Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.
- Piper Niven’s WWE Status Remains Unclear After Suffering Injury
- MLTT Week 2 Update – Butterfly Online
- Jalen Hurts Says ‘There’s No Such Thing as Luck’ After Eagles’ Win vs. Rams
- Braves host annual 44 Classic at Truist Park
- Ryder Cup: Which players have partnered most with others?
- Keller’s report on Cody Rhodes vs. Drew McIntyre, CM Punk & AJ Lee vs. Becky Lynch & Seth Rollins, John Cena vs. Brock Lesnar, Iyo Sky vs. Vaquer
- Jacob Young’s fancy footwork lifts Nationals past Mets
- Justin Herbert, Jim Harbaugh, Chargers Thrill Fans with Win vs. Broncos, 3-0 Start
Browsing: Memorial
By: Ed Weaver / October 1, 2024
The Wellsboro Varsity Volleyball team edged rival North Penn-Liberty 3-2 in the inaugural Chuck Tameris Memorial Game, sweeping the season series with the Lady Mounties on Monday, September 30.
“We came out strong the first set and struggled the next two,” head coach Darci Pollock said. “Our girls never gave up and fought the rest of the night. Lexi Urena had a great night offensively on the outside to help us secure the win. I am so proud of this team for the hard work they are putting in.”
Wellsboro needed bonus points to win the first set, 27-25 to take the early lead, however the Lady Mounties battled back to win the next two sets, 25-23 and 25-21 to take a 2-1 lead in the match.
The Lady Hornets then rallied to win the 4th set 25-18 and then held on for a 15-12 win in the 5th set.
This is the first time since the 2016 season that Wellsboro won both matches.
Urena led Wellsboro with 16 kills, 18 points (4 aces) and 16 digs while sophomore Madison Cruttenden made 30 digs, scored 12 points and made 5 assists. Sophomore
Blake Eckart recorded 9 kills, sophomore
Ellie Largey made 18 assists, junior Taylor Main had 11 assists and 15 digs, and senior Paige Logsdon had 9 points (6 aces), 6 kills, and 2 solo (and 1 assisted) blocks.
Junior
Alyssa Chilson also added an assisted block.
Wellsboro also won the JV game 2-0 (25-15, 25-19) to improve to 10-3 on the season.
Wellsboro (10-3, 7-1 NTL Large School Division) hosts Athens on Thursday.
Two decades after she made her first appearance at the meeting, world record-holder Barbora Spotakova notched up her 10th javelin victory at the Odlozil Memorial, winning with 60.21m at the World Athletics Continental Tour Bronze meeting in Prague on Monday (7).
In a contest that was held in memoriam of 1952 Olympic javelin champion Dana Zatopkova, Spotakova took the lead in the first round with 58.81m and then improved to 60.21m in the following round, coming within four centimetres of the season’s best she had set just a few days prior.
The two-time Olympic champion from the Czech Republic rounded out her series with a 59.85m effort in the final round. Greek U20 thrower Elina Tzengko was second with 57.92m.
Spotakova, 39, first competed at the Odlozil Memorial as a teenager back in 2001, around about the time she was considering a switch from the heptathlon to the javelin. In 2007 she achieved her first victory at the meet, then set a meeting record of 68.81m there one year later. She went on to win seven more times at this meeting between 2009 and 2017 before adding a 10th triumph on Monday.
Pavel Mialeshka led a Belarusian 1-2 in the men’s javelin. Aliaksei Katkavets held the early lead with his opening effort of 82.91m, but Mialeshka took the lead in round four with 85.06m, breaking his PB from four years ago. 2013 world champion Vitezslav Vesely was third with a season’s best of 82.63m.
World finalist Iryna Zhuk added to the Belarusian success, winning the women’s pole vault with 4.65m.
Namibian teenager Christine Mboma came from behind to win the women’s 200m in a national and meeting record of 22.67 (1.2m/s). The 18-year-old overtook Gina Bass (22.76) and Beatrice Masilingi (22.82) in the closing stages.
Liberia’s Emmanuel Matadi won the men’s 100m in 10.07 (0.8m/s), holding off a strong challenge from Panama’s 2009 world 200m silver medallist Alonso Edward (10.09).
In the men’s 1500m – the specialist distance of 1964 Olympic silver medallist Josef Odlozil, after whom the meeting is named – was won by Kenya’s Boaz Kiprugut in a PB of 3:35.26.
Jon Mulkeen for World Athletics