Hawaii
Baseball Opens 2024 Season With Weekend Series In Hawaii – Ole Miss Athletics – Hotty Toddy
| Friday, February 16 10:35 p.m. CT |
Saturday, February 17 5:05 p.m. CT / 8:35 p.m. CT |
Sunday, February 18 5:05 p.m. CT |
| PROJECTED STARTERS Ole Miss: RHP JT Quinn 0-0, – ERA, – K, – BB Hawaii: LHP Harrison Bodendorf 0-0, – ERA, – K, – BB |
PROJECTED STARTERS Ole Miss (G1): LHP Gunnar Dennis Hawaii (G1): LHP Randy Abshier Ole Miss (G2): RHP Grayson Saunier Hawaii (G2): TBA |
PROJECTED STARTERS Ole Miss: RHP Riley Maddox 0-0, – ERA, – K, – BB Hawaii: TBA 0-0, – ERA, – K, – BB |
HONOLULU – For the first time since 2021, Ole Miss Baseball will open its season away from Swayze Field, traveling to the island of Oahu to take on the University of Hawaii in a season-opening, four-game set.
LEADING OFF
- Ole Miss finished the 2023 season with a 25-29 record and a 6-24 record in the SEC, missing the postseason for the first time since 2011.
- The Rebels had four MLB Draft selections in 2023 including the 15th overall pick in shortstop Jacob Gonzalez.
- Kemp Alderman earned the 2023 Ferriss Trophy, becoming the first Rebel to win the award since 2014.
- Alderman was also named an All-American by both the NCBWA and the ABCA.
- Gonzalez, Alderman, and Calvin Harris each earned ABCA All-Region and All-SEC honors.
- Head coach Mike Bianco moved into second place all-time in wins by an SEC head coach with 879 wins as the leader of the Rebels.
- Ole Miss is the only program in the country that has five players on D1Baseball’s Top-100 2025 MLB Prospect list.
- Newcomer Treyson Hughes was named a Preseason All-American by the NCBWA.
- This is the first time in program history that the Rebels and the Rainbow Warriors have met and the first time that Ole Mis has played in Hawaii.
- Ole Miss will open their home slate next Wednesday against Arkansas State.
SCOUTING REPORT
Ranking seventh in wins among active head coaches with an overall record of 1,136-782-4, Rich Hill enters his third season as the head coach of the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors. Last season, he led Hawaii to a 29-20 record, finishing fifth in the Big West standings with an 18-12 conference record. The ‘Bows returned a veteran lineup for the 2024 season with six players who started at least 30 games a year ago. In addition, Hawaii is coming off one of its best power-hitting seasons, hitting the most home runs in a season since 2010 with 36 while posting a slugging percentage of .416.
Projected to start on Friday night, Harrison Bodendorf returns for his sophomore season after a successful freshman campaign. Bodendorf earned Freshman All-America honors from Collegiate Baseball and a First Team All-Big West selection after finishing 5-2 with a 3.45 ERA and 66 strikeouts over 57.1 innings pitched with a .239 batting average against.
A veteran arm and projected to start in Game One on Saturday, Randy Abshier enters his fifth collegiate season after spending all of 2023 as Hawaii’s Saturday starter, making 15 starts while going 6-3 with a 4.29 ERA and 69 strikeouts over 71.1 innings. A transfer from Arizona, Abshier leads the team with 114.1 career innings pitched and 111 strikeouts and is 11-3 over his career in 55 appearances.
CLASH OF TITANS
Head coaches Mike Bianco and Rich Hill have instilled their names into the record books as two of the most active winning head coaches in the nation. Both coaches have head coach experience at the Division I level for over 25 years. Together they have taken their respective programs to new heights as Hill (1,136-782-4) is ranked as the No. 7 winningest active head coach and Bianco (979-585-1) at No. 11 in the NCAA.
In 23 seasons leading the program, Bianco has delivered 18 postseason appearances, including eight Super Regional berths and a pair of trips to the College World Series. He has racked up 879 victories, holding a 879-514-1 (.631) record. Those wins are the most in Rebel baseball history and rank second all-time among coaches in the SEC. He also stands as the winningest and longest-active coach in the SEC among the sports of baseball, men’s basketball and football.
