Connor Koski lifts El Camino Real to City Section Open Division boys' volleyball title
'I timed my jump and I thought it was going out but I guess it hit [an opposing player's] foot on the way down,' said an exuberant Koski, who moved from middle blocker to opposite hitter before the playoffs. 'I asked [coach Alyssa Lee] to switch me and it worked.'
El Camino Real's triumph culminated in a 25-21, 25-20, 20-25, 25-21 victory over top-seeded Venice, but the title was four years in the making. Eleven of the Royals' 12 players are seniors.
'We're all friends, we all trust each other and it's a dream come true to win a championship in one of our last matches together,' said Tyler Lee, who paced the squad with 14 kills. 'We've lost our share of five setters, so we wanted to end this thing in four.'
Koski, El Camino Real's lone junior, had eight kills, including one to end the second set. Dev Vunnam and Christian Romero also each had eight kills, Jackson Riepe had seven and Nicolas Gerola served four aces, the first of which gave El Camino Real the first set.
The third-seeded Royals (27-13) got hot at the right time and avenged a pair of West Valley League losses to Chatsworth by ending the Chancellors' bid for a third straight Open title with a shocking 25-23, 25-16, 25-22 semifinal upset Tuesday.
'I've known this group since their freshman year and I've push them hard in practice to prepare them for those situations,' said Lee, who understands the intensity of every match in the West Valley League, having played libero for Granada Hills before graduating in 2009. 'The physical talent is there but the mental training is so important. You have to stay focused and can't let up.'
Lee coached the boys to the Division I title in 2016 (the Open Division debuted in 2018) and guided the girls to the Open championship in 2023. She also has coached the girls to two beach volleyball crowns.
'The first two times we played Chatsworth I just let the boys play but I game-planned a lot for the semifinals,' Lee said. 'We needed a big guy on the right like Connor to block and get some kills.'
Trailing by four points early in the third set and in danger of being swept, the Gondoliers (36-6) used an 8-0 run to surge into the lead and finished it on Nathan Hoggatt's emphatic kill. Noah Smith had 10 kills for Venice, last year's Division I champion.
Something had to give as Venice entered on an 11-match winning streak dating back to April 21 (dropping only one set in the process) while El Camino Real had won five consecutive matches and 15 straight sets since April 9.
In Saturday's Division II final, hitter Izac Garcia helped Valley Academy of Arts and Sciences take home its first City title after a 20-25, 25-22, 25-21, 25-15 triumph over Mendez, which was seeking its first crown since back-to-back Division III championships in 2021-22.
Hamilton, last year's Division V champion, moved up to Division IV and beat Port of LA for the championship. In Division V, Wilson downed Harbor Teacher for its first-ever title.
On the same floor Friday, top-seeded Taft captured its seventh section crown, sixth in Division I and first since 2015 with its 25-10, 25-20, 25-17 sweep of No. 2 Carson. Arman Mercado, who took over the girls' program in 2000 and the boys two years later, coached the girls to their first Open Division title in the fall and has guided the Toreadors to 22 finals appearances.
East Valley swept Maywood CES for the Division III title — the Falcons' first in boys volleyball.
Also on Friday, Mira Costa outlasted Huntington Beach in five sets in a South Bay showdown for the Southern Section Division 1 championship at Cerritos College. The top-seeded Mustangs prevailed, 25-19, 22-25, 25-19, 29-31, 15-11, behind 25 kills from Grayson Bradford — the last from the right side to end the match.
Mateo Fuerbringer added 17 kills for Mira Costa, which fell in three sets to Loyola in the finals last spring. Logan Hutnick led the charge for the second-seeded Oilers, who staved off four championship points in a wild fourth set. It was the Mustangs' ninth section title and first since 2021.
Mater Dei rallied to beat Peninsula 20-25, 25-17, 25-13, 25-19 in Division 2.
