Sports
ETHS Girls Earn Return Trip To State Water Polo Tourney
New Trier embraced their rare role as an underdog in girls water polo in Saturday’s sectional championship game against Evanston at Glenbrook South and even scored the first goal of the game.
But with the season on the line, the Wildkits showed their rivals that how you finish is more important than how you start.
Evanston edged New Trier 5-4, limiting the losers to just one goal in the second half, and advanced to the Elite Eight for the second year in a row. Four goals by senior Maya Vincent helped the Wildkits earn back-to-back trips to the Illinois High School Association state tournament for just the second time in school history, matching the accomplishment by the 2003 and 2004 squads.
Saturday’s triumph was the 12th in a row for the Wildkits. Their reward for that win streak? A matchup with defending state champion Stevenson in the state quarterfinals next Thursday at 4:30 p.m. at the Patriots’ pool.
Other first-round state tournament games will match Naperville North against Fremd, St. Ignatius against Lyons Township, and York against Lincoln-Way Central. The semifinals and finals will be played Saturday at Stevenson.
The Trevians refused to go quietly after losing to the Kits and tying them once prior to Saturday’s showdown. Fortunately for ETHS head coach Maggie Hatcher, her team was able to match that intensity and improved to 23-4-1 on the season.
Zaya Arellano’s goal early in the second half stood as the game-winner after New Trier did manage a score with approximately two minutes left in regulation. But the losers couldn’t get any closer against the stout Wildkit defense.
“It was closer than we would’ve liked it to be,” Hatcher admitted. “New Trier came out hard at us and you have to give them credit. It took us a little while to settle in — I’m not sure if we ever really settled in — but we got the job done.
“To play a team five times in a season and come out with a win is pretty tough to do. We didn’t play our best game, but we did what we had to do to win it. In the fourth quarter our defense did a really good job of adjusting to what New Trier was running on offense. They scored their only goal on a power play, so I thought we were pretty dominant with our defense. We just need more offense.
“We know we’re at our best if we take control right away, but it some ways it really doesn’t matter if we don’t, because these girls don’t quit. They take what they’ve learned and do whatever they can to make it happen. I’m so incredibly proud of this team for winning a sectional. Mostly, though, I’m relieved.”
The Wildkits lived up to their No. 1 sectional seed and kept their season alive in a year where they didn’t figure to take another trip to State. Especially after losing three of their first four games with a new cast of players trying to fill the big shoes of the graduated standouts who accounted for a state runner-up finish a year ago.
Since that slow start, however, Evanston’s only loss came by a 12-8 margin back on April 12th — against Stevenson.
“We had to have a new goalie step in for one that was No. 1 in the state, and this is a completely different team from last year,” Hatcher noted. “But they worked very, very hard in the club season and in the summer and winter after getting a taste of what we did last year. Most of them didn’t play in the close games last year, but getting a taste of what we did last year lit a fire in a lot of these girls.
“I didn’t know what to expect, but they were ready to step up. This team has really only been together for one winter and I can’t say enough about them. Defense has always been our foundation and those early losses were all by one or two goals. I thought it was just a product of them playing together for the first time.
“I wasn’t worried early on after those losses. We talked about how unrealistic it was to compare yourself to a team that only lost three games (2024). That was crazy and that’s not something we wanted to carry around with us. The beginning of the season is always about getting experience playing together, getting in game shape and figuring things out. And we could have won all of those games.”
That includes that mid-April meeting with Stevenson. Evanston actually led the game entering the fourth period before the Pats fought back with six goals to snatch victory from defeat.
The two teams met in last year’s state championship game and Stevenson has dominated postseason competition in girls polo, winning six of the last nine IHSA state crowns. But being on the same side of the state tourney bracket with the Pats doesn’t faze Hatcher’s squad.
“We all feel that we’re hungry for some payback,” said Hatcher. “We’ll prepare like we always do. They’re just another team and we’re capable of beating any team if we play together and fight.”
Sports
Former Grand Canyon star finds new home with Rainbow Warriors
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – It’s not uncommon for athletes to transfer schools in this era of collegiate sports.
However, for new University of Hawaii middle blocker Trevell Jordan, it wasn’t a move he was expecting to make.
Jordan — who has U.S. National team experience — had a stellar freshman season at Grand Canyon University, playing in all 21 of the Lopes’ matches as a freshman, amassing 111 kills and 67 blocks.
In April, the GCU team was blindsided when the school announced that it would no longer sponsor the sport.
“None of us saw it coming, like it was out of the blue,” Jordan said. “Went into this meeting thinking it was just gonna be how like next year was gonna go, and then that’s what they dropped the bomb, and like the meeting was like five minutes before they left.”
It was reclassified as a club sport with GCU putting out a release saying that the move was to stay competitive with other NCAA Division I programs.
