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TRAGEDY: Another teenager is killed on Sepulveda Boulevard

by Mark McDermott and Liz Mullen  Braun Levi, an 18-year-old Loyola High School tennis star, was tragically killed by a suspected drunk driver while crossing Sepulveda Boulevard shortly after midnight Sunday.  Braun Levi, an 18-year-old Loyola student, was killed crossing Sepulveda early Sunday morning. Photo Loyola High/Instagram The accident occurred in the early hours of […]

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by Mark McDermott and Liz Mullen 

Braun Levi, an 18-year-old Loyola High School tennis star, was tragically killed by a suspected drunk driver while crossing Sepulveda Boulevard shortly after midnight Sunday. 

Braun Levi, an 18-year-old Loyola student, was killed crossing Sepulveda early Sunday morning. Photo Loyola High/Instagram

The accident occurred in the early hours of May 4 after Braun and three of his friends left a nearby gathering and went to find some food. At 12:46 a.m., the Manhattan Beach Police Department responded to a report of a collision on the 100 block of South Sepulveda. Officers arrived to find Levi laying on the street next to an SUV with a dented hood and broken windshield. He was transported to a local hospital but died from his injuries shortly thereafter. 

Police arrested Jenia Belt, a 33-year-old Los Angeles resident. MBPD’s initial press release indicated Bell was charged with drunk driving and murder. As of Wednesday, she remains in the MBPD jail, and the agency responsible for prosecution, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office, has yet to file charges. 

“The case remains under review,” a District Attorney spokesperson said Wednesday. 

The LA Times reported Monday that Belt was driving with a suspended license due to a previous DUI charge. 

According to sources at Mira Costa High School, where the boys who were with Braun are students, they were at a nearby party in East Manhattan Beach and left to find something to eat. Two of the boys had crossed, and another was at the median and had just turned to urge his friend to hurry when the car struck him. The boy called 911 and waited with Levi as police and paramedics arrived. The accident took place just two blocks from where 18-year-old MCHS student Ford Savela lost his life in January, struck by a drunk driver. The student who called 911 was also a friend of Savela. He and the other boys are receiving grief counseling at MCHS. 

Levi and his family were from Pacific Palisades but had relocated to Hermosa Beach after losing their home to the wildfires in January. Levi was ranked 50th nationally as a tennis player and was committed to the University of Virginia next fall. Just days before the acciden t, he and his doubles partner had won their fourth consecutive Mission League championship. He was a four year varsity player and team captain. 

But beyond his athletic feats, Levi was known as an exuberant, kind-hearted young man who was the life of every room he entered.

“Braun was a shining presence in our Loyola family, bringing light, joy, and inspiration to everyone he touched,” wrote Loyola Principal Jamal Adams in an email sent to the school community on Sunday. 

“Braun Levi is a legend for good reason,” Georgia Bryan, a close family friend,  wrote on Instagram. “Whether you were lucky enough to cross paths with him for an hour or a lifetime, he left an impression. It was impossible to be sad or bored whenever Braun was around, and his gift for lifting those around him was truly singular. My honorary little brother and favorite instigator, I know you’re throwing the wildest party wherever you are. Live like Braun.” 

His doubles partner Cooper Schwartz, who’d been friends with Levi since they competed against each other at age 8, also posted a tribute on Instagram. 

“You’re forever who we toast to, who we laugh about when we try to explain anything you’ve ever done, and who we cry about knowing we can’t just give you a hug,” he wrote. “18 years or 125, no one had a better life than you did Braunny. The tears are joyful because of that.”

“I will spend the rest of my life striving to live with the same heart, strength, and kindness that you’ve shown these past 19 years,” wrote his sister, Adele, on Instagram. “You are deeply loved, and words can’t begin to express how much you’ll be missed.”

The Mira Costa High School boys volleyball team wore the jerseys of rival school Loyola High in honor of Braun Levi Tuesday night. Photo by Ralf Stier/Ralfsphotography.com

The Manhattan Beach City Council held a moment of silence in honor of Levi on Tuesday night. It was the third loss of life on Sepulveda since December, when another pedestrian was struck and killed between 8th and 9th Streets. Mayor Amy Howorth addressed the accident directly, speaking to those in council chambers. 

