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Long Beach State Earns No. 1 Seed to NCAA Tournament – The562.org

The562’s coverage of Long Beach State athletics for the 2024-25 season is sponsored by Marilyn Bohl. It came as no surprise to volleyball fans who’ve been paying attention this year, but the Long Beach State men’s volleyball earned the No. 1 seed into the 2025 NCAA Tournament, which will be held May 8-12 in Columbus […]

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The562’s coverage of Long Beach State athletics for the 2024-25 season is sponsored by Marilyn Bohl.

It came as no surprise to volleyball fans who’ve been paying attention this year, but the Long Beach State men’s volleyball earned the No. 1 seed into the 2025 NCAA Tournament, which will be held May 8-12 in Columbus on the campus of Ohio State. The Beach have been ranked No. 1 for the last 13 weeks and led in the RPI for the entire season.

The Beach finished the season at 27-3 overall and as the Big West regular season champions, but the night before the bracket was released lost their third match of the season. The Beach were defeated by Hawaii in the Big West Tournament championship, once again held in Hawaii.

While that loss gives Hawaii a 2-1 record over the Beach (with all three matches played on the islands), Hawaii earned the two-seed with a 26-5 record that included some bad losses. The Rainbow Warriors fell to Stanford, USC, and were swept by CSUN–none of those teams made the NCAA Tournament.

With Long Beach State earning the one seed as well as one of the two at-larges, there was some hope among Big West fans that UC Irvine would grab the other after falling to Hawaii in the Big West semifinals. But UCLA’s MPSF Tournament loss to Pepperdine dashed the Anteaters’ chances, as the Bruins earned the three seed with the other at-large spot.

The Beach will open the NCAA Tournament on Thursday, May 8 at 2pm Long Beach time against No. 8 Fort Valley State. With a win, the Beach would face the winner of Pepperdine (who they defeated in five sets this season) and Loyola Chicago on Saturday at 2pm Long Beach time.

With a win there, the Beach would play in the national championship match Monday, May 12 at 4pm on ESPN 2. All of the other matches in the tournament will be broadcast digitally on ESPN+.

This is the eight NCAA Tournament appearance in the last nine seasons for the Beach, and 15th in program history. The Beach are seeking their fourth NCAA title as a program this year.

Screenshot 2025 04 28 at 12.15.21 pm



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Denny Harper Inducted into USA Water Polo Hall of Fame

Story Links BREA, Calif. – Former UC San Diego water polo coach Denny Harper was officially inducted into the USA Water Polo Hall of Fame Friday. Harper was one of five enshrined in the 41st class during a ceremony in Brea, Calif. The honorees represent international athletic excellence as well […]

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BREA, Calif. – Former UC San Diego water polo coach Denny Harper was officially inducted into the USA Water Polo Hall of Fame Friday.

Harper was one of five enshrined in the 41st class during a ceremony in Brea, Calif. The honorees represent international athletic excellence as well as gifted coaches and referees who have dedicated their lives to water polo.

Harper, who announced his retirement from UC San Diego in July of 2022, spent 42 years at the helm of the UC San Diego men’s program. He also led the Triton women’s team from 1985 until 1999. His teams combined for 942 victories.

The Triton men posted a 697-496-4 (.584) record between 1980, his first season with the Tritons, and 2021, his final season at the helm. He was named the Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches (ACWPC) National Coach of the Year 17 times and the Western Water Polo Association (WWPA) Coach of the Year 19 times. In 2024, Harper was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the ACWPC.

The Tritons advanced to the NCAA Championship on 15 different occasions, finishing second for the first time ever in 2000. In 1995, Harper’s squad became the first Division III team to advance to the NCAA Final Four, repeating the feat in 1998 and 1999.

Under Harper’s direction, UC San Diego proved to be a regular contender in the WWPA since the league began sponsoring championships in 1981. In 35 seasons, the Tritons captured 18 titles and 14 runner-up trophies. UC San Diego has been consistently ranked among the top-12 teams in the NCAA rankings and rose as high as No. 3 in the nation in 2006.

Harper coached the UC San Diego women’s water polo team from 1985 through 1999, compiling a 245-122-2 overall record. The Tritons won five USA Water Polo crowns, one national runner-up effort, and two national third-place trophies.

A 1978 graduate of San Diego State University, Harper coached at Rancho Alamitos High School, Indio High School, and SDSU before coming to UC San Diego.

He played two years at Santa Barbara City College before moving on to San Diego State to finish his college career.

He began his collegiate coaching career at SDSU, leading the women’s club team. Harper graduated in 1978. He helped the Aztecs to a 130-18 record.