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USA Today
5 hours ago
- USA Today
Ian Baker-Finch to sign off from CBS today at Wyndham Championship after 30 years in TV
GREENSBORO, N.C. – After 30 years of broadcasting the PGA Tour, Ian Baker-Finch signing off from CBS Sports on Sunday with the network's final broadcast of the season at the Wyndham Championship. 'Since I made the decision, it's the best I've felt in a long time,' he said. Baker-Finch said he began wrestling with the decision last year at the Masters and RBC Heritage when he realized it represented his 40th year either playing or announcing at those events. 'That's what sort of got me thinking, what's next?' he explained. During his playing career, his powerful swing and competitive spirit was his appeal. Later, his charming personality and soothing voice added to his legacy. The Australian won the 1991 British Open at Royal Birkdale as a player and after he lost his game just a few years later, he made a successful transition to announcing, spending the last 19 years with CBS. Coincidentally, his remarkable story is detailed in a fascinating authorized biography, Ian Baker-Finch: To Hell and Back, which is to be released officially on Monday. Baker-Finch was introduced to golf by his father, who along with his fellow farmers helped build Beerwah Golf Club, a nine-hole course built on 100 acres of pine forest in the Sunshine hinterland of Queensland a mere six miles from the family farm. Baker-Finch received his first clubs – a 2-wood, 3-, 5- and 7-iron and a putter – on his 12th birthday, and was the only student in his school to play the game. He worked at local farms to earn enough money to build a full set at $15 a club. He got his first matched set at age 14 and a year later, in 1975, he received Jack Nicklaus's instructional book Golf My Way, which became his golf bible, as a birthday present from his parents. From those humble beginnings, he left school at age 15 to pursue a career in the game. 'I had this dream of being a club pro, giving lessons and being part of the fabric of a club,' Baker-Finch recalled. 'I never thought I'd be an Open champion.' For many golf fans, the 1984 Open at St. Andrews represented Baker-Finch's first real splash on the world stage. He held a share of the 54-hole lead and played with Tom Watson in the final pairing before skying to 79. Jim Nantz, who would become his longtime friend and broadcast partner at CBS, remembers being dazzled by Baker-Finch's play. 'He was just 23 and you could tell he was going to be a star,' Nantz said. Baker-Finch would surpass his wildest dreams by winning the 1991 Open at Royal Birkdale. In the final round, Baker-Finch sank a 15-foot birdie at the par-3 seventh to go 5 under for the day. He looked up at the leaderboard as he walked to the eighth tee and realized he held a five-shot lead. 'I thought, 'Bloody hell, do not stuff it up from here. I will not be allowed back home,' ' he wrote in his biography. Pete Bender compared caddying for Baker-Finch that week to riding Secretariat, the champion thoroughbred racehorse, and all he had to do was hold on. During his victory speech, Baker-Finch said, 'The pain of the other couple of times when I had a chance to do it gave me the strength to do it today. I will cherish this trophy forever.' Within three years of his Open conquest, his game was in tatters. The 1993 Australian PGA Championship was the last of his 17 wins as a professional golfer. In 1995, he played in 15 tournaments on the PGA Tour and missed every single cut. He hit rock bottom at the 1997 Open at Troon, shooting 92 in the opening round and withdrew. At age 36, six years after being hailed as the Champion Golfer of the Year, his playing career was over. To this day, he regrets playing that round at Troon because the scar tissue became too deep. 'Had I not played that day,' he mused, 'I may have come back to playing but then that was the sliding door moment to the TV career.' Baker-Finch had dabbled in TV the year before while nursing injuries back home in Australia and served as the lead analyst for all four networks in his native land during the summer portion of the schedule as well contributing to the Open Championship for ABC. Its producer at the time, Jack Graham, called him and said, 'I know you would love to get back to playing but if you don't, you've got a job with us.' As a broadcaster, he was a gifted storyteller and determined to follow the principles of 'less is more.' He made a point to glean fresh information from players. 'There was always a warmth quotient,' said CBS's play-by-play commentator Jim Nantz. 'Everyone loves Ian. His genuine kindness always shone through.' 'Everything Finchy said had meaning and purpose,' said CBS executive producer of golf Sellers Shy. 