Sports
Late drama and penalty heroics as Watford crowned U17 Open Champions
May 4, 2025 Watford were crowned national champions after a dramatic penalty shootout win against City of Manchester in the GoCardless Swim England Water Polo Open U17 National Age Group Championship Final. They repeated their exploits in yesterday’s semi-final with Exeter, coming from behind to take the game to penalties and win it in sudden […]

Watford were crowned national champions after a dramatic penalty shootout win against City of Manchester in the GoCardless Swim England Water Polo Open U17 National Age Group Championship Final.
They repeated their exploits in yesterday’s semi-final with Exeter, coming from behind to take the game to penalties and win it in sudden death with a final score of 15-14 (6-5 on penalties).
It was a match which Watford Head Coach Adam Page branded as ‘nuts’ but admitted that he couldn’t be prouder of his team.
He said: “It was nuts. We had similar in our semi-final with Exeter, we were down by three then took it to a penalty shootout, then sudden death. And then Vuk (Guzijan), six-foot seven giant in goal pulling out miracles.
“But we always kept our composure. It was a difficult game, we know Manchester are very good. A tough side, very good in Dan (Paddon), top club as well.
“And for the penalties I couldn’t watch. I watched a little bit; I couldn’t watch some of it. I looked at the crowd half the time to see what the reactions were – people’s faces.
“I was bricking it is the right way to put it! But I’m so proud of the boys, I love them to bits. We’ve worked so hard for this in the past four of five years. In U15s we finished second to Manchester, losing 4-3 so I’m just very proud of them.”
“They were brilliant”
After the first half the game looked like it was only going Manchester’s way. They were dominant throughout the opening 16 minutes, defending excellently and taking their chances in the second period to go 6-2 ahead.
But Watford weren’t ready to give up and after pulling the gap down to three in the third they turned the game on its head in the final quarter.
Three unanswered goals through Gethin Dorrington’s double and Theodoros Katsaris’ strike pulled them level at 7-7 with five minutes to play. Then Luka Guzijan put Watford in front for the first time since the opening quarter just a minute and a half later.
In the final minute both sides were celebrating like they’d won it. Goals from Yaroslav Shemanov and an Andrew Stephenson strike with two seconds to play made it look certain that Manchester had snatched back the trophy.
But there was one more twist as young Luka Guzijan fired a shot from halfway on the final whistle and a slight deflection took it into the net to take the game to penalties.
Both teams were excellent from the spot, missing just one of their opening five as the match went to sudden death. And when Manchester seventh penalty was saved by the tournament MVP and top goalkeeper, Vuk Guzijan, teammate Rishi Patel made no mistake to spark wild celebrations from the Watford bench.
Reflecting on the match, Page spoke on what he changed to help his side get back in it. He added: “I think we started slow, and after the second quarter we changed it a little bit. Then we got a bit of confidence, got into our flow and then what happened, happened.
“We started driving a lot more because they were playing a zone on positions one and two. Sometimes we may not always have the most technically gifted players but what I try to bring out in them is the smart side of water polo not just the brute force.
“I know that’s something they can develop and use when they’re older and they used that in the third quarter. We started breaking a little bit as well but I can’t complain with anything they were brilliant.”
U17 Open gold medal match result and scorers
Watford 15 – 14 City of Manchester (2-3, 0-3, 2-1, 5-2, Watford defeat Manchester 6-5 on penalties)
Watford scorers: Rishi Patel (3), Ilija Crompton, Theodoros Katsaris (2), Luka Guzijan (3), Gethin Dorrington (6)
City of Manchester scorers: Andrew Stephenson (5), Otis Mckelvey (2), Joseph Roxburgh (2), Jude Eagling, Carter McMillan, Yaroslav Shemanov (2).
Exeter defeat Worthing for bronze
In the bronze medal match, Exeter put their unfortunate penalty shootout defeat to Watford with a fine display.
They defeated Worthing 20-7, dominating from the second period onwards. Joseph Davies top scored for the club and the competition after grabbing six with Ollie Noyce and Bence Bartos scoring four a piece.
That potent attack was just too strong for a battling Worthing side who couldn’t hold them off despite a solid opening period.
The 2022 champions kept battling with Piaras Donnelly scoring a hat trick in response but Exeter were relentless and continued to extend their advantage to reach 13 by the final whistle.
You can find the full match sheets and all the results from this weekend’s competition by visiting the live scoreboard page.
Images: Will Johnston Photography
U17 Open bronze medal match result and scorers
Exeter 20 – 7 Worthing (4-3, 5-0, 5-2, 6-2)
Exeter scorers: Bernat Amado, Joseph Davies (6), Ollie Noyce (4), Bence Bartos (4), Luke Mardon, Toby C-Y (3), Oliver Wallace.