“We’ve received many, many, many valid concerns about safety on Sepulveda Boulevard…particularly that stretch south of Manhattan Beach Boulevard, which tragically has been the site of multiple fatal accidents in recent years, and just three of traffic fatalities involving pedestrians since December,” Howorth said. “So obviously, we take this very seriously, as does the whole city and staff and our traffic engineer. We’re committed to improving safety for everybody.” 

Sepulveda is controlled by Caltrans, Howorth acknowledged, but said the City is engaged with the agency to make changes. 

“You need to know that our traffic engineer has been aware and has been urgently reaching out to Caltrans for a while now,” she said. “And we are now working with our state senator, Ben Allen, as of today, to get Caltrans to listen to us. Because they must understand the urgency, and they need to act with urgency and implement robust safety protocols. And we at the city are going to leverage every available resource to continue to advocate for those measures that protect our residents. Our police department’s traffic bureau and patrol personnel will be conducting high visibility traffic enforcement focusing on primary collision factors such as speed along that stretch of road, and we’ll work with our regional partners on either side of us to conduct DUI saturation patrols in Manhattan Beach…It is incumbent upon us to do more than we can so this never has to happen again.” 

Resident Nazly Westernoff urged the council not to wait for Caltrans to take action. 

“It feels a little bit unfair to us as citizens to wait for Caltrans,” she said. “I spent so much time today reading about Caltrans…It is a handcuff and not one that we should suffer through. So I am urging, I am asking, for us as a city to do better than Caltrans.” 

Resident Tanya Monihan said her son was with Braun Levi the night the accident occurred. She was at Gelson’s when the accident occurred that caused a pedestrian death in December. 

“Three lives taken along the same stretch of Sepulveda Boulevard,” she said. “This is not a tragic coincidence. It is clear signal that the current conditions on this major thoroughfare are unsafe and unacceptable. We cannot afford to wait for another tragedy to take action. Whether it’s Caltrans or the city’s responsibility, really, we just need to work together. I just don’t want this to get blocked by, ‘Whose responsibility is this?’  I am very willing, and I know many people….Everybody wants to help out with this and make our city safer. So I implore you to take immediate action to make these roads safer.” 

Monihan said possibilities include new speed limits, flashing lights, costlier tickets, more enforcement, DUI and driver’s education programs, and installing barriers or even an overpass, 

“We don’t want Manhattan Beach to be remembered for preventable deaths, especially of our young,” she said. “We want this community to act safely and compassionately when it’s clear that lives are at risk.” 

Another local mother, who did not identify herself by name, told the council that her own 17-year-old child had prom Saturday night, as did Redondo Union and Chadwick School. 

“Our children were out late,” she said. “And we wake up to a Nixle [message] that a child had died. There is never a circumstance that’s going to be okay. What I love about our community, what I appreciated from the start, is that we are very tight knit, and so at 6 a.m. I started getting texts and messages. I’m a physician in this community, and I have very close friends who all have teenagers…We cannot let this happen again. Two children in three months is completely unacceptable. Our children are 17 and 18. They need their independence. These are pedestrians. They weren’t doing anything wrong. Killed by drunk drivers. So I really feel like it’s a civic responsibility that we do something to take drunk drivers off the roads. This is Manhattan Beach. We can do whatever we need to do to keep our children safe. And we need to do more.” ER 



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U.S. Sweeps Korea to Finish Strong at 2025 Women’s VNL Week One

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 8, 2025) – The U.S. Women’s National Team earned its first win of the opening week of Volleyball Nations League play with a 3-0 (25-13, 28-26, 25-17) victory over Korea on Sunday in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The U.S. (1-3) will next head to Serbia for week two of Volleyball Nations […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 8, 2025) – The U.S. Women’s National Team earned its first win of the opening week of Volleyball Nations League play with a 3-0 (25-13, 28-26, 25-17) victory over Korea on Sunday in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The U.S. (1-3) will next head to Serbia for week two of Volleyball Nations League, facing the host nation on June 18 at 11 a.m. PDT.

Get Tickets to Women’s VNL in Arlington, Texas, July 9-13

The U.S. Women dominated up front with a 14-3 advantage in blocks and also posted a double-digit lead in kills (43-31). Korea held a slight edge in aces (5-4).

