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Hometown hero Logan Webb pitches Giants to stabilizing win in West Sacramento

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Hometown hero Logan Webb pitches Giants to stabilizing win in West Sacramento

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Matt Cain, throughout his long tenure as a load-bearing pillar in the San Francisco Giants rotation, adhered to a personal code whenever he’d hand over the baseball at the end of a day’s work.

No matter how well he pitched at the Giants’ waterfront ballpark, no matter how few runs scored on his watch, no matter how comfortably the home team was ahead and no matter how loudly the crowd cheered his effort, the stoic right-hander refused to tip his cap if he left a runner on base. Something about it just didn’t feel right.

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Logan Webb has a little Matt Cain in him.

“I wish I had given a wave or something,” said Webb, who walked off the mound with two on and two out in the seventh inning at Sutter Health Park on Saturday night to the kind of ovation reserved for hometown heroes. “It’s always awkward in those moments, and I don’t know why. But I felt the love from the Sacramento crowd. It was awesome to pitch at home.”

Because their Las Vegas-bound former Bay Area rivals are carpetbagging it in the Central Valley for at least three seasons, the Giants are playing a major-league series in a minor-league stadium. It happens to be the Triple-A ballpark down the road from where Webb grew up in Rocklin. He fidgeted in his seat here many times as a kid, watching the Sacramento River Cats when they were still an A’s affiliate.

Maybe something happens when so many of your formative memories of professional baseball come in a ballpark that doesn’t have a second deck and where every seat is close to the action. Maybe there’s less emotional distance between you and the players. It might be one of the reasons Webb has remained so grounded and so rocksteady since he established himself as one of the league’s best pitchers in 2021. You can’t injure yourself by falling off a pedestal when you never put yourself on one.

Webb delivered another of his typical starts on an otherwise atypical night. He pumped strikes and mixed his pitches; a Giants lineup that included a freshly activated Matt Chapman and a resurgent Willy Adames did the rest in a 7-2 victory.


The crowd salutes its hometown hero. (Darren Yamashita / Imagn Images)

The legions of Giants fans who barely had a moment to cheer here in Friday night’s 11-2 loss came out of the auditory woodwork this time. But the sellout crowd of 12,298 could be better described as pro-Webb than pro-Giants. The moment Webb walked out of the bullpen in the bottom of the first inning, he was showered with shouts of “Go Rocklin” and “Go Thunder” from fans who more than likely once applauded the touchdown drives he directed in high school.

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Webb’s cheering section for home games in San Francisco is so vocal that his coaches would tease him about it. So you knew his loyalists would be out in full force when he started a game in his own backyard. You can’t call it a cheering section when the support stretches from pole to pole.

“Every time I got an out or a strikeout, it felt like the whole crowd was cheering me on,” Webb said.

Webb continues to raise his own high bar in what’s turning into the best season of his career. He reclaimed the major-league lead with 120 1/3 innings, and his 133 strikeouts are second only to Philadelphia’s Zack Wheeler among National League pitchers. Giants manager Bob Melvin referred to Webb as a no-brainer to make his second NL All-Star team.

He completed at least six innings for the eighth consecutive start and continues to be a stabilizing force every time he takes the mound. That’s precisely what the Giants needed one night after Melvin questioned the team’s focus in a sloppy loss.

Perhaps it’s no coincidence that the Giants played several of those unfocused games over the past four weeks without Chapman, who sustained a significantly sprained hand while getting picked off a month ago. The team was missing more than its leading home run hitter and Gold Glove third baseman. Chapman is also Melvin’s conduit to the clubhouse and the unofficial captain who sets high standards for his teammates.

“That’s what he’s been about his whole career,” said Melvin, who also managed Chapman with the A’s in Oakland. “From the minute he’s gotten here, he embraces the leadership role. He plays a certain style of baseball that we want to play. So it’s huge to have him back and not just the production part. It’s what he does on the field, it’s his presence in the dugout, in the clubhouse. It’s a big part of who we are.”

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The Giants’ lineup without Chapman lacked continuity, as well. Even after the stunning June 15 trade with the Boston Red Sox that netted Rafael Devers, one of the best left-handed hitters in the game, the lineup over the past couple of weeks competed like a group that had dressed itself in the dark. The expectation now is that with Devers and Chapman in the middle of the order, and Casey Schmitt expected to become the everyday second baseman Monday when he’s eligible to be activated from the injured list, a deeper and more stable lineup will be able to win its share of games without requiring near perfection from a rotation firmly led by Webb and Robbie Ray and a bullpen that has been baseball’s best in the first half.

