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Fort Myers beach volleyball beats Estero for Class 2A

History doesn’t repeat itself often, but for the Fort Myers beach volleyball team, it resulted in the hoisting of a trophy once again against a familiar opponent. And for Estero, the agony of being one set win away once more stung even more than it did the first meeting. The Green Wave closed out the […]

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Fort Myers beach volleyball beats Estero for Class 2A

History doesn’t repeat itself often, but for the Fort Myers beach volleyball team, it resulted in the hoisting of a trophy once again against a familiar opponent.

And for Estero, the agony of being one set win away once more stung even more than it did the first meeting.

The Green Wave closed out the Wildcats in the Class 2A-Region 4 championship game, beating them for the second time this season, and just 13 days apart, in an identical 3-2 decisions.

The Fort Myers High School beach volleyball team celebrates after taking home the district championship on May 6, 2025 as they defeated Estero High School during match play.

“The fact that we are so tiny, our team is chugging along like a train,” Fort Myers coach Kelly Corr said. “They pull together, they do their part, they cheer when they have to, they play their hearts out, we try to touch every ball, we’re working in practice hard so that when we come to the game, they’re just seeing our skills.

“We still have some work to do each and every day just to get ready for state, but I’m proud of the fact that we’re hanging in there. We’re pushing through, and we’re fighting.”

Corr didn’t make any lineup changes relative to the last match against Estero, rolling with her best three pairs on the No. 1, No. 3, and No. 5 courts. After a dramatic three-set win in the district title game two weeks ago, Isabella Higby and Erin McDowell exploited the serve receive of Avery McCarthy and Jordyn Selander on the No. 5 court, cruising to a 21-13, 21-11 win.

The Fort Myers High School beach volleyball team took home the district championship on May 6, 2025 as they defeated Estero High School during match play.

It was a welcoming sign for Corr, who saw Higby and McDowell squander a 20-14 lead in the second set in the first meeting, losing 22-20 after McCarthy and Selander went on an 8-0 run.

“It was relieving,” Corr said. “It stresses me a little because sometimes they can get a little back and forth with it and give a little too much and get in their heads a little bit, but they pulled it together. They proved they deserve to be there. You could tell they wanted it more than anyone out here. The way they were looking and playing and communicating, their one mistake, they just let it fuel them to get the next point.”