Grand Canyon just joined the Mountain West Conference, a league that does not carry men’s volleyball.
With the abrupt shutdown, it left the entire Lopes roster looking for a new home, with many players catching the eyes of coaches around the country.
Jordan found his way to Manoa.
“He had offers to go to every top program in the country and ironically they were pushing him to make a fast decision,” UH head coach Charlie Wade said. “They pushed him towards us because I was the one saying, ‘hey, I’m in for the long haul, I want you here, take your time to figure it out.’”
Jordan is now getting accustomed to volleyball in the islands as he joins a squad with big aspirations in 2026.
UH ended last season one game shy of the National Championship.
“The difference in commitment here with the fans, the program, the school, as at GCU, we didn’t get as much love as we did like any other sport,” Jordan said. “It’s been really cool, the team and squad has been really inviting, so they’ve been working with me to get more like accommodated to here.”
Jordan and the ‘Bows open the 2026 season on Friday, the first of two home matches against the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
First serve is set for 7 p.m. Hawaii time.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Sports
‘Truly humbling’: inside the centre where UK medics are helping Ukrainian amputees | Ukraine
At a specialist treatment centre in Ukraine, as other amputees play volleyball nearby, Vladislav shows a video on his phone of how he lost his left leg. He found the footage – of a drone closing in rapidly on a buggy, Vladislav standing exposed at its rear – on a Russian military social media channel.
The 31-year-old, an arbitration lawyer before Russia launched its full-scale invasion in 2022, makes a double whistling noise to describe the drone’s ominous progress. “That’s me,” he says, pointing at the video, filmed from a fibre optic drone, chasing him down with terrifying ease as the vehicle slows for a corner. Then the screen goes blank.
Vladislav was driving between positions somewhere near Lyman, in the north-east of Ukraine, on 21 August when his life changed for ever. An explosion “bam on the left ear” threw him and the driver to the ground. Still conscious, he could see the injury to his left leg was obviously very serious. But this was not his immediate priority.
“To be honest, I checked my crotch, if everything’s in the right place,” he says, grinning. The check was affirmative and so in that moment, the stricken soldier says, he reasoned life was worth still living. “Only after that, I turned my tourniquet.” That choked off the blood supply to his left leg, giving himself a chance of survival.
The respite was short. Once rescued, Vladislav was soon losing consciousness. “I don’t know if it’s real or a common trope, but pictured in my memory I saw a white tunnel with a light at the end.” But it was not the end. “My comrade fell on me with his elbow on my wounded leg and I opened my eyes with every curse I knew.”
Dozens of seriously wounded Ukrainians such as Vladislav, who have had or need to have amputations, come to this specialist treatment centre every month. No one will say exactly how many are being treated here, but across Ukraine crude estimates suggest the total number of amputees runs well into the tens of thousands.
Providing help, support and advice to Ukrainian staff at the centre are a small number of British military personnel – doctors, physiotherapists and occupational therapists from the UK’s defence medical services, part of Project Renovator. The Guardian observed some of their work during a day visit, including sessions where British practitioners discussed their use of temporary prosthetics with Ukrainian counterparts.
“The numbers here are truly humbling,” says Mike, a British rehab consultant and an army lieutenant colonel, who is part of the UK team helping out. Mike worked in Afghanistan, where the British military was present until 2014, and says professionals like himself can contribute “an understanding of complex amputee rehabilitation” and “can help move their patients on to new legs quicker”.
He is keen to emphasise that the British presence works both ways, in that there are opportunities for him and his colleagues to learn. Thanks to a combination of innovative surgery, electrical stimulation and rehab, the Ukrainians “are managing to fix nerve injuries faster than I’ve previously seen”, he says.
Britain has only minimally acknowledged a wider military presence in Ukraine, beyond its staffing at the embassy in Kyiv. Security measures around the medical crew remain tight, with only Mike able to be identified.
“I’m proud that the UK is stepping up to ensure wounded Ukrainian soldiers get the best possible treatment,” said John Healey, the defence secretary, praising their work. He said their goal was to work alongside Ukrainian teams “to deliver care and rehabilitation”, an effort that will have to continue long after the war finally ends.
There are a wide range of classes, and family and friends are able to visit unless the staff believe it would be unhelpful to an individual’s recovery. Part of the approach is to have “psychologically aware clinicians”, according to Mike, who can identify when patients run into mental problems. But a key part, as the volleyball shows, is being part of a group so the wounded can motivate each other.
Vladislav’s case is one of the simpler. He hopes to have a final prosthetic leg ready soon and to be discharged earlythis year. He says his mental state is strong, though at some point after two or four weeks, when he was on his own, he admits, “I cried a lot”. It was “like a divorce” until he eventually thought: “Let it be.”
What helped, the former lawyer says, was having his family nearby, including baby son Adam. However, he says: “I did not tell my wife about my injury for around a month and a half because she was pregnant.” Two weeks after Adam’s birth he told her what had happened, though by then she had “suspected something”, he admits.
Oleksandr, 48, is a former fitness teacher and swimming instructor who had both his legs amputated below the knee after an artillery shell landed close to him on 18 October 2024. After he arrived at the treatment centre, a succession of further surgeries proved necessary. One was to stabilise his wound, which had become infected; later, a metal brace was attached to the bone so the prosthetics would fit.
It has been a long, gruelling treatment, including a month in intensive care, and at one point Oleksandr wells up in tears at the thought of it. “In the beginning it was hard for me just to sit in the wheelchair. I was sweating immediately,” he says. But gradually, going to the gym with rehabilitation experts helped, and at some point as his exercising gradually improved, “I knew then I would get through,” he says.
There is a brightness and purpose in his eyes now but the future is uncertain. He wants to leave this year, when his legs are ready. “I hope I will be able to get back to my job as a fitness trainer,” he says. “But I just don’t know. I just need to understand what my abilities will be on the prostheses, how long I can walk. When I will learn walking, I will understand what my abilities are.”
Sports
Having A Ball: Chautauqua Lake Central School Hosts Alumni Volleyball Tournament | News, Sports, Jobs
Pictured is one of the groups of participants in the recent Chautauqua Lake Central School Alumni Volleyball Tournament.
Submitted photo
MAYVILLE — Recently, Chautauqua Lake Central School hosted its first ever Alumni Volleyball Tournament, welcoming volleyball alumni back to the court for a day of friendly competition, shared memories, and community connection.
Varsity Volleyball coach Joanne Meadows came up with the idea a few months ago with the help of her brothers, David Sturm, who coaches Junior Varsity, and Eric Sturm who is the assistant coach for both teams. The goal was to create an opportunity for both former and current players to reconnect, play for fun, and celebrate the tradition of volleyball at Chautauqua Lake Central School.
Meadows said the tournament did just that, adding that it not only celebrated the tradition of the program but also strengthened the sense of community among players across generations.
“It was a great day for past and present Mayville and Chautauqua Lake Volleyball players and shows why this program has been so special for so many years,” Meadows said. “The camaraderie in the gym was amazing to see.”
To get the tournament going and gather interest, Eric Sturm created a Facebook page for the event and invited alumni from across the years through it. Some alumni responded with full teams already, while others reached out individually and were placed on rosters, with five teams of about nine players formed overall.
Participants ranged from alumni dating back to the Class of 1993 to current students. Participants were both men and women, and Chautauqua Lake officials said it served to create a unique mix of experience, camaraderie and fun.
“We are so blessed to have the Meadows family coaching at Chautauqua Lake,” Chautauqua Lake Superintendent Josh Liddell said. “Their leadership, and the incredible support of all the alumni who returned to play and reconnect, helped make an event that truly celebrated the impressive volleyball tradition and community they’ve built over the past three decades.”
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Emerald Acres Volleyball Tournament | MyRadioLink.com
Sports
Former Illini basketball sharpshooter Luke Goode engaged to Illinois volleyball star Kayla Burbage
Love is in the air for two of Champaign’s top athletes in recent years. Former Illini men’s basketball wing Luke Goode popped the question to Illinois volleyball middle blocker Kayla Burbage, the couple shared via Instagram on Wednesday.
“Proverbs 18:22: ‘He who finds a wife finds a good thing, and obtains favor from the Lord,’” Goode wrote. “Going into the New Years as future Mr. and Mrs. Goode!”
Goode spent the first three years of his college career in Champaign, graduating from the Gies School of Business in 2024 with a bachelor’s degree in finance. After his sophomore season was cut short due to a foot injury, Goode bounced back as a junior, playing in all 38 games for the 2024 Elite Eight team. That season, the 6-foot-7 sharpshooter averaged 5.7 points and shot 38.9% from three on just over four attempts per game.
Last season, Goode spent his final year of eligibility playing for his home state Indiana Hoosiers before turning pro. He is currently suiting up for the South Bay Lakers in the NBA G League. In 11 games so far as a rookie, Goode is putting up 7.6 points and 3.0 rebounds in just above 20 minutes per game.
Burbage just finished up her final season of college volleyball. After spending her freshman campaign at Missouri, Burbage decided to make the move to Champaign. As a sophomore and junior, Burbage played in every match on Illinois’ schedule: 60 total. A shoulder injury sidelined the 6-foot-4 North Carolina native for her senior season, but she returned for a graduate year in 2025. In her final season at Huff Hall, Burbage ranked second in total blocks (82.0) for the Illini and had the fifth-most kills on the team (98).
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