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Foundation Academy names new track-and-field head coach

Foundation Academy has announced Devin Bennett as its new track-and-field head coach. Bennett, a native of New York, set multiple school records in his running days. He placed fifth in the 2010 New York Indoor State Track-and-Field Championships.  Bennett went on to run cross country at the Division I level for Siena College and then […]

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Foundation Academy has announced Devin Bennett as its new track-and-field head coach. Bennett, a native of New York, set multiple school records in his running days. He placed fifth in the 2010 New York Indoor State Track-and-Field Championships. 

Bennett went on to run cross country at the Division I level for Siena College and then at the D-II level at New Hampshire University. 

Most recently, Bennett served as both the boys and girls track-and-field and cross country coach at Windermere Prep, where he coached various state championship qualifiers and led the boys track-and-field team to its first district championships this season. 

 



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Luckless Drogheda ladies come up just shy again in water polo’s Irish Senior Cup Finals

Drogheda’s ladies team came up just short yet again in their pursuit of Irish Senior Cup glory. Picture credit: Brian Lawless / SPORTSFILE Drogheda Independent Today at 11:30 While many observers in the world of water polo thought it would be fifth time lucky for the Drogheda senior ladies team in 2025, it turned out […]

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Drogheda’s ladies team came up just short yet again in their pursuit of Irish Senior Cup glory. Picture credit: Brian Lawless / SPORTSFILE

Drogheda Independent

While many observers in the world of water polo thought it would be fifth time lucky for the Drogheda senior ladies team in 2025, it turned out to be an earlier exit from the Irish Senior Cup this spring.

Having under-performed by their own standards early on in the season due to missing a number of key players, the Drogheda outfit began to find their form in recent months as they picked up a number of notable wins in the run-up to the ‘Diamond Event’, the Irish Senior Cup Finals.

The tournament was held in Limerick University, with a total of 14 teams involved between men’s and ladies.

It all started off well enough for Drogheda as, after being paired off against one of their many old rivals North Dublin, the Boynesiders prevailed 12-6 thanks to a well-executed team plan.

Next was a match versus Tribes of Galway who entered the competition as one of the most in-form teams in the country, on the back of a very impressive run of eight wins and just one loss.

It was in this encounter that Drogheda unfortunately were outplayed and so they secured ‘only’ the runners-up position in Group B and therefore had to face Group A winners St Vincents in the semi-finals.

This was a highly anticipated match in light of the fact that Drogheda knocked them out at the same stage in 2024 following a penalty shootout, but this time the Boynesiders were beaten by a better team who went on to win the competition and record their 12th triumph in the last 13 Irish Senior Cup finals.

Still, Drogheda can look forward with optimism to the 2025/26 season which will see the return of some pivotal stalwarts. Perhaps that will boost their chances of finally going all the way in the Irish Senior Cup, having contested four of the last five finals.

The Drogheda senior ladies squad are always looking for new players, as are the junior ranks of the Drogheda underage club who train in Aura in Drogheda on a Monday night.



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Nevada Preps: Boys volleyball All-Southern Nevada 2025 team revealed

First team Regi Beshiri, Sierra Vista — The senior and first-team Class 5A all-state selection led the state with 495 kills and added 251 digs. Dexter Brimhall, Coronado — The senior and first-team 5A all-state selection recorded 324 kills, 242 digs and 38 aces for the 5A state champion. Dane Galvin, Coronado — The senior […]

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First team

Regi Beshiri, Sierra Vista — The senior and first-team Class 5A all-state selection led the state with 495 kills and added 251 digs.

Dexter Brimhall, Coronado — The senior and first-team 5A all-state selection recorded 324 kills, 242 digs and 38 aces for the 5A state champion.

Dane Galvin, Coronado — The senior recorded 306 kills and 151 digs for the 5A state champion

Ty Hardy, Basic — The junior, the 4A Sky League and state player of the year, had 312 kills and 272 digs for the 4A state champion.

