Sports
ICE defends arrest of high school student driving to volleyball practice
Federal immigration officials are defending the arrest of a high school student who was detained on his way to volleyball practice.
Todd Lyons, acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Boston field office, said the 18-year-old was taken into custody Saturday because he is in the country illegally.
“We were looking for his father,” Lyons said at a news conference Monday. “Obviously, he isn’t father of the year. He brought his son up here illegally as well.”
Lyons said officers initiated a traffic stop on a vehicle the teen was driving and determined he was in the U.S. unlawfully. He emphasized that ICE agents have the authority to detain individuals who are in the country illegally.
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“I didn’t say he was dangerous. I said he’s in this country illegally, and we’re not going to walk away from anybody,” Lyons told reporters.
He added that his agency has taken in nearly 1,500 immigrants into custody in Massachusetts in May.
The teen will appear before an immigration judge and will have the opportunity to post bond, Lyons said. The teen’s father has not turned himself in, he added.
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Friends told NBC News that the student was born in Brazil and has attended school in the district since the age of 6.
The arrest has sparked backlash in the community, with protests erupting and local officials demanding answers.
“I’m disturbed and outraged by reports that a Milford High School student was arrested by ICE on his way to volleyball practice,” Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey said in a statement. “Local officials and law enforcement have been left in the dark with no heads-up and no answers to their questions.”
Sports
Incoming Volleyball Freshman Brooke Baldwin Named State Gatorade Player of the Year

The 6-0 setter, who was an American Volleyball Coaches Association Second Team All-American and a unanimous Wisconsin Volleyball Coaches Association First Team All-State selection, led Hamilton High School to a 39-8 record and the Division 1 state championship.
The Sussex, Wisconsin native amassed 953 assists and 307 digs, including 30 assists in Hamilton’s 3-0 win over Divine Savior Holy Angels High in the state final, and also recorded 162 kills, 67 aces and 63 blocks.
Baldwin is the second member of her family to earn Gatorade State Player of the Year honors. Her brother, Patrick, a 2022 NBA first-round draft pick by the Golden State Warriors, was the 2019-20 Wisconsin Boys Basketball Gatorade Player of the Year.
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Sports
Long Beach State Sweeps Lindenwood In Season Opener
LONG BEACH, Calif. – Playing its first official match of the 2026 season after capturing the 2025 national championship, Long Beach State opened the year with a straight-set victory over Lindenwood on Friday afternoon inside the LBS Financial Credit Union Pyramid. The Beach controlled play throughout the match, earning a 3-0 win to begin the season at home.
The Beach set the tone early in the opening set, weathering a stretch of serving errors from both teams before gaining separation midway through the frame. After Lindenwood briefly surged ahead, Long Beach State responded with strong play at the net and efficient sideout execution. Wojciech Gajek and Alex Kandev helped spark the offense, while the Beach used a late run to pull ahead. A service ace by Skyler Varga brought up set point, and Kandev closed the frame with a kill to give Long Beach State a 25-21 advantage.
Long Beach State took control in the second set behind dominant blocking and improved efficiency. After trailing early, the Beach rallied with a series of kills and net violations by Lindenwood to flip the momentum. A successful challenge swung the score in Long Beach State’s favor, igniting a decisive run that pushed the Beach into the media timeout with a lead. The Beach continued to apply pressure defensively, recording multiple stuff blocks, and an ace from Jake Pazanti sealed a convincing 25-16 win.
The third set proved more competitive, with Lindenwood creating early separation and forcing Long Beach State to respond. The Beach chipped away behind steady sideout play and timely serving, eventually evening the score and pulling ahead late. Ben Braun and Gajek anchored the defense at the net, while Long Beach State capitalized on Lindenwood errors to extend the lead. A triple block on match point ended the contest, securing a 25-20 victory and the sweep.
Skyler Varga and Alex Kandev paced the Beach with nine kills apiece, while Gajek added six kills. Braun finished with four kills on .500 hitting and was part of a strong blocking effort that saw Long Beach State total 12 team blocks. Pazanti directed the offense with 24 assists, and the Beach hit .338 as a team while holding Lindenwood to a .000 hitting percentage.
Long Beach State returns to action Saturday afternoon when the Beach host No. 13 McKendree at the LBS Financial Credit Union Pyramid
Sports
BYU men’s volleyball season preview: Transfers boost Cougars for 2026 | News, Sports, Jobs
- The BYU men’s volleyball team huddles in a match at UC Irvine on Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025.
