Sports
Melissa Jefferson
Sports
NCAA volleyball tournament live: Schedule, scores, highlights
Updated Dec. 14, 2025, 4:08 p.m. ET
Two tickets to the NCAA volleyball Final Four have been punched, with No. 1 seeds Pitt and Kentucky advancing on Saturday.
The Panthers and Wildcats await their opponents. The regional semifinals conclude on Sunday, Dec. 14. Pitt will play the winner of Nebraska vs. Texas A&M (3 p.m. ET, ABC). Kentucky will play the winner of Wisconsin vs. Texas (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN).
Nebraska is the tournament’s No. 1 overall seed and looking for its first championship since 2017 and first under coach Dani Busboom Kelly. Setter Bergen Reilly, middle blocker Rebekah Allick and middle blocker Andi Jackson have led the Huskers to a 33-0 record.
Texas, the final No. 1 seed, is 13-1 on its home floor and will host the regional final at Gregory Gymnasium in Austin.
The Final Four will be held at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri. The two semifinal matches will take place on Thursday, Dec. 18 and will be broadcast on ESPN. The national championship game is Sunday, Dec. 21 on ABC.
SCORE: Texas A&M 2, Nebraska 0
Set 2 final: Texas A&M 25, Nebraska 22
Nebraska is struggling and could be eliminated after going 33-0 to start the season.
Set 2: Texas A&M first to 15
The Aggies are smelling the biggest upset of the volleyball season. They have Nebraska back on their heels. Texas A&M is hitting .333 for the set and Nebraska .222.
Set 1 final: Texas A&M 25, Nebraska 22
Nebraska dropped its eighth set of the season and first since Nov. 14 against UCLA. Kyndal Stowers has six kills and Emily Hellmuth five kills for the Aggies.
Set 1: Nebraska first to 15
Nebraska was the first to 15 but the Aggies have fought back with a 10-0 run.
We are underway in Lincoln
Nebraska is looking for its 18th bid to the Final Four and first under head coach Dani Busboom Kelly. Texas A&M is looking for its first.
Nebraska starting lineup
Texas A&M arrivals
When is NCAA women’s volleyball regional final?
- Date: Dec. 14
- Time: Two matches Sunday. Match-by-match times below.
How to watch NCAA volleyball tournament
The 2025 NCAA women’s volleyball tournament will air across the ESPN and ABC family of networks. Games can be streamed on ESPN+, ESPN’s subscription streaming service, and Fubo, which offers a free trial to potential subscribers.
NCAA volleyball regional final: Times, TV
All times Eastern
Saturday, Dec. 13
- No. 1 Kentucky 3, No. 3 Creighton 0
- No. 1 Pittsburgh 3, No. 3 Purdue 1
Sunday, Dec. 14
- No. 3 Texas A&M vs. No. 1 Nebraska, 3 p.m. | ABC
- No. 3 Wisconsin vs. No. 1 Texas, 7:30 p.m. | ESPN
When is the NCAA volleyball Final Four in 2025?
- Dates: Thursday, Dec. 18 and Sunday, Dec. 21
- The two semifinal matches in the Final Four of the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament will take place on Thursday, Dec. 18 and will be broadcast on ESPN. The national championship game is Sunday, Dec. 21 on ABC.
