HONOLULU — Kamehameha, leading by six points midway through the third set, appeared well on its way to what many had assumed — another date with Punahou in a boys volleyball state final.
But Moanalua, the Oahu Interscholastic Association champion playing with the benefit of home court advantage, was not so eager to let the defending state champion Warriors breeze to Saturday’s New City Nissan/HHSAA Division I final.
Na Menehune staked a valiant last stand, extending the Warriors to five before falling, 25-22, 25-22, 24-26, 25-27, 15-12 on Friday night.
By the end, it had the feel of a worthy title game. Fans of both teams stood and applauded.
[Note: See below for more photos of Kamehameha-Moanalua in the HHSAA Division I boys volleyball semifinals.]
“I always expect the unexpected,” said Warriors hitter Conor Williams, who was forced to summon a 26-kill, 12-dig, two-ace performance. “So I knew they were gonna put up a fight, because I know they wanted it as much as we did, but an end we put we wanted it way more, and we fought for it.”
Cain Kahahawai and Edward Tanaka posted 13 kills apiece while setter Nathaniel Koahou registered 58 assists, seven digs and four blocks for coach Sava Agpoon’s Warriors.
Afterward, Agpoon could breathe a sigh of relief. He gets another shot at ILH champ Punahou (17-0), which swept Kamehameha (15-6) in three league meetings. First serve is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Moanalua.
“They’re hungry, they’re finally piecing it together, just like last year’s team,” Agpoon said.
Rick Tune’s Buffanblu, who had their run of 10 straight titles interrupted by star Kainoa Wade and Kamehameha last year, made quick work of MIL champion Maui High, 25-19, 25-18, 25-19.
Wade, the reigning state player of the year, would’ve been on this year’s team, but graduated early over semester break to play his freshman season of volleyball for his father, University of Hawaii coach Charlie Wade. The Rainbow Warriors were in Columbus, Ohio, for the NCAA Tournament.
Agpoon said Wade spoke to the team before he departed.
“He told us, ‘it doesn’t matter what your record is,’” Agpoon recalled, ‘at the end is where (it matters), if you just piece it together correctly — that’s what the state champs really are.’”
Williams was one of the only holdovers from real experience from the Warriors’ title team, but he missed most of the season with an injury.
“Every night after practice, I’d just stay in with the trainers,” he said. “And you know, we have the best trainers in this state, I can confidently say that.”
Moanalua nearly pulled off the first boys volleyball state final appearance by an OIA team since 2022, when Na Menehune got there and lost to Punahou in lopsided fashion.
Kamehameha’s Jaeden Miyahana and Tanaka finally collaborated on the match-winning block of Ezekiel Afalava-Sablan, who attacked at the right pin and had his shot popped up and to the back far corner as Na Menehune could only watch in shock that their comeback effort was denied.
Lionel Gannon led Na Menehune with 25 kills and seven digs, Afalava-Sablan added 13 kills and Jarryn McCutcheon 11 for coach Alan Cabanting.
Lionel Gannon put down a team-high 25 kills in the loss for Moanalua. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Moanalua outhit Kamehameha, .262 to .239. Blocks were even at 12. But Kamehameha had seven service aces and Moanalua none.
Senior setter Malu Wilcox tallied 60 assists in his final winners bracket match.
“The difference in the match definitely was not luck,” Afalava-Sablan said. “I know how good they can be and how good we can be. Thank you to my teammates for picking me up. I especially appreciate all of the boys laying out, never giving up at the end.”
An ILH team is assured to take home the trophy for the 43rd consecutive edition of the tournament. An OIA team last prevailed in 1979, when Roosevelt three-peated under Robin Goo.
In Division II, Radford of the OIA takes on KIF champion Kapaa at 5 p.m. Radford upset ILH champ Le Jardin in four in the semifinals.
Jaeden Miyahana (12) and Edward Tanaka (8) combined to block Moanalua’s Ezekiel Afalava-Sablan on match point. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Moanalua coach Alan Cabanting reacted to a play. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Kamehameha coach Sava Agpoon brought his team back to the Division I state championship with a largely new group. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Moanalua libero Christian Cruz popped up a ball. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Lionel Gannon attacked from the right pin against Kamehameha’s Conor Williams (11) and Jaeden Miyahara (12). (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Moanalua middle Luke Jones reacted after a block. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Jaeden Miyahana elevated for a kill for Kamehameha as Moanalua’s Lionel Gannon tried to block. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Kamehameha’s Conor Williams reacted to a play. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Kamehameha’s Nazareth Agcaoili passed on serve-receive. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Moanalua players celebrated after a point. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Moanalua fans cheered on their team in Na Menehune’s gym. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Kamehameha’s Kekuaokalani Paik hit a ball between Moanalua’s Ezekiel Afalava-Sablan (6) and Luke Jones (5). (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Brian McInnis covers the state’s sports scene for Spectrum News Hawaii. He can be reached at brian.mcinnis@charter.com.