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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Colorado Rockies designated hitter Kris Bryant has landed on the 10-day injured list with a bad back, the latest in a series of health issues that have resulted in nine IL stints since 2022. The team said the move, retroactive to Sunday, is due to lumbar degenerative disk disease. Bryant saw […]

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Injury

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Colorado Rockies designated hitter Kris Bryant has landed on the 10-day injured list with a bad back, the latest in a series of health issues that have resulted in nine IL stints since 2022.

The team said the move, retroactive to Sunday, is due to lumbar degenerative disk disease. Bryant saw noted orthopedic spine surgeon Dr. Robert Watkins in Los Angeles on Monday.

“It’s been bothering him for a few days,” manager Bud Black said. “We decided to be a little bit proactive and put him on the injured list. Hopefully in 10 days he’ll be back.”

The 33-year-old Bryant spent the offseason following a stringent program to strengthen his back.

“This is an aggravation,” Black said. “We don’t want him to take any steps backwards by trying to push him through this. He’s going to have to manage his back, just like a lot of players have to manage certain body parts to get through the season.”

Just like the Rockies, Bryant has gotten off to a slow start through 11 games. The team had a major league-worst three wins going into its series opener at the Los Angeles Dodgers on Monday night.

Bryant is batting .154 with six hits, one RBI, 13 strikeouts and no homers.

Degenerative disk disease involves the breakdown and deterioration of the spinal disks, which act as cushions between the vertebrae. It’s a natural part of aging, but can also be accelerated by injury, overuse, and lifestyle choices. While DDD itself isn’t a disease, the resulting disk degeneration can lead to pain, nerve compression, and other symptoms.

Bryant joined the Rockies on a $182 million, seven-year contract ahead of the 2022 season. He’s appeared in only 170 games since then due to plantar fasciitis, a bone bruise in his foot, heel issues, a broken finger, a back strain, a lower rib contusion and now further back issues.

When he’s been in the lineup, Bryant has batted just .244 with 17 home runs and 61 RBIs.

His numbers have tailed off dramatically since his best years with the Chicago Cubs. Bryant helped the Cubs win the 2016 World Series and was the NL MVP that year. The four-time All-Star hit .278 and averaged 31 homers and 89 RBIs between 2015 and 2021.

Colorado called up catcher Braxton Fulford from Triple-A Albuquerque to take Bryant’s place on the roster, and right-hander Jeff Criswell was transferred to the 60-day IL.

___

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB

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Tarleton State announces 2025-26 basketball season ticket information for event center

Story Links Renewal Deposits New Season Ticket Deposits STEPHENVILLE, Texas – Tarleton State University’s event center will host Tarleton State Basketball in 2025-26, and with it comes a new season ticket model, announced by Tarleton State Athletics on Monday.   […]

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STEPHENVILLE, Texas – Tarleton State University’s event center will host Tarleton State Basketball in 2025-26, and with it comes a new season ticket model, announced by Tarleton State Athletics on Monday.
 
There will now be options to buy men’s basketball season tickets only, or women’s basketball season tickets only, and a combined season ticket package for all Tarleton State men’s basketball and women’s basketball home games. Season ticket packages for both programs begin at $125. Men’s basketball season tickets begin at $100, and women’s basketball season tickets begin at $50.

Tarleton State Basketball Season Ticket Map (Men's and Women's Basketball, 5-12-25)

 

Deposits can be placed by calling the Tarleton State Ticket Office at 254-968-1832 or online. Returning season ticket holders can place their deposit here, and new season ticket holders can place their deposit here.

 

Returning season ticket holders can now place a $100 deposit per account for Tarleton State Basketball 2025-26 season tickets at the event center. Full price season ticket holders for both men’s basketball and women’s basketball will receive an early access window to purchase other ticketed events inside the event center before the general public. Tarleton State Basketball 2024-25 season ticket holders are already eligible for the early access window, and new 2025-26 season ticket holders must put down a $50 non-refundable deposit per ticket for the combined men’s and women’s basketball package in order to be eligible. The early access window for shows at the event center is subject to terms and conditions from each artist and entertainer, and does not guarantee fans their same seat, but an early window to purchase tickets before the public. Limits may apply, more details on the process will follow.

