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Not a signature win

07/22/25 Mirror photo by Patrick Waksmunski / Curve starter Po-Yu Chen reacts after giving up a two-run homer to Chesapeake’s Carter Young. The Altoona Curve offense sputtered en route to a 2-1 loss to the Chesapeake Baysox Tuesday night in front of 6,208 fans at PNG Field. Both Baysox runs came in the second inning […]

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Not a signature win

07/22/25 Mirror photo by Patrick Waksmunski /
Curve starter Po-Yu Chen reacts after giving up a two-run homer to Chesapeake’s Carter Young.

The Altoona Curve offense sputtered en route to a 2-1 loss to the Chesapeake Baysox Tuesday night in front of 6,208 fans at PNG Field.

Both Baysox runs came in the second inning when Curve starter Po-Yu Chen gave up a two-run home run to Carter Young.

“It’s hard to win when you only get two hits,” Altoona manager Andy Fox said.

The Curve got a run back in the third when center fielder Jase Bowen roped a double that turned into a run on two throwing errors.

07/22/25 Mirror photo by Patrick Waksmunski /
Curve’s Jase Bowen is told by Brenden Dixon to stay up as he scores on a two-error double on a line drive to left field.

Bowen’s little league home run was the lone hit the Altoona offense mustered until a Mitch Jebb single in the ninth inning.

“They ran some good arms at us today,” Fox said. “They pitched well, and sometimes you’ve got to tip your hat. We couldn’t really get anything going, a little in the ninth, but we weren’t able to cash in.”

Chesapeake’s Trace Bright struck out eight in five innings of relief work for the Baysox and allowed only the hit to Jebb and one walk. Baysox starter Levi Wells threw 3• innings, allowed one hit and struck out five.

“We struck out 14 times and walked once,” Fox said. “They were commanding the ball, executing pitches and working ahead — all things you wanted to have with your pitching staff.”

Bullpen brilliant

Tasked with covering six innings, the Altoona bullpen maintained the upper hand against Chesapeake as three pitchers combined to hurl six shutout innings and keep the Curve in it until the end.

Valentin Linarez threw 1ª innings, struck out three and walked one. Blake Townsend entered for Linarez and tossed three innings in which he allowed two hits and struck out three.

Beau Burrows threw the final 1• innings and promptly struck out two and allowed only one hit.

“They’ve just maintained what they’ve been doing all year,” Fox said. “They’ve been stemming the tide for us, keeping us in games and giving us a chance. They did that again today.”

Valdez exits

Outfielder Esmerlyn Valdez exited Tuesday night’s game with an apparent leg injury in the top of the sixth inning.

Valdez was sprinting toward a foul ball and injured his leg while sliding for the baseball.

“Valdez is at the hospital getting some x-rays of his lower leg,” Fox said. “We’ll know more tomorrow. It’s a little too early to tell the extent of it.”

Setting world record

All who attended Tuesday’s game at PNG Field were on hand to witness a world record in the making.

An 8-foot, 1,200-pound replica Minor League baseball made a stop on its tour around Minor League Baseball stadiums to become the world’s most autographed baseball.

Fans, players and staff were able to sign the ball throughout the course of the game, and the line continued for nearly seven innings of play.

“It is a really cool thing to be a part of,” Curve fan Dane Leone said. “Being able to potentially be a part of baseball history is something I wasn’t expecting but is neat to think about.

Entering Tuesday night, the ball had 4,439 signatures. After the game, it was estimated, the ball had 4,942 signatures. The previous world record was 2,146 signatures on a soccer jersey in the United Kingdom, which means that every person who signed the ball while at PNG Field held a world record albeit very briefly.

The idea was derived by those in the Minor League Baseball office as a way to bring together communities and draw into the quirkiness that is Minor League Baseball.

“We like to have a lot of fun in Minor League Baseball,” vice president of marketing for Minor League Baseball Kristin Stratton said. “There’s all sorts of things about the minor league experience that you can really only find in our ballparks. And we thought, you know, ‘what’s the way we can go even bigger, even better? And let’s, let’s try to break a record that nobody’s done this before, might as well test it out in Minor League Baseball.”‘

That led to the creation of the ball and the development of a tour of cities as far west as Indianapolis and coming back east through Ohio, Pennsylvania and New Jersey before ultimately landing in New York City at MLB headquarters on July 29.

