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#2 seed Volleyball set for first round of NCAA Tournament on Thursday in Tempe – Sun Devil Athletics

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TEMPE – The 2025 NCAA Tournament has landed in Tempe, where No. 2 seed Sun Devil Volleyball is set to host the first two rounds this Thursday and Friday in Desert Financial Arena, facing Coppin State in the first round at 7 p.m. MST on Thursday on ESPN+.

Arizona State (26-3, 17-1 Big 12) will face Coppin State in the first round on Dec. 4 at 7 p.m. MST. The other matchup in the ASU’s bracket is No. 7 seed Tennessee against Utah State at 4:30 p.m. MST on Thursday as well. The winners of both matches will play each other in the second round on Dec. 5 at 6 p.m. MST.

The team that wins will move onto the regional semifinal taking place through Dec. 11-14. The national semifinals will be on December 18, with the national championship on December 21, both in Kansas City.

How to Follow and Fan Information
Parking will be free in lot 59 for fans. Any structure parking will be charged. For tickets, the lower bowl is assigned seating and the upper bowl is general admission. Tickets can be purchased through Ticketmaster.

The matches will be streamed on ESPN+, with live stats available as well. Updates will be provided on social media on X (@SunDevilVB) and Instagram (@sundevilvolleyball). More information can be found on the tournament website.

Sun Devil Outlook
No. 2 seed Arizona State(26-3, 17-1 Big 12)

  • The Sun Devils are back in the NCAA tournament for the third-consecutive year under third-year head coach JJ Van Niel, the 22nd time overall in program history. Last season, Arizona State advanced to the second round of the tournament after winning in the first round against New Hampshire. The Sun Devils are 12-21 in the NCAA Tournament, 3-2 under Van Niel.
  • Arizona State finished the regular season with a 26-3 record, going 17-1 in Big 12 play. In just its second season in the conference, Arizona State won back-to-back Big 12 titles, which is the fifth Big 12 title across all sports for ASU. Arizona State is one of four current volleyball programs in the league to win a Big 12 title (also Baylor, Kansas and Kansas State).  
  • Sun Devil Volleyball took home a number of Big 12 awards, including Big 12 Player of the Year for junior opposite Noemie Glover and a third-straight conference coach of the year nod for head coach JJ Van Niel. Arizona State has three on the All-Big 12 First Team: Glover, senior outside hitter Bailey Miller and graduate middle blocker Colby Neal. On the second team is sophomore libero Faith Frame, while redshirt freshman pin hitter Kiylah Presley is on the Big 12 All-Rookie Team. Glover is the first Sun Devil to win a conference player of the year award in team history. For Presley, she is the first from ASU to be on a conference rookie/freshman team since Marta Levinska in 2020. 
  • In three seasons as the head coach at Arizona State, JJ Van Niel has made history. He has led the Sun Devils to back-to-back Big 12 Championships, which are the only two conference titles in team history. Additionally, he has been named the conference coach of the year in each of his three seasons as a head coach and has two AVCA Region Coach of the Year honors. He was the fastest coach in team history to 50 wins and has the top two seasons in team history for winning percentage. Under his tutelage, ASU has had five All-Americans and three players win a major year-end Big 12 awards. 
  • Junior opposite Noemie Glover has been a dominant force for the Sun Devils this season, earning recognition as an AVCA National Player of the Year Semifinalist. She has reached double-digit kills in all but one match she has played in this season. In the win at No. 22 Colorado, she reached a career high 31 kills, setting the rally-scoring era record for kills in a single match and tying the all-time ASU record for ninth. In the national rankings, she is top 50 in both kills per set and points per set. Over the summer, she played with the USA U21 team in the Pan American Cup, winning a gold medal. 
  • Leading the charge on the block has been graduate middle blocker Colby Neal. She was drafted to the Orlando Valkyries as the 13th overall pick (fifth in the second round) of the 2025 Major League Volleyball Draft. Neal has been a dominant force defensively for the Sun Devils with a total of 162 blocks on the season, the first in the Big 12 (eighth in the nation). She is ranked second in the ASU record book for block assists in a single season, currently with 142. She has had five or more blocks in 20 matches this season and nine or more blocks in five matches.
  • At home, the Sun Devils are 14-0 and 32-4 in JJ Van Niel’s three seasons. This is the second time the Sun Devils went undefeated at home in the regular season since becoming an NCAA sport, the first time was in the 2024 season. The only other time ASU was undefeated at home was the first year of the program in 1973 when they went undefeated all season.

Tournament outlook
Coppin State (23-11, 13-1 MEAC)

  • Coppin State finished the regular season 23-11 and went 13-1 against conference opponents. The team earned a bid by winning the MEAC tournament. This is the second NCAA tournament appearance for the Eagles in the last three years.
  • This will be the first meeting between ASU and Coppin State.

