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Josh Taylor

Josh Taylor takes on Ekow Essuman this weekend in his debut at welterweight, but the Scotsman says that even though his goal is to become two-weight world champion, he won’t be feeling any pressure to do so as he’s already ‘completed boxing’. This Sunday, the day after Taylor’s fight with Essuman, will mark a year […]

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Josh Taylor
Josh Taylor takes on Ekow Essuman this weekend in his debut at welterweight, but the Scotsman says that even though his goal is to become two-weight world champion, he won’t be feeling any pressure to do so as he’s already ‘completed boxing’.

This Sunday, the day after Taylor’s fight with Essuman, will mark a year to the day he last fought in his rematch loss to Jack Catterall. But now the former undisputed 140-pound champion is plotting to become a two-weight titleholder.

Having signed with Queensberry Promotions after taking a year off to mull over his next move and build into a slightly larger frame, Taylor (19-2, 13 KOs) returns to the OVO Hydro in Glasgow to face former British champion Essuman (21-1, 8 KOs) on Saturday night, with the action to be streamed live on DAZN.

Ultimately, the aim for Taylor is to become champion once again. He won his first world title in May 2019, beating Ivan Baranchyk for the IBF junior-welterweight strap, before unifying The Ring and WBA titles against Regis Prograis in the World Boxing Super Series (WBSS) final later that year.

Jose Ramirez in Las Vegas was his crowning four-belt moment in May 2021, but since then he’s had it tough, dealing with the fallout of a controversial split decision win over Catterall, before losing the rematch after dropping his Ring and WBO titles to Teofimo Lopez in June 2023.

However, having achieved everything he set out to in 2019, Taylor insists the pressure is off, and he now has all the experience and know-how in the world in regards to winning titles.

“As soon as I became world champion, all the pressure was off me,” he tells The Ring. “That was my goal, my lifetime goal and ambition was to become a world champion. As soon as I beat Ivan Baranchyk, that was my mission accomplished.

“But me being me and being competitive and being the champion that I am, the champion-minded person that I am, I wanted more. I wanted to become a unified world champion. Then it was the undisputed world champion, which I achieved, which I never thought I ever would achieve.

“So yeah, everything from here on out is a bonus and now I’ve got goals to become a two-way world champion now. So it’s all about setting goals and setting targets, not staying still and staying in the same place. It’s always about trying to improve and be better.

“I’m just now all about enjoying it and more desire to go and do what I want to do without the pressure. I’ve completed boxing in a session, in a sense.”

Much has been made of the challenges Essuman, who Taylor knows well from their amateur days on the Team GB squad, will pose the Tartan Tornado.

Some observers are expecting Essuman to bring the heat to Taylor for 12 rounds straight, perfectly encapsulating what his ‘Engine’ moniker is all about, but Taylor can’t see that happening.

“It’s the kind of fast-paced fight that I’m expecting,” he added.

“Everyone seems to be going on about his engine but I don’t think he’s as big an engine as he makes out.

“He doesn’t fight like he’s got a big engine either. But I am expecting a tough fight and I’m prepared for a hard 12 rounds.”

Taylor and Essuman looked to be on friendly terms when they met at the announcement press conference earlier this year. The pair smiled, complimented each other and shook hands after a tame 20 minutes of chatter to promote their contest.

Anyone who knows anything about Taylor, however, knows that his demeanour switches on fight week. His nickname ‘Hank’ derives his likeness to the violent and angry alter-ego Jim Carrey plays in the comedy film ‘Me, Myself & Irene’.

The build-up to his fight with Ramirez four years ago, in particular, saw Taylor approach their media duties and weigh-in in a provocative, aggressive manner. Onlookers who were not aware of Taylor’s routine fight-week personality switch, came to the conclusion that he’d let his emotions get the better of him.

That assumption was far from the truth, however, as Taylor dropped Ramirez twice en route to a unanimous decision victory to win the undisputed titles at 140 pounds at the Virgin Hotels in Paradise, Nevada.

Taylor expects he’ll switch things up and bring fight-mode energy once again this week.

“I’ll be in fight mode, that’s for sure,” he added. “I’ll be in fight mode. My character and my personality changes to fighter mode now.

I’ll still be respectful and be nice and cordial when I need to be. But yeah I’ll be ready to go.

“I wouldn’t say we were friendly, but we were on friendly terms and stuff. Respect’s always been there between the two of us. We’ve always had mutual respect.

“We had a couple of good sparring sessions back in the day. But yeah, it’s a lot of experience I’ve had with him, it’s been good.