“A lot of it was triangulating mileage math and trying to figure out how far we could get within the six-week time period we had, knowing we wanted to end this tour in New York, outside of the Major League Baseball offices,” Stratton said. “In a perfect world, we get to all 120 clubs, but we would need a ball about 10 times the size of the one that we have, which would not be road legal.”

The ball arrived early Tuesday morning and will be departing for Lehigh Valley and the Ironpigs this morning.

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Altoona will have a matinee game Wednesday afternoon with a noon start.

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Amboy volleyball camp for second-eighth graders focused on fundamentals

AMBOY – The Amboy High School Volleyball program hosted a volleyball camp for young girls interested in the sport the week of July 21. The camp featured two sessions during three days. The first session was second-fifth graders and the second was for sixth-eighth graders. There were 97 campers from Amboy, Ohio, Mendota, LaMoille and […]

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AMBOY – The Amboy High School Volleyball program hosted a volleyball camp for young girls interested in the sport the week of July 21.

The camp featured two sessions during three days. The first session was second-fifth graders and the second was for sixth-eighth graders. There were 97 campers from Amboy, Ohio, Mendota, LaMoille and Oglesby.

Volleyball fundamentals such as serving, passing, setting, hitting and rotations were exhibited and perfected during games such as Survivor Island, Serve Sprint, Around the Bend and the camp favorite, Duck, Duck, Goose.

The second-grade campers were Abigail Burke, Amelia Davis, Miayah Dempsey, Evie Dickison, Magnolia Dunphy, Edi Hanson, Collins Henkel, Leah May, Ireland Morrissey, Abigail Walker and Harper Wittenauer.

Third-grade attendees were Addyson Benson, Keagan Fenwick, Adah Kant, Dany Lahman, Paisley McLain, Ava Montavon, Emily Valdez, Lorelei White and Ryleigh Wolf.

Fourth-graders on the volleyball court were Kinsley Anderson, Savannah Benson, Isabel Burke, Clare Considine, Destiny Davis, Vivian Fransen, Audrey Hanson, Annie Henkel, Harper Meusel, Adaline Montavon, Paisley Payne, Seraphina Payne, Emmieline Robens, Camille Scully and Marley Williams.

Campers in the fifth grade were Everly Bryant, Natalie Hellquist, Olivia Henkel, Grayson Montavon, Madison O’Connell, Elly O’Malley and Ava Riley.

Representing the sixth grade were Emmerson Benson, Mila Burke, Annelise Considine, Ellie Henkel, Hadley Leffelman, Jolee Leffelman, Rebecca May, Emersyn Moore, Lainey Riley, Emery Williams, Katie Wittenauer, Aliyah Holtzclaw and Mandi Ritter.

The seventh-grade campers were Leah Bodmer, Kaiya Kaleel and Emily Meyers.

Leah Bonnell, Amelia Kant, Annabelle Leffelman, Teagan Moore, Alivia Schultz, Alexis White, Molly Wilson, Avery Wittenauer, Vanessa Gross and Kylie Zellhoffer were the eighth-grade campers.

The volleyball program received help from high school players who were “buddies” to all of the younger players. The high school helpers were Jillian Anderson, Grace Althaus, Kiera Karlson, Ellie McLaughlin, Peyton Payne, Brittlyn Whitman, Alyvia Whelchel, Jadyn Whelchel, Madison Althaus, Callen Christoffersen, Morgan Kreiser, Lili Leffelman, Aubrey Wells, Addison Blaine, Madelyn Clarida, Faith Fenwick, Kilah Helm, Teagan Payne, Sydney Whelchel, Tinley Whitney, Mackenzie Alletto, Mallory Bodmer, Erika Decker, Sophya Fonderoli, Delilah Horner, Adelynn Kreiser, Sydney Noble, Quinnley Piper, Jasmine Rhodenbaugh, Norah Shearer, Natalie Skrzypa and Hannah Whitman.

The camp was coached by Sean Shepard, Monica Joeger, Lindsey Kaleel, Lisa Moore, Courtney Thompson, Haylie Barrera and Amboy varsity coach Nicole Jones.





