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Prep talk: Beach volleyball playoffs to decide Southern Section champion this week

Can any team defeat No. 1 Mira Costa in girls’ beach volleyball? We’ll find out this week as the quarterfinals, semifinals and finals will be held in Southern Section Division 1. Edison will take the first chance against Mira Costa in the quarterfinals on Tuesday. The other matchups have Santa Margarita facing Los Alamitos, Redondo […]

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Can any team defeat No. 1 Mira Costa in girls’ beach volleyball?

We’ll find out this week as the quarterfinals, semifinals and finals will be held in Southern Section Division 1.

Edison will take the first chance against Mira Costa in the quarterfinals on Tuesday. The other matchups have Santa Margarita facing Los Alamitos, Redondo Union taking on San Marcos and San Juan Hills playing JSerra.

Redondo Union has the only win against Mira Costa this season.

The championships will be Saturday at Long Beach City College.

The City Section will hold its beach championships on Friday at Santa Monica State Beach. Venice is seeded No. 1 in the 16-team field.

This is a daily look at the positive happenings in high school sports. To submit any news, please email eric.sondheimer@latimes.com.





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All-American, New School Record Stands Out for #6 Men’s Track & Field All After First Day of NCAA Outdoor Championships

Story Links GENEVA, OHIO – The #6 Rowan Men’s Track & Field is tied for sixth with eight team points after day one of the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Championships at the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio turning in an All-American and a new school mark. UPDATED RESULTS […]

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GENEVA, OHIO – The #6 Rowan Men’s Track & Field is tied for sixth with eight team points after day one of the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Championships at the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio turning in an All-American and a new school mark.

UPDATED RESULTS

Damitrius Hester was runner-up in the javelin as the sophomore hit a new personal best with a top throw of 66.55 meters to repeat as All-American

The 4×100 relay of Shamar Love, Robert McKinney, Elijah Hendricks, and Evan Corcoran broke its own school record in the preliminaries, clocking in with the fourth-fastest Division III time of 39.97.

In the 200 meter prelims, Hendricks (21.22) and Rajahn Dixon (21.13-PR) will move on the finals.

Nana Agyemang just missed an All-American nod as the senior was 17th in the long jump (6.89 meters)

Jason Agyemang was in action in the 400 meter hurdles (56.92) as was the 4×400 relay (3;16.03), but neither did not qualify for the finals.

Action continues on Friday with Profs in action in the 110 meter hurdles (J. Agyemang, Kwaku Nkrumah, Jamir Brown, and Anaias Hughes), the high jump (Jamile Gantt, Arrington Rhym, Noah Wampole), and 100 meters (Love).
 



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Altoona boys volleyball team puts up valiant fight in defeat | News, Sports, Jobs

Altoona’s Kallen Plunket gets a spike by State College’s Deondre Sheffey. Mirror photo by Patrick Waksmunski TYRONE — There are times when sweeps in a volleyball match can have the feel of a match that went five sets. During the first two frames of Thursday night’s District 6 Class 3A Championship at Tyrone Middle School, […]

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Altoona’s Kallen Plunket gets a spike by State College’s Deondre Sheffey.

Mirror photo by Patrick Waksmunski

TYRONE — There are times when sweeps in a volleyball match can have the feel of a match that went five sets.

During the first two frames of Thursday night’s District 6 Class 3A Championship at Tyrone Middle School, the Altoona boys’ squad either held the lead at times or kept things just close enough to have a chance.

State College, however, just had a couple extra plays, and in the third matchup found a big enough run as they remained a thorn in the side of the Mountain Lions. State High held strong for a 25-23, 25-22 win in the first two sets, respectively, before finishing off Altoona in set three 25-16 for the title.

“I have never been more proud of a group of guys,” Altoona coach John Saboe said. “We’ve struggled all season to maintain our confidence. I thought in games one and two, we kept our confidence, we kept fighting. We put ourselves into a little bit of two-point hole. We’d catch up, and we fall back, we’d catch up, and we’d fall back.

“We just couldn’t get over that two-point deficit that we kept creating for ourselves. We made it a little tough in the first game with some missed serves, but we still battled. The guys were still believing, and that was the biggest thing we really wanted to get through with these guys.”

Altoona’s Saturnino Yohn sets the ball for one of his teammates against State College.