Kasey Corr and Amber Englehart moved to 17-0 on the season with an easy 21-9, 21-5 win over Lilly Engle and Capri Phillipine, while Estero got a 21-17, 21-5 win on the No. 4 court from Katie Kuieck and Julia Martus. The No. 2 court saw the Wildcat tandem of Casey Kennedy and Kassia Perkins beat Briley Dodge and Addi Sprecher 21-14, 21-11.The Fort Myers High School beach volleyball team took home the district championship on May 6, 2025 as they defeated Estero High School during match play.The drama then shifted to the No. 1 court, with a battle between Fort Myers’ Gabby Dwyer and Ashlee Tenkley and Brooke Smith and Delayna Kerry of Estero. Dwyer and Tenkley had their way through the duration of the district title match, but received a stiffer fight on Tuesday, especially early.Smith and Kerry capitalized at the service line on misplays from the Fort Myers seniors, and nearly handed them their first set loss of the season. Level at 19-all, Dwyer and Tenkley ended things on a tip to the near side that went past Kerry’s outstretched arms.”Of course you’re pulling for them at that point,” Estero coach John Ban said. “I have so much faith in that team. They’re such great beach volleyball players, I thought we had every shot in the world to take them down in the first set. That would’ve changed the whole momentum of the match.”The Fort Myers High School beach volleyball team took home the district championship on May 6, 2025 as they defeated Estero High School during match play.Smith and Kerry would fall behind early in the second, trailing 7-1. Dwyer and Tenkley would hold that mid-single digit lead the rest of the way, pulling away to win 21-12 with the regional trophy shortly in hand thereafter.For Ban and the Wildcats, Martus and Kuieck are the lone seniors set to graduate from the program, giving them the foundation to be arguably the area’s top squad in 2026.”The team was amazing this year,” Ban said. “We went 15-2 and lost to the same team twice. That’s the only team we lost to. The girls are a bunch of very good volleyball players and can play on the beach as well. Moving forward into the future, we’re just locked and loaded for next year.”But the loss was definitely bittersweet. I’m happy for the Fort Myers kids that I coached in middle school at Saint Francis and the kids I’ve been able to coach in club over the years.”The Fort Myers High School beach volleyball team took home the district championship on May 6, 2025 as they defeated Estero High School during match play.The Green Wave will now head to Tallahassee to take on Gulf Breeze, the No. 2 seed in Region 1, which beat Chiles 3-2 with wins on the No. 2, No. 3, and No. 5 pairs.Having Final Four experience on the roster this year will only help, as Kelly Corr coached Bishop Verot to Tallahassee a season ago. Kasey Corr and Higby were on the team that advanced last year.”We led with that at the beginning of the season,” Kelly Corr said. “These goals are attainable, they’re reachable, they are tough, but you can do it if you put your mind to it. That was literally one of our goals, was to get (to Tallahassee) for our seniors, for the experience of our underclassmen.”To do that, and to be able to say you did it, very few teams get to do that. That’s always been one of the goals and one of the things we’ve talked about… They all know that experience, what it’s like, and they’ll be able to talk it up and hopefully that’ll fuel them to want to play even harder.”Follow Sports Reporter Alex Martin on X: @NP_AlexMartin. For the best sports coverage in Southwest Florida, follow @newspresssports and @ndnprepzone on Instagram.

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Kansas State University

CARLSBAD, Calif. – Kansas State senior Carla Bernat and sophomore Alenka Navarro ended their season on a high note on Monday as each went under par and finished in a tie for 14th during the final round of stroke play at the 2025 NCAA Championship on Monday at the par-72, 6,330-yard Omni La Costa Resort […]

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CARLSBAD, Calif. – Kansas State senior Carla Bernat and sophomore Alenka Navarro ended their season on a high note on Monday as each went under par and finished in a tie for 14th during the final round of stroke play at the 2025 NCAA Championship on Monday at the par-72, 6,330-yard Omni La Costa Resort & Spa.
 
Bernat and Navarro tied for 14th place at 2-under par 286. Bernat turned in a final-round score of 5-under par 67, while Navarro finished her final round of the season at 4-under par 68.
 
Beginning on the back 9, Bernat began her final collegiate round with birdies on each of her first three holes. After a bogey on the par-4 15th, Bernat finished her first nine holes with a birdie on No. 18.
 
Bernat proceeded to finish the final nine holes of her collegiate career bogey free and 2-under par, closing out one the most illustrious seasons and careers in program history.
 
“Her play was incredible,” head coach Stew Burke said. “The golf course is so difficult, especially in the afternoon when the greens are firm and the wind is whipping. She’s going to do this for a living and for a very long time in the future. Rounds like today to finish off her career at the standard that she set all year is just Carla being Carla.”
 
Bernat finished her career ranking first in school history in both career (70.44) and single-season (70.08) scoring. She also finished in program history second in career wins (5), top-five (14) and top-10 (16) finishes.
 
“We had a vision,” Burke said. “Gene Taylor believed in our vision, then Rinko Mitsunaga believed in my vision for the program. Carla was the first piece of the puzzle. She’s been incredible as a leader on the golf course, what she does in the weight room and just how she carries herself and how she represents us. I am really, really proud of her.”
 
Navarro also started off her round with a bang as she holed out for eagle from 97 yards on the par-5 10th, while the sophomore also birdied No. 14. Following bogeys to finish out her first nine holes on Nos. 15 and 18, she began the front 9 with birdies on Nos. 1, 2 and 5 as part of her bogey-free front 9.
 
