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The Big West Owns Top Two Spots in 2025 National Collegiate Volleyball Championship Bracket

The Big West will embark on the quest for the title owning the top two lines in the 2025 National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Championship. The Big West victor Hawai’i occupies the No. 2 position with regular-season champion Long Beach State claiming the No. 1 seed in the bracket with games slated at the Covelli Center in […]

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The Big West will embark on the quest for the title owning the top two lines in the 2025 National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Championship. The Big West victor Hawai’i occupies the No. 2 position with regular-season champion Long Beach State claiming the No. 1 seed in the bracket with games slated at the Covelli Center in Columbus, Ohio.  

After a big win over the Beach last night, the Rainbow Warriors are soaring into their 10th national postseason after a year away from the field. UH enters with an overall record of 26-5 on the season and awaits the winner of the play-in game for the No. 7 seed. The ’Bows will take on either Daemen or Penn State on Thursday, May 8 at 10:30 a.m. PT/7:30 a.m. HT.  The opening round matchup will take place this Friday, May 2 as the NEC champion Wildcats (15-12) go against the winners of the EIVA in the Nittany Lions (14-15).  

Should UH advance in the bracket, the semifinal opponent will be the victor between defending champion and No. 3 seed UCLA and Belmont Abbey. The Rainbow Warriors saw Belmont Abbey back on Feb. 20 in a 3-0 road sweep. The last time UH met up with UCLA was back in 2023, a 3-1 win in the regular season followed by a loss in the championship match in Fairfax, Va. 

Top-seeded Long Beach State earned an at-large bid into the field after a stellar 2025 campaign with just three blemishes on the record. The Beach (27-5) opens up their quest for the title against eighth-seeded Fort Valley State (16-9) as the back-to-back SIAC champions. The two teams saw each other earlier this season back on Jan. 31 as the Beach swept through The quarterfinal match is set for May 8 at 2 p.m. PT. 

LBSU’s semifinal foe will be the winner of the No. 4/5 matchup between Loyola Chicago and Pepperdine. The Beach holds a 7-0 all-time series record over Loyola with the last meeting going five in Walter Pyramid back on Feb. 5, 2023. The last clash with the Waves came on Jan. 26 in Malibu, Calif., a 3-2 win for the Beach. 

The Big West has been a mainstay on the national stage since sport-sponsorship and 2025 is sure to be no exception. The league has combined for four national titles with both Long Beach State (2018, ’19) and Hawai’i (2021, ’22) going back-to-back for the crown. Two of those iterations were between the Beach and the ’Bows, one of the fiercest men’s volleyball rivalries around. At least one league team has been a national finalist in each of the last six seasons. 

UH won its first national title in 2021 at the Covelli Center, defeating BYU in straight sets with the 2022 title defense captured in Los Angeles against LBSU. The Warriors return to the national tournament after making four consecutive title match appearances from 2019-23.  

For Long Beach State, the championship victories came in consecutive seasons as well with one coming in an all Big West finale in 2019 as the Beach played host. All told, LBSU has been on the national postseason stage 15 times, with six appearances and two titles in The Big West era (2018, ’19, ’22, ’23, ’24) and another championship hoisting moment back in 1991. 



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University of Minnesota Athletics

MINNEAPOLIS – The University of Minnesota will be well represented at the 2025 NCAA Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Track and Field West First Round May 28-31 as 21 events qualified from the men’s team and 18 from the women’s side were declared Thursday. The Maroon and Gold will compete in a total of 39 combined events over four […]

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MINNEAPOLIS – The University of Minnesota will be well represented at the 2025 NCAA Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Track and Field West First Round May 28-31 as 21 events qualified from the men’s team and 18 from the women’s side were declared Thursday.

The Maroon and Gold will compete in a total of 39 combined events over four days of action from E.B. Cushing Stadium on the campus of Texas A&M University. The region’s top 48 student-athletes in individual events and the best 24 relay teams will compete with the men set for Wednesday and Friday, while the women will compete on Thursday and Saturday.

Coverage of the entire meet will be streamed live on ESPN+ with live results via Flash Results. The top 12 competitors from each individual event and the top 12 teams from each relay will advance to the NCAA Outdoor Championships set for June 11-14 in Eugene, Ore., at Hayward Field.

