
Sunbirds and Marvelous each secure titles for Osaka in inaugural SV. League
Former Olympic champion Dmitriy Muserskiy hit the winning points as Suntory Sunbirds Osaka took the inaugural men's title in the first season of Japan's ambitious SV. League on Monday, two days after Osaka Marvelous clinched the women's title.
The tall Russian made a string of blocks and spikes as the Sunbirds downed Jtekt Stings Aichi 29-27, 25-16, 25-22 to clinch the best-of-three game final series 2-0 in front of almost 10,000 fans in Funabashi, Chiba Prefecture.
A Muserskiy service ace put the Sunbirds two points from the title and the 2012 Olympic champion sealed the deal with a crunching finish.
"I feel amazing. We won the championship. That was our goal before the season," said his Polish teammate Aleksander Sliwka, a silver medalist at the Paris Olympics.
"There were a lot of tough moments during the season, but we stayed together and believed in ourselves. So, we are really happy that we accomplished our goal."
The SV. League was launched last year with the aim of becoming the world's most popular volleyball league by 2030 on the back of the recruitment of big-name players from around the globe.
Ran Takahashi celebrates after Suntory Sunbirds Osaka clinched the SV. League championship on Monday in Chiba Prefecture. |
Jiji
"I've heard that Suntory drew over 100,000 spectators this season," said Suntory's Japanese outside hitter Ran Takahashi, who was named tournament MVP.
"That kind of energy is a great sign for both volleyball and the SV. League."
In the women's competition, Osaka Marvelous overcame NEC Red Rockets Kawasaki 25-22, 25-21, 25-16 on Saturday to wrap up the women's final series after Game 2 at Tokyo's Ariake Arena.
Osaka Marvelous players celebrate after winning the SV. League title on Monday in Tokyo. |
Jiji
"I think it's always an amazing feeling when you win a title and to be the first in history, it makes it only more beautiful," said Belgian opposite spiker Lise Van Hecke.
"We're very happy, I'm very proud. It's been a long season, but to finish it like this, it's the best way and I think we showed everyone we deserve to be the champion."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Mainichi
3 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Baseball: Ohtani extends streak with triple as Dodgers beat Padres
SAN DIEGO, California (Kyodo) -- Shohei Ohtani extended his hit streak to eight games Wednesday as he helped the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the San Diego Padres 5-2 and win the first series of the season between the National League West rivals. The reigning NL MVP contributed an insurance run with the Dodgers leading 3-2 in the top of the ninth at Petco Park, belting a line drive to right field and sprinting to third for a triple before scoring on Will Smith's single. Ohtani hobbled and appeared in pain after colliding with third baseman Manny Machado while sliding into the base, but he showed no lasting effects as he dashed home to score. The Japanese star lost his head-to-head battle in the seventh against countryman Yuki Matsui, who notched his 100th MLB strikeout by getting Ohtani to whiff at a 1-2 slider that moved low and away. "It was just by chance," said Matsui, who allowed one hit and fanned two in a scoreless seventh. "The count was in my favor, so I didn't need a strike right then."


