Sports
Long Beach State, UCLA reach NCAA men’s volleyball title match – Press Telegram
COLUMBUS, Ohio — For the second straight season, the Long Beach State and UCLA men’s volleyball teams will square off with a national championship at stake. Third-seeded UCLA, chasing its 22nd national crown and looking to become the first program to win three straight in more than 40 years, will have to get past the […]

COLUMBUS, Ohio — For the second straight season, the Long Beach State and UCLA men’s volleyball teams will square off with a national championship at stake.
Third-seeded UCLA, chasing its 22nd national crown and looking to become the first program to win three straight in more than 40 years, will have to get past the team that spent the majority of the 2025 season atop the rankings. For top-seeded Long Beach, Monday’s 4 p.m. PT title match represents a chance to secure its fourth NCAA title and avenge a bitter defeat in last year’s final, when the Bruins beat LBSU in four sets on its home court.
Both teams took care of business in Saturday’s semifinals. Long Beach (29-3) shook off a first-set loss to defeat fifth-seeded Pepperdine, 20-25, 25-23, 25-19, 25-23. UCLA (22-6) swept second-seeded Hawaii, 25-14, 25-23, 25-23.
Freshman setter Moni Nikolov, the newly minted national player of the year, broke the NCAA single-season aces record while leading LBSU into its 11th NCAA final. Nikolov came into the match just three aces shy of tying the record of 100. The 6-foot-10 Bulgarian tied and broke the mark on a pair of back-to-back aces in the third set and finished the match with five aces, a season-high 52 assists, six kills and 10 digs while quarterbacking his team to a .482 hitting percentage.
Senior opposite hitter Nato Dickinson and freshman outside hitter Alex Kandev each had 19 kills for Long Beach, with Kandev hitting a team-best .533 to go with eight digs. Dickinson hit .485 while recording five blocks, four assists and three digs. Junior opposite hitter Skyler Varga added 11 kills on a .381 clip.
The closely contested match saw 37 ties and 14 lead changes over the four sets, with both teams hitting over .400.
The first set was tight early, but Pepperdine used a 5-1 run to open a 22-17 advantage before closing out the set, 25-20. Neither team led by more than two points in a brilliant second set. The Waves used a 4-0 run to grab an 18-16 lead, but Long Beach scored three straight points after a timeout. LBSU eventually won the set, 25-23, on a Dickinson kill.
Long Beach hit an absurd .720 in the third set, with Nikolov’s record-setting ace providing a 12-8 lead. A 3-0 LBSU run capped by a kill from Connor Bloom provided a 24-18 lead and Kandev secured the set with a kill.
Long Beach hit .552 in the decisive fourth set, but Pepperdine hit .412 as the teams staged another tight battle. After 13 ties, LBSU got a few big plays from Isaiah Preuitt for a 16-15 edge. The Big West Conference regular-season champions extended their lead to 21-18 with a 5-1 run. Pepperdine answered to get within one point at 22-21, but Dickinson gave Long Beach a set point at 24-22 and his 19th kill ended the match, 25-23.
Sophomore outside hitter Ilay Haver had 14 kills and four digs while hitting .545 for Pepperdine (21-10), which put together one of its most impressive offensive performances of the season with its .421 hitting percentage.
Junior outside hitter Ryan Barnett had 13 kills on .536 hitting and freshman outside hitter Cole Hartke had 13 kills on .333 hitting to go with four digs and two aces. Graduate setter Gabriel Dyer added 48 assists and eight digs, while junior libero Jacob Reilly led the team with nine digs, and sophomore middle blocker James Eadie had a team-best four blocks.
UCLA hit .370 while holding a short-handed Hawaii (27-6) squad to a season-worst .188 mark in its semifinal.
Freshman outside hitter Sean Kelly had a match-high 13 kills while hitting .435 to pace the Bruins, who had the advantage from the service line (six aces) and at the net (11 blocks). Junior outside hitter Zach Rama added 10 kills, junior setter Andrew Rowan had 34 assists and junior middle blocker Sean McQuiggan recorded seven blocks.
UCLA used an eight-point run to open a 10-4 lead in the first set with junior outside hitter Cooper Robinson contributing two aces and a pair of kills. The Bruins’ third ace extended their lead to 16-8. They remained in control through the end of the set while hitting .417 to Hawaii’s .048 and closed it out on a Rama kill.
