Hawaii
As They Try to Rebuild Hawaii as Talent Source, Huskies Offer Edge Rusher
It was only a light-hearted remark — that the College of Washington soccer group now would grow to be Edge Rusher U after greater than a decade of supplying high-end defensive backs.
But Jimmy Lake and DBU is gone now and there is a totally different teaching workers in Montlake with its personal set of priorities.
In a single season of Kalen DeBoer, it was noteworthy that the Huskies equipped each first-team All-Pac-12 picks at edge rusher in Bralen Trice and Jeremiah Martin, plus had Zion Tupuola-Fetui earn honorable point out, this two years after the latter was a first-teamer.
Whereas Lake’s workers may need recruited all of these gamers and put them in uniform, it was DeBoer’s coaches who obtained Trice and Martin over the end line.
Eric Schmidt, the UW edge-rusher coach, is one other a kind of assistants who’s quick constructing a popularity for getting issues carried out on the soccer area and is likely to be onerous to maintain round. In actual fact, he is FCS head-coaching materials within the not too distant future, in line with a really educated supply.
With all that mentioned and carried out, the Huskies this previous week supplied a scholarship to the highest edge-rusher prospect in Hawaii in Anelu Lafaele, a 6-foot-3, 230-pound junior from Honolulu’s Saint Louis Excessive Faculty and thought of the second-best participant within the islands for 2024.
Lafaele has 15 affords, amongst then Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Wisconsin and BYU, plus eight Pac-12 faculties.
Whereas the Huskies have extremely edge rusher ZTF (Pearl Metropolis) and defensive sort out Faatui Tuitele (Saint Louis) penciled in as starters for 2023, their Hawaii roster illustration has been lagging in recent times.
Too many islanders have been program misses, with 4 transferring out in current seasons and never succeeding or going elsewhere. One other 4 gamers previous to ZTF did not pan out in Seattle both.
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The UW, in truth, has simply three Hawaii gamers presently on scholarship when including in offensive sort out Julius Buelow (Kapolei), who was a 2021 starter for half a season, however has been gradual to develop and keep a first-unit position.
Lafaele, a really lively defensive participant who wrestles, is the second Hawaiian recruit supplied by the Huskies this month, together with Aiea offensive sort out Preston Taumua.
This comes as DeBoer, UW defensive-line coach and Hawaiian native Inoke Breckterfield and the remainder of the teaching workers attempt to rebuild a as soon as very regular supply of soccer expertise.
Then there’s that edge-rusher factor in Montlake, a label that is not so far-fetched. Thus far this month, the Huskies have supplied 10 totally different gamers at this place from Texas to Utah to Hawaii, on the lookout for a really top-level signing.
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Hawaii
Missing Hawaii woman Hannah Kobayashi’s family says Venmo payments to mystery duo — possibly for tarot reading — being probed
The family of missing Hawaiian photographer Hannah Kobayashi says two suspicious Venmo payments she made to a man and woman around the time she vanished are being investigated by cops.
Kobayashi, 30, made the payments on Nov. 9 — a day after she missed a connecting flight to New York and was left stranded in Los Angeles, her aunt Larie Pidgeon told the US Sun.
One sent at 6:25 p.m. was to a woman named Veronica Almendarez and had a description of a bow-and-arrow emoji.
The second payment was made less than an hour later — at 7:19 p.m. — to a man named Jonathan Taylor with the subject line “Reading,” which appeared to be for a tarot card reading, sources told the outlet.
“We have been made aware and so have the LAPD. It’s in their hands,” Pidgeon told the Sun.
“We are still focused on Downtown LA. Even though it’s been 15 [days] we still have hope,” she added.
The distraught aunt also said the family was asking people “across the nation to keep an eye in case she has been taken outside of California.”
“We are looking at all possibilities, hotels, metros, bus, train stations,” she added.
It was not immediately clear how much money Kobayashi sent either of the recipients, who have not been accused of any wrongdoing.
Taylor, who has since gone private on social media, did not respond to multiple requests for comment, the Sun said.
There was no mention of Almendarez.
The LAPD would only tell the Sun that it was still investigating the missing woman’s disappearance.