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Bluff Impact Volleyball draws strong turnout

Youth from more than a dozen schools hope to earn a spot on the roster and sign Aug. 6 with Bluff Impact Volleyball Club teams. For only the second year, the group held a summer tryout before the high school season. It is now in the process of selecting the players who will fill either […]

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Youth from more than a dozen schools hope to earn a spot on the roster and sign Aug. 6 with Bluff Impact Volleyball Club teams. For only the second year, the group held a summer tryout before the high school season. It is now in the process of selecting the players who will fill either the 15U, 16U, or 17U teams. More than 30 girls showed up Friday to Poplar Bluff Junior High, where tryouts consisted of multiple drills to showcase athletes’ serving abilities.

“I was very pleasantly surprised with the turnout,” said Bluff Impact coach Christine Walker. “This was the second year we did a summer tryout before high school season as opposed to after high school season. In total, we had about 32 or 33 tryout to fill those three teams.”

The tryout was held Friday night at Poplar Bluff Junior High and consisted of multiple drills to showcase athletes’ serving abilities.

“The first thing we did was warmup with some serving and serve receive,” she said. “We ranked girls based off of serves in-and-out and different types of serves. We were also looking at accuracy as well. If they hit two in, are they hitting the next two out? Same with passing. Are they getting to the ball, moving their feet, are they following the ball?”

Following the drills, Walker put prospective teammates in open play with multiple combinations of girls.

“We had, I think, over 12 schools represented just within those 30-something players,” she added. “Some of those girls are returning players so coaches kind of know how they play, and we were using what we already know about them to see how they mesh in with newer players. Sometimes girls get more comfortable when they’ve been playing with each other, and they’re more familiar with each other as teammates and they know each other strengths.”



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2025 Long Beach State vs Chapman – Men’s Water Polo – News

Event Info Here’s how to watch the 2025 Long Beach State vs Chapman – Men’s Water Polo broadcast on FloSwimming. The 2025 Long Beach State vs Chapman – Men’s Water Polo broadcast starts on Sep 6, 2025. Stream or cast from your desktop, mobile or TV. Now available on Roku, Fire TV, Chromecast and Apple […]

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Event Info

Here’s how to watch the 2025 Long Beach State vs Chapman – Men’s Water Polo broadcast on FloSwimming. The 2025 Long Beach State vs Chapman – Men’s Water Polo broadcast starts on Sep 6, 2025. Stream or cast from your desktop, mobile or TV. Now available on Roku, Fire TV, Chromecast and Apple TV. Don’t forget to download the FloSports app on iOS or Android! If you can’t watch live, catch up with the replays! Video footage from the event will be archived and stored in a video library for FloSwimming subscribers to watch for the duration of their subscription.





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Top hitters in of 2025

Watch St. Ursula Bulldogs win 2024 OHSAA DII state title on this point In a reverse sweep, St. Ursula Academy won the OHSAA DII state title over Anthony Wayne Nov. 9, 2024. Here’s their final point and celebration. The last high school sports preseason milestone is within reach! In just a few days (Aug. 1 […]

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The last high school sports preseason milestone is within reach!

In just a few days (Aug. 1 to be exact), football, soccer and volleyball teams can officially begin practicing. Just in time for the calendar to flip, The Enquirer presents its final list of the top volleyball players in the city.

This week, we’re focusing on the top hitters. Watching these players work can leave fans awestruck. Just don’t get in the way of their incredibly powerful swings.

You can also read about the top defensive specialists/ liberos, top setters and top blockers.

Emma Adkins, Mercy McAuley

Adkins has done a little bit of everything in her high school career. Stepping into a starting role as a sophomore, she contributed 364 digs, 93 assists and 57 aces. Last fall, she posted 308 assists, 253 kills, 237 digs, 53 aces and 19 blocks as an invaluable six-rotation player. The Wolves will lean on the Northern Kentucky commit as a senior leader as they return just four players who saw the court in 2024.

Callie Combs, Seton

Last year, Sakura Codling was named the Ohio Division I Player of the Year. Combs could keep that honor at Seton. She is the No. 9-ranked player in Ohio, according to PrepDig, was first-team all-district and second-team All-Ohio, and is committed to North Carolina State. As a junior, she posted 327 kills, 271 digs, 33 blocks, 30 aces and 21 aces. She is on track to cross the 1,000-kill threshold for her career and has a solid chance to reach 100 career blocks.

