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Connecticut Championship Previews: Baseball, Softball, Lacrosse, Volleyball

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State championship time has arrived for high school baseball, softball, lacrosse and volleyball teams across Connecticut, as the CIAC spring tournaments conclude with 18 title contests slated for Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

All eight lacrosse finals will be played at Fairfield University, baseball finals are slated for Palmer Field in Middletown, softball championships will be contested on Burrill Family Field at the University of Connecticut, and the boys volleyball winners will be crowned at Newtown High School.

Tickets for CIAC championship games are only available digitally, and may be purchased at the GoFan website. There will be no paper tickets.

Find out what’s happening in Across Connecticutfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Some interesting facts and tidbits about the upcoming finals:

  • The finals will have Lions (Foran), Tigers (Ridgefield, Daniel Hand) and Grizzlies (Guilford), oh my! There will be three schools of Falcons (St. Paul, Fairfield Ludlowe, Joel Barlow), and two schools each of Trojans (Lyman Hall, Simsbury), Rams (Cheshire, New Canaan), Spartans (Somers, Maloney) and Crusaders (Holy Cross, Lauralton Hall).
  • Masuk softball, which plays the final semifinal contest Thursday against St. Joseph, seeks its seventh straight state championship. Woodland Regional softball is on track for its fourth state crown in a row, while New Fairfield lacrosse (both boys and girls), Daniel Hand boys lacrosse, New Canaan girls lacrosse and Lauralton Hall girls lacrosse hope to duplicate last year’s title success.
  • Eight schools will be represented in multiple finals, with St. Joseph having a shot at appearing in three pending Thursday’s softball outcome. Those rooting for dual celebrations are Guilford (baseball, boys lacrosse), St. Joseph (baseball, boys lacrosse), St. Paul (baseball, softball), Cheshire (softball, girls lacrosse), Darien (boys and girls lacrosse), Daniel Hand (boys and girls lacrosse), New Fairfield (boys and girls lacrosse) and New Canaan (girls lacrosse, boys volleyball).
  • Three programs still in contention have already claimed more than 10 state titles: Darien boys lacrosse (14), Darien girls lacrosse (12) and Masuk softball (10).
  • Of all finals teams with previous state titles under their belts, South Windsor baseball has endured the longest drought, last winning a state crown in 1993.
  • Glastonbury baseball, Suffield baseball, Ridgefield softball, Sacred Heart Academy girls lacrosse and Conard boys volleyball are making their first trips to a championship game. Programs which have competed in championship games in the past, yet are still seeking their first title, are North Branford softball, St. Paul softball, Fairfield Ludlowe boys lacrosse, Simsbury girls lacrosse, Cheshire girls lacrosse, Daniel Hand girls lacrosse and New Canaan boys volleyball.
  • Just six matchups will feature the top two seeds squaring off: Woodland-Foran softball, North Branford-St. Paul softball, Fairfield Ludlowe-St. Joseph boys lacrosse, New Fairfield-Somers boys lacrosse, Darien-New Canaan girls lacrosse and Simsbury-Cheshire girls lacrosse. A victory Thursday would place top-seeded Masuk softball against No. 2 Waterford.

Here is complete information about each title contest, including championship game histories and links to team rosters and season records. Games are on Saturday, June 14 unless otherwise indicated.

Find out what’s happening in Across Connecticutfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

BASEBALL

CLASS LL
7 p.m.

No. 2 South Windsor Bobcats vs. No. 32 Glastonbury Guardians

Regular season: SW 17-3; GLA 7-13
The road to the finals:

  • SW: d. Greenwich 9-3; d. Fairfield Prep; d. Naugatuck 4-2; d. Norwalk 5-3
  • GLA: d. Amity Regional 5-1; d. Fairfield Ludlowe 6-4; d. Southington 6-1; d. Fairfield Warde 9-1

Title game record: SW 1-1; GLA 0-0
Last state championship: SW 1993 (L); GLA none
Rosters

CLASS L
noon

No. 3 Lyman Hall Trojans vs. No. 8 Guilford Grizzlies

Regular season: LH 17-3; GUIL 14-6
The road to the finals:

  • LH: d. Bunnell 16-0; d. Torrington 12-1; d. New London 5-4; d. Cheshire 3-2
  • GUIL: d. North Haven 7-6; d. Notre Dame-West Haven 9-5; d. Brookfield 5-4; d. Berlin 15-1

Title game record: LH 2-0; GUIL 1-2
Last state championship: LH 2002 (L); GUIL 2007 (L)
Rosters

CLASS M
6/13, 7 p.m.