Dylan Ho, Palo Verde — The senior and first-team 5A all-state selection had 135 kills for the 5A state runner-up.

Porter Hughes, Basic — The junior first-team 4A all-state selection had 327 kills, 198 digs and 40 aces to lead the Wolves to their second straight 4A state title.

Kingston Jerome, Shadow Ridge — The senior, the 5A state and Desert League player of the year, recorded a .399 hitting percentage with 161 kills, 102 blocks and 55 aces.

Lincoln Larson, Centennial — The junior led the state with 99 aces and added 370 kills, 175 digs and 47 blocks.

Deacon Menlove, Coronado — The senior and first-team 5A all-state selection was fourth in the state with 388 digs for the 5A state champion.

Eli Nelson, Palo Verde — The senior and first-team 5A all-state selection recorded 99 kills for the 5A state runner-up.

Owen Romzek, Shadow Ridge — The senior and first-team 5A all-state selection was fifth in the state with 95 blocks for the Desert League champion.

Braxton Rowley, Coronado — The senior and 5A Mountain League player of the year was second in the state with 836 assists and added 212 digs, 63 blocks and 40 aces for the 5A state champion.

Coach of the year

Jazlynn Mau, Coronado — The first-year coach led the Cougars to a 38-2 record and the 5A state title.

Second team

Luke Dennett, Basic — The senior and first-team 4A all-state selection had 564 assists and 103 digs for the 4A state champion.

Ridge Gardner, Centennial — The senior and second-team 5A all-state selection had 164 kills and a .322 hitting percentage.

David Haldeman, Arbor View — The senior and second-team 5A all-state selection had 125 digs and 578 assists.

Reece Leavitt, Virgin Valley — The senior led the 3A state champion with 63 blocks and added 308 digs, 235 kills and 47 aces.

Zion Moore, Shadow Ridge — The junior and second-team 5A all-state selection recorded 217 kills and 157 digs.

Zechariah Nissley, Green Valley — The senior and second-team 5A all-state selection had 233 digs, 163 kills and 300 assists.

Gage Poulsen, Sky Pointe — The senior and first-team 4A all-state selection had 519 assists, 132 digs, 56 aces and a .375 hitting percentage.

Yeheshua Ruiz, Foothill — The junior and second-team 5A all-state selection was third in the state with a .418 hitting percentage and added 180 kills and 70 blocks.

Destry Tobler, Virgin Valley — The senior led the 3A state champion with 345 kills and 58 aces and added 191 digs.

Dyson Twitchell, Sky Pointe — The senior and first-team 4A all-state selection had 266 kills and 132 digs.

Kenyon Wickliffe, Arbor View — The junior and second-team 5A all-state selection had 135 kills.

David Zwahlen, Boulder City — The junior and 3A Mountain League player of the year recorded 183 kills, 54 aces and 302 digs.

Honorable mention

Carter Aldridge, Desert Oasis

Jaeden Alexander, Del Sol

Jacob Bay, Legacy

Jack Cox, Durango

David Davila-Matamoros, Green Valley

Dylan Domine, Liberty

Logan Hanshew, Legacy

Matthew Hill, Valley

Kaleb Law, Mojave

Tautai Malauulu, Del Sol

Ellis McGrath, Desert Oasis

Isaiah Moore, Legacy

Jordan Pierce, Chaparral

Levi Randall, Boulder City

Clayton Sellers, Valley

Izaeya Tili, Chaparral

Austen Tippetts, Sky Pointe

Aiden Tran, Bishop Gorman

AJ Tuitele, Mojave

Daniel Vargas, Cimarron-Memorial

Luke Wilkinson, Coronado

Contact Alex Wright at awright@reviewjournal.com. Follow @AlexWright1028 on X.