Worthing scorers: Leon Wudarczyk, Piaras Donnelly (3), Tom Greenyer, Cameron Mcarragger, Ben Loffler.
Sports
St. Cloud State Volleyball Announces 2025 Schedule
ST. CLOUD, Minn. – St. Cloud State Volleyball has officially announced its 2025 schedule. The Huskies’ 29-match regular season slate features a nonconference trip to Canada and Washington for the Western Washington Invitational before returning to St. Cloud to host the 2025 UP North Tournament at Halenbeck Hall. Opening its season on Sept. 4 in British […]

ST. CLOUD, Minn. – St. Cloud State Volleyball has officially announced its 2025 schedule. The Huskies’ 29-match regular season slate features a nonconference trip to Canada and Washington for the Western Washington Invitational before returning to St. Cloud to host the 2025 UP North Tournament at Halenbeck Hall. Opening its season on Sept. 4 in British Columbia, SCSU will play eight nonconference matches before beginning Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference (NSIC) play Sept. 19 at home.
The Huskies begin their 2025 season with a trip to Burnaby, British Columbia and Bellingham, Washington for the Western Washington Invitational, hosted by Western Washington and Simon Fraser (B.C.) from Sept. 4-6. SCSU will play at Simon Fraser (British Columbia) before traveling to Bellingham to play San Francisco State (Calif.), the host Western Washington and Central Washington to wrap up the four-match slate. The Huskies have played Simon Fraser three times (1-2, last in 2021), San Francisco State twice (2-0, last in 1990) and Central Washington twice (0-2, last in 2023). SCSU and Western Washington have never met on the volleyball court before. Three of the four teams, and SCSU, ended the 2024 season in the top-25 or were receiving votes.
St. Cloud State returns home the following weekend to host the 2025 UP North Tournament at Halenbeck Hall. The Huskies will play matches against Adelphi (N.Y.), Michigan Tech, Northern Michigan and Barry (Fla.). SCSU has played Adelphi once (1-0, last in 2017), Michigan Tech 22 times (16-6, last in 2024), Northern Michigan 28 times (10-18, last in 2024) and Barry once (0-1, last in 1995 NCAA Elite 8). The Huskies split against MTU and NMU in the 2024 UP North Tournament which was hosted by Michigan Tech in Houghton, Mich.
Northern Sun play starts Sept. 19-20 when Minot State and UMary come to St. Cloud for the Huskies 2025 conference home opener weekend. The following Tuesday, Sept. 23, SCSU makes its first conference road trip of the season when it travels to Mankato to play Minnesota State. St. Cloud State will play its first ever road Northern Sun match against league newcomer, Jamestown with a trip to Jamestown, N.D. on Sept. 26 and will welcome the Jimmies to St. Cloud on Oct. 25. SCSU is 4-0 all-time against Jamestown, but the teams last met in 1988. Towards the end of the NSIC slate, the Huskies will play rival Concordia-St. Paul in a nonconference matchup at the Gangelhoff Center in St. Paul on Nov. 4.
In total, the Huskies will play 14 home regular season matches (10 conference matches). The NSIC Tournament will run from Nov. 18-Nov. 21 and the NCAA Tournament will begin on Dec. 4 with regional play and conclude with the championship match on Dec. 13.
Eight teams on St. Cloud State’s 2025 schedule finished last season ranked in the Final American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) DII national poll – San Francisco State (No. 2), Concordia-St. Paul (No. 13), Southwest Minnesota State (No. 16), Wayne State (No. 19), Barry (No. 20), Northern State (No. 22), Central Washington (RV), Simon Fraser (RV), while the Huskies finished ranked No. 5, which tied their best final ranking in program history.
2025 SCHEDULE
For all the latest on St. Cloud State Volleyball, stay tuned to SCSUHuskies.com and follow the team on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.
Sports
‘Varsity Blues’ USC Coach Gets New Trial on Fraud Charge
The University of Southern California water polo coach tied to the “Varsity Blues” admissions scandal will get a new trial on a fraud charge but remains convicted on a bribery charge, a panel of First Circuit judges ruled. It’s impossible to tell if the jury reached its guilty verdict on Jovan Vavic’s honest services wire […]

The University of Southern California water polo coach tied to the “Varsity Blues” admissions scandal will get a new trial on a fraud charge but remains convicted on a bribery charge, a panel of First Circuit judges ruled.
