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Saline Tops Podium for 1st Time Since 2013 as Multiple Past Runners

Sophomore Issac Adanin captured the 200-yard individual medley (1:48.24) and 100 breaststroke (56.23) titles to lead Saline’s scoring. Diego Valdes won the 100 butterfly (49.15) for the Hornets.Click for full results. Merkel said finishing so close to a Finals championship can provide motivation, but the pressure also can raise the expectation meter. Northville had a pair […]

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Saline Tops Podium for 1st Time Since 2013 as Multiple Past Runners


Sophomore Issac Adanin captured the 200-yard individual medley (1:48.24) and 100 breaststroke (56.23) titles to lead Saline’s scoring. Diego Valdes won the 100 butterfly (49.15) for the Hornets.Click for full results.
Merkel said finishing so close to a Finals championship can provide motivation, but the pressure also can raise the expectation meter.
Northville had a pair of winners with Brady Stenson in the 200 free (1:38.06) and the 400 free relay team (3:06.60). Ann Arbor Pioneer won the 200 free relay (1:24.65).
Now he’s putting the hurt on swim opponents. Both performances Saturday were All-America qualifying times and came on the heels of earlier this season breaking the Oakland County and Detroit Catholic Central record of 45.25 in the 100 free while setting a conference and school record of 20.69 in the 50.
PHOTOS (Top) Saline poses with its championship trophy Saturday at Holland Aquatics Center. (Middle) Camren Turowski stands atop the podium after receiving one of his two championship medals. (Below) Saline’s Issac Adanin swims to the breaststroke championship. (Click for more from High School Sports Scene.)
Saline’s Issac Adanin swims to the breaststroke championship.Last year, Adanin was runner-up in the IM and fourth in the breaststroke.
Grandville’s Jack Merkel won the 100 backstroke (48.69), ending a career of rollercoaster showings at the Finals. He qualified in the backstroke as a freshman, but was slowed by the flu. He then took third in the 100 butterfly and second in the backstroke as both a sophomore and junior.
Stevens, a Zeeland West senior and Finals qualifier since his freshman year who will swim at Louisville next season, last lost in the 500 free during his freshman season.
Turowski had elected to give up lacrosse and football at the middle school level a few years ago because it seemed he was always fighting injuries. “I kept getting injured, and I wanted to save my body for swimming,” he said.
“First, everyone has to believe in the opportunity or the possibility of it,” he explained. “You have to be a team that expects to compete. It’s the old cliché: You’ve got to believe you can do it.
Saline cast aside the disappointment of finishing runner-up last year by winning the team meet at Holland Aquatics Center with 291.5 points, outdistancing the 263 scored by the four-time reigning champ Pioneers. Northville was third with 224 points, Zeeland fourth at 176 and Detroit Catholic Central fifth with 175 points.
“Three hundred and sixty five days ago, we believed we had the talent to do it. We didn’t quite perform like we wanted a year ago, but coming into today we thought we had a chance.”
“Last year I didn’t win (the 50 free), and I didn’t like that,” he said. “In swimming you need to improve in small increments, which means a lot. That means progress, which is what you need.
“I think it was a stronger field this year, very competitive in the 100. But I planned to win. I don’t like to lose.”
Camren Turowski stands atop the podium after receiving one of his two championship medals.“He comes in and asks what he needs to work on. He’s very coachable,” she said. “He’s always first in and last out.”
Joining Adanin as a double individual winner was Detroit Catholic Central sophomore Camren Turowski, who finished off an unbeaten season in the 50-yard freestyle by winning that event in 20.41 seconds and won the 100 free with a Division 1 meet record time of 45 seconds.
Detroit Catholic Central coach Jessica Stoddard said Turowski is the kind of swimmer who pays attention to coaching details, strives for perfection and is always seeking the next challenge.
HOLLAND – Saline boys swimming & diving coach Todd Brunty said the quest for his team’s Lower Peninsula Division 1 Finals championship Saturday began exactly 365 days ago after losing out to rival Ann Arbor Pioneer by 30 points.
The championship was their first since winning four straight Division 1 titles from 2010-13. Saline also finished runner-up in 2016.
“It can go both ways,” he said. “But then I realized that if you finish second, there’s only one person in the state better than you. If you’re good enough to finish second, you can also win. You have to change your mindset a little bit.”
Other champions were East Kentwood’s Fidele Byiringiro, who became the first from his school to win diving since Kyle Gahan in 1997. He scored a 448.80.
Zeeland’s Owen Stevens achieved his goal Saturday by breaking the 11-year-old Division 1 Finals record in winning the 500 free (4:23.65).
A year ago Turowski, an avid wake surfer, finished runner-up at the Finals in the 50 while helping three relays place among the top two. It was that second-place finish, in fact, that Turowski credits for driving his transformation from a good swimmer into an outstanding one.
“It was my last high school race in the 500, and I wanted to go out by breaking the record and I did,” he said. “It felt good. The record was in the back of my mind, and I thought if I swam my race, I could break it.”
“I had a slow start (this season). It was smooth, then I gradually got faster,” he said. “I really hoped I (could win both races). I was kind of young last year, so I didn’t have large expectations. But I’ve been to a lot of big meets in club, so I learned how to get better. It was harder this year, different, because (the meet) was so stacked.”

