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#9 Volleyball protects home court against Cincinnati – Sun Devil Athletics

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TEMPE – With two in double figures for kills and the team reaching double-digit blocks for the ninth match in a row, No. 9 Sun Devil Volleyball remained undefeated at home after beating Cincinnati in four sets (21-25, 25-21, 25-21, 25-14) on Wednesday night at Desert Financial Arena.

Notable stats

  • Arizona State (25-3, 16-1 Big 12) beat Cincinnati (15-12, 7-10 Big 12) despite dropping the first set. ASU is now 5-2 this year when losing the first set, 3-0 in Big 12 play. 
  • The Sun Devils improve to 13-0 at home this year. In the last two seasons, Arizona State has not lost a regular-season match at home.
  • With 10 blocks tonight, ASU has had double-digit blocks in the last nine matches. This season, the Sun Devils have had 19 matches with double-digit team blocks, including all but two Big 12 matches. 
  • Senior outside hitter Bailey Miller led the team in kills with 19, her 13th match in a row with double-digit kills. She had nine kills in just the first set. 
  • Leading the blocking effort again was graduate middle blocker Colby Neal with eight. This was her fifth match in a row with at least seven blocks. She has had at least eight blocks in six matches this year. Additionally, she had eight kills.  
  • Another Sun Devil with double-digit kills was junior opposite Noemie Glover with 13. This was her 17th-straight match in double figures in kills (all but one match). She also had three blocks.
  • Sophomore libero Faith Frame led all players in digs with 15, her second-straight match with double-digit digs, 16th this season.
  • Setters Brynn Covell and Sydney Henry both notched 20-plus assists in the win. Covell had 24 with seven digs, while Henry had 25 with five digs and an ace.
  • Senior outside hitter Tatum Parrott neared a double-double with nine kills and nine digs. She also had a team-best three aces, tying her season high.
  • Attendance was 3,868 tonight at Desert Financial Arena. This is the eighth match this season that ASU has had more than 3,000 in attendance.

Set one: Cincinnati 25, ASU 20
The Sun Devils started the match out slow, as the Bearcats went on a four-point run to open up the set. Arizona State kept battling back with big swings from Glover, Miller and Tatum Parrott, and Miller picked up back-to-back overpass kills to help cut the deficit to one at 12-11. An overturned point on a net violation gave Cincinnati a two-point lead, 15-13, going into the media timeout. Unforced errors from the Sun Devils allowed the Bearcats to extend their lead to five, leading ASU to take a timeout, trailing 20-15. Miller continued carving up the Cincinnati defense with her attacking before adding an ace and forcing a timeout from the Bearcats, down 23-20. Two quick points from Cincinnati ended the set, with the Sun Devils falling 25-20. 

Set two: ASU 25, Cincinnati 21
Arizona State began the second set strong, taking an early 5-3 lead on kills from Glover and Colby Neal. Cincinnati was able to even the score, but strong play from Ella Lomigora saw her earn a kill, block and ace within a few points to open up a five-point lead, 13-8, forcing the Bearcats to take a timeout. Cincinnati kept pushing back, forcing the Sun Devils to get crafty. Miller and Glover picked up off-tempo kills, putting the lead back to four, up 17-13. Parrott helped to extend the lead with two kills of her own, followed up by an ace, her second of the night. Cincinnati took its second timeout, trailing 20-15. A 3-0 scoring run from the Bearcats led the Sun Devils to take a timeout of their own, and quick kills from Miller and Glover gave their team set point. Arizona State took set two on a missed serve, 25-21. 

Set three: ASU 25, Cincinnati 21
Arizona State started out the set strong, taking a 3-2 lead on errors from Cincinnati and a big kill from Colby Neal, but a 4-0 run from the Bearcats saw the Sun Devils on the wrong side of a 6-3 score. Big swings from Miller and Kiylah Presley helped Arizona State battle back and knot it up at 8-8, but a missed serve and hitting errors gave Cincinnati a three-point advantage, up 12-9. The Sun Devils’ strong defense and transition offense kept the score close, and big swings from Colby Neal and Parrott brought the score back to even at 13-13. The Sun Devils took an 18-17 lead on a kill from Ella Lomigora to end a long rally. Big blocks from Colby Neal, Presley and Miller put Arizona State up 22-17. A 4-0 scoring run from the Bearcats cut the lead to one, 22-21, but big swings from Presley and Colby Neal put the Sun Devils one point away from a set victory. A block from Colby Neal and Glover gave the Sun Devils a 25-21 victory. 

