Connect with us

Sports

So long, fantasy season

Richardson finished with a completion percentage of 47.7 percent over the 11 games he played as it was the worst starting QB percentage since another similar quarterback and also a fellow Florida product — Tim Tebow. That led to him finishing QB24 on the season, so yeah, far from top 5.San Francisco’s George Kittle paced […]

Published

on

So long, fantasy season

Richardson finished with a completion percentage of 47.7 percent over the 11 games he played as it was the worst starting QB percentage since another similar quarterback and also a fellow Florida product — Tim Tebow. That led to him finishing QB24 on the season, so yeah, far from top 5.San Francisco’s George Kittle paced the way with 197.9 points as Raiders rookie Brock Bowers was a close second at 195.7. To put that into perspective, each would’ve finished WR10 and WR12, respectively, had they been actual wide receivers. Arizona’s Trey McBride was third at 181.3 as he would’ve finished WR18 as he outscored the likes of Tyreek Hill, Puka Nacua, DJ Moore and Zay Flowers.And dare I say this without jinxing the position for 2025. But…

If you hit on players like Lamar Jackson, Ja’Marr Chase and Saquon Barkley, chances are you made a deep playoff run. Personally I got lucky enough in a 10-team league where I was the last pick. I took Chase at No. 10 overall and then with my next pick, I took Barkley. And yes, I actually won a championship there.First I said Russell Wilson would be a top 15 fantasy quarterback. Although he did miss the first six games, Russ was QB22 — so we’re 0-1.It feels like the season just began. But after 17 weeks of professional football, the fantasy football season has come to an end.As far as my picks, I did not meet my picks goal for the year — such is life. A final week of 4-6 doomed me for a below-.500 mark of 78-82 on the season. I’ve always tried to make it difficult when it’s come to these picks, as anyone can make the easy picks. But being just four games below .500 isn’t exactly terrible, either.After being a barren wasteland of a position — many leagues of which had just started to put TEs into a flex position — the tight end spot actually meant something.All three of Jackson, Chase and Barkley were far and away the best at their respective positions. In standard, half-point PPR leagues, Jackson finished almost 40 points higher than Bills QB Josh Allen — that gap was even higher before Allen’s monster end to the season.The final prediction? Oh boy. I apologize here. I said Colts’ Anthony Richardson would be a top 5 QB, siting his Cam Newton-like build and his ability to get rushing yards and TDs.In the fantasy world, Barkley racked up 350.8 points as it was exactly 45 points more than the first-year Raven Derrick Henry. Detroit’s Jahmyr Gibbs, after a strong end to the season, was third, followed by Atlanta’s Bijan Robinson and Green Bay’s Josh Jacobs to round out the top five.Here’s what we learned about the second-year Richardson this season — he is not a good thrower of the football. Now I’m far from being a football savant here, but it’s my understanding the quarterback position does indeed need to be a good thrower of the football. And if you are not, this is a recipe for failure.What’s more embarrassing, however, is how my “bold predictions” turned out from the beginning of the season as I’ll recap that now.Tight ends became relevant again.Barkley was essentially the same thing, albeit not as pronounced as Chase’s dominance. The former Nittany Lion became the ninth running back in NFL history to get over 2,000 rushing yards last week, notching 2,005 on the season. He’ll likely not add to that total this week as head coach Nick Sirianni said he and many other Eagles starters will rest up for the week 18 tilt.Regardless, it’s been quite the season and if you hit on a good mix of players, chances are you hoisted a championship trophy (whether that’s a real one or a make-believe one). Chances are if you had a pick towards the middle to end of your draft, you turned in a fantastic team as early rounders such as Christian McCaffrey and Breece Hall — many league had them going 1-2 overall — were complete busts.The next was that Chiefs RB Isiah Pacheco finishes outside the top 15 for RBs. I actually hit on this one as the original reasoning was how head coach Andy Reid always is erratic with his running backs. Instead what really “helped” out here is Pacheco missing nine games in the middle of the season for an RB62 finish. Cool, we’re 1-1.I then said Jets WR Garrett Wilson finishes as a top 3 wideout. Amid all of the turmoil with the “J-E-T-S, JETS, JETS, JETS” this season, Wilson still was productive — he just wasn’t top 3 productive, especially after Davante Adams was also traded over. Wilson finished the year at WR9 so that’s 1-2 now.Chase led all wideouts with 324.9 points as second place — Vikings’ Justin Jefferson — had 264.08 points. For you mathematically inept here, that’s a difference of over 60 full points. And for those unfamiliar with the fantasy football world, that is a lot. Chase actually scored over 100 points more than the WR5 of the season, CeeDee Lamb. So if you snagged him, Chase was essentially a cheat code.So those bold predictions indeed turned out to be “bold” and also very “wrong.” Regardless, at least it’s been a fun year with the NFL and fantasy football and I hope it was a fun year for you as well. Hopefully this coming week and the playoffs will be just as exciting.This is where things go south, however.q q qThe next one was that Denver rookie Audric Estime would take over the backfield and be the go-to guy. This kind of happened but also didn’t — I’ll explain. In week 10, Estime clearly was the go-to back with 14 carries for 53 yards. Here’s the issue though. It took until these last two weeks where he even was top 2 in carries on the Broncos, as head coach Sean Payton was apparently reveling in creating chaos among the fantasy community in terms of which Denver RB was going to be viable for the week (spoiler alert: no one was). I’ll say this is a loss so we’re 1-3.Tyler Kolesar is a writer at the Courier Express and Tri-County Weekend newspapers. He can be reached at tkolesar@thecourierexpress.com.McCaffrey, the overwhelming No. 1 overall pick, played in just four games. Meanwhile, Hall finished as RB18 as he saw the likes of Cincinnati RB Chase Brown (RB11), Panthers’ Chuba Hubbard (RB13) and Tampa Bay rookie Bucky Irving (RB15) finish ahead of him.As I do each season, I get into the habit of continuously checking my apps on my phone for fantasy updates, how I can improve my rosters, etc. So this is now the time I’ll be going through withdrawal from that. But if you were one of the unfortunate ones that didn’t make playoffs in any of your leagues, maybe the end is a welcome sight.