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D2 BOYS VOLLEYBALL: Inexperienced Blue Ridge gained confidence during season

Owen Martin walked into the first day of spring sports practice inside the Blue Ridge gymnasium and many of the familiar faces were gone. Reality hit that afternoon for the senior. Gone to graduation were five starters, including Connor Cranage, the program’s all-time kills leader, Carson Gallagher, the all-time assists leader, two-time All-Region selections Aiden […]

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Owen Martin walked into the first day of spring sports practice inside the Blue Ridge gymnasium and many of the familiar faces were gone.

Reality hit that afternoon for the senior. Gone to graduation were five starters, including Connor Cranage, the program’s all-time kills leader, Carson Gallagher, the all-time assists leader, two-time All-Region selections Aiden Glasgow and Nick Laude, and Morgan Thomas.

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The group dominated the Lackawanna League with an impressive two-year run as District 2 Class 2A champions and a 42-3 overall record.

While being excited about the new season, Martin understood the daunting task with so little experience returning. Enter coach Lori Zick, who is a master at teaching the skills of the game while always being encouraging, and a determined group of athletes looking to carry on the tradition of the Raiders.

Things got off to a less-than-stellar start, but Blue Ridge enters the playoffs having won seven of the last nine matches and is the No. 5 seed. The Raiders (11-5) will go on the road to play No. 4 Berwick (11-5) on Tuesday at 6 p.m.

“When I came in four years ago, I was the young guy looking up to the older guys,” Martin said. “This year, with those guys gone, I had to take a leadership role on a completely different team. I had to step up and keep the confidence of the players up.

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“I learned a lot from the guys who graduated about the seriousness of playing the game. Everyone on last year’s team took what they did seriously. They wanted to go to states. This year, what we wanted was to keep getting better to get to where we are this year.”

Blue Ridge opened the season with a win over Tunkhannock but lost to eventual champion Abington Heights. After a win over Lackawanna Trail, the Raiders suffered their second loss of the season to second-year program Valley View.

Still, Martin and his teammates saw progress.

“At the beginning of the season, some of us were a little down,” Blue Ridge junior libero Bryce Conklin said. “We had key guys bring the team together, and they said that we had time and that we could make improvements.

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“Our practices were important. We put in crazy hours at the gym and outside of practice, learning about where to be in rotations. We also had team-bonding events, team dinners—everything we could do, we did. We knew that we had great potential.”

Blue Ridge had a dominant sweep over North Pocono and battled to a 3-2 win over West Scranton before a 3-1 setback to Crestwood had the team with as many losses this spring as it had in the two previous seasons combined.

