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Dhalluin scores 3 goals, Stanford beats USC 11-7 to win NCAA women’s water polo title

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Juliette Dhalluin score three goals on Sunday and the Stanford defense allowed just one second-half goal to help the Cardinal beat Southern California 11-7 to claim its 10th NCAA women’s water polo championship and third in the last four seasons. No. 1 Stanford (25-1) finished the season on a 10-game win streak, […]

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INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Juliette Dhalluin score three goals on Sunday and the Stanford defense allowed just one second-half goal to help the Cardinal beat Southern California 11-7 to claim its 10th NCAA women’s water polo championship and third in the last four seasons.

No. 1 Stanford (25-1) finished the season on a 10-game win streak, dating to a 12-11 loss to the Trojans on March 29. The Cardinal beat USC 11-7 on April 27 in the semifinals of the MPSF Championship.

Dhalluin scored with a second left in the first half to make it 6-6 and again with 6:47 left in the third — the only goal of the quarter — gave Stanford the lead for good.

Serena Browne added a goal with 6:04 to play and another with 3:06 remaining to make it 9-6.

Ryann Neushul scored a goal to give her and has 228 — fifth most in program history — in her seven-year career (after winning the 2019 national championship, Neushul stepped away from the Cardinal for two years to train with the U.S. national team) and is the first four-time NCAA team champion in Stanford history.

Christine Carpenter had nine saves for the Cardinal.

Meghan McAninch led USC (29-5) with two goals and Anna Reed finished with 11 saves.

The Cardinal are the all-time leaders in NCAA team championship with 137 and have won at least one team title in each of the past 49 seasons.





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TJ Vorva takes over CBC volleyball program: ‘He’s locked in’

By Joe Harris | Special to the Post-Dispatch It was an offer TJ Vorva simply couldn’t refuse. Vorva was announced as CBC’s new boys volleyball coach last week, but the process started with a call from outgoing coach Alex Erbs. “He hit me up and was like, hey, you know, I got some other endeavors […]

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It was an offer TJ Vorva simply couldn’t refuse.

Vorva was announced as CBC’s new boys volleyball coach last week, but the process started with a call from outgoing coach Alex Erbs.

“He hit me up and was like, hey, you know, I got some other endeavors that I need to kind of focus on a little bit more moving forward,” Vorva said. “But you can tell he’s so passionate about the program that he’s like, I don’t want to just hand it off to anybody and kind of lose some of the traditions and some of the stuff that I’ve built up.”

From there, Erbs introduced Vorva to CBC athletic director Scott Pingel and the hiring process began.

“We just had really, really good conversations where it seemed like we were all kind of on the same page in terms of goals and where we want to, you know, take the program moving forward,” Vorva said.

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Erbs will stay on as an assistant. It is a reunion for Vorva and Erbs as the two coached together on the club circuit.

“My big thing is I’ve kind of seen the game from the travel side, and I’ve seen the game from the college side, and there just seems to be a lot of disconnect from the high school age groups,” Vorva said. “Then when they get to college, they’re, you know, one step behind. So, there’s some things that we can do, especially with, you know, the offensive philosophy, a lot of the setting stuff, just to kind of open up the offense a little bit, and not rely on just the best hitters getting the ball 24/7. It’s kind of creating a lot of different lanes for offense to be able to accomplish that.”

Vorva’s last coaching stop was a promotion to the men’s volleyball head coach position at the now defunct Fontbonne University in May 2023 after serving as an assistant coach for two seasons. He played his college volleyball at Fontbonne and was a team captain on the 2019 squad that went 26-3. 

Vorva, who is from the Chicago area, was originally a basketball player before taking up volleyball in high school.

Pingel said the decision to hire Vorva was easy.

“If you ever spent 5-10 minutes with him, you know there’s something special about this young man,” Pingel said. “He’s locked in.”

Erbs, who graduated from CBC in 2014, stepped down after seven seasons as head coach. He led the Cadets to winning records in three of his seven seasons playing in the rugged MCC.

