Sports
Quaker Valley swimmers gearing up for postseason success

“Amelia slid right into the hole in the fly spot that was left when Emily Connors graduated,” McCarthy said. “Amelia has WIP cuts in 100 fly, 200 IM and 100 freestyle and helps make contributions in the relays.
“Both boys and girls relay teams have earned all the relay cuts. We will work to improve our seed times for WIPs,” McCarthy said. “When you have a small team, everyone counts. I like to think we are small but mighty.”
Quaker Valley junior Adlan Hifri competes last season.
Thomas Fuener earned four WIP cuts in the first meet of the season at South Fayette. Fuener, a senior, advanced to the PIAA finals last winter in the 100 butterfly.
“Lydia has her WIP cut in the 200 IM and MAC cuts in the 100 backstroke, 50 and 100 freestyles,” McCarthy said.
Adlan Hifri, also a senior, already has registered a faster WIP seed in the 100 breast this season than he did all of last year.
Junior Ryan Steinfurth advanced to WPIALs in the 100 backstroke and 100 freestyle last year and already has earned WIP cuts in both events this season.
QV’s boys squad includes three swimmers from Sewickley Academy — junior Marcus Zhan, freshman Augustin Zhan and Youran Li.
Getty swam a personal-best time of 1 minute, 57.10 seconds to place fifth in the 200 free at last year’s WPIALs. She also logged a PR of 5:19.48 to take third in the 500 free.
One of the Quakers’ team strengths are the relay events.
LaLomia advanced to the WPIAL championships last year and has attained MAC cuts in 100 and 50 freestyles and 100 back.
“And that will surely get faster,” McCarthy said. ”Next up for Adlan will be the 50 free.”
Chappell and Gibson have been swimming in the freestyle events.
Tags: Quaker Valley
“His goal is to rack up every individual WIP cut,” McCarthy said. “He has three more events to knock off — the 500 free, 100 breast and back. The plan is to place in the top 5 in the 100 fly at WIPs and possibly in our three relay entries.”
In the Quakers junior class, Alexa Westwood is a returning state swimmer who adds speed to the relays. Westwood was a WPIAL qualifier in the 100 backstroke.
Yenick is the diving coach at Quaker Valley.
“Charlotte favors swimming the breaststroke, as well,” said her coach, “while Murawski favors the sprint events, the 50 and 100 freestyles, which she has MAC cuts in. She also has her MAC cut in the 100 backstroke.”
Quaker Valley diver Ruby Olliffe
Submitted | Sharon Steinfurth
Olliffe will continue her diving career at Bucknell next year. Located in Lewisburg, Bucknell is a member of the NCAA Division I Patriot League.
“Ruby has improved her strength: her jump off the springboard and her entries into the water. Her rip is excellent. She has been training with several coaches, which is always the case with the top kids in diving, and has responded well to the various coaching styles.”
“Ruby is one of the most talented divers I’ve seen come through the sport. Her diving is graceful, strong and extremely precise,” Vernick said. ”She is feeling good physically, and I know this will be her best season yet.”
“Having swum in his homeland, Youran is getting a feel for the way the high school sports are here in America,” McCarthy said. “He likes the freestyle events and the fly.”
MAC cut refers to the time standard that qualifies an athlete for the Midwestern Athletic Conference meet.
“Alexa excels in the 100 backstroke and the 50 and 100 freestyles,” McCarthy said, “all of which she has her MAC cuts in.”
“I have great expectations for Ruby this year,” Yenick said. “She’s diving better than ever and has competed in some USA diving events with great success.
Fuener, Steinfurth, Hifri and Zhan swam in both state-qualifying relays (200 medley, 200 free) in 2023-24.
Suhayda has made an awesome first impression.
Quaker Valley coaches Mercedes McCarthy and Vernon Yenick are anticipating at least a few — if not more — breathtaking performances by senior diver Ruby Olliffe this season.
QV is a MAC member school and also a cooperative program with Sewickley Academy in swimming and diving.
QV junior Austin Young always seems to be hitting the MAC cut time in the 50 and 100 freestyles. He was a WPIAL qualifier in the 100 free last season.
Top freshmen on the girls team this season include Charlotte Chappell, Lilly Gibson, Cali Murawski and Amelia Suhayda.
“Margaret no doubt will get her WIP cut in every event,” McCarthy said, “but her heart is in the distance events. Already earning her WIP cuts in the 500 and 200 freestyles this season, her goal is the podium at states.”
By:
Sunday, January 5, 2025 | 11:01 AM
A fourth-year diving specialist, Olliffe repeated as a state qualifier last year after finishing as the WPIAL Class 2A runner-up. Olliffe placed fourth at the PIAA championships.