Tarleton State Basketball Season Ticket Map (Men's Basketball, 5-12-25)

 

Tarleton State Basketball Season Ticket Map (Women's Basketball, 5-12-25)

Another benefit to already being eligible for the event center’s early access window for events, returning Tarleton State Basketball season ticket holders from 2024-25 will have an exclusive window to select seats for their 2025-26 season tickets. If returning season ticket holders renew by June 13, they can begin their seat selections as early as June 25. Payments and payment plans will start once a specific seat is chosen, and the $100 deposit will go towards the seats. Seat selections will be made in priority point order, which is new for Texan Club members entering 2025-26, announced in March.

 

For new season ticket holders, fans may put down a $50 non-refundable deposit per ticket for 2025-26. New customer seat selection will begin in July, and seat selection will go in priority point order.

 

The hospitality experience will be enhanced starting in 2025-26, and so will the access level. Hospitality access with complimentary food, non-alcoholic beverages, a cash bar and other exclusive amenities is available to donors who reach $1,000 in cumulative giving between basketball required seat donation and philanthropic gifts to the Texan Club. Required seat donations at football do not count toward this benefit. Donors can reach the $1,000 mark by combining any philanthropic Texan Club donations to required seat donations tied to basketball season tickets.

 

Mid-court sections 102 and 111 feature larger, padded seats. Team benches will be on the west side of the event center, in front of sections 101 and 103. The student section will be on the north end of the event center near the visiting team bench, covering sections 105, 106, 107, 108, 109 and 110.

 

Upper (200 level) seats will be sold upon demand. Single-game ticket sales and parking details will be announced at a later date.

 

The main fan entrances will be on the northeast and northwest corners of the event center.

 

Fans interested in suites, courtside, baseline, loges or any premium options can contact the Texan Club at 254-459-5477.

 





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The Bold Type, with Commissioner Dan Butterly – May 12, 2025

Story Links Good morning!  I hope you all had a great weekend and were able to celebrate and commemorate all the mothers in your lives on Sunday.  Having lost my Mom on New Year’s Day, I took time on Sunday to reflect on the impact she had on my life, and how […]

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Good morning!  I hope you all had a great weekend and were able to celebrate and commemorate all the mothers in your lives on Sunday.  Having lost my Mom on New Year’s Day, I took time on Sunday to reflect on the impact she had on my life, and how much she is missed by our family.   

Before we get into this week’s update, each of you need to PLEASE watch this video from this week’s Big West Softball Championship.  

This is true emotion, a key reason WHY we do what we do, and provide championship experiences for our student-athletes. 

With the addition of the first-ever softball championship, and baseball championship later this month, we now have conference championships FOR ALL Big West sports.  Thank you to our institutional leadership for moving in this direction and providing these opportunities for our student-athletes, and for all of our fans for their support in celebrating The Big West postseason in each sport all year long.  

Congratulations to UC Santa Barbara for winning the first-ever Big West softball championship! The Gauchos impressively came all the way through the consolation bracket after falling in the first game of the week! Read more >>> 


Thank you to The Big West staff and Cal State Fullerton for hosting and managing the 2025 Big West Softball Championship last week. It was a great event for student-athletes, staff and fans alike – even if Championship Saturday was hot!  

Last week brought the unveiling of a proposed new governance structure for NCAA Division I, the NCAA press release on academic progress rates, and a Big West “Final Four” team in beach volleyball and women’s water polo as well as two teams in the men’s volleyball semifinals!  

Song of the week is “Higher” from Creed.  Maybe this is my walk-up song, but maybe it is because we all want to wake up to a world full of positives rather than negatives. 

Let’s get to The Bold Type! 


  PLAYING FOR THE TITLE – LONG BEACH STATE MEN’S VOLLEYBALL   

  • Congratulations to our Big West men’s volleyball champion Hawai’i for their run to the penultimate round and best of luck to Long Beach State as they drive for five. A victory over defending champion UCLA would give The Big West their fifth national collegiate championship since Big West sport sponsorship began in 2018. WOW! Watch the game today on ESPN2 at 4 p.m. PT. Watch here >>> 

  

   CONGRATULATIONS!   

  • Congratulations to NCAA Elite 90 Award winners Raha Peiravani from Hawaii women’s water polo and Georgi Binev of Long Beach State men’s volleyball!  This is a tremendous honor from the NCAA. 