- BYU’s Trent Moser (9) takes a swing over a triple block from Long Island during a men’s college volleyball match at the Smith Fieldhouse on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024.
- Junior setter Tyler Herget (3) came off the bench to lead No. 5 BYU to a 3-2 victory at No. 6 Ball State on Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025.
- BYU men’s volleyball coach Shawn Olmstead (left) reacts to a play on the court during an MPSF match against Stanford at the Smith Fieldhouse on Friday, April 14, 2023.
- BYU’s Teilon-Jonathan Tufuga attacks the ball against the Harvard block in a men’s college volleyball match at the Smith Fieldhouse on Monday, March 17, 2025.
At the conclusion of the 2025 season, BYU men’s volleyball head coach Shawn Olmstead held a final team meeting.
It was a chance for Olmstead to say good-bye to his seniors.
“We gave them huge hugs, told them thanks for everything, asked them to be our biggest fans and to continue to support us, then we dismissed them,” Olmstead said.
After the seniors left, Olmstead turned and looked at the eight remaining players: Two liberos, one setter, two middles, no right side and three outsides, two of which he was going to have to let go due to roster limits.
“It was the scariest sight I’ve ever had in my college coaching career,” Olmstead admitted.
Olmstead was excited about his incoming freshman class but concerned about going into the offseason without the experience of seniors Luke Benson, Miks Ramanis, Teon Taylor, Noa Haine and Keoni Thiim in the gym.
In April, Grand Canyon decided to cut its very successful men’s volleyball program and four talented Antelopes came on board, including former Cougar Trent Moser.
It’s no wonder Olmstead is optimistic for 2026.
“We got the GCU boys and that immediately changed everything,” Olmstead said. ” They brought experience and a breath of fresh air. We don’t need to entirely rely on these freshmen, so that was really big time. The former GCU coach (Jon Girten) was just texting me today saying he can’t wait to watch us play and he was rooting for us.”
The Cougars were picked to finish fifth in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation and eighth in the AVCA preseason Top 25 poll.
Where were we?
BYU was 7-5 in MPSF play in 2025 and earned the No. 3 seed in the league tournament. The Cougars battled No. 6 Stanford but lost in five sets to end up 19-10 overall and No. 8 in the final AVCA poll.
BYU was second in the country in home attendance (3,994) and memorably sold out the Smith Fieldhouse on back-to-back nights against Hawaii.
Benson was first team All-MPSF and earned honorable mention AVCA All-American honors. Ramanis fought injury issues all season but was named second team All-MPSF.
New faces
Counting Moser, there are 11 newcomers on the BYU roster in 2026.
Moser, a 6-foot-7 senior pin hitter, posted 305 kills for the Cougars in 2023 and 2024 before transferring to Grand Canyon, where last season he totaled 274 kills (2.88 per set) and hit .318 for the Antelopes.
“The biggest thing for Trent is that he’s made a lot of personal growth,” Olmstead said. “He’ll tell you that. He got married, he got a lot stronger mentally and has the right priorities, what to focus on. Trent brings size, physicality and leadership. I’ve put it on him to help the young kids because he’s had unbelievable experience, and that’s brought great team culture.”
Moser is joined by three other GCU refugees in Kyle Zediker (6-5 So. S), Connor Oldani (6-5 So. RS) and Max Phillipe (6-6 Fr. MB). Olmstead said his three starting pin hitters will be Moser, 6-5 junior Teilon-Jonathan Tafuga (1.88 kills per set, .268 in 2025) and Oldani, who has moved to the right side.
“Connor is a team player with a great attitude,” Olmstead said. “We came back from Christmas and felt like we needed to get him reps on the right side. We went to him last week and said, ‘Connor, you’re one of our three best pin hitters and we want to get all three of them on the floor.’
“There was no pause in his response. He just said, ‘I’ll do whatever you want.’”
Oldani was a second team AVCA All-American at Brophy High School in Arizona before starting his college career at GCU.
The future
The freshman class includes two-time Utah 5A state MVP Trey Thornton (6-6 OH), legacy outside hitter Corbin Batista (son of former Cougar standout Victor Batista), Trevor Herget (6-3 OH), AJ Cottle (6-8 MB), returned missionary Tennison Lighthall (6-6 OH/OPP), Tyler James Johnson (6-0 S) and Phillipe.
“Our freshmen are good but they are still navigating things,” Olmstead said. “We need to get a pulse on that but what you’re going to see across the board is a volleyball level and a physicality we’ve never had with that many kids together in a freshman class. I can tell you that Trevor Herget just flies out of the gym and Tennison came back from his mission a man among boys.”