Mirror photo by Patrick Waksmunski

Following an Altoona kill from Luke Mitchell, which helped cut the deficit late in set one to two, State High’s Deondre Sheffy stymied the rally with three of his 10 kills, including the deciding finish to end the first set.

During the second in what felt like a sequence one step forward, one step back, Lukas Weathersbee stuffed one into open space for one his 10 kills to tie the second set at 18.

“I’m so proud of Lukas Weathersbee,” Saboe said. “The guy had an outstanding game. We challenged him (Wednesday), and he rose to the occasion. All season we said we need you to do the things that our team needs.

“Tonight, he did everything that our team needed. I’m so proud of him for what he brought to the table for our guys tonight. He found holes, he found seams, he found the block.”

But Derrick Campbell answered with a pair of finishes on his own as he registered 10 of them with 12 digs and 13 assists before Sheffey finished off the second set to put State up 2-0.

Luckas Keiter had 13 digs while Amir Cyrus added 16 assists.

“They played well, they passed the ball well,” State College coach Larry Campbell said. “I felt like we were in control the whole way. I think our problem was we played tight most of the night. Our serving wasn’t bad –four aces to 11 errors — 37 kills, we hit under .200 as a team. Defensively we were a little better and that made a difference.”

In the third set, with the Little Lions leading by three, a pair of Altoona attack errors, along with four crucial kills from Campbell, helped spark the decisive 11-5 run.

“We’re starting multiple freshmen and first-year players,” Campbell said. “They’ve gotten better. Coming into this, I was kind of wondering where we’re going to be beyond this. We’re minus a kid who is going to Ohio State. You don’t take away power 5 commits and then you’re rocking and rolling. We’ve had to change a lot.”

Altoona will graduate five seniors from this year’s team and Saboe is grateful for the progress they helped the Mountain Lion program make.

“Five guys who have really grown, who have brought great contributions to our team all season,” Saboe said. “They’re a fantastic group of individuals who just worked so hard and have provided so much stability for our underclassmen.”

Saboe is also optimistic about the Mountain Lions future as the team closes 2025 with a record of 4-11 as part of a demanding Mid Penn Conference.

“I thought our program took some good steps this year,” he said. I thought our guys did a good job; I thought we really improved and I’m anxious for what the future holds for us.”

State College will travel to McDowell for the District 6-8-10 Class 3A Subregional Championship next week at a site and time to be announced. Both teams will advance to the PIAA Playoffs.

SERVICE POINTS

ALTOONA: Terza 5, Coldwell 2, Mitchell 4, Huey-Kish 7, Weathersbee 2, Yohn 2

Records: Altoona (4-11), State College (8-5).



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SIERRA HIGH’S CLASS OF2025 – Manteca Bulletin

Principal Steve Clark shared plenty of stories and tidbits at the 29th annual commencement ceremony Thursday celebrating Sierra High’s Class of 2025. This was the class that had the highest ELA (English Language Arts) scores at the school for the past two years. “You’ve excelled in the classroom, community, and the athletic arena,” said Clark, […]

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Principal Steve Clark shared plenty of stories and tidbits at the 29th annual commencement ceremony Thursday celebrating Sierra High’s Class of 2025.

This was the class that had the highest ELA (English Language Arts) scores at the school for the past two years.

“You’ve excelled in the classroom, community, and the athletic arena,” said Clark, who gave a shoutout to the flag football program and its 11-1 record in the Valley Oak League.

He also acknowledged Colins Schluer and his record goals in water polo – he’s the son of Manteca Unified board President Stephen Schluer, and will be attending the University of Alabama.

The Timberwolves, in all sports this year, had a collective 3.45 grade point average. “You were true student athletes,” Clark said.

Graduation displayed the musical talents at the school.

For starters, Oliver Naven performed the National Anthem to the crowd at Daniel Teicheira Memorial Stadium – on electric guitar.

Mapuana Toutai, who also plays guitar, did her song “Bloom” currently streaming on Spotify.

Music teacher Rick Hammarstrom – he along with science teacher Chris Courtney, Social Science instructor Dan Cunial (one of the originals of the school), English teacher Janet Sanders, and campus monitor Diane Silva are all retiring at the end of the school year – jammed once again with the band consisting of seniors Santiago Pachalian, Brock Felt, and Faka’osi Latu, and sophomores Gonzalo Pachalian and Cooper Mahoney, to the tune, “Pocket Change.”

