The annual Palisadian-Post Football Contest, giving readers a chance to predict upcoming game winners, continues to week 17.
“Every week, the Palisadian-Post will have a selection of NFL and college football games,” according to the contest rules. “Check the team you predict will win each game. The person with the most correct picks wins. In the event there is a tie, the tie-breaker will be used to determine the winner.”
There is an online submission process: Contestants can download or copy their entry form, fill in their picks, take a photo, and email it back to footballcontest@palipost.com by the 5 p.m. Friday deadline. This week’s deadline is Friday, December 27, at 5 p.m.
One entry per person per contest will be accepted. Winners will receive a $10 gift card from our contest sponsor, The Yogurt Shoppe, via email. Last week’s winner was Andrew Rhames (+9).
As we embark on yet another exciting year of sports in Pacific Palisades there are many memorable plays, record-breaking achievements and storybook endings in store. Before we look ahead, however, let us take a quick look back at moments that gave us thrills and chills in the past 12 months. Here is a countdown of the Palisadian-Post’s Top 10 sports stories in 2024…
Noah Wexler Wins Will Rogers 5K on Fourth of July
10Upon winning the Palisades Will Rogers 10K in 2023, both Henry Didden and Laura Osman vowed to return July 4 to do it again. The 20-year-old Didden from Woodland Hills won by 19 seconds in 32:46. Osman, a 43-year-old mother of three from Encino, was the leading lady in 38:36, a 23-second improvement over last year. The only other time in the event’s 47-year history that both 10K champs repeated was when Charles Gray and Teresa Haro defended their titles in 1981.
Cardinals Win Mustang World Series in Nine-Inning Thriller
9In one of the longest, most dramatic deciders ever in played in the Pacific Palisades Baseball Association, the Cardinals edged the Orioles 6-5 in nine pressure-packed innings to win the Mustang Division championship in June at the Field of Dreams.
Tate Dore stole home to give the top-seeded Cards the lead in the top of the ninth, and after a run was taken off the scoreboard in the bottom half the Orioles put runners on second and third with two outs before a grounder to third had the red birds flying high.
Pali High Swimmers Second in Relay to Tie Granada Hills
8Entering the last event, Palisades High’s girls team was leading the City swim championships by six points, but needed a runner-up finish in the 400 freestyle relay to earn at least a share of the title. Freshman Alexis Burrell made up a two-second deficit on the anchor leg to take second by 59 hundredths of a second and pull the Dolphins even with Granada Hills at 371.5 points, the first tie in girls finals history. Palisades added to its record total with its 31st girls title and 15th under Maggie Nance.
Pali High Boys Water Polo Dynasty Ends in Finals Defeat
7All good things must ultimately come to an end and that was the case for Palisades High’s boys water polo team November 13 at Valley College. The Dolphins’ latest dynasty, a 43-game playoff winning streak dating back to 2012, was snapped in the City Open Division final with a 15-4 defeat to Cleveland, the team that had dealt them their last postseason loss some 13 years earlier. Palisades’ run of 11 straight City titles included back-to-back CIF Southern California Regional Division III titles in 2021 and 2022.
Pali High Lacrosse Squads Sweep City Section Finals
6It was all about the blue and white April 23 in Lake Balboa. That is where the Palisades High girls and boys lacrosse teams captured City Section championships hours apart for the second year in a row. Led by seniors Elah Blyumkin and Mallie McGowan, the girls repeated with a 13-7 triumph over El Camino Real, their third title overall. Then the boys took down the Royals 17-6 for their eighth straight City title and their ninth total, led by Axel Greve, Dominic Zuniga, Trey Tzung and Dylan Wong.
Pali High Boys Tennis Claims 15th Consecutive City Title
5Thanks in large part to newcomer Lorenzo Brunkow’s four points at the No. 1 singles position, the Palisades High boys tennis team downed Granada Hills in the City Open Division final at Balboa Sports Center to earn its 40th section title and 15th in a row—extending the longest active championship reign by any team in any sport in the City. The Dolphins’ current dynasty started in 2009. The winningest coach in section history, Bud Kling added a 31st boys title to his resume, giving him 52 total since 1979.
