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2025 ACC Women’s Lacrosse Championship Begins Wednesday in Charlotte

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2025 ACC Women's Lacrosse Championship Begins Wednesday in Charlotte

2025 ACC Championship Home Page
Weekly Notes Package
2025 Statistics
2025 ACC-Only Statistics
2025 ACC Championship Bracket

Purchase Ticket Books (Women’s and Men’s ACC Championships)
Purchase Single-Session Tickets
 
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (theACC.com) – The 2025 ACC Women’s Lacrosse Championship begins on Wednesday, April 23, and runs through Sunday, April 27, at American Legion Memorial Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Top-seeded North Carolina (15-0, 9-0 ACC) takes on No. 8 seed Virginia Tech (9-8, 3-6) at 11 a.m. ET on Wednesday in the tournament’s opener. No. 4 seed Duke (12-4, 6-3) then plays No. 5 seed Clemson (12-5, 6-3) at 2 p.m. ET. At 5 p.m. ET, No. 2 seed Boston College (15-1, 8-1), the two-time reigning tournament champion and 2024 national champion, plays No. 7 seed Virginia (11-5, 5-4), and No. 3 seed Stanford (13-4, 7-2) faces No. 6 seed Syracuse (9-7, 5-4) at 8 p.m. ET in the nightcap.
 
The semifinals begin at 5 p.m. ET on Friday, with the winners of the first two quarterfinal games squaring off. The winners of the evening quarterfinal games will face off at 8 p.m. ET. The championship game will be played at noon ET on Sunday, April 27. All seven games of the tournament will be televised on ACC Network and also will be available on ACC Network Extra.

Seven ACC teams are ranked in the latest IL Women/IWLCA poll, including four in the top 10, with North Carolina (1), Boston College (2), Virginia (8), Duke (10), Stanford (13), Clemson (16) and Syracuse (17). The ACC has the most teams in the poll among all conferences.

All-Session ticket books for the ACC Championships in both men’s and women’s lacrosse are available for $50 and can be purchased HERE. All-Session passes are good for all 10 games in the ACC Women’s Lacrosse Championship as well as the ACC Men’s Lacrosse Championship, which will be held May 2 and 4 in Charlotte. 
 
Individual Session tickets for the ACC Championship are available online HERE. One ticket gains admission for all of the games on that respective day. Anyone 5 years and older requires a ticket for entry. All tickets are General Admission.
 
New in 2025, bring a group of 10 or more to take advantage of preferred group pricing and special Group Experiences. For more information, please email tickets@theacc.org. 

2025 ACC Women’s Lacrosse Championship Schedule
American Legion Memorial Stadium – Charlotte, N.C.
Quarterfinals | Wednesday, April 23

No. 1 North Carolina vs. No. 8 Virginia Tech | 11 a.m. | ACCN
No. 4 Duke vs. No. 5 Clemson | 2 p.m. | ACCN
No. 2 Boston College vs. No. 7 Virginia | 5 p.m. | ACCN
No. 3 Stanford vs. No. 6 Syracuse | 8 p.m. | ACCN

Semifinals | Friday, April 25
North Carolina/Virginia Tech vs. Duke/Clemson | 5 p.m. | ACCN
Boston College/Virginia vs. Stanford/Syracuse | 8 p.m. | ACCN

