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High School Sports: Terrific Trojans moving on to college track and field (5/9/25)
Courtesy Photo Parents joined Cambridge High track and field top athletes JoLie Farr (above) and Rachel Harris (below) as the seniors signed to continue their careers for collegiate programs on Tuesday. Farr joined the Wayne State College Wildcats in Wayne while Harris will compete for Concordia University at Seward. Both Trojans are among the Class […]


Courtesy Photo
Parents joined Cambridge High track and field top athletes JoLie Farr (above) and Rachel Harris (below) as the seniors signed to continue their careers for collegiate programs on Tuesday. Farr joined the Wayne State College Wildcats in Wayne while Harris will compete for Concordia University at Seward. Both Trojans are among the Class D state leaders in multiple events entering districts next week.

Courtesy Photo
Sports
Nebraska Volleyball Adding 6-5 Italian Opposite Hitter
Nebraska volleyball just got more dangerous for the inaugural season under Dani Busboom Kelly. According to Italian website Volleyball.it, the Huskers are set to add Italian opposite hitter Virginia Adriano. The 6-5 prospect has competed with the Italian youth national teams and recently finished the club season in A1 with Bergamo. A1 is the top […]

Nebraska volleyball just got more dangerous for the inaugural season under Dani Busboom Kelly.
According to Italian website Volleyball.it, the Huskers are set to add Italian opposite hitter Virginia Adriano. The 6-5 prospect has competed with the Italian youth national teams and recently finished the club season in A1 with Bergamo. A1 is the top league in Italy, which is one of the best leagues in the world.
The story indicates Adriano will be “the highest paid foreign athlete in American collegiate volleyball.”
Adriano, who will be 21 years old when the season begins, adds size and experience to a position of need for the Huskers. All-American Merritt Beason took her experience with her to the Pro Volleyball Federation as the first overall pick in last year’s draft. The Big Red recently signed two-time All-Big 12 selection Allie Sczech from Baylor.
After Sczech, freshman Ryan Hunter is next in line at opposite. Despite success this spring that saw her as one of the dominant forces, especially against Kansas, she has yet to appear in a collegiate match for a team that has national championship aspirations.
Adriano also becomes one of the tallest players on the roster for the Big Red. Taylor Landfair is the only other player listed at 6-5, with Rebekah Allick and Sczech at 6-4, and the trio of Andi Jackson, Teraya Sigler and Campbell Flynn at 6-3.
Should the Adriano addition become official, that creates a stunning three-way race for the position between her, Sczech and Hunter. Outside of the libero battle, Nebraska appears to be set at the other positions with returning starters in Bergen Reilly (setter), Harper Murray (outside hitter), Allick (middle blocker), and Jackson (middle blocker), with Sigler likely to take the second outside hitter spot.
Nebraska opens the season with the AVCA First Serve Showcase in Lincoln at Pinnacle Bank Arena The Huskers face Pittsburgh on Aug. 22 and Stanford on Aug. 24.
Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.
Sports
girls’ water polo team grows with out-of-school talent – Inklings News
Greens Farms Academy player Stella Savone made seven goals in the game against Sacred Heart on May 8, matching her personal best for most scores in a single game. With only 20 seconds left on the clock, Sacred Heart has possession. They make one final push, passing the ball to an inside player and hoping […]


Greens Farms Academy player Stella Savone made seven goals in the game against Sacred Heart on May 8, matching her personal best for most scores in a single game.
With only 20 seconds left on the clock, Sacred Heart has possession. They make one final push, passing the ball to an inside player and hoping for a shot at goal. Noise echoes and the clock ticks. A score is attempted, but goalie Sami Maldonado blocks the shot. Staples quickly gains possession, the end-of-game bell rings and the squad beats Sacred Heart with a 27-7 victory.
As summer nears, the fields flood with athletes eager to end their spring seasons with a win. However, one team, playing far from the stadium lights and crowds, finished their season with a splash: girls’ water polo. The team ended with a 5-4 record.
Water polo is historically a Staples sport, however, the lack of players in the past two years has prompted the administration to allow players who do not have a water polo team at their school to play at Staples.
The squad now includes players from eight different schools who live in a variety of towns. Although this may seem like a setback to the team atmosphere, players clicked effortlessly.
“I’m really lucky to be in such an amazing environment,” Wilton High School player Maddie Gimby ’25 said. “We all naturally support one another and joke around, so our chemistry is very natural.”
Coach Kade Ramirez’s experience coaching at water polo clubs in Connecticut allowed the team to recruit from a talented pool. Unlike most water polo teams, which recruit players with a heavy swimming background, Ramirez approaches the recruitment process from a non-swimming background, working to build teamwork and endurance at practice.
In addition to recruiting year-round players, some new members had never played water polo before this spring.
“We spent a few practices teaching [new players] the basics, and now they have grown on their own so much that our opponents mistake them as year-round players,” Gimby said.
Next season, the coaches hope to continue building this community, expanding competition and the recruitment process.
“We plan to travel to other states nearby to tap into more competition,” Ramirez said. “A major goal for us is filling the stands at our home games and showing people why they should come watch.”
Sports
A fight to save beach volleyball and Utah athletics’ ‘disheartening’ answer
SALT LAKE CITY — Coming off the best season in program history, Utah’s beach volleyball players were called into a mandatory meeting on April 29. Many went into the meeting thinking it was a conversation about the future, especially with the team’s head coach retiring just days before. Maybe there would be a conversation about […]