Pali High Football Reaches Division I Championship Game
4In its second season under head coach Dylen Smith the Palisades High football team advanced to a City Section final for the fourth time since the school opened in 1961. Along the way, the Dolphins won 11 games, took second in league, reclaimed the Charter Bowl trophy and set program records for total points scored in a season (582, an average of 41.5 per game) and points in a playoff game (63 in a semifinal victory over Eagle Rock).
Pali Rec Minors Hoops Squads Win West Region Crowns
3Not one, but two All-Star 9- & 10-year-old basketball teams from the Palisades Recreation Center experienced their own versions of “March Madness” by winning the West Region in Westwood and advancing to the Citywide Tournament. The Co-Rec Minors team, coached by Vijay Srinivasan and Brian Hansen, beat Mar Vista 34-22 and one hour later the Girls Minors, coached by Shelia Martin and Sean Cudzil, beat Cheviot Hills 30-11.
Matsuyama Wins Genesis with Record-Setting Final Round
2Tied for seventh place beginning the last day of the Genesis Invitational in February, Hideki Matsuyama delivered one of the finest displays of golf ever witnessed at Riviera Country Club. The 31-year-old from the island of Shikoku in Japan shot a 62 for a three-stroke victory and his sizzling nine under par went into the record books as the lowest final-round score ever in a PGA Tour event at the historic course nicknamed “Hogan’s Alley.” His four-day total of 267 was three strokes off the Riviera record.
Mustang 9U All-Stars Advance to PONY Zone Tournament
1In the 70-year history of the Pacific Palisades Baseball Association, the 2024 Mustang 9U All-Star team will be remembered as one of the best. Consisting of Will Feil, Carter Bergman, Tristan Kawasaki, Cabe Talt, Anthony Layton, Axl Moody, Bennett Underwood, Dylan Morrow, Jack Hetherington, Owen Tyler, Nate Underwood and Maddox Martin the squad posted a 23-6 summer record and reached the PONY West Zone playoffs—only the second team in league annals to ever make it that far.
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Another exciting year of sports is coming to an end in Pacific Palisades and it is time to look back at some of the local athletes who inspired us with their perseverance, passion and skill in 2024…
No athlete made his hometown more proud than Miles Partain, who established himself as one of the top players in the world in his sport.As one of two United States pairs entered in the men’s beach volleyball competition at the Summer Olympics in Paris, Partain and his partner Andy Benesh earned five of a possible six points to place second in the group stage, then upset the Italian duo of Samuele Cottafava and Paolo Nicolai in the round of 16 before falling to Cherif Younousse and Ahmed Tijan of Qatar in the quarterfinals and settling for fifth place.
At age 22, Partain became the youngest U.S. beach volleyball player in Olympic history. He won three City titles at Palisades High before graduating as valedictorian in 2020 and played for Pac6 Volleyball Club. In 2017, the 15-year-old and his brother Marcus (then 17) became the youngest duo to advance to the main draw of an AVP Tour event.
Partain and Benesh followed their Olympic success by reaching the finals of the Manhattan Beach Open in August and Partain was introduced as the guest of honor before the Pali High football team’s Western League contest against Westchester at Stadium by the Sea in September.
There has been no sophomore slump for Amelia Sarkisian, who is establishing herself as one of the finest prep distance runners in Southern California. The Brentwood School 10th-grader scorched the three-mile Woodward Park course in Fresno, clocking 17:31.8 to take first place by 15.6 seconds in the Division V girls race at the CIF State Cross Country Championships in November. Before that, the Alphabet Streets resident captured the Southern Section title in 18:13.2 and won the Gold Coast League individual crown, completing the three-mile route around Brentwood’s campus in a personal-best 17:01.40 while leading the Eagles to second place in the team standings. She clocked 17:17.4 to win the White Varsity Girls A Division at the Woodbridge Classic in Irvine and won the Small Schools Division in 18:46.5 at the Bellarmine/Sacred Heart Invitational in Griffith Park in September. A few weeks ago she capped off her stellar campaign with a 19:06.0 effortin the 5,000 meters at the Foot Locker West Regional Championshipsat Mt. SAC in Walnut, an 83-second improvement over her time last year.
