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Irish Examiner
13-07-2025
- Sport
- Irish Examiner
Pat Ryan gets minutes into his extended Cork panellists in League deciders
PAT RYAN took the chance to get some game time into his extended Cork panel as the finals of the Red FM Cork Hurling League took place across the weekend. Sarsfields chose to use Cathal McCarthy and Daniel Hogan in the second half of their Division 1 final victory over a St Finbarr's side who did the same with William Buckley and Jack Cahalane. Midleton took the Division 2 title with a victory over Killeagh while in Division 3, Eoin Roche played the opening half for Bride Rovers as they bested Newcestown by 1-29 to 3-16 in the final. In the end it took Rovers extra time to see off Newcestown at a sundrenched Riverstown, as they overturned a four-point deficit in extra time before kicking for home. Adam Walsh was their scorer in chief with 0-13, Conor Barry plundered 0-6, Louie Roche hit 1-2 while Conleith Ryan, Ronan O'Connell and David Barry all clipped 0-2. Eddie Kenneally underlined his importance to Newcestown in scoring 1-10, Jack Meade hit 1-1, including his customary sideline, while Gearóid O'Donovan raised their third green flag in extra time. Bandon suffered disappointment for the second weekend in-a-row as Inniscarra edged them by 3-11 to 2-13 in the Division 4 final played in Ballinhassig. Andrew McCarthy's goal six minutes from time was the key score for Inniscarra as it gave them the edge in the final stages. McCarthy also hit 0-2 for the winners, Pádraig Holland scored 1-2, Mark Nagle clipped 1-1 while Joseph Enright pilfered 0-4. Michael Cahalane top scored for Bandon with 0-7, Mark Sugrue scored 1-2 while Ciarán McCarthy clipped 1-1. Bandon's disappointment in losing hurling and football finals will be offset by the promotion in both codes. Pictured with the Red FM Div 1 Hurling league trophy were John, Orla and Hollie Crowley from Sarsfields. Picture: Howard Crowdy Where Bandon suffered double disappointment, Aghabullogue experienced double joy as they claimed the Division 5 title to go with their Division 4 football title with a 5-14 to 1-9 win over Ballyhea in Glantane. Matthew Bradley, as he so often does, led the way for Aghabullogue by scoring 1-7, James Lane hit Ballyhea for 2-2 while Luke Casey clipped 2-1. Luke Crowley raised Ballyhea's green flag, while John Morrissey and Maurice O'Sullivan both scored 0-3. The Division 6 final saw Glen Rovers and Cloyne clash in Caherlag with the city men earning a 1-14 to 0-16 victory. Cloyne seemed to be the stronger side for 40 minutes of this game but Evan Murphy's goal in the 41st-first minute tipped the tie in the Glen's favour. Murphy supplemented his goal with seven points while Dylan Long and Lee Quilligan both hit Cloyne for 0-2. Brian O'Shea led the charge for Cloyne with 0-9 while Conor Cahill hit 0-3 from midfield. Finally, Diarmuid Ó Mathúna's took the Division 7 title as late goals from Gearóid O'Donovan and Caolán O'Donovan fired them to a 3-12 to 0-15 win over Killavullen in Ballyanley. Caolán O'Donovan added 0-9 to his goal for the West Cork men, Gearóid O'Donovan also clipped a point while Jamie Lucey hit Killavullen for 1-1. For Killavullen, Jamie Magner was their top man with 0-8 while Owen Magner helped himself to 0-3.