Audrey Dyas, Notre Dame

Ava Tilden led the Pandas in 2024 with 477 kills. This fall, Notre Dame can replicate her production in the aggregate (that’s a “Moneyball” reference). Dyas, a Toledo commit, was second on the team with 241 kills to go with 62 blocks. PrepDig ranks her as the No. 7 player in Kentucky and the 64th best player in the nation.

Ava McIntyre, Kings

One of the most energetic players in the Eastern Cincinnati Conference was named the league’s 2024 offensive player of the year after posting 369 kills, 241 digs, 69 aces and 47 blocks. She recorded double-digit kills in 21 of the Knights’ 24 matches and averaged 15.4 kills per match. McIntyre led the conference in aces and was second in kills. The Wingate commit was also named to the DII all-state first team.

Morgan Meiring, Fenwick

As a sophomore, she had the second-most kills in the Greater Catholic League-Coed with 395. She also posted 271 digs and 47 aces to lead the Falcons to the DV state championship match. For the second year in a row, she was named to the all-league first team and All-Ohio third team.

Milyn Minor, Scott

The two-time 10th Region Player of the Year is back for one final season after posting 484 kills, 314 digs, 63 blocks and 57 aces as a junior. Minor lives above the net and has one of the most powerful arms on either side of the river, as proven by her 1,509 career kills.

Kendall Northern, Summit Country Day

The Penn State commit was the go-to option for the Silver Knights as she led the Miami Valley Conference with 426 kills in 2024. She also led her team 223 digs, and rounded out her contributions with 63 aces and 35 assists. Northern was named the DV District 16 Player of the Year and All-Ohio second team. She is the No. 1-ranked player in Ohio and No. 14 in the nation by PrepDig.

Gabby Semona, St. Ursula

The senior is the top returning attacker for the Bulldogs, coming off a season where she had 244 kills to go with 46 digs and 39 blocks. The Xavier University commit is an all-around net player; she posted 78 blocks as a sophomore in 2023. The Bulldogs return to DI after one season in DII, but have the roster to compete for another state title.

Nattie Slusher, Seton

Slusher had one job for the Saints in 2024: dominate at the net. She did that to the tune of 274 kills and 46 blocks. The Eastern Michigan commit averaged 11.4 kills per match in the second half of the season and posted double-digit kills in five straight postseason matches to help the Saints mow down the competition on their way to a state title.

Savanna Stacey, McNicholas

Stacey leads four returners who put away at least 100 kills in 2024. She compiled 224 kills, 190 digs, 37 blocks and 31 aces as a sophomore. She can get hot at a moment’s notice; as a freshman, she logged 27 and 28 kills in two different five-set wins. Stacey was named to the GCL-Coed and district first team and the All-Ohio third team as the Rockets advanced to the DIV regional final.

Additional hitters to watch in the 2025 season

Kendall Bosse, Ross; Railynn Bowman, Edgewood; Neenah Burton, Colerain; Kelsey Clyde, South Dearborn; Madi Demler, St. Henry; Lexy Dreher, Lakota East; Emily Helmers, St. Henry; Chloe Hershey, Bishop Brossart; Liz Hudnall, East Central; Sarah Hutchinson, McNicholas; Karsyn Jamison, East Clinton; Rachel King, Ryle; Jenna Kitchens, Simon Kenton; Rachel Lewandowski, Beechwood; Ava Long, Lebanon; Grace Miracle, Milford; Miya Nance, Wilmington; Josie Nichols, Loveland; Isabel O’Brien, Beechwood; Regan Oaks, Harrison; Kennedy Ostendorf, Fairfield; Charlotte Patton, Conner; Liz Perkins, Highlands; Ellie Poynter, Batavia; Cara Richter, Mount Notre Dame; Evie Schiller, Madeira; Maddie Steele, Turpin; Emma Tharp, Oak Hills; Lola Waleskowski, St. Ursula

Vote: Who is the top hitter in Greater Cincinnati girls volleyball in 2025?

Readers can vote once per hour per device. This poll will close at 4 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 1.



