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National runner

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National runner

View this story online | GNAC AOTY winners

PORTLAND, Ore. – After completing one of the best cross-country careers in Great Northwest Athletic Conference history last fall, Alaska’s Kendall Kramer added a final major award to her collegiate resume on Friday.
 
The conference’s athletic directors voted the Nanook senior the 2024-25 GNAC Female Scholar Athlete of the Year, recognizing a long list of achievements both academically and athletically. A graduate this spring, Kramer held a 3.89 grade point average while completing her degree in biological sciences. She was a four-time academic all-conference selection, a College Sports Communicators academic all-district pick and is a likely CSC Academic All-American when those awards are announced in July.
 
Her career on the course was even more impressive than her academic resume, as she capped things off with an NCAA Division II national runner-up finish in the fall of 2024. That came after Kramer won her third consecutive GNAC individual cross-country title and finished as the runner-up at the NCAA West Region Championships. In her four-year career at her hometown university, Kramer participated in four NCAA Championships and logged three All-American finishes.
 
Saving her best season for last, Kramer kicked off the postseason portion of the schedule by dominating the field of 93 runners at the GNAC Championships on Oct. 26 in Bellingham, Wash. Cruising through the 6k course in 20:32.3 minutes, she won the race by more than 20 seconds ahead of teammate Rosie Fordham (20:54.3 minutes). She became just the second woman in conference history to win three consecutive cross country individual titles, joining four-time winner Jessica Pixler of Seattle Pacific (2006-09). Kramer also won the event as a sophomore in 2022 in Monmouth, Ore., and as a junior in 2023 in Anchorage, Alaska. She joined a short list of women to earn all-conference honors four times in their careers, becoming the 10th to achieve that feat since the conference was founded in 2001. It was the first such occurrence by a Nanook, as Kramer placed third as a freshman in 2021 before winning the next three conference titles.
 
With the field scaled up to 192 runners at the NCAA regional meet, Kramer put forth a similar display of excellence. Although her teammate Fordham emerged with a win in a conference-regional record 19:52.7 minutes, Kramer was right on her heels as she clocked in at 20:06.9 minutes on the championship course in Billings, Mont., on Nov. 9. In four years competing at the regional meet, Kramer finished no worse than fifth place (as a freshman in 2021), as she sandwiched a win in 2023 with runner-up finishes in both 2022 and 2024. She became just the seventh woman in conference history and the first Nanook to garner four cross-country all-region awards in her collegiate career and was the first to do so since Simon Fraser’s Rebecca Bassett in 2013-16.
 
If Kramer’s career trajectory was any indicator of how her national championship race would go, then the result was not a surprise in the slightest. She took 72nd as a freshman in 2021, before finishing eighth as a sophomore in 2022 and 23rd as a junior in 2023 to garner two straight All-America honors. Toeing the line for the final time on Nov. 23 in Sacramento, Calif., Kramer was at her best among a field of 261 competitors. She clocked a 6k time of 20:30.7 minutes, finishing only behind Grand Valley State’s Lauren Kiley who edged Kramer with a time of 20:28.5 minutes for the national title.
 
It was the best finish at the national meet by a GNAC runner since Alaska Anchorage’s Caroline Kurgat won the 2017 national title, and it was far and away the best-ever finish by a Nanook at the race. Overall Kramer became the fifth woman to finish second or first at the national meet, joining three-time national champion Pixler (2007-09), 2009 and 2010 runner-up Sarah Porter of Western Washington, 2012 runner-up Susan Tanui of Alaska Anchorage and national champion Kurgat (2017). She was also the fifth in conference history to earn at least three All-America honors, joining Pixler, Porter, Kurgat and UAA’s Ruth Keino (2009-11).
 
The efforts from Kramer and fellow All-American Fordham, who finished eighth at the national meet, helped the Nanook women to their best-ever team finish as a GNAC representative as they placed 13th overall. Kramer is the first woman in school history to earn the conference’s top individual academic award. It is the fifth time that the honor has been bestowed upon a cross-country runner, as Kramer joined Seattle Pacific’s Annika Esvelt (2024), Central Washington’s Alexa Shindruk (2019), UAA’s Kurgat (2018) and SPU’s Pixler (2010).
 