“I’d like to think I can make an impact,” Chapman said before the game. “Finally, we get to play together (with Devers). We’re one step closer to everybody being together and getting comfortable playing with each other and to start playing the baseball that we expect to play.”

But there’s no thinking more wishful than “everybody being together” when you’re dealing with a 26-man roster and a 162-game season. The next injury or inconsistent stretch is always right around the corner. Not an hour passed after Chapman’s pregame session with reporters before there was a roster update: left-hander Erik Miller to the injured list with a left elbow sprain.

The news wasn’t too surprising. Something seemed off with Miller most of the year. There had to be occult forces behind his 1.50 ERA in 36 games because Miller totaled more walks and hit batters (22) than strikeouts (20) in 30 innings. His 14 percent drop in strikeout percentage is the largest year-over-year decrease among all major-league pitchers who’ve thrown at least 20 innings. Yet Miller remained an important part of the Giants’ late-inning mix, and he was a huge key to Wednesday’s win at Arizona when he entered Landen Roupp’s bases-loaded, no-out situation and limited the damage to one run on a sacrifice fly.

A sprained elbow is often a precursor to Tommy John surgery, but Melvin said Miller’s MRI did not show major structural damage, and the hope is that he will recover with a rest interval. For now, the Giants selected the contract of a familiar face, left-hander Scott Alexander, whom they recently signed on a minor-league deal, to replace Miller on the roster. Joey Lucchesi is another lefty in the bullpen, but his role for as long as he’s here is to pitch multiple innings. Former Detroit Tigers lefty Matt Gage signed a minor-league contract with the Giants on Saturday. Triple-A left-handed starter Carson Whisenhunt could be introduced to the big leagues in a relief role, too.

The trade deadline is more than three weeks away, and a team’s needs tend to fluctuate, but left-handed relief almost certainly has sped to the top of club president Buster Posey’s list.

If only the Giants could clone Randy Rodriguez, who replaced Webb and stranded both inherited runners. Rodriguez is unscored upon in 36 of 38 appearances and is the Giants’ top All-Star candidate after Webb and Ray. An argument could be made that, given his standing among his relief cohort, Rodriguez is the most deserving Giant on the team.

“The numbers say he’s been the best reliever in baseball,” said Webb, who also lobbied for Tyler Rogers to become a first-time All-Star after several seasons in which he merited a place. “I really hope he gets it.”

The Giants will play two formidable opponents in the final homestand before the All-Star break when the Philadelphia Phillies and Los Angeles Dodgers come to San Francisco, but there is still a chance to create the momentum they couldn’t gather while struggling with their demons in the past several series against sub-.500 teams. Adames hasn’t been out of action like Chapman, but his bat hasn’t made an impact for most of the season. It’s starting to heat up now. He hit a pair of two-run singles Saturday, including a crisp line drive in the first inning after A’s right-hander Luis Severino hit Heliot Ramos and Chapman with pitches.

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Both hit batters glared back at the mound. Ramos has been hit 11 times this year after getting hit just twice last season. Chapman didn’t appear to appreciate getting plunked in his first plate appearance after missing a month with a hand injury. A week ago, Webb expressed exasperation with the number of Giants batters getting hit and levied a not-so-veiled threat when he said that “the game finds a way to even itself out.”

Webb couldn’t risk getting ejected Saturday night and didn’t hit any batters in retaliation. But it sure was interesting that he made two kneecap pitches in the fourth inning — a 1-0 sinker to Jacob Wilson and an 0-1 sinker to Brent Rooker — that missed their spots by a lot more than his usual location mistakes.

It was one more reminder: Some of Webb’s most fervent fans never have to buy a ticket to see him pitch. They can watch from the dugout for free.

(Top photo: Darren Yamashita / Imagn Images)

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Four Husker seniors play final game for Nebraska

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LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN) — For one last time, four Husker seniors played under the bright lights of the John Cook Arena.

Rebekah Allick, Maisie Boesiger, Taylor Landfair and Allie Sczech all stepping onto the court on Sunday to play against Texas A&M, marking their final game at the Bob Devaney Sports Center.

“All of these seniors, their contribution has been amazing and it’ll be sad to see them go but an exciting end to the season for these girls,” said Husker fan, Joel Sup.

SEE ALSO: Nebraska volleyball’s season ends with loss to Texas A&M in regional finals

For many Husker fans, their presence has helped put Nebraska on the map and elevate the sport.

“They just bring so much to not just the team, but the community as well,” said Dave Sutko, owner of Spikes Beach Bar and Grille. “They’re very involved in things. They’re more than just volleyball players to a lot of us. Rebekah is the heartbeat of the team, I think everyone knows that. She’s just always so positive. It’s tough to see them go.”