“He’s been very, very respectful. He’s always been a good guy, we’ve always got along well. There’s no bad blood there at all.”

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Grant Gondrezick II Joins Long Beach State As Division I Transfer

LONG BEACH, Calif. – Chris Acker and the Men’s Basketball staff have added another Division I guard, bringing in a proven scorer in Grant Gondrezick II.   Grant Gondrezick II | Guard | 6-0, 180 | Benton Harbor, Mich.   An elite scorer in Michigan during his high school career, Gondrezick surpassed 2,000 career points […]

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LONG BEACH, Calif. – Chris Acker and the Men’s Basketball staff have added another Division I guard, bringing in a proven scorer in Grant Gondrezick II.
 
Grant Gondrezick II | Guard | 6-0, 180 | Benton Harbor, Mich.
 
An elite scorer in Michigan during his high school career, Gondrezick surpassed 2,000 career points while averaging 25.3 points and 4.4 assists per game as a senior at Benton Harbor High School. He scored nearly 1,000 points in his final season alone while leading Benton Harbor to a regional championship. After redshirting at Elon, Gondrezick made an immediate impact as a freshman at Detroit Mercy, averaging 8.4 points per game, making nine starts, shooting 41.5 percent from three, and adding 3.1 rebounds per game in his first full Division I season.
 
Acker on Gondrezick II:
“Grant comes from a basketball family. He understands what it takes to be a good player day in and day out. He’s put the work in and knows how to put the ball in the basket. He had some impressive games this past season, and we have all the confidence in the world that he is going to bring his competitive edge and work ethic to our program here at the Beach.”
 
With the addition of Gondrezick, Long Beach State has now brought in five Division I transfers: Shaquil Bender, Cole Farrell, Isiah Lewis, Demarshay Johnson Jr., along with Gondrezick. They will complement the team’s returning players, including Derrick Michael Xzavierro, as well as the incoming freshman class of Dallas Washington and Gavin Sykes. The program has also added two other transfers, Rob Diaz III and Christian Jones.
 



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Half of sports fans see streaming as primary viewing platform

Over half of sports fans now consider streaming platforms to be their primary method for watching sports, according to marketing and tech company PMG’s 2025 State of Sports report from its insights division. The report showed that 56% of the 1,200 participants (all 18 or older and U.S. residents, answering between Sept. 30 and Oct. […]

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Over half of sports fans now consider streaming platforms to be their primary method for watching sports, according to marketing and tech company PMG’s 2025 State of Sports report from its insights division.

The report showed that 56% of the 1,200 participants (all 18 or older and U.S. residents, answering between Sept. 30 and Oct. 9) tuned into a sporting event at least once a week. Sixty-one percent said that their sports viewing encounters have increased due to streaming services’ capability to provide “greater accessibility and exclusive content.” Of Gen Z sports followers, 75% view shorter forms of sport content more often than entire games. Millennials and Gen X are more prone to tune into sports when they’re aired in real time.

PMG said projections indicated that U.S. digital sports viewership grew by 10.2% in 2024, reaching 105.28 million viewers. In 2018, it was 18.6 million, representing a 466% surge in six years, according to eMarketer. The report credits younger fans being drawn to advanced and fast-paced sports content over conventional broadcasting as a major factor in the growth.



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Wednesday playoff recap: Softball splits as both area boys volleyball teams move to quarterfinals | Sports

Playoffs are in full effect for Connecticut high school spring sports with four local area teams competing and playing in games on Wednesday.  There were four teams (not including the Berlin Redcoats softball team) that competed in their respective brackets with two softball teams and two boys volleyball teams in action. Three out of the […]

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Playoffs are in full effect for Connecticut high school spring sports with four local area teams competing and playing in games on Wednesday. 

There were four teams (not including the Berlin Redcoats softball team) that competed in their respective brackets with two softball teams and two boys volleyball teams in action. Three out of the four teams have moved on to the next round of their state tournaments with one of the four teams suffering a season-ending loss. 



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U.S. Toppled by Brazil, Home Crowd at 2025 Women’s VNL

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 5, 2025) – Playing before a large and boisterous Brazil crowd draped in their team’s yellow and green colors, the U.S. Women’s National Team fell to the host nation, 3-0 (25-18, 25-17, 25-19) in Rio de Janeiro. The U.S. team (0-2) plays its third match in as many days tomorrow, Friday, […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 5, 2025) – Playing before a large and boisterous Brazil crowd draped in their team’s yellow and green colors, the U.S. Women’s National Team fell to the host nation, 3-0 (25-18, 25-17, 25-19) in Rio de Janeiro.