UCLA used a 5-0 run to take a 13-10 lead in the second set. The Rainbow Warriors tied the score at 17-all and there were five more ties before a diving save from Adrien Roure gave Hawaii a 23-22 lead. UCLA answered to reclaim the lead and closed out the set with its seventh block.
Hawaii kept shuffling its lineup searching for the right combination, but UCLA surged to a 12-6 lead in the third set. The Warriors got within 15-13, but UCLA went ahead 20-15 on back-to-back blocks. Hawaii got within 22-21 on a kill by Louis Sakanoko, but the teams traded service errors then UCLA scored the next two points, with Rowan setting up Robinson for his ninth kill to secure the match.
Roure led the Warriors with 12 kills with two aces while hitting .333.
Long Beach won both of its regular-season matches against UCLA, though both were played early in the season. LBSU won a four-set match at home on Feb. 7 then swept the Bruns five nights later at Pauley Pavilion.
Sports
New sports facilities coming to campus
From pickleball’s growing popularity to post-Nationals basketball hype, the University of Florida has seen a growing demand for on-campus recreational sports sites in recent years. The Flavet Outdoor Recreational Complex can meet it. Interim President Kent Fuchs proposed the complex in response to the demand during his tenure as president. The project has been in […]

From pickleball’s growing popularity to post-Nationals basketball hype, the University of Florida has seen a growing demand for on-campus recreational sports sites in recent years.
The Flavet Outdoor Recreational Complex can meet it.
Interim President Kent Fuchs proposed the complex in response to the demand during his tenure as president. The project has been in the planning stages ever since and is intended to be fully functional by early 2026.
The plan includes six pickleball courts, two sand volleyball courts, three table tennis courts and lawn space, adding to the six existing tennis courts. The complex will be located on Flavet Field, near Tolbert residential area and fraternity row.
Marty Dempsey, RecSports director of facilities and operations, said one of the initiative’s main goals was to replace facilities from the Broward Outdoor Recreational Complex, which was torn down to make room for the Honors Village.
“We were very committed to making sure that the student voice was heard loud and clear and was the biggest driver in what we put into the final design,” Dempsey said.
RecSports wants the complex to offer more than sporting grounds, he said. Its design includes a shaded pavilion, green space, lawn games and hammocks for UF’s athletic and non-athletic students alike.
“We are hoping that the whole area creates almost a Central Park vibe in the middle of campus,” he said.
While the complex is the only current RecSports initiative underway, Dempsey said other in-demand facility plans may develop in the future.
Elly Beshears, a 21-year-old UF economics senior, has played beach volleyball for two years and serves as a social chair for the UF Beach Volleyball team.
“I’m super excited about that [the new complex], especially since sometimes it gets overcrowded at Southwest,” Beshears said. “You try and get a court available, showing up with your friends, but then you can’t get on one. With this initiative, sporting facilities will be made more readily accessible to the UF community.”
Jennifer Kennymore Royer, interim director of GatorWell Health Promotion Services, said the facility would have a positive effect on UF students’ holistic development.
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“Physical well-being is an important aspect of overall well-being and has the potential to impact many aspects of well-being, including stress management and social connection,” Royer said.
The complex is projected to cost $6 million. It’s funded through the President’s Office and the Capital Improvement Trust Fund, a special fund used by Florida public universities to help finance construction and maintenance projects. The money comes from student tuition fees.
Jenna Cohen, a 21-year-old UF alumna and former treasurer of the UF beach volleyball team, said building the complex on UF’s main campus will help students get more involved with sports. “I feel like a lot of people got closer to outdoor activities when there was the one right by Broward, versus there only being courts that’s basically accessible only by bus or car,” Cohen said.
Connor Griffiths, a 22-year-old UF first-year medical student and former vice president of the UF table tennis club, said the only facility for table tennis is at Southwest Recreation Center.
“Having somewhere else on campus that has tables would be awesome,” Griffiths said. “It’s nice that they’re spread out, too. Everyone that lives kind of in that area could have tables nearby.”
Contact Swasthi Maharaj at smaharaj@thealligator.org. Follow her on X @s_maharaj1611.