Middle blocker Amber Igiede led all players with 16 points, eight of which came on blocks. She registered seven kills and one ace.

Opposite Madisen Skinner and outside hitter Sarah Franklin shared the match lead with 13 kills. Skinner added a block and an ace, while Franklin also served an ace. Opposite Logan Lednicky rounded out the double-digit scorers for the U.S. with 10 points on seven kills and three blocks. Lednicky also led the U.S. with 10 digs.

“We worked on pushing ourselves to get to a higher level so we can continue that for the rest of VNL. We have had spurts of really good things, but I think where we have improved the most over the week is in bringing more consistency for every single point,” commented Franklin, who was encouraged by the young team playing together for the first time. “Everyone is really open with trying new things and being with new people. Everyone on the team is ready to get on the court and contribute in any way possible.”

The U.S. took control of the first set early, jumping out to a 13-6 lead and building a double-digit advantage late. Skinner and Franklin each scored six points on five kills and an ace.

A block gave Korea an 8-7 lead in the second set before the U.S. ran off six consecutive points. McCage, who back set Franklin for a kill during the run, extended the lead to five points, 13-8.

Korea bounced back to even the score at 18, the first of eight late ties in the set. Back-to-back blocks by Igiede and Lednicky gave the U.S. the set, 28-26. Franklin recorded six kills with Skinner (five kills) and Igiede (two kills, three blocks) each adding five points.

The U.S. Women used that momentum to jump out to an 11-6 lead in the third set and force a Korea timeout. Igiede’s sixth block and a Lednicky block made it 13-6. The lead eventually grew to 12 points before a late 6-1 Korea run made the score appear closer than it was. Igiede led all the U.S. with seven points in the set on four blocks, two kills, and an ace.

U.S. Women’s Week One Roster for 2025 VNL

No. Name (Pos., Ht., Hometown, College, USAV Region)
6 Morgan Hentz (L, 5-9, Lakeside Park, Ky., Stanford Univ., Pioneer)
9 Madisen Skinner (OH, 6-2, Katy, Texas, Univ. of Kentucky and Univ. of Texas, Lone Star)
13 Amber Igiede (MB, 6-3, Baton Rouge, La., Univ. of Hawaii, Bayou)
14 Anna Dodson (MB, 6-5, Fort Collins, Colo., UCLA, Rocky Mountain)
17 Zoe Jarvis (previously Fleck) (L, 5-6, Granada Hills, Calif., UCLA and Univ. of Texas, Southern California)
21 Roni Jones-Perry (OH, 6-0, West Jordan, Utah, BYU, Intermountain)
22 Sarah Franklin (OH, 6-4, Lake Worth, Fla., Univ. of Wisconsin, Florida)
24 Olivia Babcock (Opp, 6-4, Los Angeles, Calif., Pitt, Southern California)
27 Ella Powell (S, 6-0, Fayetteville, Ark., Univ. of Washington, Delta)
28 Logan Lednicky (Opp, 6-3, Sugar Land, Texas, Univ. of Texas A&M, Lone Star)
29 Molly McCage (MB, 6-3, Spring, Texas, Univ. of Texas, Lone Star)
32 Saige Ka’aha’aina-Torres (S, Honolulu, Hawaii, Univ. of Texas, Aloha)
33 Logan Eggleston (OH, 6-2, Brentwood, Tenn., Univ. of Texas, Southern)
43 Serena Gray (MB, 6-2, Temple City, Calif., Pitt, Southern California)

Head Coach: Erik Sullivan
Assistant Coach: Mike Wall
Second Assistant Coach: Brandon Taliaferro
Second Assistant Coach: Tayyiba Haneef-Park
Second Assistant Coach: Joe Trinsey
Team Manager: Rob Browning
Team Doctors: William Briner, James Suchy, Chris Lee, Andrew Gregory
Physiotherapist: Kara Kessans
Physical Trainers: Shawn Hueglin, Shannon Boone
Mental Performance Coach: Andrea Becker, Katy Stanfill
Performance Analyst: Virginia Pham

Week 1 Schedule: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Matches will be shown live and on-demand on VBTV. CBS Sport Network and the Big Ten Network will also air matches.