In late 1979, fate intervened when best friend and former SBCC teammate Russ Hafferkamp asked Harper if he wanted to lead the UC San Diego men. It was a life-changing decision that turned a passion into a career. His four-plus decade run with the men’s squad is nothing short of legendary.  

The 2025 class also includes two of the most formidable defenders in Team USA history – Melissa Seidemann, a three-time Olympic and world champion, and Jesse Smith, a five-time Olympian and 2008 silver medalist. Also inducted Friday were coaching great Ricardo Azevedo as well as official/referee David Alberstein.
  
To learn more about the Hall of Fame, including a look at all the past inductees, click here.
——
About UC San Diego Athletics
After two decades as one of the most successful programs in NCAA Division II, the UC San Diego intercollegiate athletics program began a new era in 2020 as a member of The Big West Conference in NCAA Division I. The 23-sport Tritons earned 30 team and nearly 150 individual national championships during its time in Divisions II and III and helped guide 1,400 scholar-athletes to All-America honors. A total of 84 Tritons have earned Academic All-America honors, while 38 have earned prestigious NCAA Post Graduate Scholarships. UC San Diego scholar-athletes exemplify the academic ideals of one of the world’s preeminent institutions, graduating at an average rate of 91 percent, one of the highest rates among institutions at all divisions.



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‘Trinbago Beach’ action in Chaguanas | Local Sports

THE Trinbago Beach Volleyball Tour continues with an Under-18 tournament over the next two days at Saith Park, Chaguanas. It will be the second competition for the youngest category in the series, which also includes action in Under-21, Under-23 and the open divisions. After winning the men’s title in the first open tournament two months […]

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THE Trinbago Beach Volleyball Tour continues with an Under-18 tournament over the next two days at Saith Park, Chaguanas.

It will be the second competition for the youngest category in the series, which also includes action in Under-21, Under-23 and the open divisions.

After winning the men’s title in the first open tournament two months ago, Daneil Williams and Daynte Stewart struck gold again in the second stage two weeks ago.

The title favourites defeated Marlon Phillip and Jahreef Miguel 21-18, 21-18 for the trophy, after a 21-14, 21-18 semi-final triumph over Jerome Morrison and Janeiro Atherley. Phillip and Miguel nosed out Kareem Thomas and Tevin Edwards 19-21, 21-16, 15-13 to advance to the title match.

Like the champions, La Teisha Joseph made it two-out-of-two in the women’s event. After combining with Apphia Glasgow to capture the title in the first leg in mid-April, she teamed with Malika Davidson for gold this time.

The multiple NORCECA (North, Central America and the Caribbean) Beach Tour players defeated scored a hard-fought 23-21, 22-20 triumph over Tsyan Selvon and Danielle Noel-Kelly in the final.

Davidson, who flew the red, white and black flag in the Olympic Youth Games in China in 2014, and Joseph had whipped Kaylon Cruickshank and Aaliyah Alexis 21-12, 21-12 in the semis, while Selvon and Noel-Kelly scraped home 27-25, 15-21, 15-13 against Meeka Johnson and L’fe Roberts, a leading Under-18 pair of 2023.

After winning the first leg, Joseph and Glasgow represented the country in the opening leg of the NORCECA Beach Tour in Cuba at the beginning of last month.

But Williams and Stewart did not make the trip, and runners-up Stephen Enile and Joel Theodore also travelled to Dominican Republic for the second leg in the middle of the month.

The NORCECA Under-23 beach Tour got going the following weekend at the same venue, and T&T were represented by the winners of first “Trinbago” leg of this category, Kristianna Richards and Adalia Badroe and Morrison and Miguel.

The Trinbago Tour began with an U-18 tournament in early April, and Jessica Castagne-Hay and Skye La Fon and Darion Sparks and Josie Cedeno were the champs.

The second leg of the NORCECA U-23 series serves off next week Friday in Cayman Islands, while the third event in the NORCECA open circuit begins the following Friday in Honduras.





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USA Junior Men Stumble Against Croatia 19-10 To Open Play At U20 World Championship

Story Links Zagreb, Croatia – June 14 – The USA Men’s Junior National Team lost their opener at the U20 Word Championship, falling 19-10 to Croatia earlier today. Ryder Dodd led the team in scoring with four goals while Charles Mills and Baxter Chelsom combined for eight saves in net. Team […]

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Zagreb, Croatia – June 14 – The USA Men’s Junior National Team lost their opener at the U20 Word Championship, falling 19-10 to Croatia earlier today. Ryder Dodd led the team in scoring with four goals while Charles Mills and Baxter Chelsom combined for eight saves in net. Team USA is back in the pool tomorrow as they continue group play with a meeting against Hungary at 11:30am et/8:30am pt. All matches are scheduled to stream live on the World Aquatics YouTube. Live statistics will be available for every match from MicroPlus Timing Services.