The Independent Florida Alligator has been independent of the university since 1971, your donation today could help #SaveStudentNewsrooms. Please consider giving today.
Sports
Volleyball England begins 70th year celebrations
Volleyball England today begins its 70th anniversary year celebrations! It was on 28th May 1955 that the first ever meeting of the Amateur Volleyball Association (AVA) of Great Britain and Northern Ireland took place. Just under a year later, a constitution was finalised on 6th April 1956, paving the way for organised volleyball to be […]

It was on 28th May 1955 that the first ever meeting of the Amateur Volleyball Association (AVA) of Great Britain and Northern Ireland took place.
Just under a year later, a constitution was finalised on 6th April 1956, paving the way for organised volleyball to be established in the UK.
The AVA was the forerunner to the individual Home Nation national associations that now govern the sport in each of those countries today, with the AVA renamed the English Volleyball Association in 1972 and Volleyball England in 2006.
Richard Callicott OBE, Honorary President of Volleyball England, reflected on the sport’s incredible journey over the last seven decades:
“The sport has changed in so many ways in the last 70 years, with tactics, techniques, skills, fitness and commitment all improving. But the most important aspect is that the sport is enjoyed and is considered fun for so many boys and girls, and men and women of all levels of ability.”
“The development of Volleyball in England was held back due to the lack of indoor facilities until the 1970s. It was only when Sports halls were built that indoor sports were able to develop.
“Coaches were the mechanism for the expansion of Volleyball, and clubs were the means by which young people were encouraged into the sport.
“Until then, volleyball was played outdoors on grass. Events such as Sandwell, Whitfield and Ashcombe were able to showcase the sport (Sandwell was in the Guinness Book of Records as the largest in Europe).”
The competitive structure also saw significant growth in the sport across the country, with Richard saying, “Over the years, competitions have expanded and players have benefited from National, Regional and Local leagues, producing some outstanding players.
“England has had some great players who have gone on to play for professional clubs in Europe and around the world. This was never truer than in the lead up to the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.
“We have now competed in the Olympic and Paralympic Games as Great Britain in Volleyball, Beach Volleyball and Sitting Volleyball. Indeed, Mo Glover and Audrey Cooper were our first players to play in the Olympic Games in 1996 in Atlanta.
England now we has a men’s Team, Joaquin and Javier Bello, winning a bronze medal in the second Commonwealth Beach Tournament in the Commonwealth Games 2022 in Birmingham as well as a gold medal in Brazil last year in the Elite 16. They are currently ranked 10th in the world, with other English pairs close behind.
“The sport of volleyball is one of the most widely played in the world, and England is part of the European Confederation, which has over 50 Federations to compete against. I am confident that we will see our teams show increasing progress in the coming years.
“Now for the next 70 years!” said Richard.
To mark the occasion, Volleyball England will be staging several events in recognition of its 70th year, including one at Cup Finals 2026.
Members of the Volleyball England Heritage Project Core Group will also be looking to unlock some of the many stories from the past 70 years that will be told through the Facebook Group and Heritage podcast.
From the record number of England caps for Ann Jarvis (176) to the Bello brothers winning an Elite 16 event for the first time, the sport has never been short of memorable moments – and they are keen to document the best moments that have been enjoyed across the community.
For now, though, members are encouraged to send in any written literature images or videos they wish to share that may be of interest to others.
If you do so, please send via email to info@volleyballengland.org, detailing what has been submitted, as well as who has sent it and contact information in case of query.
Sports
Fuseini, Modeste earn superlatives, 12 ETAMU track and field athletes named to all-Southland teams
Twelve student-athletes from the East Texas A&M University track and field teams earned all-Southland Conference recognition following their performances at the SLC Outdoor Championships, including a pair of superlative awards. Highlighting the honors for the Lions are Ibrahim Fuseini (Accra, Ghana), who earned the conference’s Athlete of the Year award to go along with being the Outstanding […]

Twelve student-athletes from the East Texas A&M University track and field teams earned all-Southland Conference recognition following their performances at the SLC Outdoor Championships, including a pair of superlative awards.