Running it back
The Cougars are solid at setter with 6-2 senior Tyler Herget (9.59 assists, 1.62 digs per set) returning for his third season as the starter.
“Tyler is just our ‘Steady Eddie,’” Olmstead said. “I’m not the kind of coach that’s looking to recruit for flashy and Tyler has exactly what we’re looking for in a setter. He’s coachable and looks at the game like I do. It’s his last year, his last hurrah and we’re excited for him.”
The libero spot will be held down by 6-0 senior Jackson Fife (294 career digs), another two-year starter. Versatile Bernardo Adam (6-3 Sr. libero) has great energy and serving specialist Ian Little (6-5 Jr. OH) is a lefty who can contribute.
In the middle, the competition has been strong between Cottle, returner Gavin Chambers (6-9 So.) and Phillipe to replace Taylor and Niko Hales, who started as a freshman and is serving a church mission in Barcelona, Spain.
The schedule
Olmstead has never shied away from playing big matches, but the expansion of the men’s college game has created a different kind of schedule for the Cougars in 2026. Some of it is built in: Concordia, Menlo College and Vanguard have joined the MPSF in the past few seasons and this year the addition of UC Merced and Jessup makes it a 10-team league.
In an effort to help grow the men’s game, BYU opens with a pair of matches against St. Francis and also plays Lincoln Memorial, Merrimack and Fort Valley.
There are still those big matches as well, with the Cougars facing No. 6 UC Irvine and No. 17 UCSB in the non-conference and No. 9 Stanford, No. 4 Pepperdine, No. 5 USC and top-ranked UCLA in MPSF play.
Outlook
The NCAA had expanded the post-season tournament to 12 teams, which is a big deal for a BYU program that has been just short of qualification throughout the past dozen years. Tough facts: The Cougars have ended their season with a five-set loss ten times since 2004. More recently, BYU’s past four losses in the MPSF Tournament have all be in five sets.
“Right now I can tell you the kind of team were are,” Olmstead said. “We’ve been very consistent. We’re a pretty physical group and can still get a little more fine tuned. There is unbelievable effort on every play, which we need. I think we’ll have better floor defense than what we’ve had in the past. We’ve been a dominant blocking program but I felt like we were not giving ourselves enough chances with our defense. We’ve talked a lot about that, about putting our guys in situations where they need to find a way to win, to be assertive and smart. I think we’ve got some guys like that this year who aren’t afraid to put the team on their shoulders.”
BYU Men’s Volleyball
Five Things to Watch in 2026
1. Introduction are in order
BYU fans will need to consult the game program to get it all straight with 11 players who weren’t on last year’s roster.
2. Welcome home
Trent Moser, who played for the Cougars in 2023 and 2024, transferred to Grand Canyon and had a terrific year in 2025. He’s back — bringing three other GCU players with him — and will make a huge difference as one of BYU’s top pin hitter.
3. Gaining momentum
There are some huge MPSF matches at the end of the regular season schedule, so it will be important for the Cougars to pick up good wins and confidence in the non-conference.
4. Home sweet home
The Smith Fieldhouse continues to be the hottest ticket on campus and one of the best places in the country to watch a college volleyball match. Last year, BYU was second in the country in average home attendance (3,994).
5. Big finish
BYU’s last four losses in the MPSF Tournament have all been in five sets. Somehow, the Cougars need to find a way to come out on top in close matches to get to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2021.
Sports
No. 5 USC Men’s Volleyball Opens 2026 Against Spartans
The Trojans were 11-3 on their home floor last spring and are 7-3 in season openers under 11th-year head coach Jeff Nygaard. USC returns the lion’s share of a squad that ranked as high as No. 3 in 2025, finished second in the MPSF standings, and advanced to the conference championship match. Five Trojan returners were recognized by the AVCA’s All-America committee including first-team selection OH Dillon Klein and second-team choice MB Parker Tomkinson. S Caleb Blanchette, LIB Johnny Dykstra, and OH Sterling Foley all received All-America honorable mention.
Among notable departures, USC will need to replace points scored by OPP Jack Deuchar and must find someone to step in for the departed MB Guy Genis. OPP Noah Roberts and OH Christian Connell were each notable contributors last season and the Trojans benefit from the return of MB Wesley Smith who sat out the 2025 season due to injury.