Vorva is excited to be reunited with Erbs.

“I think he’s going to be a fountain of knowledge for me,” Vorva said. “But at the same time, I think it gives, you know, the boys a new perspective as well. I’ll be kind of a brand new face coming in, and it’s kind of a little bit of a fresh start for everybody, especially in terms of, like, tryouts and, you know, positional things I’m going to come in with.”

Vorva said every player will come in with a blank slate and a fresh chance to prove their skills.

“I’m very excited about what TJ can bring for our program and really take it to the next level,” Pingel said. “Alex did a great job of trying to get it right, and he felt like he left it a good spot. So, I’m ready for TJ to take to the next level.”



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Water Polo, Azzurra U16s graduate as Tuscan champions

Prato, June 16, 2025 – The Azzurra U16s have been crowned Tuscan water polo champions. This is the verdict issued by the final of the Tuscan championship of the category, which saw the Prato team prevail in the end: coach Bonechi’s boys can rejoice after the 10-6 imposed on their rivals Siena Pallanuoto. In the […]

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Prato, June 16, 2025 – The Azzurra U16s have been crowned Tuscan water polo champions. This is the verdict issued by the final of the Tuscan championship of the category, which saw the Prato team prevail in the end: coach Bonechi’s boys can rejoice after the 10-6 imposed on their rivals Siena Pallanuoto. In the first two periods the match proved to be very balanced, with the Prato athletes who then raised the pace and consolidated the result. Thus closing a more than positive season in the best possible way. The year for the club chaired by Alessandro Bartolozzi is not over: Daniele Santini’s first team drew 9-9 against Jesina a few days ago in the first leg of the Serie C championship playoffs and next Saturday the Marche will play for the qualification to Serie B. Regardless of what the final outcome will be in any case, what is certain is that from the U16 and from the youth sector in general interesting results continue to arrive. And Santini can also take notes with confidence, in view of the future.

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Life on the fringe with Orioles reliever Scott Blewett

SCROLL DOWN TO READ ARTICLE If you ask Scott Blewett to describe himself, he’ll eagerly offer that he’s “a journeyman.” The 29-year-old right-handed pitcher was the Kansas City Royals’ second-round pick in 2014, but it took him six years to finally make his major league debut. Since then, he’s logged a total of 60 major […]

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Life on the fringe with Orioles reliever Scott Blewett

SCROLL DOWN TO READ ARTICLE

If you ask Scott Blewett to describe himself, he’ll eagerly offer that he’s “a journeyman.” The 29-year-old right-handed pitcher was the Kansas City Royals’ second-round pick in 2014, but it took him six years to finally make his major league debut.

Since then, he’s logged a total of 60 major league innings, including the 2 2/3 in his second big league start on Sunday when he was the Orioles’ opener in an 11-2 victory over the Los Angeles Angels.

Blewett began the season with Minnesota and was with the Orioles for less than a week in April before he was sold to Atlanta. Ten days ago, the Orioles purchased his contract from the Braves.

Life for a fringe major league baseball player isn’t easy, something Blewett readily acknowledges.

This interview has been edited for brevity.

Question: What’s it like being a guy who doesn’t know where they’re going to be day-to-day?

Blewett: “You’ve got to take it one day at a time, right? I’m trying to get better at packing lighter. I’m learning with that. It’s been quite the journey to get to the big leagues, to stay in the big leagues. In the minor leagues, I fought so hard to get back to this level, to get to this level initially, to get back here. I’m fighting just as hard to stay here. You’ve got to prove yourself every single day. There’s thousands of guys that are fighting to take your job. I like that edge to go out and compete every single night.”

Q: You’re currently living in a hotel in Baltimore. When do you think you’ll be confident enough in your status to get an apartment?

Blewett: “I learned that lesson pretty quick this year. I thought I was going to stay in Minnesota. I thought I was going to spend most of the year in Triple-A [St. Paul]. Minnesota is pretty fortunate to have both cities pretty close to each other where if you’re in Triple-A or the big leagues, you can live in the same spot. I signed a seven-month lease there. I was in Minnesota all year last year, and I signed back with them. I had a few other offers this offseason. I really liked the program they had for me, so I got comfortable, and I learned real quick not to get too comfortable.”