In the past two seasons with the Rainbow Warriors, Hill has led Hawaii to its first two winning Big West seasons in each of his first two years. Prior to UH, Hill guided the San Diego Toreros to nine NCAA Tournament appearances with a three-year streak (2006-08) and a pair of back-to-back appearances (2002-03; 2012-13).
ALL-AMERICAN IN THE OUTFIELD
Treyson Hughes was named a 2024 Preseason All-American by the NCBWA last week, making the Third Team in the outfield.
Hughes is a junior transfer who played his first two seasons at Mercer where he played in 115 games for the Bears. The Georgia native boasts a career .352 batting average with 105 total RBI and 127 runs scored over two seasons.
Last season, he hit .387 and set a new single-season runs scored record at Mercer, crossing the plate 74 times in 58 games. Hughes led the Southern Conference in on-base percentage and runs scored, earning 2023 First Team All-SoCon and SoCon All-Tournament team honors.
BIG MAL IS BACK
Josh Mallitz was named to the 2024 Stopper of the Year Watch List, opening the season among the nation’s best in the bullpen.
Malllitz returns to the mound this season after sitting out the entirety of the 2023 season recovering from injury.
In 2022, the Florida native was an integral part of the team’s national championship run, posting a 1.45 ERA over 31 innings of work. He held opponents to a .171 batting average while racking up 48 strikeouts.
Mallitz made five appearances during the team’s postseason run, allowing just one run while striking out 18 over 10.2 innings. In game one of the College World Series Final, Mallitz worked two innings and struck out four Sooners.
THE ROAD TO 1,000
Head coach Mike Bianco comes into the 2024 season needing just 21 wins to reach 1,000 for his career. He has 979 career wins, 879 as head coach of the Rebels and 100 from his time at McNeese State.
TRANSFER TO THE SIP
D1Baseball ranked Ole Miss’ 2024 transfer class the No. 7 class in the country and No. 5 in the SEC back in January. Five new Rebels were ranked in the top-70 in the publication’s 2024 Impact Transfer rankings including Treyson Hughes (No. 11), Andrew Fischer (No. 17), and Luke Hill (No. 20) who were all ranked in the top 20.
Jackson Ross and Kyler Carmack were also included on the list at No. 25 and No. 65 respectfully.
WHAT SOPHOMORE SLUMP?
Ole Miss has five sophomores ranked in D1Baseball’s Top-100 2025 MLB Draft Prospects, something that no other program in the country can claim.
JT Quinn leads the way coming in at No. 27, followed by Luke Hill (No. 38), Andrew Fischer (No. 40), Grayson Saunier (No. 57), and Liam Doyle (No. 91).
CONTACT HIGH
Ethan Lege struck out just 16 times in his 181 at bats last season, making him one of the hardest players to strike out in the country. The Rebel infielder only struck out more than once in a game one time (2/24 vs. Maryland) in 51 games and only had eight strikeouts during SEC play.
YOUNG GUNS
220.2 innings (48 percent) of Ole Miss’ innings on the mound in 2023 were thrown by freshmen. Seven freshmen pitched at least seven innings and five pitched 25 or more innings. JT Quinn lead the youngsters with 55.1 innings worked, followed by Grayson Saunier who pitched 46.
Both Quinn and Saunier, along with Brayden Jones, Sam Tookoian, and Mason Morris return to the staff this season and will play integral parts on the Rebels’ pitching staff.
MISSISSIPPI MADE
Of the 44 players on Ole Miss’ roster in 2024, 17 of them hail from the state of Mississippi (38.6 percent). Overall, 16 different states are represented on the roster, ranging from California to New Hampshire.
NEW LOOK SWAYZE
Ole Miss officially announced expansion plans at Oxford-University Stadium that include a new club section, increased entrance to the venue and a plaza to honor the Rebels’ first baseball national title team.
The project, which will add approximately 450 premium seats, will begin at the conclusion of the upcoming season and will be in place for the 2026 campaign.
The new club will be erected where the current concessions stand is located at the end of the third base line. Club ticket holders will enjoy covered, reserved seats outdoors, and within the club area, can take advantage of a spacious social area, personal lockers, TVs, private restrooms and complimentary food. In addition, the club features 38 feet of drink rails to compliment the chairback seats.
