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SBJ Unpacks

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SBJ Unpacks

The ethos that guided Thomas Bach during his 12-year presidency of the International Olympic Committee can be found on a wall outside his office at the organization’s headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland: Change or be changed.

As Bach leaves in a handover ceremony on Monday, the end of his tenure finds the IOC changed significantly. The organization he passes on to Kirsty Coventry — the first woman elected since the IOC was founded 131 years ago — is one that has gained relevancy, reached unprecedented commercial success and weathered a series of some of the most challenging Games in its history.

Since he was elected in 2013, Bach has overseen changes to both how the Games are awarded and hosted more sustainably. He pulled the IOC back from a crisis around both that built to a Paris Olympics last summer that embodied his vision. As he has added to the scope of the IOC’s role — from sustainability to gender equality — so, too, has he added to the size of the staff and the power of the presidency.

The balance of how much the IOC changed or was changed during his tenure depends on who is speaking, but interviews with stakeholders from around the movement find the IOC to be a markedly different organization than when he started.

“We indeed have new relevance,” said Bach, citing the Olympic movement’s contribution to “a better society … to peace, health, education, empowerment.”

“It was challenging all the way through, and I enjoyed it all the way through.”

To many, Bach, 71, represents a shrewd political actor who consolidated power as he professionalized the organization. Those close to him see the German lawyer as an exacting leader, to be sure, but also a person with empathy, a dry sense of humor and someone who finds real joy in sport.

“When he knows what the consequences are, he is prepared to go all out in order to achieve them,” said U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee Chairman Gene Sykes, who is an IOC member. “The legacy of Thomas is not that the Games survived, but that he was able to shape the Games in a way that sets them up for the future and gives them the opportunity to be as meaningful as they can be.”

Russia, led by Vladimir Putin, was a persistent problem during Bach’s tenure. Getty Images

IOC members elected Bach with the expectation that he would shape the Games, elevating the 1976 fencing gold medalist to the top position 22 years after he had joined the membership.

Within months of Bach taking office, the Sochi Olympics proceeded with a record $51 billion price tag and with Russia invading the Crimean Peninsula before the Games closed. The former set the stage for reforms, and the latter kicked off an ever-present series of issues around one of the world’s most influential sporting countries.

That bolstered the late 2014 launch of Agenda 2020 — later updated to Agenda 2020+5 — a 40-point list of recommendations to reform the movement. Among them: working more closely with international federations, national Olympic committees and other organizations in the movement; increasing support for athletes; launching the Olympic Channel; reducing the cost of bidding and hosting; and fostering gender equality.

It later came to include the creation of the Refugee Olympic Team; innovating the IOC’s revenue models so that broadcasters and sponsors supported the IOC’s digital strategy; and emphasizing the universality of the Games.

“When Thomas came along in ’13, the movement was ripe for some pretty serious change,” said longtime Olympic marketer Terrence Burns. “[Modern Olympic founder Pierre de] Coubertin invented it. [Longtime IOC President Juan Antonio] Samaranch saved it. And I think Thomas attempted to reinvent it or evolve it.”

That reinvention included record success commercially. The IOC’s broadcast deals and The Olympic Partner Program (TOP) sponsorships — which make up 60% and 30% of overall revenue, respectively — grew from $5.2 billion for the 2013-16 quad to $7.7 billion for 2021-24.

As Bach worked to improve the brand of the IOC and the movement, it was able to sign bigger deals. TOP expanded to a record 15 sponsors, with Airbnb, Allianz, Deloitte and Toyota among the additions.

“The vision was fantastic for us because we had a little bit of the permission to go in a direction that people weren’t going before,” said Christian Voigt, former IOC vice president of marketing and development.

It also led the IOC in other directions.

The reforms pushed for sustainability, both environmentally and financially, in future hosts. They sought to emphasize Olympic Solidarity, using revenue to support athlete development globally. In 2015, it expanded to include the Refugee Olympic Team.