Set four: ASU 25, Cincinnati 14
The fourth set began with back-and-forth action as the teams traded points. A 5-0 run on big kills from Miller and Lomigora and blocking from Colby Neal and Presley gave the Sun Devils an 11-6 lead. Parrott’s eighth kill of the night put Arizona State up 15-11 heading into the media timeout, and kills from Glover and Miller extended the lead to five. Parrott picked up another kill and her third ace of the night, putting the Sun Devils up 19-13 and forcing a Bearcats timeout. Aggressive serving from Jillian Neal and defense from Parrott gave the Sun Devils set point, and a kill from Colby Neal sealed the deal, with Arizona State taking the match 3-1.

Up next
The final match of the regular season will be at home on Saturday, Nov. 29, at 11 a.m. MST against West Virginia. Arizona State will honor its six seniors pregame and then will celebrate the 2025 Big 12 Championship postgame.

——————————————————————-

Quotes
Head Coach JJ Van Niel
Opening Statement
“Fun match. They have a great outside hitter, Sydney Nolan, who lit us up pretty well. But it was nice to see our team kind of battle back. We made some adjustments, and I thought we played a lot better defense as the match went on. And I mean, what a crowd. That was really fun. Almost 4,000 people. So thank you to the fans for coming out. That was so cool to see them come out the day before Thanksgiving.”

On bouncing back after falling short in the first set:
“I would certainly like it if we would start out of the block a little faster. But I think one of the things in volleyball, and you see it in a lot of matches as the game goes on, you can prepare as much as you want for, say, Sydney Nolan or Noemie Glover, but you really don’t know it until you’re actually doing it. I think our team did a nice job of getting in the groove, understanding what they were doing, and made a couple of adjustments to try to slow some things down a little better. This team just doesn’t seem to get phased. We were even down, I think it was the third set. They were ahead for a bunch of it and we just kept grinding away. It was like, sideout, get a real point, sideout, get a real point, and just keep chipping away. And I thought our serving got a lot better as the match went on. We started getting them in a lot more trouble. In their own system, they were beating us up pretty good. So as the match went on, I thought we did a much better job serving to kind of get them in trouble. They only had one hitter or maybe only two hitters that we could defend a little easier.”

On Bailey Miller’s progression throughout the season thus far:
“Bailey has had a phenomenal season, and I think the progression from the beginning of the year to the end has been really impressive. It’s a testament to how hard she works in the gym. She’s in there every day trying to hone her craft and get better at the things we think she needs to get better at. It’s shown on the scoresheet, that’s for sure.”

Senior Outside Hitter Bailey Miller
On playing her last few home games at Arizona State
“This program means everything to me. I think I’ve really thrived here, and I think I’m still reaching my peak of who I can be as a volleyball player. I wouldn’t be anywhere close to where I am right now without JJ, and without the girls, and so it’s super special. It’s definitely bittersweet. If I could, I would stay forever, but I just have to give everything to them, because I wouldn’t be the volleyball player, or the person I am today, without everybody.”

On building a strong home court advantage
“The community around us is so great. On the day before Thanksgiving, having this many people be able to come out is super special. Our last match here (against U of A) was also big, breaking the record, so I think we’re making big strides as a program, every single year it is getting better and better, so it’s really cool to see and be a part of.”

Sophomore Libero Faith Frame
On if there was any added motivation facing her former team:
“There’s definitely added motivation, just knowing who’s on the other side and kind of trying to remember all their tendencies, having played with them for a while. So there was extra motivation, and my teammates being there, saying, ‘let’s win this for Faith,’ is a big deal.”

On what the coaches were saying to them in between sets and timeouts:
“We’re really good at being open with each other in the huddles and saying that we’re lacking in energy right now. Even though we won that set, it didn’t feel like we did. We need to come out with more energy, no matter if it’s an easy play or if it was a crazy up or swing. We need that energy every single play.”



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Men’s Track & Field Opens Indoor Slate With Snowflake Invitational

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Andreas Panagos set a new personal record in the weight throw at the Snowflake Invitational.

The Middlebury men’s track and field team opened the indoor campaign in strong form, accumulating 10 event titles during its annual Snowflake Invitational on Saturday from Virtue Field House.