Women’s Declared Entrants (Event, Seeded Position, Qualifying Performance)

Erin Reidy – 1500m (18th. 4:14.31)

Ali Weimer – 10000m (12th. 33:03.15)

Maja Maunsbach – 100m Hurdles (11th. 13.09)

Dyandra Gray – 400m Hurdles (27th. 57.95), 4x400m Relay (23rd. 3:37.40)

Zoie Dundon – 3000m Steeplechase (8th. 9:52.46)

Isabelle Schmitz – 3000m Steeplechase (9th. 9:55.19)

Kendra Kelley – 4x400m Relay (23rd. 3:37.40)

Kennedy Martinson –  4x400m Relay (23rd. 3:37.40)

Kitania Headley – 4x400m Relay (23rd. 3:37.40)

Ellie Kuechle (ALT) – 4x400m Relay (23rd. 3:37.40)

Laubenra Ben (ALT) – 4x400m Relay (23rd. 3:37.40)


Alliyah McNeil – High Jump (T34th. 1.78m | 5-10)

Nyalaam Jok – High Jump (T34th. 1.78m | 5-10)

Lexy Berger – Pole Vault (27th. 4.29m | 14-0 3/4)

Sofia Condon – Pole Vault (31st. 4.26m | 13-11 3/4)

Diarra Sow – Triple Jump (10th. 13.42m | 44-0 1/2)

Brooke Moore – Triple Jump (18th. 13.21m | 43-4 1/4)

Anthonett Nabwe – Shot Put (19th. 16.84m | 55-3), Discus (6th. 58.75m | 192-9), Hammer Throw (4th. 69.85m | 229-2)

Isabelle Schmidt – Shot Put (46th. 15.36m | 50-4 3/4)

Hadley Streit – Hammer Throw (14th. 65.65m | 215-5)

Men’s Declared Entrants (Event, Seeded Position, Qualifying Performance)

Devin Augustine – 100m (17th. 10.16), 200m (10th. 20.47), 4x100m Relay (2nd. 38.54)

Kion Benjamin – 100m (48th. 10.29), 4x100m Relay (2nd. 38.54)

Aaron Charles – 200m (27th. 20.66), 4x100m Relay (2nd. 38.54)

Christian Martin – 110m Hurdles (15th. 13.49), 4x400m Relay (18th. 3:06.46)

Michael Buchanan – 110m Hurdles (T33rd. 13.65)

Spencer Brown – 110m Hurdles (T33rd. 13.65)

Ahmed Khadar – 400m Hurdles (21st. 50.49)

Frankie Grey – 400m Hurdles (41st. 51.13), 4x400m Relay (18th. 3:06.46)

Emmett Gerres – 3000m Steeplechase (36th. 8:48.10)

Zion Campbell – 4x100m Relay (2nd. 38.54)

Dwyne Smith Jr. – 4x400m Relay (18th. 3:06.46)

Ramy Ayoub – 4x400m Relay (18th. 3:06.46)

Joseph Manser (ALT) – 4x400m Relay (18th. 3:06.46)

Sam Snitker – High Jump (48th. 2.10m | 6-10 3/4)

Jak Urlacher – Pole Vault (12th. 5.47m | 17-11 1/4)

Charles Godfred – Long Jump (2nd. 8.13m | 26-8 1/4)

Michael Buchanan – Long Jump (29th. 7.63m | 25-0 1/2)

Hakeem Ford – Triple Jump (2nd. 16.54m | 54-3 1/4)

Precious Opinion – Triple Jump (26th. 15.53m | 50-11 1/2)

Isaiah Schafer – Shot Put (6th. 19.87m | 65-2 1/4)

Angelos Mantzouranis – Hammer Throw (1st. 78.61m | 257-11)

Kostas Zaltos – Hammer Throw (2nd. 77.91m | 255-7)

For more information on the Gophers, continue to check back with GopherSports.com. Keep up with the University of Minnesota cross country and track and field team on X.com (Twitter) and Instagram (@GopherCCTF) and on Facebook, so you do not miss any content during the season.



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U.S. Women’s Sitting Team Wins Opener at 2025 PVPA Zonal

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (May 24, 2025) — The U.S. Women’s Sitting National Team picked up where it left off in 2024 — with a victory. Kicking off the 2025 ParaVolley Pan America Zonal Championship, the U.S. Women, ranked No. 3 in the world, defeated No. 1 Canada, 3-0, (25-22, 25-21, 25-15). The U.S. (1-0) will […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (May 24, 2025) — The U.S. Women’s Sitting National Team picked up where it left off in 2024 — with a victory. Kicking off the 2025 ParaVolley Pan America Zonal Championship, the U.S. Women, ranked No. 3 in the world, defeated No. 1 Canada, 3-0, (25-22, 25-21, 25-15).

The U.S. (1-0) will face No. 2 Brazil on Sunday, May 25 at 10 a.m. MT/9 a.m. PT. Matches are live streamed on our event page.

While two of the stars of the 2024 Paralympic Games, Heather Erickson and Katie Bridge, are not competing this year, two other Paralympians made their return to competition against Canada — 2020 Tokyo gold medalist Jillian Williams Coffee and three-time Paralympic medalist Kendra Hall.