As a freshman on the track in the spring, Sarkisian won the 800 and mile races at the Malbu Invitational and swept the 800, 1600 and 3200 varsity events at the Gold Coast League Finals.
Meanwhile, Palisades freshman Zoey Morris placed second in the frosh/soph 3200 at the Redondo Nike Invitational in 11:28.1 and first in the 3200 in 11:19.9 at the City Track & Field Championships in May. On the boys side, Dolphins captain Max Fields capped his stellar prep career by taking the section 3200 title for a second time in 9:21.09, running a personal-best 9:03.84 at the state track finals in Clovis and winning the Post Cup Award as his school’s outstanding senior athlete.
The Palisades High football team made the City Division I finals for the second time in three years and the biggest reason why was the arms and legs of quarterback Jack Thomas, a junior transfer from Loyola, who enjoyed one of the most productive seasons by a Dolphins signal caller in program history. In 14 games, he threw for 3,369 yards and 46 touchdowns with only five interceptions and rushed for 570 yards and another 12 touchdowns. He won the Joe Spector Award as Team MVP and was named Western League Player of the Year.
When it comes to golf, no one at Pali High has ever done it better than Anna Song, who wrote her name in the history books as perhaps the most accomplished player in City annals by carding a finals-record 65 at Balboa to capture her third straight individual title while leading the Dolphins to their fourth team title. The Stanford-bound senior then tied for fifth at the CIF state championships in San Gabriel.
In the spring, Luke Schultz survived a battle of attrition at Griffith Park’s Harding Course in one of the most memorable City finals battles ever. The Pali High junior forced a playoff with an eagle at No. 18, then rolled in an eight-foot birdie putt on the sixth extra hole to beat Van Nuys’ Isaiah Kim, who settled for second for the second year in a row. Schultz carded a four-under-par 68—six shots better than his previous best at Harding—and helped the Dolphins capture their 23rd team title.
Medalist Chase Zucker (-1) and teammates Cole Gailys, Hudson Menzel, Jack Zucker, Gabriel Svenblad, Noah Williams and Cole Christopher led Paul Revere Middle School’s boys squad to the Delphic League championship at Sinaloa Golf Course in Simi Valley.
After helping the United States’ men’s fencing team win the bronze medal in the foil at the Tokyo Olyumpics three years ago, 2017 Pali High graduate Nick Itlkin earnedbronze in the individual foil in Paris, becoming the first American male in that event to stand on the podium since 2016. The 24-year-old used his quickness and counter striking to beat Kazuki Iimura of Japan 15-12 in the third-place bout.
Village School grad and former Highlands resident Johnny Hooper played a vital role in the USA men’s water polo team’s bronze medal run in Paris. The 27-year-old scored four goals in five group play contests and netted his team’s first goal in the quarterfinals versus Australia.
It was another successful season on the track for auto racing phenom Jaxon Bell, as the 2021 Pali High graduate and oldest son of 10-time Indy 500 driver Townsend Bell placed fourth overall in the Toyota GR Cup standings with seven podium spots, including a win in Austin, a pole position in Viriginia and a pair of third-place finishes in Florida.
Representing her community and her country proudly on the soccer pitch is Kaitlyn Parcell, who is in her second season with Fortuna Hjorring in the Denmark Women’s Premier League (Gjensidige Kvindeliga Division 1) and has the team in first place, even scoring the winning goal against HB Koge in November. Six weeks before she played all 90 minutes in a 6-0 victory in a Denmark Cup contest and another full 90 three days later in a league match, contributing two assists from her left outside back position.