“This is not a sports organization,” said Nicole Hoevertsz, an IOC member for nearly 20 years who served on its powerful executive board for the past eight. “It has become so much more than that, and that is all because of Thomas Bach.”

That included a concerted effort on gender equality. The Paris Games marked the first time men and women had equal quota spots, around 57% of its administrative staff are women, and the IOC has increased its membership from 21% women in 2013 to 43% now.

“He’s built the pipeline,” said former USOPC chairwoman Susanne Lyons. “He has mentored quite a few of the women in the IOC and helped them get to a place where they are now taking on much bigger roles.”


As the scope of the IOC’s role expanded, so too did the organization.

Under Bach, the administration has grown from 475 people in 2015 to 800 in 2023, the last year for which the organization’s annual report is available. Salaries and social costs have more than doubled in that span, from $89.6 million in 2014 to $251.7 million in 2024.

That expansion has included its first COO, Lana Haddad, hired in 2019. The launch of the Olympic Channel in 2016 led to another 200 staffers at its Madrid office. Timo Lumme, the IOC’s top marketing director until his retirement in 2022, estimated another 50-60 positions were added to a digital and marketing engagement department.

Bach also spearheaded the 2019 opening of the Olympic House, the IOC’s new headquarters in Lausanne, which it built for $168 million.

As Bach professionalized the organization, that has meant a changing role for the IOC’s members. He notes that as he has centralized power — with the broader membership largely rubber stamping decisions of the executive board Bach leads — he has held more sessions and meetings with the membership.

Nevertheless, Dick Pound, who was a member for 44 years and spent 16 years as an IOC vice president, compares the membership to more like shareholders than leaders of the organization, as was the case when he negotiated broadcast deals decades ago.

“We have essentially a 19th-century organization with members here, there and everywhere around the world,” said Pound, who is an honorary IOC member. “And that used to work pretty well when written correspondence was the way you communicated. But as the movement got bigger and more complex, there’s less room for individual members to either develop or input or influence the policy, and that’s not surprising.”


The changes brought by Bach’s proactive vision for the movement are most clear in how the Games are awarded and hosted.

After the excess of the Sochi Games and a Rio Olympics in 2016 that needed significant financial and operational support from the IOC just to take place, the prospect of hosting looked increasingly less appealing, especially to Western European countries. In bidding for the 2022 and 2024 Games, twice as many countries (eight) dropped out as made it to the vote.

“It was a very — if I say extremely diplomatically — a very unpleasant atmosphere and a very risky atmosphere for the credibility of the organization,” Bach said. “And there, for me, it was a no-brainer that we had to make drastic changes.”

That started with awarding two Games at once, with the IOC voting in 2017 to put Olympics in Paris in 2024 and Los Angeles four years later. LA28 Chairman Casey Wasserman said a small circle of IOC leaders and representatives from each city negotiated for months as the IOC tried to avoid a scenario in which Paris might lose for a fourth consecutive time and thus stop bidding, and in which the three largest U.S. cities would each have lost out, following New York for 2012 and Chicago for 2016.

“I think it made them realize, OK, there’s a better way to do this,” Wasserman said. “[Bach] has really done things about stability, consistency and direction — brand management, if you want to call it that — without losing the membership.”

The IOC changed the structure of its bidding process, with its future host commission working alongside potential candidates to vet their fitness to hold the Games well before a vote is cast or millions of dollars are spent. Those deemed suitable are moved to targeted dialogue and, if found fit, approved by the executive board before a vote of the membership.

While many around the movement question if it’s moved too far in the extreme — shifting to an opaque process with little actual say from the members — it has reduced the risk to the brand.

In bidding, the IOC has shifted to emphasize candidates that rely on existing or temporary venues, as Paris and L.A. have.

“Even though I’m a harsh critic overall of the way the IOC has been managed, I think it’s fair to say that the reforms moved in the right direction,” said Smith College professor Andrew Zimbalist, who has written four books on the economics of hosting the Games. “They weren’t as substantial as they needed to be and need to be, but nonetheless, there’s been increased effort to have sustainability at the Games, environmentally and economically.”