The U.S. team (0-2) plays its third match in as many days tomorrow, Friday, June 6 at 5 p.m. PDT against Czechia, which lost to Brazil in three sets in its VNL opener.

Get Tickets to Women’s VNL in Arlington, Texas, July 9-13

The U.S. equaled Brazil in aces (four apiece) and stayed close in kills (38-35 Brazil) but could not overcome a 12-4 deficit in blocks. The U.S. recorded 72 digs to 51 for the hosts.

Outside hitter Logan Eggleston led the U.S. with 13 points on a team-high 12 kills with a block. Captain Roni Jones-Perry totaled nine points on seven kills and two aces. Zoe Jarvis recorded five digs.

Opposite Olivia Babcock scored eight points on seven kills and an ace. Middle blocker Anna Dodson added four points with three kills and a block. Setter Ella Powell also scored four points (two kills, one block, one ace). Amber Igiede had two kills and a block; and Logan Lednicky added two kills.

A Dodson block followed by an ace from Babcock gave the U.S. a 14-12 lead in the opening set. The lead was still two points, 16-14, when Brazil finished the set on an 11–2 run. Eggleston led all players with six kills.

Brazil jumped out to a 7-3 lead in the second set, but the U.S. battled back and trailed by just a point, 18-17. After giving up the next point, the U.S. appeared to close the gap back to a point, but Brazil won a challenge and did not give up another point in the set. Jones-Perry paced the U.S. in the set with four points on three kills and an ace.

“We just need to find a little more consistency,” U.S. head coach Erik Sullivan told VBTV after set two. “We have some moments where we’re playing really well and competing at a high level, then we just let down and have these big long runs. We [have to] find that consistency so we’re not giving up points in a row.”

The U.S. trailed by 10 points (20-10) in the third set before going on a 9-2 run to cut the lead to three points, 22-19. Aces from Jones-Perry and Powell, and a kill from middle Amber Igiede keyed the U.S. in that stretch. Eggleston scored a team-high four points in the set (three kills and a block) and Igiede added three points on a pair of kills and a block.

Brazil (2–0) scored the final three points of the third set to secure its second sweep to open VNL play.

U.S. Women’s Week One Roster for 2025 VNL

No. Name (Pos., Ht., Hometown, College, USAV Region)
6 Morgan Hentz (L, 5-9, Lakeside Park, Ky., Stanford Univ., Pioneer)
9 Madisen Skinner (OH, 6-2, Katy, Texas, Univ. of Kentucky and Univ. of Texas, Lone Star)
13 Amber Igiede (MB, 6-3, Baton Rouge, La., Univ. of Hawaii, Bayou)
14 Anna Dodson (MB, 6-5, Fort Collins, Colo., UCLA, Rocky Mountain)
17 Zoe Jarvis (previously Fleck) (L, 5-6, Granada Hills, Calif., UCLA and Univ. of Texas, Southern California)
21 Roni Jones-Perry (OH, 6-0, West Jordan, Utah, BYU, Intermountain)
22 Sarah Franklin (OH, 6-4, Lake Worth, Fla., Univ. of Wisconsin, Florida)
24 Olivia Babcock (Opp, 6-4, Los Angeles, Calif., Pitt, Southern California)
27 Ella Powell (S, 6-0, Fayetteville, Ark., Univ. of Washington, Delta)
28 Logan Lednicky (Opp, 6-3, Sugar Land, Texas, Univ. of Texas A&M, Lone Star)
29 Molly McCage (MB, 6-3, Spring, Texas, Univ. of Texas, Lone Star)
32 Saige Ka’aha’aina-Torres (S, Honolulu, Hawaii, Univ. of Texas, Aloha)
33 Logan Eggleston (OH, 6-2, Brentwood, Tenn., Univ. of Texas, Southern)
43 Serena Gray (MB, 6-2, Temple City, Calif., Pitt, Southern California)

Head Coach: Erik Sullivan
Assistant Coach: Mike Wall
Second Assistant Coach: Brandon Taliaferro
Second Assistant Coach: Tayyiba Haneef-Park
Second Assistant Coach: Joe Trinsey
Team Manager: Rob Browning
Team Doctors: William Briner, James Suchy, Chris Lee, Andrew Gregory
Physiotherapist: Kara Kessans
Physical Trainers: Shawn Hueglin, Shannon Boone
Mental Performance Coach: Andrea Becker, Katy Stanfill
Performance Analyst: Virginia Pham

Week 1 Schedule: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Matches will be shown live and on-demand on VBTV. CBS Sport Network and the Big Ten Network will also air matches.