It’s impossible to tell if the jury reached its guilty verdict on Jovan Vavic’s honest services wire fraud charge using a recently invalidated legal theory, the judges said in a Friday opinion. The theory that was shot down in a separate “Varsity Blues” appeal argued that payments to USC could be considered “actionable bribes.”
USC was the victim of the bribery scheme and therefore cannot be considered to have received bribes under honest services fraud, the First Circuit found in US v Abdelaziz.
However, the panel in the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit found misstatements by prosecutors during closing arguments weren’t enough to prompt a new trial for a separate charge—Vavic’s federal programs bribery conspiracy charge.
Prosecutors didn’t contradict jury instructions, and their statements likely didn’t impact the trial’s outcome, the judges said.
As coach, Vavic was paid to help students pose as members of the water polo team and get admitted to USC, according to prosecutors. The scandal ensnared dozens of ultra-wealthy parents, Hollywood stars, and college coaches. Vavic was the only coach to go to trial.
He was convicted in 2022, but granted a new trial after a district court found some evidence from the government wasn’t reliable.
For example, some of the payments from private equity investor John B. Wilson allegedly to secure his son’s admission went to the school’s water polo program, not Vavic, said Judge Indira Talwani of the US District Court for the District of Massachusetts.
Separately, Wilson sued USC in Los Angeles state court in September after his fraud and bribery convictions were overturned, asking for his six-figure donation back.
Judge Julie Rikelman wrote the opinion, and Judges Gustavo A. Gelpí and O. Rogeriee Thompson joined.
The case is US v. Vavic, 1st Cir., No. 22-1787, 5/30/25.
Sports
St. Cloud Tech loses in first boys volleyball tournament 2025
ELK RIVER — The first season of boys varsity volleyball in St. Cloud is over. St. Cloud Tech lost to Elk River 3-0 in the Section 8-1A play-in game Tuesday, ending the team’s inaugural season. The Tigers (1-17) were seeded No. 10 in the section and played No. 7 Elk River (13-16) for a […]

ELK RIVER — The first season of boys varsity volleyball in St. Cloud is over.
St. Cloud Tech lost to Elk River 3-0 in the Section 8-1A play-in game Tuesday, ending the team’s inaugural season.
The Tigers (1-17) were seeded No. 10 in the section and played No. 7 Elk River (13-16) for a shot at the two-seed, St. Michael Albertville (22-7). The Elks won the first set handily — 25-12, but Tech kept the second and third sets in single digits. The Elk won 25-20 and 25-22.
The Tigers beat Minneapolis Edison (8-15) on April 12. It was the first season of varsity designation for the sport by the MSHSL and most of the Tech players did not play volleyball competitively until the school added a club team in 2023-24.
There are few teams in Minnesota outside of the Twin Cities or Rochester areas, and the Tigers are the furthest north besides Bemidji (14-2). The Lumberjacks beat Tech in the Tigers’ home opener, and they are to play STMA for a chance to play Rogers (23-1) or Anoka (19-6) in the section final.
Contact reporter Reid Glenn at rglenn@gannett.com.
Sports
Turner Resets School Record In 100m Hurdles To Move On
COLLEGE STATION, Texas—The Long Beach State women’s track and field team opened competition at the NCAA West First Round Thursday at E.B. Cushing Stadium. ON THE TRACK Rahni Turner overcame a slow start in her 100m hurdles heat to win the race in a new school record time of 13.15. Turner previously held the […]

ON THE TRACK
Rahni Turner overcame a slow start in her 100m hurdles heat to win the race in a new school record time of 13.15. Turner previously held the school record with Hailey Fune’ at 13.21. Her victory automatically advanced her to Saturday’s quarterfinals in the event. The quarters begin Saturday at 4:15 p.m.
Claudine Raud-Gumiel missed moving on by one spot in the 100m hurdles. Her 13.44 resulted in 25th in the field of 48. The top 24 compete again on Saturday.
Battling a leg injury, Trinity Barnett competed in the 100m and 200m. She ran 11.66 in the 100m, coming in 44th. Returning a little over an hour later, she put up a time of 24.29 in the 200m, finishing 45th out of 48.
Sofia Lavreshina missed advancing to the quarterfinals in the 400m hurdles. Her 58.78 was the 26th fastest time in the field of 48.
IN THE FIELD
Giszelle Hrehor fouled on her three attempts in the hammer throw and did not record a place in the event.
Jonelle Scott failed to clear the opening height in the pole vault, 13-2 1/4, resulting in a non-placing finish.
