Connect with us

Sports

Volleyball Teams Conclude Competing In Denver

Bermuda’s men’s and women’s national volleyball teams completed their participation on the final day of the 2025 USA Volleyball Open National Championship in Denver, Colorado. Devil’s Isle Ladies Finish Tournament The Devil’s Isle Ladies team concluded their week in the women’s BB division with a straight-sets loss to the Rusty Ol Bolts, 25-22, 25-20. The […]

Published

on


Bermuda’s men’s and women’s national volleyball teams completed their participation on the final day of the 2025 USA Volleyball Open National Championship in Denver, Colorado.

Devil’s Isle Ladies Finish Tournament

The Devil’s Isle Ladies team concluded their week in the women’s BB division with a straight-sets loss to the Rusty Ol Bolts, 25-22, 25-20. The team finished the tournament in 35th place in their division.

Ace Boyz Conclude Play

The Ace Boyz Men’s team also finished their tournament on the final day, falling to High Tide in straight sets, 25-16, 25-16. Their overall performance in the men’s BB division placed them in 29th position.

Share on WhatsApp
Share

Read More About

#Volleyball

Category: All, Sports






Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Ames Regional Economic Alliance hosts second part of Summer Series – Iowa State Daily

The Ames Regional Economic Alliance kicked off its second “Summer Series” event Wednesday afternoon, bringing brief moments of music and sunshine before inclement weather forced the event into an early end.  The event hosted Campustown businesses, including Superdog, Macubana and a range of other vendors. Wednesday’s festivities also hosted local band Mango Soul. According to […]

Published

on


The Ames Regional Economic Alliance kicked off its second “Summer Series” event Wednesday afternoon, bringing brief moments of music and sunshine before inclement weather forced the event into an early end. 

The event hosted Campustown businesses, including Superdog, Macubana and a range of other vendors. Wednesday’s festivities also hosted local band Mango Soul.

According to the Vice President of Economic Development, Travis Toliver, Summer Series checks a multitude of boxes in satisfying the local community.

“Events like [Summer Series] are designed to promote family fun,” Toliver said. “We want the community to see Campustown as a family-friendly environment.”

Thanks to the event’s location, some locals arrived on foot, none walking more than a few blocks to attend.

“Campustown is only two blocks from where we live,” local resident Charlie Case said. “We love these types of events, and having them this close makes it that much easier.”

Due to lightning in the area, the event was cut short and forced to shut down early, but not to the dismay of its attendees.  

“I don’t think the weather should stop people from having fun,” Ames local Dave Wagner said. “It’s live music, and it’s free. It doesn’t get much better than that.”

According to another event goer, Stacy Woodword, the event achieved its goals.

“The goal is to show that Campustown isn’t just college students,” Woodward said. “We come over here all the time to shop, have dinner, grab a drink, and we love it. There’s no reason that the students and community members can’t coexist.”

The Economic Alliance hopes to continue the event for years to come. It aims to showcase the likes of the local community and its members. 

“It’s awesome that we have the support of our sponsors, and we thank them all,” Toliver said. We’re proud to be supportive of Campustown and the local businesses and the community that calls Ames home.”



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Round ‘em up! Noxen’s Rattlesnake Roundup raises funds for fire company

Crystal Rondinella holds Matilda, a Blue Gold Macaw. Mark Moran | For Times Leader Harrison Malara works the Potato Pancake stand. Mark Moran | For Times Leader Alysha Sherwood holds a rattlesnake so kids can touch the rattle. Mark Moran | For Times Leader […]

Published

on



<p>Crystal Rondinella holds Matilda, a Blue Gold Macaw.</p>
                                 <p>Mark Moran | For Times Leader</p>

Crystal Rondinella holds Matilda, a Blue Gold Macaw.

Mark Moran | For Times Leader



<p>Harrison Malara works the Potato Pancake stand.</p>
                                 <p>Mark Moran | For Times Leader</p>

Harrison Malara works the Potato Pancake stand.

Mark Moran | For Times Leader



<p>Alysha Sherwood holds a rattlesnake so kids can touch the rattle.</p>
                                 <p>Mark Moran | For Times Leader</p>

Alysha Sherwood holds a rattlesnake so kids can touch the rattle.

Mark Moran | For Times Leader



<p>Handlers measure a rattlesnake.</p>
                                 <p>Mark Moran | For Times Leader</p>

Handlers measure a rattlesnake.

Mark Moran | For Times Leader



<p>People walk the midway.</p>
                                 <p>Mark Moran | For Times Leader</p>

People walk the midway.