All times PDT
June 4 Italy def. USA, 3-0 (25-13, 25-13, 30-28)
June 5 Brazil def. USA, 3-0 (25-18, 25-17, 25-19)
June 6 Czechia def. USA, 3-2 (23-25, 20-25, 25-17, 25-20, 27-25)
June 8 USA def Korea, 3-0 (25-13, 28-26, 25-17)



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Paris water polo Olympians awarded Peter J. Cutino Award – NBC Bay Area

Two water polo athletes who represented Team USA at the 2024 Paris Olympics were awarded the Peter J. Cutino Award in San Francisco on Saturday. The award looks to honor the best Division One collegiate male and female athlete in the sport. Stanford University’s Ryan Neushul took home the award for women, and Paris bronze […]

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Two water polo athletes who represented Team USA at the 2024 Paris Olympics were awarded the Peter J. Cutino Award in San Francisco on Saturday.

The award looks to honor the best Division One collegiate male and female athlete in the sport.

Stanford University’s Ryan Neushul took home the award for women, and Paris bronze medalist Ryan Dood, an athlete at the University of California, Los Angeles, won for the men’s division.

“It is an honor to carry this for Stanford women’s water polo, Neushul said. “I believe team wins far more outweigh individual accolades, truly honored to have this.”

Rapper Flavor Flav, also known as Team USA Water Polo’s hype man, was there to hand out the statues.

The award is named after the legendary University of California, Berkeley coach who was the all-time winning coach in US water polo history.



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Herald-Standard All-Area Track & Field Girls Team

/Local Sports Lady Gators’ Larkin goes back-to-back in earning two state medals 1 / 4 Geibel Catholic’s Emma Larkin takes off in the final of the 400-meter dash in girls Class 2A action on May 24 in the PIAA Track & Field Championships at Seth Grove […]

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Lady Gators’ Larkin goes back-to-back in earning two state medals

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Geibel Catholic’s Emma Larkin takes off in the final of the 400-meter dash in girls Class 2A action on May 24 in the PIAA Track & Field Championships at Seth Grove Stadium on the campus of Shippensburg University. The junior placed seventh in the race. She was also seventh in the 300-meter hurdles, and has been selected as the Herald-Standard Track & Field Girls Athlete of the Year.

Jonathan Guth | Herald-Standard

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Laurel Highlands’ Diondra Brown competes in the long jump in Class 3A on May 24 in the PIAA Track & Field Championships at Seth Grove Stadium on the campus of Shippensburg University.

Jonathan Guth | Herald-Standard

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Southmoreland’s Megan Mehall keeps pace with Greenville’s Karis McElhaney in the 800-meter run in Class 2A on May 24 in the PIAA Track & Field Championships at Seth Grove Stadium on the campus of Shippensburg University.

Jonathan Guth | Herald-Standard

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Uniontown’s Grace Trimmer leads the pack in the 3,200-meter run in girls Class 3A on May 14 in the WPIAL Track & Field Championships at Slippery Rock University.

Jonathan Guth | Herald-Standard
















As a cross country runner, Emma Larkin has built up her stamina, but not even the miles that she puts in during the fall could have prepared her for what transpired on May 24 during the PIAA Individual Track & Field Championships at Seth Grove Stadium on the campus of Shippensburg University.

Fresh off her seventh-place finish in the girls Class 2A 400-meter dash, Larkin was brought to the benches where the eight placewinners wait to receive their medals, but she was hoping for a chance to recover because her next event, the 300 hurdles, was coming up in mere minutes. Despite the adversity, the Geibel Catholic junior persevered to finish seventh in the event.

Larkin’s back-to-back state medals have earned her the designation as the Herald-Standard Track & Field Girls Athlete of the Year.

Larkin knew what she was in for in competing in back-to-back events, but thought she could have at least gotten her bag with all of her materials to recover.

“Doing both events back-to-back was definitely a lot,” said Larkin after the event. “The normal wait time is supposed to be 15 minutes, which still isn’t a lot, but I only had 12 today from event-to-event.

“I was hoping to get to my bag for recovery, but I was told by an official that it would be quick on the podium. I thought maybe I could have my bag brought to me while I waited, but I wasn’t able to. I did get some water.”