Hawaii
Hawaii hoops survives a scare from the Sharks of HPU
The University of Hawai‘i men’s basketball team narrowly avoided an upset Tuesday night, holding off Division II Hawai‘i Pacific 67-63 in a tense contest at SimpliFi Arena at Stan Sheriff Center.
The Sharks, representing the PacWest Conference, gave the Rainbow Warriors all they could handle, building a five-point lead at halftime behind a stellar performance from Sherman Brashear, who finished with a team-high 22 points.
Hawai‘i clawed back thanks to an impressive night from beyond the arc, sinking 15 of 31 three-point attempts. Leading the charge was Kody Williams, who scored a career-high 24 points, including seven three-pointers. Ryan Rapp contributed 12 points, hitting four shots from deep.
With the win, the Rainbow Warriors improve to 5-1, wrapping up their season-opening homestand. Their next game will be on the road against Grand Canyon University next Tuesday.
For the Sharks, led by second-year head coach Jesse Nakanishi, the focus shifts to the Hoops in Hawai‘i Thanksgiving Classic, where they will open against Grace Christian on Friday night.
Hawaii
Oregon women’s basketball drops second straight to South Dakota State in Hawaii tournament
Oregon women’s basketball will return from Hawaii with plenty of lessons, but with no wins.
The No. 21 Ducks lost, 75-70, to South Dakota State on Tuesday in the second of two games at the North Shore Showcase tournament in Laie, Hawaii. One day after being dominated on the boards in a blowout loss to Georgia Tech, Oregon was unable to make a late comeback against the Jackrabbits.
The Ducks (6-2) were led by 19 points from Deja Kelly, along with 10 points and eight rebounds from Amina Muhammad. The Jackrabbits (4-2) got 19 points from Brooklyn Meyer, 16 from Paige Meyer, and 15 from Haleigh Timmer — shooting 50% from three and hitting 19 of 22 free throws.
Oregon made some changes to its starting lineup, adding Nani Falatea and Ehis Etute to the mix in lieu of Sofia Bell and Phillipina Kyei.
It was a back-and-forth start, with Oregon and South Dakota State trading transition buckets. Eight lead changes and seven ties highlighted a fast-paced first quarter, with the Ducks taking a 22-19 lead through one thanks to a banked-in three by Bell.
The Jackrabbits retook the lead early in the second, however, and controlled much of the quarter by forcing turnovers and getting easy buckets in the lane. Oregon’s turnover issues fueled a 9-0 run for South Dakota State, which took a 28-24 lead.
Kelly would mount a response by carrying the Ducks on offense, hitting a few midrange jumpers to keep the game close. But the Jackrabbits hit a trio of three-pointers in the half and carried a 40-36 lead into the break.
Amid South Dakota State’s hot shooting in the third, Kelly kept up the effort on both ends for Oregon, making key shots and the right plays on defense. But the effort on the Jackrabbits’ part was relentless, and their shooting percentage climbed above 50% as they spread the ball around.
A three-pointer by Madysen Vlastuin gave SDSU a 56-49 lead late in the third as its bench erupted, and a bucket from Oregon’s Muhammad cut it to 56-51 through three.
Back-to-back buckets for Muhammad and Alexis Whitfield to start the fourth made it just a one-point game, forcing a timeout for the Jackrabbits. And Kelly remained aggressive getting to the basket as the final frame waned on, hitting the tying free throw on her and-one with 6:14 to go.
But turnovers down the stretch, and an inability to defend consistently on the other end, was the Ducks’ peril as they attempted a comeback. Kelly’s jumper made it a four-point game once again with 33 seconds left, and an immediate steal in the full-court press led to a layup by Muhammad to cut it to two.
Down three with less than 30 seconds to go, a Peyton Scott three-pointer clanked off the rim. Oregon had to play the foul game the rest of the way and couldn’t catch up.
Next game: No. 21 Oregon (6-2) vs. Washington State (2-3)
- When: Wednesday, Dec. 4
- Time: 7 p.m. PT
- Where: Matthew Knight Arena, Eugene
- Streaming: B1G+
- Radio: Oregon Sports Network
— Ryan Clarke covers the Oregon Ducks and Big Ten Conference. Listen to the Ducks Confidential podcast or subscribe to the Ducks Roundup newsletter.
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