Hawaii
Hawaii soccer team reaps pile of Big West postseason awards for title year
HONOLULU — A huge season for the Hawaii soccer team produced a proportional amount of postseason honors for the Rainbow Wahine.
UH’s Michele Nagamine was named Big West Coach of the Year for the second time in her 14-year career and three Rainbow Wahine — goalkeeper Kennedy Justin, defender Jacey Jicha and midfielder Nalani Damacion — received Big West positional player of the year awards that had never gone to a UH player until Saturday.
Awards were voted on by the conference’s 11 coaches. UH (12-7-1, 8-1-1 BWC) won the Big West regular-season title for the first time and is the No. 1 seed in the Big West semifinals and final that it will host at Waipio Peninsula Soccer Stadium on Thursday and Sunday.
[Note: See below for photos of UH’s seven All-Big West honorees.]
Justin, Jicha and Damacion were named to the Big West first team, defender Alice Davidson and forward Brynn Mitchell to the second team and forward Amber Gilbert and midfielder Cate Sheahan to the honorable mention list.
Nagamine, whose team surged after a 2-6 start in nonconference play, has the first season of double-digit wins in her 14-year career. UH was picked to finish seventh in the preseason and had never seriously threatened as a title contender in a dozen years in the conference.
“To say that I am thrilled for my players is an understatement,” Nagamine told Spectrum News in a message. “The amount of personal investment that was made in our spring season was unsurpassed!”
“This season is so special to me because of the people. I consider myself very lucky because some people coach their whole lives and never get to experience the kind of aloha and connection that I felt with my players and staff.”
Seven player conference honors tied a program high from the WAC championship team of 2007, the only year to date that UH has made the NCAA Tournament.
That’s what’s on the line this week. UH awaits the winner of Sunday’s first-round game between fourth-seeded UC Irvine and fifth-seeded Cal State Bakersfield.
Justin, Davidson and Damacion were named to the BWC All-Freshman team.
UC Davis’ Sam Tristan, who led the league in points (24) and was second in goals (10), was named Big West Offensive Player of the Year.
Damacion, of Rocklin, Calif., showed uncommon poise and command of the field for a first-year collegiate player. She was the first freshman to win BWC Midfielder of the Year in the award’s 20 years. She posted the most game-winners (seven) for a freshman in NCAA Division I since 2015 and tied the overall program record in game-winners with Natasha Kai and Tiana Fujimoto.
Damacion was passed over for Freshman of the Year in favor of UC Santa Barbara’s Devin Green, who scored six goals on the season. Damacion was Big West Freshman of the Week five times.
Freshman Nalani Damacion, next to teammate Tatum Porter on senior night. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Justin, of Long Beach, Calif., was UH’s first BWC Goalkeeper of the Year since Alexis Mata in 2019. With length and explosiveness, she became the first freshman to win it in the Big West’s 22 seasons of the award. Justin stepped in for starter Brianna Chirpich in the final minute of the first game of the season when Chirpich went down with a season-ending injury.
She’s tied the school record for wins by a keeper (11) and set a program record with five consecutive shutouts.
Goalkeeper Kennedy Justin signed autographs for keiki after a win over UC Riverside. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Jicha, a Mililani native and Mililani High graduate, has been a mainstay at center back throughout her four-year career. She anchored a UH back line that yielded an average of 0.60 goals in conference matches. It is her third time receiving all-conference honors, but first time on the first team. She played 1,700 of a possible 1,800 minutes.
Center back Jacey Jicha on senior night against Long Beach State. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Mitchell, a Santa Cruz, Calif., native who transferred in from Saint Mary’s last year, tied for second on the team with four goals. She is the lone Wahine with a multi-goal game, against North Dakota State on Sept. 1.
Brynn Mitchell signed autographs for keiki after UH beat UC Riverside. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Davidson, of Scappoose, Ore., tied for the team lead with four assists. She’s one of four players in program history to make the Big West All-Freshman team and also make a the first or second team.
Alice Davidson made an immediate impact at defender and tied for the team lead with four assists. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Sheahan, of Highlands Ranch, Colo., was one of five BWC players with at least four goals and four assists. She started all 20 matches.