While Kramer’s skiing resume was not factored into her consideration in winning the GNAC Female Scholar Athlete award, as that sport competes outside of the conference, her resume is so impressive that it merits mentioning as well. She was the 2025 NCAA freestyle national champion, a freestyle first-team All-American and a classic second-team All-American.
 
The GNAC Scholar Athlete of the Year award is presented annually to one male and one female deemed to have achieved the highest performance both academically and athletically. Northwest Nazarene track & field star Laurenz Waldbauer was named the GNAC Male Athlete of the Year earlier this week. The conference athlete of the year awards will be announced next week.
 
2025 GNAC Athlete of the Year Awards
GNAC Male Scholar Athlete of the Year – Laurenz Waldbauer, NNU, Track & Field
GNAC Female Scholar Athlete of the Year – Kendall Kramer, UAF, Cross Country
GNAC Male Athlete of the Year – TBA June 24, 2025
GNAC Female Athlete of the Year – TBA June 26, 2025

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3 takeaways from Wisconsin Badgers’ Final Four-clinching win over Texas

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Updated Dec. 15, 2025, 7:31 a.m. CT

AUSTIN, Texas – As Wisconsin’s Charlie Fuerbringer came up with a big block in the first set, Wisconsin volleyball coach Kelly Sheffield raised his arms in what somewhat resembled a flexing motion.

It was one of many ways in which the Badgers flexed their muscle on SEC power Texas as they won on the road in four sets, 25-22, 25-21, 20-25, 25-19, en route to their sixth Final Four of the Sheffield era and seventh overall in program history.



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Volleyball Places 78 on 2025 Academic All-MAC Team

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CLEVELAND, Ohio – The Mid-American Conference announced the 78 student-athletes placed on the Academic All-MAC Team for the 2025 volleyball season. 
 
Eastern Michigan, Miami, and Western Michigan led the league with eight student-athletes each. Ball State, Buffalo, Central Michigan, and Ohio followed behind with seven honorees each.
 
The Academic All-MAC honor is awarded to a student-athlete who has excelled in both athletics and academics. To qualify, a student-athlete must have a cumulative GPA of at least 3.20 and have participated in at least 50 percent of the contests in that sport.
 
2025 Volleyball Academic All-MAC Honorees
Akron (4)
Martina Villani, Junior Criminology and Criminal Justice, 3.861
Gabby Brissett, Senior, Biology, 3.745

Vanessa Del Real, Junior, Speech-Language Pathology & Audiology, 3.81
Sarah Bettis, Junior, Biomedical Science, 3.363
 
Ball State (7)
Gwen Crull, Junior, Property Management, 3.959
Lindsey Green, Junior, Communication Studies, 4.000
Sophie Ledbetter, Sophomore, Pre-Nursing, 4.000
Elizabeth Tabeling, Sophomore, Pre-Nursing, 3.725
Carson Tyler, Sophomore, Sport Administration, 3.912
Riley Whitlock, Sophomore, Business Administration, 3.667
Camryn Wise, Junior, Computer Science, 3.723
 
Bowling Green (6)
Avery Anders, Sophomore, Marketing, 3.758
Jessica Andrews, Senior, Marketing, 4.000

Sydnie Hernandez, Sophomore, Human Development & Family Science, 3.757
Isabelle Laube, Redshirt Junior, Marketing, 3.863
Edyta Waclawczyk, Redshirt Sophomore, International Business, 4.000
Helen Wilford, Redshirt Sophomore, Biology, 4.000
 
Buffalo (7)
Luli Arcucci, Sophomore, Business Administration, 3.489
Ava Kanj, Sophomore, Biochemistry, 3.908
Keira Kleidon, Sophomore, Exploratory, 3.862
Emma Converse, Sophomore, Business Administration, 3.667
Manoela Forlin, Junior, Graphic Design, 3.590
Eve Adams, Sophomore, Early Childhood Education, 3.857
Chloe Brown, Junior, Health and Human Services, 3.751
 