HIGHLIGHTS

  • Caleb Smith secured the top spot in the long jump with a leap of 6.73 meters, headlining a Panther sweep of the top-six spots. He also won the pole vault by clearing 4.25 meters.
  • Toby Warmack posted a 1.97m effort in the high jump to grab gold. Sam McGarrahan and Smith followed in second and third place at 1.87 meters each.
  • The 400m race saw Joey Caspar cross the finish line first with a time of 49.87 seconds. Emerson Kington followed in second place at 50.81, while Wyatt Lawton rounded out the podium finishers (51.03).
  • Andreas Panagos logged a toss of 14.36m to earn top honors in the weight throw.
  • Donnell Harvey Jr. opened the indoor season in style, taking first in the 60m race (6.90). The sophomore also finished in the top spot during the 200 with a time of 22.49.
  • Jack Ulrich led the pack in the 800, clocking in at 2:03.42.
  • Owen Johnson crossed the finish line in 8:54.45 to win the 3,000, while Felix Rogovin posted a time of 9:05.50 to earn second.
  • The final top placing came for the Panther 4×400 relay team. Kington, Caspar, Nate Gardner and Sebastian Pantzer logged a combined clocking of 3:28.62.
  • Pantzer also logged a runner-up effort in the 200 (22.83) with Gardner trailing in third by one-tenth of a second.
  • Smith and Quinn Kennedy landed second and third in the 60 hurdles, respectively. Smith’s time of 8.63 seconds sat nine-tenths of a second off the winner, while Kennedy’s 8.64-second effort set a new personal best.
  • Kennedy and Calvin Szoradi rounded out the top-three performers in the shot put at 12.76 meters and 12.56 meters, respectively.
  • Tony Wang placed second in the triple jump, soaring 13.05 meters, while Caden Cote cleared 4.10 meters to finish as the runner-up in the pole vault.

NOTES

  • Panagos moved the weight 1.44 meters further than his prior best effort in the navy and white.

Middlebury returns to the Virtue Field House to host its annual Winter Classic. The action begins on Friday at 2:00 p.m., followed by the second day of competition at 9:00 a.m. Saturday.



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Hoosiers Finish Strong in Final Day of Rod McCravy

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Louisville, Ky. – Indiana track and field closes the Rod McCravy Invitational on Saturday (January 10) inside Norton Sports & Learning Center with several personal bests and individual event winners.
 
“I was very pleased with our effort this weekend,” said head coach Ed Beathea. “We broke 2 school records and had several outstanding performances. This was a very positive start to the season for us.”
 
The final day had a heavy focus on the track, starting with the sprints. Jasiah Rogers earned the first win of the day in the 60-meter sprint with his time of 6.77.
 
Several personal bests were broken in the men’s and women’s 300 meter. Kristina Vincic ran a 39.78 in the women’s contest. Trelee Banks-Rose continued to extend his school record time with his time of 32.89, winning the race. Tamer Saleh (9th) and Christian Woodson (11th) also set personal bests with times of 34.04 and 34.09, respectively.
 
In the 800, the Hoosiers had seven finishers in the top 15 in the women’s race, including Nola Somers Glenn (2nd; 2:08.77), Lily Myers (3rd; 2:08.86 PR), Catie McCabe (4th; 2:09.56 PR), Michaela Quinn (6th; 2:12.99), Ellia Hayes (2:15.85 PR), Joey Rastrelli (13th; 2:17.00), and Ava Jarrell (14th; 2:17.42).
 
Nico Colchico ran to the win as the lone Hoosier in the men’s 800 meter with his time of 1:49.50.
 
The Hoosiers had two finishers in the top 10 with Katelyn Winton (4:56.15) and Maddie Rocchio (5:02.11) finishing seventh and ninth, respectively.
 
Jessica Hegedus (9:53.68) and Mary Eubank (10:05.98) each recorded personal best times to finish fifth and ninth, respectively in the women’s 3,000-meter run.
 
The track closed with season best times in the men’s and women’s 4×400 relays. The quartet of Kristina Vincic, Veronica Hargrave, Ava Olomajeye, and Kiera Davis ran a time of 3:39.98, finishing sixth overall.
 
 In the men’s race, the team of Cameron Mullens, Kalen Sargent, Tyler Tarter, and Daquan Tate recorded a fourth place finish with a time of 3:11.14.
 
In the field, Kelly Moran (12.14m/39-10) started the day with an eighth place finish in the women’s triple jump.
 