  • To a new record already set in The Big West Track & Field Championships during multis weekend. Congratulations to UC Santa Barbara’s Brad Thomas and Long Beach State’s Claudine Raud-Gumiel came out as winners in the decathlon and heptathlon, respectively! Read more >>> 

  • To Long Beach State freshman phenom Moni Nikolov, named the AVCA’s Player of the Year! Moni is the fifth straight national player of the year from The Big West! Read more >>> 
  • To prolific outside hitter Hilir Henno of UC Irvine, who was announced Friday as the recipient of the AVCA Distinction of Excellence Award, presented by Nike Volleyball. Read more >>> 
  • To Hawai’i women’s water polo, who took down California in the quarterfinals before falling to eventual national champion Stanford in the semifinals! 
  • To top-seeded Long Beach State men’s volleyball who has dispatched Fort Valley State and Pepperdine in their quest for the National Collegiate Championship! 
  • To Hawai’i men’s volleyball for their 3-1 quarterfinal victory against Penn State before falling to defending champion UCLA in the semis!  
  • To Cal State Fullerton women’s golf, who qualified for the NCAA Championships beginning this weekend at Omni La Costa in Carlsbad!  It is the first time we’ve had a team at the Championships final site since 2015, and eighth all-time! Read more >>> 
  • It’s also a year of firsts for the Titans: 

    • First Big West Championship and spot in the NCAA Regionals! 
    • First time advancing to the National Championships! 
    • First No. 10 seed to advance in the NCAA six-regional era!  

  • After yet another stellar year on courts across the league, five programs from The Big West are represented in the American Volleyball Coaches Association’s (AVCA) 35th National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball All-America Team, unveiled on Monday. Congratulations to the  10 student-athletes on the first and second teams, over 40 percent of all honorees, and another 12 on the honorable mention listings.  Read more >>>  
  • To Big West softball champion UC Santa Barbara, who was selected as the No. 4 seed in the UCLA regional! The Gauchos open the double-elimination region on Friday at 4:30 p.m., facing off against the Bruins. Game 2 will be Saturday afternoon at either 2 or 4:30 p.m. Read more >>> 
  • To The Big West softball award winners and all-conference teams as voted on by our head coaches around the league! Read more >>> 
  • To Long Beach State senior Charlie Forster, Big West Golfer of the Year, and the 2024-25 All-Big West Teams, as voted on by the league’s 12 head coaches! Read more >>> 
  • To UC Irvine baseball, who this week is ranked: 

    • 13th by D1Baseball 
    • 15th by USA Today Coaches 
    • 17th by Baseball America 
    • 11th by NCBWA15th by Perfect Game 

  • Also to Cal Poly, UC Santa Barbara and Hawai’i baseball programs who are receiving votes by NCBWA! 

And, to our Big West Players of the Week! 

  • Baseball – Matthew O’Brien, UC Riverside (pitcher); Nate Castellon, Cal Poly (field player) 
  • Softball – Eva Hurtado, Cal State Fullerton (pitcher); Ava Arce, Cal State Fullerton (field player); Giselle Mejia, UC Santa Barbara (freshman) 
  • Track & Field – Chase Walter, Cal Poly (men’s track); Rory Devaney, Cal Poly (men’s field); Makiah Parker, Cal State Bakersfield (women’s track); Lilian Turban, Hawai‘i (women’s field) 

   

   ONLY THE BOLD STAND FOR FAIRNESS   

SONG OF CHOICE – “Right Now” by Van Halen 

On Wednesday, the NCAA unveiled a proposed new Division I governance model on YouTube—one that could fundamentally reshape the future of college sports, and in my opinion, not for the better (LINK).  The CCA-22 commissioners were presented with the draft model on Monday afternoon, but were told not to share the model outside of the presentation.  

If adopted as presented, it will hand unchecked control of the Division I governance process to four conferences: the SEC, Big Ten, ACC, and Big 12. These leagues would gain a 65% weighted voting bloc on NCAA committees—an insurmountable majority that effectively silences the voices of the rest of Division I, including conferences like The Big West. In short: a structure in which a few decide for all. 