'As our mate steps away, he leaves 19 memorable years at CBS Sports defined by integrity, excellence and kindness. Retirement is a fitting reward for someone who gave so much to the game – and to all of us.' Calling the fifth Green Jacket for Tiger Woods in 2019 and Rory McIlroy completing the career Grand Slam are among the highlights of his broadcasting career. When Adam Scott became the first Australian golfer to don the Green Jacket, Nantz threw the called to Baker-Finch, Scott's fellow Queenslander, who famously said, 'From Down Under to on top of the world, Jim.' Baker-Finch turns 65 in October, and his latest contract was set to expire. His desire to do the preparation required to broadcast at the highest level 23 weeks a year had waned. 'I don't ever want to get to the point where the producer and the team have to sort of legacy protect, if you will. I'm not there yet, but at nearly 65 you start feeling that way,' he said. Baker-Finch looks forward to traveling and enjoying various wine regions and playing more golf, 'and working on my game a little bit because that's what I love to do,' he said. He'll spend more time with wife Jenny and his daughters and grandchildren. The month of March he'll go to New Zealand as he and Jenny enjoyed this year plus three months in Australia, playing a bunch of golf in the Melbourne Sandbelt region while doing it all at his own pace. He'll keep his hands busy doing some golf course design work and still travel to several of golf's biggest events for meetings in his role as chairman of the board of the PGA of Australia. He expects his final broadcast to be an emotional one as the CBS broadcast team has become a second family and for three decades he's been one of the integral voices that make up the soundtrack of the game. 'I hope people saw me as someone who loved the game and respected the players and brought a calm and honest perspective to the coverage,' he said. 'It's never been about me. I'm sort of uncomfortable when something's about me. The love and support I've received since I went public with my retirement has been overwhelming. I do think there may be some on social media that'll say good riddance, we didn't like the accent, or we didn't like him or he was never tough enough on the players but that doesn't worry me. I think the majority will say, 'Hey, he did a good job. He loved the game. We'll miss him.' "
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
France U21 Star Takes To The Pitch For Inter Milan For The First Time In Behind-Closed-Doors Friendly
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Chicago Tribune
a day ago
- Chicago Tribune
Chinatown residents express aspirations, concerns for proposed Chicago Fire stadium
When Jerry Lee moved to Chicago nearly five years ago, the California native found community hard to come by. As the 31-year-old landed in town for graduate school, he didn't know a single person, though he found one place that felt like home: Chinatown. Now, with the Chicago Fire soccer team announcing in June plans for a proposed $650 million soccer stadium a half a mile away from Chinatown, Lee and other Chicago residents have started to wonder about the neighborhood's future as Chinatowns in other cities continue to dwindle. 'Chinatown was (somewhere) that allowed me … to find a place where I felt like I fit in,' Lee said at a recent town hall where community members voiced their qualms and hopes for the development. As envisioned, the Fire's proposed stadium, slated to open ahead of the 2028 Major League Soccer regular season, would be situated along the Chicago River just south of Roosevelt Road and total 22,000 seats. The stadium would be privately funded by the Fire's owner, Joe Mansueto, and serve as the anchor tenant of The 78, an empty stretch of riverfront southwest of the Loop where developer Related Midwest has sought for years to plant a brand-new neighborhood. During a two-hour meeting Wednesday night at Chinatown's Pui Tak Center, organized by the Coalition for a Better Chinese American Community and Teen Coalition for Chinatown, concerns that The 78 would gentrify and displace residents of the historic Chinatown neighborhood were ever present. But organizers made it clear that the gathering was just the start of a larger conversation over the project, noting their goal is to have an end product that residents can gain from, rather than feel the weight of. 'This is going to affect all of us,' said Yu Jing Chen, founder and adviser of the Teen Coalition for Chinatown. 