Mark Moran | For Times Leader



<p>Lilly Mahalick takes a ride on the swings.</p>
                                 <p>Mark Moran | For Times Leader</p>

Lilly Mahalick takes a ride on the swings.

Mark Moran | For Times Leader



<p>Alivya McKitish (center) holds a French fry for Alana Rinaldi and Zack McKitish.</p>
                                 <p>Mark Moran | For Times Leader</p>

Alivya McKitish (center) holds a French fry for Alana Rinaldi and Zack McKitish.

Mark Moran | For Times Leader



NOXEN — The annual rattlesnake roundup returned to the Noxen Volunteer Fire Company grounds this week, featuring four days of live music, educational snake displays, food, rides and family activities. The event, which is the fire company’s biggest fundraiser of the year, began in 1973.

According to noxenpa.com/snakes, education is an important part of the event.

“The Noxen Rattlesnake Roundup has gained popularity throughout the region and is even known in other parts of the U.S.,” the website state. “We’ve heard stories of people making the trip from Philadelphia and Cleveland, and some from as far off as Las Vegas, Nevada!”

The event will continue Sunday, set to wrap up in the evening with a fireworks display.

Sunday schedule

1 p.m.: Grounds open.

1 to 5 p.m.: Snakes on display.

1 p.m.: DJ Ray Phillips.

6 p.m.: Music by Jimmy Stranger.

9:30 p.m.: Fireworks by Pyro Joe LLC.

To learn more, visit the Noxen Volunteer Fire Co. Facebook page.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Neptunes outsmart Sirens to lift President’s Cup

Valletta secure top-flight berth Neptunes secured the President’s Cup for the first time since 2019, marking their tenth triumph in this charity match. The Balluta Bay team delivered a commanding performance against Sirens, dominating large stretches of the encounter despite a brief wobble in the second session. The Reds began strongly, with goals from Jake […]

Published

on


Valletta secure top-flight berth

Neptunes secured the President’s Cup for the first time since 2019, marking their tenth triumph in this charity match.

The Balluta Bay team delivered a commanding performance against Sirens, dominating large stretches of the encounter despite a brief wobble in the second session.

The Reds began strongly, with goals from Jake Bajada, Stevie Camilleri, and a brace by Gergo Zalanki giving them early control.

Gianni Farrugia pulled one back late in the first session. Mattias Ortoleva added another for Neptunes to make it 4–2.

However, Sirens showed signs of a comeback when their foreign import Nicolas Bicari netted a quickfire hat-trick to close the gap to 6–5.

But Neptunes quickly reasserted themselves, raising the tempo with goals from Zalanki (2), Sam Gialanze, and Camilleri, stretching the lead to 9–5. From that point onward, the outcome was never in doubt.

Camilleri completed his hat-trick before the end of the third session, extinguishing any remaining hopes Sirens had of mounting a comeback.

The Reds’ experience and quality ultimately proved too much for their opponents.

At the end of the match, Karl Izzo, president of the ASA, presented the trophy to Neptunes captain Stevie Camilleri.

In the other President’s Cup match, San Ġiljan staged a remarkable comeback, overturning a four-goal deficit to edge out Sliema in a thrilling, topsy-turvy encounter.

The Blues burst out of the blocks, storming to a 4–0 lead with goals from Elijah Schembri, Angelos Vlachopoulos, Dino Cachia, and Jamie Gambin.

San Ġiljan, however, regrouped in the second session.

Led by Aaron Younger and Ben Plumpton – who both netted twice – the Saints clawed their way back to level terms at 7–7, erasing Sliema’s early advantage.

But just before the half-time break, Dino Zammit struck to give Sliema a narrow edge heading into the interval.

Two goals from a five-metre throw at either side, delivered by Nikolai Zammit and Vlachopoulos kept Sliema one goal ahead but Darren Zammit made it 9-9.

San Ġiljan then took the lead for the first time when Plumpton found the net with just two minutes remaining in the third session. Their advantage was short-lived, however, as Liam Galea responded immediately to make it 10-10.

A brilliant through ball by Nikolai Zammit carved open the Sliema defence, setting up Younger to score past Benji Busuttil for 11-10 – but Gambin hit back yet again to restore parity.

With seconds left on the clock, Jake Bonavia beat the buzzer to hand the Saints a slender lead heading into the final session.

Two goals from Jeremy Abela, a strike by Nikolai Zammit, and two crucial saves by San Ġiljan goalkeeper Jake Tanti further tipped the balance in favour of the Saints.