Sports

Rondina, Pons rule PNVF Beach Volleyball National Open

Bernadeth Pons and Sisi Ronda during the PNVF Beach Volleyball National Open at Nuvali Sand Courts in Santa Rosa, Laguna.–CONTRIBUTED PHOTO MANILA, Philippines — Sisi Rondina and Bernadeth Pons still proved to be the queens of the sands as they ruled the Philippine National Volleyball Federation (PNVF) Beach Volleyball National Open with a five-game sweep. […]

Published

on


Bernadeth Pons Sisi Ronda beach volleyball

Bernadeth Pons and Sisi Ronda during the PNVF Beach Volleyball National Open at Nuvali Sand Courts in Santa Rosa, Laguna.–CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines — Sisi Rondina and Bernadeth Pons still proved to be the queens of the sands as they ruled the Philippine National Volleyball Federation (PNVF) Beach Volleyball National Open with a five-game sweep.

Rondina and Pons, who had a two-year hiatus from the sport, completed a come-from-behind sweep of their Alas Pilipinas teammates, Sunny Villapando and Dij Rodriguez, 17-21, 21-16, 16-14, to capture the championship organized by Beach Volleyball Republic on Saturday night at Nuvali Sand Courts in City of Santa Rosa, Laguna.

Article continues after this advertisement

READ: Rondina, Pons vow improvement after early exit in beach volley return

The pair, who won Southeast Asian Games beach volleyball bronze medals in 2019 and 2022, decided to return this year after emerging as MVPs in the PVL.