Round of 16 volleyball results
Thursday, Dec. 11
- No. 3 Creighton 3, No. 2 Arizona State 1
- No. 1 Kentucky 3, Cal Poly 0
- No. 1 Pittsburgh 3, No. 4 Minnesota 0
- No. 3 Purdue 3, No. 2 SMU 1
Friday, Dec. 12
- No. 1 Texas 3, No. 4 Indiana 0
- No. 3 Wisconsin 3, No. 2 Stanford 1
- No. 3 Texas A&M 3, No. 2 Louisville 2
- No. 1 Nebraska 3, No. 4 Kansas 0
NCAA volleyball second-round results
Lexington bracket
- No. 1 Kentucky 3, No. 8 UCLA 1 (30-28, 25-16, 28-30, 25-17)
- No. 3 Creighton 3, No. 6 Northern Iowa 1 (25-18, 23-25, 25-22, 25-21)
- No. 2 Arizona State 3, Utah State 1 (25-15, 25-18, 22-25, 25-15)
- Cal Poly 3, No. 4 USC 2 (25-19, 25-20, 20-25, 14-25, 15-7)
Austin bracket
- No. 4 Indiana 3, No. 5 Colorado 0 (25-20, 25-17, 25-23)
- No. 3 Wisconsin 3, North Carolina 0 (25-14, 25-21, 27-25)
- No. 1 Texas 1, No. 8 Penn State 0 (25-16, 25-9, 25-19)
- No. 2 Stanford 3, Arizona 1 (25-16, 25-27, 25-17, 25-20)
Pittsburgh bracket
- No. 3 Purdue 3, No. 6 Baylor 1 (25-16, 25-19, 23-25, 25-20)
- No. 1 Pittsburgh 3, Michigan 0 (25-23, 25-23, 25-18)
- No. 2 SMU 3, Florida 0 (25-11, 25-21, 26-24)
- No. 4 Minnesota 3, No. 5 Iowa State 0 (25-22, 25-21, 25-14)
Lincoln bracket
- No. 4 Kansas 3, No. 5 Miami 1 (25-17, 25-22, 22-25, 27-25)
- No. 2 Louisville 3, Marquette 2 (21-25, 25-11, 23-25, 25-19, 15-12)
- No. 1 Nebraska 3, Kansas State 0 (25-17, 25-21, 25-16)
- No. 3 Texas A&M 3, No. 6 TCU 1 (23-25, 25-23, 25-22, 29-27)
NCAA volleyball first-round results
Lexington bracket
- No. 1 Kentucky 3, Wofford 0 (25-11, 25-19, 25-12)
- No. 8 UCLA 3, Georgia Tech 2 (24-26, 25-19, 25-23, 25-18, 15-10)
- Cal Poly 3, No. 5 BYU 2 (25-19, 17-25, 20-25, 25-20, 15-10)
- No. 4 USC 3, Princeton 0, (25-19, 25-12, 25-13)
- No. 3 Creighton 3, Northern Colorado 2 (12-25, 25-23,25-23,17-25, 8-15)
- No. 6 Northern Iowa 3, Utah 2 (15-25, 21-25, 26-24, 25-20, 15-10)
- Utah State 3, No. 7 Tennessee 2 (25-19, 25-15, 19-25, 25-18, 15-11)
- No. 2 Arizona State 3, Coppin State 0 (25-11, 25-14, 25-12)
Austin bracket
- No. 1 Texas 3, Florida A&M 0 (25-11, 25- 8, 25-14)
- No. 8 Penn State 3, South Florida 1 (25-23, 12-25, 25-21, 25-19)
- No. 5 Colorado 3, American 0 (25-16, 25-19, 25-16)
- No. 4 Indiana 3, Toledo 0 (25-18, 25-15, 25-17)
- No. 3 Wisconsin 3, Eastern Illinois 0 (25-11, 25-6, 25-19)
- North Carolina 3, No. 6 UTEP 1 (24-26, 25-11, 25-18, 25-21)
- Arizona 3, No. 7 South Dakota State 1 (25-21, 22-25, 25-15, 25-15)
- No. 2 Stanford 3, Utah Valley 1 (21-25, 25-21, 25-13, 25-14)
Pittsburgh bracket
- No. 1 Pitt 3, UMBC 0 (25-10, 25-17, 25-13)
- Michigan 3, No. 8 Xavier 0 (25-19, 25-15, 25-23)
- No. 5 Iowa State 3, St. Thomas-Minnesota 2 (21-25, 25-13, 25-16, 21-25, 15-8)
- No. 4 Minnesota 3, Fairfield 0 (25-12, 25-7, 25-13)
- No. 3 Purdue 3, Wright State 0 (25-13, 25-21, 25-19)
- No. 6 Baylor 3, Arkansas State 2 (23-25, 25-20, 30-28, 23-25, 15-10)
- Florida 3, No. 7 Rice 0 (27-25, 25-23, 25-19)
- No. 2 SMU 3, Central Arkansas 0 (25-13, 25-13, 25-13)
Lincoln bracket
- No. 1 Nebraska 3, Long Island 0 (25-11, 25-15, 25-17)
- Kansas State 3, San Diego 2 (21-25, 25-17, 26-28, 25-22, 15-12)
- No. 5 Miami 3, Tulsa 1 (25-22, 13-25, 25-22, 25-20)
- No. 4 Kansas 3, High Point 0 (25-20, 25-15, 25-18)
- No. 3 Texas A&M 3, Campbell 0 (25-20, 25-10, 25-13)
- No. 6 TCU 3, Stephen F. Austin 0 (25-8, 26-24, 25-20)
- Marquette 3, Western Kentucky 0 (25-22, 25-21, 25-16)
- No. 2 Louisville 3, Loyola (Illinois) 0 (25-17, 25-9, 25-12)
NCAA volleyball tournament champions
Penn State is the reigning NCAA volleyball champion, having defeated Louisville in four sets last year in the national title game. It was the Nittany Lions’ eighth volleyball championship since 1999.