SALT LAKE CITY — Coming off the best season in program history, Utah’s beach volleyball players were called into a mandatory meeting on April 29.
Many went into the meeting thinking it was a conversation about the future, especially with the team’s head coach retiring just days before. Maybe there would be a conversation about the hiring process or talk about the values the players wanted to see from a new coach.
Instead, the University of Utah decided to cut the program entirely.
“I’d say it was disheartening,” said Maeve Griffin, a graduate senior on the team who was not a part of the meeting since she wasn’t a returner for the 2026 season.
Griffin didn’t learn of the decision until her teammates informed all the seniors of the meeting’s purpose. But she was not alone, members of the support staff — including the team’s nutritionist and therapist — were left in the dark, too.
Some incoming recruits also first learned of the change in news articles and social media posts, though Utah contacted each recruit personally minutes after the meeting with the team.
“They’re heartbroken, like, absolutely heartbroken,” senior Sonja Wessel said. “We all came off such a high, and then in two days, our whole world got flipped upside down; and knowing that our family that we’ve created is going to be broken apart and we’re never going to be together ever again is devastating.”
The decision to discontinue the beach volleyball program came after “significant and appropriate amount of thought, consideration and consultation,” Utah Athletic Director Mark Harlan said in a statement as part of the announcement to the public.
The university didn’t see a path forward for the program, “with little evidence of the sport expanding at this time” at Utah, he added.
“With the sport’s growth stunted, and without the home facilities with amenities that allow us to host championship-level events, we are not providing the world-class experience that we seek to provide to our student-athletes,” Harlan said.
The athletes, though, felt those reasonings didn’t make much sense for a program that has grown since its start as a sanctioned sport at Utah. Even being one of the lowest-funded sports, the athletes felt they could still compete for a national championship.
This last season, Utah recorded its first 21-win season and a spot in the top 25, setting the team up for a potential wild card spot in the tournament.
Utah was doing more with less.
BOOOOOOOOOM
After winning 4-1 over CSU Bakersfield, the 2025 Utah Beach Volleyball Squad sets a new bar for MOST WINS IN A SEASON
The Utes end the regular season with a 20-12 record and look towards the Big 12 Tournament next week.#GoUtespic.twitter.com/Jiit7xJftZ
— Utah Beach Volleyball (@UtahBeachVB) April 19, 2025
And though former head coach Brenda Whicker, who retired shortly before the news in an unrelated move, advocated for more resources — like asking to up the two scholarships that were distributed between 18 women — all were content with their situation at Utah.
“Keep in mind, we are very content with the facilities,” Griffin said. “There’s nothing wrong with our facilities. We have a nice locker room, we have courts. We hadn’t complained about our facilities. We’re beach volleyball, like, we’re just happy.”
That fact added further doubt to the argument that beach volleyball’s growth was “stunted,” and that Utah — and teams in the Big 12 by extension — had no future in the sport, Griffin said.
“There clearly is a future in Big 12 volleyball, like TCU just won the national championship for the first time ever,” Griffin said. “It’s always been UCLA and USC that have gone back and forth, and this is the first time someone else has won it. And so that right there shows growth in beach volleyball, alongside the statistics that this year was the most Division I beach volleyball teams to play in the NCAA ever.”
“It’s just frustrating,” Wessel added. “Removing, cutting our program, we’re also impacting the Big 12, as well.”
The beach volleyball program brought in just shy of $223,000 in revenue for the 2024 fiscal year, while having an operating expense of $380,000 for a loss of $157,000, according to the latest financial reports.
That loss pales in comparison to the $2.17 million loss in baseball, or the $844,565 loss in golf and $803,658 in lacrosse, to name a few. Outside of football and men’s basketball, though, no other program at Utah brings in more than their operating expenses.
Those figures don’t take into account an incoming proposed NCAA court settlement that will require athletic departments to pay student athletes if they opt in — a max of $20.5 million for the entire department — this coming year.
In March, Utah announced a $14 million gift that was given to the athletic department to support women’s sports. But even as the lowest profile women’s sport, in terms of financial impact, Utah didn’t see a path forward and decided to no longer invest in beach volleyball.
Seeking answers
Looking to get more answers beyond a quick session with Harlan and Deputy Athletic Director Charmelle Green, the 18-member volleyball team asked for a follow-up meeting to have a conversation about the change.
The athletic department agreed and held a meeting that went about an hour as the two parties addressed the end of the program. That follow-up meeting, though, left the team more frustrated about the decision and by Harlan and Green’s response.
“We’re a group of 18 girls that just had our entire lives turned upside down,” Griffin said. “We’re 18 to 22 years old, and we are trying to go about it in the best way that we know how. And then you have two people in a power position that should be pretty well equipped to deal with these kind of situations that walk in and appear like they don’t know what they’re doing or why they made this rash decision.”
“We were coming from a place of just — we just wanted answers,” Wessel added. “We came in very calm, very almost, like, emotionless, because we don’t want to make things worse. So we’re like, we’re just going to go in with facts and want answers, and they were just not giving us the time of day.”
The two athletes described the meeting as “disrespectful,” with Wessel adding that the two athletic leaders were “scoffing at us when we would ask just basic questions.”
“I mean, everything that you think could go wrong went wrong,” she added, while also noting that neither leader knew any of the athletes’ names.
Griffin said there was “some sort of disconnect” in how the department responded to “speaking about the values that they have in the athletic department and the way they actually are treating the student-athletes on the inside.”
“I think we kind of called them on that, and that did not go over well,” Griffin said. “The more questions we asked, the less answers they had, and the more defensive and deflective they got over things.”
Speaking to KSL.com, a spokesperson for the athletics department acknowledged the sensitive nature of the meeting, citing the “difficult decision for the department” to discontinue the sport and the associated feelings from its athletes.
“We fully understand the student-athlete emotions that come with receiving this news. We have continued to have open dialogue with them, including a follow-up meeting that lasted more than an hour, to listen to their concerns and reiterate our commitment to supporting and assisting them through this process. We will continue to support them and do all we can to help.”
But for Griffin and Wessel, it was just the final blow to a team who didn’t feel like they were supported by the athletics department and didn’t see their top athletic leaders much at all. As such, the athletes felt like an afterthought.