Larkin had about an hour of time to rest between her preliminary races a day earlier in the 400 and 300 hurdles, which helped her to qualify for the finals in both events, and barring an unforeseen circumstance, she was guaranteed a spot on the podium in both events.

“I didn’t feel as much pressure during my races in the finals because I knew as long as I didn’t get disqualified or have anything out of the ordinary, I would accomplish my goal of placing at states,” Larkin said. “My times weren’t the best, but I was able to beat at least one person in each race.”

Larkin ran a 59.93 in the 400 final and 49.77 in the 300 final, which were below her personal records (PR) in each event. She has a PR of 58.51 in the 400 and 46.15 in the 300 hurdles.

If Larkin met or exceeded her PR in both races, she would have placed fourth in the 300 hurdles and fifth in the 400.

All-area performers in the Herald-Standard coverage area are:

3,200-meter relay: Laurel Highlands (Taylor Schwertfeger, Bethany Byrne, Alexander Mattey, Isabella Baker)

100-meter hurdles: Shayla Dues, Laurel Highlands

100-meter dash: Diondra Brown, Laurel Highlands

1,600-meter run: Grace Trimmer, Uniontown

400-meter relay: Brownsville (Jersey Feick-White, Aijanae Foster, Ta’Veonna Harris, Amya Wilson)

400-meter dash: Emma Larkin, Geibel Catholic

300-meter hurdles: Emma Larkin, Geibel Catholic

800-meter run: Megan Mehall, Southmoreland

200-meter dash: Diondra Brown, Laurel Highlands

3,200-meter run: Grace Trimmer, Uniontown

1,600-meter relay: Laurel Highlands (Taylor Schwertfeger, Isabella Baker, Bethany Byrne, Diondra Brown)

Shot put: Addie Billheimer, Southmoreland

Discus: Alexa Lewandowsky, Brownsville

Javelin: Skylar Salay, Belle Vernon

High jump: Ella Neil, California

Pole vault: Madison Blair, Waynesburg Central

Long jump: Diondra Brown, Laurel Highlands

Triple jump: Lyric McLee, Uniontown










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Local athletes endure disappointing final day of track and field meet | News, Sports, Jobs

Photo by Kim North St. Clairsville’s Ava Crum looks at the bar as she clears 11-4 in the Division II pole vault Saturday at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium on the campus of Ohio State University. She placed sixth in the event to earn all-Ohio honors. COLUMBUS — One word can describe […]

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Photo by Kim North
St. Clairsville’s Ava Crum looks at the bar as she clears 11-4 in the Division II pole vault Saturday at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium on the campus of Ohio State University. She placed sixth in the event to earn all-Ohio honors.

COLUMBUS — One word can describe Saturday’s 117th Boys and 51st Girls State Track and Field Championships inside Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium on the campus of Ohio State University.

Disappointing.

Several Eastern Ohio athletes had their sights set high to stand atop the awards podium, but that didn’t materialize for one reason or another.

DIVISION II

One of the few who didn’t fall under that category was St. Clairsville pole vaulter Emma Crum. The junior placed sixth, moving up two spots from 2024, with a 11-foot, 4-inch performance.

“It feels pretty amazing. My personal record is 11-6, so I’m pleased with my effort,” Crum said. “Being here last year really helped me,” she added. “There are a lot more people here today than there were last year.

“The key was running faster and getting a good plant (with my pole),” he said.

Now for the disappointments.

Martins Ferry’s Alana Williams had the fastest qualifying time in the 1600-meter run at 4-minutes, 50.96-seconds. However, she was nearly four seconds slower Saturday with a time of 4:53.17 that was good enough for third.

“Just a bad run today,” Williams noted. “I didn’t really feel that good.”

Then, 55 minutes later, she took to the track in the 800-meter run and placed fifth in 2:13.60, which was nearly three seconds slower than her qualifying time of 2:11.44.

“The 1600 really killed me,” Williams admitted. “So, I just used whatever I had left for the 800.

She ended the day as a two-time all-Ohioan.

Despite her high school season being finished, Williams will continue training for the New Balance Nationals that is being held at Franklin Field in Philadelphia June 19 through the 22.