Tyler Carrell followed in the pole vault with a second place finish off a season best mark of 5.40m/17-8.5. Lukas Brauc (5.00m/16-4.75) also opened his first meet as a Hoosier with a sixth place finish.
 
In the shot put, Seth Brosseau claimed a fifth place finish with his distance of 17.03m/55-7.5.
 
The Hoosiers will be back at home next week as they host the Indiana Invitational. The meet will span two days from Friday, January 16, to Saturday, January 17.
 
Follow Indiana track and field and cross country via X, Facebook and Instagram.
 
#NeverDaunted
 





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Track and Field Competes at Dartmouth to Open up 2026

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HANOVER, N.H. – The Brown track and field teams returned to action for the first time since the holiday break on Saturday afternoon at the Ivy vs. America East Challenge, hosted by Dartmouth.
 
With only partial squads traveling from both Brown programs, the women’s team finished in second place in the meet, coming in behind first place Dartmouth, and ahead of third place Vermont and fourth place UMass Lowell.
 
The men’s team placed fourth behind Dartmouth, UMass Lowell, and Vermont, respectively.
 
WOMEN
Junior Alyssa Jackson led the way in the 60m dash with a time of 7.71 seconds, with freshman Anya Anderson also earning a point for her fourth place finish in 8.06. Junior Anna Pollak took runner-up at 26.77 in the 200 meters and freshman Sydney Ruckett (58.25) took first place in the 400m dash.

Brown took three of the top four spots in the finals of the 60m hurdles, with Simone Dunbar (8.89) placing second, followed by Jannah Maguire (8.97) and Kareema McKenzie (9.02) in third and fourth, respectively.

In the field events, senior Nene Mokonchu finished in a three-way tie for first place in the high jump at 1.65m. In the long jump, senior Rachel Bibiu (5.38m) took second place and freshman Clara Fan (5.26m) finished third. The Bears also picked up a win and nine points in the triple jump with freshman Joyce Olawalye winning the event at 11.53m. Fan (1.28m) took second and Bibiu (11.03m) finished fourth.

Sophomore Giana DeCesare took runner-up in the weight throw with her mark of 15.32 meters, and junior Amiya Hopkins finished fourth in the shot put with a 12.47m mark.

 

MEN

Leading the way for Brown on the track were senior sprinters Elias Archie and Solomon Miller, with Archie taking home first place in the 60m dash by crossing the finish line in 6.88 seconds, followed by Miller in third place in 6.93.

Junior Jake Haley scored a point with his fourth place finish in the 500 meters with a time of 1:07.18.

In the field events, junior Gabriel Liem Thai took second place in the pole vault (4.45m), freshman Jerald Evangelista placed third in the triple jump (13.27m), and freshman Sean Wilton finished third in the shot put (15.30m).

The Bears will return to action next Saturday, January 17 at the Beantown Challenge at Harvard.

 


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here to learn more about how you can support the Bears.

 

FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL

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Tigers Win Six Events at Alexis Jarrett Invitational

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Mizzou track and field opened its indoor track and field season Saturday hosting the second annual Alexis Jarrett Invitational at the Hearnes Center Fieldhouse and claimed six event titles, despite competing a limited number of student-athletes.

Other schools competing included SIU-Edwardsville, Central Methodist, Kansas City, Iowa Western Community College, Barton County Community College and Cottey College.

TOP TIGERS

Senior sprinter Robert Hines was a two-time winner. He claimed the 200m dash with a time of 21.82 – just four-tenths of a second off his indoor personal best – and also won the 60m dash in 6.87.

Senior Anna Vedral won the women’s pole vault at the Alexis Jarrett Invitational for the second straight year clearing 3.90m (12-9.5) and sophomore Anna Ferguson (3.60/11-9.75) took second after tying for the runner-up spot a year ago.

Senior Petra Gombas secured the Alexis Jarrett Invitational title for the second straight year with a throw of 19.91m (62-11.5). 

RECAP

Sophomore Marlena Tresnjo won the women’s high jump at 1.76m (5-9.25).

The Tigers were especially strong in the throwing events.

Junior Garik Pozecki had a spirited competition with SIU-Edwardsville’s Grant Milbrath in the men’s weight throw and finished second by a single centimeter, throwing 21.62m (70-11.25), a personal best and the sixth-best mark ever at Mizzou, to Milbrath’s 21.63m (70-11.75). Teammates Clayton Kamp and T.J. Wiggins followed Pozecki in third and fourth with respective throws of 17.92m (58-9.5) and 16.83m (55-2.75).

The Tigers swept the women’s weight throw, taking the top five positions. Gombas’ victory was followed by teammates Reagan Kimrey (19.12/62-8.75), Delilah Pippen (PR – 16.72/54-10.25), Ames Burton (16.62/54-6.5) and Kaitlyn Morningstar (PR – 16.60/54-5.5).

Junior Chase Crawford won the men’s shot put with a personal best throw of 17.62m (57-9.75). Teammates Sam Albert (PR – 15.83m/51-11.25) and Kamp (14.86m/48-9) were third and fifth, respectively.

In his Mizzou debut, Houston transfer Dillon Leacock was second in the 60m hurdles (8.29) and eighth in the 200m dash (22.44) – both events in which he had not competed before.

Multi-event athlete Sophia Wydra, a freshman, also made her debut in the black-and-gold and competed in three events: women’s long jump, sixth, 5.45m (17-10.75); women’s 60m hurdles, ninth, 9.24; and shot put, third (11.42m/37-5.75).

Former Tiger Arianna Fisher, competing unattached, won the women’s triple jump (12.81m/42-0.50), an event in which she holds the Missouri school indoor record (14.06m/46-1.5).

UP NEXT

Next week, Missouri hosts its second of five consecutive home meets – the Show-Me Showdown – inside the Hearnes Center Fieldhouse on Friday, Jan. 16.

FOLLOW THE TIGERS

For all the latest on Mizzou Track and Field, stay tuned to MUTigers.com and follow the team on Facebook, Instagram and X (MizzouTFXC).



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Second School Record Falls; Sewell Succeeds in World Championships on Saturday – University of Cincinnati Athletics

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CINCINNATI — One day after Juliette Laracuente-Huebner broke the long-jump record, the Cincinnati track and field team witnessed a youth movement with the 4×400 relay team taking over the top spot, a group with two freshmen and a sophomore.

That foursome included Ade Lloyd (who in his debut claimed the school’s 300-meter crown), John Apel, Camden Beatty and Romaro Knight, notching a 3:12.70 mark.

Gianni Allwein captured the mile title with a 4:08.17 mark, giving UC three on the weekend after Annika Kinley and Kya Epps on Friday.

Also in action, though straight down south in Tallahassee, Fla., was Abby Sewell in the World Athletics Cross Country Championships. She finished 33rd in the field, and third among all Americans, at 21:23 in her 5K.

Not to be outdone by the men, the women’s 4×400 team produced the No. 9 time of the season, en route to third in the Bearcats record books, with a 3:39.78 clip. Davenae Fagan, Morgan Komolafe, Kya Epps and Macaela Walker keyed that bunch.

Gwen Stare (3,000m) and Omolola Kuponiyi (shot put) also reached ninth and 10th in the school record books on Saturday.

Freshman Rafiq Washington was also 10th in the triple jump in his college debut. Sarah Madix and Mackenzie Steele’s miles were also PRs, giving UC three for the week.

Overall, the Bearcats netted seven top-10 record book entries.



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Giles Breaks Shot Put Program Record at Tryon International Collegiate Opener

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TRYON, N.C. – The High Point University women’s track and field team traveled to the western part of the state to compete at the Tryon International Collegiate Opener hosted by Big South Conference foe UNC Asheville. The Panthers used this meet as practice for the Big South Indoor Championships that will take place at the same facility at the end of February.
 
High Point had a group of throwers and combined events student-athletes make the trip.
 
In the throwing events, Ashlyn Giles broke her own program record in her second meet as a Panther in the shot put. She threw a 15.43m throw for first place which was 0.43m farther than her previous record. She also competed in the weight throw and launched the weight 15.32m for third place.
 
Vanessa Kobialka placed in second behind Giles in the shot put with a 13.27m throw. Jill Stroup placed fourth in the weight throw and matched Giles’ throw with a 15.32m launch.
 
Jhanelle Thomas and Mya Hines competed in the 60m hurdles and crossed the finish line in back-to-back times as Thomas registered a 9.08 time and Hines posted a 9.25 time for fourth and fifth place respectively. Thomas also competed in the high jump and cleared 1.47m for a six-way tie for third. Kaitlyn Green was right there with Thomas in the high jump also clearing 1.47m for third place.
 
UP NEXT: High Point travels to Blacksburg, Virginia for the Virginia Tech Invitational on January 16-17.
 

#GoHPU x #OnTheProwl



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