Oregon boys volleyball’s growth on display with Parkrose and Franklin success
Published 10:35 pm Saturday, May 24, 2025
1 of 8
The Parkrose boys volleyball team celebrates a point scored in the 5A state boys volleyball quarterfinals against Hood River Valley on May 24 at Olympus Sports Center in Hillsboro. (Austin White/Portland Tribune)
The Franklin/McDaniel boys volleyball team celebrates a point scored in the 6A state boys volleyball quarterfinals against South Salem on May 24 at Olympus Sports Center in Hillsboro. (Austin White/Portland Tribune)
Parkrose junior Truman Martino sets up his serve in the 5A state boys volleyball quarterfinals against Hood River Valley on May 24 at Olympus Sports Center in Hillsboro. (Austin White/Portland Tribune)
Franklin/McDaniel junior Given Unwin digs a ball in the 6A state boys volleyball quarterfinals against South Salem on May 24 at Olympus Sports Center in Hillsboro. (Austin White/Portland Tribune)
Parkrose senior Finn Sathrum, right, celebrates a point scored with his team in the 5A state boys volleyball quarterfinals against Hood River Valley on May 24 at Olympus Sports Center in Hillsboro. (Austin White/Portland Tribune)
Franklin/McDaniel senior Archer Mist yells after scoring a point in the 6A state boys volleyball quarterfinals against South Salem on May 24 at Olympus Sports Center in Hillsboro. (Austin White/Portland Tribune)
Parkrose senior King Ozier goes up for a spike in the 5A state boys volleyball quarterfinals against Hood River Valley on May 24 at Olympus Sports Center in Hillsboro. (Austin White/Portland Tribune)
Franklin/McDaniel junior Given Unwin goes up for a spike in the 6A state boys volleyball quarterfinals against South Salem on May 24 at Olympus Sports Center in Hillsboro. (Austin White/Portland Tribune)
Surrounded by fellow boys volleyball squads at the 2025 state tournament Saturday, May 24 at Olympus Sports Center in Hillsboro, the Parkrose High School squad kept things light.
Big points against quarterfinals opponent Hood River Valley were met with a little dance move as the team came together for a huddle, smiles on all six players faces.
Playing loose is where the Broncos are at their best according to head coach Joseph Porche, and they’ve been that way for most of the season with a now 19-2 record. Those losses both came against 6A opponents.The No. 1 seed in the 5A tournament, Parkrose swept HRV 25-17, 25-12, 25-14 and followed it up with a 3-1 win (18-25, 25-16, 25-14, 25-20) over Silverton in the semifinals.
Now they’ll have a chance to keep the party going for the whole summer when the Broncos matchup against Summit in the 5A state title game set for 6 p.m. Sunday, May 25 in Hillsboro.
“We’re a very emotionally driven team, we’re playing around, having fun, serious but not too serious,” Porche said. “We’re engaged but we’re light about it, and it helps make it easier for the kids.”
Most of the Broncos, like every club at the state tournament, are still relatively new to the sport as its growth in Oregon and the whole country continues to boom.
The OSAA approved boys volleyball to be an emerging activity back in October of 2023, providing a little more structure for the sport to operate within schools but still missing the full backing from the association and member schools.
Now finishing up its second season as an emerging activity, the sport has completed its two-year provisional period and could be sanctioned by the OSAA next fall.
Boys volleyball had 68 teams participate this season with teams from up and down Interstate 5, central Oregon and out to the coast.
They all came together for the state tournament, creating an environment for the sport in Oregon that hasn’t been matched.
“When I grew up, there were literally four club teams,” Parkrose senior captain Finn Sathrum said. “To see all these boys come out and a lot of athletes, it’s amazing, I can’t express it enough.”
Sathrum is the boys volleyball veteran of his Broncos crew, using his dominant serve game to help win points, diving for spiked balls and putting away a few kills.
But most importantly, him and fellow senior captain Jonas Ankrum are the two who the team plays through emotionally.
“Those two, we go where they go,” Porche said of Sathrum and Ankrum. “If they’re loud, having fun, being loose, our team feeds off that energy. … (Sathrum) has been playing ball a long time, so he’s able to lock in and also regulate his emotions pretty well.
“(Ankrum) has come a long way. It was instilling confidence in him to be himself as well.”
The rest of the squad is made up of Korey McKeaver, Alex Shichalin, Truman Martino, Zander Huhnholz, Masi Lolo, Noah Tancuan, King Ozier and Juni Napaa.
This group has provided plenty of pride for The Rose this year as athletics has been a bit of a tough lane to find success in recent years.
Being on the state stage to rep the Broncos is another source of pride and a reason why the sport has become so important for the Northeast Portland community.
“I think that my school is often underrepresented,” Sathrum said. “To come out here and be the No. 1 seed, it feels great to represent my school and have some Bronco pride.”
They’re not alone in that vein as the co-op Franklin/McDaniel team has been another Portland standout, grabbing the No. 4 seed in the 6A state tournament.
The Lightning had a slow start but shook it off to sweep No. 5 South Salem in the quarterfinals on Saturday at 25-22, 25-23, 25-22. They took on No. 1 Central Catholic in the semifinals and pushed the Rams to the limit, dropping the match 3-2 (20-25, 25-11, 25-17, 26-28, 15-8).
Still, the 2025 season has been an excellent coming out party and the fun isn’t over as they’ll take on Nelson at 4 p.m. Sunday, May 25 for third place.
“It’s been really fun, it’s a great group of guys and I have my setter Archer (Mist), he plays on my club team so we already had that chemistry,” junior outside hitter Given Unwin, who is a student at McDaniel but plays for Franklin, said. “We went 16-0 in the regular season, so that’s pretty cool and it was really fun.”
Unwin is another player with some experience coming into high school, and his love for the sport has grown to the rest of his teammates who continue to grow, despite most of them being at another school.
“(Unwin) is definitely the breadwinner of the team in terms of scoring and he does a great job of getting the attention away from our other hitters,” Franklin head coach Mykel Caruso said. “It’s not just on the court that he’s performing. Off the court and as a leader he’s doing really well.”
At the heart of it, that’s what high school sports is all about: Having fun and building characteristics in student-athletes that they can take with them for the rest of their lives.
If the OSAA needed any more proof on what the sport is doing for high schoolers, whether they come from an athletic powerhouse school or not, the state boys volleyball tournament provides an excellent example.
Whether or not Parkrose or Franklin win on Sunday doesn’t really matter. They’ve displayed what the sport can do for any student looking to get active in a new experience or help keep them active when their other sports aren’t in season.
Sunday will be the culminating moment of 2025, but it could also be the launchpad for years of boys volleyball to come as a possible sanctioned sport in Oregon.
“There were 68 teams this year, that’s really cool, it’s by far the fastest growing sport in the U.S.,” Unwin said. “I think that, especially if the club players come back and keep showing them what’s up, it’ll just keep growing. People will be more interested and I think it’s just going to keep growing exponentially.”