St. Clairsville’s Brady Blacker had a heartbreaking experience in the 800-meter run. The Red Devils’ senior and East Liverpool’s Julius Jones were in a pack of runners crossing the start-finish line after one lap. However, both got their legs tangled and fell to the track and were not able to finish the race.

“I don’t really know. It’s horrible,” Blacker said while trying to understand how his prep career ended. “There were a bunch of us and … . I don’t know.”

Barnesville’s Aden Zumock was set to run in the 100-meter dash finals on Saturday. He had the eighth fastest qualifying time and would run in Lane 8. However, as fate would have it, he suffered a hamstring injury in his 200-meter preliminary race on Friday and had to pull out of the 100.

Zumock, the District champion in both events, has a history of hamstring problems dating back to his freshman season.

Cambridge senior Zoey Caldwell won the 100-meter hurdles in 14.28. She is the granddaughter of legendary Beallsville football coach, Dave Caldwell.

DIVISION II

Steubenville Catholic’s Andrew Rohde also earned a pair of all-Ohioan honors in the 1600- and 3200-meter runs. The Crusaders’ senior was second in the 3200 in 9:12.94, finishing just behind White Oak senior Landen Eyre who led from the start and clocked out in 9:12.46.

“I didn’t qualify last year so placing second this year is quite a reward,” Rohde said.

Rohde actually took the lead with about 200 meters to go, but Eyre had a stronger kick down the stretch.

“I’ve run against him for several years now and I know he has a really good kick,’ Rohde explained. “I tried to take him in the final 200, but it didn’t work for me. Hopefully, we’ll compete against each other in college and I’ll get another chance at him.”

Rohde, who will continue his college career at Ohio State, finished third in the 1600 in a personal-record time of 4:12.72.

“I got second last year but I ran faster this year, so I’ve got to look at the positives,” he said. “I just need to continue looking at the future. I’m healthy.”



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USA Men Beat Australia 13-12 At The Buzzer To Begin Exhibition Series

Story Links Walnut, CA – June 8 – The USA Men’s National Team beat Australia 13-12 today at Mt. San Antonio College. Ryder Dodd led the charge for Team USA with five goals, including the game-winner, while Bernardo Herzer went the distance in net to record 12 saves. Team USA will play against Australia again […]

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Walnut, CA – June 8 – The USA Men’s National Team beat Australia 13-12 today at Mt. San Antonio College. Ryder Dodd led the charge for Team USA with five goals, including the game-winner, while Bernardo Herzer went the distance in net to record 12 saves. Team USA will play against Australia again on Wednesday night at JSerra Catholic High School at 10:00pm et/7:00pm pt. Tickets to the match are available here. The match will stream LIVE on Overnght with stats from 6-8 Sports.

Australia jumped out to an early lead in this game as the visitors scored four in the first quarter behind Nathan Power (2), Jacob Mercep, and Matthew Byrnes. Team USA managed just one goal from Chase Dodd who converted a power play opportunity with a nice skip shot and the Aussies led 4-1 after one. In the second period, the Americans began to fight back. Ryder Dodd and Nicolas Saveljic scored early before Jett Taylor recorded his first career goal with the Senior National Team. Ryder Dodd converted on a five meter attempt late in the period for the final goal. The visitors scored thrice in the period from Mercep, Marcus Berehulak, and Angus Lambie to hold a 7-5 lead at halftime.

Team USA flipped the game on its head in the third quarter. Dominic Brown, Jake Ehrhardt, Hannes Daube, Dylan Woodhead, and Ryder Dodd all found the back of the net offensively while the team defense held strong to allow zero goals from Australia, leaving the United States ahead 10-7 after three. In the final frame, Tristan Glanznig put one home for the Aussies early but Ryder Dodd answered shortly after. From there, Luka Krstic and Lambie cut into the deficit before Chase Dodd fired a rocket cross cage for a goal to push the Americans back up by two. Mercep and Krstic each scored natural goals to level the score with 0:19 remaining. The United States called for a timeout and then put the ball in Ryder Dodd’s hands on its final possession and he did the rest. After a series of fakes to either side, Ryder Dodd unloaded a rocket into the upper right corner for a game-winning goal with less than one second left. Australia would have one final heave from half tank but Ryder Dodd was there again with a field block to secure the 13-12 victory.