That changed vision has come as Bach navigated a continuous string of crises during his presidency.

A widespread Russian doping program, which included the subversion of anti-doping controls at the Sochi Games, resulted in sanctions for the Russian Olympic Committee, as well as officials and some athletes from that nation at every Olympics from Rio to Beijing. Bach and the IOC still allowed individual Russians to compete as neutral athletes, a move that angered athletes and anti-doping officials worldwide. The country remains excluded from the Olympic movement for violating the Olympic Truce with its invasion of Ukraine.

Bach, who missed out on a second Olympics as an athlete when West Germany was part of the 1980 boycott of the Moscow Games, has emphasized the rights of individual athletes.

“We did what was important and what was the interest of the athletes,” Bach said.

Said Burns, “We need Russia, we need Iran, we need China, we need the United States. I don’t think he got that right. And I think over the course of time, he would probably agree with that, but he probably thought he made the best decision he could at the time he was making it to maintain the unity and universality.”

Mostly awarded before Bach became president, the Games during his tenure represented several challenges.

Due to consistent operational challenges, the 2016 Games in Rio were “existential,” said former IOC marketing director Michael Payne. “He went to bed each night not knowing if he had a Games the next day.”

Two years later, nuclear concerns overshadowed the 2018 Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea, with Bach helping broker North Korean participation to ensure some stability.

“He finds, I think, great energy when the purpose and the stakes are extremely high,” said Christophe Dubi, Olympic Games executive director. “He loves when it’s challenging.”

No stakes were higher than in 2020, with the pandemic arriving just months before the Tokyo Games were to begin. Working with a small staff in Switzerland, Bach persuaded Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and local organizers to postpone the Games and commit to hosting them in 2021.

Strict restrictions on vaccinations and testing led organizers to bar fans, but to Bach, canceling the Games was not a consideration.

“We would have lost a whole generation of athletes if we would not have had these Games. And for the movement as such, it would have been very risky not to have the Games in eight years,” Bach said. “This, for me, would have been really a treason against the athletes, and therefore it was really never a question.”

As Bach, the IOC and Japanese organizers worked to plan the Games amid continuous uncertainty around the pandemic, he didn’t share his doubts or worries publicly for fear they would destabilize the plans ahead. It was, he said later, a “lonely” period.

“To shift the massive Olympic infrastructure a year and with the uncertainty of where Covid was going to take us was an unbelievable accomplishment,” said NBC Olymipcs president Gary Zenkel. “There were many, many reasons for the Japanese to walk away, and he held that together.”


For all difficulty he had endured, Bach’s final Games in Paris delivered on the vision he brought to the presidency.

Using mostly existing venues and putting temporary ones in some of the city’s most iconic locations, Paris revitalized the movement and renewed interest in the Games. Last week, organizers there announced an $87 million profit, according to Le Monde.

After Paris the IOC lost five sponsors, including three Japanese companies whose ROI was hampered by Covid in the Tokyo Games, but added TCL earlier this year and extended deals with Anheuser-Busch InBev and Allianz. In March, the IOC and NBCUniversal announced a $3 billion extension for another quad to keep the U.S. rights through 2036. Those additions give the IOC $7.4 billion in revenue secured for this quad, and $6.5 billion signed for 2029-32.

Bach leaves with hosts secured through 2034, with the IOC awarding those Games to Salt Lake City last year. It has said it has a double-digit number of cities interested in hosting 2036 and beyond.

“He drove the ship through really turbulent times and guaranteed its success far further in the future than I think anybody else could have,” Wasserman said. “He has created a level of consistency and stability that will allow it to maintain its place in the global ecosystem, and he was probably uniquely capable of doing that.”

That security helped Bach step away despite calls from members that he seek a third term, something that would have required amending the Olympic charter. Citing the good governance reforms he put in place, Bach chose not to make that change.