“He has not shown up to a single practice, a single game,” Wessel said, speaking about Harlan. “We have one home game a year, we don’t ask for a lot, and they never have ever supported us in any way.”
“We have one home game a year that’s on campus, as in, like, a two minute walk from his office, and neither he nor Charmelle even made the time,” Griffin added.
A university spokesperson told KSL.com that Harlan was at the team’s first match (on Friday) but was “out of town” for the second day.
“Mark was present at a home match on the first day of their one home weekend, but he was out of town on that second day when they recognized their seniors,” the spokesperson said. “Sports supervisor Delaney Reilly was the formal representative for athletics.”
Despite that, the athletes said they loved being at Utah. They knew there were limited resources when they committed to Utah, but each came because they wanted to play at a school like Utah for the love of the game. Wessel and Griffin said it was the same for every other member of the team.
But a little more support would have gone a long way, Wessel said.
“It’s frustrating when (Harlan) makes this business decision that we need to cut our program when he has yet to show up,” Wessel said. “And I feel like it was just like an easy write-off for him.”
“I transferred into the University of Utah this year for my master’s program, and at the new student orientation, Mark Harlan promises each and every single student-athlete the best student-athlete experience in the country; and I can’t say I’ve had that here, like I don’t feel like he’s had our back or advocated for us in any capacity,” Griffin added.
And after that second meeting, hope for a reversal of the school’s decision has dwindled and become a reality to the athletes. But they remain optimistic for a change in direction.