Croatia opened the scoring with a tally at the 5:22 mark but Dodd immediately tied the game on the next possession delivering on a penalty shot score. The two sides would trade goals until Croatia hit for two in a row to build a 4-2 edge with 1:39 to play. William Schneider kept Team USA afloat scoring two of the next three goals to make it a 5-4 game with less than a minute to go in the opening quarter. Croatia had the last word, scoring with :25 on the clock to build a two-goal lead going to the second quarter.

Team USA came out strong to open the second quarter as Peter Castillo hit on a power play followed by a Ryan Ohl goal in close for a 6-6 game roughly two minutes into the period. The lowest scoring quarter of the match stayed quiet on the offensive end until the 2:08 mark when the host country broke through with an extra man goal for a 7-6 lead. They added another power play goal a minute later to go in front 8-6 at halftime. 

Croatia took control of this match in the third, outscoring Team USA 6-1. They opened the period with three unanswered goals to increase their lead to five at 11-6. Dodd stopped the bleeding with a tally but Croatia went right back to work scoring three more goals in the quarter to go ahead 14-7 with one period left to play. Dodd hit on a penalty shot to make it 15-8 with 6:44 to play in the game but the United States would get no closer. Croatia added five goals in the fourth to surge to the nine-goal victory. 

Team USA went 4/11 on power plays and 2/2 on penalties while Croatia went 6/8 on power plays and 2/2 on penalties. 

Scoring – Stats

USA 10 (4, 2, 1, 3) R. Dodd 4, P. Castillo 2, W. Schneider 2, R. Ohl 1. B. Brinkema 1

CRO 19 (6, 2, 6, 5) A. Jerkovic 5, V. Pavlic 4,V. Toncinic 3, M. Susic 3, G. Burburan 2, A. Fajkovic 1, K. Dragosevic 1

Saves – USA – C. Mills 7, B. Chelsom 1 – CRO – M. Cubranic 8

6×5 – USA – 4/11 – CRO – 6/8

Penalties – USA – 2/2 – CRO – 2/2 



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Alas Pilipinas rises to no. 46 in FIVB women’s world rankings

Alas Pilipinas on Saturday rose to no. 46 in the FIVB women’s world rankings. Before the AVC Nations Cup, the women’s national volleyball team was at no. 56. According to Asian Volleyball Confederation head and Philippine National Volleyball Federation president Ramon ‘Tats’ Suzara, the past three years have shown that the program is working for […]

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Alas Pilipinas on Saturday rose to no. 46 in the FIVB women’s world rankings.

Before the AVC Nations Cup, the women’s national volleyball team was at no. 56.

According to Asian Volleyball Confederation head and Philippine National Volleyball Federation president Ramon ‘Tats’ Suzara, the past three years have shown that the program is working for the national team.

“The past three years was all upward for our national program in all disciplines—volleyball and beach—thanks to the support of our stakeholders,” Suzara said in a statement.

Last year, Alas claimed bronze in the AVC Challenge Cup, and now the Philippines has a chance for the gold medal in the same but rebranded tournament AVC Nations Cup.

“Last year, our best brought us to the bronze, and this time, it’s going to bring us to higher heights,” Alas Pilipinas team captain Jia De Guzman said. “So we’re just going to bring our best again—and no matter what, this is for the country.”

Alas will take on Vietnam in the finals on Saturday night.

—JKC, GMA Integrated News



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FIS Approves Prize Money Increase Across All World Cup Disciplines for 2025–26 Season

Athletes will receive more prize money for the 2025-26 season. | Image: FIS The International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) voted to increase prize money across all FIS World Cup disciplines for the 2025-26 season. During the 56th FIS Council Meeting held in Geneva on June 12–13, council members approved a boost of up to […]

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FIS Approves Prize Money Increase Across All World Cup Disciplines for 2025–26 Season

Athletes will receive more prize money for the 2025-26 season. | Image: FIS

The International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) voted to increase prize money across all FIS World Cup disciplines for the 2025-26 season. During the 56th FIS Council Meeting held in Geneva on June 12–13, council members approved a boost of up to 20% in athlete prize money—10% guaranteed by FIS, with an additional 10% to be voluntarily contributed by each Local Organizing Committee (LOC).

