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Virginia Opens Play at NCAA Charlottesville Regional on Monday

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — The No. 11 Virginia women’s golf team is set to host the 2025 NCAA Charlottesville Regional at Birdwood Golf Course starting Monday (May 5). The Cavaliers are the No. 2 seed in the 12-team regional that runs through Wednesday (May 7). UVA will be paired with South Carolina and Ole Miss. Those […]

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Virginia Opens Play at NCAA Charlottesville Regional on Monday

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — The No. 11 Virginia women’s golf team is set to host the 2025 NCAA Charlottesville Regional at Birdwood Golf Course starting Monday (May 5). The Cavaliers are the No. 2 seed in the 12-team regional that runs through Wednesday (May 7).

UVA will be paired with South Carolina and Ole Miss. Those teams will tee off starting at 8 a.m. from the first tee.

How to Follow
Live scoring for the NCAA Charlottesville Regional will be provided through Scoreboard powered by Clippd.

Live coverage of the tournament will be provided by Babygrande Golf beginning at 8:30 a.m. on each day of competition.

Format
Each regional site is a 54-hole event with a single-round scheduled for Monday through Wednesday. The top five teams (30 teams total) and the low individual (six individuals total) not on an advancing team from each regional site qualify for the national championships. The NCAA Championships are set for May 16-21 at the Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, Calif.

Regional History
This year’s regional marks the 19th time Virginia has received a bid to the NCAA Championships. Virginia will be looking to advance to the NCAA Championships for the 15th time in the program’s 22-year history. Last year the Cavaliers were third at the Cle Elum (Wash.) Regional. The Cavaliers were led by a third-place finish from Amanda Sambach who shot 2-under 214. UVA went on to finish 28th at the NCAA Championship Final led by Sambach’s 57th place finish after three rounds.

UVA’s has never won a regional but finished as the runners-up in 2022 and 2018. Virginia was third in 2011, fourth in 2023, 2019 and 2009 and has been fifth five times (2015, 2012, 2010, 2008, 2005). UVA has had three first-place individual finishers at NCAA Regionals. Calle Nielson was the first to accomplish the feat, placing first in 2010 at the West Regional at Stanford. In 2016, Elizabeth Szokol shared first-place honors, also at the Stanford Golf Course. Sambach became the third Cavalier to achieve the honor in 2023.

The Field
The field at the Charlottesville Regional site includes (in seed order): 1. South Carolina, 2. Virginia, 3. Ole Miss, 4. Florida, 5. UCLA, 6. UCF, 7. College of Charleston, 8. NC State, 9. BYU, 10. Princeton, 11. Richmond, 12. Radford.

All-ACC
Virginia junior Amanda Sambach was named to the 15-member 2025 All-Atlantic Coast Conference team. She is currently the No. 12 player in the NCAA individual rankings. It marks the fourth consecutive year she has received the honor. Sambach placed second at this year’s ACC Championships. It was the fourth consecutive season she has posted a top-3 finish at the ACCs. She won the event in 2023 on the way to earning first-team All-America honors.

The ACC
Virginia is one of 12 ACC teams to qualify for this year’s NCAA Championship including Florida State, Stanford, California, Duke, Louisville, Miami, North Carolina, NC State, SMU, Virginia Tech, and Wake Forest.

The ACC’s 12 selections is tied for the most of any conference in the NCAA Women’s Golf Championship. The figure also breaks the previous conference record of 11 teams which stood since 2018.

UVA Regional Lineup
The Cavalier lineup will feature Amanda Sambach, Megan Propeck, Chloe Schiavone, Jaclyn LaHa and Rebecca Skoler. Kennedy Swedick will be available as an alternate.

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Holly Roberts Selected for New Zealand Women’s U20 Aquatics Team

Holly Roberts, a talented water polo player from UC San Diego, has been selected to represent the New Zealand Women’s U20 National Team at the 2025 World Aquatics Women’s U20 Championships in Salvador, Brazil, scheduled for August 10-16. This follows her impressive freshman season with the Tritons, during which she earned a spot on the […]

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Holly Roberts, a talented water polo player from UC San Diego, has been selected to represent the New Zealand Women’s U20 National Team at the 2025 World Aquatics Women’s U20 Championships in Salvador, Brazil, scheduled for August 10-16. This follows her impressive freshman season with the Tritons, during which she earned a spot on the Big West All-Freshman Team and contributed significantly in both scoring and defense. She is one of 14 players chosen for the national team, showcasing her exceptional skills and potential.