Los Angeles Times
20-06-2025
- Sport
- Los Angeles Times
Daily Pilot Boys' Volleyball Dream Team: Sage Hill's Jackson Cryst could do it all
Jackson Cryst has likely always been the big man on campus. The 6-foot-10 outsider hitter took the Sage Hill boys' volleyball program to new heights during an unbelievable two-year stint that was no tall tale. While much remains ahead for Cryst, who is joining reigning national champion Long Beach State to continue playing volleyball, his high school career closed three weeks ago with the highest of highs. Sage Hill, largely because of Cryst, went down in history as one of the inaugural boys' volleyball state champions, as the Lightning beat San Francisco International 25-19, 25-16, 25-23 for the CIF State Division III title. Cryst had 23 kills, three service aces and 1½ total blocks in the state final, the last game in an extended winning streak that spanned more than six weeks. The season-saving streak began on April 17 with a five-set win over Portola that got the Lightning back to the .500 mark after an 0-5 start. Sage Hill (22-11) grabbed an at-large bid into the Southern Section's Division 4 bracket, then made good on that chance by edging Santa Barbara in five sets for its second consecutive CIF title. After winning back-to-back CIF titles and earning divisional player of the year honors in his two seasons at Sage Hill, Cryst is the Daily Pilot Boys' Volleyball Dream Team Player of the Year. Cryst insisted that winning championships was not a byproduct of 'the Jackson show,' saying that he learned about how to lead a team and make others around him better. Junior Connor Gapp, who split his playing time between setter and opposite, and junior outside hitter Ryan Manesh became key contributors. 'I think that was a really surprising challenge that I wasn't ready for, that I'm not just going to be able to jump my way and hit my way out of everything,' Cryst said. 'That helps in crunch-time matches, but volleyball is the ultimate team sport. I can't hit a ball without someone setting it, and you can't set it without someone passing it, so I think it was really incredible to actually be able to understand that. Now, if I can apply that to a higher-level team, then it makes the game so much more fun to play, and then also we're just so much more effective at winning volleyball matches.' Arriving at Sage Hill as a junior transfer from Long Beach Millikan, Cryst had an immediate impact on the fortunes of the Lightning. Sage Hill needed all of Cryst's eye-popping 54-kill performance to come out on top in a five-set Division 5 final against San Marino for the program's first CIF championship in 2024. 'Jackson is a great leader,' Manesh said. 'It's truly a blessing to be on the same team as him because the amount of volleyball knowledge that he spreads and preaches to us, it's so helpful to our game. … I remember our five-set match against [Simi Valley] Royal, he was talking to us about what Karch Kiraly, the greatest volleyball player of all time, told him. … 'Before the fifth set, he said Karch Kiraly told him, 'Nobody wants the easy 3-0 experiences. The best champions, they live for the five-set matches,' and that helped push us to the win against Royal. Just inspirational words like that, the knowledge that he has, the skills. He's 6-foot-10, but his ball control is insane.' As a two-sport athlete, Cryst also played in the post for the boys' basketball team. Sage Hill advanced to the Division 3AA quarterfinals in his junior year, and this past season, they were the runner-up in the same division. So much of that was challenging. First came frustration with transfer sit-out periods. Then as a senior, the physicality and the time commitment of a senior basketball season that extended into the early part of March with regional playoff qualification was eating away at a volleyball season already underway. Cryst credited D'Cean Bryant, Sage Hill's boys' basketball coach, with helping him to understand the life lessons involved while navigating those situations. 'I think that he was really right there with me through all that, and not in a way where he's just trying to make me feel better, but in a way where he's telling me what I need,' Cryst said of Bryant. 'This last year, too, where I'm committed to college for volleyball, and I'm in basketball season, going well into volleyball, and I'm frustrated. I'm voicing to him that I'm extremely frustrated. 'I'm a volleyball player. Why am I doing this? I'm getting double- and triple-teamed in games, getting beat up.'' Bryant's message was one of honoring your commitments and being where your feet are. 