Championship | Sunday, April 27
Semifinal Winners | Noon | ACCN

All times Eastern

Noting ACC Women’s Lacrosse
• This is the 28th edition of the ACC Women’s Lacrosse Championship and the third straight in Charlotte, N.C. The first tournament was held in 1997. The event is scheduled to be held in Charlotte through 2028.
• Boston College has won back-to-back championships. BC (2023-24) and UNC (2016-19, 21-22) have combined to win the last eight ACC titles.
• The 2025 All-ACC Team was announced Tuesday. BC and UNC led all schools with eight selections each. The Eagles had seven first-team honorees.
• The ACC’s season awards will be announced next week following the conclusion of the ACC Championship.
• In the NCAA’s Tuesday RPI, ACC teams held six of the top 15 spots, with Boston College (1), North Carolina (2), Virginia (6), Stanford (9), Syracuse (12) and Duke (15). ACC teams took eight of the top 27 spots.
• The NCAA’s Division I Women’s Lacrosse Committee revealed its top 10 teams last Thursday (April 17), with five from the ACC: UNC (1), Boston College (2), Virginia (5), Syracuse (9) and Stanford (10).
• UNC is the only remaining undefeated team nationally this season. BC is the only other team with one loss or fewer.
• North Carolina owns the nation’s longest active win streak at 15.
• ACC teams finished 70-16 (81.4%) in non-conference play in the regular season, including 16 wins over ranked foes. That is the most wins and best win percentage of any league.
• Eleven ACC teams rank among the top 30 nationally in Strength of Schedule (by opponent win pct.), including six in the top 15: Syracuse (1), BC (2), Virginia (4), UNC (7), Virginia Tech (11) and Stanford (14).
• Seven ACC teams are ranked in the latest IWLCA poll, including four in the top 10, led by North Carolina and Boston College at No. 1 and 2, respectively. They are followed by Virginia (8), Duke (10), Stanford (13), Clemson (16) and Syracuse (17). The ACC has the most teams in the poll among all leagues.
• 11 ACC players are among the 25 nominees for the Tewaaraton Trophy. That is the most of any conference. BC leads all schools with five nominees, while UNC is second with three.
• Four ACC teams rank among the top 25 nationally in scoring: BC (1st, 18.2/game), UNC (2nd, 17.7), Clemson (17th, 14.8) and Virginia (25th, 14.1). 
• BC’s Rachel Clark is second nationally in goals (79) and points (98). UNC’s Chloe Humphrey is third in goals (64) and BC’s Emma LoPinto is 12th (58).
• Five ACC squads are among the top 15 in scoring defense: UNC (1st, 6.1), BC (2nd, 6.9), Stanford (5th, 8.6), Clemson (7th, 8.7) and Notre Dame (15th, 9.5).
• UNC GK Betty Nelson owns the nation’s lowest goals-against average (6.91), while BC’s Shea Dolce (7.00) is second and Clemson’s Emily Lamparter (8.83) is sixth.
• UNC head coach Jenny Levy was named to the 2025 IWLCA Hall of Fame Class on Feb. 13. Now in her 30th season, she owns a 436-130 record and three national championships during her career at UNC.
• This is the 29th season of ACC women’s lacrosse. The league expanded to 12 teams this year with the addition of California and Stanford, with a 13th team on the way in 2026 in Florida State’s inaugural season.
• Boston College won its second national championship in program history in 2024. The Eagles rallied from a 6-0 deficit to top reigning champ Northwestern in the title game, 14-13. 
• The ACC has totaled 18 national championships and had at least one school in the national semifinals in 34 straight tournaments and in 38 of the 40 NCAA Tournaments all-time (dating to 1983). 
• Since the ACC began sponsoring women’s lacrosse in 1997, ACC teams have won 13 national titles. 
• An ACC team played in the national title game for the 14th time in the last 15 tournaments. 
• Since 1997, ACC teams have made 51 national semifinal appearances and 28 championship game appearances.

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NCAA Tournament Central: Colorado – Indiana University Athletics

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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – A trip to the NCAA regional semifinals is on the line Friday (Dec. 5) evening at Wilkinson Hall. Fourth-seeded Indiana and fifth-seeded Colorado will meet in Bloomington at 6 p.m. on ESPN+ to determine the first berth in the round of 16 this season.

 

The Hoosiers worked an impressive sweep of Toledo on Thursday (Dec. 4) to open their first NCAA Tournament journey since 2010. Senior outside hitter Candela Alonso-Corcelles led the way with 12 kills while freshman outside hitter Jaidyn Jager recorded a double-double on 11 kills and 10 digs.

 

Below is a list of notes to know ahead of Friday’s second round match at Wilkinson Hall.