Bach, named honorary IOC president for life, has remained a visible presence during his lame-duck period. Since the election, he has visited the new pope in Vatican City, received the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun from the emperor of Japan and attended the French Open women’s final.

He has few defined plans beyond sleeping in on Tuesday, though he will have more time to spend with his wife, Claudia, and other friends and family. Ever the competitor, he has no plans to take up golf, finding it too slow for his taste.

Mark Adams, the IOC president’s spokesperson, recalls at one point Bach adroitly commenting, “This kind of work-life balance thing, I don’t really understand it, because I love what I do.”

Bach said he will take a few months to see if anyone in the movement reaches out for help but, failing that, he will find his own ways to be useful.

“I have done for the Olympic movement what I could do and [tried] in these uncertain times to secure the stability of the movement, in every respect, and to prepare the movement for the future,” he said. “I’m very much at ease, because I know with [Coventry] the Olympic movement is in the best hands.

“Being changed is not a project you can finish,” he added. “That will always be work in progress.”

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Gibbs-Lawhorn Named Raising Cane’s Outstanding Rebel Of The Week

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LAS VEGAS (UNLVRebels.com) – UNLV men’s basketball junior Dra Gibbs-Lawhorn has been named the Raising Cane’s Outstanding Rebel of the Week, the school announced Friday.

Gibbs-Lawhorn has earned the recognition for the first time this season, while it’s also the men’s basketball team’s second of the year.

The award goes to the student-athlete who turned in the best individual performance during the previous week of competition from Monday through Sunday as voted on by the UNLV Athletics Strategic Communications department.

A native of Lafayette, Indiana, Gibbs-Lawhorn led the Runnin’ Rebels to a Mountain West opening 84-72 win over Fresno State. He scored a career-high 28 points, while grabbing seven rebounds, four assists, three steals, and a blocked shot.

Additionally, Gibbs-Lawhorn shot 9 of 15 from the field, made all four of his free throw attempts and shot 60% on 3-pointers (6 of 10).

2025-26 Outstanding Rebel of the Week Award Winners
Sept. 3 – Aamaris Brown, Football
Sept. 11 – Jaida Harris, Volleyball
Sept. 16 – Alondra Alarcon, Volleyball
Sept. 23 – Marsel McDuffie, Football
Sept. 30 – Zi Yu Foong, Women’s Golf
Oct. 7 – Kayden McGee, Football
Oct. 14 – Anthony Colandrea, Football
Oct. 22 – Jaida Harris, Volleyball
Oct. 27 – Ilia Snitari, Men’s Tennis
Nov. 5 – Michelle Madrid, Women’s Soccer
Nov. 12 – Jai’Den Thomas, Football 
Nov. 12 – Meadow Roland, Women’s Basketball
Nov. 18 – Issac Williamson, Men’s Basketball
Nov. 26 – Ilia Snitari, Men’s Tennis
Dec. 3 – Jai’Den Thomas, Football

Dec. 10 – Bryson Huey, Men’s Swim & Dive
Dec. 26 – Dra Gibbs-Lawhorn, Men’s Basketball

-UNLV-



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Out of indoor eligibility, Texas A&M’s Hellmuth transfers to LSU beach volleyball program

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COLLEGE STATION, Texas (KBTX) – Texas A&M outside hitter Emily Hellmuth is transferring to LSU to play with the Tiger beach volleyball program, LSU announced on social media Friday.

Hellmuth could not have returned to defend the national championship with A&M this season, as she is out of eligibility in the indoor game. In switching sports, she will gain a year of eligibility and will be able to play two spring seasons for the Tigers while earning a master’s degree.

Hellmuth finished third on the Aggies in kills (316) and kills per set (2.70) this season as a key piece of A&M’s balanced attack. In 2024, Hellmuth tallied a career-high 330 kills, with a 3 kill average per set. The Highland Park native transferred to A&M after spending her first two seasons at Pepperdine.

The Aggies will need to find a significant number of replacements on the attack, returning only outside hitter Kyndal Stowers in their top 6 attackers from the national championship season.