'He was like, 'I don't know when this is going to serve you, but it's going to because at a certain point in your life, you're going to have to do something that you don't want to do. How are you going to respond to that? Are you just going to show up and not be there, not really do it, or are you going to be all-in to whatever you're doing?' It's a character thing, and I think that did really serve me well,' Cryst said. Jordan Hoppe, who took over as the Sage Hill boys' volleyball coach this year, called Cryst a 'student of the game' and also referred to some of the athleticism he displays on the court as incomprehensible. He said he has seen Cryst do the splits. 'The athletic ability, being 6-10, is something you only see in a few athletes to ever live — I think Wilt Chamberlain being number one,' Hoppe said. 'I think it's a good comparison because I think Wilt was one of the most athletic 7-footers to ever play basketball. I think Jackson is not only arguably the best player in the country, but he's arguably one of the most athletic players in the country, even at 6-10, which is even more remarkable.' Craig Pazanti Huntington Beach Huntington Beach (36-5) enjoyed a season to be proud of, even if it fell short of the ultimate goal. The Oilers spent the season looking up to Mira Costa as the nation's top team, but they earned multiple bites at the apple in the postseason, meeting the Mustangs in the Division 1 section final and the Division I regional final. Huntington Beach went undefeated in the Sunset League, securing its first league title since 2016. The Oilers advanced to their first CIF final since 2021. Ben Brown OH | Corona del Mar | Jr. What can Brown do for you? For the Sea Kings, the answer was a lot. Brown, who transferred from Elmhurst York in Illinois, paid immediate dividends for CdM (24-7), which came one match shy of reaching the Division 1 final. The All-CIF Division 1 and Sunset League first-team selection compiled 451 kills, 144 digs and 42 aces. Henry Clemo OPP | Newport Harbor | Jr. Clemo packed a punch from the right pin and the service line, rarely holding back on a swing. A fiery competitor, the junior opposite provided infectious passion that helped elevate Newport Harbor (27-12), which was one of three Sunset League teams to qualify for the Division 1 playoffs. Clemo was a first-team all-league honoree. Kai Gan S | Huntington Beach | Sr. After sharing the setting duties with Jake Pazanti as a junior, Gan handled the role in all rotations as a senior. Gan, a Harvard commit, shared the Sunset League MVP award with Logan Hutnick, his top option and an emerging star for the Oilers at outside hitter. The All-CIF selection churned out 1,454 assists to go with 175 digs, 54 blocks, 39 kills and 29 aces. Nick Ganier Jr. MB | Huntington Beach | Sr. Ganier Jr. had the effect of opening up the entire offense, as teams could not lock in solely on Logan Hutnick and Ben Arguello on the pins. When opponents made that choice, they paid a price for doing so. Ganier Jr., a first-team all-league selection, supplied 212 kills on a .403 hitting percentage and contributed to 68 blocks. Brogan Glenn L | Corona del Mar | Sr. A three-year starter for the Sea Kings, Glenn's passing contributions were vital with his team breaking in a new setter in Drake Foley. Glenn, a UCLA-bound libero who earned All-CIF and Sunset League first-team honors, provided 263 digs, 22 kills and 16 aces. Logan Hutnick OH | Huntington Beach | So. Huntington Beach fell one set short of its first section title in a decade, but Hutnick will surely be at the forefront of the revenge tour. Hutnick finished with 560 kills on a .318 hitting percentage, adding 204 digs, 72 total blocks and 30 aces. The All-CIF honoree had 22 kills, 13 digs and 2½ blocks in the Division 1 final. Position, Name, School, Year OPP Ben Arguello, Huntington Beach, Jr. L Aiden Atencio, Huntington Beach, Sr. MB Jack Berry, Newport Harbor, Sr. L Nathan Jackson, Edison, Sr. OPP Connor McNally, Edison, Sr. OH Kai Patchell, Laguna Beach, Sr. OH Hudson Reynolds, Pacifica Christian, Sr. OPP An Nguyen, Ocean View, Sr. OH JP Wardy, Newport Harbor, Jr. S Charlie Von Der Ahe, Newport Harbor, Jr. MB Billy Watkins, Fountain Valley, Jr.


Irish Independent
12-06-2025
- Sport
- Irish Independent
Blackwater's double delight as Under-11 teams collect Division 3 and Division 5 titles
If there's a club in the county that doesn't get the recognition their recent success deserves, it is probably Blackwater. Another fantastic year with their under-age teams across the board was further emphasised by double success in the Wexford and District Schoolboys Soccer Under-11 leagues, winning the Division 3 and Division 5 titles with their 'A' and 'B' teams.