Highlighting the honors for the Lions are Ibrahim Fuseini (Accra, Ghana), who earned the conference’s Athlete of the Year award to go along with being the Outstanding Running Events performer and the Most Valuable Performer at the outdoor meet, while Armani Modeste (Castries, Saint Lucia) was named the co-Newcomer of the Year.
Fuseini put together an impressive season for East Texas A&M as he went 4 for 4 in winning conference championships at the meet in Houston, being part of two school record and one Southland meet record performance as well. He won the 100 meter dash, 200 meter dash, 4×100 meter relay, and 4×400 meter relay, setting the school record in the 200 meter dash and the 4×100 meter relay, and breaking the Lions’ SLC meet record in the 4×100 meter relay as well.
Modeste ran alongside Fuseini in the 4×100 meter relay and 4×400 meter relay, winning gold in both races, while also scoring points for the Lions in the 200 meter dash (fourth) and the 400 meter dash (seventh).
Along with the individual honors, the conference also announced the all-conference teams, with 12 Lions being named to the three all-conference teams. The Lions finished fourth on the men’s side at the conference championships, while the Lion women finished sixth.
Fuseini earned first team all-Southland honors in the 100 meter dash, 200 meter dash, 4×100 meter relay, and 4×400 meter relay. Joining Fuseini on the first team are Justin Vincent (Agde, France) in the men’s long jump, Veronika Kramarenko (Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine) in the women’s high jump, and Romi Griese (Salzkotten, Germany) in the women’s discus.
The four individual champions on the first team were joined by the 4×100 meter relay team of Fuseini, Modeste, Enoch Fosuhene (Accra, Ghana), and Oguz Uyar (Cannakele, Turkey) and the 4×400 meter relay team of Fuseini, Modeste, Fosuhene, and Philip Krenek (Prague, Czech Republic).
Fosuhene was also named to second team all-Southland in the 200 meter dash, while Jonas Gran (Riehen, Switzerland) earned second team honors in the decathlon.
On the women’s side, the third team all-conference honors were Analice Pursley (Georgetown – East View) in the 400 meter hurdles, Cassandra Rendon (San Antonio – Madison) in the discus, and Blessing Samuel (Ghana) in the long jump.
Southland Conference Outdoor Track & Field superlative awards are nominated and voted upon by the league’s head coaches. Voting for oneself or one’s own athletes is not permitted. All-conference distinction is given to the first-, second- and third-place finishers in each championship event final.
Women’s Athlete of the Year – Samari Finney, Northwestern State
Women’s Outstanding Running Events Performer – Maygan Shaw, Northwestern State
Women’s Outstanding Field Events Performer – Raven-Symone Jarrett, Northwestern State
Women’s Freshman of the Year and Most Valuable Performer – Elizabeth Khatevi, A&M-Corpus Christi
Women’s Newcomer of the Year – Basia Mitchell, SFA
Women’s Phil Olson Coach of the Year – Mike Heimerman, Northwestern State
Men’s Athlete of the Year, Most Outstanding Running Events Performer and Most Valuable Performer – Ibrahim Fuseini, East Texas A&M
Men’s Outstanding Field Events Performer – Marcus Francis, McNeese
Men’s Freshman of the Year – Elkana Kipruto, SFA
Men’s Co-Newcomer of the Year – Emmanuel Ekuma, A&M-Corpus Christi
Men’s Co-Newcomer of the Year – Armani Modeste, East Texas A&M
Leon Johnson Award (Men’s Coach of the Year) – Robert Hansen, SFA
2025 SOUTHLAND CONFERENCE MEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD ALL-CONFERENCE TEAMS
Event | First | Second | Third |
100 meter dash | Ibrahim Fuseini, East Texas A&M | Corin Burns, UTRGV | Tavis Wilson, NSU |
