Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

Sports

Topeka’s Stormont Vail Events Center wants KSHSAA State Volleyball Tournament

Published

on


play

TOPEKA — High school championships are ingrained in Shawnee County. History speaks for itself with the amount of great state title performances that have been played in the Topeka-area. However, the area has been without many major state tournaments for the last several years.

Stormont Vail Events Center wants to bring a major high school sports event back to Topeka.

During Thursday’s Shawnee County Commission’s work session, Kellen Seitz talked about the progress of Stormont Vail Events Center. The general manager of the building spoke about bringing the KSHSAA State Volleyball Tournament to Topeka in 2026.

“We have had some discussions with KSHSAA. We have placed some holds on the calendar for KSHSAA volleyball,” Seitz told the Capital-Journal. “That would be a great piece of business to get back in the building and a great venue to host a state tournament activity.”

“The KSHSAA has had discussions about the possibility of state volleyball coming back to Topeka,” KSHSAA Assistant Executive Director Jeremy Holaday said. “Those talks will need to be continued as we look at 2026.”

Topeka has a strong history of hosting state tournaments. They continually host the state swimming championships at the Capitol Federal Natatorium. The Class 4A State Football Championship was held at Hummer Sports Park in 2023.

Stormont Vail Events Center has a history of hosting these events, too. Since 2017, the arena has been the host to the KSHSAA Game Day Spirit Showcase State Championship.

The arena previously hosted state basketball and state volleyball, too. The Class 5A State Basketball Tournament was last held in 2018, with the volleyball tournament last making an appearance in 2017. Seitz wants to change that and bring back the state volleyball tournament.

This winter, Stormont Vail Events Center is hosting a club volleyball tournament. It’s a way for them to continue hosting larger sports events while showing off their new synthetic court. The arena has purchased a modular sports floor through the Capital Improvement Project in 2024.

“It allows us to produce basketball, volleyball tournaments, really any sporting activity with the exception of racquet sports,” Seitz said. “It turns our exhibition hall into 13 courts for our tournament in January.”

While the new synthetic court can support basketball, hosting the KSHSAA State Basketball Tournament may not be in Stormont Vail’s Future. The Kansas Kids Wrestling tournament falls during the same time, Seitz emphasizes his position in honoring the event for the top junior wrestlers in the state.

“There is not a lot of opportunity there to produce both,” Seitz said. “Kansas Kids Wrestling is the tournament that we have contracted with moving forward.”

Liam Keating covers high school sports for The Topeka Capital-Journal. Send stats or information to him at Lkeating@gannett.com

This story has been republished to include comment from KSHSAA.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

BYU hires Rob Neilson as new head women’s volleyball coach – BYU Athletics – Official Athletics Website

Published

on


PROVO, Utah — BYU Director of Athletics Brian Santiago has announced the hiring of Rob Neilson as the seventh head women’s volleyball coach in BYU history.

“We are thrilled to welcome Rob Neilson back to BYU as our head women’s volleyball coach,” Santiago said. “Rob has been a part of a rich history at BYU, both as a player and coach on the men’s side, highlighted by winning a national championship. He is a proven winner, as evidenced by his experience as a head coach at Utah State and as an assistant coach for the USA National Team. We are excited to have Rob lead our BYU women’s volleyball program and exceptional student-athletes into the future.”

A setter at BYU from 2003-06, Neilson was part of the Cougars’ 2004 national championship team. He compiled a 91-31 record in his collegiate career. He tallied 2,790 assists, ranking fifth in BYU’s rally-scoring era record book upon graduation, and finished eighth in solo blocks with 28.

“Coaching at BYU is a dream come true,” Neilson said. “This is a distinguished university, with storied volleyball programs, built by amazing student-athletes, incredible coaches and a community that’s all in. I’m honored to continue that legacy with our women’s team. Thank you to the board of trustees, President Reese, Brian Santiago, Chad Lewis and the search committee. I’m excited to get to work preparing for great things as we hurl our challenge to all foes. Rise and shout. Let’s go.”

Neilson has spent the past six seasons as head coach at Utah State, posting a 112-59 (.655) record in Logan. Most recently, he led the Aggies to a historic 2025 campaign, finishing 24-8 overall with an 18-0 mark in Mountain West Conference play, winning the Mountain West Tournament title and recording a first-round upset of No. 7 seed Tennessee in the NCAA Tournament, Utah State’s first tournament win since 2001.

During his tenure, the Aggies captured three Mountain West regular-season championships (2021, 2023, 2025) and two Mountain West Tournament titles (2022, 2025). Neilson was named Mountain West Coach of the Year three times (2021, 2023, 2025) and earned AVCA Pacific North Region Coach of the Year honors in 2023.