Q: Don’t they pay to help you get out of your lease?

Blewett: “Some of it; you had to eat some of it.”

Q: Any tips for finding a place to live?

Blewett: “I’ve been in a lot of hotels. I found a cool app. When I was in Alanta, I was able to move into an apartment. I found an app that did short-term one-month leases. For the most part, I’m living out of a suitcase the entire year.”

Q: You don’t have children, so it’s just you, your wife, Rachel, who’s a speech language pathologist, and a dog. How much of the moving is on you and how much on her?

Blewett: “I like to take most of the responsibility. She’ll pack her stuff. I’ll pack mine. I’ve gotten really good at that, fit a lot of things into my car, get from city-to-city. If we have to fly, we’ll take what we need and leave the rest in the car, get the car later.

Q: Fans think players have it easy. What’s it like when you’re not a star?

Blewett: “My motto is, ‘Live in the moment, live where my feet are. Don’t think about what happened yesterday. Don’t think about what’s going to happen tomorrow.’ I have the opportunity to be here today. I have the opportunity to be the best I can be.

“When I look back and think about it, it’s like every single day, fighting for my job. In the moment, I don’t think about it. As I end the season, I’ll reflect, ‘Wow, that was quite the year, and it flies by.’

“There is a lot of stress involved. There were some times last week where it was like, ‘What is my life right now?’ I drove from Atlanta to Charlotte, stayed in Charlotte for a night, drove here, got on a flight to Sacramento, went out there and was pitching the next day. The travel can definitely take a toll on you sometimes. I fought hard to get here. I’m fighting just as hard to stay here. I know I can lay my head on the pillow at night knowing I gave 100 percent every time out. Keep a positive attitude and work as hard as I can.”

Q: Earlier this season, you gave up 0 earned runs in 4 1/3 innings in two outings for the Orioles only to be designated for assignment when they needed a roster spot. Does that annoy you?

Blewett: “I understand the business, right? I’ve been around the game. This is my 12th year, so I understand how the business works. Being in the role that I’m in, I think it’s a role that’s overlooked sometimes.

“It’s not glamorous by any means, right? It’s necessary. Games are out of hand, one way or the other. Somebody’s got to eat those innings and it just happens to be me a lot of those times.

“I’ll do anything it takes to stay in the big leagues. I don’t mind doing that role. Big league innings are big league innings. It’s an amazing opportunity. It’s something I’ve dreamt of as a kid. I’ve just got to keep that attitude every single time out. I hope for the best. Whatever happens after that, if I get designated, and the next day I’m playing for another team, so be it. It’s out of my control. The only thing I can do is go out there and put up zeros.”

Q: Did it surprise you when you found out you were back with the Orioles six weeks after you left?

Blewett: “I always try and keep a good relationship, no matter where you go. Baseball’s such a small world. Attitude is everything. As long as you have a positive attitude, you never know.

“You go to Atlanta. You come back here. You go back to Atlanta. You come back here. Anything can happen. I learned a lot from Matt Bowman last year. I was with him in Minnesota. We’d talk about the whole process because we’re in a very similar situation. He’s been around the game a lot longer than I have. He’s a very smart guy.

“You don’t meet too many guys in our exact situation. You can relate to those guys and talk about it and laugh how crazy this life can be. It’s nice to be able to have somebody who can relate.”

Q: But you knocked Bowman out of a job. He was DFA’d when the Orioles reacquired you.

Blewett: “Unfortunately, but it can happen that he knocks me out of a job. We both understand that situation. It’s the unfortunate part of the business.”

Q: In 2023, you had seven starts for a team in Taiwan. What was that like?

Blewett: “It was great. I loved it. It was a pretty big culture shock when I got there at first. I had two great translators, some other foreign players. One guy was American, Canadian, a guy from Panama. They were all awesome. We all leaned on each other.