Parcell, who turned 27 in September, grew up in the El Medio Bluffs, went to Corpus Christi and is the only Pali High player to tally 50+ goals and 50+ assists in her career. She won the Post Cup Award in 2016.
This year’s Post Cup winner (along with Fields) was another soccer extraordinaire, Erica Hamilton, who enjoyed the greatest offensive season ever by a girls soccer player at Palisades.
Hamilton shattered the school records for goals (33) and points (71). She needed only 17 games to break the school record of 27 goals in 20 games set by Kathryn Gaskin in 2009-10, doing so in a three-goal effort versus league rival LACES that pushed her season total to 28. She went on to tally five more, including all four Dolphin goals in a playoff victory over Venice. She graduated with a three-year total of 66 goals in 49 career games (she did not play as a ninth-grader) and kicked her team to three City Divison I semifinals.
Pali High senior James Van Wagenen was the epitome of courage at Roybal Learning Center in February when he captured the City 126-pound wrestling title in dramatic fashion. In the finals against Birmingham’s Roman Arakelyan he built an early lead, lost it, but led 7-6 in the final seconds Arakelyan took a shot in a desperate attempt to score but Van Wagenen sidestepped the move and the two tumbled to the mat together as time expired. Van Wagenen was credited with two points for a near fall that gave him a 9-6 decision, prompting him to flex his muscles and scream in jubilation. In his triumph he reached the 100-win plateau and earned a trip to the state meet in Bakersfield.
Lorenzo Brunkow is glad he made the decision to join the Pali High tennis team in the spring. First, the junior from Topanga got all the way to the finals of the CIF singles division at Ojai. Four days later he swept his four singles sets to lead the Dolphins to their 40th City title and 15th straight. Then, the early UCSB commit capped his season in style, dropping one game in five matches on his way to the City individual singles title.
On the doubles side, Loyola juniors Braun Levi and Cooper Schwartz wereformidable duo, winning the Mission League title and making the Ojai quarterfinals.
Speaking of joining forces, how about sisters Lexi and Kiki Wolf, who in July paired up to win the silver ball in the 16-and-under doubles division at the USTA Clay Court Nationals in Huntsville, Alabama. Seeded fourth in a draw of 128 teams, they upset the top-seeded duo in the semifinals before falling to the second-seeded tandem in the championship match. As teammates at Sherman Oaks Notre Dame High in the fall (Lexi is a junior, Kiki a freshman) the Riviera residents united again to reach the CIF doubles finals.
On the prep volleyball court, Marymount senior Ryan Gilhooly was a true renaisssance gal for the Sailors, earning Mission League honors playing multiple positions. At Palisades, middle blockers Hazel Irving andAnnabelle Refnes earned All-City first team honorsfor the girls while outside hitter Pierce Bergstein and setter Kyle McKnight did so for the boys.
At UCLA, Cooper Robinson had 12 kills, three blocks, two digs and an ace as the Bruins topped Long Beach State in four sets to claim their 21st NCAA national championship in May.
“Special K” may be a well-deserved nickname for pitcher Lars Refnes after his performance for Pali Blue in the Westside Pony Division final at the Field of Dreams. He fanned 16 Pali Black batters in a three-hit shutout and that came on the heels of a no-hitter with 13 strikeouts in the semifinals, giving him a total of 29 strikeouts in 12 postseason innings.
Then there was the warrior mentality of Pali High softball’s Briana Vasquez, who earned All-City honors (along with shortstop Stella Honda) after tossing 165 strikeouts in 118.2 innings and pitching a perfect game versus Hamilton as the Dolphins reached the City Division I semifinals.
Summer was special for Santa Monica Girls Fastpitch 12U Gold
All-Star team members Sloane Le Chang and Charlie Albores,whohelped their squad place fifth out of 31 teams at the Western Nationals in Salem, Oregon. Chang played center field and was one of the team’s best hitters while Albores was error free in 32 fielding chances at second base.