Neilson coached 12 all-conference honorees, three all-region selections and one All-American, while guiding Utah State to winning records in five of his six seasons and three NCAA Tournament appearances. He is just the third coach in program history to reach the 100-win milestone and the first to do so since 1978.

Prior to his time in Logan, Neilson served as the first assistant coach with the U.S. Men’s National Team, helping Team USA earn a bronze medal at the 2018 World Championships and a silver medal at the 2019 Volleyball Nations League.

Before joining USA Volleyball, Neilson spent 10 seasons on the BYU men’s volleyball staff. He served as an assistant coach from 2006-10, acting as recruiting coordinator and overseeing player development. Neilson was BYU’s interim head coach in 2011, returned as an assistant in 2012 and was named associate head coach in 2014. During that span, he helped lead the Cougars to two conference championships and a national runner-up finish in 2013.

Neilson earned a bachelor’s degree in neuroscience from BYU in 2006 and completed an MBA in 2013. He and his wife, Sarah, have five children.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Former Penn State Women’s Volleyball Setter Izzy Starck Transfers To Pitt

Published

on


Former Penn State women’s volleyball setter Izzy Starck is transferring to Pitt, she announced Thursday.

Starck spent one full season with the Nittany Lions before leaving the team after four games during her sophomore season.

As a freshman, Starck led the nation in total assists with 1,483 and was a key piece in Penn State’s run to winning the national championship.

This past season, Starck stepped away from volleyball for the season to prioritize her mental health and was removed from the Nittany Lions’ roster a week later.

The Panthers went 30-5 in the 2025 season, making it to the NCAA Tournament Semifinals.

Please choose an option below.

Sign up for our e-mail newsletter:

OR

About the Author

Michael Siroty is a junior from Westfield, New Jersey, majoring in broadcast journalism. When he isn’t writing articles or making TikToks for Onward State, Siroty is probably somewhere talking about college sports. You can contact him to discuss your sushi order or music taste on Instagram and X @msiroty or by email at [email protected].



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Wisconsin Badgers volleyball 2025 transfer portal tracker

Published

on


Dec. 23, 2025, 10:22 a.m. CT

Wisconsin volleyball has quickly pivoted from postseason mode to offseason roster-building mode.

On Dec. 18, the Badgers lost in the NCAA Final Four in a five-set heartbreaker to Kentucky. On Dec. 19, five UW players announced plans to enter the transfer portal. Wisconsin coach Kelly Sheffield then picked up his first transfer portal commitment a day after that.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Badgers news: Wisconsin lands 2nd commitment from transfer portal

Published

on


The Wisconsin Badgers moved quickly in the transfer portal, landing UC Santa Barbara outside hitter Eva Travis after losing starter Una Vajagic to the transfer portal on Monday.

Travis, a redshirt sophomore in 2025, had a strong season this past year, averaging 3.93 kills per set for the Gauchos, while recording a career-high 30 kills in a win over UC Irvine. She had 20+ kills in six matches this year and 19 matches with double-digit kills.

She’ll join an outside hitter group that includes returners Grace Egan (sophomore) and Madison Quest (freshman), as well as touted incoming freshmen Audrey Flanagan and Halle Thompson.

Travis was the 2024 Big West Freshman of the Year after redshirting in 2023. She earned All-Big West 2nd Team Honors this year.

Against some top competition in USC and Creighton this year, Travis had 21 and 19 kills, respectively. She now becomes the second transfer to commit to Wisconsin from the portal in this cycle, joining Florida middle blocker Jaela Auguste.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Former Penn State star Izzy Starck commits to Pitt volleyball

Published

on






Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Utah State Launches Search for New Volleyball Coach

Published

on


LOGAN, Utah – Utah State University Vice President and Director of Athletics Cameron Walker announced the immediate national search for the next Utah State volleyball head coach on Tuesday, following the departure of Rob Neilson.
 
“I am grateful for Rob’s leadership of our volleyball program, including multiple conference championships and NCAA Tournament appearances,” said Walker. “The profile of Utah State volleyball has been elevated, and we expect that standard to continue under new leadership. We will be efficient and aggressive in our pursuit of the next leader of Utah State volleyball and will begin an immediate national search.”
 
The Utah State volleyball program has won five conference titles over the past five seasons, including Mountain West Tournament championships in 2022 and 2025, as well as regular-season titles in 2021, 2023, and 2025. In the 2025 NCAA Tournament, the Aggies earned their first NCAA Tournament victory since 2001.
 
A national search for Utah State’s next head volleyball coach will begin immediately. 
 



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending