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How college baseball learned to stop worrying and lean into the long ball

College baseball has spent much of the last three decades bouncing between offensive extremes, from the gorilla ball to the dead ball and back to a bombs-away mentality. The latest swing in the state of play has produced an unprecedented four-year run of power hitting. Unlike some of the other recent fluctuations, the latest uptick […]

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How college baseball learned to stop worrying and lean into the long ball

College baseball has spent much of the last three decades bouncing between offensive extremes, from the gorilla ball to the dead ball and back to a bombs-away mentality.

The latest swing in the state of play has produced an unprecedented four-year run of power hitting. Unlike some of the other recent fluctuations, the latest uptick in offense has those in the game less worried about the balls and the bats and more focused on the guys using the equipment and how.

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“I just think teams are a lot bigger and a lot stronger than they used to be,” said Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn, who has led his teams to nine College World Series appearances in 36 years as a head coach. “They’re a lot older than they used to be.”

According to NCAA records dating back to 1970, there have been four seasons in which Division I teams averaged a home run per game: 1998 and the past three seasons. Heading into the NCAA regionals, this season is on pace (1.06 homers per team game) to be the fifth overall and fourth straight.

Instead of fretting about the abundance of dingers, the game’s leaders see it as a natural evolution brought about by a combination of mostly positive developments.

“I think the college game’s in a great spot,” UC Irvine coach Ben Orloff said.

Homer history

The college game’s first brush with the outer limits of recognizable baseball came in 1998, the same year the pursuit of the MLB single-season home run record captivated the big leagues. Division I records for runs (7.12) and home runs (1.06) per team per game were set. Former LSU coach Skip Bertman was credited with coining the term “gorilla ball” to describe the state of the college game at the time.

The punctuation came at the College World Series, when USC beat Arizona State 21-14 in a championship game that featured nine home runs. At least one team reached double-digits in runs scored in seven of the 14 games in Omaha.

The NCAA and college baseball leaders decided it was time to cool off the bats, in the name of bringing balance back to the game and protecting the players most likely to be injured by close-range line drives. Working with sports scientists, they sought to devise a way to measure how fast the ball was coming off the bat and ensure non-wood bats performed no better than the best-performing wood bats.

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“(Non-wood bats) have what is known as a trampoline effect,” said Alan Nathan, professor emeritus at the University of Illinois who has done extensive research on bat-to-ball physics. “So when the ball hits the surface of the bat, the bat itself, which is hollow, the surface of the bat can compress and then spring back much, much like a trampoline, and you get a bigger kick to the ball. So you get higher exit velocities that way.”

Ball Exit Speed Ratio (BESR) testing was introduced after the 1998 season, and home runs and runs steadily dropped for about 10 years, but they ticked up in 2008. By 2010, home runs were again approaching one per game, and runs were up near 7.0. Again, safety became part of the conversation. A new standard for measuring how the ball comes off the bat called the Batted Ball Coefficient of Restitution (BBCOR) was implemented in 2011.

Again, adjusting the bats worked — too well.

Offense cratered. In 2014, home runs were down to 0.39 per team per game. Runs per game hit levels last seen in college baseball when wood bats were still being used in the early 1970s. The switch to aluminum bats came in 1974.

At the 2014 College World Series, UC Irvine coach Mike Gillespie told The Associated Press the bat change was a “nightmare.” TCU coach Jim Schlossnagle added, “It’s just a travesty what we’ve done to college baseball.”

Only three home runs were hit over 16 CWS games. Vanderbilt won it, with a homer in the deciding game providing the winning run in a 3-2 victory against Virginia. The Commodores finished that season with 22 homers over 72 games.

This time, the ball took the fall. The next season the NCAA began using a ball more similar to what is used in the Major Leagues, with flattened seams that allow it to cut through the air with less drag.

“When you lower the seams on the ball, the ball isn’t coming off the bat any faster,” Nathan said.

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Once again, the adjustment worked. Long balls increased immediately and steadily climbed for a few years. In 2019, Vanderbilt won another national championship, and Commodores outfielder JJ Bleday blasted 27 homers by himself.

In 2022 there was another surge in homers (1.03 per game) to near 1998 levels. That set the stage for a record-breaking number of homers in 2023 (1.14 per game) and another in 2024 (1.16).

This time, though, no adjustments were made. And things have already ticked back down, though compared to historical norms, home runs are still flying out of college ballparks at a rate akin to the gorilla ball days. There is a distinct difference between the two eras.

“The home run was prevalent by those that could really hit them,” said ESPN college baseball analyst Chris Burke, a former major leaguer and 2001 first-round draft pick out of Tennessee. “But nobody was necessarily teaching the (swing) path that produced that result. There was still a lot of old-school teaching around that era of the game, and so while the equipment was really designed for a bunch of home runs the instruction was not nearly as intentional as it is today.”

The rise has been driven by the top conferences.

Homers per team per game

League 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025

SEC

1.29

1.47

1.62

1.68

1.54

ACC

1.25

1.56

1.46

1.68

1.32

Big 12

1.11

1.22

1.28

1.34

1.21

Big Ten

1.03

1.19

1.19

1.23

1.27

Pac-12

0.96

1.07

1.4

1.19

N/A

The bats

While the ping of a metal bat making contact was once a trademark of college baseball, carbon-fiber composite bats are now far more common. Generally, composite bats offer larger barrels while feeling lighter when swung because of how they are proportioned. They can crack and break like wood bats — though not as easily — and unlike aluminum bats, they perform better when broken in.

Composite bats can also be altered to improve how the ball springs off them (the so-called trampoline effect) and surpass the NCAA standards that have been established (and re-established) over the past 25 years. The most common ways are called shaving and rolling, and a simple online search will produce plenty of bat doctors, selling services and bats that will supposedly put some extra juice on your fly balls.

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Shaving requires removing the end cap of a bat, which can be difficult to do, and shaving down or thinning out the inner wall of the barrel. That makes the bat more springy.

Rolling is less involved and is designed to replicate heavy usage. A rolling machine breaks down the bat evenly and produces an accelerated break-in.

Getting doctored bats into a game, though, is not so easy. NCAA rules require bats to be tested using a three-step protocol that includes the use of a bat compression tester. Bats that pass are labeled with a tamper-proof sticker. and only stickered bats can be used in games.

This season the NCAA changed its rules to require bat testing before every game. Previously, bats were tested before every series, though the ACC and SEC both switched to day-of-competition testing last season.

Is the system foolproof? Is anything?

There have been no verified cheating scandals in college baseball recently, and coaches don’t seem to be particularly worried about an epidemic of doctored bats undermining their sport. But baseball being baseball, skepticism and suspicion come with the territory.

The Vanderbilt-Tennessee rivalry got spicy in 2022 when Vols slugger Jordan Beck had a home run against the Commodores waved off by umpires because it didn’t have the appropriate sticker. Vandy coach Tim Corbin implied that it might not have been an innocent mistake.

Sometimes suspicion can lead to teammates accusing teammates.

After the 2024 college baseball season, a player at a Power 4 school alleged some of his teammates were using — for at least part of the season — doctored bats, attorneys working with the player have told The Athletic. The attorneys brought the allegations and supporting evidence to the conference office, which directed attorneys to share what they had with the school. A few months later school officials told the attorneys they had found no wrongdoing in their baseball program. A school official told The Athletic a thorough investigation was done that involved interviewing players and coaches.

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“The only reason you could slide an illegal bat under the radar is because you have humans testing them,” Clemson coach Eric Bakich said. “And those humans are usually representative of each institution, so it’s not like a neutral third-party, like an umpire is testing. But I think that’s probably the next evolution of bat testing. But I don’t think it’s a problem. I haven’t seen it be a problem.”

Bakich added, “My assumption is that that feels pretty reined in just the amount of testing that goes on with those bats every day.”

Nick Smith, deputy director of Washington State’s sports science lab, which has worked with the NCAA on setting the standards for non-wood bat performance, said the lab will send bats out to rolling services and test them. What they generally find is the bats still remain within the testing standard upon return. Charging customers for bats that can’t pass inspection is probably not great business, Smith said.

So if a bat is doctored to accelerate the break-in period and improve its performance, but that performance still falls within the rules, is it cheating?

Smith also said bat manufacturers are now designing bats in ways that mitigate the effects of rolling.

“That’s a form of bat doctoring that’s very easy for us to replicate, and it’s now part of our standard test. So I think there are probably other ways people can cheat and gain an advantage,” said Smith, whose father Lloyd invented the compression testing device used by schools to measure the BBCOR of bats. “I think rolling is one where they’re unlikely to gain any advantage beyond placebo.”