Central Michigan (7)
Izzy Swiercz, Sophomore, Undeclared, 3.66
Natalia Rejment, Senior, General Management, 3.15
Alina Anderson, Senior, Accounting 3.68
Abby Olin, Senior, Mechanical Engineering + Spanish, 3.98
Grace Thomas, Sophomore, Undeclared, 3.65
Brooklyn Conner, Senior, Environmental Science, 3.65

Hannah Langton, Sophomore, Communication Sciences & Disorders, 3.81
 
Eastern Michigan (8)

Kendal Bonney, Senior, Elem Early Child Teach & Learn, 3.83
Ella Grasson, Senior, Sport Management, 3.87
Anna Guard, Sophomore, Biology, 3.61

Taeley Mahler, Sophomore, Comm Sciences & Disorders, 3.70
Surabhi Srinivasan, Junior, Mathematics-Secondary Education, 3.80
Wrigley Takats, Sophomore, Exploratory, 3.84

Ella Voorhees, Senior, Environ Sci & Society Interdis, 3.59
Hatteras Welker, Sophomore, Biology, 3.89
 
Kent State (5)
Greta Bolognini, Senior, Business Management, 3.66
Hailey Brenner, Sophomore, Sport, Exercise and Performance Psychology, 3.45
Lesley Furuta, Sophomore, General Business, 3.87
Mackenzie McGuire, Senior, Exercise Science, 3.51
Nadia Miller, Sophomore, Exercise Science, 3.28
 
Miami (8)
Ellie Hanson, Senior, Psychology/Sport Management, 3.68
Hayden Hicks, Senior, Psychology/Sport Management, 3.89

Raegan Lantz, Junior, Human Capital Management & Leadership, 3.76
Anna McClure, Redshirt Junior, Strategic Communication, 3.83

Lydia Michelin, Sophomore, Kinesiology/Premedical & Pre-Health Studies, 3.89
Kamryn Utley, Sophomore, Public Health/Healthcare Sales, 4.00

Gentry Warrick, Senior, Kinesiology/Premedical & Pre-Health Studies, 3.29
Chelsea Williams, Junior, Kinesiology, 3.86
 
Northern Illinois (6)
Kylie Schulze, Junior, Marketing, 3.81
Rylea Alvin, Sophomore, Psychology, 3.746
Emma McCartney, Sophomore, Biomedical Engineering, 3,709
Ava Grevengoed, Sophomore, Kinesiology, 3.515
Ella Strausberger, Sophomore, Marketing, 3.442
Alexa Hayes, Senior, Criminology, 3.389
 
Ohio (7)

Caroline Curran, Junior, Engineering Tech & MGMT, 3.852
Sierra Evans, Sophomore, Journalism News and Info., 3.457
Olivia Gardner, Junior, Exercise Physiology, 3.660
Lexi Grissett, Sophomore, Marketing, 4.000
Kendall Hickey, Junior, Communication Studies, 3.396

Bryn Janke, Sophomore, Accounting & Finance, 3.895

Darbi Ricketts, Sophomore, Exercise Physiology – Strength & Conditioning, 3.384
 
Toledo (5)
Anna Alford, Senior, Public Health Management, 3.415
Grace Freiberger, Sophomore, Recreational Therapy, 3.909
Olivia Heitkamp, Sophomore, Early Childhood Education, 3.501
Macy Medors, Senior, Recreational Therapy, 3.989
Sierra Pertzborn, Redshirt Sophomore, Nursing, 3.558     
 
Western Michigan (8)
Reeghan Boyer, Senior, Finance, 3.93
Mary Clare Brusek, Senior, Exercise Science, 3.77
Elana Erickson, Sophomore, Special Education, 3.79
Amanda Glanton, Senior, Mechanical Engineering, 3.84
Maddie Kmetz, R-Junior, Exercise Science, 3.73
Annalise Patchett, Sophomore, Exercise Science, 4.00
Carley Piercefield, Sophomore, Elementary Education, 3.48
Leah Richmond, R-Freshman, Exercise Science, 4.00

 



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Volleyball Paces MAC with Eight Academic All-MAC Selections

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CLEVELAND, Ohio (EMUEagles.com) – The Eastern Michigan University volleyball program led the Mid-American Conference with eight Academic All-MAC student-athletes as the conference announced 78 student-athletes earned the honor for the 2025 season Monday, Dec.15.
 
