty’s Surf Club legends to South Bay Boardriders Club groms. Browning’s stoke for surfing, both in front of and behind the camera inspired and bound South Bay surfers in a kinship that transpired all differences

“No sad shit,” Browning made his brother Jeff promise after his passing from ALS last month.

His wish was respected. The paddleout was all Geebs. ER

 



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Junior Sandfest Volleyball Tournament raises money for Little Light House | News

TULSA, Okla. — The junior division of the Sandfest Volleyball Tournament is raising money for the Little Light House for the 18th year. Tracy Weldon, the director of the Little Light House Fundraiser Volleyball Tournament, explained the services Little Light House provides for kids. “It’s a school here in town for special needs kids for people […]

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TULSA, Okla. — The junior division of the Sandfest Volleyball Tournament is raising money for the Little Light House for the 18th year.

Tracy Weldon, the director of the Little Light House Fundraiser Volleyball Tournament, explained the services Little Light House provides for kids.

“It’s a school here in town for special needs kids for people who don’t know what that is. They provide services like speech therapy, physical therapy, several services that a lot of families don’t get anywhere else other than the Little Light House. They are private donations, corporate donations, their funding comes from those. They are not government funded, United Way, funded any other way. So our tournament is just a way for us to give back part of that.”

Since Weldon’s employer Webco had often been a sponsor of Little Light House in the past, he approached them when he decided he wanted to put together a volleyball tournament to benefit the school.

“It started when Owen, my oldest son, was a student at the Little Lighthouse and the volleyball community really embraced the tournament, which I was a part of that community before I was ever married and that’s kind of where I got the idea, but I had no idea that it would grow like it would.”

Now, the tournament has to be spread across two separate weekends to accommodate all players.

“We originally started with a grass tournament. The first year was five teams and it has grown over the years to where we have a juniors division and an adult or open division. This is our 18th year and it’s gotten big enough that we have to do juniors one weekend and then the adult tournament later in the summer on a different weekend, so it’s grown quite a bit since the first five team tournament.”

Weldon said this weekend’s junior tournament had about 55 teams competing.

“All the money we raise goes directly to the Little Lighthouse. Now, we have expenses for court rental and stuff like that…All of the people that help us put on the tournament, that’s volunteer work strictly. Nobody gets paid anything for that, so other than court rental and T-shirt costs, stuff like that, everything else goes to the Little Lighthouse.”

The Adult tournament is set to be held the first weekend of August.

To learn more about Little Lighthouse, click here.



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Naperville North boys water polo rolls over Neuqua and moves on to the Sectional Final

Naperville North boys water polo has won three straight sectionals, and this year, they are attempting to do it as hosts against Neuqua Valley. On the other side of the pool, the Wildcats look for an upset and avenge a 22-12 loss earlier this season. This highlight is sponsored by BMO. Naperville North opens the IHSA […]

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Naperville North boys water polo has won three straight sectionals, and this year, they are attempting to do it as hosts against Neuqua Valley. On the other side of the pool, the Wildcats look for an upset and avenge a 22-12 loss earlier this season. This highlight is sponsored by BMO.

Naperville North opens the IHSA Boys Water Polo Sectional Semifinal with a 6-0 lead against Neuqua

Four minutes in with an early 1-0 lead, the Huskies start to work it around and inside to Jack Reif, who scores to go up 2-0.

Looking to get on the scoreboard, Declan Puacz flicks it to Mario Valente, whose point-blank shot is stopped by the arm of Caleb Uson. Neuqua stays scoreless.

After a save late in the quarter, Uson sends it down the pool to Jack Boudeman. Boudeman is free to get close, rise up and shoot. His goal puts North ahead 3-0.

The Huskies’ offense starts to heat up as two quick passes set up Jack Reif, whose thunderous shot finds the net. 4-0 North, holding Neuqua scoreless in the first quarter.

Down 6-0 in the second, Puacz gets a quick steal and takes off on his own…  They have a numbers advantage on the break, and the senior rises to fire home the Wildcats’ first goal.

Huskies extend lead to double digits and move on to play Waubonsie Valley in the Sectional Final

The Huskies didn’t let off the gas at all. Here is Reif being hounded by two defenders and still finishing strong. 7-1 North.