“It was really awesome [being back on the court],” Coffee said. “I also have Major (her son) and my husband watching. Last I played, he was in my belly, so it was cool to have him here with me, too. Just to be with the girls again was unbelievable — the feeling, the excitement, and the energy is unmatched.”

Despite the three-set win, there were still a couple rough spots for the U.S. in the match, as expected with a different mix of athletes competing together for the first time.

“I think we did really well, but there’s a lot to work on, including serving and serve receive,” Coffee added. “We are pretty much a whole new lineup when it comes to the people on the court, so it takes some time to adjust to who’s next to us and getting comfortable with getting into that rhythm with each other. We’re getting there.”

Coffee scored five points on five kills in her first match back, but four-time Paralympic medalist Monique Matthews led the U.S. with 11 points on eight kills, one blocks and two aces.

Kaleo Kanahele Maclay scored seven points at setter in the first two sets, with three kills, two blocks and two aces. Lora Webster, Tia Edwards and Whitney Dosty each scored six. Webster had four kills and two blocks; Edwards had three kills and three blocks; and Dosty had six kills.

Nicky Nieves had two kills and two blocks; Emma Schieck had an ace and three kills; Lexi Patterson collected a kill; and MaKenzie Franklin and Raelene Elam each recorded a block.

The U.S. led Canada in kills, 34-24 and blocks, 12-8, but Canada had a 7-6 edge in aces. Canada’s Heidi Peters led all scorers with 15 points.

Full Match Stats (PDF)

Schedule/Results

May 24
USA def. Canada, 3-0 (25-21, 25-22, 25-15)

May 25
USA vs. Brazil, 10 a.m. MT/9 a.m. PT

May 26
USA vs. Brazil, 5 p.m. MT/4 p.m. PT

May 27
Gold medal match, 1 vs 2 at 3 p.m. MT/2 p.m. PT

Roster

No Name (Position, Height, Hometown)
1 Lora Webster (MB, 5-11, Point Lookout, N.Y.)
Bethany Zummo (L, 5-3, Dublin, Calif.)
Lexi Patterson (S/L, 5-4, Waseca, Minn.)
Monique Matthews (MB/OH, 6-0, Ardmore, Okla.)
Whitney Dosty (OH/OPP, 6-3, Tucson, Ariz.)
Tia Edwards (OH/MB, 5-7, Skiatook, Okla.)
11 Jillian Williams-Coffee (MB/OPP/OH, 5-10, Odem, Texas)
12 Emma Schieck (OH, 5-7, Statesville, N.C.)
14 Kaleo Kanahele Maclay (S, 5-6, Oklahoma City, Okla.)
15 Kendra Hall (5-7, Westfield, Ind.)
16 Nicky Nieves (MB/OH, 5-10, Kissimmee, Fla.)
18 Courtney Baker (OH, 5-9, Crofton, Ky.)
22 MaKenzie Franklin (OH, 6-0, Red Wing, Minn., North Country)
24 Raelene Elam (OH, 6-1, St. George, Utah, Northern California)



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College track & field: Loras’ Seipel wins 3rd national long jump title | Local Sports

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Cannes 2025: Impressive Thriller ‘The Plague’ from Charlie Polinger

Cannes 2025: Impressive Thriller ‘The Plague’ from Charlie Polinger by Alex Billington May 24, 2025 A fresh new debut from a filmmaker who has real talent. One of the best first films at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival is titled The Plague, an American indie thriller made by filmmaker Charlie Polinger. During the intro at […]

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Cannes 2025: Impressive Thriller ‘The Plague’ from Charlie Polinger

by Alex Billington
May 24, 2025

The Plague Review

A fresh new debut from a filmmaker who has real talent. One of the best first films at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival is titled The Plague, an American indie thriller made by filmmaker Charlie Polinger. During the intro at its world premiere, actor Joel Edgerton (who also runs his own production company called Blue-Tongue Films – though they’re not involved in this film) stated that he’d already seen few of Polinger’s short films before reading the script for this & couldn’t wait for him to finally make his mark with his first feature. That moment is here and, yes, he has definitely made his mark. Even after watching many other films over the course of the festival, this one still stands out, it still lingers in my mind and the score still haunts me. Even if the story about bullying is a bit obvious, and even if it never dips into any full-on horror despite the feeling often that it might do so, it is still an impressive debut with top notch filmmaking across the board. The Plague plunges viewers into the chilling realm of kids picking on other kids and it’s proper freaky stuff.