Earning the award for EMU is Kendal Bonney, Ella Grasson, Anna Guard (Burlington, Ky./St. Henry District), Taeley Mahler (Fort Wayne, Ind./Homestead), Surabhi Srinivasan (Dublin, Ohio/Dublin Jerome), Wrigley Takats, Ella Voorhees, and Hatteras Welker.
 
Along with Eastern’s eight honorees, Miami and Western Michigan tied for the lead in the league with eight student-athletes honored. Ball State, Buffalo, Central Michigan, and Ohio followed behind with seven honorees each. 
 
The Academic All-MAC honor is for a student-athlete who has excelled in athletics and academics. To qualify, a student-athlete must have at least a 3.20 cumulative GPA and have participated in at least 50 percent of the contests for that particular sport.  
 
The honor marks the second for Bonney and Srinivasan, while Grasson, Guard, Mahler, Takats, Voorhees, and Welker earned the accolade for the first time in their respective careers.
 
Eastern’s eight honorees are its most since it also placed eight on the list in the 2022 campaign, and mark most in the Head Coach Kevin Foeman era (2023-present). Eight honorees are the most in one season for the Eagles since at least 2005.
 
2025 Volleyball Academic All-MAC Honorees
 
Eastern Michigan (8)
Kendal Bonney, Senior, Elem Early Child Teach & Learn, 3.83 
Ella Grasson, Senior, Sport Management, 3.87 
Anna Guard, Sophomore, Biology, 3.61 
Taeley Mahler, Sophomore, Comm Sciences & Disorders, 3.70 
Surabhi Srinivasan, Junior, Mathematics-Secondary Education, 3.80 
Wrigley Takats, Sophomore, Exploratory, 3.84 
Ella Voorhees, Senior, Environ Sci & Society Interdis, 3.59 
Hatteras Welker, Sophomore, Biology, 3.89 
 
Akron (4)
Martina Villani, Junior Criminology and Criminal Justice, 3.861
Gabby Brissett, Senior, Biology, 3.745

Vanessa Del Real, Junior, Speech-Language Pathology & Audiology, 3.81
Sarah Bettis, Junior, Biomedical Science, 3.363
 
Ball State (7)
Gwen Crull, Junior, Property Management, 3.959
Lindsey Green, Junior, Communication Studies, 4.000
Sophie Ledbetter, Sophomore, Pre-Nursing, 4.000
Elizabeth Tabeling, Sophomore, Pre-Nursing, 3.725
Carson Tyler, Sophomore, Sport Administration, 3.912
Riley Whitlock, Sophomore, Business Administration, 3.667
Camryn Wise, Junior, Computer Science, 3.723
 
Bowling Green (6)
Avery Anders, Sophomore, Marketing, 3.758
Jessica Andrews, Senior, Marketing, 4.000

Sydnie Hernandez, Sophomore, Human Development & Family Science, 3.757
Isabelle Laube, Redshirt Junior, Marketing, 3.863
Edyta Waclawczyk, Redshirt Sophomore, International Business, 4.000
Helen Wilford, Redshirt Sophomore, Biology, 4.000
 
Buffalo (7)
Luli Arcucci, Sophomore, Business Administration, 3.489
Ava Kanj, Sophomore, Biochemistry, 3.908
Keira Kleidon, Sophomore, Exploratory, 3.862
Emma Converse, Sophomore, Business Administration, 3.667
Manoela Forlin, Junior, Graphic Design, 3.590
Eve Adams, Sophomore, Early Childhood Education, 3.857
Chloe Brown, Junior, Health and Human Services, 3.751
 