Among the student speakers were valedictorian Nicole Allison, salutatorian Siddharthan Gopendran, and senior class President Alexa Jimenez Moya.

Clark noted that Allison’s “senioritis” was taking four AP classes this year. “She got all A’s,” he said.

She responded, by saying: “I didn’t set out to be valedictorian – my goal was just to apply myself.”

Allison was introspective on her high school journey in “finding brings you joy and passion.” For her, it’s art.

Clark indicated that she has 22 full sketchbooks.

Gopendran went to nine different schools prior to Sierra High. None could properly pronounce his first name, Siddharthan, he recalled.

Along the way, he learned a lot about himself, in particular, finding ways to adapt along the way,

“Adaptability is the greatest skill,” Gopendran said, for which he credits this for allowing him to be the best version of himself.

Moya praised the support she received from family and friends during her time at Sierra, basking in the moment of graduation.

“It’s a great day to be T-Wolves,” she proclaimed.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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Chicago White Sox Minor League Update

Charlotte Knights 8, Round Rock Express 0 (Statcast box)The Charlotte Knights flexed their offensive muscles, launching five dingers en route to a dominant victory over the Round Rock Express, bringing their record back to .500 at 24-24. The home run brigade started early for the Knights, as they jumped out to a 3-0 lead in […]

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Chicago White Sox Minor League Update

Charlotte Knights 8, Round Rock Express 0 (Statcast box)
The Charlotte Knights flexed their offensive muscles, launching five dingers en route to a dominant victory over the Round Rock Express, bringing their record back to .500 at 24-24.

The home run brigade started early for the Knights, as they jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first inning on solo blasts from newly demoted Brooks Baldwin, Kyle Teel, and Korey Lee. The strong performances from catchers Teel and Lee, coupled with the success of Matt Thaiss and Edgar Quero at the big league level, highlight a somewhat problematic backlog at backstop. It sure would be nice if our GM could work some deals to get players who produce at other positions.

Charlotte continued to pile on the runs in the third, breaking the game open with another three-spot. A Dominic Fletcher triple drove in Teel, who had singled, and that set the stage for a two-run blast from Bryan Ramos, a much-needed big hit for the struggling infielder.

The long ball parade wasn’t over. In the fourth, Corey Julks doubled, and Teel then launched his second no-doubter of the night, extending the Knights’ lead to a commanding 8-0.

On the mound, newly acquired righthander Evan McKendry, obtained by Chicago from the Milwaukee Brewers on May 5, pitched well in his outing. The former 2019 ninth-round pick of the Tampa Bay Rays, a career minor league arm, went four strong innings, allowing just one hit and three walks while striking out two. The Knights’ bullpen then took over, surrendering only three more hits over the final five frames to secure the shutout victory.

Poll

Who was the Knights MVP?







  • 95%

    Kyle Teel: 3-for-4, 3 R, 3 RBI, 2 HR

    (65 votes)

  • 0%

    Korey Lee:1-for-3, R, RBI, BB, HR

    (0 votes)

  • 0%

    Bryan Ramos: 1-for-3, R, 2 RBI, BB, HR

    (0 votes)

  • 0%

    Brooks Baldwin: 1-for-4, R, RBI, HR

    (0 votes)

  • 2%

    Dominic Fletcher: 1-for-3, R, RBI, BB, 3B

    (2 votes)

  • 1%

    Evan McKendry: 4 IP, H, 3 BB, 2 K

    (1 vote)



68 votes total

Vote Now

Poll

Who was the Knights Cold Cat?

  • 89%

    Colson Montgomery: 0-for-4, BB, 2 K

    (51 votes)

  • 1%

    Oscar Colás: 0-for-3, BB, K

    (1 vote)

  • 8%

    Jacob Amaya: 0-for-3, BB, K

    (5 votes)



57 votes total

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Birmingham Barons 4, Pensacola Blue Wahoos 2
The Barons (22-18) tightened their grip on first place in the SOU North division tonight, defeating the Blue Wahoos behind a strong outing from starter Shane Murphy and timely hitting. Murphy, the 24-year-old lefty promoted to Birmingham on April 27 from Winston-Salem, continued his impressive run with the Barons. He picked up his third win, improving his record to 3-1 with a sparkling 1.80 ERA in eight appearances. Murphy tossed six innings of four-hit, one-run ball, yielding only a solo home run in the fifth. The 2022 14th-round pick out of Chandler-Gilbert Community College earned a quality start for his efforts.