The steady stream of positivity and commitment to improve at practice sparked a five-match winning streak.

“When you start to get some wins, it keeps you up,” Conklin said. “We got wins, and that got us pumped up.”

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Western Wayne and Holy Redeemer, two teams in this year’s District 2 Class 2A field, swept the Raiders, 3-0, in back-to-back matches. But Blue Ridge closed with a 3-1 win over Dallas, the No. 8 seed in the bracket, and Hazleton Area.

Parker Glasgow, a junior, leads the team with 156 kills and 124 service points. Martin has contributed 85 kills and 101 service points, freshman Jacob Brown has 76 kills, and sophomore Jacek Motyka has 65 kills. Conklin has 116 service points with 36 aces and a team-high 321 digs, and junior Riley Phillips has 397 assists.

The development as a group has elevated the energy heading into the district tournament.

“It’s an honor to be the defending champions, even though only one of us really played a lot,” Conklin said. “We are going to play to our potential, and we are going to give it our all.”



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St Andrews Cathedral School where water polo coach Lilie James was murdered is plunged into lockdown over intruder

By CANDACE SUTTON FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA Published: 21:19 EDT, 18 May 2025 | Updated: 01:12 EDT, 19 May 2025 The private school where water polo coach Lilie James was murdered was plunged into emergency lockdown after a male intruder entered one of its buildings and threatened staff. St Andrew’s Cathedral School in Sydney’s CBD was […]

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The private school where water polo coach Lilie James was murdered was plunged into emergency lockdown after a male intruder entered one of its buildings and threatened staff.

St Andrew’s Cathedral School in Sydney’s CBD was locked down by police on Monday morning after the break-in by a man who ‘threatened staff and then returned to the campus’.

The male entered the school’s Bishop Barry Centre in Druitt Street, which is part of the campus of St Andrews near Sydney Town Hall.

Parents were alerted to the lockdown by a text message from the school, and police have now arrested a 46-year-old man.

About 12pm, officers attached to Surry Hills Police Area Command were called to a hotel in Surry Hills for a man acting erratically and refusing to leave the premises. Police attended and arrested him.

On October 25, 2023, St Andrews staff member Lilie James was murdered with a hammer by fellow sports coach, Paul Thijssen, in a toilet near the school’s staff room.

Thijssen then either fell or jumped taking his own life off a cliff at Vaucluse in Sydney’s eastern suburbs. 

The private school where water polo coach Lilie James was murdered has been plunged into emergency lockdown after an intruder entered one of its buildings

The private school where water polo coach Lilie James was murdered has been plunged into emergency lockdown after an intruder entered one of its buildings

Police have conducted a sweep of the school after the report of an intruder, but the campus remained in lockdown

Police have conducted a sweep of the school after the report of an intruder, but the campus remained in lockdown

 Parents of pupils at St Andrews school have been informed that ‘everyone is safe’ after police conducted a sweep of the buildings, but the school remains on high alert. 

NSW Police issued a statement on Monday morning, saying that ‘a police operation at a school in Sydney’s CBD has now concluded.

‘Officers from Sydney City Police Area Command attended about 9.45am today (Monday 19 May 2025), after reports a man had earlier threatened staff and since returned to the campus.

‘The school was placed in locked down and a search of the building, on the corner of Druitt and Kent Streets, was conducted with the assistance of specialist resources.

‘Despite an extensive search of the grounds, the man could not be located, and the lockdown was lifted.

‘An investigation is now underway into the incident, and inquiries continue to locate the man.’

St Andrews school has issued a statement saying the man who entered an external area of the campus was ‘disorientated’ and left ‘a minute later’.

‘The school can confirm that there was no threat of violence and no one was harmed during the incident, and thanks its staff and the NSW Police for their professional and calm response.’

NSW Police said ‘inquiries are continuing’ with the man taken into custody over the incident. 