A native of Mexico City, Navarro finished her second collegiate season ranked sixth in school history with a 73.58 scoring average. She enters her junior campaign ranked second in school history with a 73.68 career scoring average.
 
“It was a really incredible round,” Burke said. “She started out of the gate hot. She made a couple of mistakes and was a little wobbly in the middle, then she just kept the pedal down. I am really proud of her. She hit some shots that were truly world class today.”
 
Arkansas’ Maria Jose Marin was crowned the 2025 NCAA Individual Champion after firing a 12-under par 276. She led Arkansas to the No. 6 seed in match play, which begins on Tuesday. Stanford is the top seed after finishing stroke play at 27-under par 1,125. The other six teams that moved on to match play are Oregon, Northwestern, Florida State, USC, Texas and Virginia.

 



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Aroca Gonzalez ’26 collects third all-region men’s golf team honor

Story Links 2025 NCAA PING All-Region Men’s Golf Teams Hamilton College’s Ramon Aroca Gonzalez ’26 (Madrid, Spain/Hastings School) was selected for the 2025 NCAA Division III PING Men’s All-Region Team by the Golf Coaches Association of America on Sunday, May 18. Aroca Gonzalez […]

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Hamilton College’s Ramon Aroca Gonzalez ’26 (Madrid, Spain/Hastings School) was selected for the 2025 NCAA Division III PING Men’s All-Region Team by the Golf Coaches Association of America on Sunday, May 18.

Aroca Gonzalez is one of 15 all-region golfers in Region 1, which otherwise featured honorees from colleges and universities in New England. The all-region selection was the third in as many seasons for Aroca Gonzalez.

Aroca Gonzalez led Hamilton with an 18-hole stroke average of 72.40 for 20 rounds. He earned four individual medalist honors and finished in the top 10 seven times out of 10 tournaments. Aroca Gonzalez tied for second place at the New England Small College Athletic Conference championship at Williams College’s Taconic Golf Club in late April with rounds of 71-71-80. The 80 in the final round was his worst all season, and he shot in the 60s three times.

Gonzalez was selected to compete in the NCAA Division III championship as an individual for the first time. The tournament begins on Tuesday, May 20 and runs through Friday, May 23. The first two rounds will be played simultaneously at Midvale Country Club in Penfield, N.Y., and at Cobblestone Creek Country Club in Victor, N.Y.

 



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Power Four schools could face expulsion from conferences if they don’t sign binding contract, per report

Leaders from the Power Four conferences are circulating a binding document that would radically transform rules enforcement in college football, according to Yahoo Sports.  The contract would create the College Sports Commission, a new entity geared toward rules enforcement. Power Four schools would be required to sign the contract or risk being expelled from their […]

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Leaders from the Power Four conferences are circulating a binding document that would radically transform rules enforcement in college football, according to Yahoo Sports. 

The contract would create the College Sports Commission, a new entity geared toward rules enforcement. Power Four schools would be required to sign the contract or risk being expelled from their leagues and having member schools refuse to play games against them. Additionally, it would limit the ability for schools to sue over enforcement decisions, radically transforming the outlook of the new era of college athletics. 

If the document is signed, it would create legitimate enforcement power that would put an end to the largely unregulated market that exists in the present environment. Notably, it would make schools subject to decisions by an NIL clearinghouse, which would judge whether outside NIL contracts represent true “market value.” It would also ensure that all power conference schools fully comply with the upcoming House v. NCAA lawsuit settlement, which is expected to be finalized in the coming days and will allow direct pay-for-play for the first time in history. 

CEO to oversee college sports rules enforcement after House v. NCAA settlement is finalized, per report

Carter Bahns

CEO to oversee college sports rules enforcement after House v. NCAA settlement is finalized, per report

The potential agreement comes in the wake of a wave of legal complications at the state level. Multiple states have considered legislation that would prevent the settlement from being legally enforceable in their states. Notably, Tennessee passed a law last week that would prevent rules that violate state laws — which such an agreement would seem to do. However, schools voluntarily entering into such a deal would be another legal complication. 