The offensive uptick hasn’t prompted calls for change or increased scrutiny because there are plenty of organic contributing factors. Wake Forest coach Tom Walter, whose program has been at the forefront of the long-ball craze with 465 homers over the past four seasons, said baseball has a long history of players looking for any advantage they can find.

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“Do I think there are programs out there that are probably pushing that envelope there? There are, I’m sure they are,” Walter said. “And if they’re not doing it as a program, there’s probably individual kids that are trying to figure that out and figure out how to beat the system. I think that we’re always going to be dealing with that. And I think college baseball has done a good job of reacting to the times.”

Shrinking minor leagues and paying college players

In 2020, as the pandemic disrupted high school, college and professional baseball seasons, MLB shortened its draft to five rounds from its usual 40. The next year, in conjunction with the contraction of Major League-affiliated minor league baseball, the draft was permanently cut in half to 20 rounds.

Meanwhile, the NCAA chose not to count 2020-21 participation toward athletes’ eligibility clocks, creating a horde of fifth-, sixth- and even seventh-year college athletes in recent years.

Add those two pandemic ripple effects together, and it’s been a crowded few seasons in college baseball.

“We’ve got a couple guys on our team that are 24, about to turn 25,” Bakich said. “Just having a lineup with 22-, 23-year-old guys in your lineup is the new normal for a lot of programs. There’s less and less 18-year-old, 19-year-old freshmen. As kids continue to develop, power is usually one of the things that comes last.”

And while baseball players aren’t generally receiving the high six-figure or even seven-figure deals football and basketball players are getting, there is money to be made in college, and the quality of life is often better than in the minor leagues.

“College baseball is the best farm system for Major League Baseball,” Bakich said. “The tippy-top of college baseball usually has a Double-A or Triple-A facility and is giving these kids the big-league treatment in terms of travel, accommodations, food, et cetera. So these kids, they go to summer ball, it’s a letdown. They go to Single-A and it’s a letdown.”


Tennessee, which used a deep stable of power hitters to win its first national championship in 2024, is third in D-I in home runs this year.

Style of play

Just like in 1998, the offensive environment in college baseball echoes what is happening in Major League Baseball.

Strikeouts have been steadily climbing against pitchers who have more tools, technology and data at their disposal than ever before to improve velocity and movement. Depending on a team to string together hits — or even contact — to score multiple runs in an inning against pitchers with nasty stuff is a hard way to win.

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It’s all about launch angle and exit velo. Lift the ball and hit it hard.

“The data shows that we want our guys kind of living in that 12- to 18-degree launch angle range,” Walter said. “And I get why, because some of your misses are home runs, and then some of your misses are hard ground balls, right? So you want guys to live a little bit higher launch angle because your misses are more productive.”

Walter, whose program has prided itself on being at the cutting-edge of baseball’s tech and data revolution, also said the strike zone is shrinking because of ball-tracking technology used to evaluate umpires. Pitches barely on, or in many cases slightly off, the outside part of the plate that were frequently called strikes aren’t anymore.

“These umpires are getting evaluated on TrackMan every single game, and I think they’ve learned that if they want a good score, they’ve got to keep it on the plate,” he said.

Add in an uptick in hitter-friendly parks around the country and sprinkle on top of that a little climate change — warm temperatures help baseballs fly farther — and conditions have never been more conducive for homers.

And these days, that’s just fine. Ratings for the last two College World Series have set new highs for ESPN and the college game is continuing to fill in the developmental gap left by minor-league contraction. While scoring remains high compared to historical norms (teams are combining for a little under 14 runs per game overall), why mess with a seemingly good thing?

“I do think the best time for college baseball is ahead of us,” said Craig Keilitz, the longtime executive director of the American Baseball Coaches Association. “As good as we are right now, I think we got a brighter future, so I’m really excited about the future of our game.”

(Top photo: Corey Perrine / Florida Times-Union via Imagn Images)

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Water polo players briefly leave the pool after shots fired near Under-20 World Cup game in Brazil | Sports

SAO PAULO (AP) — Brazilian police said Monday there were no injuries after shots were fired near an Under-20 World Cup women’s water polo game between China and Canada in the city of Salvador. China won 12-8 on Sunday — the opening day of the tournament — but footage showed the game being briefly interrupted […]

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SAO PAULO (AP) — Brazilian police said Monday there were no injuries after shots were fired near an Under-20 World Cup women’s water polo game between China and Canada in the city of Salvador.