Here’s a perfect pass to start the break. It lands right in front of Mason Hoffman, who hustles ahead to free himself up. He raises up, pump fake! And he flicks it over for some style points. 9-1 North as they roar ahead.

For Neuqua, Puacz finds Milan O’Connor in front of the net; he slings it off the post, and it doinks in. North leads 10-3 now.

Here’s Reif working around the side of the net. He passes it to Hoffman, who muscles in another shot. North leads 11-4.

Already with a commanding lead in the second half, North takes possession again. Jack Reif is right where he wants to be and scores again.  North takes it 19-9, without much struggle. They play Waubonsie for the sectional final.

For more prep sports highlights, visit the Naperville Sports Weekly page.





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McCutcheon boys volleyball reflects on turnaround in first IHSAA season

LAFAYETTE ― McCutcheon boys volleyball coach Keith Crisler saw his players meld together after two years of learning the sport together. Boys who picked up the sport for the first time two seasons ago became a formidable group that learned to pass, digs and score points together as a unit. Advertisement McCutcheon was swept in […]

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LAFAYETTE ― McCutcheon boys volleyball coach Keith Crisler saw his players meld together after two years of learning the sport together.

Boys who picked up the sport for the first time two seasons ago became a formidable group that learned to pass, digs and score points together as a unit.

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McCutcheon was swept in the first IHSAA sectional boys title title on Saturday afternoon to Zionsville 25-19, 25-14, 25-18, but the program summitted after going 11-20 in 2023 and 6-18 in 2024.

For Crisler, finishing with a 15-10 record in 2025 was a breakthrough for his Mavericks.

More: Boys volleyball experiencing growing pains despite popularity in first season under IHSAA

“One word I would say is growth,” Crisler said. “Growth as individuals, as athletes and as a program in the sport. Boys volleyball and men’s volleyball in Indiana has (some time) to grow, but I feel like we’ve had a successful season because we took that pioneering step to learn something new and that’s not an easy thing to do.”

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The number of boys volleyball teams expanded from 35 in 2022 to the 133 competing in the IHSAA playoffs this spring.

As the competition grew, so did McCutcheon.

McCutcheon Mavericks defensive specialist Jack Smith (9) celebrates Saturday, May 17, 2025, during the IHSAA boys volleyball sectionals championship match against the Zionsville Eagles at Harrison High School in West Lafayette, Indiana.

McCutcheon Mavericks defensive specialist Jack Smith (9) celebrates Saturday, May 17, 2025, during the IHSAA boys volleyball sectionals championship match against the Zionsville Eagles at Harrison High School in West Lafayette, Indiana.

“I don’t think anyone should leave this season with their head down and their shoulders slumped,” Crisler said. “They are pioneer men and left their mark in their first official year in Indiana.”

The growth of McCutcheon volleyball was headed by graduating starters senior libero Khelan Patel, middle blocker Jayden Heygood, setter Kieraan Jordan, outside hitter Josh Madsen and outside hitter Malachi Kenner.

Patel, Heygood, Jordan, Madsen and Kenner were the “founding fathers of McCutcheon boys volleyball,” per Crisler.

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More: IHSAA boys volleyball sectional semifinals: McCutcheon advances to championship against Zionsville

“They are the true pioneers,” Crisler added. “A lot of what we did this season is because of them. With experiences they had and how they led the younger boys in our program, they should probably have a statue or something like that.”

Patel was a consistent libero who attacked and placed shot receives in playable directions for his offense.

“It just shows the effort and drive we had for the game,” Patel said. “I know all of us who have been playing, we go play during the offseason because of how much we love the sport. We really took it upon ourselves to grow the game, build the program and build what we had within our community at McCutcheon volleyball.”

McCutcheon Mavericks libero Khelan Patel (1) celebrates Saturday, May 17, 2025, during the IHSAA boys volleyball sectionals championship match against the Zionsville Eagles at Harrison High School in West Lafayette, Indiana.

McCutcheon Mavericks libero Khelan Patel (1) celebrates Saturday, May 17, 2025, during the IHSAA boys volleyball sectionals championship match against the Zionsville Eagles at Harrison High School in West Lafayette, Indiana.