They hardly missed a beat as they won all five games and never conceded a set in the first four matches in the 12-team field

Rondina and Pons took down National University Nazareth School’s Faith Mangyao and Liezl Dejan, 21-11, 21-6, and University of the Philippines’ Euri Eslapor and Kassie Doering, 21-12, 21-15, in the pool stage.

The decorated duo also took down other Alas teammates in the playoffs, outlasting Jenny Gaviola and Alexa Polidario, 21-9, 21-12, in the quarterfinal and Sofiah Pagara and Khy Progella, 21-15, 21-19, in the semifinal. 

Article continues after this advertisement

Villapando and Rodriguez reached the Final after sweeping National University’s Kizil Doren Quijote and Honey Grace Cordero, 21-13, 21-11, in the Final Four before settling for a runner-up finish.

READ: Bernadeth Pons reunites with Sisi Rondina for beach volley return

Meanwhile, Spikers’ Turf MVP Jude Garcia ruled the men’s division with his first-time partner James Buytrago, completing a five-game sweep.

Garcia and Buytrago and Jude Garcia outlasted the pair of Alas teammates Ronniel Rosales and Rancel Varga after the pair conceded in the second set of the Final.

Article continues after this advertisement

The Garcia-Buytrago pair dominated the opening set, 21-14, and brought the momentum with a 9-5 start in the second set. However, Rosales suffered muscle cramps and couldn’t continue the game.

They beat University of the Philippines’ Christian Pitogo and Angelo Lipata, 21-16, 21-11, and Intra Asian Volleyballista’s Krung Arbasto and Dominique Gabito, 21-15, 21-14, in pool play.

In the playoffs, Buytrago and Garcia defeated College of Saint Benilde’s Mark Jun Garcia and Alvin Sulayman, 21-14, 21-15, in the quarterfinal, and fellow Alas Ranran Abdilla and Edwin Tolentino, 21-15, 21-17, in the semis.

READ: Sisi Ronda returns to beach volleyball for 2025 SEA Games

Rosales and Varga survived NUNS’ Alex Cabatuan and Sky Gemarino, 21-17, 20-22, 15-13, in their thrilling Final Four duel before crashing out in the second set of the final.

Pagara and Progella secured the women’s bronze medal after turning back Quijote and Cordero, 21-16, 22-20, while Abdilla and Tolentino completed the podium finishers in the 15-team men’s side

The Alas stars, led by coach Joao Luciano Kioda, also conducted a beach volleyball workshop, teaching over 60 participants last Friday.



Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.



Your subscription has been successful.

The Sandroot program aims to reinforce, train and develop talents and skills. Running since BVR’s inception in 2015, the Sandroots program has supported local aspiring beach volleyball players during the BVR on Tour events.





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Hazirah Makes Powerful Debut In Queens Run

KUCHING: National bowler Nur Hazirah Ramli made a strong debut on the Professional Women’s Bowling Association (PWBA) Tour after finishing third at the 2025 United States Bowling Congress (USBC) Queens, a major championship held in the United States. She came just two wins short of a dream tiara finish after a strong performance that carried […]

Published

on


KUCHING: National bowler Nur Hazirah Ramli made a strong debut on the Professional Women’s Bowling Association (PWBA) Tour after finishing third at the 2025 United States Bowling Congress (USBC) Queens, a major championship held in the United States.

She came just two wins short of a dream tiara finish after a strong performance that carried her all the way to the stepladder finals on Monday (May 19), a surreal experience the 23-year-old debutant still treasures.

Competing against a world-class field in what is considered one of the toughest and most prestigious events in women’s bowling, the 2024 SUKMA gold medallist held her own and showcased her composure under pressure.

The semifinal match featured an all-Malaysian showdown, with Sin Li Jane going head-to-head against her teammate Nur Hazirah Ramli, who was making her debut in any professional event.

Two early opens by Sin in the first four frames gave Hazirah the lead, but Sin recovered with a stunning seven consecutive strikes to finish with 235.

Hazirah, despite a solid 211, was unable to keep pace and bowed out in third place — earning USD 22,500 for her efforts.