This is not shared governance. This is consolidation of power by the very conferences,  institutions and leadership that helped drive the NCAA into its current legal and financial crisis. And now, they seek to rewrite the rules to insulate themselves from accountability, while expecting others to share the financial burden of settlement costs from cases like House v. NCAA. 

Let’s be bold and honest: the only thing holding Division I together right now is a legal settlement. NCAA President Charlie Baker has said as much—that if the A4 conferences walk away, they alone would be responsible for the full financial cost of the House settlement. Rather than risk that, this proposal looks like an effort to force out those of us who still believe in education, access, parity, and opportunity for student-athletes across all institutions—not just the richest ones. 

And once governance is centralized, what’s to stop them from restricting national championship access? From changing scholarship rules in ways that disadvantage mid-majors? From building a postseason system that rewards only the highest-resourced teams? Absolutely nothing. 

This isn’t bold leadership. It’s power consolidation masquerading as progress. 

The Big West will not stand by silently. We are committed to championing the principle that all Division I student-athletes deserve meaningful access to championships, fair representation in governance, and the chance to succeed on and off the field—regardless of conference affiliation or athletic budget. 

In the weeks ahead, The Big West will work with our peer conferences to demand a better model—one that respects the diversity of Division I and honors the values of equity, education, and competition. If this system is truly for the benefit of college athletes, then all their voices—not just the loudest or wealthiest—deserve to be heard. 

We cannot let financial pressure become the pretext for undermining fairness and opportunity in college athletics. The integrity of higher education depends on leadership that is inclusive, principled, and forward-looking. 

After all, we’re The Big West. 

Only The Bold. 


   GRADUATES OVER GUARANTEES: THE BIG WEST DIFFERENCE   

SONG – “My Hero” from Foo Fighters 

In an era when college athletics headlines are dominated by name, image and likeness (NIL) deals and multimillion-dollar transactions, it’s easy to lose sight of what truly defines success. In The Big West, we’ve chosen a different path—one that puts purpose before profit, and student before athlete. 

Our member institutions are among the most respected public universities in the country. Academic rigor is not a slogan for us—it’s a standard. Our student-athletes don’t just play for wins; they commit themselves to the classroom, the community, and a degree that will serve them far beyond their years of eligibility. 

This year’s Academic Progress Rate (APR) data reflects that commitment (LINK). The Big West earned 38 perfect team scores of 1,000 across 11 institutions. More than 61% of our programs meet or exceed the national four-year average. That doesn’t happen by accident—it happens because our campuses invest in the academic success of student-athletes with the same intensity as they invest in competitive success. 

While others are paying millions to rent talent for a season, we’re investing in futures that will impact generations. That’s not to diminish the opportunities NIL can offer—but at The Big West, we believe the most powerful name, image, and likeness is the one on a diploma.

Our student-athletes are earning more than statistics. They’re earning degrees, building character, and preparing for lifelong achievement. That is the Big West difference. 

We’re proud of our champions. We’re even prouder of our graduates. In The Big West, we choose graduates over guarantees—every time.

  

   ESPN TO ANNOUNCE “FLAGSHIP” NAME AND PRICE THIS WEEK   

Flagship is the handle ESPN has used for about a year now to refer to its developing and highly anticipated direct to consumer app, which will for the first time make all of ESPN’s channels available for standalone sale. This week ESPN will retire the place setter name “Flagship” and replace it with the real thing. (LINK) 

  

   BROADCAST TRAILBLAZERS   

On May 3rd, Long Beach State hosted a unique softball event between Cal Poly and Long Beach State, which became the first on-air execution of ESPN’s cloud-based production model. The event, broadcast on ESPNU, utilized a Discrete cloud-based production setup, which mirrors traditional production with multiple operator and production positions, including video switchers, audio consoles, replay and graphics operators, and directing/production user stations. The core production team operated remotely from ESPN’s facilities in Bristol, CT. 

Thanks to the coordination between Long Beach State’s Mike Habura and the institutional  IT department, a 1GB data line was set up to support the production. This milestone is a point of pride for Long Beach State and The Big West! 

 

   MEDIA ARTICLES ON NCAA AND LEGAL ISSUES   

  • Lawyers for NCAA and plaintiffs in proposed House settlement say in filing that they have made changes to roster limits that Judge Claudia Wilken said two weeks were unfair and preventing from granting final approval. (LINK)  Judge Wilken is allowing three lawyers for objectors who focused on the proposed roster limits to file responses by May 13. Wilken also is allowing the plaintiffs and the NCAA/Conferences to file replies by May 16. 
  • Attorney Steve Molo, who represents a group of objectors, has already voiced opposition to the revision: “While the NCAA and Class Counsel have acknowledged our objection to roster caps is valid, their proposed mushy modification doesn’t go far enough. Many, many student athletes have had something taken away from them. The fight will continue.” (link); Molo, attorney Laura Reathaford, and the Buchalter firm will be those allowed to submit responses to the revision by May 13. (link) 
  • Sportico’s Michael McCann writes on how a potential Trump administration executive order on college athletics could face a bevy of legal pushback. (link) 
  • Kennyhertz Perry attorney Mit Winter: “The NCAA is appealing the order granting Jett Elad’s motion to preliminary enjoin the NCAA’s 5 year eligibility clock rule. It’s also appealing the lower court Pavia decision. Those 2 appeals will tell us a lot about how courts will look at NCAA eligibility rules going forward.” (link) 


   CELEBRATE ASIAN AMERICAN, NATIVE HAWAIIAN AND PACIFIC ISLANDER HERITAGE MONTH!   

May marks Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, a time to celebrate the diversity and impact of AANHPI individuals across college sports. 

Why it matters: AANHPI student-athletes are making significant strides in college sports, with record growth in participation, leadership roles and academic success. 

  • By the numbers: Total AANHPI student-athletes competing across all NCAA divisions in 2023-24 reached 13,739, a 54% increase over the past 10 years. 

Top sports for student-athletes: Football and women’s soccer lead in total numbers, but sports like fencing and gymnastics include high percentages of AANHPI student-athletes. 

Leadership trends: AANHPI representation is rising in leadership roles, with a 49% increase in head coaches and a 53% increase in presidents/chancellors since data collection began. 

 

   QUOTE OF THE DAY   

“The world is not fair, and not everyone gets to be heard, but if you want to change it, you have to fight for it.” – From the musical Hamilton.  This quote, while not stated verbatim in the musical, is a powerful distillation of the themes explored in Hamilton.   

And, from one of our major partners, as I discussed the formation of a marketing, branding, ticketing and attendance subcommittee once the 2026-27 membership is set:  “But they better not recommend a change to the logo…that branding is too good!” 

  

As I have noted, the next 4-6 weeks could be the most dynamic time of change for NCAA Division I athletics.  

In closing, be sure to thank our athletic trainers, game managers and SIDs.Their work is vital to the success of your student-athletes, and to every Big West program.  

Have a great week, and good luck to all of our programs at upcoming Big West and NCAA Championships! 


Dan 





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High school boys’ volleyball: Playoff results and pairings

SOUTHERN SECTION BOYS VOLLEYBALL PLAYOFFS MONDAY’S RESULTS SEMIFINALS DIVISION 7 San Gabriel Academy d. Brentwood, 3-2 DIVISION 9Downey Calvary Chapel d. Beverly Hills, 3-2 WEDNESDAY’S SCHEDULE FINALS DIVISION 7San Gabriel Academy at Brea Olinda, 6 p.m. FRIDAY’S SCHEDULE FINALS At Cerritos College DIVISION 1Mira Costa vs. Huntington Beach, 7 p.m. At Mater Dei DIVISION 2 […]

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SOUTHERN SECTION BOYS VOLLEYBALL PLAYOFFS

MONDAY’S RESULTS

SEMIFINALS

DIVISION 7
San Gabriel Academy d. Brentwood, 3-2

DIVISION 9
Downey Calvary Chapel d. Beverly Hills, 3-2

WEDNESDAY’S SCHEDULE

FINALS

DIVISION 7
San Gabriel Academy at Brea Olinda, 6 p.m.

FRIDAY’S SCHEDULE

FINALS
At Cerritos College
DIVISION 1
Mira Costa vs. Huntington Beach, 7 p.m.

At Mater Dei
DIVISION 2
Peninsula vs. Mater Dei, 6:30 p.m.

At Crossroads
DIVISION 8
Katella vs. Wildwood, 6 p.m.