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Heritage girls win third straight track and field title, Glass’ Smith gets No. 4

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Manheim Central gearing up for PIAA Class 2A volleyball semifinal showdown against familiar foe York Suburban | Boys’ volleyball

Manheim Central’s boys volleyball team is simply sizzling.  Caution: Flammable.  There has been no slowing down the Barons over their previous five matches, which have all ended with dominating 3-0 victories.  Three of those came in the District 3 Class 2A tournament, when Central slayed Northern Lebanon, Linville Hill Christian and York Suburban by a […]

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Manheim Central’s boys volleyball team is simply sizzling. 

Caution: Flammable. 

There has been no slowing down the Barons over their previous five matches, which have all ended with dominating 3-0 victories. 

Three of those came in the District 3 Class 2A tournament, when Central slayed Northern Lebanon, Linville Hill Christian and York Suburban by a combined 9-0 to nab their second district title, and first since 2019.

That district crown came on the heels of Central winning its third straight Lancaster-Lebanon League Section 2 championship, before the Barons reached the league finale for the third year in a row. But after winning two straight L-L crowns, they were tripped up by Cedar Crest in the title match this time around. 

That loss has motivated Central, which has been sharp in all facets since that setback against the Falcons. Defense in the back? Check. Setting prowess? Check. Serve game? Check. Front-row play, including piling up kills and blocking everything left and right? Check and check. 

The Barons bagged a pair of PIAA Class 2A playoff wins last week, both via shutout, over Academy at Palumbo and Dock Mennonite Academy. Saturday’s victory in the quarterfinals against Dock Mennonite served as some payback for the Barons, who were knocked out by the Pioneers in the state quarterfinals in 2022. 


Manheim Central breezes past Academy at Palumbo for spot in PIAA Class 2A boys volleyball quarterfinals


Manheim Central drops Dock Mennonite Academy, barrels into PIAA Class 2A volleyball semifinals

Central (22-1 overall) is set to square off against a familiar foe in Tuesday’s state semifinals; the Barons will clash with York Suburban for the third time this season, and for the second time in 13 days. The Barons and the Trojans will duke it out at 5 p.m. at Penn Manor in Millersville. 

Central held off Suburban 25-23, 27-25 and 25-22 in a hotly contested nonleague match back on May 5 in York. In the rematch, on May 29 in Manheim, the Barons scarfed up a 25-21, 25-17, 25-19 win for district gold.

“We’ll have a lot of confidence going into the game,” Central defensive wizard Colin Rohrer said. “You always want to be confident, and I’d say we’re pretty confident right now. As long as we can stay consistent — getting our serves in, playing good defense, hitting the ball — we feel like we can probably beat any team in the state.” 

In Central’s first encounter with Suburban this spring, Dylan Musser teed up 35 assists, Reagan Miller blasted 14 kills and Landon Mattiace had seven blocks to spearhead the Barons. 

In the district finale, Musser was everywhere with 34 assists, eight kills, five aces, five digs and a pair of blocks; Miller waffled 11 kills with 11 digs; Mattiace had 10 kills and a couple of blocks; Rohrer had 18 digs; and Weston Longenecker (8 kills, 9 digs) and Caleb Groff (5 kills, 8 digs) came up big from their outside hitter spots. 

That kind of balance has been the Barons’ calling card. 


Manheim Central serves up win against York Suburban, bags second District 3 Class 2A boys volleyball championship

MC-YS III will be for a spot in Saturday’s state championship match, set for 11 a.m. inside Penn State’s esteemed Rec Hall.

Central and Suburban are both 0-2 in PIAA championship matches. The Trojans bounced the Barons 3-1 in the state semifinals in 2019. 

Tuesday’s other Class 2A state semifinal is another dandy matchup, with District 10 winner and reigning PIAA champ Meadville taking on District 7 champ Shaler. 

Meadville, which features 6-foot-7 junior middle Luc Sorensen, a Team USA member and a Penn State recruit, beat Central 3-1 in last year’s state finale. Shaler won the PIAA Class 3A crown last spring compliments of a 3-0 win over Parkland — after the Titans eliminated Warwick in the semifinals.