No. 7 seed Tennessee (20-7, 10-5 SEC)

  • The Volunteers, who are No. 18 in the AVCA Coaches Poll, will make their fifth-consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance under head coach Eve Rackham Watt. This is their 20th time being selected for the tournament. 
  • Tennessee finished the regular season with a 20-7 record, 10-5 in conference play.  They team made it to the semifinals in the SEC Tournament before falling to No. 2 Kentucky. 
  • The Lady Vols have a 17-19 record in 19 appearances in the NCAA Tournament and have advanced past the first round three times under coach Wyatt. They hold a 13-7 record all-time in the first round. 
  • The all-time series between ASU and Tennessee is locked at 2-2. The teams last met in 2003, with the Volunteers winning in five.

Utah State (23-7, 18-0 MWC)

  • The Aggies enter the NCAA tournament after winning the Mountain West Conference Tournament Championship. This is their seventh all-time appearance in the NCAA Tournament with a 2-6 record in previous outings. The Aggies last tournament win was in 2001. 
  • Utah State earned a perfect 18-0 conference record this season, making them the second team in MWC history to go undefeated in conference play and win the conference title.
  • ASU leads the all-time series against USU 7-3, with the last matchup being in 2017 when the Sun Devils won in a sweep.



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No. 2 seed ASU volleyball advances to Sweet 16 in NCAA Tournament

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Updated Dec. 5, 2025, 11:15 p.m. MT



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Babcock sets record as Pitt women’s volleyball team rolls in 1st round of NCAA Tournament

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Olivia Babcock didn’t realize her performance during the first round of the NCAA women’s volleyball tournament gave her the Pitt record for most kills in a season. Babcock knew she met the previous record holder, Wendy Hatlestad, during alumni weekend.

Babcock recorded 13 kills during the Panthers’ 25-10, 25-17, 25-13 win Friday night at Petersen Events Center in front of a crowd of 4,240. Babcock now has 558 kills, going past the single-season record of 555 Hatlestad set in 2003.

“I was talking to her two weeks ago,” Babcock said. “That’s crazy I just met her. But I think it says a lot about how much my team trusts me to take those big rips, and it gives me the opportunity to score and get as many kills as I do.”

Everyone had a good night hitting for the top-seeded Panthers, who advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament for the 10th straight season.

The Panthers committed only four attack errors against UMBC (13-12) and finished with a hitting percentage of .551.

“It’s really good to start out and to remind ourselves to maintain high standards,” Babcock said. “Obviously, all of these teams have made it into the tournament because they’re an amazing team, and everyone’s going to bring their best volleyball. I think we just need to make sure that we’re playing our best, too, because, especially in these matches, we don’t wanna slip up and give away a set or a match.”

Pitt (27-4) hasn’t dropped a set in the first round since it beat VCU, 3-1, in 2017 at Penn State.

The Retrievers qualified for the tournament after winning the America East Conference for the fifth time in the past six seasons. Pitt setter Brooke Mosher, who finished with 34 assists, said the Panthers got themselves in system thanks to their good passing.

Blaire Bayless was second for the Panthers with nine kills, and Abby Emch contributed eight.

“That made it really easy for me to spread the ball around and get the middles involved,” Mosher said. “Then, I trusted my teammates to be able to put the ball away.”

Pitt lost the first point of the match after UMBC delivered on a kill by Jalynn Brown. The Panthers responded by scoring the next three points, capping the surge with an ace by Izzy Masten.

UMBC struggled to find holes in Pitt’s defense. The Retrievers hit .129 and were led by seven kills from Hannah Dobbs.

UMBC coach Kasey Crider was happy with how they played.

“We don’t have an Olivia Babcock slayer, so, bummer,” Crider said. “I’ve been to this tournament a few times as a head coach and assistant coach, and I’ve never walked away from the tournament thinking we were the best at the end until today. It still hurts, but there were no regrets.”

Pitt will take on Michigan in the second round Saturday. The Wolverines advanced by beating Xavier. The Panthers are 3-6 all-time against the Wolverines.

Pitt’s only meeting with Michigan in the NCAA Tournament came in 2018, when the Wolverines upset Pitt in five sets at Petersen Events Center.

Mosher, who previously played in the NCAA Tournament with Illinois, said she doesn’t feel any extra pressure playing as the No. 1 seed.

“I think just being in the tournament has its own weight in itself,” Mosher said. “Every game your season is on the line, which is the same no matter who you are.”

Josh Rizzo is a freelance writer.