No. 1 Suffield Wildcats vs. No. 15 St. Joseph Cadets

Regular season: SUF 18-2; STJ 12-8
The road to the finals:

  • SUF: d. Vinal Tech 10-1; d. New Fairfield 8-7; d. Ansonia 2-0; d. Stonington 5-4
  • STJ: d. Abbott Tech 9-2; d. Montville 17-3; d. Ellington 5-3; d. Killingly 3-0

Title game record: SUF 0-0; STJ 5-1
Last state championship: SUF none; STJ 2019 (M)
Rosters

CLASS S
3:30 p.m.

No. 1 St. Paul Falcons vs. No. 10 Holy Cross Crusaders

Regular season: STP 17-3; HC 12-8
The road to the finals:

  • STP: d. Stafford 14-0; d. Lakeview 14-1; d. Woodland Regional 4-3; d. East Catholic 7-1
  • HC: d. Thomaston 3-1; d. Wheeler 8-1; d. North Branford 4-0; d. Shepaug Valley 5-4

Title game record: STP 4-3; HC 1-2
Last state championship: STP 2022 (S); HC 2017 (S)
Rosters

SOFTBALL

CLASS LL
time TBA

No. 1 Cheshire Rams vs. No. 18 Ridgefield Tigers

Regular season: CHE 18-2; RIDG 11-9
The road to the finals:

  • CHE: 1st round bye; d. Trumbull 4-3; d. Norwich Free Academy 8-0; d. Southington 6-0
  • RIDG: d. Fitch 4-0; d. Enfield 5-3; d. Fairfield Ludlowe 13-0; d. Fairfield Warde 4-3

Title game record: CHE 1-6; RIDG 0-0
Last state championship: CHE 2016 (LL); RIDG none
Rosters

CLASS L
time TBA

No. 2 Waterford Lancers vs. No. 1 Masuk Panthers/No. 5 St. Joseph Cadets

Regular season: WAT 17-3; MAS 19-1; STJ 17-3
The road to the finals:

  • WAT: 1st round bye; d. Bunnell 3-2; d. New Milford 1-0; d. Ellington 1-0
  • MAS: 1st round bye; d. RHAM 17-0; d. E.O. Smith 11-0
  • STJ: d. Torrington 12-0; d. Jonathan Law 5-4; d. Brookfield 4-0

Title game record: WAT 5-6; MAS 10-2; STJ 6-5
Last state championship: WAT 2019 (M); MAS 2024 (L); STJ 2018 (M)
Rosters: WFD; MAS/STJ

CLASS M
time TBA

No. 1 Woodland Regional Hawks vs. No. 2 Foran Lions

Regular season: WR 20-0; FOR 20-0
The road to the finals:

  • WR: d. Notre Dame Prep 13-0; d. Watertown 10-0; d. Tolland 14-0; d. Oxford 12-0
  • FOR: d. Bacon Academy 6-2; d. Holy Cross 9-2; d. Seymour 4-3; d. Nonnewaug 14-0

Title game record: WR 3-1; FOR 2-2
Last state championship: WL 2024 (M); FOR 2011 (L)
Rosters

CLASS S
time TBA

No. 1 North Branford Thunderbirds vs. No. 2 St. Paul Falcons

Regular season: NB 19-1; STP 18-2
The road to the finals:

  • NB: 1st round bye; d. Lyme-Old Lyme 8-0; d. Immaculate 6-1; d. St. Bernard 2-0
  • STP: 1st round bye; d. Thomaston 7-0; d. East Catholic 12-0; d. Hale Ray 10-1

Title game record: NB 0-4; STP 0-1
Last state championship: NB none; STP none
Rosters

BOYS LACROSSE

CLASS LL
time TBA

No. 3 Staples Wreckers vs. No. 4 Darien Blue Wave

Regular season: STA 12-3; DAR 10-5
The road to the finals:

  • STA: 1st round bye; d. Norwich Free Academy 23-0; d. Greenwich 10-2; d. Ridgefield 10-9
  • DAR: 1st round bye; d. Bristol co-op 25-2; d. Fairfield Prep 12-5; d. New Canaan 8-5

Title game record: STA 2-3; DAR 14-4
Last state championship: STA 2023 (L); DAR 2019 (L)
Rosters

