Merritt Island beach volleyball claims regional title

Merritt Island beach volleyball faced a familiar foe on Tuesday, May 5, in the Class 2A, Region 2 final in New Smyrna Beach, the reigning state runner-up.

USA TODAY

Tuesday was the second meeting of the season with No. 2 seed New Smyrna Beach winning the regular season meeting 4-1 on March 11.

In front of its home fans, No. 1 seed Merritt Island flipped the result with a 3-2 victory to claim the regional title and punch its ticket to Tallahassee for the state semifinals.

“Super proud of them. They worked really hard,” Merritt Island head coach Angie Patrick said. “Just win their last game at home is just pretty sweet.”

The Barracudas won the first match of the duel 21-11, 21-18. On center court, senior Delaney Petit and junior Reece Loggins evened things up with a 3-set win.

Merritt Island carried that momentum, winning the next two matches to secure the regional title. Mustangs junior Sadie McClellan and sophomore Gena Walters won in straight sets 21-19, 21-15.

On center court, juniors Bella Becker and Amber Ives clinched the win with a 21-19, 21-13 sweep.

“The first 10 minutes or so, I was a little concerned because we seemed hesitant and nervous. I think we started to find our groove and then I felt better because they got this now,” Patrick said. “They were feeling more confident and moving better. I think just them turning that dial, flipping that switch and realizing what was on the line. Just seeing them go out and compete was a great thing.”

Merritt Island players celebrate after defeating New Smyrna Beach 3-2 in the regional finals of the Class 2A beach volleyball tournament May 5, 2026. Craig Bailey, FLORIDA TODAY via USA TODAY NETWORK

Petit/Loggins battled back to earn Merritt Island’s first win of the match. The No. 2 pair dropped the first set 16-21 before rallying to win 21-17, 15-13.

“I think just to get through each pass and talk to each other about hitting shots, where to go really helped us,” Petit said.

Merritt Island dropped three of its first seven matches of the season. Since then, the Mustangs have rattled off 13 consecutive wins to advance to the state semifinals.

They’ve achieved that with Petit as the lone senior on the squad.

Advertisement

“Since the beginning, we always came out here with 110 percent effort and always pushed to be successful,” Petit said.

Merritt Island last played in Tallahassee in 2024 when it was among the final 16 teams in the state. For the first time since the sport expanded to three classes, it’s among the last four teams standing in Class 2A.

“We went to state a couple years ago and lost in a region semifinal last year, which was very tough,” Petit said. “Coming out, being very strong and compete very hard against a team we lost earlier in the season to was very exciting. Everyone cheering and being excited for our team helped us a lot.”

The Mustangs compete in the Class 2A state semifinals on Friday, May 8, at Florida State University. A victory would propel them to the championship match on Saturday, May 9.

“Same thing that happened (Tuesday),” Patrick said. “We all got to come out ready and strong and not nervous, back on our heels and just have confidence. More than anything, I just want to enjoy this ride with them. I want them to enjoy it and know this is going to be a blast.”

New Smyrna Beach(15-6) 2

Merritt Island(17-3) 3

No. 1:Bella Becker/Amber Ivesdef. Teagan Lux/Bailey Jones (21-19, 21-13)

No. 2:Delaney Petit/Reece Logginsdef. Unity Baker/Savannah Toler (16-21, 21-17, 15-13)

No. 3: Mollie Hale/Paige Taylor def.Whitney Wisniewski/Peyton Riordan(15-21, 21-11, 15-9)

No. 4: Jasmine Mahoney/Laila Parnell def.Khloe Horton/Lydia Scott(11-21, 18-21)

No. 5:Sadie McClellan/Gena Waltersdef. Della McLaughlin/Kate Collins (21-19, 21-15)

This article originally appeared on Florida Today:Merritt Island beach volleyball advances to state

Merritt Island beach volleyball claims regional title

Merritt Island beach volleyball faced a familiar foe on Tuesday, May 5, in the Class 2A, Region 2 final in New Smyrna Beach, the reigni...
Oregon Lottery Mega Millions, Pick 4 results for May 5

TheOregon Lotteryoffers several draw games for those aiming to win big.

USA TODAY

Here's a look at May 5, 2026, results for each game:

Winning Mega Millions numbers from May 5 drawing

12-22-50-51-55, Mega Ball: 10

Check Mega Millions payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Pick 4 numbers from May 5 drawing

1PM: 0-8-9-9

4PM: 6-0-4-6

Advertisement

7PM: 4-1-0-1

10PM: 8-2-0-6

Check Pick 4 payouts and previous drawings here.

Feeling lucky?Explore the latest lottery news & results

When are the Oregon Lottery drawings held?

  • Powerball: 7:59 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.

  • Mega Millions: 7:59 p.m. on Tuesday and Friday.

  • Pick 4: 1 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. daily.

  • Win for Life: 7:30 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.

  • Megabucks: 7:29 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.

This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by an Oregon editor. You can send feedback usingthis form.

This article originally appeared on Salem Statesman Journal:Oregon Lottery Mega Millions, Pick 4 results for May 5

Oregon Lottery Mega Millions, Pick 4 results for May 5

TheOregon Lotteryoffers several draw games for those aiming to win big. Here's a look at May 5, 2026, results for each game: ...
Alysa Liu’s New Louis Vuitton Role Marks a Major Fashion Move

It’s been just a few months sinceAlysa Liucaptured the world’s attention at the2026 Milano-Cortina Olympics, delivering a gold medal performance that instantly became one of the Games’ defining moments. It didn’t take long for Liu to captivate the fashion world, too. Today, on the morning of the 2026 Met Gala, Louis Vuitton has named Liu as its latest house ambassador.

Elle Denim jacket with a fitted silhouette and button details

“It’s honestly surreal to be a house ambassador for Louis Vuitton,” the Olympian tells ELLE exclusively. “It’s truly an honor and a privilege, especially for a figure skater, to be recognized in this way, and I take so much pride in that.”

Portrait with obscured facial features focusing on hair and clothing.

Liu’s stay in Milan was an unabashed success. She won two gold medals at the 2026 games—taking both the individual and team titles—and became the first American woman in 24 years to win Olympic gold in women’s figure skating. Equally as impressive as her victories was her individuality—whether it be her now-signature“halo” hair,viral smiley piercing, or free-spirited approach to her craft. “I don’t like boxing myself in,” she explains of her approach to style both on and off the ice.

Liu first entered the Louis Vuitton sphere shortly after, when she made her Paris Fashion Week debut at the brand’s fall/winter 2026 show in March. She now joins an elite roster of the maison’s house ambassadors, an impressive list formed under artistic director Nicolas Ghesquière that includes the likes of Lisa, Zendaya, and Ana de Armas.

When Louis Vuitton approached you about becoming an ambassador, what was your initial reaction?

Life is really about connection, and I feel that Louis Vuitton has really made me feel included. It’s a really empowering feeling to be a part of something so artistic.

Advertisement

What are your first memories of Louis Vuitton?

When I was 11, at a competition in L.A., I saw that one of my competitors had a mini Louis Vuitton backpack with the classic logo-ed up monogram. I remember thinking to myself,That’s so cute!

Person carrying ice skates.

How would you describe your personal style right now—and how has it evolved over the years?

My style is very eclectic! My personal style has evolved over the years naturally, as I’ve gotten older, but mostly because I’m coming back into myself. I know what I like and what makes me feel good, but because I’m still evolving, it’s fun to leave room for the unexpected and the discovery part of my personality.

Do you see fashion becoming an even bigger part of your life and career moving forward?

I see fashion like I see my art [and] figure skating as a form of self-expression. I don’t think of the two worlds as separate. I love to exercise self-expression in everything I do! Everything I choose to do or wear is just an extension of myself, and that’s what I love sharing. There is nothing to balance as long as I’m just being myself.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

You Might Also Like

Alysa Liu’s New Louis Vuitton Role Marks a Major Fashion Move

It’s been just a few months sinceAlysa Liucaptured the world’s attention at the2026 Milano-Cortina Olympics, delivering a gold medal pe...
2026 Kentucky Derby guide: Date, location, time, TV channels, betting favorites and more

The hunt for horse racing's Triple Crown begins Saturday with the 152nd running of the Kentucky Derby in Louisville, Kentucky.

NBC Universal

This year, the field of 3-year-old horses aren't the only ones drawing attention. Trainer Bob Baffert, whose horses have won the Kentucky Derby a record-tying six times, will have two horses in the field as he tries to become the race's all-time winningest trainer.

NBC Sports will provide coverage of the Derby all Saturday.

How to watch the 2026 Kentucky Derby

Date:Saturday, May 2

Live coverage time:Begins at 12 p.m. ET on Peacock and continues on NBC and Peacock at 2:30 p.m.

Post time for Kentucky Derby:6:57 p.m. ET

Where:Churchill Downsin Louisville, Kentucky

TV Network:NBC

Streaming:Peacock

The essentials

Who:20 3-year-old horses

Purse:$5 million ($3.1 million for first place)

Distance:1¼ miles

Post positions with oddsvia NBC Sports

No. 1 Renegade (4-1)

  • Jockey: Irad Ortiz Jr. | Trainer: Todd Pletcher

  • Career Highlight: The odds-on favorite to win won this year's Arkansas Derby and Sam F Davis Stakes.

  • Fun Fact: A Kentucky Derby winner hasn't come from the first position since 1986. But Renegade is trained by a two-time Derby winner in Pletcher.

No. 2 Albus (30-1)

Advertisement

  • Jockey: Manny Franco | Trainer: Riley Mott

  • Career Highlight: Winning at Tampa Bay Downs on Feb. 27, and at Aqueduct on April 4.

  • Fun Fact: Riley Mott is competing in the same race as his father, trainer Bill Mott. On its mother's side, is related to last year's winner, Sovereignty.

No. 3 Intrepido (50-1)

  • Jockey: Hector I. Berrios | Trainer: Jeff Mullins

  • Career Highlight: Won the 1 1/16th-mile American Pharaoh Stakes in October.

  • Fun Fact: Comes into the Derby after losing by a huge margin, 10 lengths, in the Santa Anita Derby on April 4.

No. 4 Litmus Test (50-1)

  • Jockey: Martin Garcia | Trainer: Bob Baffert

  • Career Highlight: Won the Los Alamitos Futurity in the fall.

  • Fun Fact: Litmus Test's father, Nyquist, was once named Horse of the Year.

No. 6 Commandment (6-1)

  • Jockey: Luis Saez | Trainer: Brad Cox

  • Career Highlight: Has won its last four races, including at the Florida Derby, and has more than $1 million in career earnings.

  • Fun Fact: Cox has two horses in this race, along with Further Ado, and nearly had three until Fulleffort scratched.

No. 7 Danon Bourbon (20-1)

  • Jockey: Atsuya Nishimura | Trainer: Manabu Ikezoe

  • Career Highlight: Has won all three career races. But because all of those races took place in Japan, the horse has only raced on right hand-turning tracks.

  • Fun Fact: Though born in Kentucky, Danon Bourbon raced exclusively in Japan, and a Japan-based horse has never won the Kentucky Derby.

No. 8 So Happy (15-1)

  • Jockey: Mike Smith | Trainer: Mark Glatt

  • Career Highlight: Winning the Santa Anita Derby by 2 3/4 lengths, one of three races it has won in four career starts.

  • Fun Fact: Smith rode Justify to the 2018 Kentucky Derby victory.

No. 9 The Puma (10-1)

A blurred view of a horse and jockey racing down the track. (Michael Reaves / Getty Images)
  • Jockey: Javier Castellano | Trainer: Gustavo Delgado

  • Career Highlight: Finished second in the Florida Derby. A good omen? Mage and Sovereignty also finished second in the same race before going on to win the Kentucky Derby.

  • Fun Fact: Delgado was the trainer for Mage, and Castellano its rider, when the horse won this race in 2023.

No. 10 Wonder Dean (30-1)

  • Jockey: Ryusei Sakai | Trainer: Daisuke Takayanagi

  • Career Highlight: Winner of the UAE Derby.

  • Fun Fact: The only horse in the field born in Japan.

No. 11 Incredibolt (20-1)

  • Jockey: Jaime Torres | Trainer: Riley Mott

  • Career Highlight: Won the Virginia Derby.

  • Fun Fact: Won two races at Churchill Downs in the fall, but can this horse win after not racing for the past seven weeks?

No. 12 Chief Wallabee (8-1)

  • Jockey: Junior Alvarado | Trainer: Bill Mott

  • Career Highlight: Has won once, at Gulfstream Park, and took second in a stakes race at the same track.

  • Fun Fact: Alvarado rode Sovereignty to the win in the 2025 Kentucky Derby. Mott has trained two winners since 2019 in Country House and 2025's Sovereignty.

No. 14 Potente (20-1)

  • Jockey: Juan Hernandez | Trainer: Bob Baffert

  • Career Highlight: Has won two of its three races, at Santa Anita Park on Jan. 31 and at the same venue on March 7. Faded to second at the Santa Anita Derby.

  • Fun Fact: Both Potente and Commandment share the same sire, Into Mischief.

No. 15 Emerging Market (15-1)

  • Jockey: Flavien Prat | Trainer: Chad Brown

  • Career Highlight: Has won both its career races.

  • Fun Fact: Enters with the fewest starts (2) of any horse in the field. Prat rode Country House to the 2019 win after a disqualification. Brown has trained two past Derby runners-up.

No. 16 Pavlovian (30-1)

  • Jockey: Edwin Maldonado | Trainer: Doug O’Neill

  • Career Highlight: Its results improved dramatically after wearing blinkers, including a win in the Sunland Derby.

  • Fun Fact: Has experience on its side. Not only does Pavlovian enter with the most starts (10), its owner and trainer have twice won the Derby together.

No. 17 Six Speed (50-1)

  • Jockey: Brian Hernandez Jr. | Trainer: Bhupat Seemar

  • Career Highlight: Owns three wins, with the last coming March 28, in five starts.

  • Fun Fact: Known as quite a fast horse. Hernandez has ridden the winning horse once, in 2024 with Mystik Dan.

No. 18 Further Ado (6-1)

  • Jockey: John Velazquez | Trainer: Brad Cox

  • Career Highlight: Has earned $1.1 million in earnings in six starts.

  • Fun Fact: Further Ado has the highest top-end speed of any horse in the field, according to both the Beyer Speed Figures and Brisnet Speed Ratings. Velazquez has been the winning jockey in 2011, 2017 and 2020.

No. 19 Golden Tempo (30-1)

  • Jockey: Jose Ortiz | Trainer: Cherie DeVaux

  • Career Highlight: Has raced four times, winning twice.

  • Fun Fact: Tempo's father, Curlin, has sired three past Derby runners-up (Exaggerator, Good Magic, Journalism).

No. 21 Great White(50-1)

  • Jockey: Alex Achard | Trainer: John Ennis

  • Career Highlight: Great White has won two races but both were on synthetic tracks instead of dirt the kind it will run on at Churchill Downs.

  • Fun Fact: Did not officially join the Derby field until Wednesday, after Silent Tactic's scratch.

No. 22 Ocelli (50-1)

  • Jockey: Joseph Ramos | Trainer: D. Whitworth Beckman

  • Career Highlight: Finished third in the high-profile Wood Memorial, but has yet to produce a victory in six starts.

  • Fun Fact: Joined the field Thursday after Fulleffort was scratched following an X-ray showing a chip and fluid in Fulleffort's left hind ankle.

  • No. 23 Robusta (50-1)

  • Jockey: Cristian Torres | Trainer: Doug O'Neill

  • Career Highlight: Has raced four times, all at Santa Anita Park on dirt. Robusta won its first race in January.

  • Fun Fact: Joined the field Friday after Right to Party was scratched. This will be the first Kentucky Derby ride for Torres, who had been set to ride Silent Tactic this week until Tactic was scratched. Now, thanks to another scratch, Robusta (and Torres) are in the race.

2026 Kentucky Derby guide: Date, location, time, TV channels, betting favorites and more

The hunt for horse racing's Triple Crown begins Saturday with the 152nd running of the Kentucky Derby in Louisville, Kentucky. ...
In big upset, top-seeded UCLA men’s volleyball season ends

Their fortunes changed in a flash.

NY Post Sports An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Four volleyball players in blue and yellow uniforms huddle together, Image 2 shows A volleyball player in a blue and yellow uniform jumps to hit a volleyball over the net

One moment, the UCLA men’s volleyball players were celebrating a trip to the Final Four.

The next, they were mourning the end of their season.

Bruins volleyball players huddle during their NCAA Tournament quarterfinal against UC Irvine.

That’s how quickly the momentum shifted Saturday night after what appeared to be the winning point was wiped out by an official review during the Bruins’ NCAA Tournament quarterfinal against UC Irvine.

Given new life, the unseeded Anteaters went on to complete the comeback, knocking off top-seeded UCLA, 25-23, 19-25, 25-23, 19-25, 16-14, at Pauley Pavilion.

How big of an upset was this?

The Bruins (29-2) had lost just once previously this season, with their only other setback coming against Pepperdine a month ago.

“Being honest,” said UCLA senior outside hitter Zach Rama, his eyes reddened with sadness, “I don’t think it’s anything any of us expected just because of how confident we are and our ability to play together. I don’t think it’s fully hit me yet.”

Rama’s attack error on match point sparked a wild celebration for UC Irvine (20-8), which had trailed 8-4 in the fifth set and appeared momentarily beaten after an earlier match point had been awarded to the Bruins before being reversed.

Anteaters coach David Kniffin said he was confident the replay would given his team the critical point because he had heard a UCLA player touch the ball on the play.

Advertisement

“But sound doesn’t carry on a challenge review system,” Kniffin said, “so you never know what the camera is going to pick up. But, for me, it wasn’t even if we got the touch or not, it was about sustaining belief.”

Top-seeded UCLA volleyball was stunned in five sets by UC Irvine on Saturday at Pauley Pavilion.

In the Bruins’ huddle, there was determination to not let the call beat them twice.

“We did talk about being able to move on even if the call was to be overturned,” senior setter Andrew Rowan said, “so do our best to bounce back from a call like that.”

This was already an unusual situation for the Bruins, who were forced to rally to force the fifth set. They had trailed 2-1 only three times previously this season, including a comeback victory over the Anteaters on Feb. 28 that they won in five sets.

After the reversal on match point pulled the Anteaters to within 14-13, an attack error on UCLA middle blocker Cameron Thorne tied the score.

The Bruins then unsuccessfully challenged a kill by UC Irvine’s Andreas Brinck, which gave the Anteaters match point. They capitalized on Rama’s attack error that sailed out of bounds.

As their fans roared in approval, the Anteaters’ reserves bounded onto the court and senior William D’Arcy pulled the front of his jersey over his head in celebration.

Meanwhile, the Bruins were left to contemplate a Final Four that will be held without them on their home court. UC Irvine will play fourth-seeded Ball State in one semifinal May 9 at Pauley Pavilion, and third-seeded Long Beach State will play second-seeded Hawaii in the other semifinal.

“I mean, it’s obviously tough,” Rowan said. “It’s the first time we haven’t been past this game in our collegiate career, so it’s tough. It hasn’t really set in yet.”

UCLA’s seniors had been part of two championships before finishing as runners-up last season. There would be no happy ending in their farewell season.

“I’m incredibly sad for them,” Bruins coach John Hawks said. “We had an incredible run, and I’m sorry to see it end.”

In big upset, top-seeded UCLA men’s volleyball season ends

Their fortunes changed in a flash. One moment, the UCLA men’s volleyball players were celebrating a trip to the Final Four. The ...

 

CUSTOS JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com