Dino Zammit offered Sliema a glimmer of hope with a goal to make it 15-14.

But the Blues were denied from completing their comeback as a five-metre penalty restored San Ġiljan’s two-goal cushion, sealing a 16–14 final scoreline.

Earlier, Valletta only assured themselves of the Premier Division in the last session when Ivan Nagaev, woke up to his responsibilities to hit a poker as the Citizens finally distanced themselves from their opponents.

Nagaev, stepped up when it mattered most with a four-goal haul in the last session – completing a stunning seven-goal tally overall. His heroics ensured the Citizens pulled clear of their rivals and joined Exiles in securing a top-flight spot.

Edward Aquilina’s Birżebbuġa had threatened an upset early on, racing to a 7-4 lead in the opening session.

However, Valletta regrouped in the second quarter, overturning the South Seasiders’ momentum to draw level at 10-10 by half-time.

The third session saw a tight and thrilling contest, with both sides trading goals in a balanced and entertaining eight-goal spell. But when it came to the final stretch, Nagaev took matters into his own hands, decisively tipping the scales in Valletta’s favour.

Birżebbuġa, despite their spirited effort, will now drop to Division One.

VALLETTA 21

BIRZEBBUĠA 16

(4-7, 6-3, 4-4, 7-2)

VALLETTA: A. Bugeja, M. Mifsud 4, M. Carani, J. Sciberras 2, S. Busuttil 1, J. Colombo, M. Zammit 1, I. Nagaev 7, K. Borg 1, K. Erdogan 3, M. Chircop 2, K. Cremona, G. Borg

BIRZEBBUĠA: M. Sladden, M. Aquilina 4, M. Cassar, N. Bursac 4, J. Ciantar 2, I. Galea, J. Abdilla, N. Saliba 1, D. Farrugia, M. Cutajar 1, M. Mannino 1, N. Bugelli 2, S. Livori, J. Saliba 1.

Refs: Federico Braghini, S. Licari

NEPTUNES 17

SIRENS 7

(4-1, 3-4, 5-0, 5-2)

NEPTUNES: Matthew Castillo, S. Gialanze 1, G. Zalanki 6, L. Mallia, J. Camilleri 1, J. Valletta 1, S. Camilleri 4, Mark Castillo 1, B. Schranz, J. Bajada 2, A. Fenech, M. Azzopardi 1, M. Rossi, E. Mallia.

SIRENS: J. Parnis, P. Serracino, N. Bicari 3, P. Borg, J. Cachia, K. Agius, M. Ortoleva 1, I. Riolo 2, J. Zerafa Gregory, M. Sciberras, Z. Mizzi, G. Farrugia, 1 M. Bonello Dupius, G. Pace.

Refs: Angelo Petraglia, Ronnie Spiteri

SLIEMA 14

SAN ĠILJAN 16

(4-1, 4-6, 3-5, 3-4)

SLIEMA: N.Grixti, E. Schembri 2, L. Galea 3, J. Gambin 2, J. Cassar, B. Cachia, J. Cutajar, D. Rizzo 1, J. Chircop, A. Galea, A. Vlachopulos 3, D. Zammit 2, B. Busuttil, S. Engerer

SAN ĠILJAN: J. Tanti, D. Bugeja, D. Tully, R. Caruana, A. Younger 4, J. Bonavia 1, B. Plumpton 3, J. Abela 3, N. Zammit 3, D. Zammit 1, N. Schiavone, Z. Attard, G. Bonavia

Refs: Federico Braghini, Massimo Anigileri





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Team Spirit among four teams now 2-0 at PGL Wallachia Season 5 – Field Level Media – Professional sports content solutions

Team Spirit, Gaimin Gladiators, Aurora Gaming and Natus Vincere improved to 2-0 at PGL Wallachia Season 5 with victories Sunday in Bucharest, Romania. In Round 2 of the five-day group stage, Spirit swept Edge 2-0, Gaimin Gladiators blanked Team Tidebound and Aurora beat Xtreme Gaming by the same score, while Natus Vincere notched a 2-1 […]

Published

on


Team Spirit, Gaimin Gladiators, Aurora Gaming and Natus Vincere improved to 2-0 at PGL Wallachia Season 5 with victories Sunday in Bucharest, Romania.

In Round 2 of the five-day group stage, Spirit swept Edge 2-0, Gaimin Gladiators blanked Team Tidebound and Aurora beat Xtreme Gaming by the same score, while Natus Vincere notched a 2-1 victory over Team Liquid.