CLASS L
time TBA

No. 1 Fairfield Ludlowe Falcons vs. No. 2 St. Joseph Cadets

Regular season: FFL 12-4; STJ 11-5
The road to the finals:

  • FFL: 1st round bye; d. Windsor 20-1; d. Newtown 19-5; d. Conard 17-7
  • STJ: 1st round bye; d. Enfield 17-0; d. New Milford 12-2; d. Cheshire 7-6

Title game record: FFL 0-1; STJ 7-5
Last state championship: FFL none; STJ 2021 (S)
Rosters

CLASS M
time TBA

No. 1 Daniel Hand Tigers vs. No. 3 Guilford Grizzlies

Regular season: DH 10-6; GUIL 9-7
The road to the finals:

  • DH: 1st round bye; 2nd round bye; d. RHAM 19-4; d. Brookfield 18-5
  • GUIL: 1st round bye; d. Watertown 21-1; d. East Lyme 12-3; d. Joel Barlow 8-7

Title game record: DH 1-7; GUIL 0-1
Last state championship: DH 2024 (M); GUIL none
Rosters

CLASS S
time TBA

No. 1 New Fairfield Rebels vs. No. 2 Somers Spartans

Regular season: NFF 14-2; SOM 15-1
The road to the finals:

  • NFF: 1st round bye; d. Morgan 18-0; d. Granby Memorial 16-5; d. Haddam-Killingworth 5-4
  • SOM: 1st round bye; d. Holy Cross 19-1; d. Old Saybrook 12-8; d. Sheehan 16-9

Title game record: NFF 4-3; SOM 5-3
Last state championship: NFF 2024 (S); SOM 2017 (S)
Rosters

GIRLS LACROSSE

CLASS LL
6/15, 4 p.m.

No. 1 Darien Blue Wave vs. No. 2 New Canaan Rams

Regular season: DAR 14-1; NC 10-6
The road to the finals:

  • DAR: 1st round bye; 2nd round bye; d. Fairfield Ludlowe 22-5; d. Ridgefield 17-5
  • NC: 1st round bye; d. Newington 21-2; d. Staples 16-7; d. Wilton 7-6

Title game record: DAR 12-4; NC 8-4
Last state championship: DAR 2023 (L); NC 2024 (LL)
Rosters

CLASS L
6/15, 2 p.m.

No. 1 Simsbury Trojans vs. No. 2 Cheshire Rams

Regular season: SIM 14-1; CHE 14-2
The road to the finals:

  • SIM: 1st round bye; 2nd round bye; d. Farmington 18-1; d. Masuk 7-5
  • CHE: 1st round bye; 2nd round bye; d. Fairfield Warde 12-8; d. Amity Regional 14-11

Title game record: SIM 0-1; CHE 0-1
Last state championship: SIM none; CHE none
Rosters

CLASS M
6/15, noon

No. 1 New Fairfield Rebels vs. No. 3 Daniel Hand Tigers

Regular season: NFF 15-1; DH 9-7
The road to the finals:

  • NFF: 1st round bye; d. Berlin 16-3; d. Joel Barlow 15-4; d. Suffield 15-5
  • DH: 1st round bye; d. Sheehan 18-6; d. St. Joseph 11-4; d. Branford 16-10

Title game record: NFF 7-1; DH 0-3
Last state championship: NFF 2024 (M); DH none
Rosters

CLASS S
6/15, 10 a.m.

No. 1 Lauralton Hall Crusaders vs. No. 6 Sacred Heart Academy Sharks

Regular season: LH 10-6; SHA 7-9
The road to the finals:

  • LH: 1st round bye; d. Housatonic Regional 20-3; d. East Catholic 18-9; d. Somers 16-15
  • SHA: 1st round bye; d. Haddam-Killingworth 17-7; d. Northwest Catholic 18-9; d. Granby Memorial 11-8

Title game record: LH 1-1; SHA 0-0
Last state championship: LH 2024 (S); SHA none
Rosters

BOYS VOLLEYBALL

CLASS L
6/13, 7 p.m.

No. 1 Conard Red Wolves vs. No. 3 Maloney Spartans

Regular season: CON 17-0; MAL 18-1
The road to the finals:

  • CON: d. Ridgefield 3-0; d. Hall 3-2; d. Shelton 3-2
  • MAL: d. East Hartford 3-1; d. Darien 3-0; d. Trumbull 3-1

Title game record: CON 0-0; MAL 1-0
Last state championship: CON none; MAL 2005 (M)
Rosters

CLASS M
6/13, 4:30 p.m.

No. 1 Joel Barlow Falcons vs. No. 3 New Canaan Rams

Regular season: JB 15-4; NC 14-3
The road to the finals:

  • JB: d. St. Joseph 3-0; d. Newtown 3-0; d. Newington 3-1
  • NC: d. Putnam 3-0; d. Cheshire 3-1; d. Masuk 3-2

Title game record: JB 2-3; NC 0-1
Last state championship: JB 2022 (M); NC none
Rosters

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Long Beach State Men’s Volleyball vs Alberta – The562.org

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R62

20231220 MENS 562

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Details from the contract of new Nevada volleyball head coach Jason Borchin

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Jason Borchin has signed a four-year contract to serve as Nevada’s head volleyball coach as part of a deal that will pay him $637,840 if he finishes his term, according to the contract obtained by Nevada Sports Net via a public records request. The contract was signed by Borchin on Dec. 28 and finalized with the signature of Wolf Pack athletic director Stephanie Rempe and university president Brian Sandoval on Dec. 29. Borchin most recently served as Cal Poly’s associate head coach before accepting the job at Nevada, which will be his first as a head coach. Here is an overview of the contract.

Longevity: The contract started Dec. 29, 2025 and runs through Dec. 31, 2029, making this a four-year agreement, which is one year less than the contract signed by his predecessor, Shannon Wyckoff-McNeal, who resigned after two years.

Base salary: Borchin will make $150,000 in base salary annually, a small decrease from Wyckoff-McNeal’s $155,000 yearly salary. Borchin also received a $10,000 bonus that must be repaid if he leaves Nevada prior to Jan. 1, 2027.

Fringe benefits: Borchin will get a $500 monthly automobile stipend and $80 monthly cell phone stipend, which would total $27,840 over the life of the contract. Borchin will get six football season tickets and four men’s basketball season tickets each year.

Performance bonuses: As long as Nevada hits a single-season APR of 940 in the immediately preceding academic year, Borchin is eligible to earn the following athletic performance bonuses: $5,000 for a regular-season title; $2,500 for a conference tournament title; $3,000 for finishing top 25 in the RPI; $2,500 for winning conference coach of the year; $2,500 for an NCAA Tournament invitation; $2,000 for each NCAA Tournament win; $5,000 for an NCAA title; and $2,500 for an APR of 985 or higher.

Early termination: If Borchin is fired without cause before the end of his contract, Nevada must pay him the following: Dec. 29, 2025 through Dec. 31, 2026 (180 days base salary); Jan. 1, 2027 through Dec. 31, 2027 (120 days base salary); Jan. 1, 2028 through Dec. 31, 2028 (90 days base salary); Jan. 1, 2029 through Dec. 31, 2029 (60 days base salary or his remaining base salary if there is less than 60 days on his contract)

Coach buyout: If Borchin leaves Nevada before the end of his contract, he must pay the Wolf Pack $20,000 within 60 days of his resignation date.

Personnel evaluation: The contract states Borchin will be evaluated on four factors, including 40 percent on competitiveness; 40 percent on academic and rules compliance; 10 percent on institutional goals, including diversity and citizenship; and 10 percent on program administration.



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Pacific Beats Pepperdine to Remain Unbeaten at Home

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STOCKTON, Calif. – Improving to 7-0 at home, the Pacific men’s basketball made a defensive stand on the final play to top a pesky Pepperdine squad 74-69 on Sunday at the Alex G. Spanos Center.
 
The Waves (5-12, 0-4 WCC) trailed 72-69 and had the ball in the closing moments when senior Justin Rochelin stripped away a steal, ran the floor and scored to put an exclamation point on the win. It capped a back-and-forth victory that featured 13 lead changes.
 
Pacific (11-6, 2-2 WCC) shot .529 from the floor, 9-of-20 (.450) from three-point range and 11-of-13 (.846) from the free throw line to overcome 18 turnovers. The Tigers outrebounded the Waves 35-24 to create a 16-7 edge in second chance points.
 
Senior Elias Ralph tallied a double-double of 22 points and 10 rebounds to lead the charge. He was 7-of-13 from the field, 3-of-5 from long distance and 5-of-6 from the free throw line.
 
Ralph was one of four Tigers to score in double-figures. Senior Justin Rochelin registered a season-high 14 points and matched his career-high eight rebounds to go along with three steals. Rochelin was 5-of-7 shooting.
 
Senior Jaden Clayton recorded 11 points and junior Kajus Kublickas came off the bench to notch 10 points and five assists. Freshman Jaion Pitt contributed with five points and nine rebounds.
 
Pepperdine was guided by Javon Cooley’s 18 points and seven rebounds. The Waves were 14-of-15 (.933) from the free throw line.
 
The teams were neck-and-neck in the first half with Pacific leading 13-12 after a tip-in by Ralph at the 14:49 mark. A three-pointer by Kublickas put the Tigers ahead 26-23 with 10:37 to go.
 
Pepperdine went up 35-32 with 4:34 remaining when the Tigers ended the half on a 7-1 run. It included a last-second three-pointer by Ralph to put them up 40-36 heading into the break.
 
Pacific came out hot in the second half and was seemingly in control 56-45 after senior TJ Wainwright nailed a three at the 12:28 mark. Though, the Waves slowly chipped away at the deficit and cut it to 58-54 with 8:47 left.
 
A tip-in by Rochelin upped Pacific’s edge to 70-63 with 1:38 remaining, but Pepperdine’s Cooley was fouled shooting a three and made all three free throws to cut it to 70-66 with 1:09 to go. After a jumper by Clayton, Pepperdine’s Aaron Clark made a three to change the score to 72-69 with 29 seconds left.
 
The Tigers missed the front end of a one-and-one and the Waves had the opportunity to tie it in the final seconds. As Cooley was about to go up for a three-point attempt, Rochelin stripped the ball away and ran the length of the floor for a bucket to end it.
 
The Tigers will hit the road Thursday for a 7 p.m. game at Portland. They’ll return home Saturday for a 4 p.m. affair against San Diego.
 
NOTES
– Pacific is now 44-39 all-time against Pepperdine and 23-13 at home.
 
– The Tigers are 7-0 at home this season, 816-462 all-time at home and 353-229 in the Spanos Center.
 
– Pacific improved to 8-0 this season when shooting over .500 from the field.
 
– The Tigers have outrebounded all four conference opponents this season. They entered the game ranked 22nd in the nation in rebounding margin with a +9.6 clip and outrebounded the Waves 35-24.
 
– Pacific entered the game ranked 51st in the country in free throw percentage with a .763 mark and put up a .846 clip Sunday.
 
– Ralph submitted his 26th career double-double, 15th at Pacific, fifth this year and third in the last four games. It was his 26th career 20-plus scoring game, 14th at Pacific and seventh this season. This weekend against Oregon State and Pepperdine, Ralph was 15-of-16 (.938) from the free throw line.
 
– Rochelin surpassed his previous season-high of 13 points set against San Diego. His eight rebounds matched a career-high for the fourth time. It was his 12th career double-figure scoring game and third at Pacific.
 
– Clayton etched his 38th career double-digit scoring outing, seventh at Pacific and second in a row after draining 15 points Friday against Oregon State. Clayton was 5-of-10 from the field and hit a three.
 
– Kublickas was a perfect 4-of-4 from the field and 2-of-2 from beyond-the-arc. It was his fifth double-figure scoring game of the year and the fourth time he’s distributed at least five assists.
 
– Wainwright drilled a pair of threes and has made at least one in 16 of 17 games this year.
 
– Pacific has already surpassed its overall win total by two games from last season when it finished 9-24. It’s the second year in a row under head coach Dave Smart that the Tigers have increased their win total as he inherited a 6-26 (0-16 WCC) squad from 2023-24.
 

Tigers Tickets

Tickets for upcoming events can be purchased through the PacificTigers.com tickets tab, or by calling the Box Office at 209-946-2474.  Groups of 10 or more are eligible for a group discount and exclusive fan experiences.

 

Stay Social

For all the latest on Pacific Men’s Basketball, be sure to follow the team on X (@PacificMensBB), Instagram (@PacificMensBB) and “like” the team’s official Facebook page (Pacific Men’s Basketball).

 

#PacificProud

 





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Committed to empower youth through power of sports: Lieutenant Governor

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Jammu, Jan 05: Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha on Monday attended the grand opening ceremony of the 2nd edition of the ‘Khelo India Beach Games’ at the iconic Blue Flag certified Ghoghla Beach in Diu.

The ceremony was also graced by Praful Patel, Administrator, UT of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu.

During the event, a special message from Prime Minister Narendra Modi was read out, extending his heartiest felicitations to the participating athletes and organizers.

Addressing the gathering, the Lieutenant Governor stated that under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India is witnessing a new revolution in sports.

“We are committed to empower youth through the power of sports. From Kashmir to Kanyakumari, India’s youth are redefining sports excellence and scripting a new history from playgrounds to podiums. The young sportspersons are not confined to traditional sports but they are conquering new grounds with sweat, dreams and victory,” the Lieutenant Governor said.

The Lieutenant Governor highlighted that the spectacular Khelo India Beach Games event reflects the Government of India’s commitment to nurture a strong sporting culture and India’s Youth Surge in Coastal Sports.

The Lieutenant Governor said that the Jammu & Kashmir is proud to be an active participant in this national sporting movement.

These games will build confidence and leadership that will spur rise of Gen Z athletes in global tournaments, he further said

The Lieutenant Governor called upon the athletes to act as brand ambassadors for ‘Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat’ and share the warm hospitality and priceless culture of Diu with their respective regions.

“Khelo India Beach Games are not just about winning medals; they are a platform to project India’s ‘soft power’ and showcase our coastal tourism potential to the world,” the Lieutenant Governor said.

He said the Beach Games also remind us of our shared responsibility towards environmental sustainability and the preservation of our coastal ecosystems.

“Sports unite people beyond caste, religion, and region. Let us make these games a success through the power of unity and work towards making India a world-class sporting power,” the Lieutenant Governor said.

The Lieutenant Governor congratulated Praful Patel, Administrator, UT of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, and the people of the Union Territory for successfully hosting the India’s first-ever multi-sport Beach Games in 2024 and the inaugural edition of the Khelo India Beach Games in 2025. He also extended his best wishes to all the athletes.

The 2026 edition follows the historic success of the inaugural games. Over the next five days, more than 1,300 athletes from 31 states and UTs will be participating in eight disciplines (6 competitive and 2 demonstration) including Beach Soccer, Beach Volleyball, Beach Sepak Takraw, Beach Kabaddi, Beach Pencak Silat, & Open water Swimming as Competitive and Beach Mallakhamb & Beach Tug of war as Demonstration.

Eminent sports personalities, senior officials, prominent citizens from different walks of life, sports enthusiasts and youth in large number attended the opening ceremony.



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Hawaii men’s volleyball team sweeps New Jersey Institute of Technology