Boston Globe
08-06-2025
- Sport
- Boston Globe
10 high school sports takeaways from a Saturday held hostage by Mother's Nature's whims
Now on to the rest of Saturday's action. Advertisement 1. Milestones We saw a few round numbers Saturday, as Westfield senior Shea Hurley notched her 1,000th career strikeout in a quarterfinal matchup with Walpole that was Emma Paquette made five saves in a 9-8 Division 4 girls' lacrosse quarterfinal win over Pentucket to reach 200 career stops; and Duxbury senior Jack Sovik recorded his 100th career point with an assist in an 11-10 boys' lacrosse loss to Reading in the Division 2 quarterfinals. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 2. Walkoff win Eighth-seeded Gloucester hung with top-seeded Dighton-Rehoboth for seven-and-a-half innings in the Division 3 softball quarterfinals before Mia Ribeiro doubled for the Falcons and Skye Harrison drove her home for a 2-1 eight-inning victory. 4. Upset city Already tied for the lowest seed to reach the softball quarterfinals in any division, No. 10 Greater New Bedford kept its Division 3 run going by taking down No. 2 Norton, 5-0, behind Advertisement It wasn't technically an upset, but top-seeded Concord-Carlisle sent 5. Three stars Emma Horrocks , Dighton-Rehoboth — The senior catcher scored one of the Falcons' two runs, but she was most dangerous behind the dish, where she threw out six would-be Gloucester base stealers in the extra-inning triumph in the Division 3 quarterfinals. Chris Houle , Acton-Boxborough — The sophomore stopped 14 shots, including five in the fourth quarter, to hold off Andover, 12-10, and send the Revolution to their third-straight Division 1 boys' lacrosse semifinal. Addy Walls , Hopkinton — The sophomore pitched a two-hit complete game and drove in five runs, including a fifth-inning grand slam that broke open a 12-2 Division 2 quarterfinal win over Westwood. 6. Going, going, gone In addition to Walls's grand slam for Hopkinton, Westwood's Bridget Mulkeen plated both her team's runs with a two-run blast, and Georgetown's Ellie Barbarick launched a solo shot, her 15th of the season and 34th of her career, in a 4-3 Division 5 quarterfinal win over Maynard. 7. Daily lacrosse leaderboard Goals Jack Peno , Nauset, 7 Reese Bromby , Newburyport, 5 Teddy Glynn , Norwell, 5 Scarlett Mirak , Concord-Carlisle, 5 Thomas Quirk , Acton-Boxborough, 4 Avery Tahnk , Newburyport, 4 Lucy Winthrop , Ipswich, 4 Nick Casarano , Reading, 3 Dan Guinee , Andover, 3 Joey McCarthy , Norwell, 3 Jake McGuirk , Norwell, 3 Advertisement Matt Pantilla , Norwell, 3 Logan Poulin , Nauset, 3 Sophie Schiller , Hanover, 3 Connor Wicken , Reading, 3 8. Daily strikeout leaderboard Jillian Macfarlane , Maynard, 14 Liana Danubio , Norton, 10 Akira'ley Vasquez , Greater New Bedford, 10 Edy Latour , Dighton-Rehoboth, 9 9. College corner Andrew Middleton , a former Canton High star who graduated from Dexter Southfield and started his college career with two years at UMass, has entered the transfer portal with three years of eligibility remaining. The lefthanded pitcher struck out 29 in 11⅔ innings without surrendering a run before undergoing internal brace surgery. He plans to return for the 2026 season. Entering the transfer portal with 3 years of eligibility left. LHP who led the NCAA in K/9 and was second in strikeout percentage for 4 weeks before undergoing internal brace surgery. On rehab path to be back for the 2026 season. Cell 617-352-3415 — Andrew Middleton (@AMiddles16) 10. QMJHL draft results The Quebec Major Junior Hockey League held its draft Friday and Saturday, and 24 Massachusetts products were selected. The first off the board was Rivers freshman Carter Meyer , who was taken with the 17th pick of the first round by the Quebec Remparts. From Winchester, the 6-foot, 160-pound center posted 70 points, including a NEPSAC-leading 41 goals as a freshman. He was expected to join the US National Team Development Program after impressing at a March evaluation camp. We have our first American player off the board! The — QMJHL (@QMJHL) In the second round, Charlottetown selected Belmont Hill sophomore Brady Sloper , from North Andover, a 6-4, 200-pound defenseman. Paulo Gualberto Jr. , a 5-10, 170-pound center from Sandwich who plays for Mt. St. Charles Academy, was taken in the third round, 48th overall, by Halifax. Arlington sophomore defenseman Kurt Beck was the first MIAA player selected, going in the third round (56th overall) to