The new College Sports Commission structure would seem to echo one that was proposed by NCAA president Charlie Baker in Dec. 2023, which would create a new subdivision to create rules for the small group of schools that compensates players. 

However, the CSC would seem to be an attempt to create it outside of the NCAA’s authority — and potentially begin the process of removing administration of the sport from the NCAA. ESPN reported that the NCAA could step away from enforcement and a CEO is expected to be hired to lead it shortly after the House case is settled. 

Taming the Wild West

Schools have taken advantage of the fully unregulated NIL market that emerged in 2021. In the beginning, the NCAA attempted to set rules and guidelines to limit the flow of unregulated money to athletes, especially by boosters. However, after a number of legal challenges, the NCAA has lost nearly every lever of power available to it. 

Ultimately, that’s the primary catalyst for a third party to be created. Making it a voluntary organization in the wake of the settlement would help make the case to the courts that it’s a legitimate group with authority. Additionally, it would allow the NCAA to step away from an extraordinary amount of legal liability if enforcement power is taken off its plate. 

Nearly every stakeholder involved wants there to be clear rules and enforceable regulations. The sport has no chance of reaching a conclusion until they come. However, the right of richer institutions to leverage advantages will be a final piece that has to be resolved. 

Inside Donald Trump’s push to fix college sports: How it began and what we know going forward

John Talty

Inside Donald Trump's push to fix college sports: How it began and what we know going forward

Is it enforceable?

The College Sports Commission would be an attempt to create a legally allowable enforcement mechanism so that the sport can have laws. But in the case where Tennessee has a law preventing NIL rules that it views as illegal, can the University of Tennessee voluntarily take part in this deal? Can the courts clear them? Can anyone? 

Ultimately, that’s where we are at this point. Any final solution will require clear court decisions and successful defenses. When college commissioners and administrators continue to fly to Washington, D.C., to lobby for federal legislation, this is why. 

Only Congress can supersede every other stakeholder, including state governments and the courts. 





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Portal Update – Basketball and Gymnastics Take Hits

When taking a look at DU’s major sports teams, the transfer portal has had a mixed impact. Basketball is undergoing the biggest transformation, and gymnastics has taken a big hit, losing its biggest star. Hockey and soccer remain stable, and it is a wait-and-see for lacrosse. Just take a look at DU’s core sports of […]

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When taking a look at DU’s major sports teams, the transfer portal has had a mixed impact. Basketball is undergoing the biggest transformation, and gymnastics has taken a big hit, losing its biggest star. Hockey and soccer remain stable, and it is a wait-and-see for lacrosse.

Just take a look at DU’s core sports of gymnastics, hockey, men’s soccer, and lacrosse, and you will see the current impact of the transfer portal on the University of Denver.

Men’s Basketball – March 24th – April 22nd (Closed)

During the basketball portal window, 2,544 student-athletes entered the portal.  DU center Isaiah Carr landed at Drake, point guard DeAndre Craig at Purdue Fort Wayne, center Abdulai Fanta Kabba at Western Carolina, guard Jon Mani at the University of Colorado, guard Nicholas Shogbonyo at Texas A&M- Corpus Christi, and guard Ben Bowen at (D2) Northern State.

Denver is left with returning guards Josh Lee, Devin Carney, and Loch Cunningham. Forwards Logan Kinsey, Corleone Dandridge, Carson Johnson, and Shaun Wysocki are coming to Denver from the University of Minnesota-Moorhead (DII,) following their new coaches. Gabe Oldham is coming to DU from Pima Community College (DII). Another DII product, guard Zane Wilson, is coming to DU from Missouri Western, and Julius Rollins (DI) from Western Illinois and Jerimiah Burke (DI) from North Dakota State. 