All times PDT
June 4 Italy def. USA, 3-0 (25-13, 25-13, 30-28)
June 5 Brazil def. USA, 3-0 (25-18, 25-17, 25-19)
June 6 at 5 p.m. vs. Czechia
June 8 at 1 p.m. vs. Korea



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Conard Boys Volleyball Sweeps Ridgefield in First Round of State Playoffs. – We-Ha

Conard Boys Volleyball Sweeps Ridgefield in First Round of State Playoffs.  The still-undefeated Conard boys volleyball team hosted Ridgefield on Wednesday in West Hartford. Sports reporting is sponsored by Keating Agency Insurance By Kayleigh Martin and Bridget Dawson After their 3-0 sweep against 16-seed Ridgefield on Wednesday night, the top-seeded Conard boys volleyball team will […]

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Conard Boys Volleyball Sweeps Ridgefield in First Round of State Playoffs.

 The still-undefeated Conard boys volleyball team hosted Ridgefield on Wednesday in West Hartford.

Sports reporting is sponsored by Keating Agency Insurance

By Kayleigh Martin and Bridget Dawson

After their 3-0 sweep against 16-seed Ridgefield on Wednesday night, the top-seeded Conard boys volleyball team will continue on to the quarterfinals of the CIAC Class L tournament to face their crosstown West Hartford rival, Hall High School, the No. 9 seed.

Conard will host Hall – which defeated Glastonbury 3-2 in the first round – on Friday, June 6, at 5:30 p.m. The Hall boys volleyball team’s record is 12-8, and Conard’s is 21-0. Kelly Roller and her team continue to celebrate her recent 300th career victory milestone with another big win.

The first set was an incredibly close, nerve-racking  set, resulting in a win for Conard. With alternating scores from 21, the set continued all the way up to Conard’s win by two, at 27-25. Tyler Richards and Lucas Hartland were strong at the net, blocking countless Ridgefield hits.

Conard started the second set off strong, leading 6 to 1, 11 to 5, 17 to 7, and eventually 19 to 10. Conard ultimately won the set at an incredible 25-12. Conard dominated the second set and this highlighted some of their best players. In the second set, Conard’s Libero, Jonah White, showed off some incredible defense and leadership in the back row.

The third set started off close, with Conard and Ridgefield tied 4-4, and Ridgefield gained a 7-to-5 advantage early on, however, Conard was able to tie it multiple times at  10-10, 12-12 and 14-14. Conard took a 20-17 lead, and was able to secure a 25-23 victory over Ridgefield, with the help of Keith Carreras whose crucial serves helped secure a victory for the Red Wolves.

Conard boys volleyball swept Ridgefield in the first round of the CIAC Class L tournament. June 4, 2025. Photo credit: Bridget Dawson

Despite the successful sweep, the boys believe they didn’t play their best game. Being undefeated, there is a high standard to reach, and even winning a state tournament game doesn’t suffice. Conard boys volleyball manager Kate Riker said, “The boys can do better, They played well today, but are going to lock for their face-off against Hall”

Captain Tristian McClay agreed. “Although we won, I think we can do much better,” he said, noting that the team holds each other accountable in the best of ways, cheering each other on for the good, and pushing each other to do better.

One of Conard’s other managers, Jayme Kline, explained that, “They have really good team chemistry when they’re down,” and that’s what makes a good team.

The Conard boys volleyball team is ready to take on Hall – a team they swept on May 22 – and hopes to secure a victory in Friday’s matchup. The community is invited to come cheer on the Red Wolves as they take on the Titans!

Like what you see here? Click here to subscribe to We-Ha’s newsletter so you’ll always be in the know about what’s happening in West Hartford! Click the blue button below to become a supporter of We-Ha.com and our efforts to continue producing quality journalism.





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Water Polo’s Mimi Stoupas Named an ACWPC All-American

The Melbourne, Australia native earned honorable mention designation and is the first Aztec to be named an All-American since the 2022 season. SAN DIEGO – San Diego State water polo’s Mimi Stoupas has a new honor to hang on her wall. The sophomore was named an honorable mention All-American by the Association of Collegiate Water […]

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The Melbourne, Australia native earned honorable mention designation and is the first Aztec to be named an All-American since the 2022 season. SAN DIEGO – San Diego State water polo’s Mimi Stoupas has a new honor to hang on her wall. The sophomore was named an honorable mention All-American by the Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches (ACWPC) for her play during the 2025 season. Stoupas, who competed in each of the team’s 30 games, led the Aztecs with 73 goals, a .603 shot percentage, 69 exclusions drawn and 29 steals. She was second on the squad with 121 shots…





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