Will Horowitz scored 17 points and grabbed 12 rebounds to lead the Suns to a 45-21 victory over the Grizzlies in the final of the Palisades Recreation Center’s Coed Major Division basketball championship in June, then he played alongside his older brother Jake for the Celtics in the Junior Division final.
Mitchell Majors won his age group and was third overall in the Palisades Will Rogers 10K on the Fourth of July, clocking 36:07. He bested a long-standing Paul Revere record in the “Sub Six Mile,” clocking 4:41, and competed in two half marathons: Surf City USA (taking second in the 1-14 age group in 1:28:34); and Santa Barbara Wine Country (winning the 1-19 age division in 1:24:55).
Fifty-something karate mom Gracy Llana was nothing short of a trophy-winning machine in 2024 while representing Gerry Blanck’s Martial Arts Center at numerous competitions. The blue belt took first place in Traditional Kata, Musical Kata, Weapons and Sparring at the International Martial Arts Council (IMAC) Open at Pan Pacific Park in Los Angeles in October. The dojo’s new “golden girl” took firstsin Kata and Sparring and added a silver medal in Weapons at the Elite Karate Cup in Santa Ana in May, captured three golds in the Adult Novice Division at the USA World Championships in Las Vegas in June and left the Elite Summer Showdown in Chino Hills in July with with golds in Kata and Weapons and a silver in Kumite.
Pali High’s girls swim team tied for the City title in the spring thanks to points earned by 1-meter diving champion Parker Connor and 400 freestyle relayers Sabrina Kim, Noa Levetrov, Bailey Gair and Alexis Burrell, who clocked 3:44.83 to finish second in the last event and give the Dolphins the total needed to match Granada Hills at Valley College.
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Steve Kerr added still another accomplishment to his resume over the summer and it may be the one he will be most proud of when he finally calls it quits.
As head coach of the USA men’s basketball team at the Olympics in Paris, Kerr watched in awe from the bench as NBA star Steph Curry sank four clutch three-pointers in the last three minutes to seal a 98-87 victory over host France in the gold medal game. The Americans went 6-0, winning by an average margin of 19 points a game.
It was Team USA’s fifth straight gold medal in the sport dating back to 2008. For the 59-year-old Kerr it marked another milestone in his basketball career, which has seen him win nine NBA titles (five as a player, four as a coach). The 1983 Palisades High graduate, who set the NBA record for three-point percentage during his 15-year NBA playing career, is proving to be one of the game’s most successful coaches and that now includes the international level, for he served on Gregg Popovich’s staff at the Tokyo Games in 2021.
Kerr played baseball and basketball at Palisades, played for Lute Olson at the University of Arizona, won three straight NBA crowns (1996-98) with the Chicago Bulls alongside Michael Jordan and collected two more titles with the Tim Duncan-led San Antonio Spurs (1999 and 2003).
While Kerr deserves top billing, others worthy of honorable mention include University of Texas women’s volleyball coach Jerritt Elliott, who grew up on Miami Way and graduated from Pali High. He guided the Longhorns to the NCAA Regional Semifinals.
Taylor Talt, a backup quarterback at USC in 2000 and 2001, piloted the PPBA‘s 9U All-Stars to the PONY West Zone playoffs with his assistants Matt Underwood and Joe Layton.
LeBre Merritt, who captained Pali High in 2008-09, was named interim boys basketball coach one game into the 2023-24 season and led the Dolphins to 10 wins in their last 13 regular season outings and into the Open Division playoffs.
Los Angeles Fire Department knocked down two “small fires” near Murphy Ranch in Pacific Palisades at 2200 Sullivan Fire Road that were first reported on Monday, December 16, at 4:43 p.m.
“LAFD Air Ops located two small fires (each less than 30’ by 30’) located near Murphy Ranch in medium to heavy brush,” according to spokesperson Margaret Stewart.
The fires were located in “difficult to reach areas,” according to Stewart, but there was no wind at the time.