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California (CIF) State boys volleyball high school playoff bracket (5/18/2025)

The first CIF State tournament boys volleyball high school playoff brackets are here. First-round play in both the South and North gets underway Tuesday with three rounds of regional play, finished off May 31 with the North and South winners playing off for the championship at San Jose City College. CIF Regional action is scheduled […]

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The first CIF State tournament boys volleyball high school playoff brackets are here.

First-round play in both the South and North gets underway Tuesday with three rounds of regional play, finished off May 31 with the North and South winners playing off for the championship at San Jose City College.

CIF Regional action is scheduled May 20-24 with the state finals May 31 at Fresno City College. This is first season of state boys volleyball championships.

Top seeds in the North are Mitty (D1), Buchanan (D2), Leigh (D3) and Ben Holt College Prep Academy (D4).

Top seeds in the South are Mira Costa (D1), Mater Dei (D2), Sage Hill (D3) and Mater Dei Catholic (D4).



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Killing It In Kirkwood Volleyball | Webster Kirkwood Times

| photo courtesy of Kyle Martinez Kirkwood High School senior volleyball player Luke “Marty” Martinez (#16) set a new school record, pushing past 800 career kills (he totaled 801) during the game against Parkway North on Friday, May 9. He also holds the record for most kills in a single match (36), which happened last […]

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| photo courtesy of Kyle Martinez


Kirkwood High School senior volleyball player Luke “Marty” Martinez (#16) set a new school record, pushing past 800 career kills (he totaled 801) during the game against Parkway North on Friday, May 9. He also holds the record for most kills in a single match (36), which happened last season during a five set match against Parkway South. Martinez has committed to playing Division I/II volleyball with Maryville University in the fall. 



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Baseball Wins Third Straight NCAA Regional Game, Advances To Super Regionals

Lynchburg, Va. — The University of Lynchburg baseball squad is headed for the NCAA Super Regional round after holding off Emory, 6-5, in the final game of the Lynchburg regional on Sunday afternoon on James C. fox Field. The Hornets wasted no time getting on the board, plating four runs in a […]

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Lynchburg, Va. — The University of Lynchburg baseball squad is headed for the NCAA Super Regional round after holding off Emory, 6-5, in the final game of the Lynchburg regional on Sunday afternoon on James C. fox Field.

The Hornets wasted no time getting on the board, plating four runs in a productive first inning. Bradon Garcia opened the gates by scoring off a RBI single from Sean Pokorak. The momentum continued with a sacrifice fly by Bryce Demory, bringing in Joe Munitz. Ryder Warren followed with an RBI single to right to score Benton Jones, and Eric Hiett capped the inning with a base hit up the middle to bring home Pokorak.

Lynchburg extended their lead in the third inning when Hiett notched his second RBI of the game with a single to left center, driving in Warren to make it a five-run advantage for the Hornets. Pokorak added insurance in the sixth with his second RBI single, scoring Garcia and pushing the Lynchburg lead to 6-0. He finished the game two-for-four with two RBI.

Nick Mattfield had a spectacular day on the bump. He got the start and threw 6.1 frames, allowing just one hit through the first six innings. Emory mounted a furious rally in the seventh, stringing together five runs on four hits and a walk. Jonathan Lang sparked the comeback with a two-RBI single, and Brock Liu added another RBI knock. A bases-loaded walk and a fielder’s choice rounded out the scoring, bringing the game within one run. 

Colin McGuire checked in on the mound for Austin Riney in the seventh and effectively closed out the game. He secured his ninth save of the season by throwing 2.2 innings and allowing just one hit throughout his time in the contest. He finished with four strikeouts in nine batters faced, including the final two outs of the game in the ninth.

Lynchburg has secured a spot in the Super Regional round and will take on Rowan this coming weekend. More information, including game time and location, will be available on lynchburgsports.com as it is published.