Cate Sheahan was always in the thick of the action with four goals and four assists. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Gilbert, of Mililani, was a first-teamer last year. She drew constant attention with her speed and attacking runs. Her lone goal was an important one: the winner against nemesis Cal State Fullerton in a 1-0 game on Oct. 6.
Amber Gilbert was frequently targeted by opposing defenses for her attacking runs. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Brian McInnis covers the state’s sports scene for Spectrum News Hawaii. He can be reached at brian.mcinnis@charter.com.
Hawaii
This Hawaii Flight Emergency Looks Different Over The Pacific
Many Hawaii-bound travelers now board with at least one power bank in their carry-on. We plug in our personal devices and then settle into a flight where the nearest runway may still be up to three hours away if something starts smoking in the cabin.
That risk is no longer theoretical. A passenger’s portable charger reportedly caught fire this week on a United flight between Zurich and Newark. The crew turned toward London, and the aircraft was on the ground at Heathrow about 35 minutes later. On a Hawaii flight, that clock runs very differently.
Hawaii flights are safe. The harder question is what happens when a cabin emergency involves the one item nearly everyone now brings onboard, and the nearest runway is hours away instead of minutes.
The flight diversion ended quickly.
According to The Aviation Herald, the aircraft was a United Boeing 767, and the passenger whose power back caught fire was seated in premium economy. Emergency vehicles at Heathrow met the aircraft after landing.
The aircraft was operating over Europe, surrounded by airports and densely packed airspace, with a runway available once the crew turned toward London. The Pacific almost uniquely changes that equation because even a safe, controlled diversion can still leave passengers and crew airborne for hours before reaching a runway.
Hawaii flights operate under a very different reality.
Hawaii routes operate under strict long-range overwater requirements, and airlines always remain within approved diversion ranges throughout flights. Pilots continuously monitor alternate airports, fuel burn, weather systems, and aircraft performance when crossing the Pacific to and from Hawaii, and modern aircraft are designed specifically around this type of flying.
A Hawaii flight halfway between California and Honolulu, or a redeye returning overnight to the mainland, can remain hours from landing after a diversion is called for. Anyone who flies to and from Hawaii likely has given this some thought.
After two hours in flight, we are already wondering whether we are closer to the mainland or to the islands. That is because when anything goes wrong, the airplane will be heading in one direction or the other.
By the third hour of an overnight to the mainland, most of the cabin is asleep, often with phones and tablets plugged into power banks around them. Bags are packed under seats. The map screen still shows water in every direction. That is the part of the flight where a smoke event becomes a multi-hour event, not a 35-minute one.
Why airlines worry so much about power banks now.
Lithium battery fires pose a different challenge from ordinary cabin fires because the battery itself can continue generating heat even after visible flames appear to be extinguished. This thermal runaway is a chain reaction inside the battery cell that can keep reigniting unless the device is cooled and isolated.
Hawaii routes have already seen their own reminders about just how this works. In 2024, Hawaiian Airlines Flight 26 between Honolulu and Portland experienced an onboard iPad fire, and the response in the air raised hard questions about how prepared crews actually are when a battery goes into thermal runaway in a packed cabin.
Flight attendants are trained not simply to put out the initial flare-up, but to continue monitoring and cooling the device for the remainder of the flight. Many airlines now carry thermal containment bags designed specifically for overheating electronics, and crews may spend significant time managing a single damaged battery after the initial emergency appears over.
The industry has also seen these incidents emerge through increasingly ordinary situations. That includes devices that slip into reclining seat mechanisms and become crushed during flight. Chargers overheat during continuous use. Damaged batteries continue being used after swelling or impact damage.
Airlines understand that the overwhelming majority of lithium batteries pose no problems. The concern is scale. Nearly every passenger now travels with multiple high-capacity batteries, and Hawaii flights combine long durations, overwater flying, overnight operations, and cabins filled with continuously charging electronics.
Three hours can feel very different than 35 minutes.
A smoke event onboard a European flight may mean the airplane is parked at the gate before passengers fully process what happened. On a Hawaii route, the same event can unfold under very different conditions, even when the crew responds perfectly, and the aircraft remains fully under control.