The Barons’ offense got on the board early, manufacturing a run in the first inning. Rikuu Nishida led off with a single, stole second (his 15th of the season), advanced to third on a William Bergolla ground out, and then scored on a sacrifice fly by Wilfred Veras.

Birmingham extended their lead in the second with two more runs. With two outs, Caden Connor reached on a throwing error. Mario Camilletti then ripped a triple, scoring Connor. Nishida followed with his second single of the night, driving in Camilletti. Nishida wasn’t done, as he drove in his second run of the game with another single in the fourth, extending the Barons’ lead.

Zach Franklin and Peyton Pallette held the Wahoos scoreless over a combined 2 1⁄3 frames, and Jared Kelly allowed one unearned run in 2⁄3 of an inning. Franklin and Kelly each earned a hold while Pallette got his seventh save.

Poll

Who was the Barons MVP?






  • 44%

    Rikuu Nishida: 3-for-5, R, 2 RBI

    (25 votes)

  • 0%

    Mario Camilletti: 1-for-3, R, RBI, BB

    (0 votes)

  • 3%

    Caden Connor: 1-for-4, 2 R

    (2 votes)

  • 46%

    Shane Murphy: 6 IP, 4 H, R, 5 K

    (26 votes)

  • 5%

    Peyton Pallette: 1 1⁄3 IP, H, 0 R, K

    (3 votes)



56 votes total

Vote Now

Poll

Wo was the Barons Cold Cat?

  • 100%

    William Bergolla: 0-for-4, K

    (29 votes)



29 votes total

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Hudson Valley Renegades 13, Winston-Salem Dash 2
The Winston-Salem Dash are by far the worst of the affiliates and sit in last place in the South Atlantic League South Division with a 14-28 record.

Dash starting pitcher Lucas Gordon, a 23-year-old lefty and the Chicago White Sox’s 2023 sixth-round pick (No. 179 overall), saw his impressive early-season statistics take a hit. Coming into the game with a 2.72 ERA, 1.01 WHIP, and 10.21 K/9, Gordon had been a victim of poor run support, but tonight, the Renegades’ bats were unforgiving.

Gordon largely held the Renegades in check until the top of the fifth inning when Roc Riggio (what a baseball name!) launched a two-run homer, giving Hudson Valley a 2-1 lead. The Renegades plated two more runs off of Gordon in the sixth, extending their lead to 4-2, and ultimately chasing him from the game.

The wheels truly came off for the Dash in the seventh inning. Reliever Joseph Yabbour faced a barrage, surrendering five runs while only managing 2⁄3 of an inning, pushing the Renegades’ advantage to 9-2. Hudson Valley wasn’t done, adding three more runs in the eighth and another in the ninth for good measure.

Winston-Salem’s offense showed glimmers of hope early on. In the bottom of the first, Cole McConnell drew a walk, and after Jeral Perez struck out, Braden Montgomery and Arxy Hernández strung together back-to-back singles to bring McConnell home, giving the Dash a brief 1-0 lead. The Dash managed to tie the game at 2-2 in the fifth inning on consecutive doubles by Perez and Montgomery, but their offensive production completely dried up after that.

Poll

Who was the Dash MVP?






  • 85%

    Braden Montgomery: 2-for-4, RBI, 2B

    (40 votes)

  • 12%

    Cole McConnell: 2-for-4, R, BB, 2B

    (6 votes)

  • 2%

    Jeral Perez: 1-for-3, R, BB

    (1 vote)

  • 0%

    Arxy Hernández: 1-for-4, RBI

    (0 votes)

  • 0%

    Clete Hartzog: IP, 0 R, H

    (0 votes)



47 votes total

Vote Now

Poll

Who was the Dash Cold Cat?







  • 5%

    Lucas Gordon: 5 IP, 6 H, 4 R, 3 BB, 7 K, 2 HR

    (2 votes)

  • 68%

    Joseph Yabbour: 2⁄3 IP, 3 H, 5 R, 2 BB

    (26 votes)

  • 0%

    Madison Jeffrey: 1 1⁄3 IP, 2 H, 3 R, 4 BB, K

    (0 votes)

  • 0%

    Alec Makarewicz: 0-for-3, K, BB

    (0 votes)

  • 2%

    Jackson Appel: 0-for-3

    (1 vote)

  • 23%

    Samuel Zavala: 0-for-4, 3 K

    (9 votes)



38 votes total

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Kannapolis Cannon Ballers 4, Columbia Fireflies 0
The Ballers’ (23-19) victory over the Columbia Fireflies tonight propelled them into a tie for first place in the Carolina League South division. The MVP was undoubtedly Grant Umberger. The 23-year-old lefty, an undrafted free agent from 2024, delivered a brilliant performance in his third start of the season. Umberger tossed six scoreless innings, allowing just two hits while striking out 11 batters, earning himself a well-deserved quality start.