200 meter dash | Ibrahim Fuseini, East Texas A&M | Enoch Fosuhene, East Texas A&M | Corin Burns, UTRGV |
400 meter dash | Cameron Chin, Lamar | William Achee, NSU | Victory Achapoekri, SLU |
800 meter run | Phillip Jensen e Castro, TAMUCC | Tray’Quan Francis, McNeese | Luke Parker, Lamar |
1,500 meter run | Edouard Lecrivain, HCU | Fredd Richardson, Lamar | Riley Elliott, SFA |
5,000 meter run | Elkana Kipruto, SFA | Griffin Neal, UIW | Freddy Richardson, UIW |
10,000 meter run | Elkana Kipruto, SFA | Griffin Neal, UIW | Lloyd Sheppard-Brown, Lamar |
110 meter hurdles | Olufolabo Ogunyemi, SLU | Dishawn Lamb, NSU | Ashton Munoz-Nieves, HCU |
400 meter hurdles | Jarvis Anderson, SFA | Jaden Powell, McNeese | Denzel Hinds, HCU |
3,000 meter steeplechase | Christopher Daniels, UIW | Zephirin Darhan, SFA | Ethan Malsich, UIW |
4×100 meter relay | Oguz Uyar, Enoch Fosuhene, Armani Modeste, Ibrahim Fuseini – East Texas A&M | Galen Loyd, Mikkel Johansson, Elijah Rowe, Tavis Wilson — NSU | Christopher Murphy, Madonna Favour, Daryl Bachmann, Darryl George, Jr. – UNO |
4×400 meter relay | Enoch Fosuhene, Philip Krenek, Armani Modeste, Ibrahim Fuseini– East Texas A&M | Vincent Granini, Desmond Duncan, Galen Loyd, William Achee – NSU | Alejandro Arellano, Jamari Harts, Ricky Young, Derrius Henry –UTRGV |
High Jump | Elijah Jackson, Lamar | Hunter Murphy, SFA | Nicholas Grullon, SFA |
Pole Vault | Brayden Hill, SFA | Garrett Savage, SFA | Cade Carter, SFA |
Long Jump | Justin Vincent, East Texas A&M | Keamonie Archie, UTRGV | Christopher Murphy, UNO |
Triple Jump | Bryson Williams, SFA | Joshua Gillis-Harry, HCU | Aaron Cooper, UTRGV |
Shot Put | Marcus Francis, McNeese | Donroy Brown, SLU | Emmanuel Ekuma, TAMUCC |
Discus Throw | Marcus Francis, McNeese | Anthony Oliver, Lamar | Micah Miller, SLU |
Hammer Throw | Anthony Oliver, Lamar | Gerrit Viser, SLU | Tyler Challis, McNeese |
Javelin Throw | Thomas Knoop, Lamar | Gabriel Lim, SLU | Alex Del Popolo, TAMUCC |
Decathlon | Leo Chauchard, UIW | Jonas Gran, East Texas A&M | Bruce Boon, NSU |
2025 SOUTHLAND CONFERENCE WOMEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK & FIELD ALL-CONFERENCE TEAMS
Event | First | Second | Third |
100 meter dash | Nayla Harris, UTRGV | Sileena Farrell, NSU | Kennedy Swann, SFA |
200 meter dash | Maygan Shaw, NSU | Jizzale Davis, UTRGV | Samari Finney, NSU |
400 meter dash | Maygan Shaw, NSU | Onyah Onyinye Favour, SLU | Samari Finney, NSU |
800 meter run | Elizabeth Khatevi, TAMUCC | Lilliana Guerrero, UTRGV | Kailey Salazar, UTRGV |
1,500 meter run | Elizabeth Khatevi, TAMUCC | Eline Mast, HCU | Inca Padfield, Lamar |
5,000 meter run | Elizabeth Khatevi, TAMUCC | Inca Padfield, Lamar | Alicia Finnis, TAMUCC |
10,000 meter run | Valentine Jemutai, SFA | Ahston Rainey, Lamar | Alicia Finnis, TAMUCC |
100 meter hurdles | Kayli Johnson, Lamar | Helen Baugaretn, UNO | Raven-Symone Jarrett, NSU |
400 meter hurdles | Esther Nwaze, SLU | Silet Gray, NSU | Analice Pursley, East Texas A&M |
3,000 meter steeplechase | Samantha Gonzalez, UTRGV | Oceane Cercueil, UIW | Micah Mizell, TAMUCC |
4×100 meter relay | Samari Finney, Maygan Shaw, Dynia Lewis, Sileena Farrell — NSU | Kierra Yarbough, Jada Gibson, Kennedy Swann, Whitenee Teagle — SFA | Ahmasia Brown, Kayla Smith, Kayli Johnson, Chantell Brown — Lamar |
4×400 meter relay | Kahliyah Anderson, Tranasia Jones, Margret Conteh, Samari Finney — NSU | Miriam Kauer, Nina Sorapuru, Esther Nwanze, Onyah Onyinye Favour — SLU | Aliyah Castillo, Zoe Adams, Trinity Kirk, Jizzale Davis — UTRGV |
High Jump | Veronika Kramarenko, East Texas A&M | Achol Maywin, UTRGV | Isabella Gonzalez-Velasquez, UIW |
Pole Vault | Kalli Knott, NSU | Iliana Singh, UIW | Kira Van Den Ham, SFA |