By the Numbers

  • Roberts scored 14 goals and provided 13 assists, totaling 27 points in her freshman season.
  • She recorded five field blocks and 17 steals, ranking second and eighth, respectively, on the team.

Yes, But

While Roberts’ achievements are commendable, some may argue that the team’s overall performance could overshadow individual accolades, as the Tritons finished with a mixed 17-14 record.

State of Play

  • UC San Diego water polo team ranked ninth nationally and showcased strong potential this season.
  • The Tritons ended their Big West campaign with a solid 4-3 record and advanced to the semifinals.

What’s Next

Roberts will look to leverage her collegiate experience as she prepares for international competition, potentially setting the stage for a promising career ahead.

Bottom Line

Holly Roberts’ selection for the New Zealand U20 National Team is a significant achievement, highlighting not only her individual skills but also the growing competitiveness of UC San Diego’s water polo program.





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USC men’s track and field team completes season sweep at NCAA Championships

It may seem counterintuitive, but track and field is the ultimate collegiate team sport. USC secured its 33rd title in program history. The win in Eugene also provided the first Trojan sweep since 2015, having won the indoor championship earlier. For Director Quincy Watts, he wanted to see his USC squads earn and experience a […]

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It may seem counterintuitive, but track and field is the ultimate collegiate team sport. USC secured its 33rd title in program history. The win in Eugene also provided the first Trojan sweep since 2015, having won the indoor championship earlier.

For Director Quincy Watts, he wanted to see his USC squads earn and experience a team win together. Track and field is a points-based system. Even if an individual does not come in first, finishing strong and still competing to the best of one’s ability can benefit the team as a whole by securing precious points.

USC needed each one, as the conclusion of Friday’s events had the Trojans crowned as champions, with Texas A&M and both schools sitting on 41 points each.

It has been an impressive season, and the Trojans, in earnest, may just be getting started when looking at the underclassmen talent in particular that is on this roster. From top to bottom, this team did well to have so many qualify for the NCAA Championships, and the Cardinal and Gold earned the right to celebrate yet another title.

Max Thomas earned a second-place finish in the men’s 100m sprint. He was then a part of the 4x100m relay team, along with  Travis Williams, Taylor Banks, and Garrett Kaalund, that came in second in that event.

Kaalund and Thomas finished third and sixth, respectively, in the 200m race. Williams Jones earned a second-place finish in the 400m event. Johnny Brackins Jr. provided some points for the Trojans through his 400m hurdles performance by coming in seventh place.

Racquil Broderick finished his excellent sophomore year with a fourth-place finish in the discus throw and reset a school record that was also previously held by him.

Needed USC finish sets up potential all-around victory

Finally, Jacob Andrews, Jaelen Knox, Thomas, and Jones provided USC with a critical point through their eighth-place finish during the 4x400m race.

With that team win, USC is in a prime position to earn a Learfield Directors’ Cup victory as well. It will come down to the women’s track and field members, as they are set to compete with the bulk of events starting at 5:30 PT. The event will be aired on ESPNU. 



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All-Star action takes over Norfolk on the volleyball court and football field

NORFOLK, Neb (KTIV) – Both Northeast Nebraska All-Star games on the volleyball floor and football field took place on Friday. Numerous Siouxland athletes showed off their talents at the all-star events. Check them out in the video linked in this story. Want to get the latest news and weather from Siouxland’s News Source? Follow these […]

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NORFOLK, Neb (KTIV) – Both Northeast Nebraska All-Star games on the volleyball floor and football field took place on Friday.

Numerous Siouxland athletes showed off their talents at the all-star events.

Check them out in the video linked in this story.

Want to get the latest news and weather from Siouxland’s News Source? Follow these links to download our KTIV News app and our First Alert Weather app.



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Setter Alec Smagula positioned Brookline volleyball for title run

In a state championship on the verge of slipping away, the junior, already a three-year captain, changed the course of the match, helping top-seeded Brookline to a 20-25, 27-25, 25-22, 25-15 victory at Xaverian Brothers. “I am a setter, but I think I can play any position a coach needs me to play,” he said. […]

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In a state championship on the verge of slipping away, the junior, already a three-year captain, changed the course of the match, helping top-seeded Brookline to a 20-25, 27-25, 25-22, 25-15 victory at Xaverian Brothers.

