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Benilde coach Arnold Laniog rues injuries, inexperience in Blazers' Final Four breakdown
Benilde coach Arnold Laniog rues injuries, inexperience in Blazers' Final Four breakdown

GMA Network

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • GMA Network

Benilde coach Arnold Laniog rues injuries, inexperience in Blazers' Final Four breakdown

NCAA By BEA MICALLER,GMA Integrated News De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde head coach Arnold Laniog said injuries and inexperience came back to haunt them in the NCAA Season 100 men's volleyball Final Four round. The top-seeded Blazers took two shocking tumbles in the semifinals, falling twice to fourth seed Colegio de San Juan de Letran to bow out of contention despite holding a twice-to-beat advantage over the Knights. The Taft crew had to play through a depleted roster after team captain Arnel Aguilar and main opposite spiker Jacob Herrera were both forced to play on limited minutes due to injuries they sustained even prior to the semifinals round. Laniog shared Aguilar is nursing a shoulder injury he got in the final stretch of the first round while the lefty Herrera tore his patellar tendon during the start of the tournament. With these, Laniog decided to convert Aguilar to a libero, including in their do-or-die Game 2 against the Knights just to put his presence on the court while Herrera saw minimal playing time. "Ang laking bagay din na nawala 'yung captain namin as regular spiker dahil sa injury niya sa balikat. Kaya namin siyang ginawang libero para lang every time na nasa loob siya, nando'n pa rin 'yung presence niya," Laniog told GMA News Online. "Siya 'yung malaking bagay na nawala kasi meron siyang leadership, 'yung action, and sa crucial time kaya naiyang mag-deliver. Si Jacob Herrera start pa lang ng tournament, punit na 'yung patellar tendon so nilaban niya lang." But Laniog isn't offering any excuses, stressing the Knights played like a legit title contender behind veterans Vince Himzon and Bembem Bautista. After losing Game 1, Benilde still had a chance to clinch a finals berth as they dominated Letran in Set 1 of the sudden death, but they failed to find the finishing touches as the Knights staged a come-from-behind victory to enter the championship round for the first time in 16 years. "That's the turning point eh, nu'ng natalo kami sa second set. We have a chance nu'ng second set nu'ng nag-25-all after ng challenge namin pero hindi na-capitalize," Laniog added. "Sabi ko nga kung nakuha namin 'yun, big difference sa third set pero sa third set biglang bumagsak. Lumalabas na 'yung grupo namin ay mas bata, kulang sa experience." Despite the Final Four exit, all is not lost for Benilde as the Blazers now shift their focus on the battle for third against Mapua University in their bid to make the podium. "'Yun na lang, sabi nga namin we must accept ang nangyari na talagang talo tayo. Hindi tayo nag-perform doon sa kagustuhan natin so let's move on para doon sa battle for third." —JKC, GMA Integrated News

Denver's license plate surveillance system faces critical vote
Denver's license plate surveillance system faces critical vote

Axios

time05-05-2025

  • Axios

Denver's license plate surveillance system faces critical vote

A proposal expanding the contract duration for Denver police's license plate reader system is raising concerns about the surveillance tool's potential misuse. Why it matters: In other jurisdictions, similar systems that provide law enforcement with real-time data have already been exploited by federal agencies, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement. By the numbers: Denver police want to add $666,000 to an existing contract with Flock Group Inc. that would expand its services two more years to continue operating the 111 cameras already installed at 70 locations citywide. This would bring the contract's total to just over $1 million. State of play: Denver police commander Jacob Herrera last month said any agency requesting department data must "sign and attest" they won't give information to ICE. However, the ACLU, which opposes using such tech to share data, says a records request completed in Northern California this year from a similar ALPR system operated by a different company showed ICE gained access to a database to monitor more than 5 billion data points. What they're saying: ACLU Colorado senior policy strategist Anaya Robinson tells us the public's right to privacy should be considered: "The community should have a say in whether or not they are willing to give that up." Context: The devices, called automated license plate readers (ALPR), photograph car plates and feed them into a searchable database owned by DPD. DPD credited the tech with helping reduce car thefts after a spike in 2022, and it says ALPRs helped investigations of more serious crimes, including two homicide cases. 81 law enforcement agencies throughout Colorado have access to data gathered by DPD. How it works: The cameras photograph license plates, then compare them to those of cars flagged by other agencies in the state and across the country, Herrera said last month. The devices can alert police in real time to the location of stolen vehicles, Herrera said. Data is retained for 30 days, but search records — basically, who conducts a query — are kept indefinitely. It's up to individual agencies to decide who can access their data, Flock spokesperson Holly Beilin tells us. Yes, but: Denver City Councilmember Sarah Parady tells us she has concerns about the proposed contract, saying: "I can't vote for this." Her top concerns include: Between the lines: Mayor Mike Johnston supports the expanded contract, with a spokesperson saying it will "help address auto theft without sacrificing our shared values and residents' privacy," per a statement.

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