Long Jump | Samari Finney, NSU | Kayli Johnson, Lamar | Blessing Samuel, East Texas A&M |
Triple Jump | Jaslyn Smith, NSU | Nyadhol Thichoit, TAMUCC | Kayli Johnson, Lamar |
Shot Put | Shakera Williams, NSU | Efe Latham, UTRGV | Jaslyn Russell, McNeese |
Discus Throw | Romi Griese, East Texas A&M | Shakera Kirk, NSU | Cassandra Rendon, East Texas A&M |
Hammer Throw | Hannah Hilding, UTRGV | Breyunna Dowell, TAMUUC | Cyan Green, TAMUCC |
Javelin Throw | Neelie Schiel, Lamar | Cecile Bogliolo, Lamar | Teodors Samac, NSU |
Heptathlon | Raven-Symone Jarrett, NSU | Basia Mitchell, SFA | Mariam Buenanueva-Saleme, Lamar |
Article source and photo credit: lionathletics.com
Sports
Rutgers Freshman Becomes Tunnel to Towers Student Athlete Advocate
Rutgers University freshman Caitlin Collins hails from a family of firefighters, so when the opportunity came to show support to fallen heroes of September 11th, she threw her hat into the ring. “It’s my way of giving back to the people I know who have served,” Collins told Fox Sports Radio New Jersey a couple […]

Rutgers University freshman Caitlin Collins hails from a family of firefighters, so when the opportunity came to show support to fallen heroes of September 11th, she threw her hat into the ring.
“It’s my way of giving back to the people I know who have served,” Collins told Fox Sports Radio New Jersey a couple of days before Memorial Day. “I think about sharing the stories of growing up in a firehouse, navigating holidays, birthdays, and graduations around my dad’s firehouse schedule. Growing up around it I learned about the scarifies first responders make every day.”
Collins is the daughter of a firefighter captain, granddaughter of a retired firefighter, and great-granddaughter of a former battalion chief.
This spring, she just completed her freshman season on the Rutgers women’s Lacrosse team and is now the latest member of the Student Athlete Advocate Program through the Tunnel to Towers Foundation.
The Foundation was formed over 20 years ago in honor of the sacrifice made by FDNY Stephen Siller, who laid down his life to save others on September 11, 2001.
The Foundation has supported the nation’s first responders, veterans, and their families by providing mortgage-free homes to the families of fallen heroes.
According to a press release issued by T2T, since 2021, Tunnel to Towers has joined up with the NCAA to provide an opportunity to “connect current student-athletes to the foundation’s mission and ensure young Americans ‘Never Forget’ the sacrifices made by first responders and military members.”
To date, 18 student-athletes and young professionals have collaborated with the foundation to participate in the initiative.
Collins was chosen along with Jack Holl, a senior water polo player at Pennsylvania State University-Behrend, to represent the foundation.
Continued Collins: “I would always see their commercials, and my dad’s fire station has worked with the Foundation in the past. We had a ‘My Cause’ game back in March, and it was a no-brainer to choose Tunnels to Towers. I went to their website, and they had a column for student athletes, and I saw other athletes sharing their stories, and I wanted to be a part of it.”
Added Tunnel to Towers Media Relations Manager Nick Diamantis: “Caitlin’s background was everything we looked for in building this program. Her long lineage of family and first responder units totally captures what we try to do here to get a younger demographic of people helping out the Foundation, spreading the mission nationwide.”
Collins will take part in the Tunnel to Towers Tower Climb on June 1 in New York City at One World Observatory. The event has been taking place since 2015, and celebrates the life and scarifies of all 9-11 heroes.