 

Gameday Info

vs. (5) Colorado (Friday, December 5th, 2025 – 6 p.m. ET)

Live Video:
bit.ly/3MkznXp

Live Stats:
bit.ly/3MF39WS

 

Notable

PROGRAM RECORD: The Hoosiers made program history this week in Bloomington after Thursday’s win over Toledo. IU broke a single-season program record for wins (24) in the NCAA era, passing the former mark of 23 from 2010. It will have a chance at a 25-win campaign on Friday against Colorado.

 

BALANCE ON THE PINS: Indiana is the only Power Four program who has three different players averaging at least 3.22 kills per set this season. On 10 different occasions this year, all three of IU’s pin hitters have gone for 10+ kills each. Senior outside hitter Candela Alonso-Corcelles leads the team with 3.49 kills per set.

 

POSTSEASON BALL: For just the sixth time in program history, IU is playing in the NCAA Tournament. It’s IU’s first appearance since going to the regional semifinals in 2010. The Hoosiers broke one of the longest postseason droughts (15 years) of any power four program. IU is hosting for just the second time in school history.

 

ALL-BIG TEN HOOSIERS: IU had three First Team All-Big Ten selections in 2025. Before this year, IU had never even had two players picked to the All-Big Ten First Team in the same year. Senior outside hitter Candela Alonso-Corcelles, senior opposite hitter Avry Tatum and freshman setter Teodora Krickovic all made the team this season.

 

STRONG AT HOME: The Hoosiers have been fantastic at Wilkinson Hall over the last four years. Dating back to 2022, IU is 39-15 on the home court. For the first time since 1998-2000, IU has won 10-or-more home games in three-straight years. IU hasn’t lost at home to an unranked team since Nov. 12, 2023.

 

VIC STEPPING UP: When freshman middle blocker Victoria Gray gets the ball, she’s been especially lethal. During the month of November, her game was at a new level. In nine games last month, she hit .416 with 52 kills. Her best game was a career-high 12 kills against Purdue to end the regular season.

 

BIG TIME AVRY: Senior opposite hitter Avry Tatum has loved the big moments during her IU career. She had 10+ kills in nine of 13 matches against teams that made the NCAA Tournament. In two games last week, Tatum averaged 3.86 kills per set while hitting at a .396 clip.

 

POWER DUO: IU is 26-8 over the last three years when senior outside hitter Candela Alonso-Corcelles and senior opposite Avry Tatum each record 10 kills in the same match. It last happened in a dominant win at Illinois (Nov. 26). On the season, the Hoosiers are 7-1 in conference play in 2025 when this occurs.

 

SERVING TOUGH: IU went for 10 aces in Thursday’s win over Toledo. It’s the fifth time this season that the team has gone for double-digit aces. Since November 14th, IU has recorded 52 aces and is averaging 2.26 aces per set in that seven-game stretch. Six different players tallied at least one ace in the first-round victory.

 

BIG BLOCK GRAY: Freshman middle blocker Victoria Gray became the first freshman to record 100 blocks in a season after her four-block night against Toledo. She’s had 14 different matches with at least four blocks this year. The Hoosiers have also had 14 matches with at least nine blocks as a team this season.

 

First Round Notes: Indiana 3, Toledo 0

• With a win on Thursday evening, IU set a single-season program record for wins (24) in the NCAA era. The 2010 team won 23 contests but this year’s squad has officially passed that mark. IU will go for its first 25-win season tomorrow night against Colorado.

• Senior outside hitter Candela Alonso-Corcelles moved into ninth in program history in career kills. She recorded 12 in the win over Toledo, passing Katie Pollom (2001-04) in the process. Thursday’s win was the 72nd time she’s recorded double-digit kills in her career.

• Freshman outside hitter Jaidyn Jager recorded the sixth double-double of her young career on Thursday evening. She provided 11 kills and a team-high 10 digs in the victory over Toledo. It’s the seventh time this season she’s recorded at least 10 digs. Jager matched a career high with three aces.