the Phoenix Sherbrooke. The 6-foot-1-inch, 180-pound defenseman has also played with the Boston Junior Eagles. Au choix # 56, le Phoenix repêche le défenseur Kurt Beck du Boston jr Junior Eagles. — Phœnix de Sherbrooke (@PhoenixSherbroo) Catholic Memorial freshman Colin Yandle was selected in the ninth round, 164th overall, by the Moncton Wildcats. The 5-7, 128-pound defenseman hails from Dorchester and has also played for the Boston Junior Eagles. His uncle, Keith Yandle , who also played for Moncton, went on to suit up for 1,109 NHL games for the Coyotes, Rangers, Panthers, and Flyers. Advertisement Also selected from Massachusetts: Groton's Kaiden Donia , of Townsend, was taken with the 57th selection by Sherbrooke; Rivers's Sam Pandolfo , of Winchester, was taken 72nd overall by Quebec; Cushing's Joseph Covelluzzi , of Wakefield, was selected 76th by Newfoundland, Dexter Southfield's Noah Survilas , of Winthrop, was taken 90th by Moncton; Williston Northampton's Easton Anello , of Windsor, was selected 92nd by Cape Breton; Noble's Justin Lee , of Newton, was taken 93rd by Chicoutimi; Rivers' Finnegan Sears , of Medford, was selected 94th by Saint John; Lovell's Cooper Campbell , of Cohasset, was taken 108th by Drummondville; Holden's Jacoby Palmer , who plays for Long Island Gulls 15s, was taken 118th by Newfoundland; Mount St. Charles's Owen Kailher , of Duxbury, was taken 127th overall by Rimouski, Hillside's Stephen Pinette , of Dracut, was selected 140th by Baie-Comeau; NorthStar Christian Academy Isaac Davis , of Rockland, was taken 146th by Moncton; Belmont Hill's David Bosco , of Winchester, went 168th to Gatineau; Uxbridge's Caiden Pellegrino , who plays for the Providence Capitals, went 174th to Cape Breton; Dexter Southfield's Owen McHale , of Charlestown, was taken 178th by Chicoutimi; Thayer's Ty Hymovitz , of Needham, went 190th to Newfoundland; Boston's Cameron Holyoke , who plays for the Chicago Mission, went 200th to Moncton; Nobles' Kristofer Soja , of Ludlow, was selected 209th by Cape Breton; and Mount St. Charles's Gavin Callahan , of Hull, went 216th to Drummondville. 11. A loss in Belmont Longtime Belmont hockey coach James 'Skip' Viglirolo died at the age of 95 Tuesday. A three-sport athlete at Belmont, he went on to spend more than 50 years working for the town's Department of Public Works. Advertisement A member of the MSHSHCA and Belmont High halls of fame, he spent 25 years coaching Marauders hockey after playing at Northeastern and Suffolk. A Korean War veteran, the Belmont ice rink is named in his honor. The MSHCA mourns the loss of longtime association member & fmr. longtime Belmont HS coach, James 'Skip' Viglirolo. He was recognized for his contributions to hockey in MA & Belmont w/ his name adorning the old Belmont rink. Our thoughts & prayers go out to his family & friends. — Mass State High School Hockey Coaches Association (@MSHCA1) Brendan Kurie can be reached at

Boston Globe
06-06-2025
- Sport
- Boston Globe
Eight high school takeaways from Thursday, as the quarterfinals take shape for every sport
Most brackets have gone to chalk — more evidence of the effectiveness of the power rankings formula — with no seed lower than 10 remaining in softball, nobody worse than No. 11 Ursuline left in girls' lacrosse, and No. 11 Shawsheen representing the worst seed still going in boys' lacrosse. But in baseball there's been plenty of upheaval, as eight double-digit seeds made the quarterfinals (13 double-digit seeds made the quarterfinals in all other sports combined) and two No. 1 seeds (Taunton and St. Mary's) have already fallen. No. 17 Natick and No. 16 Apponequet are still alive, as are 14 seeds Milford and Chelmsford, 13-seed Wakefield, 12-seed Franklin and two 11 seeds: Dennis-Yarmouth and Mount Everett. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 1. Reading list Advertisement From 2. Three stars Edy Latour , Dighton-Rehoboth — The sophomore lefthander pitched a two-hitter, allowing just one run with seven strikeouts, but it was her hitting that drew the headlines, going 4 for 4 with two doubles and four RBIs in a 13-1 Division 3 second-round win over Medway. Advertisement Criss Luna , Charlestown — The junior not only started the game for the Townies on the mound and delivered a game-tying two-run single in the third, but seven innings later he produced a walkoff home run over the fence in left field in the bottom of the 11th, giving the Townies a 3-2 Division 5 second-round win over Bromfield. Next up, City rival English Saturday night. Related : Liam Williams , Westwood — The junior middie netted his second goal of the game with five seconds remaining to lift the Wolverines' boys' lacrosse team into the Division 2 quarterfinals. 