Here’s a look at the past 10 NCAA volleyball champions:
- 2024: Penn State
- 2023: Texas
- 2022: Texas
- 2021: Wisconsin
- 2020: Kentucky
- 2019: Stanford
- 2018: Stanford
- 2017: Nebraska
- 2016: Stanford
- 2015: Nebraska
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Sports
Purdue volleyball season ends to top seed Pitt in Elite Eight
Dec. 13, 2025, 11:52 p.m. ET
It was Dave Shondell’s three-word reply on social media platform X that became the rallying cry for Purdue volleyball.
“We not dead,” Shondell posted on March 28, a response to an account that claimed NIL had killed the Boilermaker volleyball program.
Purdue then spent 34 matches during the 2025 season backing up their head coach’s belief.
It concluded Saturday night in Fitzgerald Field House against top-seeded and regional host Pitt 25-22, 25-21, 22-25, 25-17 in the Elite Eight, the Panthers’ fifth-straight Final Four appearance.
Before it ended, though, the Boilermakers made one thing perfectly clear: Purdue volleyball did not die.
After losing 93% of its offense from a season ago, including four potential starting players who transferred elsewhere, Purdue rebuilt its own roster through the portal and with returnees stepping into larger roles.
The Boilermakers went 27-7, reaching their first regional final since 2021.
“I will never forget this year,” said outside hitter Kenna Wollard, a first-team All-Big Ten selection and Midwest Region Player of the Year as a junior this season. “Everything we’ve gone through and everything we’ve accomplished has just been absolutely amazing.
“The girls that I played with this year were so, so special to me.”
Purdue will lose four players from its roster: Rachel Williams, Julia Kane, Lindsey Miller and Akasha Anderson, the latter two transfers who played just one season with the Boilermakers.
Shondell opened his post-match news conference following the team’s season-ending loss with a cautionary tale of current-age college athletics in its era of Name, Image and Likeness, revenue sharing and mass transfers.
“It was a meaningful season for Purdue and a meaningful season, as I told our team, for college athletics,” Shondell said. “First of all, college athletics has changed. It’s not going to go backwards … I think teams and programs and administrations just have to recognize that when people do decide to leave, you wish them well and you go find more players.
“If your program truly is a positive program that develops athletes and provides great experiences, players will come into your program and you’ll be able to continue. I think that’s what we were able to do at Purdue.”

Purdue welcomed in five new faces via the portal: Anderson (Michigan State), Miller (USC), Bianka Lulić (Miami), Dior Charles (Wake Forest) and Nataly Moravec (Iowa). Purdue tied a program record with five All-Big Ten selections, which included All-Midwest Region honorees Grace Heaney, Taylor Anderson and Ryan McAleer, all returnees.
An offseason was spent as much on relationship building as much as skill development.
Purdue’s volleyball program didn’t die. It got better.
“When I got there in the spring, it felt like people just were a little broken, emotionally and mentally, and I feel like the entire team just used the entire spring, in the summer, in the fall, to just completely love each other with open arms,” Akasha Anderson said. “I think that’s just been shown on every single game that we’ve won, every single game that we’ve lost, this team just loves each other.
“If they keep that up, that’s just going to take them so far.”
Sam King covers sports for the Journal & Courier. Email him at sking@jconline.com and follow him on X and Instagram @samueltking.
Sports
Meet the Journal’s 2025 All-Metro volleyball team
PREPS
Three future Division I players are among the first and second teams
Swingers, blockers, diggers and facilitators. The Journal’s 2025 All-Metro volleyball team has it all.
The Journal’s choices include three future Division I players among the top 12 (six first-team choices, six more on the second team).
Cleveland’s Azlynn Tittmann, who has signed with Boise State, is one of this season’s three first-team hitters.