Submitted | Marna Blackmer
She finished in the WPIAL’s top 20 in the 100 backstroke and 200 individual medley, and also was a relay competitor.
“Ruby earned her WIP (WPIAL qualifying) cut after her first meet,” McCarthy said. “She is so skilled at the higher dives and is very artistic in the execution. She really knows how to put on a show. We expect she will do amazing her final year in high school diving.”
Li is new to swimming in the United States. He is an exchange student from China.
QV junior Kendra Hines favors the distance events, particularly the 500 free, and Makenna Burns is another junior on the radar for her MAC cut.
Batina has achieved MAC cuts in the 100 and 200 freestyles, as well as the 100 butterfly. Fiedler, who attends Sewickley Academy, has hit the MAC cut in the 200 IM, 100 breast and 100 free.
The older Zhan brother made his presence felt last season as a PIAA finalist in the 200 and 500 freestyles. He also swam with the PIAA-qualifying 200 medley and 200 free relayers.
“Austin powers through the water every time he swims,” McCarthy said.
Quaker Valley junior Adlan Hifri competes during the 2023-24 swimming season.
“Marcus dominates in the distance events,” McCarthy said. “He has WIP cuts in both the 500 and 200 freestyle. And his younger brother Augustin piles on WIP cuts in anything he swims.”
Getty qualified for the PIAA Class 2A championships in four events, advancing in the 200- and 500-yard freestyles and two relays.
Fuener has attained the MAC cut in the 100 breast and is close in the 500 free.
Also looking to make a splash this winter is Margaret Burns, who is back in the pool after recovering from surgery.
Sports
New Allen track coach makes debut
Greg Franklin is taking the reins of the Allen Community College track and field team.
Franklin, previously ACC assistant track and field coach, replaces Vince DeGrado, head coach for almost 20 years. DeGrado is now the school’s endowment director.
The Red Devils enter their first indoor meet Saturday at the Friends University First Chance Qualifier at Wichita States University.
“It’s nothing big. I was already a head coach prior to coming here,” Franklin said. “For Vince, he needed a new start. He had been doing this for a long time. He was a coach here when I was in JUCO running track. I ran for Pratt.”
Franklin competed in DI track at Middle Tennessee State University by way of Pratt Community College after a successful high school career at Prattville High School in his home state of Alabama.
Franklin won All-Sun Belt honors in indoor track and was a three-time NJCAA All-American while competing for Pratt.
After his competition days were over, Franklin worked his way up from assistant to head coach of Butler Community College track program.
After more than eight seasons with the Grizzlies, Franklin moved to Allen, providing a perfect complement to DeGrado’s specialty being distance running.
With the women’s team finishing ninth at the NJCAA national meet last spring and the men taking 16th, Franklin is excited to see the progress they made over the past six months at Saturday’s debut.
“I’m excited. This is going to be a great year, and we brought in a lot of great kids this year,” Franklin said. “They will do well. RaNayla Moten was on the 4×100 last year that won nationals. She was second in the 100 and fourth in the 200. She made a really big impact last year. This year, she will do extremely well.”
Franklin said he uses the indoor track season as a primer for the outdoor season. With both teams finishing in the top 20 at nationals, he hopes to use the Friends University First-Chance Qualifier to give his athletes a baseline to improve upon until they return to nationals in May.
“I always use indoor to mold the first half of your race, so when you get outdoors, it really counts and matters,” Franklin said. “Some kids just want to run for their country and the U.S. trials, so we use indoor to prepare for that. Last year, even though I was an assistant, I watched what Vince did, how he handled things and with a mindset to learn how to progress the program. Vince dominated the distance side and did a really great job. He carried the Allen program for years, so I just want to continue what he was doing.”
Sports
In Memoriam: Glen Charles Lietzke
Glen Charles Lietzke passed away on December 25, 2025 after a private journey with leukemia for more than four years. He battled with the same fierce dedication and resolve that he brought to his career in volleyball. For more than four decades, Glen provided innovative leadership that helped grow and strengthen the volleyball community both within Texas and across the country.
Glen’s contributions to volleyball began at the collegiate level. He coached at the University of Wisconsin at River Falls, Southwest Missouri State, and most significantly as an assistant coach at the University of Texas where they won the 1988 NCAA National Championship.
During Glen’s time in collegiate volleyball, he was inspired to build the game across all levels, and began to pour his time into the sport at the youth level. Glen created Austin Junior Volleyball, setting a standard of excellence that influenced clubs across the country. He coached two girls’ national championship teams and created tournaments that prepared players to perform at the highest collegiate levels. Similarly, Glen was a tireless advocate for boys’ volleyball at both the club and collegiate levels, most notably through his work with the First Point Volleyball Foundation and the creation of the First Point Collegiate Challenge, a men’s NCAA volleyball showcase.