“LAFD Air Ops conducted water drops, which knocked out the bulk of the flames,” Stewart continued. “Meanwhile ground firefighters [worked] to gain access and cut lines around the perimeter.”
After the water drops knocked back the fire, Stewart wrote, firefighters were able to reach the burn area by ground. They conducted mop up operations during the two-hour operation to ensure that all hotspots were out.
No structures were threatened, according to the report.
Pacific Palisades skate shop Paliskates will celebrate its 25th anniversary with an event on Friday, December 20, from 6 to 9 p.m.
“Founded and owned by Erica Simpson, Paliskates offers a curated collection of on-trend products and merchandise, reflecting the independent spirit of skate and surf culture and the unique style of young adults,” read a statement from Malibu Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce. “This is a momentous occasion, as Erica is a pioneer, being the sole women business owner in the skateboarding industry across all of USA.”
Paliskates—located at 1021 Swarthmore Avenue—will host a celebratory event on December 20 with festivities to include a DJ, food and a “chance to reminisce about the store’s journey.”
“Paliskates has always been more than just a retail store in the Palisades,” the statement continued. “It quickly became a space where young adults could connect, hang out and learn from one another.”
Throughout the years, Paliskates has hosted events, including pop-up concerts, and has partnered with area nonprofits to help fundraise, most recently with Palisades-based Level UP LA, donating a portion of proceeds from an event to support the organization. The store has also launched a podcast series, which is available on Instagram and TikTok (@paliskates).
Prizes will be awarded in three categories: Best Decked Out Hall, Best Theme and Greenest Decor, which was launched in 2023 to honor a home with environmentally sustainable decorations.
This year’s sponsors include McConnell’s Fine Ice Creams, Alfred, Theatre Palisades, Porta Via Palisades, Palisades Gas & Wash, and Roku Sushi.
Voting is set to begin on December 23 and will continue through January 3, with winners announced in the January 9 print edition of the Post.
Palisades Gift Shop is offering gift wrap services for any product this holiday season, not just items purchased from the shop.
“We love to make gifts look beautiful and special, and we are excited to offer gift wrapping services for the holiday season,” according to Palisades Gift Shop. “Drop your gifts off with us, and pick them up wrapped and ready to go.”
Pricing for gift wrapping services range from $5 to $25 per gift, which is based on number of packages, size of package and style of gift wrap. Turnaround time is typically 24 to 48 hours.
“When you drop off your gifts, you will select gift wrap for each item and be charged at the time of drop off,” Palisades Gift Shop explained.
Bookings can be requested online via the Palisades Gift Shop website.
Palisades Library Film Society two screenings of holiday-time movies on upcoming Saturday afternoons.
The first is a 1970 musical film that was directed by Ronald Neame and starred Albert Finney as its titular character, which will be presented on Saturday, December 21, beginning at 2:30 p.m. The film received four Academy Award nominations, including Best Original Song.
The next screening—a “classic romantic Christmas movie”—will take place on Saturday, December 28, at 2 p.m. The second film stars Hugh Grant and “many other British stars,” according to an event description.
“Take a break from the holidays,” read the description. “Snacks will be served.”
Both shows will take place in-person at the Palisades Branch Library, located at 861 Alma Real Drive.
Pacific Palisades Art Association will host a holiday celebration at Palisades Branch Library on Saturday, December 21, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The event will feature artwork by Annette Alexakis, Krishna Thangavelu and Teresa Bernadette.
“Join us for gathering and refreshments,” PPAA wrote. “We hope to see you there.”
The event will take place at the Palisades Branch Library Community Room.
Founded in 1947, Pacific Palisades Art Association is a nonprofit organization dedicated to informing and showcasing art in the Palisades.
“Our mission: Creating a safe environment for artists to share and explore their journey through group discussions, critiques, guest speakers and events,” according to its website. “The Pacific Palisades Art Association has invited artists and creative souls to share their art and knowledge … We serve as a community gathering for local artists.”
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