'Not just in the next couple of years but, really, for generations to come. … Yeah, there is such great potential. But we really need to do this together.' The Fire's new home is to serve as a catalyst for realizing the broader vision of The 78, according to Related Midwest, which includes retail, residential, outdoor gathering spaces and a half-mile riverwalk — none of which has yet come to fruition. Both the Fire and Related Midwest have touted that the proposed stadium will create thousands of jobs and generate millions of dollars in tax revenue for the city. Related has also previously spoken of its commitment to bringing up to 1,000 new affordable units to the city as it builds The 78. Yet among the concerns raised at Wednesday's meeting was what affordability would mean in real time. Event organizers noted that what's affordable in Chinatown is different from what would be affordable in the neighboring South Loop. There's also the concern that new development would suddenly raise rents and property values for surrounding neighborhoods. Andy Chen, who lives in University Village and does business in Chinatown, said he wants to ensure that his two sons, 11 and 15, can afford to live in Chicago when they are older. But Chen, 47, worries private development will come at the expense of public interest, which isn't 'the kind of community or world that we want to live in,' he said. Chen is also concerned about congestion and public safety. A cyclist and proponent of alternative transportation, Chen said he wants his oldest son to be able to ride his bike to school in the South Loop. But with the high foot traffic a new stadium would bring, congestion could get 'much, much worse,' he said. By starting a conversation now, community leaders said they are looking to chart a path forward beneficial to all stakeholders. Here's why Chicago's Chinatown is booming, even as others across the U.S. fade'We really want to proactively plan for this catalytic investment,' Sarah Tang, director of programs for the Coalition for a Better Chinese American Community (CBCAC), said, later adding: 'We're at the perfect (time) to collect community feedback and to do something together.' Born and raised in San Francisco's historic Chinatown with family still there today, Lee said that while applying for graduate schools, he only considered cities with Chinatown districts, ultimately choosing the University of Chicago. Lee fears resident displacement for Chicago's Chinatown in the wake of other Chinatowns across the country facing similar pressures. In 1997, the home of the Washington Capitals hockey team and the Wizards basketball team, today known as Capital One Arena, moved to D.C.'s Chinatown community. The Associated Press reported in 2022 that the project brought rising rents and chain restaurants, forcing the community out. Most recently, the Philadelphia 76ers had plans in the works to build a $1.3 billion arena just a block away from the gateway arch for Philadelphia's Chinatown. A coalition to oppose the arena composed of more than 40 Chinatown community groups, nonprofits and business organizations formed in response. Earlier this year, the 76ers abandoned the arena plans. Since Related Midwest acquired The 78 property in 2016, the undeveloped swath of land has been in the running to be home of new enterprises, from Amazon's second headquarters to a new publicly funded ballpark for the White Sox. Chinatown was most actively involved when Related Midwest sought to bring a casino to the megadevelopment a few years ago, said Grace Chan McKibben, executive director of CBCAC. The proposal spurred CBCAC to amass more than 2,000 signatures in opposition. Related Midwest lost its bid for the casino in 2022. McKibben said the goal is to work in tandem with not only Related Midwest but also the city and adjacent neighborhoods that also stand to be affected by development, including Pilsen and Bronzeville. Related Midwest has echoed the sentiment. In a statement to the Tribune, the developer said it has 'prioritized community engagement, as we do with every one of our real estate developments in Chicago. This includes outreach to Chinatown residents and other neighbors most impacted by our proposal.' To date, Related has engaged in several community meetings on its current project plans. In June, hundreds attended a town hall about The 78 hosted by Ald. Pat Dowell, 3rd, where Related Midwest President Curt Bailey presented a proposed development plan. 'Working alongside the Chicago Fire,' Related said in its statement, 'we look forward to continuing this dialogue with the local Aldermen, their constituents and other stakeholders to address any questions they may have and ensure this transformational project brings benefits to the community while respecting its surroundings.' Ald. Nicole Lee, 11th, who represents the Bridgeport and Chinatown neighborhoods, attended the town hall as an audience member. 'I was really happy to be here today to hear all of the community's concerns,' she said after the meeting. She also said she's looking forward to continuing the conversation. 'Relationships with the developers, with the city, between everybody, creates the most wins possible, because this should be a good thing,' she said. 'We need development in the city.'