SATURDAY’S SCHEDULE

FINALS
At Cerritos College
DIVISION 3
Orange Lutheran vs. Tesoro, 10 a.m.

DIVISION 5
Esperanza vs. Kennedy, 12:30 p.m.

DIVISION 9
CAMS vs. Downey Calvary Chapel, 3 p.m.

DIVISION 6
Quartz Hill vs. El Toro, 6 p.m.

At Santa Barbara
DIVISION 4
Sage Hill vs. Santa Barbara, 1 p.m.



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At the Cannes Film Festival, These Screenings Are on the Beach

On a warm afternoon in late April, La Croisette hummed with life. Families pushed strollers along the boardwalk, children trailed behind with dripping ice cream cones, and tourists posed for selfies silhouetted against the Mediterranean. At Plage Macé, a centrally-located public beach, people tanned, played volleyball and went for a dip. For the next two […]

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On a warm afternoon in late April, La Croisette hummed with life. Families pushed strollers along the boardwalk, children trailed behind with dripping ice cream cones, and tourists posed for selfies silhouetted against the Mediterranean. At Plage Macé, a centrally-located public beach, people tanned, played volleyball and went for a dip.

For the next two weeks, Plage Macé has been transformed into an outdoor theater, outfitted with a massive movie screen — nearly 80 feet by 20 feet — and an elaborate sound system, with 600 deck chairs available on a first-come-first-served basis.

This is Cinéma de la Plage, the Cannes Film Festival’s free program of nightly film screenings. At a film festival notorious for its exclusivity, this is one event where everyone is welcome, no matter who they are — or how they are dressed.

“Cinéma de la Plage is evidence that the Cannes Film Festival never forgets it has to remain a cultural and popular event,” Thierry Frémaux, the festival’s artistic director, explained in an email.

Camilla Amelotti works at a children’s attraction, Les P’tits Bateaux (The Li’l Boats), directly in front of Plage Macé. In between selling souvenir magnets and handing out remote controls for miniature yachts, she described Cinéma de la Plage as an accessible alternative to the festival’s indoor screenings, especially for film-loving locals.

“It’s really nice,” said Amelotti, 28. “You just have to have time to go and the patience to wait to get in.” She added that for many people who work in the tourism industry, the film festival is the busiest time of year.

Ilona el-Hasnaoui, 26, has a front-row seat to Cinéma de la Plage from behind the counter of Kiosque 9 Bis, a gleaming white food stand with a turquoise awning situated directly in front of Plage Macé. Hasnaoui is the store’s manager and often stays until closing time — 1 a.m. during the festival — so she steals glances at the screen while serving sandwiches and crepes.

She said that business picked up during the nightly screenings. “People can see the movie from here,” she said, indicating the space directly in front of her kiosk. “They get their food here and they sit behind the railing,” she said, noting that no food or beverages were allowed on the beach during the films and that deck chairs were a precious commodity. “There are many, many people. If you want a seat, you need to wait.”

Cinéma de la Plage is officially part of Cannes Classics, the festival section devoted to film history that was started in the early 2000s. Frémaux, who has worked at Cannes since 1999 and became festival director in 2007, said his desire to inaugurate a free, outdoor program stemmed from personal experience.

“When I was just a festivalgoer, I wasn’t always able to get into the movie theaters and I thought it would be a good idea if the festival offered something completely different to the public, especially in the evenings,” he said. “When I took over, I suggested we hold a daily event on the beach.”

Given the festival’s unique location on the French Riviera, it may seem hard to believe that movies on the beach were never a major part of the event during its first 50 years. (Frémaux pointed to some earlier one-off events, including an apocryphal midnight screening of Hans-Jürgen Syberberg’s “Parsifal,” a four-hour-and-fifteen-minute film version of Richard Wagner’s opera, which ended with breakfast on the beach at dawn.)

While classics, often presented in fresh restorations, dominated the early Cinéma de la Plage programs, these days the lineup also includes cult and contemporary offerings, as well as sneak previews of films about to hit French cinemas and even the occasional world premiere.

Because this is Cannes and a high percentage of the world’s major filmmakers congregate here during festival time, it’s not uncommon for directors to pop over to present their films if they’re programmed in Cinéma de la Plage.