“It just gave me an appreciation for here and the Latin players that come over. You’re in a different country. You’re away from your family. You lean on each other. When I was there, I learned a splitter. Kind of completely changed my career around. Had a great time there, give them a lot of credit for where I am today.”

Call for questions: I answer Orioles questions most weekdays. Please send yours to: [email protected].



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Manheim Central’s run to PIAA boys volleyball royalty coincided with District 3 counterpart [column] | Boys’ volleyball

UNIVERSITY PARK — What makes a championship-winning team? Pure talent? Cohesion amongst players and staff? Experience? Luck? There’s no correct answer. No evidence to fully comprehend what it takes to reach the summit. But over a given high school athletic season, programs align the pieces, check off the boxes and identify the values that make […]

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UNIVERSITY PARK — What makes a championship-winning team?

Pure talent? Cohesion amongst players and staff? Experience? Luck?

There’s no correct answer. No evidence to fully comprehend what it takes to reach the summit. But over a given high school athletic season, programs align the pieces, check off the boxes and identify the values that make the engine hum.

In rare instances, the segments click into place. Blossom into a gold-medal outcome.

I had the privilege of covering both PIAA boys volleyball champions this spring. On Saturday, I assisted in the coverage of Manheim Central lifting its first Class 2A title in program history. At my previous employer, I thoroughly followed Cumberland Valley, the Class 3A victor.

The Barons imposed their payback at Penn State University’s Rec Hall, dispatching District 10 champion Meadville 3-1 — by scores of 21-25, 25-23, 25-16 and 27-25 — after settling for silver against the Bulldogs in 2024. The Eagles, completing an undefeated campaign, swept District Seven stronghold North Allegheny in 25-21, 25-21, 25-12 fashion.

“It’s probably the calmest I’ve been in a championship match,” Central coach Craig Dietrich said, “because they knew what they needed to do. Very few small adjustments we made today, but I trust them very greatly.”

Two teams. Two identities. The same result.

What Central thrived in, CV was shorthanded. What the Eagles succeeded in, the opposite for the Barons.

Don’t twist it, there was plenty of crossover to go around. Senior leadership, for example.

Central started five seniors. CV fielded six. Most logged significant minutes as underclassmen and juniors, the springboard to their fruitful ending.

“We said (to each other), ‘Stay focused. Stay in the moment. Stay present,’” Barons senior outside Reagan Miller said. “Because the state championship only happens once a year. So that was kind of the message throughout playoffs.”


COLUMN: Manheim Central will enjoy view from the top of PIAA Class 2A volleyball mountain


Speaking of the postseason, that’s where the Barons and Eagles’ one-way ticket to gold mapped separate routes. Manheim met its adversity in the Lancaster-Lebanon League final, suffering a 3-1 setback — its only loss of the season — to Cedar Crest. Cumberland Valley, which hadn’t dropped a set all spring, was momentarily derailed when Central York stole a game in the District Three title tilt.

Where did the eventual PIAA champs recenter? In each match following their respective delay.

The Barons used Crest’s clipping as scripture and won their ensuing 18 sets. The Eagles, albeit a set loss to Governor Mifflin in the state semifinals, ousted Unionville, Abington Heights and the Mustangs with game victories of 25-7, 25-9, 25-10 and 25-11 nature.

Central and CV were vulnerable to the knockdown. But they regained anchorage, raised the flags and set sail with little turbulence.

“We’ve all been in that situation before,” Barons senior setter Dylan Musser said. “… It’s just something we know that we can do, that we’re capable of. And we showed it.”

“Showing it” can come in all shapes and sizes. From the front row to the back corners of the court. The Barons and Eagles hugged the parallel line of talent.

Manheim landed six players on the District Three 2A all-star list, as did CV in the 3A contingent. For L-L Section Two, Miller and Musser shared MVP honors, and six Barons earned all-star admission. In the Mid-Penn Commonwealth, Eagles setter Isaiah Sibbitt was tabbed Player of the Year, leading six all-division selections.

