Sports
Loaded Loyola volleyball team downs rebuilding Mira Costa in straight sets
Dillon Klein nonetheless thinks concerning the loss every single day. Each. Single. Day.
The second replays within the Los Angeles Loyola Excessive volleyball star’s head, sitting along with his group within the locker room after falling to rival Manhattan Seashore Mira Costa in final yr’s regional championships.
“Rattling, we couldn’t do it for you guys,” Klein thought, realizing it’d be the final time he’d get to play along with his senior buddies.
“I don’t know if I’ll ever recover from that,” stated Klein, who’s now a senior exterior hitter. “I assure I’ll inform my children that story.”
9 months later, the loss nonetheless cuts deep, and it had Klein and the Cubs circling a Saturday showdown rematch with Mira Costa on their calendars.
“Simply need to get on the market and kick some butt,” Klein stated.
This yr’s Mustangs are a totally completely different group, making an attempt to rebuild after 18 seniors graduated from the earlier yr’s championship squad. With a 25-23, 25-19, 25-17 sweep of Mira Costa, Loyola earned a measure of revenge on its dwelling courtroom.
Returning 5 starters from a group that went 18-3 in 2021, the Cubs set lofty targets heading into the season, aiming for an undefeated file and CIF regional and state titles.
After a loss to Redondo Union of their second sport of the season and one other in early March, tensions bubbled to the floor, head coach Michael Boehle stated. Earlier than a key March 12 match towards Newport Harbor, the group assembled within the gymnasium in a closed-door assembly.
Returners like Klein, UC Santa Barbara-bound Owen Loncar and Princeton commit Ryan Vena had one ultimate season left, an opportunity at redemption. They implored their teammates in that assembly, Boehle stated, to know.
“I do know a number of the fellows on the group are nonetheless — I don’t need to say scarred,” Klein stated, “however we’re not forgetting what occurred final yr. It’s an enormous motivator for us.”
An enormous group hug on the finish of that 30-minute meeting has belied per week of dominant play. The Cubs hadn’t misplaced a set since March 8 heading into the showdown with Mira Costa.
Dustin Steinbeck, who usually performs as an reverse hitter in membership volleyball, has been making an attempt to rise up to hurry because the group’s libero after a preseason harm knocked out the incumbent. Senior Michael Robertson is dedicated to UC San Diego, however languished on the bench for a lot of the season earlier than an harm to Loncar thrust him into motion.
5 Loyola gamers have locked down Division I commitments. One other, sophomore Sean Kelly, is a high participant within the class of 2024. There’s an overflow of expertise — and at instances, that’s needed to convey sacrifice for gamers like Robertson, Boehle stated.
“That wasn’t accepted final yr,” Boehle stated. “They weren’t keen to sacrifice for his or her teammates, they weren’t keen to sacrifice for themselves. Now, as a result of they noticed what occurred [last year], we’ve acquired guys which can be keen to sacrifice.”
The items have fallen into place. The Cubs boast a rotation of servers and highly effective hitters that put quick strain on an opponent’s blocking line.
With a proficient but untested roster, Mira Costa coach Avery Drost’s plan Saturday was merely to remain aggressive — to hold powerful and rattle Loyola in a high-pressure setting.
“I believe one of many hardest issues that Loyola has to do is play as much as their very own expectations, as a result of the expectations are so excessive with a group like that,” Drost stated.
Sophomore Victor Loiola was notably lively, saggy shorts whistling by the air as his lanky body slapped ball after ball off tall Loyola blockers within the first set. After lacking a lot of the season due to tutorial ineligibility, the return of an out of doors hitter that Boehle known as a “specimen” is vital for the Mustangs.
“Folks will need to see Victor Loiola play,” Drost stated.
Loyola barely eked out a first-set win. After Mira Costa minimize a nine-point deficit to 16-12 within the second, Boehle grimaced and known as timeout, main Klein to rally his teammates within the huddle.
“Sufficient,” Boehle recalled Klein saying. “Let’s go. It’s time.”
Off a return instantly after the timeout, Klein almost left a smoking gap within the hardwood with an atomic spike. Loyola saved the Mustangs at bay for a second-set win, and pulled away within the third to earn a victory in a regular-season sport that meant just a little extra.
Watching from the stands, Jim Menges, a seashore volleyball legend and former UCLA star, was stunned by Klein’s athleticism.
“Only a few individuals can bounce like that,” Menges stated. “That’s God-given.”
The USC commit walked off the ground with a smile, heading again to his locker room — this time on a be aware of triumph, not defeat. It was time to exchange some recollections.
Sports
Sam Darnold coming up short in loss to Rams has major implications for Vikings’ future at QB
GLENDALE, Ariz. — The look on Zygi Wilf’s face said it all. It was as if the Minnesota Vikings owner and chairman had just watched a horror movie with a gutting ending. He exited the locker room, stood for a few seconds and stared blankly at the crowd of people in front of him. His son, Jonathan, pointed him toward a long hallway. And off he went slowly into another offseason.
How did this end so abruptly? How did a 14-win Vikings team oscillate so quickly from being a potential No. 1 seed to losing in the wild-card round? Wilf’s mind turned with questions such as these.
None of them, though, were as confounding as this one: What happened to quarterback Sam Darnold?
Two weeks ago, Darnold’s Vikings teammates were dousing him with water bottles as part of a locker-room celebration following a win at U.S. Bank Stadium. Now, here they were Monday night at State Farm Stadium, zipping up their suitcases and heading for the buses after a brutal 27-9 loss to the underdog Los Angeles Rams.
GO DEEPER
Rams down Vikings 27-9 in wild-card game for date with Eagles: Takeaways
The dichotomy between the two scenes was as stark as it was disorienting. In the first snapshot, the 27-year-old Darnold seemed to have completed a career transformation and galvanized an organization in the process. In the second, it felt fair to wonder how much of Darnold’s impressive play this season was a mirage.
“I think it’s very important we all think about Sam’s body of work,” Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell said postgame. “It did not work out in the end, and I think Sam would be the first one to tell you (he could have played better).”
After a loss like this one, there are typically multiple culprits. The offensive line is another obvious one for Minnesota. The Rams sacked Darnold nine times, tying an NFL playoff record. Furthermore, 12 Rams defenders generated at least one pressure, according to Next Gen Stats, their most in a game since Week 6 in 2021.
Hoecht throws up the “LA” after the Rams latest sack
📺: #MINvsLAR on ESPN/ABC
📱: Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN+ pic.twitter.com/iWM1Pofp0U— NFL (@NFL) January 14, 2025
Allocating cap space and draft capital to interior offensive linemen will be a priority this offseason. O’Connell suggested as much Monday night.
Still, that concern pales in comparison to the importance of what happens at quarterback — and what that means for everything else — which is why Darnold’s drop-off over the last two weeks is so jarring.
After playing well enough over the first 16 games to lead the Vikings to a 14-2 record and legitimately be in the conversation for NFL MVP, Darnold struggled mightily in the regular-season finale, a 31-9 loss in Detroit. Against the Lions, he completed just 18 of 41 passes for 166 yards, posting his third-worst passer rating (55.5) and his highest bad-throw percentage of the season (34.2).
GO DEEPER
Did Vikings’ struggles against Lions show a blueprint for how to slow down Sam Darnold?
Those troubles continued against the Rams. His numbers — 25-for-40 passing for 245 yards, a touchdown and an interception — belied Darnold’s level of comfort. He misplaced multiple throws. Darnold, who so often this season had been pinpoint accurate, threw behind his receivers. He spun out of the pocket but failed to get the ball off. His eyes often scanned from right to left too quickly. His feet swiveled back and forth constantly. He tried to evade pass rushers, who engulfed him almost every time.
Darnold’s system malfunctioned in almost every regard. When it wasn’t his vision, it was his footwork. When it wasn’t his vision or his footwork, it was his arm.
“Left too many throws out there that I would usually make,” he said afterward.
Had he said that earlier in his career in New York or Carolina, some might have laughed. But this season, while entrusted in O’Connell’s scheme and developmental process, he proved over a meaningful sample size that he could progress in rhythm, deliver the football accurately and withstand pressure.
Darnold had also displayed resilience, navigating a difficult midseason stretch against the Colts and Jaguars during which he threw five interceptions. The way he responded to those tough film sessions, throwing 18 touchdowns and two interceptions in the ensuing seven games, showed just what he was capable of.
In late December, The Athletic’s Dianna Russini reported, “After conversations with a team source, one thing is clear: The Vikings want Darnold back in Minnesota for 2025.” Separately, another Vikings staffer texted, “I hope we can keep him.” Darnold’s MVP odds climbed. Against the Packers in the team’s final home game of the season, he completed 33 of 43 passes for 377 yards, three touchdowns and an interception and was soaked by teammates afterward in the locker room.
The Sam Darnold experience continues. pic.twitter.com/k5db9DYdtp
— Alec Lewis (@alec_lewis) December 30, 2024
This 2024 Vikings season, billed as a transition year toward a more flexible future around rookie quarterback J.J. McCarthy, had exceeded even the rosiest expectations.
“Outside of these walls, nobody really believed in him,” running back Aaron Jones said of Darnold at the time. “Nobody gave him a chance. But he’s proving everybody wrong.”
That was the crescendo, a byproduct of an infrastructure optimized in Darnold’s image. At the time, the Vikings staff reiterated the role that rhythm and timing played in Darnold’s success and how important it was for his feet and eyes to sync.
Buried in the jargon was an important reality: Darnold trusted the play calls and reads so much that it was more about sticking to a specific timing than observing the field and making decisions based on what he saw. The best way to sum up his struggles in Detroit and Arizona was an interruption in timing. Both the Lions and Rams affected Darnold’s ability to climb up in the pocket, and both teams mixed in countless stunts and exotic pressures to keep Darnold from being comfortable, assessing the picture downfield and throwing.