Written & directed by Charlie Polinger, The Plague is set in the early 2000s and tells the story of a group of kids at a water polo summer camp. I know these sports camps as I went to a few when I was growing up & they were always awkward experiences for me, too. A bunch of feisty, young, bored kids thrown together for a week (without any parents). Newcomer Everett Blunck stars as a scrawny kid named Ben, who tries to gain the camaraderie of the other group of kids that already know each other. Kenny Rasmussen co-stars as Eli, a weird boy who has some skin problems that appear as rashes on his body. The other kids think this is some scary disease they dub “The Plague” and act as if it’s horrible, always making fun of him, constantly picking on him, not going near him. But Eli doesn’t seem to care and just does whatever he wants to do his own way, even if they keep bullying him. Kayo Martin also co-stars as Jake, the bullying ringleader who is always the one finding something to pick on with any kid. The performances from Everett Blunck and Kayo Martin are some of the best young performances I’ve seen in quite a while. They’re not only convincing but also challenging, diving into a disquieting dynamic that is necessary for this story to work as well as it does.

Aside from the kids being legit in their roles (and Joel Edgerton as their coach), this is proper filmmaking firing on all cylinders. There’s some incredibly unique cinematography by DP Steven Breckon, framing the pool and the buildings and every shot in a way that is instantly peculiar or unsettling yet also entrancing. This guy has an eye, that’s for sure, and I’m glad he teamed up with Polinger. The score rules – it’s a stirring horror score built around “aaah” and “oooh” vocals sampled into percussive music. The singer / composer Johan Lenox is the inventive musician behind this score and he deserves extra attention for creating this especially freaky score. Still thinking about it all the time… It’s part of what makes this movie so chilling to watch, keeping viewers on the edge of their seat even if it’s not actually horror. Ultimately the story is less about bullying and more about being yourself, not letting any peer pressure or conformity get to you. Not an easy task, especially when you’re a kid growing up who wants to be seen as cool and accepted in the group. It’s a helluva good film that’s entirely original and gripping – Polinger instantly proving he’s got the chops.

Alex’s Cannes 2025 Rating: 8 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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Turlington posts second-best national finish by Ole in outdoor 5K

Story Links GENEVA, Ohio – Junior Kevin Turlington of the St. Olaf College men’s track and field team finished his season with Second Team All-America honors and an 11th-place finish in the 5,000-meter run at the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships on Saturday afternoon at the SPIRE […]

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GENEVA, Ohio – Junior Kevin Turlington of the St. Olaf College men’s track and field team finished his season with Second Team All-America honors and an 11th-place finish in the 5,000-meter run at the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships on Saturday afternoon at the SPIRE Institute.

After finishing 11th nationally in the event earlier this year, Turlington replicated the feat in his first national outdoor meet by clocking in at 14:23.51 to earn his second Second Team All-America accolade of the year. The junior’s 11th-place performance was the highest national finish for an Ole in the event since 1987 and the second-highest in recorded program history.

Turlington was 14th in the field of 22 runners midway through the race before moving up to ninth – one spot outside of the First Team All-America spots – with one lap to go but settled for 11th place. Turlington entered the meet as the No. 21 seed in the event but used his freshness to finish 10 spots higher after 12 of the other 21 runners competed in either the 10,000-meter run or 3,000-meter steeplechase earlier in the meet.

In his junior season, Turlington earned an All-America accolade in each of his three seasons of competition, as he was 23rd nationally in cross country in the fall. St. Olaf finished ended the national meet with no team points, although both of its qualifiers came away with Second Team All-America honors after junior Ignatius Fitzgerald was ninth in the 3,000-meter steeplechase on Friday.

 

 



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Women’s Track and Field Wraps Up Season at Day Three of NCAA Championships

Story Links GENEVA, OHIO (May 24, 2025) – The Tufts University women’s track and field team wrapped up their season with a solid showing on day three of the 2025 NCAA Division III Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships at the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio. Senior Jordan Andrew and first […]

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GENEVA, OHIO (May 24, 2025) – The Tufts University women’s track and field team wrapped up their season with a solid showing on day three of the 2025 NCAA Division III Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships at the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio.

Senior Jordan Andrew and first year Elysse Cumberland set the ball rolling on day three in the triple jump. Cumberland bowed out of the competition in 13th place after an 11.85m jump. Andrew stepped up and landed a jump of 11.93m on her first recorded mark before improving to 12.08m on her third attempt. The veteran jumper hovered around the 11.90m area before finally breaking it open on her final attempt. The senior matched her personal best on the final jump of her season, landing a mark of 12.29m to take fourth place. It would be the best finish for the Jumbos on day three.

First year Arielle Chechile took ninth place in the 400m hurdles finals to end the day after an unfortunate disqualification.

The Jumbos end their season with two top five finishes at the 2025 NCAA Division III Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships.

 

–JUMBOS–



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