It doesn’t get more linear. Covered from the front, back, middle and outside. No empty gaps, no holes to exploit.

“Our whole team knew what was at stake,” Musser said. “For us seniors, this was our last shot. We just gave it our all.”

Desire was the gulf between Central and CV. Not that the Eagles didn’t have the gold-medal itch. But the Barons’ itch, after two prior whiffs and a rematch with the Bulldogs, became a scratch and then a scar.

Central clotted the proverbial bleeding Saturday. All the aches, cramps and throbs of last year’s sting were bandaged. No more “what if?”

“We wanted this all year, getting back to the state ‘chip, and we knew we could,” Musser said. “Playing Meadville made it even better. You get that rematch, and then especially beating them. It feels amazing. We felt we were the better team last year, but it didn’t go our way. But this year, we just battled through it and got our revenge.”

CV didn’t have the dejection, the sorrow of a state-championship loss hanging over its head. The Eagles’ last final appearance — and only other — came in 2008 when they outlasted Central York in five sets. Manheim Central joined Hempfield — a 10-time PIAA champion — and Conestoga Valley (1983) in L-L boys volleyball royalty.

“It’s a very small group of teams that have done it,” Dietrich said. “It is pretty cool to bring it back, and I think the community really rallied around us and supported us.”

The question still stands: what makes a championship-winning team?

The Barons and Eagles don’t have the answer key, but they had the tools to solve the riddle. The means to reach the summit.

Two teams with two identities, authoring the same result.


16 L-L League boys volleyball standouts earn District 3 all-star honors, including Class 2A Player of the Year [lists]



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Forty Under 40

Launching a professional women’s hockey league didn’t begin as a passion project for Royce Cohen, a top executive at the Los Angeles Dodgers since 2014. When the team’s owners first explored the idea in 2022, it was simply a matter of determining whether and how such a league could be a viable business. “One thing […]

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Forty Under 40

Launching a professional women’s hockey league didn’t begin as a passion project for Royce Cohen, a top executive at the Los Angeles Dodgers since 2014. When the team’s owners first explored the idea in 2022, it was simply a matter of determining whether and how such a league could be a viable business.

“One thing I heard a lot of when we first launched the PWHL was, ‘If you build it, they will come,’” Cohen recalled. “While I understand why people said that, and I don’t fault them for that, I think the more appropriate conclusion is, ‘If you build it right, you’ll find out if they will come.’”

Launching the PWHL consumed roughly 90% of Cohen’s time over the next two years. Cohen led the negotiation of a collective-bargaining agreement with the world’s top women’s hockey players and buyout of the Premier Hockey Federation. Once those deals were in place, he had fewer than six months to help create a league from scratch.

Cohen, a summa cum laude graduate of The Wharton School, feels the PWHL still has a lot to prove, but the early results have exceeded expectations. The six-team league welcomed its 1 millionth fan midway through its second season, an achievement driven by unprecedented crowds for professional women’s hockey in both teams’ home markets and in neutral markets throughout the U.S. and Canada. The PWHL also has received consistent corporate investment, with 40 sponsors on board in each of its first two seasons.

Next season, the league will welcome its first two expansion teams in Seattle and Vancouver, giving it a coast-to-coast presence for the first time. When 9-year-old hockey player Sydney Mildon made the Vancouver announcement official, it was clear Cohen’s investment in the league had evolved beyond just business.

“It’s hard not to choke up when you see that sort of stuff,” Cohen said. “We’re certainly in a different spot now than at the outset.”


Royce Cohen
Advisory Board Member
Professional Women’s Hockey League
Senior Vice President of Business Strategy
Los Angeles Dodgers

Age: 35

Born: Philadelphia

Education: University of Pennsylvania, The Wharton School, B.S., economics

Family: Spouse, Cole; children, Leighton (3) and Madison (1)

Charity supported: Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation.

Mobile app used most: Tableau.

Best career advice received: When taking a job, prioritize choosing your boss above title, salary, etc.