Shaler dipped down to Class 2A this season, and finds itself right back in the state semifinals. 

Central is in the state playoffs for the eighth season in a row; the 2020 campaign was canceled because of COVID-19. Since 2017, the Barons are 15-7 in PIAA matches, with finals trips in 2018 (a loss to Northeastern York) and last spring (a loss to Meadville).

Central reached the quarterfinals in all eight trips, with semifinal appearances in 2017, 2018, 2019, 2024 and this spring. The Barons are a chiseled bunch, piloted by a veteran coach, Craig Dietrich, who knows how to steer a team through a playoff bracket. 

“It’s an exciting time,” Central middle Blake Neiles said. “We got to play in the state finals last year, and not many people get to experience that. Now we want to go back.”

It is chalk across the board in the PVCA Class 2A state rankings; Meadville is first, Central is second, Shaler is third and York Suburban is fourth. 


Setter of attention: Manheim Central senior standout steers Barons' successful volleyball program

TRIPLE TROUBLE IN TRIPLE-A

Three of the four teams still standing in the PIAA Class 3A bracket call District 3 home. That’s pretty impressive.

Tuesday’s semifinals will pit undefeated District 3 champ Cumberland Valley against District 3 third-seed Governor Mifflin, and District 3 runner-up Central York against WPIAL kingpin North Allegheny, which is angling for its 10th state crown.

Central York, which has captured 25 District 3 and seven PIAA titles, KO’d Governor Mifflin, the Berks County champ, in the district semifinals. 

North Allegheny was tripped up by Warwick in the first round last spring, so the Tigers are plenty motivated to get back in the winner’s circle this time around. 

It is also chalk in the PVCA Class 3A state rankings; Cumberland Valley is first, North Allegheny is second, Central York is third and Governor Mifflin is fourth. 



Cedar Crest gets defensive, dethrones Manheim Central for first L-L League boys volleyball championship


Here are your 2025 L-L League boys volleyball all-stars, section MVPs [list]

X: @JeffReinhart77

MORE L-L LEAGUE VOLLEYBALL COVERAGE



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Bermuda Begins ECVA U21 Beach Volleyball

Bermuda’s teams started competition on the opening day of the 2025 Eastern Caribbean Volleyball Association [ECVA] Under-21 Beach Championships. Bermuda’s men’s duo, Kyle Mello and Anijahe Dos Santo Martin, lost both of their initial matches in Men’s Pool D. They were defeated 2-0 [21-8, 21-16] by Julian Bristol and Komarr Fraties of Saint Kitts and […]

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Bermuda’s teams started competition on the opening day of the 2025 Eastern Caribbean Volleyball Association [ECVA] Under-21 Beach Championships.

Bermuda’s men’s duo, Kyle Mello and Anijahe Dos Santo Martin, lost both of their initial matches in Men’s Pool D. They were defeated 2-0 [21-8, 21-16] by Julian Bristol and Komarr Fraties of Saint Kitts and Nevis. Their second loss was 2-0 [21-8, 21-13] against Zerick Walcott and Kibose Hamilton of Grenada.

In Women’s Pool C, Bermudian players Kayley Hamilton and Hailey Moss achieved two victories. They secured a 2-0 [21-4, 21-10] win against Azarraha Amritt and Shaylee Pinney of Saint Kitts and Nevis. They followed this with another 2-0 [21-8, 21-9] victory over Gereliva Spanner and Gercia Brown of St Eustatius.

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As NCAA pay era begins, SDSU launches bold NIL fund to power its Pac-12 future – The Daily Aztec

The age of amateurism in college sports is officially over. On Friday, June 6, a federal judge granted final approval of the House v. NCAA settlement. This landmark decision reshapes the landscape of collegiate athletics by allowing schools to pay athletes for the first time. The 10-year agreement, which resolves three major […]

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The age of amateurism in college sports is officially over.