The 6-foot-1 senior registered 332 kills, an average of 4.6 kills per set.
Joining Tittmann as hitters on the first team are La Cueva junior Jula Utash and St. Pius senior Alyssa Bendinskas.
The 5-8 Bendinskas had nearly 300 kills for the Class 4A state champion Sartans, plus 49 aces and 251 digs. She is headed to Austin Peay to play beach volleyball at the next level.
Utash is the latest in a long line of dynamic hitters to put on the La Cueva colors. The junior powered her way to 370 kills last season as the Bears reached the Class 5A state championship game.
Bendinskas was not the only St. Pius Sartan to make the first team. Senior Maya Perea is generally regarded as the top libero in New Mexico, and she makes a return appearance on the Journal’s All-Metro group following a season in which she dug 331 balls.
And Utash was one of two Bears to make the first team. Her setter, freshman Charlie Ferguson, is the first-team choice this season. Ferguson did a brilliant job of feeding her hitters in the La Cueva attack, averaging over 9 assists per set. She finished with an impressive 758 assists for the season.
The first team is rounded out by Albuquerque Academy middle Kiara Brown. The sophomore was a six-rotation player for the Chargers, and finished the year with 341 kills, 223 digs and 60 blocks.
The third of the D1 signees this season is Albuquerque High hitter Kaelynn Ashley, who also is headed for Austin Peay in Tennessee, but to play on the hard courts. Her younger sister, Ayva, is the second-team setter.
Rounding out the second team are sophomore outside hitters Avery Steele from Hope Christian and Rowan Jaime from Academy, plus senior middle Aaliyah Simpson from Cleveland, and La Cueva libero Embrey Eisele, also a sophomore.
ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL
2025 ALL-METRO VOLLEYBALL TEAMS
FIRST TEAM
- Jula Utash, 5-8, jr., OH, La Cueva
- Azlynn Tittmann, 6-1, sr., OH, Cleveland
- Alyssa Bendinskas, 5-8, sr., OH, St. Pius
- Kiara Brown, 6-0, soph., MB, Albuquerque Academy
- Maya Perea, 5-5, sr., libero, St. Pius
- Charlie Ferguson, 5-9, fresh., setter, La Cueva
SECOND TEAM
- Kaelynn Ashley, 5-10, sr., OH, Albuquerque High
- Avery Steele, 5-9, soph., OH, Hope Christian
- Rowan Jaime, 5-10, soph., OH, Albuquerque Academy
- Aaliyah Simpson, 5-11, sr., MB, Cleveland
- Embrey Eisele, 5-4, soph., libero, La Cueva
- Ayva Ashley, 5-9, jr., setter, Albuquerque High
Sports
Watch Wisconsin volleyball vs Texas in NCAA tournament, time, TV
Updated Dec. 14, 2025, 11:46 a.m. CT
Wisconsin volleyball is playing for a berth in the Final Four of the 2025 NCAA tournament on Sunday, Dec. 14.
It would be the team’s sixth appearance in the national semifinals in Kelly Sheffield’s 13 years as head coach and fifth in the last seven years.
But standing in their way is Texas, a very formidable opponent the Badgers know well and a team they haven’t been able to solve of late.
And making the task more difficult is that they’ll be playing in enemy territory.
The third-seeded Badgers [27-4] take on No. 1 Texas [26-3] in a regional final in the Longhorns’ home gymnasium. The match is set for 6:30 p.m. and will air on ESPN.
It’s a rematch from earlier this season when Texas swept Wisconsin in Madison in the Badgers’ third match of the year on Aug. 31.
Overall, the Longhorns have defeated the Badgers in each of the last four meetings dating back to 2020. This includes a dominant sweep over Wisconsin in the 2023 national semifinal. Texas went on to win its second straight national championship that year.
Both squads, however, came up short in their bids to return to the Final Four last year with Wisconsin falling in a regional final and Texas in the regional semifinals.
One will now get back to college volleyball’s biggest stage in 2025. Wisconsin, which already exorcised some demons when it finally beat Stanford for the first time ever in the regional semifinals, enters the match playing its best volleyball of the season. It hasn’t lost since Oct. 31.
Meanwhile, the Longhorns haven’t dropped a set in the tournament and have only lost to two teams this year, both of whom are still in the NCAA tournament.
The winner gets No. 1 Kentucky in the national semifinals.