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Oldenburg, Tuman and Hasbrook Attend Fourth Annual Big Ten Media Day

CHICAGO – The Big Ten Conference held the fourth annual Big Ten Women’s Volleyball Media Days on Monday and Tuesday in Chicago with all 18 teams represented. Head Coach Jen Flynn Oldenburg, junior Mia Tuman and sophomore Olivia Hasbrook attended media day.   “I think what makes Covelli special is how intimate it is,” Oldenburg […]

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CHICAGO – The Big Ten Conference held the fourth annual Big Ten Women’s Volleyball Media Days on Monday and Tuesday in Chicago with all 18 teams represented. Head Coach Jen Flynn Oldenburg, junior Mia Tuman and sophomore Olivia Hasbrook attended media day.
 
“I think what makes Covelli special is how intimate it is,” Oldenburg said. “It was made for volleyball. I think they did the research well – no seat is a bad seat. Even if you go get concessions, you’re still standing close enough to see every point of the action and it’s loud. Regardless of the amount of fans in there, but especially when we sell out, which we are expected to do, it’s a pretty cool environment.”
 

Media day featured interviews with BTN in multiple capacities (BTN Courtside, At The Net, BTN Digital Studio, BTN Main Studio), SiriusXM, AVCA & TOGETHXR, Out of System and a live press conference (TRANSCRIPT). The day wrapped up with a photoshoot. View photos from Big Ten media day HERE.
 
“I think we’re all super hungry and we’re ready to go,” Tuman said. “We want to earn everything that we get and I think that’s been our mindset for how hard we want to work. Our work ethic in the weight room has been completely different this summer, but in the best way.”
 
“Everyone feels comfortable being around each other,” Hasbrook said. “I think building that foundation has set us up for success on the volleyball court. Throughout the spring and summer, we’ve made [team bonding] a huge focus for us. I think you can tell that by how we are off the court and how much we hang out with each other. On the court, you can see the trust and the love.”
 
The Buckeyes open the 2025 season at the University of Miami, playing VCU on Friday, Aug. 29 and Miami (FL) on Saturday, Aug. 30. Ohio State’s home opener is scheduled for Sunday, Sept. 7 against Florida.
 
Tickets for the 2025 season are now on sale with links for season tickets, four-match mini plans and single match tickets found below. Ohio State students are free with a valid BuckID. Fans with ticketing questions should call the Ohio State Ticket Office at 1-800-GO-BUCKS or email athletic.tix@osu.edu.
 
Ticket links:

#GoBucks



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Men’s U23 Drops 2025 Pan Am Cup Opener to Dominican Republic

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado (July 29, 2025) – The U.S. Men’s U23 National Team dropped an exciting opening match at the 2025 NORCECA Men’s U23 Pan American Cup, 3-1 (23-25, 26-24, 31-29, 25-16) to the Dominican Republic on Tuesday in Guatemala City, Guatemala. The U.S. returns to action July 30 at 3 p.m. PDT against Mexico. The […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado (July 29, 2025) – The U.S. Men’s U23 National Team dropped an exciting opening match at the 2025 NORCECA Men’s U23 Pan American Cup, 3-1 (23-25, 26-24, 31-29, 25-16) to the Dominican Republic on Tuesday in Guatemala City, Guatemala.

The U.S. returns to action July 30 at 3 p.m. PDT against Mexico.

The U.S. recorded 12 of the 16 blocks in the match and four of six aces but could not overcome 37 errors and a 62-51 deficit in kills.

Opposite George Bruening led the U.S. with 20 points on 16 kills, a block and a match-high three aces. Middle blocker Cam Thorne posted a match-high five blocks, one more than the Dominican Republic, and added 10 kills for 15 points. Fellow middle Nicodemus Meyer also totaled 15 points with 14 kills and a block.

Outside hitter Patrick Rogers contributed seven points on six kills and a block. Libero Ryan Merk led the U.S. with 10 kills and five successful receptions.

Barnett scored on an overpass to put the U.S. up 10-8 in the first set. A Rogers block made it 14-11, and Bruening made a mid-air adjustment to score on a tip and give the U.S. its biggest lead of the set at four points, 17-13.

The Dominican Republic responded with a 5-1 run to even the set at 18. Bruening recorded a kill and an ace as the U.S. scored three points in a row for a 22-19 lead. Rogers tallied the last two U.S. points, giving him five points on four kills and a block in the set.

The Dominican Republic jumped out to a 7-3 lead in the second set and still led 13-9 when the U.S. went on a 5-2 run to pull within a point, 15-14.