MATCH #1 • Saturday, January 10 • 5 p.m. PT
No. 5 USC (0-0) vs. St. Thomas Aquinas (0-0)
Galen Center • Los Angeles, Calif.
SERIES RECORD: First meeting
TV/STREAM: B1G+ (Andrew Giesler & Alex Buettgen)
OPPONENT WEBSITE: STACAthletics.com
FIRST SERVE (TL;DR)
- USC is led by 11th-year head coach Jeff Nygaard, a three-time Olympian in indoor and beach volleyball and a two-time NCAA champion.
- The Trojans are ranked fifth in the AVCA Preseason Coaches Poll.
- USC is 35-21 all-time in season openers; 7-3 under Nygaard.
- For the third year in a row, USC will open its season with an opponent it meets for the first time: Fort Valley State (2024), Daemen (2025).
- Last year, the Trojans went 11-3 at home and only lost to a No. 2-ranked UC Irvine and twice to 13th-ranked Stanford.
- USC returns five players that were recognized by the AVCA All-America committee in 2025 including first-team choice OH Dillon Klein and second-team selection MB Parker Tomkinson. S Caleb Blanchette, OH Sterling Foley, and LIB Johnny Dykstra each received All-America honorable mention.
- The Men of Troy will play 16 home matches in 2026 and will play in Southern California for all but two regular-season matches (at BYU, April 10-11).
- In 2025, the Trojans the NCAA in blocks (2.86 bps) and led the MPSF in kills (13.11 kps, 5th NCAA), assists (12.24 aps, 3rd NCAA), and digs (8.82 dps). USC was also second in the MPSF in hitting percentage (.344, 4th NCAA).
Sports
Volleyball Adds Two Transfers for 2026
ROCK HILL, S.C. — Winthrop University volleyball Head Coach Heather Gearhart has announced two transfers to Rock Hill for the 2026 squad, Kimanni Rugley, a middle blocker from Pearland, Texas and Cami Roberts, a setter from Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Kimanni Rugley | Middle Blocker | 6’1 | Pearland, Texas | North Dakota
Rugley is joining the Eagles after spending her freshman season at North Dakota, where she appeared in 66 sets, totaling 77 kills, 107.0 points, 42.0 total blocks all while hitting a .232 clip.
Rugley hit a career-high .818 with nine kills against UT Martin, for the highest hit percentage in a five-set match in UND history and achieved seven games with five or more kills.
In her high school career, finished as a senior with a .449 attack percentage, ranking among the top 45 marks nationally and fourth in the state of Texas. She was a three-time All-District selection, earning first-team honors in 2022 and 2023, and was named conference offensive player of the year twice (2022, 2023) after being tabbed conference defensive player of the year in 2021. She was named conference MVP in 2023, earned two All-America selections, and was part of 143 wins over four seasons at PHS.
Rugley on why she chose Winthrop:
“The campus and gym are really gorgeous, after talking with Coach Heather and hearing about the goals she has for the team it was not only best for her but best for me and the team and I’m so excited to become a part of the group.”
Gearhart on Rugley:
“I am excited to have Kimanni join us after a strong start to her collegiate career. She will strengthen our middle group and be a great physical presence on both sides of the ball. The energy she plays with is infectious, and we are excited to have her personality join our group. She is going to add a lot to our program on and off the court right away.”
Cami Roberts | Setter | 6’0 | Myrtle Beach, S.C. | Johnson County CC
Roberts is joining Winthrop after a year at Johnson County Community College in Kansas, after playing in 29 sets, totaling 148 assists for 5.10 assists per set.
Roberts collected a career-high 38 assists against Central Methodist University JV in just three sets.
The South Carolina native won districts with Grand Strand Juniors/Coast United and punched a ticket to the national tournament and was ranked 9th nationally.
Off the court, Roberts was the vice president and one of the founders at my club called the One Love club in high school and went to Washington D.C. to speak to representatives to get it placed in all high schools and I was a leader at FCA at my previous university.
Roberts on why she chose Winthrop:
“I chose Winthrop because I absolutely fell in love with the campus and the people when I went my junior year and also, I wanted to be closer to home because I’m a big family girl. And I just love the environment and Rock Hill in general.”
Gearhart on Roberts:
“I am looking forward to adding Cami to our program after having known her for several years. She is a very steady competitor and will add a calm demeanor on the second contact for us. Cami has a ton of potential still left in her game, and I am excited to see her development take off in our gym. She is a well-rounded person in general that will fit right in with our culture, and I am so happy to have her back in her home state.”
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