Central Michigan (7)
Izzy Swiercz, Sophomore, Undeclared, 3.66
Natalia Rejment, Senior, General Management, 3.15
Alina Anderson, Senior, Accounting 3.68
Abby Olin, Senior, Mechanical Engineering + Spanish, 3.98
Grace Thomas, Sophomore, Undeclared, 3.65
Brooklyn Conner, Senior, Environmental Science, 3.65

Hannah Langton, Sophomore, Communication Sciences & Disorders, 3.81
  
Kent State (5)
Greta Bolognini, Senior, Business Management, 3.66
Hailey Brenner, Sophomore, Sport, Exercise and Performance Psychology, 3.45
Lesley Furuta, Sophomore, General Business, 3.87
Mackenzie McGuire, Senior, Exercise Science, 3.51
Nadia Miller, Sophomore, Exercise Science, 3.28
 
Miami (8)
Ellie Hanson, Senior, Psychology/Sport Management, 3.68 
Hayden Hicks, Senior, Psychology/Sport Management, 3.89 

Raegan Lantz, Junior, Human Capital Management & Leadership, 3.76 
Anna McClure, Redshirt Junior, Strategic Communication, 3.83 

Lydia Michelin, Sophomore, Kinesiology/Premedical & Pre-Health Studies, 3.89 
Kamryn Utley, Sophomore, Public Health/Healthcare Sales, 4.00 

Gentry Warrick, Senior, Kinesiology/Premedical & Pre-Health Studies, 3.29 
Chelsea Williams, Junior, Kinesiology, 3.86 
 
Northern Illinois (6)
Kylie Schulze, Junior, Marketing, 3.81
Rylea Alvin, Sophomore, Psychology, 3.746
Emma McCartney, Sophomore, Biomedical Engineering, 3,709
Ava Grevengoed, Sophomore, Kinesiology, 3.515
Ella Strausberger, Sophomore, Marketing, 3.442
Alexa Hayes, Senior, Criminology, 3.389
 
Ohio (7)

Caroline Curran, Junior, Engineering Tech & MGMT, 3.852
Sierra Evans, Sophomore, Journalism News and Info., 3.457
Olivia Gardner, Junior, Exercise Physiology, 3.660
Lexi Grissett, Sophomore, Marketing, 4.000
Kendall Hickey, Junior, Communication Studies, 3.396

Bryn Janke, Sophomore, Accounting & Finance, 3.895

Darbi Ricketts, Sophomore, Exercise Physiology – Strength & Conditioning, 3.384
 
Toledo (5)
Anna Alford, Senior, Public Health Management, 3.415
Grace Freiberger, Sophomore, Recreational Therapy, 3.909
Olivia Heitkamp, Sophomore, Early Childhood Education, 3.501
Macy Medors, Senior, Recreational Therapy, 3.989
Sierra Pertzborn, Redshirt Sophomore, Nursing, 3.558      
 
Western Michigan (8)
Reeghan Boyer, Senior, Finance, 3.93
Mary Clare Brusek, Senior, Exercise Science, 3.77
Elana Erickson, Sophomore, Special Education, 3.79
Amanda Glanton, Senior, Mechanical Engineering, 3.84
Maddie Kmetz, R-Junior, Exercise Science, 3.73
Annalise Patchett, Sophomore, Exercise Science, 4.00
Carley Piercefield, Sophomore, Elementary Education, 3.48
Leah Richmond, R-Freshman, Exercise Science, 4.00
 
Follow Us
Stay connected with the Eagles all season long by following @EMUVolleyball and @EMUAthletics on X for all of the latest EMU volleyball updates. Be sure to also follow the Green and White on Instagram, @EMU_Volleyball and @emuathletics.