Trailing 21-18, the U.S. tied the set on a Bruening kill, a Thorne block and a Dominican Republic hitting error. A Flayter block gave the U.S. set point at 24-23, but a service error and back-to-back blocks evened the match at one set each. Bruening led all players with eight kills.

Trailing 9-7 in the third set, the Dominican Republic took the lead with a 4-0 run. The lead grew to five points, 20-15. The U.S. used a Thorne kill and consecutive aces by Bruening to pull within a point, 23-22. A Barnett kill tied the set at 24.

The U.S. then saved four set points before earning its first set point, 29-28, on an error. The Dominican Republic scored the last three points to take the set. Bruening led the U.S. with eight points on six kills and two aces. Adrian Figueroa of the Dominican Republic registered 14 kills in the set.

Continuing its momentum from the end of the third set, the Dominican Republic scored four of the first five points in the fourth set and never trailed in clinching the match. The U.S. cut the lead to two points, 9-7, only to see the Dominican Republic stretch the lead to seven with a 6-1 run and a 15-8 lead on its way to clinching the match. Barnett led all players with six kills.

USA Volleyball Men’s U23 Roster for Pan Am Cup

Name (Pos., Height, Hometown, College/Pro, Region)

1 Ryan Merk (L, 6-1, 2003, Chicago, Ill., Penn State, Great Lakes)
4 Nathan Flayter (S, 6-4, 2005, Hales Corner, Wisc., McKendree, Badger)
5 Cam Thorne (MB, 6-4, 2004, Hollywood, Fla., UCLA, Florida)
6 Ryan Barnett (OH, 6-5, 2003, Vero Beach, Fla., Pepperdine, Florida)
8 Jalen Phillips (OPP, 6-5, 2004, Anaheim, Calif., CSUN, Southern California)
9 Ryan McElligott (S, 6-6, 2004, Mundelein, Ill., Loyola Chicago, Great Lakes)
14 Nicodemus Meyer (MB, 6-4, 2003, Franklin, Wisc., Loyola Chicago, Badger)
18 Patrick Rogers (OH, 6-7, 2004, Rutherford, N.J., Ball State, Garden Empire)
19 George Bruening (OPP, 6-10, 2004, Newport Beach, Calif., UCSB, Southern California)
21 Wesley Smith (MB, 6-11, 2004, Encinitas, Calif., USC, Southern California)
22 Owen Rose (MB, 6-8, 2003, Merrick, N.Y., Penn State, Garden Empire)
25 Theo Snoey (OH/OPP, 6-8, 2004, Berkeley, Calif., Stanford, Northern California)

Alternates
2 Donovan Constable (S, 6-2, 2003, Clovis, Calif., CSUN, Northern California)
7 Andrew Deardorff (OH, 6-5, 2003, Itasca, Ill., St. Francis, Great Lakes)
10 Paul Wyszynski (L, 6-0, 2003, Northbrook, Ill.,  Miedzyrzeckie Towarzystwo Siatkarskie, Great Lakes)
13 D’Aaron McCraney (MB, 6-9, 2003, Las Vegas, Nev., McKendree, Southern California)
16 Nyherowo Omene (OPP, 6-7, 2003, Chicago, Ill., Princeton, Great Lakes)
17 Trent Moser (OH, 6-8, 2003, Gilbert, Ariz., BYU, Arizona)
23 Alex Rottman (OH, 6-7, 2004, Santa Barbara, Calif., Stanford, Southern California)

Coaches
Head Coach: Nickie Sanlin (McKendree)
Assistant Coach: Reid Priddy (Indoor VC, Olympian)
Assistant Coach: Luke Reynolds (Pepperdine)
Performance Analyst: Mackenna Basore (Auburn)
ATC: Claire Pointer (LOVB Madison)
Team Lead: Will Berdecia (OTVA)

Schedule

All times Pacific

July 29: Dominican Republic def. USA, 3-1 (23-25, 26-24, 31-29, 25-16)
July 30: USA vs. Mexico, 3 p.m.
July 31: USA vs. Belize, 3 p.m.
Aug. 1: Quarterfinals
Aug. 2: Semifinals/Classification Matches
Aug. 3: Medal Matches/Classification Matches



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