Early indications are that three of four incoming recruits who signed letters of intent (LOI) last year are heading in different directions due to the coaching change. Only Trajan Trajan Thompson has agreed to stay with the current Denver staff.  There are still open spots to be filled on next season’s roster.

Gymnastics Portal – Opened March 31-May 14th (Closed)

DU Gymnastics associate head coach Linas Gaveika, a key Melissa Kutcher-Rinehart lieutenant, announced his departure from the program along with assistant coach Stephen Hood. According to College Gym News, DU’s 19-year-old standout sophomore Madison Ulrich is shown entering the transfer portal, followed by visits to LSU, Oklahoma, and Utah. This marks the loss of DU’s most high-profile gymnast. Could the events be connected to the staff changes and/or NIL-related? Time will tell. Ulrich earned three individual All-American designations at the 2025 NCAA Championships.

Hockey Portal March 30th – May 13th (Closed)

Despite losing early departures Aidan Thompson and Jared Wright to the pros, Denver appears to be standing pat with their incoming  CHL-heavy freshman class – this is the first year in many decades that Canadian Major Junior players are eligible to play in the NCAA and David Carle is taking full advantage – after just one transfer portal departure. Goaltender Freddie Halyk will play for Brown next season. Forward Alex Weiermair, technically listed in the portal, left Denver in the middle of the 2024-25 season to sign with the WHL’s Portland Winterhawks and, at the moment, has not decided on a return to the NCAA.

NCHC peers Colorado College and Minnesota-Duluth have lost seven and nine players, respectively. Miami also lost seven players. Arizona State has six portal refugees. North Dakota has five exits.

Men’s Soccer November 25-December 24th (Closed)

Jamie Franks appears to be following the playbook employed by David Carle. According to Top Drawer Soccer, Denver appears to have retained all their eligible players, and they are not filling in gaps with portal transfers. That is not the case with many other programs stock piling portal transfers such as Eastern Illinois (11), Marshall (8), Coastal Carolina (6), Florida (6),  Michigan State (4), Indiana (4), Akron (4), St Louis (3) and South and UCLA (4) to name just a few.

Lacrosse Portal May 11th – June 9th (Open)

Denver has nine graduating seniors to include key contributors like Noah Manning, Casey Wilson, Jimmy Freehill, Mic Kelly, Jack Tortolani, and Malcolm Kleban. Look for Matt Brown and his coaching staff to tap the portal to fill the holes. If DU loses any key players, there is little time to replace players prior to the beginning of fall classes. 



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Former Alabama QB Trusts Nick Saban to ‘Save College Football’ on New NIL Commission

Legendary retired Alabama Crimson head coach Nick Saban’s involvement in President Donald Trump’s proposed NIL commission remains a subject of speculation. While Saban hasn’t outright said he’ll be on such a commission should it be created via an executive order, it appears he’s been working behind the scenes to address the state of college football, […]

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Legendary retired Alabama Crimson head coach Nick Saban’s involvement in President Donald Trump’s proposed NIL commission remains a subject of speculation.

While Saban hasn’t outright said he’ll be on such a commission should it be created via an executive order, it appears he’s been working behind the scenes to address the state of college football, the transfer portal, and NIL.

Many head coaches, analysts, and former players have lamented the new landscape that is dominated by multi-million NIL deals with no guardrails on expenditures nor the transfer portal.

Many have publicly praised one of the most successful college football coaches in history for his ability to transform college sports.

Former Alabama QB A.J. McCarron Thinks Nick Saban Can Save College Football

Former Crimson Tide quarterback A.J. McCarron, who has full faith in his college head coach, is among those who endorse Saban.

In a recent episode of “The Next Round,” McCarron fully endorsed Saban as the ideal co-chair to spearhead this new NIL commission.

He also gave a brutally candid assessment of his perspective on how college football stands today.