The Ballers’ offense wasted no time getting on the board, scoring in the first inning — a feat that marked Kannapolis as the fourth affiliate to tally a run in the opening frame. Back-to-back doubles from Caleb Bonemer and Calvin Harris plated the first run. A walk to George Wolkow and a subsequent wild pitch brought in the second run, giving Kanny an early 2-0 advantage.

The Cannon Ballers added insurance runs in the later innings. Ronny Hernandez singled home a run in the seventh, and Wilber Sánchez followed suit with an RBI single in the eighth, extending Kannapolis’ lead to 4-0. The arm barn of Jonathan Clark, Carlton Perkins, and Morris Austin held the Fireflies scoreless and hitless in the final three frames, preserving Umberger’s impressive performance.

As a strange side note, in the bottom of the second inning, Ballers manager Chad Pinder got ejected. Seemed to be some chaos on the field with regards to the umpiring crew losing track of pitch counts.

Poll

Who was the Ballers MVP?






  • 2%

    Calvin Harris: 2-for-4, R, RBI

    (1 vote)

  • 15%

    Lyle Miller-Green: 3-for-3, BB

    (6 votes)

  • 2%

    Ronny Hernandez: 1-for-4, RBI

    (1 vote)

  • 0%

    Wilber Sánchez: 1-for-4, RBI

    (0 votes)

  • 79%

    Grant Umberger: 6 IP, 0 R, 2 H, 11 K, QS, W

    (31 votes)



39 votes total

Vote Now

Poll

Who was the Ballers Cold Cat?

  • 80%

    Nathan Archer: 0-for-4, K

    (25 votes)

  • 19%

    George Wolkow: 0-for-3, BB, K

    (6 votes)



31 votes total

Vote Now


ACL Royals 3, ACL White Sox 2
The Sox (6-7) struck first in the bottom of the second on a solo jack by Adrian Gil (4). The Royals quickly answered in the top of the third on a walk, stolen base, and single off of starter Matthias LaCombe. That would be the only run allowed over three innings by the righty as he gave up just two hits, one walk, and struck out six.

Connor Housley came out in relief of LaCombe and tossed two frames. He surrendered one run on three hits while walking none and striking out three. The Royals’ third run was unearned off Gray Thomas and came courtesy of a hit-by-pitch, a stolen base, and a throwing error by shortstop Jurdrick Profar.

The Sox manufactured their second and final tally in the bottom of the seventh on two walks, a wild pitch, and a ground out.

Poll

Who was the ACL Sox MVP?

  • 47%

    Adrian Gil: 1-for-4, RBI, R, HR

    (11 votes)

  • 0%

    Matt Hogan: 1-for-4

    (0 votes)

  • 0%

    Stiven Flores: 1-for-4

    (0 votes)

  • 8%

    D’Angelo Tejada: 1-for-2, BB

    (2 votes)

  • 43%

    Nick Altermatt: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 5 K

    (10 votes)



23 votes total

Vote Now

Poll

Who was the ACL Sox Cold Cat?

  • 77%

    Marcelo Ácala: 0-for-4, 2 K

    (17 votes)

  • 4%

    Leandro Alsinois: 0-for-3

    (1 vote)

  • 13%

    Albertson Asigen: 0-for-3, 2 K

    (3 votes)

  • 4%

    Connor Housley: 3 IP, R, 3 H, 3 K

    (1 vote)

  • 0%

    Matthias LaCombe: 2 H, R, BB, 6 K

    (0 votes)



22 votes total

Vote Now

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NCAA Spring Preview – Women’s Tennis and Outdoor Track and Field

Story Links This Memorial Day weekend, the last four Brandeis student-athletes will be competing at their respective NCAA Championships. Starting on Friday, first-years Sarai Sealy of New York, New York, and Peterly Leroy, of Malden, Massachusetts, will be competing at the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field Championships at the […]

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This Memorial Day weekend, the last four Brandeis student-athletes will be competing at their respective NCAA Championships.