Adjacent to the new stadium gates, the First Champions Plaza will be erected outside the facility along University Place. The exhibit will feature a statue and visuals that celebrate the Rebels’ 2022 national championship.
REBS ON THE NATIONAL STAGE
The Rebels are scheduled to appear on SEC Network eight times, ESPNU twice, and ESPN2 once during the 2024 campaign. Ole Miss’ first game on national TV will be March 16 as they host South Carolina for game two of their three game series. The Rebels can then be seen on the national stage five times in April and five times in May.
National TV Games
March 16 vs. South Carolina (1 p.m. CT) – SEC Network
April 4 at Arkansas (6 p.m. CT) – SEC Network
April 12 vs. Mississippi State (7 p.m. CT) – SEC Network
April 13 vs. Mississippi State (7:30 p.m. CT) – ESPN2
April 25 vs. Alabama (6:30 p.m. CT) – ESPNU
April 27 vs. Alabama (2 p.m. CT) – SEC Network
May 1 vs. Mississippi State (Governor’s Cup) (6 p.m. CT) – ESPNU
May 4 at Auburn (7 p.m. CT) – SEC Network
May 5 at Auburn (3 p.m. CT) – SEC Network
May 10 vs. Texas A&M (7:30 p.m. CT) – SEC Network
May 12 vs. Texas A&M (5 p.m. CT) – SEC Network
SWAYZE CRAZIES
Ole Miss set a new average attendance record at Oxford-University Stadium/Swayze Field last season, averaging 10,095 fans per home game. The Oxford faithful also set a new single-season total attendance record as 323,047 totals fans came through Swayze Field during the 2023 season.
Keep up with all the latest news and information on the Rebels by following Ole Miss baseball on X at @OleMissBSB, on Facebook at Facebook.com/OleMissBaseball, on Instagram at Instagram.com/officialolemissbsb and on TikTok at @olemissbsb. Also, follow head coach Mike Bianco on X at @CoachMikeBianco.
Hawaii
Hawaii Traveler Just Found This 186% Hawaiian Airlines Fee Hike
A reader booking a Hawaii flight just found and wrote to us about one fee that nearly tripled this week, from $35 to $100. But the bigger story is what else readers are finding at booking and onboard, from fees to meals, as Hawaiian’s old terms get replaced with ones the new airline can actually afford to keep.
This $35 fee just became $100.
Hawaiian’s longtime interisland cabin pet fee was $35, a price well below the rest of the airline industry. The cabin pet fee is now $100, whether flying interisland or between Hawaii and the mainland. Checked pets on interisland flights are listed at $60, so even that option now costs more than the old cabin fee many residents and repeat visitors knew. Moving from $35 to $100 is a 186% increase, and a quick interisland roundtrip with a pet now costs $130 more.
The new fee is closer to what mainland carriers already charge for pets in the cabin, where $100 to $150 has long been common. That doesn’t make the increase easier for longtime Hawaii travelers who booked expecting the old Hawaiian price, which was unusually low when measured against the larger airline system Alaska brought with it.
The reader who found out at booking.
One reader put it plainly after finding the new price while trying to make a pet reservation. The frustration was not just the dollar amount. It was the timing, the lack of warning, and another familiar Hawaiian practice that pulled the rug out from under travelers still assuming the old rules applied.
“Alaska is not better in another way. Today I discovered that taking a pet on an inter island flight is now $100 as opposed to $35 with Hawaiian. Had I made my pet reservation just 2 days ago I would have saved $65 per way. Outrageous! This is not in the spirit of Aloha.”
For a traveler making a short island hop, the pet fee can now approach or exceed the passenger fare itself, depending on route, timing, and when the ticket was booked.
The meal that still isn’t.
The pet fee is one data point, and meals are another. Readers are describing gaps between what they expected from Hawaiian and what they received on flights, part of a longer pattern of small Hawaiian touches changing, being repriced, reduced, or still unclear during this week’s transition.
One reader booked a mainland flight under the Hawaiian name and reported the meal didn’t match what was promised.