This pioneering vision was recognized by multiple organizations. Glen was awarded the George J. Fisher Leader in Volleyball in 1998, inducted into the American Volleyball Coaches Hall of Fame in 2018, and inducted into the 2022 Greater Austin Sports Foundation Hall of Honor. However, these awards mattered less to Glen than the people he worked with and for. His vision helped athletes and coaches believe in themselves, improving the game of volleyball by inspiring everyone to think bigger and do better.
For Glen, what was most important though, was his family.
He is survived by his wife, Kathy, and children, Nathan, Lauren; and beloved dogs, Moose and Stormi. Born on March 6, 1954 in Minneapolis, MN, Glen was preceded in death by his mother Lorraine Begin Lietzke and father Clarence Willard Lietzke. Glen is also survived by his brothers, Craig and Jim, and countless nieces and nephews.
The Lietzke family will hold a memorial service to celebrate Glen’s exceptional life on Friday, January 2 at 10:30 a.m. at the Chapel on St. Andrew’s Episcopal School campus with a reception following at Highlander Hall. The Lietzkes request that those in attendance wear either navy blue, or their favorite AJV, LSC, or University of Texas attire to remember Glen’s legacy of growing the game of volleyball and of creating lifelong friendships and opportunities.
In lieu of flowers, the Lietzke family asks that you consider donating to two organizations: JVAA Scholarship Fund or the MD Anderson Cancer Center (P.O. Box 4486, Houston, TX 77210-4486), indicating Dr. Abbas Leukemia in memory of Glen Lietzke in the memo section of the check or donating online https://www.mdanderson.org/leukemiagiving..
Sports
Volleyball Ranked 16th in Final American Volleyball Coaches Association Poll
The Hope College volleyball team ranked 16th in the final American Volleyball Coaches Association TARAFLEX NCAA Division III poll for the 2025 season.
The MIAA-champion Flying Dutch totaled 844 points after finishing the season with a 23-7 overall record.
Led by head coach Becky Schmidt, Hope advanced to the second round of the NCAA Division III Championships before losing to nationally-ranked Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The Flying Dutch claimed their third consecutive MIAA regular-season crown for the second time in program history with an 8-0 league record.
Hope’s roster featured three standouts who garnered AVCA All-America accolades: senior setter Lauren Lee (first team), junior middle blocker Kamryn Burbridge (third team), and sophomore middle blocker Olivia Wyma (honorable mention).
Lee was also named MIAA MVP and joined by three teammates on the All-MIAA teams: Burbridge (first team), Wyma (first team) and Kathryn Oates (second team).
Sports
CCIW Places Three Teams in AVCA Men’s Volleyball Preseason Rankings
NAPERVILLE — The College Conference of Illinois & Wisconsin (CCIW) will open the 2026 men’s volleyball season with a strong national showing, placing three programs in the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) Division III Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll released Monday.
Defending league champion Carthage headlines the conference contingent, checking in at No. 2 nationally with 533 points. The Firebirds, voted as the CCIW preseason favorite on Monday, trail only Springfield in the preseason rankings as they prepare to defend their league crown.
Loras also earned preseason recognition, debuting at No. 14 with 133 points, while North Central rounds out the CCIW presence at No. 18 with 78 points.
| CCIW on X | CCIW Instagram | CCIW Facebook |
The College Conference of Illinois & Wisconsin (CCIW) was founded in 1946 and currently services nine member institutions including Augustana College (Rock Island, Ill.), Carroll University (Waukesha, Wis.), Carthage College (Kenosha, Wis.), Elmhurst University (Elmhurst, Ill.), Illinois Wesleyan University (Bloomington, Ill.), Millikin University (Decatur, Ill.), North Central College (Naperville, Ill.), North Park University (Chicago, Ill.) and Wheaton College (Wheaton, Ill.).
Sports
UCLA Announces 2026 Women’s Beach Volleyball Schedule
SOCIAL MEDIA: BeachVB on Twitter | BeachVB on Facebook | BeachVB on Instagram
LOS ANGELES – The UCLA Women’s Beach Volleyball team announced its 2026 schedule today, highlighted by hosting three regular-season tournaments (two at Mapes Beach and one at legendary Manhattan Beach Pier) and “Senior Day” against CSU Bakersfield.
The Bruins will compete in seven different regular-season tournaments during the year, beginning with the season opener against Texas on Friday, Feb. 19, at 9:45 a.m. PT at Outrigger Duke Kahanamoku Beach Classic at Queen’s Beach in Honolulu, Hawaii. The Bruins will also face Hawai’i, LMU, Stanford, California, and USC in the opening weekend.