UP NEXT
Tristyn Flores has advanced to Friday’s quarterfinals in the men’s 100m and men’s 200m. The 100m is scheduled to begin at 4:35 p.m. PDT. The 200m begins at 5:50 p.m. PDT. Friday’s Long Beach State field entries are listed below.
ALL TIMES PACIFIC
~#LongBeachBuilt~
Sports
Eagles win 2 all-sports trophies and top women’s athlete in ASUN awards
Selfless service to community In service, Carpenter was a dedicated volunteer with numerous nonprofit organizations, consistently giving back to FGCU and the local community. After Hurricane Ian struck in 2022, she contributed and coordinated more than 30 hours of volunteer work to assist local students and residents. She also led the bone marrow registration initiative […]
Sports
REGIONAL RUNNERS-UP: Badger boys’ volleyball postseason march ends in sweep by Knights
Photo by Daniel Sherriff All season long the Berkshire Badgers boys’ volleyball team has frustrated their opponents with their scrappy play. The shoe was on the other foot on Saturday afternoon as the Badgers fell to Nordonia in the Ohio High School Athletic Association Division II Region 7 championship by a 25-14, 25-18, 25-17 sweep […]


All season long the Berkshire Badgers boys’ volleyball team has frustrated their opponents with their scrappy play. The shoe was on the other foot on Saturday afternoon as the Badgers fell to Nordonia in the Ohio High School Athletic Association Division II Region 7 championship by a 25-14, 25-18, 25-17 sweep at Berkshire High School.
“They have such a commanding offense,” Coach Tim Percic said. “Because of that it stretches out our defense. Our defense likes to go after balls that are in play and makes plays but when we are completely spread out over the full court, there a lot more holes and that was a tough test for our guys.”
A historic season in which Berkshire (16-7, 7-1) captured a share of the conference banner, set the record for most wins in a season and advanced to the regional final for the first time in school history ended just shy of capturing a berth in the OHSAA Division II Final Four.
Nordonia established control in the first set, racing ahead to a 6-4 advantage. The five-year coach noted Berkshire wanted to speed up its offense to catch the Knights off guard but it was the other way around. By using a full-court offense, Nordonia found all of the holes in the Badgers’ side of the court.
In addition to finding the sweet spots, senior outside hitter Jake Starr noted that the Knights set the tempo early, forcing Berkshire out of its usual system, evidenced by them going on a 6-1 run to hold a 15-8 advantage at the halfway point of the first set.
“I think they came out punching and were (not?) ready to go,” he added. “We honestly came out really slow and I think that was our kryptonite, in the first two sets we played like we did not care and in the third set it was closer. We woke up but at that point it does not matter, you have already dug yourself a deep hole.”
Nordonia went on a 10-6 run to claim a 25-14 victory in the first set and carried the momentum into the second set.
Starr acknowledged that the Knights were the relentless team in fighting for every loose ball, a strategy that had served Berkshire well throughout the season.
“We haven’t seen a team that scrappy,” he said. “They fought just as much and honestly, they fought more for every point than we did. I think that is why we lost, we did not want every point, we wanted every other one and they wanted everyone, so it showed.”
After taking a 9-5 advantage in the second set, the Knights kept rolling and were spurred by a 10-8 run, increasing their lead to 19-14. The Badgers continued allowing Nordonia to dictate the terms of the match as the Knights won the set 25-18.
Percic said that no matter how often the Badgers tried trimming into Nordonia’s lead, the Knights always had an answer.
“It is a big stage against a tough opponent, and you want to do something spectacular,” he said. “Hit the grand slam of volleyball if there was one but it is a game of patience. Sometimes, the moment got to us and we made silly mistakes.”
The Badgers demonstrated their resilience in the third set as they battled back from an early 7-4 deficit fueled by an 8-5 run to tie the score at 12-12.
The teams traded points and Nordonia appeared to be pulling away by being fueled by a 4-1 run, but Berkshire trimmed the lead to 16-15 with another rally
Ultimately, Nordonia maintained control at the end and senior setter Zac Fernandez closed the match out by delivering four aces in the final five points to end the third set with a 25-17 victory.
Although the Badgers’ season ended just one win shy of the Final Four, Starr spoke glowingly of the bond shared by the seven seniors that returned from last year’s team and raised the ceiling for the entire program.
“This is my favorite high school sport,” he said. “We all loved it and we are definitely going to miss it. I know a couple of us are going to stay around, but we will stay connected. I am hoping at some point so set up a little bit of a game between all of the seniors.”
As far as Percic was concerned, while the Badgers are graduating some valuable contributors, he looked forward to seeing what the next wave of players will show for next season as Berkshire’s depth kept several talented players on the bench this season behind the leadership of the senior class.
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