Frémaux reminisced about Quentin Tarantino showing up with Uma Thurman to introduce a 35-millimeter print of “Pulp Fiction” in 2014, and Jackie Chan arriving by boat for a screening of his 1982 kung fu classic “Project A” for its 40th anniversary in 2012.

“And there was Agnès Varda, who in the rain convinced the audience to stay by talking to them for several minutes before the film,” he said of the French director’s “One Sings, the Other Doesn’t,” which was screened during the memorably wet 2018 edition of the festival. Beyond films, Cinéma de la Plage has also hosted concerts, dance parties and even karaoke.

This year’s lineup features films by John Woo, Nanni Moretti and Terrence Malick; a new restoration of King Vidor’s 1946 western “Duel in the Sun” undertaken by Martin Scorsese; and a new documentary about Brigitte Bardot.

“Cinéma de la Plage is a brilliant idea, brilliantly executed,” said Peter Bradshaw, the chief film critic for The Guardian, who has attended the Cannes Film Festival since 1999.

“And I think it’s a very good thing for Cannes to do,” he added, “because Cannes is sometimes criticized for being too closed off and elitist.”

And while there is undeniable excitement whenever a world premiere takes place at Plage Macé (as with “F9,” the ninth film in the “Fast and Furious” franchise, in 2021) Cinéma de la Plage provides especially inspiring conditions for seeing a classic foreign or art house film.

“On occasion you can get to see ‘8½’ at some repertory movie theater, but it’s a rare thing to see it on the biggest possible screen,” Bradshaw said, referring to the 1963 Federico Fellini film, which screened here on the beach in 2014. (He fondly recalled seeing “Jaws” — the ultimate beach movie — on Plage Macé in 2013).

While accredited journalists and film industry members — including those who find themselves locked out of other festival screenings — turn up at Cinéma de la Plage, the program is particularly valuable for locals who have comparatively few opportunities to see other films at the festival. (No tickets are sold to any of the festival screenings, which require hard-to-come-by invitations for the public. A limited number of these are made available to Cannes residents).

“It’s a chance for the festival to reach out to the town, to reach out to the Côte d’Azur generally,” Bradshaw said.

Beyond all that, however, Cinéma de la Plage also provides a striking visual. The image of its majestic screen, silhouetted against the sea and sky, has become an indelible part of the festival’s image.

“It looks so great as a spectacle in itself, on the beach, especially as night falls,” Bradshaw said. “Even if you’re not going to a movie there and just walking up and down the Croisette, which is a signature experience of being at Cannes.”

Plage Macé is only three hundred yards from the red carpet. And yet, with the sound of the waves and the smell of the sea, you might as well be light-years away from the glamour, adrenaline and stress that are otherwise inescapable at the event. Leaning back in your deck chair, this can feel like the best seat at the festival — in the sand, under the stars.

“Of course, Cannes is the biggest festival in the world, of course there’s a market, there’s media pressure, the competition, the awards,” Frémaux said.

“But for everyone,” he added, “going to the beach is a way of not forgetting that, in essence, cinema is all about a silver screen, a crowd and a film.”



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Long Beach St. beats UCLA, wins men’s volleyball crown

May 12, 2025, 10:37 PM ET COLUMBUS, Ohio — Freshman Moni Nikolov posted six kills, four aces and a pair of digs and Long Beach State beat UCLA 25-17, 25-23 and 25-21 to win the NCAA men’s volleyball tournament on Monday night. It was the Beach’s (30-3) fourth championship in program history and first since […]

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — Freshman Moni Nikolov posted six kills, four aces and a pair of digs and Long Beach State beat UCLA 25-17, 25-23 and 25-21 to win the NCAA men’s volleyball tournament on Monday night.

It was the Beach’s (30-3) fourth championship in program history and first since 2019. Long Beach State also won the title in 2018 and claimed its first title in 1991 when current coach Alan Knipe was a player.

The 6-foot-10 Nikolov, who just turned 18, started the match with an opening-serve ace and ended UCLA’s two-time reign with a thunderous kill.

“Not for one second did we think we were going to lose that game,” Nikolov said. “Before the game in the locker room we told each other we were here. We were born for this (expletive) game.”

The animated Nikolov paused, apologized for his faux pas and went on to say: “We were built for this game. Even when we were down five, we trusted each other because we knew we were the better team.”