Japan Today
3 hours ago
- Japan Today
WADA calls on U.S. to stop 'dangerous' Enhanced Games
World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) chief Witold Banka has called on U.S. authorities to prevent the drug-fueled Enhanced Games from taking place next year. Speaking in Lausanne in an address to a meeting of summer Olympic officials, Banka said the inaugural edition of the Enhanced Games in Las Vegas -- where athletes will be free to use performance-enhancing drugs -- "must be stopped." "We all must stand up and condemn those who put greed and ego before the well-being of athletes and the values of fair competition," Banka said. "As the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles approach, we cannot allow what should be a celebration of honest sporting endeavor to be overshadowed by this cynical attempt to undermine clean sport. "WADA is now urging the authorities in the U.S. to seek ways to prevent the Enhanced Games from going ahead as planned. For the sake of athletes' health and the purity of sport, it must be stopped." In separate remarks following the address, Banka urged U.S. authorities to consider legal action to prevent the Enhanced Games from taking place. "Every effort should be made by the authorities in the U.S. to prevent this dangerous event from going ahead as planned," Banka said. "This should be explored from the legal perspective. For example, I would question whether it is legal for licensed doctors to give these potent drugs to healthy athletes. "It goes completely against the rules and values of their profession...I think there is a strong role to be played by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA)". USADA has been a strident critic of WADA in recent years following controversy over the global doping watchdog's handling of positive drug tests from 23 Chinese swimmers in 2021. Responding to Banka's remarks on Wednesday, USADA chief executive Travis Tygart accused the WADA president of "attempting to leverage this sideshow to distract from fixing WADA and to stoke anti-American rhetoric." "As we have repeatedly said, for all of the obvious reasons, the Enhanced Games or any other open competition is a bad idea," Tygart said in comments emailed to AFP, urging Banka to accept an invitation to a US Senate hearing next week where the 2021 case involving Chinese swimmers is to be discussed. The first Enhanced Games will be staged in Las Vegas in May 2026, with athletes participating in three sports -- athletics, swimming and weightlifting. Athletes will be allowed to use drugs banned across international sport such as steroids and human growth hormones, with winners of each event receiving $250,000, and a bonus of $1 million for any athlete who breaks a world record. © 2025 AFP


The Mainichi
4 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Football: Urawa Reds to represent J-League at revamped Club World Cup
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Urawa Reds will fly the flag as Japan's sole representative at the new 32-team Club World Cup kicking off Saturday in the United States, where hefty bonuses await the winner of each match, let alone the entire month-long tournament. Earning entry via their 2022-23 Asian Champions League triumph, Reds fittingly became Japan's inaugural entry in the overhauled event as winners of three continental titles, more than any other Japanese club. Qualification has already earned them $9.55 million and any group-stage win will net a further $2 million, with that amount to be split between the two sides in the event of a draw. The prize-money balloons from the round of 16 onward, with the eventual winners pocketing some $125 million in total. The competition will feature continental champions from 2021 to 2024, as well as teams with a high standing in their respective confederations' club rankings during the period, with a maximum of two clubs from any country. "The 32 best club teams in the world will determine, for the first time in history, which club, which team, is the best," FIFA President Gianni Infantino said. The tournament's addition to an already congested footballing calendar raised eyebrows, especially for European clubs who have just wrapped up their draining domestic seasons, but it represents an invaluable opportunity for Urawa to square off with some of the world's top sides. The draw has placed them in a tough but intriguing Group E featuring Argentina's River Plate, led by 17-year-old wonderkid Franco Mastantuono, Italian giants Inter Milan, who made this year's UEFA Champions League final, and Mexican powerhouse Monterrey. "I want Urawa to show they can more than compete with anyone on the world stage," former Japan captain and Urawa player Makoto Hasebe said in a video message in March as the trophy was exhibited at their Saitama Stadium. Prior to the latest alteration, the Toyota Cup pitted European and South American champions in a one-off decider in Japan before it was expanded to the previous edition of the Club World Cup in 2005, contested by six continental champions and a side from the host nation. Urawa's best outing to date in the tournament came in 2007 when the Asian champions lost 1-0 to Kaka-inspired AC Milan in the semifinals but beat Etoile Sahel of Tunisia in the third-place match 4-2 on penalties following a 2-2 draw. Recently crowned European champions Paris Saint-Germain join Real Madrid, Manchester City and Bayern Munich as favorites to lift the new trophy, while the spotlight will fall on 38-year-old Lionel Messi after his Inter Miami claimed the host's slot. Urawa arrive in the United States on the back of a decent domestic season so far, sitting third and six points off the top midway through the J1 campaign, having played two games more than leaders Kashima Antlers. Kashima, the 2018 ACL winners, incidentally had the best run at the Club World Cup two years earlier as host representative, reaching the final where they lost 4-2 in extra time to Real Madrid, a feat that Urawa goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa hopes his team can emulate. "In order to tell the world how wonderful the J-League is, we need to produce a good result," said the veteran who is set to play in the Club World Cup for the fourth time. "Earning at least a point in the opener is the most important thing and we want to focus on that (for now)."