Picture a darkened overnight flight between Honolulu and the mainland, with the seatbelt sign illuminated above sleeping passengers. A faint smoke smell drifts into part of the cabin, nearby travelers begin looking around to understand where it is coming from, and flight attendants move quickly through the aisle carrying gloves, water bottles, and containment equipment.
Someone several rows away is told to unplug a device, while another passenger suddenly realizes the smell may be coming from a backpack pushed beneath a nearby seat. Outside the window, there are no visible city lights, highways, or coastline below, only darkness and open ocean stretching across the moving map screen.
Modern crews train extensively for exactly these situations, and commercial aviation remains remarkably safe. What changes is the sense of time, because passengers understand the airplane may still remain airborne for hours after the diversion decision happens.
The crew may be doing everything right and the battery may already be contained, yet the flight can still have hours left before anyone steps onto a runway.
Airlines are tightening the rules.
Airlines are becoming more aggressive about portable charger policies, especially on longer and overwater routes. Southwest already requires power banks to remain visible while in use, with no charging inside bags or overhead bins, and other carriers are thought to be moving quickly in the same direction.
As we covered previously in New Inflight Portable Charger Ban Reaches Hawaii Route December 15, airlines increasingly view portable power banks as one of the highest-risk personal items regularly brought onboard. Long, overwater flying is where much of that enforcement is appearing first, and travelers should expect more restrictions ahead, not fewer.
What this means for the next time you fly to Hawaii.
For most Hawaii travelers, the practical takeaway is simple. Carry fewer spare batteries and keep portable power banks where you can see them, rather than buried inside luggage. Editor Jeff likes to keep his visible in his seat pocket.
Recently, more announcements include something to the effect that if a device becomes unusually hot, starts swelling, smells odd, or slips into a seat mechanism, to tell a flight attendant immediately rather than trying to handle it privately. Cabin crews would far rather respond early to a small problem than discover it later after smoke appears in the cabin.
The crew wants exactly what passengers want on a Hawaii flight: a long, uneventful crossing where nothing memorable happens. Portable chargers offer a new type of concern that is just now being addressed.
Have you ever known of issues with portable chargers on a flight?
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Hawaii
Emergency crews treat unresponsive man aboard a vessel off Kaneohe
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Emergency crews responded to a medical incident offshore of Kualoa Regional Park Tuesday.
The Honolulu Ocean Safety Department said rescuers were called around 1:01 p.m. for an unresponsive adult man aboard a vessel about 10 miles offshore in Kaneohe waters.
Crews met the vessel near Mokolii, also known as Chinaman’s Hat, where a lifeguard boarded and began CPR and oxygen treatment.
The man was transported to Kualoa Regional Park, where Honolulu Emergency Medical Services took over care and continued advanced treatment.
No additional information about the man’s condition was immediately available.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
Lava fountaining marks start of Episode 46 at Kilauea – Hawaii Tribune-Herald
Kilauea began a new episode of lava fountaining at its summit today, prompting an ashfall advisory for parts of Hawaii Island.
The Hawaiian Volcano Observatory said Episode 46 started at 8:17 a.m. inside Halemaʻumaʻu crater, with activity confined to Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.
The volcano remains at watch alert level and orange aviation color code, indicating heightened unrest with increased potential for eruption hazards.
The National Weather Service issued an ashfall advisory through 8 p.m. for areas downwind of the summit, including Volcano and Mountain View.
Light and variable winds shifting southeast are expected to carry volcanic gas and ash across the summit region and toward the north and northwest areas.
Tephra, including ash and Pele’s hair, is most likely within about 3 miles of the vents, but lighter material can travel much farther.
Officials said impacts are expected to be limited, though ash particles can irritate eyes and lungs, especially for those with respiratory conditions.
Residents are urged to limit exposure by staying indoors when possible, closing windows and doors and wearing masks and eye protection if going outside.
People with water catchment systems should cover and disconnect them to prevent contamination.
Anyone observing ashfall is encouraged to report conditions to the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory at hawaiiash.science/report_form.
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