Jordan distributed the ball as a setter but could also provide an extra body at the net to make blocks or earn kills and points for his team.

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“It’s truly something special to be there during the first year and build this thing from the ground up when it wasn’t a fully sanctioned sport,” Jordan said. “It’s just awesome to see it blossom into this and see it expand like football and baseball.”

Jordan and Patel saw the culture grow at McCutcheon through their activity, setting an example for future players to come.

“It shows how much we’ve grown from March 10 and the first day of the season to now,” Jordan said. “We’ve been really focused and bought into the program and this was our goal, to make it to the championship. It showed there was so much focus put into this team.”

Ethan Hanson is the sports reporter for the Journal & Courier in Lafayette. He can be reached at ehanson@jconline.com, on Twitter at EthanAHanson and Instagram at  ethan_a_hanson.

This article originally appeared on Lafayette Journal & Courier: McCutcheon boys volleyball shows growth in 2025 season





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McCutcheon boys volleyball shows growth in 2025 season

LAFAYETTE ― McCutcheon boys volleyball coach Keith Crisler saw his players meld together after two years of learning the sport together. Boys who picked up the sport for the first time two seasons ago became a formidable group that learned to pass, digs and score points together as a unit. McCutcheon was swept in the […]

Published

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LAFAYETTE ― McCutcheon boys volleyball coach Keith Crisler saw his players meld together after two years of learning the sport together.

Boys who picked up the sport for the first time two seasons ago became a formidable group that learned to pass, digs and score points together as a unit.

McCutcheon was swept in the first IHSAA sectional boys title title on Saturday afternoon to Zionsville 25-19, 25-14, 25-18, but the program summitted after going 11-20 in 2023 and 6-18 in 2024.

For Crisler, finishing with a 15-10 record in 2025 was a breakthrough for his Mavericks.

“One word I would say is growth,” Crisler said. “Growth as individuals, as athletes and as a program in the sport. Boys volleyball and men’s volleyball in Indiana has (some time) to grow, but I feel like we’ve had a successful season because we took that pioneering step to learn something new and that’s not an easy thing to do.”

The number of boys volleyball teams expanded from 35 in 2022 to the 133 competing in the IHSAA playoffs this spring.

As the competition grew, so did McCutcheon.

“I don’t think anyone should leave this season with their head down and their shoulders slumped,” Crisler said. “They are pioneer men and left their mark in their first official year in Indiana.”

The growth of McCutcheon volleyball was headed by graduating starters senior libero Khelan Patel, middle blocker Jayden Heygood, setter Kieraan Jordan, outside hitter Josh Madsen and outside hitter Malachi Kenner.

Patel, Heygood, Jordan, Madsen and Kenner were the “founding fathers of McCutcheon boys volleyball,” per Crisler.

“They are the true pioneers,” Crisler added. “A lot of what we did this season is because of them. With experiences they had and how they led the younger boys in our program, they should probably have a statue or something like that.”

Patel was a consistent libero who attacked and placed shot receives in playable directions for his offense.

“It just shows the effort and drive we had for the game,” Patel said. “I know all of us who have been playing, we go play during the offseason because of how much we love the sport. We really took it upon ourselves to grow the game, build the program and build what we had within our community at McCutcheon volleyball.”

Jordan distributed the ball as a setter but could also provide an extra body at the net to make blocks or earn kills and points for his team.

“It’s truly something special to be there during the first year and build this thing from the ground up when it wasn’t a fully sanctioned sport,” Jordan said. “It’s just awesome to see it blossom into this and see it expand like football and baseball.”

Jordan and Patel saw the culture grow at McCutcheon through their activity, setting an example for future players to come.

“It shows how much we’ve grown from March 10 and the first day of the season to now,” Jordan said. “We’ve been really focused and bought into the program and this was our goal, to make it to the championship. It showed there was so much focus put into this team.”

Ethan Hanson is the sports reporter for the Journal & Courier in Lafayette. He can be reached at ehanson@jconline.com, on Twitter at EthanAHanson and Instagram at  ethan_a_hanson.





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