Here’s how to watch Wisconsin-Texas on TV, the NCAA volleyball bracket and schedule:
What channel is Wisconsin volleyball vs Texas? TV, livestream
- TV: ESPN
- Stream: You can stream the match on services that offer ESPN, including Fubo. A free trial is available.
Watch on Fubo
Wisconsin volleyball vs Texas time today
- Date: Sunday, Dec. 14
- Time: 6:30 p.m.
Wisconsin plays Texas in an NCAA tournament regional final match at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 14, at the Gregory Gymnasium in Austin, Texas.
The Badgers have won nine of 10 sets in their first three matches to get to this stage of the tournament. They beat Stanford in four sets in the regional semifinal on Friday afternoon.
Texas has swept each of their first three opponents in the tournament and are coming off a 3-0 win over Indiana in the regional semifinal.
Wisconsin volleyball score today
The Journal Sentinel is in Austin for the Badgers’ NCAA tournament run this weekend. Follow reporter John Steppe’s live blog at jsonline.com/sports/badgers for scoring updates and highlights from the match.
NCAA tournament volleyball bracket
Kentucky and Pitt, two No. 1 seeds, have already punched their tickets to the national semifinals after winning regional final matches on Saturday. The rest of the Final Four will be complete tonight with two more 1 vs. 3-seeded regional final matches.
Saturday, Dec. 13
- No. 1 Kentucky vs No. 3 Creighton; Kentucky wins 3-0
- No. 1 Pitt vs. No. 3 Purdue; Pitt wins 3-1
Sunday, Dec. 14
- No. 1 Nebraska vs. No. 3 Texas A&M, 2 p.m., ABC
- No. 1 Texas vs No. 3 Wisconsin, 6:30 p.m., ESPN
NCAA volleyball schedule
Semifinals: Thursday, Dec. 18
- No. 1 Kentucky vs. winner of No. 1 Texas/No. 3 Wisconsin
- No. 1 Pitt vs. winner of No. 1 Nebraska/No. 3 Texas A&M
National championship: 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 21 | ABC
Sports
Kentucky Wildcats volleyball results, recap vs Creighton
Updated Dec. 13, 2025, 6:53 p.m. ET
The Kentucky Wildcats volleyball team won their 26th straight match on Saturday, and none are bigger than this one. The Wildcats are on their way to the Final Four after beating Creighton 3-0 (25-19, 25-13, 25-18).
Brooklyn DeLeye and SEC Player of the Year Eva Hudson were fantastic once again for Kentucky. Both had some huge kills at key moments in the match. DeLeye totaled 18 kills and 12 digs, while Hudson added 13 kills of her own.
The rest of the Wildcats roster was huge as well. Molly Tuozzo had a plethora of big-time digs that kept rallies going. Kassie O’Brien had a big day as well, setting up her teammates.
Stream Kentucky vs Creighton (Free trial available)Wildcats fans have been very supportive of the team, and were there again today. Now, they’ll go on to the Final Four. Congratulations to Kentucky.
Brooklyn DeLeye ends it
The Kentucky Wildcats are on to the Final Four after taking the set 25-18. They get the sweep.
Kentucky closing in on the win
They lead 23-17 in set three after the service error by Creighton.
Trinity Ward ace
It’s 18-14 after the terrific serve from Ward.
Eva Hudson with a big block
The Wildcats lead 17-14 after Hudson goes up to get a huge block. Timeout Creighton.
Kennedy Washington kill number five
Washington puts Kentucky ahead 15-14 in a hard-fought third set as Creighton tries to extend the match.
Highlight: Wild rally
Creighton re-takes the lead with defense
Big defensive play gave Creighton back to back points to go up 11-9.
Asia Thigpen ties it
It’s now 6-6 after Thigpen smashes one down the middle.
Kennedy Washington kill
Washington has played well, and gets the point here. Creighton leads 5-4.
Creighton wins a long rally
That was a wild point, with great digs by both sides. The Bluejays finally get the point though, and lead 3-1.
Creighton scores first in set three
The Bluejays have to bounce back quickly, trailing 2-0 in the match.
Asia Thigpen ends the set
Thigpen gets the kill to close out set two. The Wildcats take it 25-13 to take a 2-0 lead in the match.
Lizzie Carr with another block
Carr’s defense gives Kentucky a 21-12 lead.