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Kansas State volleyball vs Nebraska in NCAA Tournament channel, time

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Dec. 6, 2025, 6:03 a.m. CT



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Women’s track and field begins indoor season at M City Classic

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MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – The St. Olaf College women’s track and field team turned in 13 performances that ranked on its all-time performers’ list at the season-opening M City Classic on Friday at the University of Minnesota Fieldhouse.

First years accounted for 11 of the 13 performances that ranked on St. Olaf’s all-time list at the unscored meet, which included teams from the NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III, National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), and club levels. In addition to the top-10 list performances, senior Ella Landis posted St. Olaf’s lone first-place finish at the meet by winning the one-mile run in 5:17.28.

In her first collegiate meet, first year Evangeline Sappington broke onto the program’s all-time performers’ list in both the 60-meter dash and 200-meter dash. Sappington was the top Division III finisher and was 10th overall in the 200-meter dash (26.84), while also taking second among Division III competitors and 16th overall in the 60-meter dash. Sappington’s time in the 60-meter dash ranks second on the Oles’ all-time list – just four one-hundredths of a second off the record – and her time in the 200-meter dash is fifth.

Sophomore Izzi Jaeckle clocked in with St. Olaf’s No. 4 time in the 60-meter dash by placing 17th (8.10), while first year Ellie Semple also broke onto the list in 10th with a time of 8.28 seconds to finish 27th. Sophomore Logan Paulsen moved up to seventh on the Oles’ list with a sixth-place performance in the shot put (12.48m, 40′ 11 ½”), while first year Abigal Frei cleared 3.26 meters (10′ 8 ¼”) for a No. 5 all-time result and an eighth-place finish.

First years Svea Frantzich and Claire Stein recorded St. Olaf’s No. 8 and No. 10 scores in the pentathlon by finishing seventh (3,005) and eighth (2,993), respectively. Frantzich tied for third in the long jump (5.44m, 17′ 10 ¼”) and was sixth in the 60-meter hurdles (9.47), which both ranked on St. Olaf’s all-time list. Stein also tied for third in the long jump (5.44m, 10′ 10 ¼”) to highlight her day. First year Annika Walsh was the runner-up in the high jump (1.62m, 5′ 3 ¾”) – fifth all-time – and was seventh in the 60-meter hurdles (9.48) – ninth all-time – as part of a ninth-place finish in the pentathlon (2,881).

St. Olaf will be back in action in 2026 at the Ole Opener at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 17 at Tostrud Center.

 



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Second-Screen Golf Experiences : Player Profiles

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At the 2025 JM Eagle LA Championship, IRCODE debuted Player Profiles, a new LIVE+ capability to bring fans closer to athletes without prompts, QR codes, or static triggers.

In addition to offering an on-site fan experience, IRCODE, as a Technology Partner, introduced an interactive viewer experience for fans at home. When players appeared on-screen, viewers used the IRCODE app to scan their screen and instantly accessed a full, interactive profile for shopping their favorite players’ gear, diving deeper into their stories and learning more about the causes that are meaningful to them.

Player Profiles leverages IRCODE’s patented EXACT Match technology and proprietary computer vision, and applies real-time visual recognition to usher in the next generation of second-screen entertainment.



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Catch Saturday’s Basketball and Indoor Track and Field Action

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BEREA, Ohio – Fans can follow or watch Saturday’s Baldwin Wallace University basketball and indoor track and field action via live results, statistics or video.

The men’s and women’s indoor track and field teams open the 2025-26 season when it travels to Cleveland to compete in the Spartan Alumni Holiday Classic hosted by Case Western Reserve University inside the Veale Convocation, Recreation and Athletic Center at 11:00 a.m.

Live Results: 

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3MlDQcr

FloCollege On Demand Live Video:

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3KFq6st

The men’s basketball team travels to New Concord for the first game of a men’s and women’s Ohio Athletic Conference and Hoops for Hunger Food Drive doubleheader against Muskingum University on Performance Court inside the Anne C. Steele Center at 1:00 p.m.  Fans can receive free admission to the game with a donation of canned food, a non-perishable item, or a monetary contribution.

Tickets:

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3WGuwll

Live Statistics:

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/493Gehq

FloCollege On Demand Live Video:

https://flosports.link/47hSw2V

The No. 21 nationally ranked women’s basketball team travels to New Concord for the second game of a women’s and men’s Ohio Athletic Conference and Hoops for Hunger Food Drive doubleheader against Muskingum University on Performance Court inside the Anne C. Steele Center at 4:00 p.m.  Fans can receive free admission to the game with a donation of canned food, a non-perishable item, or a monetary contribution.

Tickets:

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3WGuwll

Live Statistics:

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/49Ist7Q

FloCollege On Demand Live Video:

https://flosports.link/4qu1Fyr

 



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