On Dec. 23, A&M added Marquette outside hitter Natalie Ring and Ohio State middle blocker Kaia Ring through the transfer portal, according to releases and social media posts by the program. Friday, A&M announced the addition of Boise State middle blocker Eliza Sharp.

Ring paced the Golden Eagles with 497 kills and a 4.6 kill per set average, while hitting. 274. Castle recorded 200 kills, with seven double-digit kill matches, and 91 blocks last season.

“We value speed at the middle blocker position and it’s rare to see someone with Kaia’s length who can move the way she does,” A&M head coach Jamie Morrison said in a statement. “Beyond the physical tools, she is an incredible human. I truly enjoyed every part of the recruiting process with Kaia and can’t wait to have her here in Aggieland.”

Sharp was the Mountain West Conference freshman of the year after ranking second on the Broncos’ in kills with 250, averaging 2.21 per set. She hit at a .323 clip and tallied 140 blocks.

“It’s hard to win conference awards as a middle blocker and Eliza comes to us as the reigning Freshman of the Year in her conference,” Morrison said in a statement. “She is an elite athlete as both a blocker and an attacker who will continue the lineage of great middle blockers at Texas A&M. From our first phone call, I knew she would be a great fit for our culture, not just as a player, but as a person who embodies the values of Texas A&M.”



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A&M Volleyball’s Lednicky signs professional contract with LOVB Houston | KWKT

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BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION, Texas (FOX 44) – Texas A&M Volleyball’s Logan Lednicky has signed her first professional contract with League One Volleyball (LOVB) Houston, the organization announced Friday.

Texas A&M Athletics says Lednicky joins the Houston based LOVB team after spearheading the Aggies to the program’s first national title. The opposite hitter etched her name in Texas A&M history, as she broke the program rally-scoring record for career kills concluding her four years with 1,686.

The Sugar Land, Texas, native developed a well-rounded game throughout her four years but offensively is where she excelled. She recorded double-digit kills in 94 matches during her career, including 23 straight to conclude the 2025 campaign which led to a national crown.

Texas A&M Athletics says Lednicky showed her versatility during her time in Aggieland, racking up 379 blocks which ranks 11th in program history and secured back-to-back 100-block seasons in her junior and senior campaigns. She also tacked on 808 digs which helped account for 28 career double-doubles.

Lednicky cemented herself as an all-time great for the program and received a pair of AVCA Second Team All-America honors, was a four-time All-SEC and All-Region selection, AVCA Player of the Year Semifinalist, NCAA Tournament Team recipient, NCAA Regional Most Outstanding Player and five-time SEC weekly award winner.  

Texas A&M Athletics says yhe pin hitter got her international career started this past summer, as she received her first senior-national team call up for the United States and was named to the Volleyball Nation’s League roster for the opening two weeks in Brazil and Serbia. She competed in seven of the eight matches over the two weeks, tallying 43 points on 38 kills and five blocks, while adding 26 digs.



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Purdue Volleyball Loses Freshman to NCAA Transfer Portal

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One member of Purdue’s 2025 recruiting class has entered the NCAA transfer portal. Defensive specialist Mattie Casale decided to explore opportunities following the conclusion of the Boilermakers’ 2025 campaign, which concluded in the Elite Eight.

Casale, a 5-foot-7 freshman, has also already found a new home. On Christmas Eve, Houston posted on social media that it had received a commitment from the former Boilermaker. She will have all four seasons of eligibility remaining with the Cougars.

Casale spent one season in West Lafayette but did not play in any matches. She used the 2025 campaign as a redshirt year.

Houston added three new players to the roster in recent weeks, trying to bolster its squad ahead of the 2026 campaign. The Cougars also received commitments from middle blocker Kaitlyn Evans (Loyola Marymount) and outside hitter Sydney Jones (Tennessee).

“Our volleyball staff has been working to rebuild Houston Volleyball and with the two transfers we announced last week, we have improved our team for the 2026 season,” head coach David Rehr said in a statement. “The additions of Casale, Evans and Jones continue to make us a better volleyball team.”