Currently, FIS mandates that the LOC of each FIS World Cup Alpine race makes available at least CHF 144,000 (USD 177,716) for prize money, divided among the Top 30 finishers. Up until the 2023-24 season, first place at most FIS Alpine races was decorated with CHF 50,000. However, that figure was reduced to CHF 47,000, with the redistributed funds benefitting lower-ranking athletes. A 20% increase for the 2025-26 season would translate to a total of CHF 172,800 (USD 213,260). Notably, FIS rules stipulate equal minimum prize money for men and women across all World Cup events, underscoring a commitment to gender equality in the sport.

“It is clear that we still have a lot to do when it comes to rewarding our athletes as they deserve. This is an important step, but only another one in a long way ahead.”
– Johan Eliasch, FIS President

Prize money varies significantly between FIS disciplines. Alpine skiing remains the most lucrative, with the CHF 144,000 baseline (soon CHF 172,800) and CHF 47,000 awarded to the winner. In contrast, cross-country skiing events have a CHF 55,000 purse per race, with CHF 15,000 going to the winner and prizes extended to the top 20. Snowboarding and freestyle skiing see even less, with CHF 30,000 per event and CHF 13,500 to the winner, split among just the top 10 athletes.

Jessie Diggins claimed the Overall Big Crystal Globe and the Small Long Distance Crystal Globe for the 2023-24 season. | Image: Jessie Diggins Instagram

Exactly how the prize increase will be implemented across individual venues remains uncertain. While FIS sets the minimum, the actual prize money often depends on the financial capacity of host venues—tied to sponsorship deals, broadcasting rights, and public funding. The Hahnenkamm races in Kitzbühel, Austria, currently offer the highest first-place prize of CHF 100,000, well above the FIS minimum. Whether the Kitzbühel Ski Club (K.S.C.) will match the proposed 20% increase remains to be seen; they typically announce their prize structure in October.

Prize money records could soon be broken. Mikaela Shiffrin set the women’s record in the 2022–23 season with CHF 964,200 in World Cup earnings and an additional CHF 114,000 from the World Championships—surpassing CHF 1 million in total. Marco Odermatt set the men’s record that same year, earning CHF 941,200. With the upcoming increase, both athletes—and others in the field—could surpass those milestones in 2025–26.

FIS’s move to raise prize money signals a broader commitment to athlete recognition and financial fairness across winter sports. While implementation will depend on the capacity of individual venues, the initiative marks a significant step toward better compensating elite skiers and snowboarders. As the 2025–26 season approaches, all eyes will be on whether the sport’s biggest names—and its most iconic venues—rise to meet the moment.

Hahnenkamm
The Finish Area of the Hahnenkamm race. | Image: Helly Hansen (one of the sponsors of the race)

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Jimenez Makes Senior World Team With Triumph At Final X

NEWARK, N.J. – Lehigh sophomore Audrey Jimenez will represent the United States at the UWW Senior World Championships in Croatia in September after sweeping her best-of-three series against Erin Golston Saturday at Final X at Prudential Center. Jimenez won her matches 10-2 and 12-2 Saturday to complete an outstanding spring campaign and secure the World […]

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Jimenez Makes Senior World Team With Triumph At Final X

NEWARK, N.J. – Lehigh sophomore Audrey Jimenez will represent the United States at the UWW Senior World Championships in Croatia in September after sweeping her best-of-three series against Erin Golston Saturday at Final X at Prudential Center. Jimenez won her matches 10-2 and 12-2 Saturday to complete an outstanding spring campaign and secure the World Team spot at 50 kg.
 
In Saturday’s first match, Jimenez fell behind 2-0 at the break and had to fight off her back to avoid conceding a fall. Jimenez battled back in the second period, scoring a takedown plus two points of exposure to take a 4-2 lead. She added another four point move in the final seconds, plus a takedown right before the buzzer to take the first match 10-2.
 
Bout two saw Jimenez race to a 5-0 lead at the break behind a shot clock point and two takedowns. Golston opened the second period with a takedown, but Jimenez came back to score the final seven points to secure the technical fall. Jimenez scored a step out point, then added a takedown. She closed out the win with under 15 seconds remaining with a takedown and a two-point turn.
 
Jimenez improved to 5-0 all-time versus Golston with Saturday’s two victories.
 
The victory at Final X caps a spring that saw Jimenez also win titles at U20 Nationals, the U.S. Open and the Senior Pan-American Championships.
 
The UWW World Championships are set for Sept. 13-21 in Zagreb, Croatia. Jimenez will also wrestle at the U20 World Championships, Aug. 18-24 in Sofia, Bulgaria and the U23 World Championships, Oct. 20-26 in Novi Sad, Serbia.
 
 

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