One of the biggest moments fans won’t forget — the team playing in front of a sold-out 92,003-person crowd at Memorial Stadium.

A game Allick and Boesiger were a part of in 2023.

“I’ve been to a lot of games at Memorial Stadium and in my opinion, that was the most impactful sporting event I have ever attended,” said Joel Sup, a Husker fan. “As a girl dad, it was amazing to see women’s sports take the big stage, and I think it really pushed Nebraska to the forefront of what women’s sports in America can be.”

Despite the Huskers losing to the Aggies, many fans agree that one thing is clear: the future for the Huskers is bright.

“They bring so much to not just the university, but the entire state. Everybody talks about Nebraska and says ‘oh you guys have the Volleyball team!’ Yep, that’s us!”





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Wisconsin volleyball finally gets the better of Texas, advances to Final Four | Top Stories

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AUSTIN, Texas — For the last several years, the Texas Longhorns have been the thorn in the Wisconsin volleyball team’s side.

In 2021, the Longhorns swept the Badgers in the Final Four. In 2023, the Horns had a similarly dominant 3-1 win in another Final Four. Last year, it was a regular season sweep in Milwaukee and earlier this year it was a regular season sweep in Madison.

But finally, finally, Wisconsin cracked the code Sunday night.

The No. 3-seed Badgers bid “goodbye to Texas University” on the Longhorns’ home court, knocking off the No. 1 seed 3-1 (25-22, 25-21, 20-25, 25-19) to advance to the 2025 Final Four.

Perhaps all the Badgers needed was the consistency of their ‘Big 4,’ who have been exceeding expectations all season long.

Mimi Colyer ended the match with 23 kills on 55 attacks with just 6 errors. Una Vajagic had 15 kills and Carter Booth had 11. Their ultimate set-up woman, Charlie Fuerbringer, had 57 assists to go along with 9 digs.

The Badgers now turn their focus to No. 1-seed Kentucky, who had a dominant sweep of No. 3-seed Creighton in their quarterfinal match. That match will be played in Kansas City.

Interestingly enough, Wisconsin ends the weekend as the only Big Ten team left in the tournament. No. 1-seed Nebraska suffered a shock upset to No. 3-seed Texas A&M, as the Aggies advanced to their first Final Four in program history. They’ll take on No. 1-seed Pittsburgh.

​COPYRIGHT 2025 BY CHANNEL 3000. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS MATERIAL MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED, BROADCAST, REWRITTEN OR REDISTRIBUTED.



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Hooked on a feeling: Badgers punch ticket to Kansas City

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AUSTIN, Texas – The No. 3 Wisconsin volleyball team punched their ticket to the NCAA National Semifinals for the seventh time in program history, storming into Gregory Gymnasium to take down No. 1 Texas (25-22, 25-21, 20-25, 25-19) in four sets. 

The Badgers and the Longhorns hooked up in a back-and-forth battle in the first set, as UW utilized a quick 4-0 burst to take a lead at 10-9. With the help of a kill from outside hitter Mimi Colyer, the Badgers enjoyed a narrow 15-14 advantage heading into the first media timeout. 

Wisconsin went on to enjoy a 6-0 run to pull away from Texas in the latter half of the frame, led by the serving of freshman Kristen Simon, who tallied an ace in the process. After the Longhorns provided a response in multiple match points, Colyer put it away with a kill to push the Badgers to a set one victory at 25-22. 

Set two was more of the same for UW, as the Badgers were able to create some separation with the help of back-to-back kills turned in by middle blocker Carter Booth—extending their lead to 14-10. They followed it up with a 3-0 run, highlighted by a kill apiece from right side Grace Egan and middle blocker Alicia Andrew

Texas once again made a late push to apply the pressure on Wisconsin, but the Badgers answered back quickly to wrap up the second set with a win. It was Colyer again, as the star senior converted on another kill to give UW a 2-0 lead. 

The Longhorns utilized their physical presence on the offensive end to get back into a rhythm in the third set, illustrated by a 5-0 scoring run in the middle of the frame. 

Outside hitter Una Vajagic provided some momentum for the Badgers in set three, tallying five kills to keep Wisconsin within striking distance. Unfortunately for UW, it was not enough, as they fell 20-25. 

Texas maintained their momentum right away in the fourth frame, jumping out to a 4-0 lead to force a Wisconsin timeout. 

The Badgers proved to be resilient, winning six of seven rallies to take a 7-6 lead—concluding that stretch with an ace from Colyer. Outside hitter Trinity Shadd-Ceres made her presence felt moments later, recording a pair of kills to extend the advantage to 13-8. 