Starting on Friday, first-years Sarai Sealy of New York, New York, and Peterly Leroy, of Malden, Massachusetts, will be competing at the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field Championships at the SPIRE Institute in Cleveland, Ohio. Sealy enters the meet as the second seed in the triple jump, while Leroy is ranked fourth nationally in the 400-meter dash. The meet starts today – Thursday – with Leroy’s preliminary race coming on Friday afternoon and finals on Saturday. Sealy’s event takes place on Saturday as well.

Meanwhile, senior Bhakti Parwani of Ahmedabad, India, and junior Rebecca Suarez of New York, New York, will be competing at the NCAA Division III Women’s Tennis Championships at Claremont-Mudd-Scripps Colleges in Claremont, California. Suarez will compete in both the singles and doubles competitions, while Parwani is her doubles partner. Opening round action starts on Saturday at 9 AM Pacific (12 Eastern) for the singles tournament and 3 PM Pacific (6 Eastern) for doubles. 

With the championship fields announced after finals had concluded the Judges have been using their extra time in a variety of different ways.  Rebecca has been getting additional exercise at times that feel more natural, while Bhakti took advantage of the nicer weather to hit as many tennis balls as possible.  Sarai, who battled injury during the season, has been able to focus more on her recovery after practice. For Peterly, the break has afforded more time to work on the mental aspect of racing. “I’ve been visualizing my race, setting clear intentions for what I want to achieve, and making sure my body is fully rested and ready to perform at its best,” she said. The need for rest is one that each of the Judges said was a key component to maximizing their time.

This is a repeat performance for all four Judges. The tennis players went to St. Louis last year, where they fell in the first round in doubles, while the track stars competed at the NCAA Indoor Championships in Rochester in March, where Sarai placed fourth in the triple jump and Peterly was 14th in the 400 meters. They will all bring lessons from that previous trip. Rebecca struggled with injuries in 2024, so she’ll work on maintaining her peak physical performance. Peterly will focus on her performance without worrying about rankings or seedings, and being able to stay in the moment. Bhakti and Sarai each mentioned feeling the nerves or pressure of the moment last time around. Bhakti will try to treat this match like any other, while Sarai learned that it’s important to have fun at the meet. “Seeing the other competitors talking to each other between jumps and making jokes showed me that it’s okay not to take things so seriously.”

Last time out, with the NCAA tennis championships in St. Louis – a University Athletic Association city that many Judges get to visit in their careers, but not the tennis team, who play their championships in Florida – Bhakti and Rebecca both found their trips around the city – to the Gateway Arch and on a boat trip around town – a memorable moment. Sarai enjoyed getting to bond with her teammates, Leroy and Garret Rieden of the men’s team, while the overall camaraderie and energy of the meet was among Peterly’s favorite things.

One of the most important aspects for the quartet is the opportunity to represent Brandeis on the national stage. It’s a goal for all Judges, not just these four, but it’s one that they’ve been working hard for, as they see it not only as a chance to represent themselves and the school, but their programs, and their teammates who also put in hard work all season long. “It means the world, really,” Rebecca said. “I’ve been telling [coach] Pauri [Pandian] how I’ve wanted to compete at NCAAs in singles and doubles, and after three years, I’ve accomplished a goal I’ve had since I was a first-year.”

The Judges are all looking for All-America finishes as they compete for national championships. “I feel confident about our chances going into the tournament,” said coach Pandian of his tennis players. “Rebecca and Bhakti have played better and better as the season progressed, and they are peaking at the right time. I’m also excited to have them back for a second year in a row. You learn a lot of lessons your first time, and I know they will apply those lessons.”

“I am very excited for Peterly and Sarai’s first NCAA Outdoor Championshipa,” said head track and field coach Miles Ketchum. “It is an extremely competitive field, but they are both as talented and capable as anyone at the meet. They are both competitors who can embrace and respond to the environment, and they are feeling prepared and ready to do their best.”

No matter what happens, the Judges will give their best as their seasons come to a close. “I want to focus on the things that are under my control,” Bhakti said. “I also want to enjoy my last college tennis tournament, since I graduated a few days back!”