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Nebraska Volleyball was “Maxed Out” in Loss to Texas A&M

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Nebraska 2 vs Texas A&M 3 – 22-25, 22-25, 25-20, 37-35, 13-15

Coach Dani Busboom Kelly said after the loss that she was proud of what her team gave today and left the game with no regrets. “We maxed out with what we had today.” We read into that statement that some players were still sick, and we assume she was also talking about the injuries that happened to Campbell Flynn earlier in the week and the one that happened during warm-ups to Allie Sczech.

Even with all those challenges it is baffling to wrap our heads around what just happened. Texas A&M is a highly talented team that played nearly perfect volleyball inside the Devaney Center for three hours. The odds of such a feat are so low that we still cannot believe it happened.

The Aggies scouted and prepared for Nebraska with such precision. They seemed to know what shot Andi Jackson was going to hit before Jackson was even set, maybe they did. Maybe Nebraska was too predictable. Perhaps the shots the go for kills all year long because we are above the opposing block were the same over and over again.

Nebraska was blocked 30 times in this match and that stat doesn’t seem to capture the impact those blocks had on the match. Jackson was held to a .045 hitting percentage with six kills and five errors. Jackson doesn’t make that many errors, but she did tonight because of the Aggie block and perhaps a timing and connection issue with setter Bergen Reilly.

The Nebraska serve receive was also tested and if we are giving out grades got a C+. The serves were fast, flat and well located and Nebraska passers had real trouble. Laney Choboy was the target of many challenging serves. She passes some but also made five reception errors which means that ball wasn’t playable, point Aggies.

We enter the off season; we do it reluctantly and in a state of shock.



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Say goodbye to these NFL teams, plus a volleyball stunner

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The Pulse Newsletter 📣 | This is The Athletic’s daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox.


Good morning! I hope you don’t run into your nemesis today. Coming up: 

  • 🏈 Big-name NFL teams eliminated from the postseason. 
  • 🏐 Volleyball juggernaut toppled
  • 🙅‍♂️ Alabama coach says no to suitors.
  • 🗳️ Vote on front-office rankings.

Goodbyes: It’s holiday cleanout time in the NFL

Today is Dec. 15, which means it is a prime hour to clean. Maybe you’re clearing out old clutter toys to make room for new ones at Christmas. Maybe you’re getting an early start on the end-of-year reset. 

In the NFL, it’s just time to say goodbye to some teams. Yesterday brought some jarring reminders of it. Who and what we’re saying goodbye to, posthaste: 

1. The Kansas City Chiefs
The defending AFC champions are eliminated from postseason play before 2026 begins, which is a concept I have a hard time processing. Their 16-13 loss to the Chargers yesterday ended a streak of 10 straight postseason appearances for the franchise. It also brought a more immediate toll: Patrick Mahomes tore his ACL with less than two minutes to play. Brutal. 

A good note from Jesse Newell’s column from the game: Kansas City was 12-0 in one-score games last year, which ended with a Super Bowl appearance. This year: 1-7. That’ll do it. 

2. The Cincinnati Bengals and Minnesota Vikings
Both were also axed from postseason contention yesterday, and poor Minnesota didn’t even get a chance to play first. It was a particularly dour day in Cincinnati, where a 24-0 loss to the Ravens and an unhappy Joe Burrow have put a pall over the fan base. Burrow doesn’t want out (not yet, at least), but it’s quite clear the franchise cannot waste another season of his prime again. Also contributing to the bad vibes: not shoveling the snow in Cincy

Minnesota started its audition tape for next year’s contender status with a 34-26 win in Dallas last night that had J.J. McCarthy hitting the Griddy while walking into the end zone. Too late for 2025, fellas. 

3. The Green Bay Packers … maybe
Green Bay, on paper, remains a legit contender at 9-4-1 with a 94 percent chance to make the postseason, per our simulator. But the season suddenly feels in extreme doubt after a 34-26 loss to the red-hot Broncos left superstar acquisition Micah Parsons with a non-contact injury that could be a torn ACL. Standout wide receiver Christian Watson also left the game with a chest injury and was evaluated at a Denver hospital afterward. Don’t forget that star tight end Tucker Kraft tore his ACL last month, too. 