Casale joined Purdue as a member of the 2025 recruiting as the No. 1 defensive specialist/libero in the state of Florida, per PrepDig.com. She was a national finalist for Libero of the Year in 2023.

Houston ended the 2025 regular season with a 9-20 record.

Purdue in great shape at DS/libero

Purdue Boilermakers defensive specialist Ryan McAleer (3) hits the ball

Purdue Boilermakers defensive specialist Ryan McAleer (3) hits the ball | Alex Martin/Journal and Courier / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Losing a talented freshman to the transfer portal isn’t a great feeling, but Purdue is in really good shape at the libero spot moving forward. Ryan McAleer just concluded her sophomore season and was an All-Region honorable mention for the 2025 season. She also earned second-team All-Big Ten honors.

McAleer has solidified her spot as Purdue’s top libero, especially after a stellar season. She averaged 3.634 digs and 1.267 assists per set for the Boilermakers this past season. She also developed into one of the top servers on the team, especially late in the year. The sophomore had 21 service aces for the season.

The Boilermakers also have depth at defensive specialist, with both Rachel Williams and Sienna Foster in the back row. Those two have primarily been utilized as serving specialists, but have also improved as defensive players in coach Dave Shondell’s system.

Purdue prides itself on the defensive end and has plenty of skill, even with Casale’s departure from the program.

Get top Boilermakers stories, expert analysis, and can’t-miss moments straight to your inbox for free by signing up for the Purdue Boilermakers on SI newsletter!

Related stories on Purdue volleyball

3 BOILERS EARN ALL-AMERICA HONORS: Three Purdue volleyball players received All-American honors from the AVCA on Wednesday. The Boilers finished with a 27-7 record and a trip to the Elite Eight. CLICK HERE

SHONDELL INKS CONTRACT EXTENSION: Following Purdue’s loss to Pitt in the Regional Final, coach Dave Shondell revealed that he signed an extension to remain the head coach of the Boilermakers. CLICK HERE





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Aggies Sign Mountain West Freshman of the Year Eliza Sharp to 2026 Class – Texas A&M Athletics

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BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION – The Texas A&M volleyball team added redshirt sophomore middle blocker Eliza Sharp to the 2026 roster, head coach Jamie Morrison announced Friday.
 
Sharp joins the Aggies from Boise State, where she had a historic debut campaign for the Broncos being named Mountain West Conference Freshman of the Year. The middle blocker also garnered All-Mountain West Team honors, as she was only one of five freshmen in the conference to be named in the postseason awards.
 

“It’s hard to win conference awards as a middle blocker and Eliza [Sharp] comes to us as the reigning Freshman of the Year in her conference,” coach Morrison said. “She is an elite athlete as both a blocker and an attacker who will continue the lineage of great middle blockers at Texas A&M. From our first phone call, I knew she would be a great fit for our culture, not just as a player, but as a person who embodies the values of Texas A&M.”
 
The Burlingame, California, native impresses offensively, as she ranked second on her team in kills after tallying 250 on the year, averaging 2.21 per set and hitting at a .323 percent clip. She eclipsed double-digit kills on nine occasions, setting her career high at 15 and hitting that number twice versus Navy and Utah State.
 
On the defensive end she also finished the year second in blocks, stuffing 140 swings in her debut campaign. She set her career high of 11 total blocks versus San Diego State and had another 10-block outing versus Montana.
 
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Visit 12thMan.com for more information on Texas A&M volleyball. Fans can keep up to date with the A&M volleyball team on Facebook, Instagram and on Twitter by following @AggieVolleyball.





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Granby native leads MSU Denver volleyball team to first national title

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Metropolitan State University of Denver’s women’s volleyball team took home the national title on Dec. 13 at the NCAA Division 2 Championship game. Pictured from left are assistant coach Kaden Knepper, head coach Jenny Glenn and manager Yuchan Kim.
Jenny Glenn/Courtesy photo

The journey to a national title lasted 10 years for Metropolitan State University of Denver women’s volleyball head coach Jenny Glenn.