China won 12-8 on Sunday — the opening day of the tournament — but footage showed the game being briefly interrupted as players got out of the pool, laid down and took cover by a small barrier after hearing gunshots outside the water polo venue in the Pituba neighborhood. China led Canada 3-2 at the time.

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.



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Soccer Opens 2025 Season at Long Beach State, Pepperdine

Story Links Coming off of its first-ever Big West regular season title, Hawai’i will open its 2025 season with a nonconference match at Long Beach State on Thursday at 4 p.m. HT.   Following Thursday’s season opener, the Rainbow Wahine will head up the California Coast to take on Pepperdine Sunday at […]

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Coming off of its first-ever Big West regular season title, Hawai’i will open its 2025 season with a nonconference match at Long Beach State on Thursday at 4 p.m. HT.
 
Following Thursday’s season opener, the Rainbow Wahine will head up the California Coast to take on Pepperdine Sunday at 9 a.m. HT. UH trails the all time series against both schools (3-10-4 vs. LBSU, 0-6-1 vs. PEP) but won the last meeting against The Beach with a 1-0 victory in the regular season finale last year.
 










HAWAI’I (12-8-1, 8-1-1 Big West) at Long Beach State (6-9-3, 3-5-2 Big West) // Pepperdine (12-4-5, 6-1-3 WCC)
Date / Time Thursday, Aug. 14

Hawai’i at Long Beach State — 4:00 p.m. HT

Sunday, Aug. 17

Hawai’i at Pepperdine– 9:00 a.m. HT

Location Long Beach, Calif. | Malibu, Calif.
Live Stream Thursday 
Live Stats Thursday | Sunday
PDF Notes Hawai’i | Long Beach State | Pepperdine
Social Media @HawaiiWSoccer Twitter | #HawaiiWSoccer | @HawaiiWSoccer Instagram 

 
HEAD COACH MICHELE NAGAMINE

At Hawai’i: 86
-115-25 (14th season)

Collegiate Record: 110
-145-26 (17th year)

SERIES VS. LONG BEACH STATE

Overall: LBSU leads, 10-3-4

Last Meeting: Oct. 31, 2024 (UH won, 1-0)

Streak: W1

SERIES VS. PEPPERDINE

Overall: PEP leads, 6-0-1

Last meeting: Sept. 19, 2010 (PEP won, 2-0)

Streak: L2

 

ON THE PITCH  

DID YOU KNOW?

2024 Big West Midfielder of the Year Nalani Damacion finished tied for third nationally and first among all freshmen with seven game-winning goals. Her seven game-winners were also the most by any NCAA freshman since 2015 (Cece Kizer, Ole Miss).

 

REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS!

Hawai’i is coming off of a magical 2024 season in which it captured the program’s first ever Big West regular season title. The Rainbow Wahine dominated the Big West regular season, going 8-1-1 and setting a school record for conference wins while finishing with 25 points – the most by a Big West school since 2016. The regular season title gave UH the right to host the semifinals and finals of the Big West Championship, however, the ‘Bows saw their historic season come to an end with a semifinal loss to CSU Bakersfield.

 

» Set a school record with a nine-match unbeaten streak that ran from Sept. 12-Oct. 20.

» Seven match winning streak was the longest in a single season and tied the overall program record.

» Outscored teams 12-6 in 10 league games, with all eight wins coming by one goal.

» First Big West team to start 5-0 in conference play since 2010 (UC Irvine).

 

RAISING THE EXPECTATIONS

The Rainbow Wahine enter the 2025 season with lofty expectations following last year’s conference regular season title. UH was picked first in the Big West Preseason Coaches Poll, marking the first time since 2008 that the program has been tabbed as a preseason conference favorite. It’s also the first time since Hawai’i joined the Big West that it has been picked to finish atop the conference. Additionally, Amber Gilbert and Nalani Damacion each earned Preseason All-Big West recognition.

 

FAB FRESHMEN TO SUPER SOPHOMORES

A huge key to last season’s Big West regular season title run was the contributions UH got from a number of freshmen. The Rainbow Wahine’s group of eight sophomores combined for three Big West All-Freshman honors and eight conference player of the week recognitions a year ago as freshmen and will be counted on to play key roles again in 2025.

 

» Kennedy Justin earned Big West Goalkeeper of the Year honors last year as a redshirt freshman.

» Justin became the first freshman ever to claim that honor and matched a school single-season record for goalkeeper wins with a record of 11-8-1.

» Nalani Damacion was named Big West Midfielder of the Year after leading the team with seven goals.

» Damacion became the first freshman ever to claim the honor.

» All seven of Damacion’s goals were game-winner, ranking third nationally and first among freshmen.

» Alice Davidson earned Big West All-Freshman honors after finishing with four assists (T-1st on team).

» UH earned six total Big West Freshman of the Week honors (Damacion: 5x; Laule’a Ah Mook Sang: 1x)

 

RAINBOW RELOAD

The Rainbow Wahine will welcome in a talented group of eight newcomers to compliment their deep pool of returnees. UH brings in three players out of the transfer portal while adding five freshmen to the mix in 2025. Defenders Rikako Hayami and Solala Nasu will fill some key roles on the back line while three-year Division I goalkeeper Julia Ortega gives UH depth in the net. Isabella Kaemmerer, Karissa Kira, Saira Johal, Montana Longcrier and Sophia Nygaard make up the group of five incoming true freshmen.

 

» Hayami spent the 2024 season at Arizona and previously was an NJCAA All-American in 2023.

» Nasu returns home after spending freshman season at South Dakota State; was the three-time HHSAA State Tournament Most Outstanding Player from 2022-24.

» Ortega has totaled 137 saves in 29 career starts in goal at Southern Utah and Arizona State.

» Kaemmerer and Kira were high school and club teammates, winning an ECNL U17 national title in 2024.

 





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Liv Ekponé – Track and Field Coach – Texas A&M Athletics

Olivia Ekponé made her return to Aggieland to join head coach Pat Henry’s staff at the start of the 2024/25 season. Since landing back in College Station, she took on the role of athletics assistant for the Maroon & White, helping in multitude of roles for the track & field program. Assisting on the track, she […]

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Olivia Ekponé made her return to Aggieland to join head coach Pat Henry’s staff at the start of the 2024/25 season. Since landing back in College Station, she took on the role of athletics assistant for the Maroon & White, helping in multitude of roles for the track & field program.

Assisting on the track, she aids both Coach Pat Henry and Coach Kurt Henry with the decorated 400m and sprint groups for practice and meet day preparation. Her experience as an athlete helped those groups, as she contributed to the men’s programs fifth NCAA Outdoor National Title and first SEC Indoor Championship during the 2025 season.

 

Her groups on the men’s side accounted for 10 points at the NCAA outdoor championships and eight points at the indoor championships. Collecting honors throughout the season, Ekponé’s squads tacked on 13 All-America accolades and three conference medals. The women’s team also saw success through her leadership, with 19 All-America honors and three league medals.

As an athlete, Ekponé was a four-year letterwinner and 12-time All-American for the Maroon & White. She played a key role in securing the women’s team’s fourth NCAA outdoor championship in 2014 and the program’s first SEC outdoor team title in 2013. She also anchored the women’s 4x100m relay team to a national title at the 2014 outdoor meet, winning the final in 42.80. Her outstanding performances won her SEC Runner of the Year honors in 2014, and helped guide the team to another trio of top-three program finishes during her time as a student-athlete.

 

She also etched her name in the Aggie history books, as Ekponé remains the school-record holder in the women’s outdoor 200m with a time of 22.23, as well as ranking in the top-10 in both the indoor 60m (7.25) and outdoor 100m (11.11).

 

Following her graduation, Ekponé stayed in the track & field world, as she worked for MileSplit and FloTrack in a sports media roll covering athletes from the youth to professional levels.



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INTRO — Media Aug. 11

Saturday will mark the start of my 20th year here at SBJ. Twenty years since I shifted away from a career as an attorney and into sports journalism — and I’ve never looked back. Research. Data analysis. Writing. Editing. Podcast hosting. Moderating panels. Even playing beach volleyball in my suit jacket and pants alongside Olympian […]

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Saturday will mark the start of my 20th year here at SBJ. Twenty years since I shifted away from a career as an attorney and into sports journalism — and I’ve never looked back.

Research. Data analysis. Writing. Editing. Podcast hosting. Moderating panels. Even playing beach volleyball in my suit jacket and pants alongside Olympian Kerri Walsh Jennings. I’ve tackled a number of duties and responsibilities at SBJ. Now, it’s time for my next role: sports media beat reporter.

As many reading SBJ Media will know, I’m no stranger to this area, having written about TV viewership for years. Now, I’ll formally expand on that expertise and take on all intersections of media and sports business.

I’m champing at the bit to start this next challenge. Thank you to so many in the business that have already reached out. I look forward to working with all of you!

And I want to hear from all SBJ readers. What are you paying attention to? Who do we need as a guest on the SBJ Sports Media Podcast? Got a tip? Email or call anytime.

SBJ remains the tip of the spear for those seriously tuned in to sports business, and I’m incredibly honored to be taking on this new role.

Let’s rock!



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Champ’s Kid Club Partners with The Future Fan

Story Links Montana State’s Champ’s Kids Club has announced a new partnership with The Future Fan, as the Bobcats prepare for the start of the 2025-26 sports season. The Future Fan is a U.S. company based in Arkansas that partners with other colleges and professional sports teams around the country to fulfill […]

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Montana State’s Champ’s Kids Club has announced a new partnership with The Future Fan, as the Bobcats prepare for the start of the 2025-26 sports season.

The Future Fan is a U.S. company based in Arkansas that partners with other colleges and professional sports teams around the country to fulfill their exclusive membership programs.

This season’s Champ’s Kids Club membership ($50) includes an exclusive club t-shirt, mini-pennant, stickers, lanyard, and credentials, along with free admission to all home volleyball, men’s and women’s basketball games, and men’s and women’s tennis events. An additional perk is discounts on birthday parties at volleyball or basketball games and exclusive kid’s club events throughout the year.

The Future Fan will ship Champ’s Kids Club kits directly to your home. Fans should expect their kits within two weeks of ordering. To sign up for Champ’s Kids Club, sponsored by Billings Clinic, go to msubobcats.com (Fan Info).

 



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2025 AVCA First Serve to Include Block Party in Lincoln

The American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA), in conjunction with Visit Lincoln, is bringing the excitement beyond the court this summer with the AVCA First Serve Block Party, a free three-day celebration in Lincoln’s Railyard outside Pinnacle Bank Arena, Aug. 22–24, 2025. Fans can look forward to live entertainment, interactive activities, special guest appearances, and a […]

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The American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA), in conjunction with Visit Lincoln, is bringing the excitement beyond the court this summer with the AVCA First Serve Block Party, a free three-day celebration in Lincoln’s Railyard outside Pinnacle Bank Arena, Aug. 22–24, 2025. Fans can look forward to live entertainment, interactive activities, special guest appearances, and a festival-like atmosphere leading up to—and during—AVCA First Serve, the nation’s premier collegiate volleyball showcase.

The AVCA First Serve Block Party transforms the Railyard into volleyball central with attractions for fans of all ages, including:

  • AVCA Merch Tent – Grab official event gear and show your volleyball pride.
  • Photo Trailer – Snap Instagram-worthy shots with friends and teammates.
  • Human Foosball – Take part in the oversized, action-packed version of the classic game.
  • Face Painting & Poster Decorating – Perfect for younger fans and team spirit displays.
  • Fitness & Yoga Sessions – Hosted by Good Life Fitness for an energizing start to the day.
  • Vertical Jump Test – See how high you can soar.
  • Meet & Greets – With USA Volleyball, Athletes Unlimited, LOVB, and the Omaha Supernovas.
  • Food Trucks – Serving up local flavors all weekend.
  • Main Stage Programming – Featuring live music, DJs, contests, interviews with current and former players and coaches, volleyball trivia, and ticket giveaways.

Check out this map with more info on the Block Party grounds and booths.

Daily Highlights:

  • Friday, Aug. 22 – Pep Rally & Red Carpet Walk at 3:45 p.m. (CT), live music from Honeytown, and evening celebrations running until midnight.
  • Saturday, Aug. 23 – Fitness Bootcamp, live music from the Chuck Briseno Band, and a full afternoon of fan activities from noon to 3 p.m.
  • Sunday, Aug. 24 – Yoga session, more main stage entertainment, and closing celebrations from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Volleyball fans won’t want to miss the Rally Towels Giveaway for the first 200 fans each day and ticket giveaways at every watch party located at the stage.

“Lincoln is known for its incredible volleyball community, and the Block Party is the perfect way to connect fans, athletes, and the sport in a fun, energetic setting,” said AVCA CEO Dr. Jaime Gordon. “We’re thrilled to bring the excitement outside the arena and into the heart of the city.”

For more information on AVCA First Serve, including match times, go here.

 

 



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