Let’s do a lightning round of other things we’re waving bye to before we get to the presents that can stay under the football tree: 

4. The sack record 👀. Myles Garrett tallied 1.5 sacks in Cleveland’s blowout loss, putting him one sack shy of tying the NFL single-season record with three games to play. 

5. Any worry about Matthew Stafford. The 37-year-old Rams quarterback who started the season as an injury worry cemented his spot as the MVP front-runner in a wild win over his former team yesterday. 

6. Au revoir, Cowboys. Dallas is essentially done (less than a 1 percent chance to make the playoffs) after that loss to the Vikings last night. At least the team has been interesting this year.  

Now, let’s quickly talk about who’s still here:

Brian Fluharty / Imagn Images

  • My first thought upon seeing the Chiefs eliminated: I wonder how the Bills feel. Buffalo (10-4) saw its boogeyman vanquished and beat the division rival Patriots in a thriller yesterday, which is about as good of a Sunday for the Bills as possible. Josh Allen quite literally left it all on the field.

  • About those Broncos. Denver, despite some earlier skepticism, has won 11 straight to reach 12-2 and looked as impressive as ever in yesterday’s win over Green Bay. Add them to the cadre of AFC teams thrilled that Kansas City is done. 

We have full takeaways from the weekend, of course, and it’s always good to fiddle around with the playoff simulator at this point in the season. Oh, and I didn’t even get to mention Philip Rivers’ comeback day

Let’s keep moving:


News to Know

Dylan Widger / Imagn Images

A volleyball stunner
Texas A&M shocked Nebraska to advance to the NCAA volleyball Final Four yesterday in an upset I don’t think anyone expected. Coming into the match, the juggernaut Cornhuskers (now 33-1) had won 54 of 55 home sets this season before dropping the first two in yesterday’s regional final on their home floor. An epic two-set comeback was rendered moot by A&M, which heads to its first Final Four. Read more on what might be “one of the most entertaining matches” in the sport’s history.

More news

  • Steph Curry hit 12 3-pointers last night, and the Warriors still lost.
  • USC women’s basketball coach Lindsay Gottlieb, a Brown graduate, gave a stirring and heartbreaking speech yesterday after the shooting at her alma mater. Her comments are worth a read.
  • Alabama football coach Kalen DeBoer shut down any talk of leaving for Michigan.
  • Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia apologized for his comments after the Heisman ceremony Saturday night. See his statement.

📰 Find more news here 24/7.


What to Watch

📺 NFL: Dolphins at Steelers
8:15 p.m. ET on ESPN
This is a crucial game for Pittsburgh to burnish its hopes of a postseason appearance in Aaron Rodgers’ final season. An issue: Miami has won four straight. This should be a good one. 

📺 NBA: Pistons at Celtics
7 p.m. ET on Peacock
Yes, 20-5 Detroit is still the best team in the East right now, but we should be talking more about Boston, which is 15-10 in what people thought would be a lost season. Jayson Tatum isn’t here, and this team is still really good. Compelling.

Get tickets to games like these here.


Pulse Picks

We’re past ranking front offices in each professional sport. Who’s the best front office in all of the Big Four sports? You can vote on that here

The Heat almost traded for Allen Iverson in 2006. Dwyane Wade shut it down

Ken Rosenthal returns with a post-Winter Meetings notebook full of good tidbits, including one on the Royals’ interest in Jarren Duran. Read that here

Can UConn go undefeated this season? Sabreena Merchant makes some good points in her weekly women’s college basketball Top 25

Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: Our top 50 MLB free agents

Most-read on the website yesterday: Jayna Bardahl’s excellent story on what happens when a ball lands in the stands in the NFL. Sometimes, it’s a lawsuit

📫 That’s all for now! Say hello at thepulse@theathletic.com, and check out our other newsletters.



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Nebraska volleyball’s season is over. What went wrong for the Huskers against Texas A&M? | Husker Red Zone

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