UCLA will return home to host the Battle for LA (along with USC) on Friday-Saturday (Feb. 27-28). The Bruins will face Boise State, Cal Poly, Long Beach State, and Pepperdine in the friendly confines of Mapes Beach for the home opening weekend.
UCLA will host the MPSF Midseason Rumble at Mapes Beach on March 6-7, where the Bruins will face Grand Canyon, Washington, Oregon, and Stanford.
The Bruins will then host the annual East Meets West Invitational at iconic Manhattan Beach Pier on March 13-14. The Bruins will open with Arizona State and LSU on day one and conclude the event with Texas and FiU.
After a week off, UCLA will head to Austin, Texas to compete in the Texas Invitational on March 27-28. The Bruins will take on LSU, Texas, North Florida, and Florida Atlantic at Wright-Whitaker Sports Complex.
The sixth tournament of the season will take place in Laguna Beach, Calif., where the Bruins will face Cal Poly, Stanford, USC, and Long Beach State at the Best in the West tournament on April 3-4 at the Main Beach.
The final regular season tournament will see the Bruins in San Luis Obispo, Calif., for the Center of Effort Challenge on April 10-11. UCLA will open with California and Cal Poly on the first day and will conclude bracket play with Arizona State on day two before heading into the playoff portion of the bracket.
The Bruins will complete their home slate with CSU Bakersfield on April 14 at 3:00 p.m. PT for “Senior Day,” and will conclude the regular season with a date at USC on April 16 at Noon.
For the second straight year, the Bruins will head to Spiker Beach in Hutington Beach, Calif., for the 2026 MPSF Championship Tournament (April 22-24). The winner will earn the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA Championship Tournament in Gulf Shores, Ala., to be held May 1-3.
2026 UCLA Women’s Beach Volleyball Schedule
|
Sports
UMBC Baseball Releases 2026 Schedule
BALTIMORE — UMBC Baseball coach Liam Bowen announced the Retrievers 2026 schedule on Monday afternoon. The 52-game slate features 25 contests at Alumni Field, highlighted by a visit from Maryland on April 7.
CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE FULL SCHEDULE
The non-conference road schedule features the first trip to Longwood since 2012 to open the season (2/20-2/22), and the first ever meetings with Penn (3/7-/3/8) and Florida Atlantic (3/13-3/15).
After the Longwood series, home Opening Day at Alumni Field will be on February 24 against Georgetown at 3 p.m., followed by a weekend series with Monmouth (2/27-31). UMBC will then play midweeks at George Washington (3/3) and Delaware State (3/4) before heading to Penn. They then return home to face Mount St. Mary’s (3/10), travel to FAU and then host a rematch with Delaware State (3/17).
America East play then begins as the Dawgs host Maine (3/20-3/22), they then have road tilts Coppin State (3/24) at UAlbany (3/27-29) before closing March by hosting George Washingto (3/31). April opens with a three-game non-conference home series against Iona (4/2-4/4) followed by the visit from the Terps.
Trips to Binghamton (4/10-4/12) and Georgetown (4/14) are then followed with a four-game homestand against UMass Lowell (4/17-4/19) and Towson (4/21). The Retrievers then make the return trip to Maine (4/24-4/26) and head to La Salle (4/28) before returning to Alumni Field to host UAlbany (5/1-5/3) and Coppin State (5/5).
The regular season wraps with trips to Bryant (5/8-5/10) and Towson (5/12), and then NJIT (5/14-5/16) comes to Baltimore for senior weekend.
The America East Tournament begins the following wek in Binghamton. The top six teams qualify, with the top two earning a bye to the double-elimination portion of the bracket.
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoPrinceton Area Community Foundation awards more than $1.3 million to 40 local nonprofits ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news %
-
Sports3 weeks agoBeach Volleyball Unveils 2026 Spring Schedule – University of South Carolina Athletics
-
Sports2 weeks agoBadgers news: Wisconsin lands 2nd commitment from transfer portal
-
Sports3 weeks agoBadgers news: Final Four Game Thread vs. No. 1 Kentucky Wildcats
-
Sports2 weeks agoIs women’s volleyball the SEC’s next big sport? How Kentucky, Texas A&M broke through
-
Rec Sports4 days agoFive Youth Sports Trends We’re Watching in 2026
-
Sports3 weeks agoFour From Women’s Volleyball Named to College Sports Communicators Academic All-District Team
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoYouth Sports Business in 2025: The Year the Industry Grew Up
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoRefugee-Focused Youth Sport Initiatives : Moving for Change
-
Rec Sports3 weeks ago
Inside the NWSL’s first combine: Can the league create a more robust pathway for American talent development?