The group stage runs through Wednesday and features 16 teams in a modified Swiss system. All matches are best of three. Eight teams will advance to the playoffs, which are double elimination and run from June 26-29. All playoff matches are best of three except for the final, which is best of five.

The prize pool totals $1 million, with the winner taking home $350,000.

On Sunday, Spirit earned a quick 25-minute win on red before outlasting Edge in 72 minutes on green for the sweep. GG defeated Tidebound in 42 minutes on red and 29 minutes on green, while Aurora similarly wrapped things up against Xtreme in 34 minutes on red and 33 minutes on green.

In the other match between 1-0 teams, Natus Vincere opened with a 36-minute triumph on red, then lost to Team Liquid in 44 minutes while on green. NaVi bounced back to win the do-or-die third map in 33 minutes on red.

There were also four matches pitting 0-1 teams against each other, with the losers falling to the brink of elimination Monday. Tundra Esports defeated AVULUS 2-0; BetBoom Team shut out Virtus.pro 2-0; OG topped Nigma Galaxy 2-0; and Wildcard pushed past HEROIC 2-1.

The tournament continues Monday with eight matches in Round 3:
2-0 Group
–Aurora Gaming vs. Gaimin Gladiators
–Team Spirit vs. Natus Vincere
1-1 Group
–Xtreme Gaming vs. BetBoom Team
–Team Tidebound vs. Wildcard
–Team Liquid vs. OG
–Edge vs. Tundra Esports
0-2 Group
–AVULUS vs. HEROIC
–Nigma Galaxy vs. Virtus.pro

Prize pool:
1. $350,000
2. $145,000
3. $100,000
4. $80,000
5-6. $60,000
7-8. $40,000
9-11. $20,000
12-14. $15,000
15-16. $10,000

–Field Level Media



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Lucas Schneider is The Star’s Boys Track and Field Athlete of the Year

The first race of Lucas Schneider’s junior track season foretold the future. In his main event, the 300-meter hurdles, Schneider crossed the finish line at the Tara Davis Invitational in 38.29 seconds — a lifetime best by more than two seconds that nearly set a Thousand Oaks High program record.  The breakout performance didn’t just signal […]

Published

on


The first race of Lucas Schneider’s junior track season foretold the future.

In his main event, the 300-meter hurdles, Schneider crossed the finish line at the Tara Davis Invitational in 38.29 seconds — a lifetime best by more than two seconds that nearly set a Thousand Oaks High program record. 

The breakout performance didn’t just signal Schneider’s potential, it woke him up to it.

“I’ll be honest, that completely caught me off-guard,” Schneider said. “After that race, I just kind of realized that I needed to set some goals for myself.”

Five months later, nearly all of those goals have been blown out of the water.

Schneider ran 36.94 seconds to finish third at the CIF-State Championships, the cherry on top of a fairytale season that saw the star hurdler win his first Ventura County and CIF-Southern Section titles and set the county 300 hurdles record.

Now, he has been selected as The Star’s Boys Track and Field Athlete of the Year for 2025.

“I was a little bit shocked by it,” Schneider said. “It’s still kind of hard to process now.”

Schneider’s path — from failing to qualify for the CIF-SS finals the previous year to winning the title the next — took time, effort and consistency. 

It began before he even made it to high school. 

Before teaming up under legendary coach Marlene Wilcox’s tutelage at Thousand Oaks, Schneider competed with future teammate high school teammate and excellent short hurdler Gabriel Chin on the Thousand Oaks Flyers Club. 

As he got closer to equaling Chin’s times, Schneider said, he started to realize his potential in the event.

“I never did eventually beat him, but it was me recognizing the fact that I was starting to catch up to him,” Schneider said. “By my freshman year, I just really locked in with the hurdles.”

Over the course of his high school career, Schneider saw incremental improvement. After finishing his freshman season with a personal best of 45.86 seconds, Schneider dropped more than five seconds to run 40.54 at the end of his sophomore campaign.

Wilcox attributed Schneider’s success to his consistency and focus in following the training program. 

“It’s called showing up. He showed up every day,” Wilcox said. “That’s why I show up every day. That’s what feeds my desire — to see that buy-in, that potential and that willingness to commit (and) lay it on the line.” 

With time and experience, Schneider learned how to not only survive the difficult event, but how to compete. 

“I don’t believe you can have a bad race,” Schneider said. “I think every single race you run is going to give you at least some type of experience. Even if you have to run it slowly, you are still finding your pattern, you are still getting comfortable.”