Watch the action live by visiting https://www.ncaa.com/liveschedule/. Live Results from track and field are at https://results.leonetiming.com/?mid=7852, and women’s tennis are at http://webapps3.cmc.edu/livescore/.



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Why a razor brand sponsored a pro volleyball championship

Some sports sponsorships just make sense, like Reese’s and Angel Reese or Rao’s and Tommy DeVito. Add Bic Soleil and the Pro Volleyball Federation (PVF) to that list. The razor brand served as the title sponsor of the PVF’s championship tournament, formally called the 2025 Bic Soleil Pro Volleyball Federation Championship, in Nevada earlier this […]

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Some sports sponsorships just make sense, like Reese’s and Angel Reese or Rao’s and Tommy DeVito. Add Bic Soleil and the Pro Volleyball Federation (PVF) to that list.

The razor brand served as the title sponsor of the PVF’s championship tournament, formally called the 2025 Bic Soleil Pro Volleyball Federation Championship, in Nevada earlier this month. The deal came together in part because of a volleyball play called a “bic,” short for “back-row attack,” in which a player attacks the ball from the back of the court. Beyond the obvious synergy in the name, the play is a bit of a metaphor for the Bic Soleil brand, Karen Schwartz, global VP of blade excellence at Bic, told Marketing Brew.

“The bic is designed to surprise opponents,” Schwartz said. “You don’t see it coming, and that’s sort of like our Soleil razors. We’re a little bit understated. We don’t spend as much on marketing…as some of the other brands out there, but when women use a Bic Soleil, they love it.”

Plus, there’s no shortage of exposed legs and armpits in volleyball, “so the benefits of the product are on display,” she added. While Bic Soleil’s deal with the PVF was exclusively focused on the championship this year, it’s part of a broader push into emerging women’s sports for the brand, and Schwartz said it might not be the end of Bic Soleil’s presence in volleyball.

Bump

The bic play wasn’t the only aspect of volleyball that stood out to Schwartz and her team when the PVF approached them with the idea for the sponsorship. Schwartz said she took note of the growth of women’s volleyball around 2023, when the University of Nebraska women’s volleyball team set a record for attendance at a women’s sports event. She also has some young volleyball players in her family, and appreciated the fact that the sport is popular at the youth level, she said.

Bic Soleil has been working to get in on the ground floor with women’s sports leagues, targeting sports that seem to be more up-and-coming rather than leagues that are already established in the mainstream. The brand recently renewed its partnership with the Professional Women’s Hockey League for a second season, which was its first-ever sports deal, Schwartz said.

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“For us, it’s really about those unsung heroes,” she said. “As we looked for places to start and learn about women’s sports, we really wanted to get in on some of these sports that were taking off early…because we see the potential of where they can go.”

Set

In addition to the championship title sponsorship, Bic Soleil’s deal with the PVF included signs around Lee’s Family Forum arena, digital and social ads, and a campaign that ran on CBS Sports Network and the jumbotron promoting the brand’s “Set a Bic, Score a Bic” sweepstakes that offered audiences a chance to win Bic x PVF merchandise every time a team set a bic during the tournament.

Bic Soleil also partnered with a couple of the athletes who competed in the tournament, Ally Batenhorst of the Omaha Supernovas and Mia Tuaniga of the Atlanta Vibe, since a lot of the content pro volleyball players post on social has “felt very authentic to the Bic Soleil brand,” Schwartz said.

Both Batenhorst and Tuaniga posted multiple times in the leadup to the tournament, including GRWM videos using Bic Soleil razors, explainers about the back-row attack, and promos for the sweepstakes.

Spike

Reach was a major KPI for the sponsorship, according to Schwartz, and her team is also tracking market share and sales of the Bic Soleil Glide razor, the product featured in the campaign content. Within a few days of the campaign debut, Bic Soleil generated more than 150,000 organic impressions and saw an average engagement rate of 3.7% on its PVF social content, according to the brand.

Ahead of the tournament, Schwartz expressed interest in potentially expanding the deal if the initial sponsorship performed as her team expected. They’re also eyeing other women’s sports that are seeing “growing surges of popularity and chatter,” such as Olympic sports and international soccer, that could help the brand stand out by demonstrating its uses realistically, Schwartz said.

“It’s not about these beautiful, photoshopped moments of shaving, but really, how can Bic Soleil support [women’s] on-the-go lifestyles…whether that’s on the ice, on the court, or in her day-to-day life.”





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