“I just flew on a ‘Hawaiian’ flight from Hawaii to the mainland and having doubts about service changes, I checked 2 weeks, and then 72 hours in advance to pre-order a meal in premier class seating. It stated meals for that flight were complimentary but we got a bag of snack mix only. It is disappointing to experience these inconsistent changes among the Alaska takeover.”
Comments we have received at Beat of Hawaii say that complimentary meals are still being phased out. Readers are reporting, and employee accounts are pointing in the same direction. Food that once defined Hawaiian’s mainland and long-haul service is being reduced, reworked, or shifted. Alaska sent us a different message this week when we wrote about Hawaiian Air meal service:
“There are no changes to our complimentary meal service in our main cabins. During our PSS transition, several dual‑brand content updates were made to our webpages, and the link referenced in your post was unintentionally directing to an Alaska Airlines pre‑order page. We’re working to correct that now.
Two days later, however, there’s no sign on Hawaiian’s own food page of what complimentary meals in economy still exist. The page only refers to business class meals.
A reader says what BOH has been reporting.
One longtime BOH reader put it in harsher terms than we would have chosen. The loss did not begin on one date. It came through smaller moves, thinner service, and a pricing model that kept asking the question of whether the old Hawaiian Air experience could survive as a standalone airline model.
“I am having trouble understanding why people are mourning the loss of Hawaiian Airlines. It died years ago making incremental changes to their image and service. Flying Hawaiian airlines in their heyday was a special experience. But, like many other things in life right now, there’s little left of what we once knew.”
The old Hawaiian experience had been fading long before Alaska took control, even while many travelers still hoped the brand, the food, the service style, and the Hawaii-specific aspects they still remember fondly would remain intact. Alaska did not create the problems Hawaii travelers are feeling, but the acquisition is forcing the pricing and service reset into public view in a big way. The $35 pet fee moving to $100 is just another example.
The longhaul issues also come into focus.
One reader just described a much 10,000 mile trip on Hawaiian this week, where the food issue became harder to understand because of the route length and total travel time.
“I just got off a 9hr flight from Sydney Australia. We had a light meal on that flight…. a 3hr stop over and now am on a 9-10hr flight to JFK and now I have to purchase food and drinks. Absolutely pathetic for such a long flight.”
The undoubtedly soon to be resolved pattern has three points: an interisland fee increase, a premier-class meal gap, and a long-haul food complaint. Travelers are bringing old Hawaiian expectations into a new system where fees, meals, and what’s included are being reset.
We’ve experienced this ourselves in countless mileage upgrades from economy to business/first class on Hawaiian flights. These were offered at pricing too low to be sustainable, and compared with the rest of the industry. Those cheap mileage upgrades are now gone.
That kind of value built loyalty. But it also created an obvious question for any acquiring airline. Cheap fees, too generous upgrades, included meals, and other unique offerings helped Hawaiian feel different. They also left Hawaiian in terrible financial straits. And they leave Alaska with plenty of places where the larger airline can raise, remove, or reprice things.
Why the old Hawaiian couldn’t last.
For longtime Hawaiian travelers, this part is still uncomfortable. Many of the things people loved were real, but they were priced in a way that was hard to defend commercially once Hawaiian was no longer standing by itself. A bigger carrier absorbs a smaller one and necessarily looks for alignment. The cheaper system moves toward the more expensive one, and not the other way around.
Hawaiian’s “Aloha discount” is what the merger ended. The brand still appears, the Pualani paint job remains, and the word Hawaiian still carries deep meaning for many travelers. But the pricing system underneath is changing. That is how the pet fee increase connects to the meal complaints, the upgrade math, and more.
Hawaiian’s standalone pricing was not sustainable, and that reality is part of what made the acquisition necessary. Travelers can be angry about the loss and still see why the old setup wasn’t going to survive once a larger airline took over.
What to expect.
Don’t assume legacy Hawaiian terms still apply just because the flight is to, from, or within Hawaii. Check at booking, especially pets, bags, seats, food, and upgrade options. Check again too before departure, because readers are already finding gaps between what they expected, what they saw online, and what they report happened onboard.
For meals on mainland and long-haul flights, don’t rely on memory from past Hawaiian trips. Look closely at what is included, what must be pre-ordered, and what may now be sold onboard. If the site and the airline say one thing and the cabin delivers another, that’s the gap readers are now reporting.