What led me to sports business as a career: Everyone else at Wharton went into investment banking, so it left sports business as a path less traveled.

How I deal with stress in the workplace: Shuffle poker chips.

The most pressing issue facing my generation: Complacency.

The sports industry needs to do a better job of … : Deploying customer-centric strategies.

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Mavericks volleyball showed resilience in wake of levy failure

MOSES LAKE – When the Moses Lake School District 2024 educational programs and operations levy failed for the first time, coaches like Mavericks volleyball coach Krystal Trammell were unsure what would happen if it failed a second time. What they were certain about was their dedication to the kids at Moses Lake High School.   […]

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MOSES LAKE – When the Moses Lake School District 2024 educational programs and operations levy failed for the first time, coaches like Mavericks volleyball coach Krystal Trammell were unsure what would happen if it failed a second time. What they were certain about was their dedication to the kids at Moses Lake High School.  

“I don’t think there was one coach or one program that wasn’t in to do it for the kids,” Trammell said. “We knew exactly what we needed to do. We just didn’t know how to go about it, how the teams were going to look, our transportation equipment, etcetera. But relying on each other really helped things kind of materialize.” 

After the levy failed a second time, Trammell knew it was real and had to figure out how the team was going to have a volleyball season. She said the hard work of the coaches at Moses Lake and the Community Athletics and Activities booster helped the season come to fruition.  

Trammell said parents stepped up and helped organize transportation for the athletes to get to games and tournaments throughout the fall season. When they had to figure out how to have a season, it was clear that their culture was in jeopardy, according to Trammell. Over the years, she said they have worked hard to build a culture of students first, athletes second.  

“When that opportunity could have been taken from us, we turned to each other, our parents, our coaching staff and our athletes, and came together as a group stronger than before. We were going to do everything in our power to make the program even better and get more hands involved. That’s exactly what happened with our parents and athletes and coaches,” Trammell said.  

The Mavericks volleyball team managed to put together one of their best seasons in a long time, according to Trammell. They finished the season with a 12-6 record and secured a highlight 3-1 win over West Valley, which Trammell said was their first in program history. Trammell could see something shifted in her players’ last season that made a difference.  

“Program-wide, the girls had something to prove. They were not going to let the levy failure and the fact that we almost didn’t have a season ruin anything. I think they came out more on fire to show everyone ‘no, we’re not going to stop, and this is what we’re going to do,’” she said.  

Trammell said her team excelled with court awareness, mental toughness and utilizing everything they have worked on over the last couple of years. She said she liked what she saw from her team last season, and it makes her excited for this upcoming season since they will have nine returning players. She said they will benefit from coming in with more knowledge and experience.  

However, now that a new levy was passed this year, they will still have another season without a budget until January 2026. Though Trammell said it will be business as usual heading into the season. She said their experience last season will help them navigate this season more effectively as they learn more throughout the summer.  

According to Trammell, she is confident they will have another season after seeing all of the support they got last year. She is confident in her community, she said, and believes in Mavericks athletics. In the meantime, Trammell plans to prepare for the fall season the same way she always does.  

“We’re just concentrating on the workouts and our summer league and preparing for the season, and we’ve been through it once, and so going through it again, it won’t be as difficult this time,” she said. “It brought all the coaches together and I think sportsmanship is different. I just think everyone came together as a whole league instead of just one community, one town, one school.”  

    Krystal Trammell breaks down a huddle with her players before a game. Trammell said her players played with something to prove this season in the wake of the 2024 levy failure.
 
 
    Mavericks Maddy Bond prepares for an incoming ball during a set. Bond made the All-League first team in the Big Nine conference.
 
 
    The Mavericks’ Makenna Stuart serving the ball in their game against Sunnyside last season. Stuart was an honorable mention in the Big Nine All-League team announcements last Fall.
 
 
    The Mavs’ Kardyn Martinez spikes the ball in their game against Sunnyside last season. Martinez has been All-League first team the last two seasons, and Trammell hopes to see that continue heading into her senior season this Fall.
 
 



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