When it came down to the final game of the 2025 season, she knew the team had already accomplished a feat far more remarkable than its first NCAA Division 2 championship: They knew themselves not only as players but as people.

“We really pressed into our identity of who we were off the court and who each individual was, and that was just a turning point,” Glenn said. “In the last three weeks of our season, our team played in such freedom, and we didn’t feel the pressure. … When we did that, you saw a team that was kind of unstoppable.”



Coming full circle

In August, the team attended a retreat in Grand County and visited the same courts where Glenn, a graduate of Middle Park High School, found her love of volleyball.

“We taught our team about what identity is and who they’re created to be, and we spent most of the season identifying who or what each athlete is, and who they were created to be,” she said.



The women then traveled to Middle Park High School and West Grand High School to host camps for local students — a full-circle moment for Glenn, she said, and an opportunity to give back to the community that shaped her.

A Granby native, Glenn has been coaching the Roadrunners for the past decade leading up to their first national championship win against nine-time winner Concordia University St. Paul.

She was a three-sport athlete in high school and played volleyball for Middle Park, with her father, Jim Glenn, as head coach. Her father and sisters’ love of volleyball fueled her own, but she also received support from her track coach Paul Quere and her high school PE coaches Cal and Tammy Cherrington, she said.

Her mentors instilled a sense of identity within her — something she wanted her players to cultivate for the 2025 season. At the August retreat, she taught her players about self-discovery and finding their unique role on and off the court.

“This season, each person had a role,” she said. “It really was all of us — all 14 players plus our staff — really operating out of who they were created to be. That was really cool.”

Championship season

In addition to a strong identity, the Roadrunners came out of the season with a strong track record: The team finished with 32 wins, the most in program history. Glenn’s overall winning percentage and conference winning percentage are the best in team history.

“Since I’ve gotten here, we’ve set our sights on the national championship,” Glenn said. “We have always said that our goal is to win a national championship, but we also wanted to do it the right way.”

The team had been working its way up the rankings since Glenn came on as head coach. In 2020, it finished fourth in the final division poll and took the No. 3 spot in 2021 and 2022.

After five years of getting beat out at the Sweet 16 stage, this year was the team’s first time making it to the Elite 8 of the NCAA Championship and Glenn’s first time since she played volleyball for Truman State University.

MSU Denver won three of four sets at the Dec. 13 championship match. The winning point of the final game, in which the Roadrunners defeated their opponent 25-21, was scored by junior Megan Hagar, an outside hitter who stepped in after the team’s sole senior player Annika Helf was sidelined by a knee injury in the quarterfinal.

At a press conference after the win, players applauded Hagar’s willingness to fill in for her injured teammate, adding that Glenn’s leadership and dedication to the team were crucial to securing the title.

“I am so deeply proud of her that she just stayed in throughout the entire season, and she got the fruit of that,” teammate Skyler Michael said about Hagar, who was also named the tournament’s most valuable player.

Helf, an all-American player, stayed supportive on the sidelines, cheering on Hagar and the team as they moved on to the semifinals and, eventually, the championship game. She credited Glenn’s unique coaching style as a key factor in the team’s success.

“Lots of coaches are focused on performance, and to have a coach that is focused on making us good human beings and knowing who we are, it’s just amazing,” Helf said at the press conference.

Looking back on the season, Glenn credited her players’ inner work for their outward success. The ability to tell the team’s story on a large scale has been a blessing, and now that the championship is over and won, she said she looks forward to recharging and regrouping before planning for next season.

“The trophy is awesome, but I’m just so proud of who these women are,” she said. … “We’ve already won in knowing who we are.”

Metropolitan State University of Denver’s women’s volleyball team took home the national title on Dec. 13 at the NCAA Division 2 Championship game. This is the team’s first national championship win and the university’s first national title since the women’s soccer team won in 2006.
Jenny Glenn/Courtesy photo
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