Have you booked a Hawaii flight, interisland or mainland, since the merger took hold? What did you expect based on past Hawaiian service, and what did you actually get?
Get Breaking Hawaii Travel News
Hawaii
Aloha in Action benefit concert raises money for flood victims
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Large crowds gathered in Ko Olina on Thursday for a benefit concert to support flood victims from last month’s Kona low storms.
The Aloha in Action benefit concert boasted an all-star lineup, including Jack Johnson, Kokohe Kai, Jason Momoa, Amy Hanaialii and Kimie Miner, to name a few.
“We called it ‘Aloha in Action,’ because, really, that’s what it’s all about. Everyone just showing their aloha, coming together and making sure that we’re doing our part to support others when there is need,” said Kuhio Lewis, president and CEO of the Hawaiian Council.
Proceeds from the concert will go to the Hawaiian Council’s Kakoo Mai fund to benefit residents affected by the flood, with some also going to nonprofit organizations providing support.
So far, organizers said they’ve raised almost $3 million in collective funds.
“It’s going to go to support the nonprofits that are on the ground doing that important work, oftentimes it’s hard to raise the money at the same time, so we’re being that conduit to help them to do that part, raise the money to make sure they’re resourced and supporting our community.”
Lewis said they are using their experience from assisting with the recovery of the 2023 Lahaina wildfires to help flood-impacted residents.
“We learned a lot in helping the Lahaina residents recover, he said. “So when we saw what was going on here, we applied all of our knowledge to helping the residents that were impacted by the floods.”
Organizers say as of earlier Thursday afternoon, 6,500 tickets were sold.
The concert runs until 10 p.m., and tickets are still available.
“Just come down,” he said. “We’re still selling tickets at the door. We don’t want to deny anyone. It’s a great showing of the community coming together.”
There is a charge for parking, cash only.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
Bench in Honokaʻa to Hilo storefront: Knickknackery Hawaii brings old-time island charm to Hilo
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – You are invited to take a step into Hawaii’s past with a unique collection of antiques and collectables.
Let’s go holoholo to The Knickknackery Hawaii in Hilo.
Every morning, Keli’I Wilson sets up antiques right outside his shop, the Knickknackery Hawaii, which he co-owns and is a curator for.
“About 11 years ago, me and my partner started collecting a lot of antiques, and we visited this little store in Honoka’a, and we started on a bench outside selling antiques in Honoka’a 11 years ago,” said Wilson. “The lady that we bought from told us that we have a lot, we should try and sell it and see what happens. About 9 months later, we rented the spot next to her shop, and we had a store for the first time in Honoka’a.”
Wilson said they moved to the corner of Haili and Kapiolani Street.
And now, they’re along Ponohawai St. in Hilo.
“So, when we decided we’re going to open up a shop, we wanted to come up with a very cool name, so I scanned through this old Webster’s dictionary from 1913, and I found the meaning of antiques, it was called knickknackery,” said Wilson. “Collecting knickknacks, whatnots, and thingamabobs, things worthy of collecting, that was the meaning in the Webster’s dictionary, and I said, there’s the name right there.”
Wilson said he loves vintage wares, old furniture, and its history.
“It reminds me of my grandma, my aunties that had beautiful Hawaiian things in their old homes,” said Wilson.
In the shop, there are hula animatronics that dance hula, which Wilson said were made for the Kona Seaside Hotel in the 1950s and were displayed outside of their luau show.
There’s lots to see.
Look at Hawaii in the 1900’s through postcards or a trip down memory lane in the 90s.
There are all kinds of collectibles, from books, cameras, and old records.
“Well, it’s immaculate, for one thing, and it’s just beautiful the way everything is displayed,” said Vashti McMurray, who was visiting from Canada.
“I would say it’s like quirky, has like a lot of like life and personality, said Ivy McMurray, who was also visiting from Canada.,
“A lot of the visitors that I get is from off-island, or they’ve lived in the mainland for 20, 30 years, and they come here, and they see all the things that remind them of Hawaii and that’s what I think matters to me, that I put that back out in the world, the hospitality, the beauty, the nostalgia of vintage Hawaii,” said Wilson.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
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