“It was my PWBA debut in the US, and what made it even more memorable,albeit more intense — was that it’s a major.

“Queens has always been known for its tough, high-scoring elimination format. The prize that awaits the champion is every woman’s childhood princess dream, being crowned queen and wearing the tiara,”Hazirah told Sarawak Tribune when contacted recently.

That fairytale, however, quickly gave way to reality as Hazirah was met with the intensity and depth of the international competition.

“I had to get past the cultural shock and the awe-struck butterflies quickly, or else it would have been a very short one-stop tour for me this year,” she said.

Recalling her journey, Hazirah credited her ability to reframe nerves into excitement , a lesson instilled in her from a young age.

“From young, we were taught to turn nervousness into excitement. Remembering my past efforts, the sacrifices, and everyone who supported and encouraged me , that helped me embrace the moment,” she said.

That mental clarity allowed her to focus on every throw, battle through the rounds, and fight all the way to the televised finals. Though her run ended just shy of a title shot, she called the experience “gratifying.”

“I was sad to be just two wins away, but making the TV finals in a major on my debut was a huge achievement for me. Till today, looking back at the journey that’s come to pass, it still feels surreal,” she added.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Long Beach Poly Hangs On Against Harvard-Westlake, Advances To Championship Game  – The562.org

The562’s coverage of Long Beach Poly is sponsored by Bryson Financial. There may have been nerves for the Long Beach Poly softball team, but never a doubt. The Jackrabbits fell behind early against Harvard-Westlake in the CIF-SS Division 4 semifinals and had to weather a strong five-run rally by the Wolverines in the seventh inning. But […]

Published

on


The562’s coverage of Long Beach Poly is sponsored by Bryson Financial.

There may have been nerves for the Long Beach Poly softball team, but never a doubt.

The Jackrabbits fell behind early against Harvard-Westlake in the CIF-SS Division 4 semifinals and had to weather a strong five-run rally by the Wolverines in the seventh inning. But the Jackrabbits never lacked belief through all the adversity, hanging on for a 13-12 victory.

With the win, Poly punches its ticket to the CIF-SS championship game next weekend where they’ll face Warren on either Friday or Saturday. A CIF-SS title would mark the first in program history.

“You saw me burning my tread in the dugout like I usually do but I just knew,” said Poly coach Elizabeth Sanches of the win. “I knew and I trusted them. I forgot who it was, but someone told me in the dugout that they were nervous…I told them that I don’t want to hear that. It’s a game. Trust your experience, get out there and have fun.”

The Jackrabbits were with junior Ki’ele Ho-Ching who has been on and off the field while nursing an injury. The Oklahoma commit played as their designated-hitter and went 3-for-3 with a pair of home runs. Ho-Ching also finished the game with three RBIs and three runs of her own.

“I’m so grateful for such a supportive team and coaches who understand my situation,” she said. “I feel like I have such a great support system not just with them but with my family as well. It feels great to be back and help my team come out on top today.”

Ho-Ching’s first home run of the day sparked a response for Poly after they trailed 5-1 through two innings. After an Emoni Lam Sam single to open the third, Ho-Ching’s home run cut the lead to two. Janelle Morris then hit an RBI double before an Alayna Veavealagi sac-bunt. Sunnie Vaafuti hit an RBI single to close out the inning to put the Jackrabbits up 6-5—their first and final lead of the day.

“I started to see a few nerves because we’re not used to being behind in the playoffs, but I just reminded them that in the last three games we scored 26 runs,” said Sanches of her message ahead of the breakout inning. “A four run deficit is nothing. Of course we don’t want a four run deficit, but when it comes to trusting their bats and their ability to execute and do what it takes to score runs I have so much trust in them.”

The Jackrabbits added another pair of runs in the fourth inning when Morris smacked a two-run home run to left field. Harvard-Westlake responded in the inning with a Kale’a Tindal solo home run to cut the lead to two.