• IU will play Colorado tomorrow night at Wilkinson Hall with a shot at the NCAA regional semifinals. The Hoosiers have made it to the round of 16 just once in program history (2010). These two teams haven’t met since 1993 but will play at 6 p.m. on ESPN+ tomorrow in Bloomington.

• Freshman middle blocker Victoria Gray shared the team lead with four blocks. She became the first IU freshman since Ashley Benson (2007) to record over 100 blocks in a season. Since the beginning of the 25-point rally-scoring era, no freshman has more blocks in a single season than Gray (102.0).



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Campbell Falls to No. 3 Texas A&M in 2025 NCAA Volleyball Championship Opening Round

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Campbell Falls to No. 3 Texas A&M in 2025 NCAA Volleyball Championship Opening Round

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COLLEGE STATION, Texas – Despite a valiant defensive effort, the Campbell volleyball team saw its season come to an end after falling to No. 3 Texas A&M at the 2025 NCAA Volleyball Championship in straight sets (20-25, 10-25, 13-25) inside Reed Arena on Friday evening.
 
The Camels finished the season with a 23-7 record. Hannah Pattie and Bella Illig battled on the back line, each reaching double figures in digs with 11 and 10 apiece, respectively. Abbie Tuyo notched a team-best nine kills on Friday.

The CAA Champions kept pace with the Aggies (24-4) in the opening set, going point-for-point before taking an early 7-6 lead on a tandem block from Tuyo and Aley Clent. Texas A&M surged shortly after with a 9-2 run halted by a slam by Campbell’s Gwen Wolkow. The Camels did not go away quietly with an 8-1 stretch of their own, starting with a kill from Maja Daca and finishing with a Clent and Tuyo stuff on A&M’s Kyndal Stowers at the net to pull within three, 23-20. The Aggies went on to capture the first set two points later, 25-20.

Campbell’s Daca helped her team to a 3-3 tie to start the second frame after earning a kill and painting the end line for a service ace. The Aggies pulled away after seeing Logan Lednicky register four kills and a solo block on the team’s 10-1 run to close out the set, 25-10 win.

The Camels’ Illig fought off heavy swings from the Aggies’ attackers all evening, but her impressive defensive abilities were on full display to start the third set. The graduate libero saved a floater from hitting the floor and dug out two more attacks before setting up Tuyo for the kill, tying the score at two early in the third set. Texas A&M proved to be too much and secured a 25-13 win in set three.

Follow #CAAVB on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram to get up-to-date information and learn more about CAA member institutions and their volleyball programs.

 





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Watch Wisconsin volleyball in NCAA tournament tonight; time, TV

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Dec. 5, 2025, 2:21 p.m. CT



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No. 3 Volleyball sweeps Florida A&M, 3-0, to advance in NCAA Tournament

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AUSTIN, Texas. — The No. 3 Texas Volleyball team improved to 42-0 in the NCAA First Round after sweeping Florida A&M (25-11, 25-8, 25-14). The Longhorns improved to 24-3 on the season behind Emma Halter’s historic night on defense. 

Halter moved up to No. 8 on the all-time Texas digs list with 25 tonight, making it a 1,282 total. Halter also broke the Texas record in three-set matches with 25 digs. She’s now the fourth Longhorn to record 25, joining Dariam Acevedo (2006), Adrian Greenmail (2001) and Carrie Busch (1995). 

Ayden Ames matched her career high with eight blocks, leading the Longhorns to tally nine total. Ramsey Gary also recorded a season high three aces for a match high. The Longhorns recorded 42 kills to the Rattlers 15, holding them to a -.027 – the lowest opponent hitting percentage of the season. 

Set One: Texas dominated the opening set 25-11, limiting the Rattlers to a .000 attacking percentage while hitting .414 themselves. Torrey Stafford led the charge with five kills and a .455 hitting percentage. Swindle recorded nine assists and Halter registered 10 digs. The Texas defense totaled four and a half blocks in the first set. 

Set Two: The Longhorns held the Rattlers to only eight points, tying their opponent season low in the second set. Stafford added six more kills out of her 13 total, while Texas put up four team blocks behind Ames’ four. 