“I am a setter, but I think I can play any position a coach needs me to play,” he said. “A good setter can do everything. They can play defense, they can block, they can get kills, and that’s why I think I’m a good setter.”

Smagula, a libero at SMASH Volleyball Club who is also in the beach volleyball national team development program, made plays in serve-receive as well, keeping the Warriors (23-1) alive in close second and third sets.

As a left-handed setter, he was able to dump the ball with force when he saw the opportunity.

Even Brookline’s first-year coach Lexi De La Cruz said the team’s first title win since 1992 wouldn’t have been possible without Smagula.

“I think Alec was the MVP of today,” he said. “We have great weapons, but he was just able to run a really great game. We couldn’t have done it without him, so the hard work he did all year showed up in today’s final.”

Senior Kris Vaivars has been playing with Smagula for three years, and the duo has an immaculate setter-hitter connection. It was crucial to the win that Vaivars could hit at the net and from the back row, and Smagula found the right times to set him. He racked up 24 kills.

“He’s like a brother to me,” Vaivars said. “I know he trusts me. We have that connection.”

With one more year ahead, Smagula has even more opportunity to grow, not just as a player, but as one of the state’s best all-around players and a leader of a defending champion.

“He has a huge impact,” Vaivars said. “He’s one of the best defenders in the state … He’s an offensive weapon, and because of that, it makes it so much easier for us to win rallies and score points.”


AJ Traub can be reached at aj.traub@globe.com. Follow him on X @aj_traub and Instagram @ajt37. Alexa Podalsky can be reached at alexa.podalsky@globe.com.





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Gator Men Finish Eighth at NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships

EUGENE, Ore. – Florida Gators Men’s Track and Field concluded their 2025 season on Friday, ultimately finishing 8th in the team standings at the NCAA Outdoor Championships.   The Gators finished with 22 team points, adding five to their total on Friday.   Highlights Relays The Gators 4x400m Relay ran a 3:01.88 time in the […]

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EUGENE, Ore. – Florida Gators Men’s Track and Field concluded their 2025 season on Friday, ultimately finishing 8th in the team standings at the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
 
The Gators finished with 22 team points, adding five to their total on Friday.
 
Highlights
Relays
The Gators 4x400m Relay ran a 3:01.88 time in the final, earning a fifth-place finish in the final event of the evening. Ashton Schwartzman, Reheem Hayles, Rios Prude Jr. and Justin Braun ran together for the first time, and combined for Florida’s second-fastest effort of the season.
 
Prude Jr. ran an exceptional 44.86-second third leg, the Gators’ best, despite an early trip-up immediately following the handoff from Hayles. His effort propelled the Gators from seventh at his exchange up to third at his delivery to the anchor.
 
Throws
Jacob Lemmon finished tenth in the Men’s Discus Throw field, posting a 59.07m [193′ 9″] mark on his first attempt. The Senior out of Sanibel, Fla. was a mere one centimeter out of a spot in the top nine to make the event final. He takes home his fourth All-America Honor, having reached the NCAA Championship meet in the Discus Throw all four years of his collegiate career (2021, 2022, 2024 with Virginia).
 
Next up
The Gator Women return to Hayward Field tomorrow, boasting six total entries on the final day of the championship meet.
 
Live Results for the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships can be found here.
 
The meet will be available to stream on ESPN+ and the evening running events will be available on ESPN2. Individual streams of each field event will be available on ESPN+. Links for the main ESPN broadcasts, as well as all individual field broadcasts that feature Gator athletes, can be found below. All listed times are Eastern.
 
Saturday, June 14 (Women’s Day 2):
Primary broadcast, 9:00 p.m. (ESPN2)
Women’s Discus, 3:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
Women’s Triple Jump, 9:10 p.m. (ESPN+)
 
NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships – Florida Gators Results
Friday, June 13

 
Final Team Standings – NCAA Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships (Top-10)

T-1. Texas A&M – 41 pts
T-1. Southern Cal. – 41pts
3. Arkansas – 40 pts.
4. Auburn – 35 pts.
5. New Mexico – 31 pts.
6. Oklahoma – 30.5 pts.
7. Minnesota – 25 pts.
T-8. FLORIDA – 22 pts.
T-8. Kentucky – 22 pts.
T-8. Ole Miss – 22 pts.
 



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MIAA lacrosse, volleyball, baseball state championship recaps for Friday

pinned MIAA championships: Friday schedule and results MIAA state championships: Live updates from Thursday’s games Click here to refresh | Read more schools stories Yet another championship moment for Izzy Kittredge as Medfield girls’ lacrosse repeats in Division 3 — 11:45 p.m. Trevor Hass WELLESLEY — As dynamic as she is on a daily basis, […]

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MIAA championships: Friday schedule and results



MIAA state championships: Live updates from Thursday’s games

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Yet another championship moment for Izzy Kittredge as Medfield girls’ lacrosse repeats in Division 3 — 11:45 p.m.

Trevor Hass

WELLESLEY — As dynamic as she is on a daily basis, Medfield junior Izzy Kittredge has a habit of saving her absolute best for state championship games.

This winter, she racked up 28 points, 10 rebounds, 4 steals, 3 blocks, and 3 assists to cement back-to-back Division 2 titles for the girls’ basketball program.

In Friday’s Division 3 girls’ lacrosse final against Newburyport, Kittredge exploded for a team-high 6 goals, 3 assists, and 7 draw controls to spearhead an 18-8 triumph and clinch back-to-back championships as well.

“She shows up for the big games,” said Medfield coach Mary Laughna. “She loves to compete. She loves winning. She can take over those games.”

Continue reading Trevor Hass’s story


A Chelmsford Division 1 baseball championship 59 years and nine innings in the making — 11:15 p.m.

Mike Puzzanghera

WORCESTER — In Chelmsford, they’re partying like it’s 1966.

For the first time in 59 years, the Lions are state champions, after a heroic ninth-inning rally plated six runs to topple Braintree, 8-2, Friday night at Polar Park.

But to give the town its long-awaited triumph, the 14th-seeded Lions (19-8) needed their superstar — senior Matt Stuart — to put in a herculean effort. That’s exactly what the Gardner-Webb committed righthander did.

Stuart fired a complete game, striking out six and surrendering just a pair of runs, and added three hits and a run at the plate.

Continue reading Mike Puzzanghera’s story


Kris Vaivers smashes the clincher, resilient Brookline boys’ volleyball bounces back to rule Division 1 — 10:40 p.m.

AJ Traub

WESTWOOD — One more point to win in his high school career. Kris Vaivars knew the ball would come his way.

The senior smashed the last of his 24 kills off defending fingertips, the ball sailing out the back as Brookline’s title drought since 1992 came to an end at Xaverian Brothers.

“It’s surreal,” Vaivars said. “Nothing feels real right now. Just being here is amazing.”

Continue reading AJ Traub’s story


Scenes as Brookline nets long-sought volleyball title — 10:25 p.m.

Brookline’s Alec Smagula sets the ball during the second set of its Division 1 boys’ volleyball championship game against Needham in Westwood.Ken McGagh for The Boston Globe
Brookline’s Amir Tomer (center) celebrates a point with Alec Smagula during the second set.Ken McGagh for The Boston Globe
Kristaps Vaivars (right) celebrates with Brookline teammates Liam Raybould and libero Jacob Lam after his championship-clinching kill in the fourth set.Ken McGagh for The Boston Globe
Kristaps Vaivars lifts the Division 1 trophy, Brookline’s first since 1992.Ken McGagh for The Boston Globe

Scenes from Medfield’s Division 3 dominance — 10:15 p.m.

Izzy Kittredge scores one of her six goals in Friday’s victory over Newburyport at Babson College.Heather Diehl for the Boston Glo
Medfield captain Michaela McDonald looks to make a pass.Heather Diehl for the Boston Glo
Newburyport’s Reese Bromby is fouled by Medfield’s Izzy Kittredge.Heather Diehl for the Boston Glo
Medfield’s Sarah Faust (left) celebrates with her team after scoring.Heather Diehl for the Boston Glo
The Medfield girls celebrate their latest Division 3 state championship.Heather Diehl for the Boston Glo

Chelmsford is the champion — 10:00 p.m.

No. 14 is No. 1 as Chelmsford finished off Braintree with a 6-run ninth at Polar Park, the Lions winning the school’s first Division 1 baseball state championship since 1966.


Mid 9: Chelmsford 8, Braintree 2 — 9:55 p.m.

Chelmsford is on the cusp of ending its Cinderella run in the Division 1 baseball tournament as the belle of the ball.

The Lions loaded the bases with no one out in the ninth, then retook the lead in the state final when freshman Aidan Brackett — who took a ball to the neck earlier in the game — faked a bunt, then drove a ground ball through the left side.

A Matt Hall sacrifice fly made it 4-2. A John Latham chopper got through the drawn-in infield at shortstop to make it 6-2, and a wild pitch and a Will Colucci single made it a six-run inning.

Matt Stuart, who needed only 86 pitches to get through the first eight innings, sits three outs away from delivering a championship.


Chelmsford, Braintree on to the ninth, 2-2 — 9:40 p.m.

More zeros traded in the eighth inning at Polar Park. Peter Brooks made the final out from third base after a pair of Matt Rogers strikeouts in the top half, and Matt Stuart answered for Chelmsford in the bottom half, erasing a leadoff single.

If you’re curious, we’ve got a long way to go until reaching the record books for the longest Division 1 championship game. Chelmsford needed 14 innings to beat Stoughton, 6-5, in 1966.


Seven innings weren’t enough to decide the Division 1 baseball champion.

Three Matt Stuart strikeouts finish off the seventh, stranding a pair of runners, and a raucous crowd at Polar Park will get to see the state’s two best teams play on.


Medfield wins Division 3 girls’ lacrosse title — 9:10 p.m.

The Warriors repeat with a dominant 18-8 victory, against beating Newburyport. Izzy Kittredge injured her ankle in the fourth quarter, but not before she potted six goals for the state champions.

It’s Medfield’s third Division 3 state championship in four years.


All even between Chelmsford, Braintree — 9:00 p.m.

It’s 2-2 at Polar Park.

Matt Rodgers’s sixth-inning RBI single drove in Peter Brooks, who reached base on a dropped third strike and advanced on a sacrifice bunt in the sixth, and the Division 1 baseball final is tied going into the seventh inning.


Superb defensive play keeps it 2-1, Chelmsford — 8:50 p.m.

John Latham looked ready for the WooSox in the bottom of the fifth, not only running down Sean Canavan’s long shot to center field, but turning it into a double play.

The Division 1 final remains a one-run game.


Brookline claims Division 1 boys’ volleyball title — 8:45 p.m.

A back-and-forth battle was anything but in the fourth set, as the Warriors ripped off a 15-3 run on their way to a 25-15 victory in the clincher.


Medfield pulling away from Newburyport — 8:43 p.m.

With Newburyport down a player due to accumulated cards, Medfield scored the final three goals of the third, taking a 13-7 lead — its largest of the game — into the final quarter of the Division 3 girls’ lacrosse final at Babson.


Mid 5: Chelmsford 2, Braintree 1 — 8:35 p.m.

The scoreboard has flipped at Polar Park.

With two outs and the bases loaded, a infield fly dropped in and scored a pair of runs, the latter via Will Colucci racing home from second.


North Reading baseball’s two-year trek to a Division 3 state championship ends in elation — 8:22 p.m.

Graham Dietz

WORCESTER — With no seniors on his roster last year, North Reading baseball coach Eric Archambault felt the road to a state championship required two seasons.

“This was really like a two-year journey for us,” Archambault said. “In our last practice, I just told them ‘This isn’t practice 38 for us. This is practice 75, 76 — something in that range.’ Because it’s a two-year journey when you don’t graduate anyone.”

Archambault’s plan blossomed into a reality Friday at Polar Park as the ninth-seeded Hornets captured the Division 3 state championship, 10-3, over No. 11 Arlington Catholic thanks to a five-run first inning.

Continue reading Graham Dietz’s story


Brookline claims third set, within one of title — 8:20 p.m.

The Warriors have made it two sets in a row at the Division 1 boys’ volleyball final, building leads of 17-12 and 20-15, then hanging on despite a run of Matty Cloonan kills to get Needham within 22-21.

Kris Vaivars helped close it out, 25-22, and Brookline is within a set of its first state title in more than 30 years.


Kittredge, Medfield in control at the half — 8:15 p.m.

Reese Bromby and Avery Tahnk pulled Newburyport within 6-5 with the first two goals of the second quarter in the Division 3 girls’ lacrosse final, but Izzy Kittredge ripped off three straight for her team in response.

She has five goals, and it’s a 9-6 lead for top-seeded Medfield at the half.


Determined and relentless, no denying Walpole girls’ lacrosse the Division 2 championship — 8:05 p.m.

Trevor Hass

WELLESLEY — After each Walpole goal, coach Mike Tosone put his head down, briskly paced the sideline, then immediately returned to his home base, bent over, and placed his hands on his knees.

Even as the Timberwolves’ lead ballooned once, then again after a Reading comeback, Tosone wouldn’t allow himself or his team to get complacent.

For a perennial contender appearing in its fifth state title game in the last 10 years, including last spring, Friday’s Division 2 girls’ lacrosse championship game served as an opportunity to finish what they started.

Walpole didn’t squander it, earning a hard-fought, 16-11, victory at Babson College.

Continue reading Trevor Hass’s story


Braintree opens the scoring at Polar Park — 8:00 p.m.

Connor Grieve smacked the last of three two-out singles in the bottom of the third, giving the Wamps an early edge on upset-minded Chelmsford in Division 1 baseball.


Medfield girls’ lacrosse up, 6-3, after one — 7:50 p.m.

The defending champions scored five of the first six goals in the Division 3 final, but after a pair of Newburyport tallies, Izzy Kittredge built the lead back to three goals with a free position shot 12 seconds from the end of the quarter.


Brookline snipes second set from Needham to pull even — 7:45 p.m.

The Rockets pulled out to leads of 6-1 and 13-9 in the second, but the top seeds battled back to pull even at 18-18. The teams largely traded points into extras from there, and after Needham squandered multiple chances at a two-set lead, an Amir Tomer kill and an Alex Smagula block finished it, 27-25.


Medfield takes early lead in Division 3 girls’ lacrosse — 7:30 p.m.

In just four minutes, top-seeded Medfield has built a 3-0 lead as it seeks to again beat No. 2 Newburyport for a state championship.

Izzy Kittredge, Kendall Herrick, and Mia Macropoulous have the goals, the last coming with 8:16 left in the opening quarter.


Division 1 baseball final nearing first pitch at Polar Park — 7:10 p.m.

It’s not the matchup anyone expected, except maybe these two teams, as eighth-seeded Braintree (16-8) takes on 14th-seeded Chelmsford (18-8).


Needham takes first set — 7:05 p.m.

Will McDonald sealed the first set, 25-20, for the Rockets.


Needham takes first lead — 6:55 p.m.

Andrew Kurdziel started the match with a pair of kills and Needham is up 6-1 in the first set. Timeout Brookline.

After the timeout Needham continued to extend its lead, going up 13-6 in the first set.


Division 1 boys’ volleyball championship about to start — 6:45 p.m.

Top-seeded Brookline (22-1) is making its first title-game appearance since 1992, while No. 3 Needham (21-5) is here for the fifth-straight year in an all-Bay State final at Xaverian.


Walpole wins its first girls’ lacrosse state championship — 6:40 p.m.

Final: Walpole 16, Reading 11

Caitlyn Naughton, Jenna Wong, and Ava MacLean all scored four goals for the Timberwolves, who end their title drought.


Walpole inching closer to state title — 6:30 p.m.

Walpole playing keep-away, up 15-10 with 3:30 to play in the Division 2 girls’ lacrosse championship game.


Walpole builds on its lead in fourth quarter — 6:25 p.m.

Walpole 15, Reading 9, 9:23 left 4th quarter

With back-to-back goals from Ava MacLean, the Timberwolves have built their largest lead of the game.


North Reading wins the Division 3 baseball championship! — 6:20 p.m.

Final: North Reading 10, Arlington Catholic 3

The ninth-seeded Hornets led the entire way to capture their first crown in 13 years.

Nick Torra was 3 for 4 at the dish with a double and three RBIs, Matt Mancinelli went 2 for 3 with two RBIs and Christian Lava was 2 for 4 with three RBIs.


North Reading taking control — 6:15 p.m.