Poly found some insurance runs in the fifth when E. Lam Sam hit an RBI double to score Vaafuti. A hit-by-pitch with the bases loaded then scored Lam Sam before a fielder’s choice that allowed both Ho-Ching and Tauala to score. Ho-Ching had her second home run of the day on a solo shot to left field in the seventh inning.

Harvard-Westlake found a run from Tindal in the sixth inning thanks to an error. The Wolverines then put together a monstrous rally in the bottom of the seventh with RBI singles from Tindal and Fischer Hinnen. Emma Tseng scored on a fielder’s choice before a Dylan Fischer RBI double to cut the lead to just one run.

The Poly defense and pitcher Tegan Breaux had their backs against the wall when Harvard-Westlake had the tying run in scoring position and the game-winning run on first base. The sophomore got out of it with a pop-up to Vaafuti for the put-out to seal the win for the Jackrabbits.

“It was nerve-racking,” Breaux said of the final inning. She pitched six innings and had three strikeouts. “I was shaking, but I feel like we’re able to get past things like that. We’ve won games and we’ve lost games so we know that pressure. So we were able to push through that.”

“She thrives off of that intensity, which is great,” said Sanches of Breaux. “She gets in that zone and she is one of the most intense players I’ve ever coached. As a young 15 year old, I don’t know if she realizes what she’s doing. It’s insane. We’re excited to have her for two more years.”

Poly’s championship matchup against Warren will either be on Friday or next Saturday according to the CIF bracket. Warren defeated Dos Pueblos on Saturday to advance.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

What We Should Make Of Post

The North Side Baseball Caretaker Fund You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Cubs community on the internet. Included with caretaking is ad-free browsing of North Side Baseball. 0

Published

on

What We Should Make Of Post

The North Side Baseball Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Cubs community on the internet. Included with caretaking is ad-free browsing of North Side Baseball.

Continue Reading

Sports

Sarah Sjöström Shatters 100m Freestyle World Record in Relay Lead-Off

About World Aquatics Privacy and Cookie Policies We use cookies to provide our services and for analytics and marketing. To find out more about our use of cookies and how you can disable them, please see our Privacy Policy. By continuing to browse our website, you agree to our use of cookies. Click here to […]

Published

on






Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Titans Earn Four All-America Honors In Final Day Of National Championship, Finish Fifth

Story Links GENEVA, Ohio- The UW-Oshkosh men’s track & field team took fifth at the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Championship on Saturday (May 24) by collecting four total All-America honors and a pair of top-eight scoring finishes.   UW-La Crosse won the team title with 84 points, followed by […]

Published

on


GENEVA, Ohio- The UW-Oshkosh men’s track & field team took fifth at the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Championship on Saturday (May 24) by collecting four total All-America honors and a pair of top-eight scoring finishes.
 
UW-La Crosse won the team title with 84 points, followed by UW-Eau Claire with 56 points, Rowan University (N.J.) with 44.5, and St. John’s University (Minn.) with 39.5.
 
Zach Zirgibel (Merton/Arrowhead Union) took 14th in the pole vault with a best height of 4.85 meters, earning an All-America Second Team mention for the second time this season after taking 13th during the indoor championship.
 
Gavin Fritsch (Little Chute/Little Chute) earned his second All-America honor of the meet with a ninth-place, 60.09-meter throw in the hammer throw.
 
For the second straight outdoor championship, Davian Willems (De Pere/West De Pere) submitted a First Team All-America performance in the 100-meter dash by taking seventh in 10.48 seconds.
 
Matthew Eiden (Stevens Point/SPASH), Joshua Rivers (Bolingbrook, Ill./Bolingbrook), Daniel Wilson (Sun Prairie/Sun Prairie West), and Tyran Bender (Bourbonnais, Ill./Bradley-Bourbonnais Community) raced to sixth in the 4×400-meter relay in 3:11.60, the final men’s event of this year’s outdoor national championship, to score Oshkosh’s final three points.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending