
Celtic beat Falkirk to go level with Hearts at top of the table
Celtic's 3-1 win over Falkirk puts them level with Hearts at the top of the table!

No. 1 seed Hawaii defeated No. 5 seed UC San Diego to reach the Big West final. They will face No. 2 Long Beach State for the championship title.
IRVINE, Calif. — No. 1 seed Hawaii avenged its only loss of the season in conference play.
Now the ’Bows get their longtime rival in the final of the Outrigger Big West Men’s Volleyball Championship.
The Rainbow Warriors got a team-high 12 kills from Louis Sakanoko and overcame a slow start to hold off No. 5 seed UC San Diego 25-19, 19-25, 25-20, 25-13 in the semifinals on Friday night at Bren Events Center.
Hawaii will meet No. 2 Long Beach State with an opportunity to win its fifth Big West championship today at 2 p.m.
Adrien Roure, who along with starting opposite Kristian Titriyski was hitting negative for the match in the third set, rallied to finish with 10 kills and a .261 hitting percentage.
Hawaii (27-4), which ended the night hitting .248 after improving its hitting percentage in each set, scored 42 of the final 66 points after trailing for the final time 9-8 in the third set.
“That team has given us all we can handle,” Hawaii coach Charlie Wade said. “We weren’t as sharp offensively as we have been throughout the year, but a lot of that is credit to a tough San Diego team.”
The Tritons (13-14), who recorded a season-high 15 blocks to hand Hawaii its only Big West loss in its final road match of the regular season, matched that total Friday and had the ’Bows frustrated walking to the back after dropping the second set.
Middle blocker Trevell Jordan, who had missed three of Hawaii’s previous four matches, had eight kills on 10 swings and Ofeck Hazan, who replaced an injured Justin Todd late in the first set, added four kills to help open things up for UH’s struggling starting pin hitters.
The two combined to hit .556 with eight blocks.
“I always say that starting with the middles is really important because once the middle blocker on the other side is giving you respect, even if it’s for one moment he’s hesitating before going (to block) the outside, it can determine if it is kill, block or soft touch,” Hazan said. “I think (setter) Tread (Rosenthal) did a really good job of getting me and Tre into the game.”
Rosenthal finished with a match-high 39 assists, seven digs, five kills and three blocks and needed the middles to get the Tritons block off the pin hitters.
Hawaii had only three players hitting in positive figures after the second set and one of them was Rosenthal with three kills.
Jordan had four kills on five swings and Sakanoko was hitting .250 with six kills. Roure and Titriyski each had as many kills as they had attack errors.
“It was kind of the same story as the last game when we won against them, we just picked up on that,” said UCSD junior hitter Leo Pravednikov, who was in on five blocks. “That first set I think we had a lot of big blocks, but obviously it was pretty hard to keep that up for the whole game.”
The Anteaters started the match with four quick blocks and held Hawaii to a negative hitting percentage in building a 15-12 lead at the media timeout.
Hawaii defeated UC San Diego with set scores of 25-19, 19-25, 25-20, and 25-13.
Louis Sakanoko led with 12 kills, while Adrien Roure contributed 10 kills.
The championship match is scheduled for today at 2 p.m.
Hawaii has the opportunity to win its fifth Big West championship title.

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The Tritons led 16-13 when a service error began a set-closing 12-3 run for the ‘Bows, who had to carry Todd off the floor leading 20-19.
Todd tried to two-hand pass a ball with his back to the net off of a UCSD serve before falling to the ground clutching at his left ankle.
Hazan replaced him and promptly delivered a kill to put UH back in front by two points.
The Tritons didn’t score again as a 5-0 Hawaii run ended the set with Hazan putting away the final point with UH’s second ace.
“The first point I got in, he set me the ball, which is pretty rare for Tread,” Hazan said. “But yeah, I thought we did a pretty good job opening the net up for our pin hitters.”
The second set was tied at 12-all when a lift call on Sakanoko changed the momentum of the match in UCSD’s favor.
Hawaii apparently had a 13-12 lead when Sakanoko wiped a kill off the block, but he was whistled for a lift, giving UCSD the point.
That started a set-closing 13-7 run for the Tritons, who frustrated Hawaii with three more blocks to give them 8.5 after two sets.
“It was 12-12 and it was a judgment call. In this day and age where the push, throw, shove is so much a part of the game where you make that call, and then it’s a three-point swing that then is a six-point swing,” Wade said. “You can’t give decent teams that many points. You give them one and then they get two more off and it’s 15-12 and changed the entire set.”
Titriyski got the ’Bows on track with a kill and an ace out of a UCSD timeout to put UH ahead 13-9 after a 5-0 run.
He was given a yellow card after talking through the net following a solo block of Pravednikov to prompt a second Tritons timeout down 17-12.
Sakanoko and Jordan’s double block of Sebastiano Sani gave UH its largest lead at 20-13 and Hawaii doubled its match total in blocks in the set with 4.5 to go up two sets to one.
The final set was over quick. Sakanoko served 11 balls in a row during an 11-0 run to put the match to bed.
“It stinks. Bad taste in our mouth finishing that fourth set,” UC San Diego coach Brad Rostratter said. “They had some serving runs and there were a lot of things that weren’t as good as it needs to be against a good team and a good block. We knew it was going to go back and forth and unfortunately it was just a little too slow for us to get out of some of those runs.”