Fighting to reinstate the program
Sitting in her hotel room in the Philippines, professional beach volleyball player and University of Utah alum Melissa Powell was frustrated by the news.
Earlier that day — just minutes before her competition, in fact — Powell saw the news that her former school was discontinuing the beach volleyball program.
“I was shocked, like this must be fake,” Powell recalled. “I kind of thought it was like a satire thing. And then I was like, of course they’d cut it, they don’t even care about the program at all. It’s not super shocking that they would take this decision.”
Powell had to shake the emotions off before her match, but said the feeling of shock never left her in the days that followed. “I just kind of let the anger kind of fester for a couple days,” she admitted.
“It was a mix of emotions — of not super shocked, because they don’t really care about the program, but also shocked because they just had their first top-25 year. And for a program with zero money, that’s really insane to accomplish,” Powell said.
And as someone who has followed her hometown collegiate program — even after following her husband, who played football, to the Houston area — Powell said she remained close to the program. For Powell, it’s the place she credits for her professional career.
“I don’t want to seem ungrateful, because I am grateful that they had the program,” Powell said. “It changed my life, because I would have quit volleyball if they didn’t have this program, and I wouldn’t be a professional athlete, and I wouldn’t have my business without them. So I don’t want to come off as like, ‘They never gave us anything,’ because they did give us a platform for the athletes.
“Even if they don’t give us a huge budget, just having a platform to play at such a big school as the University of Utah — it’s such an awesome school — is really great.”
Regardless of the decision, though, Powell had an offer for the University of Utah that could help the team: If the program could be reinstated, she’d let the team use her new Olympic facilities in Pleasant Grove for free to offset the perceived reasons to cut the team entirely.
They’d have world-class facilities, free coaching and training support, and a place to study while continuing their pursuit of the sport at a Division I school.
“It’s going to be a championship level facility, so if I have the means to host their trainings for free and not have the university have to worry at all about paying — if this is a money thing why they’re cutting,” Powell said. “I don’t see why getting a facility for free wouldn’t help the cause.
“I know the girls wouldn’t mind — cut the program or drive 30 minutes out of the way, right?”
But having off-site facilities not be a part of the campus community, where Utah could host tournaments or championship events, was part of why the athletic department felt the need to discontinue the program, according to Harlan’s initial statement.
Still, Powell believes her solution would solve most the problems the university faces in relation to keeping beach volleyball as a sanctioned sport. Upon returning to Utah, Powell formally submitted the offer to Harlan while also publishing it to Instagram, where it has picked up attention from the beach volleyball community.
But outside of the university confirming that the offer was received, Powell said she hasn’t heard anything more from the school and that it remains a waiting game.
The university, however, told KSL.com that “we’ve received a letter and have sent a response.”
While still in a sort of limbo, Powell made her case:
“Let me handle this,” Powell said, as if speaking to Harlan. “If this has been a headache for you or whatever is happening with this program, I can handle it for you. Like, let me take this off your plate. I would love to keep this dream alive and help these young women get the same experience I got. This is very important to me that women’s sports isn’t canceled.
“Is what we want really just men’s basketball and men’s football? Like, is that all we want to see in the collegiate level? Because that is kind of where we’re headed if we just look at it as a money perspective here. So I would really, really, really like the opportunity to show you, Mark, my facilities, my vision for this and how I can help.
“I can help give these athletes the championship experience that you’re looking for, and I’m offering this completely free, so I would love to talk at least; and if it doesn’t work out, at least we had a chance to sit down and chat about it and figure out a way to continue the dreams of these athletes and the recruits coming in.”

Hope for tomorrow
With the offer from Powell on the table, the beach volleyball athletes remain optimistic — especially as 5,300 individuals have signed a Change.org petition to help bring attention to the cause — but each recognizes that a reversal of the decision seems unlikely.
They’ll continue to fight, though, and work to help all those who put in the work at Utah.
“We have nothing to lose at this point — like we’re graduated, we’re done with our program, we’re moving on to the next chapter of our lives,” Wessel said. “It’s our duty to fight for these young women who have sacrificed so much for this team, for this university. They’ve never been in it for money. They’ve never gone to Utah being like, ‘Oh, I’m playing for the money.’ Like, they play for the pure love and joy that the sport brings and the sacrifices that they give for the organization.”
“I think at the end of the day, the best outcome for us is to be heard and to make sure that we’re advocating for the people that we love and for the people that are working hard and are representing the University of Utah,” Griffin said.
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
Sports
Palace Honors Osaka Culture with Hanshin Tigers Collab and Flagship Launch
New Store, Local Flavor, and Streetwear Energy Collide in Japan Palace Skateboards is taking its global expansion seriously, and the latest stop on that journey is Osaka, Japan. To celebrate the launch of its newest flagship in the heart of Kansai, the UK-born label has dropped a collection that speaks directly to the city’s pulse. […]