Team USA went 4/8 on power plays and 3/5 on penalties while Australia went 0/6 on power plays and 1/2 on penalties. 

Scoring – Stats

USA 13 (1, 4, 5, 3) R. Dodd 5, C. Dodd 2, H. Daube 1, D. Woodhead 1, N. Saveljic 1, J. Ehrhardt 1, D. Brown 1, J. Taylor 1

AUS 12 (4, 3, 0, 5) J. Mercep 3, N. Power 2, A. Lambie 2, L. Krstic 2, M. Byrnes 1, M. Berehulak 1, T. Glanznig 1

Saves – USA – B. Herzer 12 – AUS – L. Baker 10, N. Porter 8

6×5 – USA  – 4/8 – AUS – 0/6

Penalties – USA – 3/5 – AUS – 1/2

 



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Class 4 girls’ track & field: Millbrook’s Washington wins high jump | Winchester Star

LYNCHBURG — With the sun beating down on a day in which temperatures reached the mid 80s, Millbrook High School sophomore Janai Washington moved around gingerly as she tried to balance a bag of ice on her neck following her run in the 4×400-meter relay on Saturday at the Class 4 state track & field meet […]

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LYNCHBURG — With the sun beating down on a day in which temperatures reached the mid 80s, Millbrook High School sophomore Janai Washington moved around gingerly as she tried to balance a bag of ice on her neck following her run in the 4×400-meter relay on Saturday at the Class 4 state track & field meet at Liberty University in Lynchburg.

As for what happened earlier in the day, few girls were moving faster. And absolutely no one soared higher. 

Washington set a personal record to win the high jump by two inches with a mark of 5 feet, 4 inches; improved on her seed by five spots to take fourth in the 200 meters in 25.14 seconds after setting a PR by 0.43 (25.10) in Friday’s preliminaries; and ran a solid 1:03.36 as the opening leg on Millbrook’s second-place 4×400 team. 

“[The state title] feels really good, because I’ve worked so long [to improve] for high jump, and I didn’t know what I could do for a while,” said an emotional Washington after the 4×400. “That God gave me the strength to be able to do something like that, it feels amazing, honestly.”  

The four girls on the relay team — Washington, junior Ella Mannarino and seniors Savannah Florek and Jada Arrington — combined to score 37 points, good for sixth place and the highest finish among local high schools. Arrington scored points in the 200 and 400 for the fourth time in her career by taking second (24.91) and third (57.30), respectively, in those events.

Defending champion Blacksburg led 33 scoring teams by compiling 111.5 points, 52 more than runner-up Atlee (59.5). Led by 3,200-meter champion and junior Kate Konyar, James Wood tied for 11th with 20 points. Sherando tied for 28th with 3 points and Handley did not score.

The Judges only had senior defending 100-meter champion and 2024 200 silver medalist Emeryce Worrell compete in the 4×100. She did not compete in Friday’s prelimaries so she could play in the Region 4D championship soccer game at Handley.

The girls’ high jump competition was very much a toss-up heading into Saturday. There were 25 girls entered — 10 had a seed mark of 5-2, two had seed marks in between 5-0 and 5-2, 12 had seed marks of 5-0 and two came in at 4-10 — though only 23 actually competed on Saturday. 

Washington was one of the girls whose best mark this spring was 5-0. That was the mark at which the competition started, which meant most of the girls were going to have perform their best immediately off the bat. Eleven of them weren’t able to clear the bar in three attempts. 

Washington cleared 5-0 on her first attempt, but she couldn’t surpass 5-2 on her first two attempts. When she did it on her third, she bounced on the mat and held her hands to her mouth as she looked toward the Millbrook coaching staff and her supporters. The last time she cleared 5-2 was the Region 4D indoor meet.

“It felt good to know [my previous 5-2] wasn’t a mistake,” Washington said. “I could do it again.”

Washington was one of three people who cleared 5-2. She then cleared 5-4 on her second attempt, and she bounced even higher off the mat as she made the same motion with her hands and looked over at the Millbrook contingent. When no else cleared 5-4, she was a state champion, an accomplishment that was celebrated by several other high jumpers, including Sherando’s McKenna Hardy and Mercedes Silver and Handley’s Elisabeth Pitcock.