Schneider set the ambitious goal of dropping another four seconds and hitting the 36-second mark by the end of his junior year. His ability to reach that goal was due in large part to a minor change he and Wilcox made to his approach to clearing the first hurdle. 

His start was phenomenal — so powerful, in fact, that he was reaching the first hurdle far too quickly, disrupting his rhythm. 

“Consequently, he had to really stutter to get over that first hurdle, and that just really kills your momentum,” Wilcox said. 

Wilcox pushed her star hurdler to reposition his blocks, and to use his opposite leg at the first hurdle — a change that was uncomfortable in the moment, but could raise his ceiling. Reaching his goals meant placing his trust in Wilcox’s wisdom. 

It paid off. 

“She was so experienced in being able to teach and just in the hurdles, themselves, she was able to really guide me through that,” Schneider said. “Honestly, that first hurdle is probably one of the biggest contributors to my time.”

While tweaking and optimizing the minutiae of technique could be tedious for some, Schneider said it’s one of the things he enjoys most about his unique event. 

“It’s the reason why I like hurdles so much,” Schneider said. “It adds some depth and sophistication to the running.”

Wilcox said she believes Schneider will be able to maintain a 13-step rhythm throughout the entire race. If he can do that, even more special times lie ahead for the Thousand Oaks star. 

“He has always got an ace in his pocket,” Wilcox said. “He is very competitive — don’t be fooled by the quietness, don’t be fooled by that boyish smile, believe me. He is not afraid to go for it.”

Outside of technique, Wilcox made mental toughness central to her training plan this year, but it was clear early on that Schneider’s mentality was one of his biggest assets. 

His grit was on full display while racing in the seeded section of the 300-meter hurdles at the Arcadia Invitational. Schneider came off of the fifth hurdle far behind the leaders, but he clawed back over the final 150 meters to win the race. 

“That is when I realized, ‘Ah, there it is. He has got the dogfight in him,’ ” Wilcox said. “It has been that way ever since.”

Dominic Massimino is a staff writer for the Star. He can be reached at dominic.massimino@vcstar.com. For more coverage, follow @vcsdominic on X (formerly Twitter) and Instagram.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

U.S. Women Show Poise in Win Over France to Close VNL Week Two

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 22, 2025) – The U.S. Women’s National Team close out week two of 2025 Volleyball Nations League with its second five-set victory, this time against France 3-2 (25-22, 26-24, 20-25, 21-25, 15-13) on Sunday in Belgrade, Serbia. The U.S. improve to 4-4. They will pick back up on home soil in […]

Published

on


COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 22, 2025) – The U.S. Women’s National Team close out week two of 2025 Volleyball Nations League with its second five-set victory, this time against France 3-2 (25-22, 26-24, 20-25, 21-25, 15-13) on Sunday in Belgrade, Serbia.

The U.S. improve to 4-4. They will pick back up on home soil in Arlington, Texas on July 9 against Thailand.

Opposite Madi Skinner led U.S. scorers with 21 points on 19 kills, one block and one ace. Outside Hitter Sarah Franklin followed with 18 points on 18 kills. Outside Hitter Logan Eggleston had 17 points on 17 kills. Setter Saige Ka’aha’aina-Torres led the U.S. in blocks with four. Libero Lexi Rodriguez had a match high 15 digs.

The U.S. led in blocks (11-10) and points off opponent errors (24-20). France led in kills (73-70) and aces (6-2).

“Those aren’t easy matches to manage,” said head coach Erik Sullivan, when asked about the team’s performance. “I think last week we let those moments get the better of us and to see us kind of fight through that and just be uncomfortable the whole night and find a way to win is a very valuable lesson.”

Middle blocker Dana Rettke had 10 points on six kills, three blocks and one ace. Middle blocker Brionne Butler had eight points on five kills and three blocks. Opposite Logan Lednicky had four points on four kills. Middle blocker Amber Igiede added one point on one kill.

Trailing 12-9 early in the first set, the U.S. stayed close until finally tying it up 14-14 after an unsuccessful challenge from France. A deep court tip from Skinner put the U.S. ahead 15-14 and they never gave up the lead after that. A mid set double substitution brought in Rachel Fairbanks and Logan Lednicky. Lednicky scored three straight points off the bench to extend the U.S. lead to 19-15. A tip from Butler that just caught the line ended the first set 25-22 in favor of the U.S.