On Friday, June 6, a federal judge granted final approval of the House v. NCAA settlement. This landmark decision reshapes the landscape of collegiate athletics by allowing schools to pay athletes for the first time. The 10-year agreement, which resolves three major antitrust cases, allows universities to share up to $20.5 million annually with athletes, beginning in the 2025–26 academic year.

“This is a new beginning for Division I student-athletes and for the NCAA,” NCAA President Charlie Baker said in a public letter. “Opportunities to drive transformative change don’t come often to organizations like ours. We must make the most of this one.”

The settlement comes nearly five years after former Arizona State swimmer Grant House and former Oregon basketball standout Sedona Prince filed suit, challenging the NCAA’s prohibition of athlete compensation related to name, image, and likeness (NIL). Two other suitsCarter v. NCAA and Hubbard v. NCAA—were consolidated into the case.

The result is unprecedented: not only can schools now pay athletes for NIL, but the NCAA and the Power Five conferences (ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12, and SEC) will also pay $2.8 billion in back damages to Division I athletes denied NIL opportunities dating back to 2016..

Judge Claudia Wilken approved the settlement despite resistance from some objectors, who raised concerns about new “roster limits” replacing scholarship caps. After Wilken intervened, lawyers revised the terms to include voluntary “grandfathering” for walk-ons and partially funded athletes whose spots were cut.

SDSU Responds: “This fund is a vital step”

Within hours of the ruling, San Diego State University announced the launch of its Student-Athlete Recruitment and Retention Fund, a forward-looking initiative designed to strengthen its competitiveness as it transitions into the Pac-12 Conference in 2026.

“This fund is a vital step in ensuring we continue to compete for championships while also aligning SDSU Athletics with the future of college sports,” said John David Wicker, SDSU Director of Athletics, in a release from the university. “Our student-athletes deserve the very best, and this initiative allows us to directly invest in their experience while sustaining the proud tradition of Aztec excellence.”

The initiative complements the ongoing work of the MESA Foundation and Aztec Link, two organizations central to SDSU’s NIL efforts in recent years. Both collectives will remain integral under the new model, offering student-athletes opportunities through business partnerships and community engagement while the university prepares to offer direct revenue-sharing agreements.

Contributions to the fund are tax-deductible, and SDSU encourages fans to support in a variety of ways—from donations and pledges to purchasing season tickets and continuing NIL contributions through MESA and Aztec Link.

National Shift, Local Impact

The ruling and SDSU’s swift response mark a dramatic turning point. Until now, NIL payments came exclusively from third parties, including boosters and collectives. But with schools now cleared to pay athletes directly, institutions are bracing for a new reality—one governed by spending caps, oversight commissions, and a greater emphasis on compliance.

The College Sports Commission, a newly formed regulatory body staffed by executives, including those from Major League Baseball, will oversee enforcement of the $20.5 million cap and monitor third-party NIL deals. Any payment over $600 will now go through a clearinghouse to verify business purpose and fair market value.

That enforcement shift mirrors the NCAA’s new posture: step back, let the conferences lead. According to Baker, the NCAA will now focus more on core academic standards, athlete well-being, and eligibility while relinquishing much of its historical authority around financial rules.

“This new framework… marks a huge step forward for college sports,” Baker wrote in his letter. “Student-athletes at many schools will be able to receive nearly 50% of all athletics department revenue. That is a tremendously positive change and one that was long overdue.”

What Comes Next

While SDSU gears up for Pac-12 competition and establishes its financial foundation, national legal threats still loom. Ongoing cases like Johnson v. NCAA, which argues student-athletes should be classified as employees, could disrupt even this new system. Title IX implications, antitrust lawsuits, and state laws also remain in flux.

Nonetheless, for Aztecs and athletes across the country, the message is clear: this is no longer the old NCAA.

And starting July 1, it’s officially game on.



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