Visit Lynchburg athletics’ home online, LynchburgSports.com, anytime for up-to-the-minute news on all Hornets sports and coverage from the Lynchburg Hornets Sports Network.

Sign up here to receive Lynchburg Sports news in your email inbox.

Give Lynchburg Athletics a like on Facebook, and follow Lynchburg Athletics on Instagram and X.


–LYN–





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Bronson Chungson breaks barriers in water polo

Nineteen-year-old Bronson Chungson, from Māngere, is not only competing in international polo but also breaking new ground as one of the few Pacific Islanders in a sport noted for its lack of diversity. Born and raised in South Auckland, Chungson has quickly become a standout talent in water polo. “I grew up in South Auckland, […]

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Nineteen-year-old Bronson Chungson, from Māngere, is not only competing in international polo but also breaking new ground as one of the few Pacific Islanders in a sport noted for its lack of diversity.

Born and raised in South Auckland, Chungson has quickly become a standout talent in water polo.

“I grew up in South Auckland, born and raised in Māngere, and went to Sacred Heart College. I currently live in San Francisco and I’m just playing water polo and studying,” he shared in an interview with Tofiga Fepulea’i on Island Time.

Chungson’s journey into the sport began at the Papatoetoe and Māngere swim clubs, where his aunt, a coach at Holy Cross Papatoetoe, introduced him to water polo.

“I didn’t enjoy [swimming] as much because it was an individual sport… but water polo being a team sport, it gave me more of a passion and a love for it because I got to play with friends.”

By Year 11 and 12, Chungson was already playing for older New Zealand squads. He now plays for West Valley College in California.

In June, Chungson will compete at the Under-21 World Championships in Croatia and Montenegro. He recognises the challenges ahead.

“Definitely, the European teams are the powerhouses – Hungary, Serbia, Croatia. But we’ve been fortunate enough to have a slightly less challenging pool. We’ve got Kazakhstan and Iran. I’m pretty sure Kazakhstan came first in the Asia Cup tournament, so we’ll be playing the champs of Asia.”

Chungson’s parents are fundraising to cover his travel costs to the World Championships. On their Givealittle page, they expressed their pride in his achievements, stating, “It’s such an incredible achievement, and we couldn’t be prouder.”

They say water polo is considered a minority sport and does not receive much funding, but they are committed to supporting Chungson’s passion and promoting cultural representation in the sport.

Watch the full interview with Bronson Chungson below.

“He’s often the only Sāmoan player in his teams, and it’s something he’s incredibly proud of. He loves representing his culture in a sport where diversity is rare, and this opportunity to represent both New Zealand and his Sāmoan roots on the world stage is something truly special.”

Looking ahead

Chungson still has one more year at West Valley and hopes to transfer to a four-year college in New York, California, or Los Angeles.

He says a highlight has been staying with other water polo athletes from South Africa, Germany, and Croatia, while representing his cultural roots.

“There are not many Pacific Islanders who are playing the sport, and so I want to make sure that I can inspire and encourage the younger generation to pursue a sport where it’s not dominated by Pacific Islanders as well, but we can still make a big mark.”

Bronson Chungson (centre) with his proud parents. Photo/Givealittle

Despite being far from home, he maintains a strong connection to his faith and culture. “It’s enormous for me, especially living here, it’s been hard dealing with the pressure and the stress with trying to play well in front of coaches and team-mates. But I always just remember that I’m playing for an audience of one and I give all my glory to God.”

His high school coach, Matt Lewis, a West Valley alumnus, has been one of his biggest inspirations. “There was a time when I was kind of thinking of just quitting water polo… but he helped me find the love and the passion for it again.”

Chungson encourages others to consider water polo. “Just give it a try. I think there’s too many times where we pass up these opportunities and we only later realise that we’re missing out … It’s just throwing a ball, playing with some teammates and having fun.”

Bronson Chungson’s waterpolo skills have led to travel and study opportunities. Photo/Supplied





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