France led nearly the entire second set until the final few points. The U.S. won a critical point late after an out of system set from Franklin to Eggleston to tie it up 22-22. A pancake dig from Rettke led to a kill off the block from Franklin to give the U.S. its first lead in the set 24-23. France challenged the pancake, but was unsuccessful. Back-to-back attack errors from France clinched the set and a 2-0 match lead for the U.S.

France jumped out to a 8-0 lead in the third set. Despite that, the U.S. fought its way back into the set late to get within four points at 21-17. The U.S. stayed in it before Sabine Haewegene from France put together back-to-back kills to give them set point before a U.S. serving error ended the set 25-20 for France.

The U.S. was in control in the fourth set with their largest lead at 16-11 before France put together their second 8-0 run of the match to take a 21-18 lead. France went on to win the set 25-21 to force a fifth set.

The U.S. took control early behind four kills from Eggleston. A Rettke block gave the U.S. an 11-8 lead. France challenged a net touch but was unsuccessful. The U.S. found itself in a familiar situation after France put another run together before tying the set 12-12 on an ace serve. France took a 13-12 lead on a block out of the final USA timeout. Eggleston continued where she left off early in the fifth set with a kill to tie it up 13-13. Jones-Perry subbed in to serve leading to a critical back court dig from , and Franklin went up on two to take match point 14-13. Franklin ended it down the line to give U.S. the match 15-13.

Week Two Roster for 2025 VNL

U.S. Women’s Preliminary Roster for 2025 VNL
No. Name (Pos., Ht., Hometown, College, USAV Region)
6 Morgan Hentz (L, 5-9, Lakeside Park, Ky., Stanford Univ., Pioneer)
7 Lexi Rodriguez (L, 5-5, Sterling, Ill., Univ. of Nebraska Great Lakes)
8 Brionne Butler (MB, 6-4, Kendleton, Texas, Univ. of Texas, Lone Star)
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, Delta)
15 Rachel Fairbanks (S, 6-0, Tustin, Calif., Pitt, Southern California)
16 Dana Rettke (MB, 6-8, Riverside, Ill., Univ. of Wisconsin, Great Lakes)
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)
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)

Reserve
27 Ella Powell (S, 6-0, Fayetteville, Ark., Univ. of Washington, Delta)

Coaches
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 2 Schedule: Belgrade, Serbia (all times PDT)
Matches will be shown on VBTV, Big Ten Network and/or CBS Sports Network. Please check listings for BTN and CBSN.

June 18 USA def. Serbia, 3-2 (25-22, 25-20, 22-25, 22-25, 15-11)
June 19 Poland def. USA, 3-1 (20-25, 25-20, 25-17, 25-18)
June 21 USA def. Netherlands, 3-0 (25-18, 25-22, 25-19)
June 22 USA def. France, 3-2 (25-22, 26-24, 20-25, 21-25, 15-13)

Week 1 Results: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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)



Link

Continue Reading
Sports1 minute ago

Ames Regional Economic Alliance hosts second part of Summer Series – Iowa State Daily

Sports2 minutes ago

Round ‘em up! Noxen’s Rattlesnake Roundup raises funds for fire company

College Sports5 minutes ago

LSU sweeps Coastal Carolina to win College World Series title: Reaction and analysis

Motorsports7 minutes ago

Daniel Wilkerson Wins Mission #2Fast2Tasty Challenge at Virginia NHRA Nationals

Sports10 minutes ago

Neptunes outsmart Sirens to lift President’s Cup

Sports15 minutes ago

Team Spirit among four teams now 2-0 at PGL Wallachia Season 5 – Field Level Media – Professional sports content solutions

NIL20 minutes ago

Athlon Sports releases 2025 preseason college football All-American teams

Sports25 minutes ago

Lucas Schneider is The Star’s Boys Track and Field Athlete of the Year

Sports27 minutes ago

U.S. Women Show Poise in Win Over France to Close VNL Week Two

Motorsports33 minutes ago

Dale Earnhardt Jr. takes historic win on shock NASCAR debut at Pocono

Sports43 minutes ago

Cedar Crest rising senior mines javelin gold at New Balance Nationals Outdoor track and field meet | High School Track and Field

Sports44 minutes ago

Incoming BBC volleyball players finish second at nationals | Sports

Motorsports49 minutes ago

No. 6 Porsche leads Sahlen’s Six Hours at halfway

Youtube52 minutes ago

2019 NBA Finals FULL Mini-Movie | Raptors Defeat Warriors In 6 Games

Youtube53 minutes ago

Remembering John Brenkus, the co-creator and host of ESPN’s Sports Science | SportsCenter

Most Viewed Posts

Trending