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Hawaii libero Quintin Greenidge (22) celebrates with team mates after a dig against the NJIT Highlanders during the second set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii setter Tread Rosenthal (13) tries to keep the ball in play against the NJIT Highlanders during the second set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Adrien Roure (7) celebrates with team mates outside hitter Justin Todd (9), left, and outside hitter Louis Sakanoko (23) after a point against the NJIT Highlanders during the second set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii head coach Charlie Wade shakes hands with NJIT head coach Danny Goncalves between the first and second sets of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii opposite Kristian Titriyski (10) puts a kill past NJIT opposite Wiktor Nowak (19) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Justin Todd (9) and outside hitter Adrien Roure (7) go up to block NJIT outside hitter Andre Aleixo (2) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii setter Tread Rosenthal (13) serves the ball against the NJIT Highlanders during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii middle blocker Trevell Jordan (20) puts down a kill against NJIT outside hitter Andre Aleixo (2) and middle blocker Andrew Fedmasu (20) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii head coach Charlie Wade looks on from the sideline during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game against the NJIT Highlanders, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii setter Tread Rosenthal (13) goes up to block NJIT middle blocker Andrew Fedmasu (20) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii setter Tread Rosenthal (13), middle blocker Trevell Jordan (20), and outside hitter Louis Sakanoko (23) combine on the triple block on NJIT outside hitter Parker Moorhead (8) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii opposite Kristian Titriyski (10) puts a kill past NJIT outside hitter Parker Moorhead (8) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Louis Sakanoko (23) and outside hitter Justin Todd (9) combine on the double block on NJIT opposite Wiktor Nowak (19) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Louis Sakanoko (23) keeps the ball in play against NJIT opposite Wiktor Nowak (19) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii setter Tread Rosenthal (13), top, opposite Kristian Titriyski (10), outside hitter Justin Todd (9), and outside hitter Louis Sakanoko (23) celebrate a point against the NJIT Highlanders during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii setter Tread Rosenthal (13), top, outside hitter Justin Todd (9), and outside hitter Louis Sakanoko (23) celebrate a point against the NJIT Highlanders during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Louis Sakanoko (23) soars for a kill over NJIT middle blocker Daniel Latkowski (5) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Louis Sakanoko (23) soars for a kill over NJIT middle blocker Daniel Latkowski (5) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Adrien Roure (7) goes for a dig against the NJIT Highlanders during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii opposite Kristian Titriyski (10), left, outside hitter Justin Todd (9), and outside hitter Adrien Roure (7) go up to block NJIT opposite Wiktor Nowak (19) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Justin Todd (9) puts down a kill against NJIT middle blocker Daniel Latkowski (5) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Justin Todd (9) and outside hitter Adrien Roure (7) go up to block NJIT middle blocker Daniel Latkowski (5) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Adrien Roure (7) puts down a kill against NJIT middle blocker Daniel Latkowski (5) and setter Bruno Figueiredo (3) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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NJIT outside hitter Andre Aleixo (2) has a kill attempt thwarted by Hawaii setter Tread Rosenthal (13) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii opposite Kristian Titriyski (10) puts down a kill against NJIT outside hitter Andre Aleixo (2) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Louis Sakanoko (23) puts a kill past NJIT setter Bruno Figueiredo (3), right, and middle blocker Andrew Fedmasu (20) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii libero Quintin Greenidge (22) keeps the ball in play against the NJIT Highlanders during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii opposite Kristian Titriyski (10) serves the ball against the NJIT Highlanders during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii opposite Kristian Titriyski (10) serves the ball against the NJIT Highlanders during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii setter Tread Rosenthal (13) goes up to block NJIT outside hitter Parker Moorhead (8) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii opposite Kristian Titriyski (10) puts down a kill against NJIT outside hitter Parker Moorhead (8), left, during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii opposite Kristian Titriyski (10), left, outside hitter Justin Todd (9), and outside hitter Louis Sakanoko (23) combine on the triple block on NJIT opposite Wiktor Nowak (19) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.

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Hawaii outside hitter Adrien Roure (7) puts down a kill against NJIT middle blocker Daniel Latkowski (5) and opposite Wiktor Nowak (19) during the first set of a men’s NCAA volleyball game, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Honolulu.



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Sports

Erisman going to familiar Columbia College for track

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By Jeremy Jacob, Sports Editor

Becca Erisman had a big life decision to make.

Erisman decided to sign for track and field with Columbia College and made her intentions clear during a ceremony on Dec. 4 in the Centralia High School gym. The senior has five state medals, including two during her freshman season when the Lady Panthers finished third for their first state trophy since 1985.

Erisman said he liked the academics at Columbia College as he plans to go into its nursing program. There was some other factor that made her comfortable with the destination.

“I love the track team,” Erisman said. “I know a lot about it because my brother and his girlfriend are on the track team. I’m really excited to experience a lot of what they’ve done and to see it for myself.”

Grant Erisman is a senior at Columbia College with multiple championships in the American Midwest Conference.

Becca Erisman was a district champion a season ago in the girls 4×800 relay. She also advanced to sectionals last season in the long jump. Centralia head coach Becca Erisman said it is “a welcome challenge” to determine in which events Erisman will be competing.

She brings energy and enthusiasm to every practice and is a great leader for our younger athletes,” Sontheimer said. “Her two greatest strengths are her year-round commitment to track and field and her versatility as an athlete. As a coaching staff, we feel that Becca could help us in eight or nine different events.”

Erisman said she has had “amazing” coaches before and during high school that have made her the athlete she is today.

“They make great workouts for us,” Erisman said. “I have amazing teammates who push me every day in practice. Without them, I would not have the success that I’ve had.”

Erisman admitted that she wasn’t a great runner earlier in her life but now she has five state medals as part of various relay teams. She pointed out she had “a lot of growth” in long jump last season that ended with her just missing the cut for state by one spot in fifth place.

“Over time, I got better and I kept practicing,” Erisman said. “Definitely throughout high school, I have seen great improvements. I just barely didn’t make the cutoff for state (in long jump), but I am working towards that this year.”

Sontheimer said Erisman should do well in college after being a big contributor for the Lady Panthers one more season.

“Becca has been a tremendous asset to our track program the last three years,” Sontheimer said. “We are glad to have her for one more season before she begins competing at the college level.”





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