Wisconsin managed to outlast Texas in lengthy rallies down the stretch, continuing to keep the Longhorns off balance on the offensive end. Vajagic and Colyer ended it with kills, securing the victory for the Badgers and etching their spot in the National Semifinals in Kansas City next week.

Colyer paced UW with 23 kills, finishing with a .309 hitting percentage. In similar fashion, Vajagic followed suit swinging at .458 (15 – 4 – 24), marking double-digit kill totals for the sixth consecutive match. 

Booth was steady from the front row in a tough road atmosphere, converting on 11 kills. In the middle of it all, setter Charlie Fuerbringer dished out 57 assists and notched nine digs.

Straight from the Court

Head Coach Kelly Sheffield (on tonight’s match): “One of the hardest things to do in sports is what you have to do in volleyball. It’s awesome that we have home environments in this round, but to go on the road and grab a win from a Goliath…the talent they got over there, we knew our players were going to have to stand tall and embrace everything.”

(On how special this team is): “I’m excited to still be playing with these guys. I love this team, I love how far this team has gone. They have grown so incredibly much since the beginning of this season. I know nobody wants this thing to end.”

(on advancing to the National Semifinals): “The Final Four is just so special, it is so incredible. When you’ve been there, every fiber of your being, you want as many of your players that are committed that decide to come here, you want them to experience that. I’m so excited that they are going to be able to experience that.”

Outside Hitter Mimi Colyer (on the emotions of making it to the Final Four): “It’s been so much fun to play for this group of girls, and I think we were so energetic and we were just so courageous out there. We played such good, gritty volleyball and I’m so excited to keep playing.”

Middle Blocker Carter Booth (on embracing the crowd): “I think we walked in knowing exactly who we are and what we have practiced and what we have worked on and the talent that we have. We came in with the intention of showing people exactly who we are and who we know ourselves to be.”

Setter Charlie Fuerbringer (on Una Vajagic’s performance): “She really just led us to this point, and was clutch in huge moments. Going back to the underdog thing, there are no underdogs in this thing, everyone is giving their best volleyball.”

Notes: 


  • With the win, Wisconsin volleyball advances to the National Semifinal for the seventh time in program history and the sixth under head coach Kelly Sheffield.
  • Wisconsin improves to 5-6 all-time against the Longhorns. The last win previously in Austin was back in September 18, 2016.
  • The Badgers improve to 74-29 all-time in the NCAA tournament.
  • For the second-straight match, Wisconsin wore its black jersey. The Badgers are 3-0 this season when wearing black.
  • The Badgers had three player with double-figure kills, led by Mimi Colyer (23), Una Vajagic (15) and Carter Booth (11).
  • Libero Kristen Simon had a match-high 15 digs.
  • Setter Charlie Fuerbringer had a match-high 57 assists. She chipped in with nine digs and three blocks.
  • For the 13th match this season, Colyer tallied 20 or more kills. She had a match-high 23 kills on 55 swings while hitting .309. Colyer has now recorded double-figure kills in every match but one and is currently on a 19-match streak with double-digit kills.

Up Next: The Badgers will hit the road to Kansas City to take on No. 1 Kentucky in the NCAA National Semifinals on Thursday, Dec. 18. UW last faced the Wildcats during the 2022 season, and have taken three-straight matches over Kentucky.



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Wisconsin volleyball upsets Texas to advance to the Final Four

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Updated Dec. 14, 2025, 10:30 p.m. ET



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Florida Setter Alexis Stucky Transfers To Penn State Women’s Volleyball

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Florida setter Alexis Stucky announced her commitment to Penn State women’s volleyball out of the transfer portal Sunday night. Stucky posted on Instagram her intentions to transfer to Happy Valley.

As a redshirt junior this past season, Stucky totaled 1,062 assists and 10.31 assists per set, which was top 30 in the nation. She was selected to the All-SEC Second Team.

Stucky will join Penn State outside hitter Kennedy Martin, who spent two years with Stucky at Florida. In her first year as a Nittany Lion, Martin was second in the NCAA with 5.42 kills per set.

Following the departure of star setter Izzy Starck, the Nittany Lions finished the 2025 season with a 19-13 record and went 12-8 in the Big Ten.

Incoming freshman setter Danielle Whitmire, a top-five recruit in the 2026 recruiting class, will also join the Nittany Lions.

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Michael Siroty is a junior from Westfield, New Jersey, majoring in broadcast journalism. When he isn’t writing articles or making TikToks for Onward State, Siroty is probably somewhere talking about college sports. You can contact him to discuss your sushi order or music taste on Instagram and X @msiroty or by email at [email protected].



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Warrior Women Produce Standout Performances in Spokane

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Warrior Women Produce Standout Performances in Spokane | Dailyfly News




























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