“It’s a really good community for the high jump,” Washington said. “We’re all so close because we know how it feels to go really high, and then you can get stuck at a point. I just love the high jump community. They’re all amazing.”

For them and Millbrook coach Jamie McCarty, Washington was amazing to watch.

“We knew that there was more there, and she kind of got that monkey off her back today,” McCarty said. “Once she was over 5-2, 5-4 was great. And she had a couple of really good jumps even at 5-6.”

McCarty said Washington truly deserves what she accomplished this weekend. 

“It’s just the amount of work that she’s put in just in general,” McCarty said. “Not just as a high jumper, but as a leader for us, and as a sprinter for us. That improvement has been amazing. She’s been a great leadoff leg for our 4×4. She’s kind of assumed that role of, ‘We know Jada’s leaving. Who wants to be the next person to step up?’ I feel like she’s kind of taken that by the horns and said, ‘All right, I can be that person.'”  

Washington wasn’t expecting to do as well as she did in the 200.

“I’ve been training to get faster,” Washington said. “Everything I’ve worked for all season has finally come into place. It felt good for it to come at states.”

McCarty said having Arrington in the same heat on Friday likely helped. On Saturday, they ran next to each other in lanes 1 and 2 in the 200, with Washington able to look at Arrington ahead of her in lane 2. 

“[Washington] chases [Arrington] in practice all the time, so it was almost like a practice day for her being in there with Jada,” McCarty said. “She knew if she could hang close to her [in the prelims], she could give herself a shot [at the finals], and that’s what she did.”  

Washington was glad the seniors Florek and Arrington could end on a strong note with the 4×400 team. In achieving a time of 4:04.42, Milbrook improved on its season-best time by 1.52 seconds and bested its time from the indoor state meet, when the Pioneers took third in 4:04.89. Blackburg won on Saturday with a 3:56.79.

Charlottesville crossed the finish line before Milbrook on Saturday, but the Black Knights used a grouping that wasn’t permissable due to runners having maxed out their total running events for the meet, and they were disqualified.  

Headed to Norfolk State, Arrington closed her high school career out by passing two people completely on the last lap of the 4×400 and running a split of 58.14, the second-fastest anchor leg of the event. This year marked the first time Arrington ran in a relay at a state outdoor meet after doing the 100, 200 and 400 each of her first three years.

“I love chasing [people],” said Arrington when asked about the 4×400. “I always get [the team] in a better place than what we’re already in.” 

McCarty praised each member of the relay, noting that Arrington and Washington were run down after having run the 200 about a half hour before on a hot day. 

“Every one of them has a different strength,” McCarty said. “The way we’ve structured, it fit together perfect. Ella (1:02.40) and Savannah (1:00.53) both ran really, really great legs. I can’t say enough about both of them. Ella coming over from soccer and being able to get a couple weeks of training in, we see the difference versus her from the last time she ran on it.”    

Konyar led the 3,200 throughout the race and won with a time of 11:02.34, 3.26 seconds ahead of Blacksburg freshman Lola Olsen (11:05.60), for the first state of her career. Later, Konyar placed sixth in the 1,600 (5:17.67) in the fast heat while Colonels senior Ruby Ostrander, who ran in the first heat, placed fifth in 5:16.64.

On Friday, Konyar and Ostrander teamed with junior Katelyn Palmer and sophomore Ally Oliver to place seventh in the 4×800 in 9:47.76.

James Wood also led by Erin Link (eighth in the shot put, 33-11) and four girls who each took 10th — senior Olivia Boyce (long jump, 16-5.75); junior Isabelle French (100 hurdles, 16.18), junior Alina Kieffer (3,200, 11:38.52) and Emma Messick (discus, 96-2), who was the only freshman in the 18-girl discus competition on Friday. Messick’s best mark this year is 104-11, and she’s qualified for New Balance Nationals.  

Sherando’s only points came on Friday from the senior Hardy. She took sixth in the triple jump (34-10.25).  

The sophomore Pitcock had Handley’s highest finish in the meet, tying for 11th in the high jump (5-0). 

For more coverage on the Class 4 meet, see Tuesday’s edition of The Winchester Star. 



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