3. Going, going, gone No home run was more important Wednesday than Natalia Leach's , which stood as the only run in Foxborough's 1-0 win over St. Mary's in the second round of the Division 3 softball tournament. Milford's Joe Butler and Ian Carter both cranked two-run shots in No. 14 Milford's 9-7 upset of No. 3 North Attleborough in the second round of the D2 baseball bracket. Also homering were Dighton-Rehoboth's Emma Horrocks , Attleboro's Lola Ronayne and Medway's Olivia Klaus . 4. Daily lacrosse leaderboard Goals Arann Hanlon , Nantucket, 5 Emily Hagan , Walpole, 5 Kelan Cardinal , Lynnfield, 4 Kendall Herrick , Medfield, 4 Sawyer McCutchen , Nauset, 4 Sophie Zeppieri , Medfield, 4 Points Hagan, Walpole, 9 Arann Hanlon , Nantucket, 7 Owen Considine , Lynnfield, 6 Herrick, Medfield, 6 Zeppieri, Medfield, 6 5. Daily strikeout leaderboard Delaney Moquin , Silver Lake, 13 Jimmer Donnelly , Millbury, 11 Patrick Higgins , Norwell, 11 Mylee Ramer , Bishop Feehan, 11 Connor Grieve , Braintree, 8 Edy Latour , Dighton-Rehoboth, 7 Madux Iovinelli , Lynnfield, 6 6. Coaching corner Looking to boost its boys' basketball program, St. John's Prep announced the hiring of Corey Lowe to replace David Clay , who stepped down earlier this year for personal reasons. Advertisement Lowe coached Newton South the last two years, flipping a 7-13 record to 16-4 in his second season, when he was named Dual County League Coach of the Year. Previously, he led the Bradford Christian Academy girls to a 20-3 record. Former Newton South coach (and Newton North alumni) Corey Lowe will take over the boys' basketball program at St. John's Prep. Jonathan Wiggs/Globe Staff 'I am blessed to be able to be the next leader of the Eagles program,' said Lowe in a statement. 'I will put a lot of focus into the development of all players from our middle school up to the varsity team. Sharpening skills that will allow us to play fast, spaced, and aggressive.' Lowe, a 2006 Newton North graduate, played four seasons at Boston University and is still the program's all-time leader in minutes and 3-pointers. He played internationally in Latvia, Israel, and Brazil before injuries ended his playing career. Lowe takes over an Eagles program that went 2-18 last season and hasn't made the playoffs since 2019. 'I'm excited to get working with Corey,' Eagles AD Jameson Pelkey said in a statement. 'He has an outstanding background as a player achieving success at the highest levels in high school, college, and professionally.' We are pleased to announce that Newton native and former Newton South boys basketball coach Corey Lowe will be the new head coach of the Eagles' program, effective immediately. Read more: — St. John's Prep (@stjohnsprep) 7. Commitment corner Haverhill's Jordy Oriach has committed to play baseball at Georgia after a breakout season at New Mexico. The 6-foot-5-inch outfielder and 2022 Hillies graduate spent two seasons at Frank Phillips College before hitting .388 with 16 homers and 63 RBIs last season with the Lobos. Breaking: Jordy Oriach has committed to Georgia, he tells me. The 6-foot-5 slugger had a breakout season in his first year at the Div. 1 level at New Mexico, where he hit .388 with 16 HRs and 63 RBIs. One of the best stories in college baseball. Now, he's headed to the SEC. — Evan Applebaum (@EvanApplebaum2) Harvard men's basketball announced its incoming class, which includes Worcester Academy graduate Ryan Sullivan of Auburn. A NEPSAC AA All-League selection, the 6-foot-9-inch, 205-pound forward helped Worcester win three league titles. A four-year varsity baseball player, Sullivan also plays AAU for BABC. Advertisement 8. Upcoming events The Mass HS Volleyball All-Star game events will begin at 10 a.m. on June 14 at SLAM Volleyball in Marlborough. The Boston City League All-Star baseball game will be played Monday at 3:30 p.m. Rosters are expected to be announced Friday. The 47th annual Shriners All-Star Football Classic will be held June 13 at 7 p.m. at Hormel Stadium in Medford. The girls' flag football championship tournament will be held June 12 at Boston College. The ISL Underclassmen All-Star game will be held at Boston College on Monday. Brendan Kurie can be reached at