“It’s a way to give back and carry on the legacy of others. Seeing other people my age grow up the same way you did is relatable, and it’s fun to be a part of. I was born in 2006, so I only know the post-9/11 world, so it’s important to me to promote that we never forget what families have gone through.”
Michael Cohen is the News and Sports Director at Fox Sports Radio New Jersey and Magic 98.3 FM, as well as a radio production assistant with Fox and Magic in New Jersey. He started his career in Somerset in 2018 initially as a news fill-in at WCTC 1450 AM, and soon moved up to higher responsibilities in the ensuing years, assuming News & Sports Director title in 2021Prior to his time with Fox Sports New Jersey, Michael was play-by-play voice for New Jersey Jackals baseball, and as well as play-by-play and color for the College of Staten Island basketball (men and women), softball and baseball. Michael began his career as a news and sportswriter with the Jersey Journal of Hudson County.
Sports
Mathea Olin Scours Vancouver Island for Waves on a Sailboat
Vancouver Island holds many secrets, but you can find them if you look. Photo: YouTube//Screenshot The west coast of Vancouver Island holds many secrets. I grew up there, poking my nose around different corners, slogging through the mud beneath the trees in search of waves, and I have not found most of them. There are […]


Vancouver Island holds many secrets, but you can find them if you look. Photo: YouTube//Screenshot

The west coast of Vancouver Island holds many secrets. I grew up there, poking my nose around different corners, slogging through the mud beneath the trees in search of waves, and I have not found most of them. There are endless waves breaking off endless points and over endless shifting sandbars, many of which require more than just legs to access. It’s a stunningly beautiful place made more beautiful by the work that goes into seeing those beautiful places. Canadian surfer Mathea Olin knows that as well as anyone, and she decided to explore the rugged coastline of her home in Rip Curl’s Transports of Delight II.
“Finding waves where you can surf and you’re the only one out, like, those are moments for me when I know where I’m meant to be,” Olin said. “Those are the moments I’m going to continue to find and explore our coastline and push my limits on a sailboat and just overall learn more about the ocean and who I want to be.”
Vancouver Island isn’t exactly known for it’s perfect, sunny days. The storms come fast and hard, full of driving rain and howling wind. The ocean is moodier there than many other places; ripping currents and freezing cold water that’s sometimes crystal clear and other times as clear as mud.
Olin, like many who call the island home, has a strong connection with the place she grew up. And growing up in Tofino, the ocean is home. Like anywhere else, you can’t always bank on perfect waves.
“For me a huge part of it is just being out there in the ocean. Out in nature,” Olin explained. “It’s definitely a cherry on top when you actually get swell on a sailing trip.”
As I mentioned, Vancouver Island is full of secrets, and Olin wants to keep uncovering them. It’s a magical place, but it’s not just because of the waves.
“Being a surfer, you’re always so enamored by the coastline and what it has to offer,” she said. “Every corner we rounded there was something new to look at. Little moments like that make me want to keep going a little bit farther, not knowing what you’re going to find.”
This is the second such trip Olin has done, and she learned a few valuable lessons from the first go-around.
“Last trip was a crash course in sailing with friend and mentor Satch Robertson,” Rip Curl wrote. “This time, Mathea came prepared. That’s the beauty of doing things for a second time. You know more, have a sense for extra goals and can truly let go of any anxieties. There’s something incredibly empowering about having the skills to chart your own course too. To take your adventure into your own hands. The freedom to explore wherever the wind takes you — and the confidence to make the journey your own.”
Sports
Women’s Track Star Scatchard, Water Polo’s Pozaric Receive Princeton’s Top Senior Athletic Awards
AWARDS SHOW: Princeton University women’s track and cross country star Mena Scatchard, left, is all smiles as she receives the C. Otto von Kienbusch Award from Princeton Director of Athletics John Mack last Thursday evening at the Gary Walters ’67 Princeton Varsity Club Awards Banquet. The award is given annually to a Princeton senior woman […]

AWARDS SHOW: Princeton University women’s track and cross country star Mena Scatchard, left, is all smiles as she receives the C. Otto von Kienbusch Award from Princeton Director of Athletics John Mack last Thursday evening at the Gary Walters ’67 Princeton Varsity Club Awards Banquet. The award is given annually to a Princeton senior woman of high scholastic rank who has demonstrated general proficiency in athletics and the qualities of a true sportswoman. During her Tiger career, Scatchard was eight-time Ivy League champion and a 2025 NCAA indoor runner-up in the mile. (Photo provided courtesy of Princeton Athletics)
By Bill Alden
One is a petite, wiry runner from England while the other is a chiseled 6’4 bruiser from Croatia who dominates in the pool.