New Store, Local Flavor, and Streetwear Energy Collide in Japan
Palace Skateboards is taking its global expansion seriously, and the latest stop on that journey is Osaka, Japan. To celebrate the launch of its newest flagship in the heart of Kansai, the UK-born label has dropped a collection that speaks directly to the city’s pulse. Fusing streetwear, sports heritage, and homegrown character, Palace’s Osaka debut is more than just another retail opening—it’s a full-on cultural moment.
To mark the occasion, Palace has teamed up with the legendary Hanshin Tigers, one of Japan’s most storied professional baseball teams, for a co-branded capsule that’s already generating buzz far beyond the city limits. Add to that a locally filmed skate video, collaborative pieces with Champion, and a range of Osaka-exclusive merch, and you’ve got a release that’s rooted in place but speaks to global streetwear heads.
Hanshin Tigers x Palace: A Tribute to Local Legends
At the heart of the collection is Palace’s collaboration with the Hanshin Tigers, a team known for its fiercely loyal fanbase and iconic yellow, black, and white team colors. Palace’s take on Tigers gear goes beyond logo placement—it’s a playful yet respectful remix of sports iconography, anchored by a standout varsity jacket that channels vintage American sportswear through a distinctly Japanese lens.
The jacket blends classic Tigers aesthetics with Palace’s irreverent branding style. On the back, fans will find a large-scale illustration of To-Lucky—the team’s bird-like mascot—alongside embroidered logos that span both sleeves and the pockets. Across the chest, a bold Palace emblem grounds the look, while smaller co-branded hits add layered detail.
To-Lucky makes additional appearances across the drop, showing up on raglan tops, baseball tees, and headwear. The mix of silhouettes captures both American varsity vibes and traditional Japanese athleticwear. While rooted in a specific team partnership, these pieces tap into universal streetwear language—heritage sports graphics, oversized cuts, and statement pieces that transition from stadium to sidewalk.
Store-Exclusive Pieces and Localized Touches
Beyond the baseball collab, Palace has dropped a variety of Osaka-specific gear to commemorate the opening. T-shirts and hoodies co-designed with Champion carry the word “OSAKA” across the chest in bold, collegiate-style font—simple but striking, especially for collectors and fans of location-based drops.
For die-hards, the collection also includes versions of Palace’s classic Triferg logo designs, this time featuring illustrations that nod to Osaka’s cultural identity. Graphics include a stone statue motif and a stylized crab—a likely reference to the city’s beloved Dotonbori district and its famous mechanized crab sign. These subtle cues help the collection feel tied to place without being overly literal or touristy.
Rounding out the release is a lineup of accessories that further drives the local theme home. Skate decks stamped with the word “OSAKA,” collectible stickers, pint glasses, and traditional Japanese Tenugui towels all speak to Palace’s ability to balance cheeky branding with thoughtful cultural cues. It’s a merch table with range—and attitude.
Skate Culture at the Core
To tie everything together, Palace dropped a new skate edit filmed across Osaka’s neighborhoods, cityscapes, and iconic landmarks. The video captures local energy and spot-hunting spirit in a way that’s true to the brand’s roots. Palace has always balanced fashion credibility with a no-nonsense approach to skateboarding, and this visual element anchors the entire launch in authenticity.
Featuring team riders doing what they do best, the video serves as both a travelogue and a style guide—showing the gear in motion while offering a glimpse into the rhythm of the city. It’s a smart move that adds more depth than a standard lookbook, giving fans a taste of what Palace feels like in Osaka, not just what it looks like.
Opening Day and What It Means for Palace
The Palace Osaka flagship officially opens on Saturday, May 10, adding another notch to the brand’s international retail presence. With existing stores in London, New York, Los Angeles, and Tokyo, the Osaka location reflects Palace’s growing influence across Asia—and its deepening commitment to blending local engagement with its global brand identity.
As streetwear continues to globalize, Palace’s strategy remains refreshingly straightforward: show up, collaborate meaningfully, and celebrate the unique vibe of each city it enters. The Osaka launch doesn’t just introduce a new storefront—it delivers a wearable homage to the city’s sports culture, visual identity, and skate-friendly streets.
Those hoping to grab a piece from the drop can visit Palace’s official site for updates and availability. With demand running high and regional exclusivity baked into the release, expect pieces to move fast—both in-store and online.
Sports
Georgia, Coastal Carolina move up in latest NCAA baseball tournament bracket predictions, by D1Baseball
Georgia, Coastal Carolina move up in latest NCAA baseball tournament bracket predictions, by D1Baseball | NCAA.com Skip to main content Link 0

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