North Reading 10, Arlington Catholic 3, bottom 6th

Matt Macinelli doubles to deep left, scoring Christian Lava and Gavin Brady as the Hornets are now three outs away from their first state championship since 2012.


After 3 quarters: Walpole 13, Reading 8 — 6:10 p.m.

Timberwolves end the quarter on a 6-1 run to build a five-goal lead heading into the final 12 minutes.


North Reading pulling away in sixth — 6:05 p.m.

North Reading 8, Arlington Catholic 3, bottom 6th


Walpole regains the lead — 6:00 p.m.

Walpole 10, Reading 7, 4:41 left 3rd quarter

Caitlyn Naughton’s third goal of the day put the Timberwolves up 8-7, Lily Rodgers completed her own hat trick shortly after, and Emily Hagan pushed the advantage to three goals.


Reading ties it up in third quarter — 5:55 p.m.

Walpole 7, Reading 7, 8:15 left 3rd quarter

A minute out of halftime, Walpole’s Riley Halloran scores for a 7-5 lead, but Libby Quinn scores on a free position shot to make it 7-6 before Lily Rodgers nets her third goal of the game for a 7-7 tie. Reading is on a 6-1 run since falling behind 6-1.


North Reading extends its lead — 5:45 p.m.

North Reading 6, Arlington Catholic 3, top 6th

The Hornets scored in the bottom of the fifth for the first time since the first inning when Matt Mancinelli raced from first to score on a bloop single to center.

There’s also a pitching change to start the sixth. North Reading starter Dylan Matthews pitched five innings, pitching around eight hits and five walks to allow three runs. Glenn Melo coming on in relief.

Arlington Catholic also went to its bullpen in the sixth, pulling starter Patrick Clair after he allowed eight hits, two walks, and six runs in five innings. EJ LaValle relieves him.


Halftime: Walpole 6, Reading 4 — 5:42 p.m.

The Rockets scored three unanswered goals to end the second quarter and got six saves from Addyson Mathews to get right back in this game. Reading’s final goal of the half came from Abby Shanahan off a feed from Molly Trahan.


Middle 5th: North Reading 5, Arlington Catholic 3 — 5:38 p.m.

The Cougars put two on with one out in the fifth but a 6-4-3 double play from North Reading ended the threat.


Reading cuts its deficit again — 5:35 p.m.

Walpole 6, Reading 3, 6:57 left 2nd quarter

Walpole, Reading trade goals early in 2nd — 5:30 p.m.

Walpole’s Jenna Wong scores 13 seconds into the second frame for a 6-1 lead, but sophomore Lily Rodgers gets one back for Reading, still in the opening minute of the second quarter.


End 1st quarter: Walpole 5, Reading 1 — 5:25 p.m.

Caitlyn Naughton’s second goal gave the Timberwolves a four-goal advantage after the opening 12 minutes.


Arlington Catholic inching closer — 5:25 p.m.

North Reading 5, Arlington Catholic 3, bottom 4th

For the third-straight inning, the Cougars cut their deficit by a run, this time on an RBI single from Trey Flaherty.


Walpole puts three on the board in a flurry — 5:20 p.m.

Walpole 4, Reading 1, 1st quarter

Emily Hagan, Sophia Fruci, and Ava McLean scored in a 70-second span for the Timberwolves.


After 3: North Reading 5, Arlington Catholic 0 — 5:15 p.m.

The Hornets haven’t put one on the board since the first, while the Cougars have scored one run in each the second and third innings.


Reading, Walpole knotted at 1-1 in early going — 5:10 p.m.

Jacklyn Shimansky scored for Reading and Caitlyn Naughton answered for Walpole and it’s only three minutes into the game.


Arlington Catholic closes the gap in 3rd — 5:05 p.m.

Tyler Valente singled to center, scoring a run and pulling the Cougars within 5-2 in the top of the third.


Division 2 girls’ lacrosse final about to start — 5 p.m.

Second-seeded Walpole will face fourth-seeded Reading at Babson College.

Walpole looking for its first state title, despite playing in its fifth championship game, while Reading, also looking for its first title, is coming off an upset of top-ranked and three-time defending champion Notre Dame (Hingham).


Arlington Catholic gets one back — 4:45 p.m.

North Reading 5, Arlington Catholic 1, middle 2nd

Connor Fleming-Benison, the No. 9 hitter, gets ahold of an RBI double, sending it to deep center and scoring Patrick Clair (walk) for the Cougars’ first run.