Trailing 1-0, UCLA led 18-13 in the second set before the nation’s No. 1-ranked team outscored the Bruins 12-5 for a two-point win. In the third set, Alex Kandev’s kill gave Long Beach State a 4-3 lead and the Beach led for the remainder. Kandev finished with a .452 hitting percentage.

The Bruins entered the tournament with the second highest hitting efficiency in the country but were stifled in part by Long Beach State’s length and were outhit by the Beach .354 to .192. UCLA’s Cooper Robinson finished with a .381 hitting percentage.

The championship match was the third meeting between the two teams this season with Long Beach State owning a 9-1 set advantage.

Long Beach State dropped just a single set as it beat Fort Valley State 3-0 and Pepperdine 3-1.

Two-time defending champion UCLA (22-7) sought to become college volleyball’s first three-peat champion since the Bruins’ won four in a row from 1981-84.



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High school boys’ volleyball: Playoff results and pairings

CITY SECTION BOYS VOLLEYBALL PLAYOFFS MONDAY’S RESULTS QUARTERFINALS DIVISION II#1 VAAS d. #8 Roosevelt, 25-15, 23-25, 25-22, 25-20#4 Fairfax d. #5 Poly, 25-17, 25-12, 13-25, 25-20#3 Banning d. #6 Sylmar, 25-22, 25-22, 21-25, 25-23#2 Mendez d. #10 Legacy, 25-19, 25-23, 25-12 DIVISION III#1 East Valley d. #8 Foshay, 25-14, 21-25, 25-17, 16-25, 15-11#4 SOCES d. […]

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CITY SECTION BOYS VOLLEYBALL PLAYOFFS

MONDAY’S RESULTS

QUARTERFINALS

DIVISION II
#1 VAAS d. #8 Roosevelt, 25-15, 23-25, 25-22, 25-20
#4 Fairfax d. #5 Poly, 25-17, 25-12, 13-25, 25-20
#3 Banning d. #6 Sylmar, 25-22, 25-22, 21-25, 25-23
#2 Mendez d. #10 Legacy, 25-19, 25-23, 25-12

DIVISION III
#1 East Valley d. #8 Foshay, 25-14, 21-25, 25-17, 16-25, 15-11
#4 SOCES d. #5 Downtown Magnets, 26-24, 25-21, 20-25, 25-15
#19 San Fernando at #6 Angelou
#7 Maywood CES d. #2 Gardena, 3-0

DIVISION IV
#8 Hamilton d. #1 Garfield, 25-19, 14-25, 25-23, 25-19
#5 Animo Venice d. #20 Belmont, 20-25, 25-22, 25-22, 25-15
#11 University Prep Value d. #3 Sun Valley Magnet, 25-21, 25-19, 25-21
#10 Port of LA d. #2 Huntington Park, 25-22, 20-25, 26-24, 28-26

DIVISION V
#1 Wilson d. #9 Magnolia Science Academy Reseda, 25-11, 25-16, 25-19
#4 Animo South Los Angeles d. #12 Arleta, 21-25, 25-22, 20-25, 25-21, 16-14
#3 Harbor Teacher d. New Designs University Park, 25-19, 25-22, 17-25, 25-15
#2 Dorsey d. #10 Washington, 25-13, 25-11, 25-14

TUESDAY’S SCHEDULE
(Matches at 7 p.m. unless noted)

SEMIFINALS

OPEN DIVISION
#4 Granada Hills at #1 Venice
#3 El Camino Real at #2 Chatsworth

DIVISION I
#5 Marquez at #1 Taft
#3 Marshall at #2 Carson

WEDNESDAY’S SCHEDULE
(Matches at 7 p.m. unless noted)

SEMIFINALS

DIVISION II
#4 Fairfax at #1 VAAS
#3 Banning at #2 Mendez

DIVISION III
#4 SOCES at #1 East Valley
#7 Maywood CES vs. #6 Angelou or San Fernando

DIVISION IV
#8 Hamilton at #5 Animo Venice
#11 University Prep Value at #10 Port of Los Angeles

DIVISION V
#4 Animo South Los Angeles at #1 Wilson
#3 Harbor Teacher at #2 Dorsey

Note: Finals in all divisions May 16-17 (sites and times TBD).



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