Creighton calls timeout
The Wildcats lead is now 20-12 and the Bluejays use their second timeout.
Eva Hudson with a devastating kill
Hudson goes up and crushes it through the block attempt. It’s 18-11 Wildcats.
Brooklyn DeLeye gets another one
It’s now 14-6 Kentucky after another DeLeye kill.
Highlight: Brooklyn DeLeye crushes it
Kentucky wins a long rally
It’s 10-3 Kentucky after another point from Hudson. Creighton calls timeout.
Eva Hudson with another kill
Hudson skies for another smash. It’s now 9-3 Kentucky.
Kassie O’Brien gets a block
The Wildcats lead 6-1 after O’Brien blocks an attempt. Her defense has been key.
Brooklyn DeLeye kill
Kentucky is out to a 3-0 start to the second set.
Highlight: Lizzie Carr gets a block
Kentucky takes set one
The Wildcats close the set out on an error by Creighton to win it 25-19. They go up 1-0 in the match.
Creighton scores three straight
The Bluejays cut the lead to 23-19 after scoring three straight points.
Lizzie Carr gets a kill
It’s 22-16 after Carr continues to play well in this tournament.
Kentucky pulls ahead
An Eva Hudson kill has made it 17-14, then a mis-hit by Creighton makes it a four point lead. The Bluejays call timeout.
Kennedy Washing crushes one home
The Wildcats lead 15-14 at the timeout. However, Creighton is playing very well and it has been a back and forth first set.
Eva Hudson gives Kentucky the lead
Hudson gets way up for a huge hit and it’s 12-11 Wildcats.
Creighton takes the lead with an ace
It’s 10-8 now after back to back big service aces.
Lizzie Carr block
It’s Kentucky’s turn to play defense now. Lizzie Carr ties it at 6.
Creighton’s defense is working hard
The Bluejays get back to back blocks and take a 6-4 lead on Kentucky.
Eva Hudson kill
Molly Tuozzo made a terrific play, digging out a big hit, then Hudson smashed it home to tie it 3-3.
Creighton scores first
A long rally started the match. Creighton goes up early.
Start time for Kentucky vs Creighton slightly delayed
The game should be starting soon. A college basketball game ran a little long, but it’s almost time to start.
Where to watch Kentucky vs Creighton
When to watch Kentucky vs Creighton
- Date: Saturday, Dec. 13
- Time: 5:00 P.M. ET
Sports
Defense Leads Volleyball Cats to Final Four – UK Athletics
The Kentucky volleyball team used service pressure to beat Creighton on Saturday to advance to the Final Four. While serving is the first part of the equation, being able to get set defensively is the second part, and the Cats did that extremely well against the Blue Jays.
UK had 62 digs in the match and eight total blocks. After the match, UK head coach Craig Skinner praised his team’s defensive effort.
“To hold a team like that to .066 is a lot to do with your defense, and you know, it’s a mentality,” Skinner said. “We have to establish a defensive mentality in practice. We hammer balls at them all the time, they’re flying all over the gym, making plays. We have a couple rules, we’ll reason why you don’t go for the ball; that would be out of bounds, hear the whistle, or some sort of danger is in the way. Outside of that, you better go for the ball. But it’s just, you have to set that in practice, and we’ve spent a lot of time this year, just hammering that into our team, and it’s, man, it’s fun to watch, too.”
Kentucky senior outside hitter Eva Hudson thought she and her teammates responded to the coaching staff’s challenge.
“Craig asked us to be relentless all evening,” Hudson said. “That sort of defense is so frustrating, one of your best shots and it being dug up. That was our mindset every time.”
Junior outside hitter Brooklyn DeLeye also thought that the coaches did a great job of putting together an effective game plan for Saturday’s match.
“Props to the staff, I mean they really had a good game plan going into the match and I think we just executed that at a high level,” DeLeye said. “Even if Creighton was making changes throughout the match, they were still telling us every single time we were at the net what to do.”
Creighton head coach Brian Rosen said after the match that Kentucky’s defense made it very difficult on his team.
“I just thought their defense tonight was the difference,” Rosen said. “They were an arm and ball back up. We ended up with nine blocks. I thought we could have had 18 tonight. They covered so well, just kept plays alive long enough for their outsides to terminate eventually. And so again, I just I give them a lot of credit for that.”
Defense wins championships, and on Saturday, that was true for Kentucky.
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