Top 2nd: North Reading 5, Arlington Catholic 0 — 4:40 p.m.

When it was all said and done, the Hornets scored five runs in the bottom of the first, the last two coming home on Nick Torra’s single to left.


North Reading goes ahead in bottom 1st — 4:30 p.m.

North Reading 3, Arlington Catholic 0, bottom 1st

Christian Lava’s RBI single scored Antonio Ricca for the game’s first run and moments later, Gavin Brady’s RBI groundout scored Jason Curran and Max Forristall added an RBI single for a 3-0 North Reading lead, still in the first.


Mid 1st: Arlington Catholic 0, North Reading 0 — 4:17 p.m.

Arlington Catholic leadoff hitter Trey Flaherty got on base with a single through third base, and Matthew Toland was intentionally walked to put two Cougars on base. Both were stranded.


Lineups for Game 1 — 4:00 p.m.


How North Reading and Wakefield got here — 3:50 p.m.

Semifinals:

North Reading 6, Wakefield 0 — North Reading starting pitcher Ethan Quan felt shaky. His curveball wasn’t turning. His changeup wouldn’t dip.

But he trusted his gut through a bases-loaded jam in the top of the first, and completed all seven innings in shutout fashion, clinching the ninth-seeded Hornets (20-4) a spot in the state championship at Polar Park.

“My arm couldn’t feel any better,” Quan said. “Wasn’t the best start, had the bases loaded, but I have a great staff. My pitching coach over there, my coaches and my teammates, they helped me keep the ball low and that seemed to be effective.”

The North Reading baseball team is headed to the Division 3 championship game after taking down Wakefield, 6-0.Graham Dietz

Quan only registered two strikeouts but limited No. 13 Wakefield (18-6) to zero runs on four walks and five hits.

“Honestly, the key to the game for him was those first three innings,” North Reading coach Eric Archambault said. “I think they had base runners in all three innings, and for him to be able to work out of those jams — I mean, if they rip a double there it’s a completely different game.”

North Reading centerfielder Gavin Brady (3), right fielder Max Forristall, and second baseman Antonio Ricca celebrate after Forristall caught the final out of the Hornets’ 6-0 win over Wakefield Wednesday at Fraser Field in Lynn. North Reading will face Arlington Catholic in the Division 3 championship.Robert Marra Photography

Christian Lava scooted a two-run single through the right side of the infield to put the Hornets on the board in the top of the third inning. A Glenn Mello moonshot scored Nick Torra in the top of the fifth, and effective baserunning led to two more North Reading runs.

Jason Curran scored on a passed ball, and Gavin Brady raced home on a sacrifice bunt by Max Forristall.

North Reading players swarm the mound to celebrate their 6-0 win over Wakefield Wednesday at Fraser Field in Lynn.Robert Marra Photography

Archambault wisely chose to intentionally walk Wakefield junior Jack Pennacchia whenever he stepped up to bat. Andrew Nemec led the Warriors with a single and a double.

“We just weren’t going to let [Pennacchia] beat us,” Archambault said. “He is such a phenomenal player. I’ve seen him in person, seen his highlights, talked to a few people and I know he’s a key cog when he gets going.”

Junior Ethan Quan pitched a complete game and shut out Wakefield 6-0 at Fraser Field in Lynn to lead North Reading into the MIAA Division 3 baseball championship this weekend against Arlington Catholic.Robert Marra Photography

Arlington Catholic 5, Sandwich 4 — With Tyler Valente singling home Matt Toland with the winning run in the top of the eighth, the 11th-seeded Cougars (16-6) clawed past No. 7 Sandwich (18-6) and into the championship game. Toland finished with two hits and two RBIs, and Patrick Clair pitched three hitless, scoreless innings of relief with two strikeouts after starter Tyler Nelson went five innings, allowing four runs on six hits and three walks with six strikeouts.


It’s a beautiful day for baseball at Polar Park — 3:40 p.m.

The first game of the day is the Division 3 baseball final, pitting ninth-seeded North Reading (20-4) and 11th-seeded Arlington Catholic (16-6) and Graham Dietz will have coverage from Worcester.


Brendan Kurie can be reached at brendan.kurie@globe.com. Follow him on X @BrendanKurie.





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