Set Three: The Longhorns saw Cari Spears add four kills and Whitney Lauenstein add one of her five kills in the third. Lauenstein also totaled four blocks on the night and hit for .571. 

Up next Texas will face off against No. 25 Penn State in the Second Round of the NCAA Tournament on Saturday, Dec. 6 at 6:30 p.m. CT on ESPN+. 



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Volleyball sees season end in NCAA DII Second Round

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WINGATE, N.C. – Another successful Lenoir-Rhyne Volleyball season has come to an end. The Bears fell 3-1 to #3 seeded Anderson in the NCAA DII Tournament second round on Friday, closing their season at 23-8.  

Emmaleigh Allen led the team with 13 kills while Emmie Modlin and Alicia Barbarito combined for 38 assists.

INSIDE THE MATCHUP

Final: Anderson 3, Lenoir-Rhyne 1 (29-27, 20-25, 25-9, 25-18)

Records: Anderson (23-7, 16-4 SAC), Lenoir-Rhyne (23-8, 14-4 SAC)

Location: Wingate, NC | Cuddy Arena

STORY OF THE MATCH: 

  • Down early on, the Bears went on a late 4-0 run to tie the score at 22 in the first set.
  • Lenoir-Rhyne had set point at 26-25, but a 4-1 run from Anderson gave the Trojans the 29-27 set victory.
  • Hadley Prince produced back-to-back service aces to help Lenoir-Rhyne win the second set 25-20.
  • Anderson dominated the third set 25-9, finishing with a .317 hitting % and just four attack errors.
  • Lenoir-Rhyne responded early in the fourth set, jumping ahead 6-3.
  • The Trojans did not look back after tying the match at 7, keeping the Bears an arms length away the rest of the set. 

STATS OF THE GAME:

  • Anderson finished with an advantage in kills (59-to-46), hitting % (.276-to-.127), and assists (57-to-43).
  • There were a combined 38 block assists and solo blocks between the two teams.
  • Kayli Cleaver and Averie Dale combined for 11 total blocks
  • Hadley Prince led the team with 19 digs while Addison Vary collected two service aces.

BEYOND THE BOXSCORE:

  • This was the fourth meeting this season between the Bears and Trojans, with each team winning twice.
  • Emmaleigh Allen generated her sixth double-double this season after finishing with 13 kills and 16 digs.
  • Kayli Cleaver finished the season as the team leader in kills (363) and kills per set (3.36) for the second straight season.
  • The 2025 Lenoir-Rhyne Volleyball Team finished with the second highest hitting % in school history at .235, just .05 away from the record held by the the 1998 squad.
  • Averie Dale finished with a .399 hitting %, which ties the program’s individual season record held by Michelle Baity in 1999.
  • The Bears produced their third straight season with 20 or more wins and set a new program record winning 13 matches at home. 
  • Nicole Barringer now holds an 87-35 record in four years as the Bears’ head coach. 
  • Barringer is the first coach in program history to lead the team to three consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances. 





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Volleyball’s Season Ends In Round Of 32 to No. 3 Wisconsin

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MADISON, WISC – Carolina volleyball falls to No. 3 Wisconsin Badgers (25-14, 25-21, 25-27) in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. 

The Tar Heels improved after each set, raising their hitting percentage from .146 to .317. Laynie Smith led the way offensively as she hit .400 with seven kills on only 15 attacks.

Carolina dropped the first set 25-14, but Bridget Malone was the bright spot as she came off the bench and hit above .444 with four kills.

The Tar Heels had a much better second set, putting together an impressive 7-2 run in the middle of the match that brought the score to 17-18. The Tar Heels continued to fight back against the top-ranked Badgers.

The Tar Heels battled back in the third set as the final set was tied 19 times and there were ten lead changes. 

Maddy May wrapped up her legendary Tar Heel career tonight. May played  in every single set (445) of every single match (118) over her four-year career. May currently sits third all-time in program history with 1622 digs. The senior closed out her time in Chapel Hill on a high note, as she was named Second Team All-ACC for the first time in her career.

 



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