There were numerous examples from Monday night. Early in the second quarter, Darnold dropped back and eyed the right sideline. Rams defensive lineman Braden Fiske pushed Vikings left guard Blake Brandel toward Darnold, who side-stepped and kept his eyes on receiver Jordan Addison, while receiver Jalen Nailor was open crossing the field. Darnold hurled a pass in Addison’s direction. But the ball was late and behind Addison, and it was intercepted by Rams cornerback Cobie Durant.
Later in the quarter, the Rams blitzed safety Quentin Lake from depth. He squeaked past right guard Dalton Risner, forcing Darnold to step up and move his vision from right to left. Uncertain with what he was seeing, he looked back to his right. But before he could release the ball, another blitzer, Rams cornerback Ahkello Witherspoon, speared him in the back. Darnold fumbled, and Rams edge rusher Jared Verse recovered and rumbled 57 yards for a touchdown, extending Los Angeles’ lead.
JARED VERSE SCOOP AND SCORE!
📺: #MINvsLAR on ESPN/ABC
📱: Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN+ pic.twitter.com/bXLHmOUaQW— NFL (@NFL) January 14, 2025
“There are some examples where, when you go back and watch the tape in an air-conditioned room tomorrow, it’s going to feel like, ‘Man, why didn’t I just do this or that?’” O’Connell said. “But it’s hard in the moment. It’s hard with how fast things happen out there.”
Good quarterbacks have the arm and the athleticism, especially in the modern NFL, but the mind is what separates the top-tier QBs. Matthew Stafford’s operating capacity on the other side of the field validated this, and Monday night substantiated a popular opinion regarding the Vikings’ future: Franchise-tagging or extending Darnold, who is set to become a free agent, does not make sense with the team’s needs elsewhere, especially on the interior of the offensive line.
Moving on from Darnold would, of course, raise questions. How ready is McCarthy? Which veteran option might the Vikings pair with McCarthy? And how would O’Connell feel about having to build up an entirely new quarterback option?
These are vastly different questions from the ones on Wilf’s mind as he wound his way through the bowels of the stadium Monday night. But they’ll soon be on his plate following a wildly successful season that ended in a disappointing flash, a roller-coaster ride for a quarterback who could not polish off the progress he’d built.
(Photo: Christian Petersen / Getty Images)
Sports
Daniil Medvedev smashes racket, camera during fiery outburst as he avoids Australian Open upset
Top-ranked tennis pro Daniil Medvedev destroyed a camera and his tennis racket as he faced what could have been a monumental upset in the Australian Open by a wild-card entry ranked 418th in the first round of the Grand Slam tournament on Tuesday.
Medvedev’s outburst came during the third set when he lost a 13-stroke back-and-forth with Thailand’s Kasidit Samrej to fall behind 40-15. With Medvedev up at the net, Samrej’s shot clipped the net to go beyond Medvedev’s reach in a direction he clearly could not have anticipated.
Then Medvedev, a three-time Australian Open finalist, unleashed his anger on the net, smashing his racket several times.
In the process, Medvedev destroyed his racket and a camera that was situated directly in his path of destruction.
Staff quickly rushed to replace the broken camera and clean up the debris on the court. Medvedev was given a code violation warning for racket abuse from the chair umpire.
COCO GAUFF DELIVERS 6-WORD MESSAGE FOR THOSE DEALING WITH LA WILDFIRES AFTER AUSTRALIAN OPEN WIN
Medvedev dropped the set to trail 2-1, and it looked as though the No. 5 ranked player would face elimination. But Medvedev quickly turned things around to win the following two sets 6-1, 6-2, and advanced to the second round.
“In the end of last year, this match, I probably would have lost it,” Medvedev said after the match. “New year, new energy.”
Medvedev is hoping to start out the 2025 season with a win in Melbourne. A three-time finalist, including in last year’s tournament, Medvedev has never won the Australian Open. His biggest challenger will be Novak Djokovic, who has won the most Australian Open titles than any other men’s player with 10.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Sports
Prep talk: CIF to waive transfer rules for high school athletes affected by fires
The California Interscholastic Federation is preparing this week to send out a form to the 10 section commissioners that would simplify transfer rules for families displaced because of the fires in Southern California, executive director Ron Nocetti said Tuesday.
The sections will make the transfer waiver form available to individual schools to complete, which would allow immediate athletic eligibility for individuals who lost their homes or were displaced.
“It’s a waiver from the normal transfer process, which could take quite a few days,” Nocetti said. “We allow administrators to make the judgment, ‘Yes, the student is here because of the fire, and yes, they can participate.’ We’re going to make it simple. This is the last thing we want families to worry about.”
Hundreds of homes have been damaged or destroyed in the Palisades fire and Eaton fire. The disruption will lead to tough family decisions about where to stay and where to move. Teenagers involved in athletics might have to switch schools.
This isn’t the first time the CIF has created provisions in its transfer rules for displaced families. When Hurricane Katrina caused extensive damage in Louisiana and Texas in 2005, the CIF created a similar waiver for families that moved to California.
Normal transfer rules require families to submit extensive information, such as utility bills, to establish residency. The new form will help expedite the paperwork.
This is a daily look at the positive happenings in high school sports. To submit any news, please email eric.sondheimer@latimes.com.
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