“I’m not a fan of college football right now,” McCarron said. “I think it’s a [expletive] show with everything, and hopefully, with Saban getting co-chairman on that board helps bring some structure to it because they need it. It hurts to think about it because I missed out on a lot of money from that sense.”

McCarron went on to joke that the backpay from the House settlement should extend back to his college years, rather than ending in 2016.

It’s frankly understandable for former players to have a bitter outlook on the state of things when they weren’t privy to these million-dollar NIL deals—particularly one like McCarron, who won three consecutive national championships quarterbacking Alabama.

McCarron is not alone in expressing the urgent need for a regulated system. Many see the current landscape as untenable.

It’s not clear how this proposed commission look like, or how it will fix NIL, especially in concert with revenue sharing.

However, it appears that Saban is taking quiet steps toward a solution, as he has met with Texas Tech billionaire booster Cody Campbell to discuss what the commission might look like and what they can do.

Campbell is a former player who started the Red Raiders NIL collective and has been said to have a key role in the star-studded transfer class.

Whatever the future for the commission might look like, there probably isn’t a better-positioned legend in the sport poised to take on the challenge like Saban.





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COLLEGE SIGNING

PORT ANGELES — Port Angeles’ Ava-Anne Sheahan could have easily picked one of two sports to continue her athletic career in college. She’s an outstanding softball player for the Roughriders who has been a huge part of teams that have gone to the state tournament. This year, she’s leading the Riders with seven doubles. But […]

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COLLEGE SIGNING

PORT ANGELES — Port Angeles’ Ava-Anne Sheahan could have easily picked one of two sports to continue her athletic career in college.

She’s an outstanding softball player for the Roughriders who has been a huge part of teams that have gone to the state tournament. This year, she’s leading the Riders with seven doubles.

But soccer is her true love. A longtime defensive back for the Riders, she chose soccer as the sport to continue, signing a commitment to play for Corban University in Salem, Ore.

“I really have a love and passion for soccer. Soccer has always been my sport, it’s always been the path for me,” Sheahan said.

Coaches and family members spoke at her signing ceremony, focusing especially on her strong character as much as her athletic achievements.

“This is an exciting day but a sad day as well because of what we’re losing,” said soccer coach Dan Horton. “We’re losing a good person, which makes it even harder. Corban is getting a great player, but more importantly, a great person.”

“Everything you do is genuine. Your moral compass is spot-on,” said her first softball coach, Randy Steinman.

Her first soccer coach, Scott Moseley, said he knew when she was a freshman that she would be a pretty good player. He said he just didn’t realize how good she would be.

“In her first game, I subbed her in during a game against Sequim. And I never took her out ever again,” Moseley said. “It was fun watching her, scoring goals and wondering, ‘Where did that come from?’ ”

Horton said that while Sheahan played center-back on defense, she could score when needed to. In a game this year, she moved up to midfield for the Riders and erupted for a hat trick.

Her mother Megan Sheahan said Ava-Anne is her family’s champion, not only in athletics, but in academics. She said her daughter had overcome a lot in her career, including a serious knee injury and a pulled muscle in her senior year.

“I lost track of many soccer games my mom came to. I’m so grateful she always pushed me because she was always right,” Sheahan said.

Sheahan said she picked Corban because she liked the community at the private, Christian school.

“It’s a great place to build my faith and continue with my academic and athletic career,” she said.

There’s actually a bit of a pipeline between Port Angeles High School and Corban with former Riders stars Gracie Long and Jack Gladfelter moving on to a lot of athletic success at the Salem school. Sheahan said she was aware of that and saw Gladfelter on campus, but it wasn’t a major factor her in picking Corban.

Sheahan begins her final hurrah this weekend, playing in the state softball tournament for the third-ranked Roughriders, who finished fourth at state last year. She said the team has a lot of confidence going into this year’s tournament.

“We all have a lot of trust in each other,” she said.


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