Coming to Princeton from Europe in 2021, the two athletes, Mena Scatchard and Roko Pozaric, produced stellar college careers. Scatchard established herself as one of the most accomplished distance runners in the 47-year history of Princeton women’s track and field. Pozaric, for his part, ended his Tiger men’s water polo career with the most goals in program history.
Last Thursday evening, Scatchard and Pozaric were honored as the top Princeton senior athletes at the Gary Walters ’67 Princeton Varsity Club Awards Banquet. Scatchard received the C. Otto von Kienbusch Award given annually to a Princeton senior woman of high scholastic rank who has demonstrated general proficiency in athletics and the qualities of a true sportswoman. Pozaric won the William Winston Roper Trophy awarded annually to a Princeton senior man of high scholastic rank who has demonstrated general proficiency in athletics and the qualities of a true sportsman.
Scatchard displayed her quality time and time again as an eight-time Ivy League champion. A 2025 NCAA indoor runner-up in the mile, Scatchard is just the second Tiger woman to place that high at nationals – and she did it while climbing from 10th to second with the fastest final two laps in the entire field.
At the conference level, Scatchard won individual Ivy titles in four events, while winning four 4×800 relay titles. She set four facility records during her championship performances.
Additionally, Scatchard, a native of North Yorkshire, U.K., is a nine-time first team and three-time second team All-Ivy honoree. Scatchard has rewritten the Princeton record books during her four years. She holds seven program records, including the 800 meters, 1,500, 5,000, 3,000, mile, and as a part of 4×800 and distance medley relays. She also ranks second all-time in the Princeton record books in three other events, while making the all-time top-10 in four more. Scatchard’s performances have landed her in the Ivy League all-time top-10, all-meets in seven events.
A rare middle distance runner who also excels on the cross country course, Scatchard is a two-time
All-Ivy performer and finished second overall last fall to lead the Tigers to their first cross country Heps title in nine years. Scatchard’s individual achievements and leadership have guided Princeton women’s cross country and women’s track and field to new heights this year, helping the program complete its first Triple Crown (Ivy cross country, indoor track, and outdoor track titles) since 2011 and third all-time — two milestones that will be cemented and cherished in the history of the program.
MAKING A SPLASH: Princeton University men’s water polo player Roko Pozaric unloads the ball in action this season. Pozaric, who tallied a program-record 281 goals in his Tiger career, was named last Thursday as the recipient of the William Winston Roper Trophy awarded annually to a Princeton senior man of high scholastic rank who has demonstrated general proficiency in athletics and the qualities of a true sportsman. (Photo by Shelley M. Szwast, provided courtesy of Princeton Athletics)
Pozaric made history of his own for the Tiger men’s water polo team as a four-time All-American and three time conference Northeast Water Polo Conference (NWPC) Player of the Year. He is Princeton’s all-time leading goal scorer with 281 tallies while also ranking second all-time in assists, ranking Pozaric as arguably the best player in program history. Pozaric who hails from Zagreb Croatia, made an immediate impact when he arrived at Princeton, being named the NWPC Rookie of the Year and Rookie of the NWPC Tournament on his way to his first All-American honors.
In 2023, Pozaric had a career year with 76 goals and 47 assists and received recognition as the NWPC Tournament MVP and was named a Cutino Award finalist, an award presented annually by the Olympic Club to honor the nation’s most outstanding Division I male and female water polo athletes.
During his carer, Pozaric has helped transform the program into a national contender as the Tigers have won the conference title four years in a row, making it to the NCAA Final Four in 2023 and earning a program-record 28 wins, finishing ranked fifth in the country the last two seasons and beating two of the water polo “big four,” in Cal and Stanford, during his career. Pozaric is a four-time first-team All-NWPC performer and a 14-time conference Player of the Week.
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