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

Sports

How 28

Published

on

How 28

Welcome to Sliders, a weekly in-season MLB column that focuses on both the timely and timeless elements of the game.

The text message came to Isaac Collins from Garrett Schilling, a teammate on the 2022 Hartford Yard Goats. It was early December of that year, and Schilling was following the minor-league phase of the Rule 5 draft, being held at the winter meetings in San Diego.

Advertisement

Collins, relaxing at home in Arizona, was not.

“It said, ‘Brewers,’ exclamation mark,” Collins said. “And I was like, ‘Uh…what?’”

That punchy declaration – Brewers! – is overtaking Major League Baseball this summer. Milwaukee has swept four series in a row, with a 12-game winning streak propelling the team to the majors’ best record, at 76-44. It’s as if Bernie Brewer is sliding upwards, somehow, on an anti-gravity joyride.

“We have a group of guys that are just humble enough to understand that what’s most important is winning, not my stats and how much I’m getting paid,” Collins said. “It’s ‘Let’s win, and this will elevate all of us.’”

Collins — a switch-hitting outfielder drafted for $24,000 from the Colorado Rockies’ farm system — beat the New York Mets last Sunday with his eighth home run of the season and first walk-off blast of his life. He’s hitting .288 with a .384 on-base percentage and .448 slugging percentage, and his .833 OPS leads all National League rookies with at least 300 plate appearances.

Some rookies have more homers, like Miami’s Agustín Ramírez (17) and Atlanta’s Drake Baldwin (13), but Collins could be the leading candidate for NL Rookie of the Year. His team almost never loses when he’s in the lineup: the Brewers are 56-18 (.757) when Collins starts.

“He’s a winning player,” manager Pat Murphy said. “It started to shine through when given the opportunity early in the season, and then we couldn’t get them out of there.”

Opportunity is the word that Mike Collins, Isaac’s father, has always stressed to his sons. Sports offer precious few chances, so seizing them is critical. A starting defensive back for West Virginia in the early 1990s, Mike Collins roamed the pro ranks for a job: cut by the Buffalo Bills and injured in NFL Europe tryouts, he retired after a season in Arena Football with the St. Louis Stampede.

Advertisement

That was all before Isaac was born in 1997. He grew up consumed by sports, constantly dribbling a basketball, learning to switch-hit so he could bat lefty like his older brother, Roman (who went on to play in the minors for Kansas City), and dreaming of playing college football for the Mountaineers, like his dad.

Collins’ own family will grow in the next few days, as he’s expected to miss this weekend’s series against the Reds for the birth of his first son.

“I would tell Roman and Isaac, just from my experience, play as long as you can,” Mike Collins said. “Because once it’s over, it’s over.”

For Mike Collins, it was basically over with the 1994 Sugar Bowl, a 41-7 humiliation by Florida that ruined an undefeated season. The polls had squeezed West Virginia out of the Orange Bowl — which matched No. 1 Florida State and No. 2 Nebraska — and the Mountaineers, he said, could not shake that letdown.

“The difference between that experience and what the Brewers are doing now is that the Brewers have everything within their control,” Mike Collins said. “They don’t have to rely on somebody putting them into a game. All they’ve got to do is continue to win and play the way they’re playing — being selfless and next man up — which is what they’ve done all season.”

The Brewers will almost surely reach the postseason for the seventh time in the past eight years, still searching for the first championship in franchise history. Their summer streak could be another tease, but they’ve overcome plenty just to get here.

Milwaukee opened the season in the Bronx, losing three to the Yankees by a combined score of 36-14. Collins was there, but only because another outfielder, Blake Perkins, had broken his shin with a foul ball in spring training. The team was unsure of Collins’ defense — he’d played more second base in the minors — and his bat.

Advertisement

“We didn’t think he’d be with us full-time; we thought he’d be an up-and-down guy, to be honest,” Murphy said. “He didn’t show the ability to swing left-handed last year. And even in spring, we were like, ‘Eh, he’s a right-handed hitter off the bench.’ But it was a nice security blanket — and he’s the right kid, we knew that. He gets it.”

For the Brewers, there was a lot to like. In selecting Collins from the Rockies — who had left him off their 38-man Triple-A roster after the 2022 season — they saw a versatile switch-hitter with speed (30 steals in Double A) who understood the strike zone. Those qualities always help.

“We sometimes joke about dumpster diving here in a way that is actually a lot of fun,” general manager Matt Arnold said. “We have a lot of guys that have been overlooked for a lot of years, and you always have to try to find value in (those) spots. I think it shows up all over our roster, but especially with somebody like Isaac Collins.”

The opening series was a “yard sale,” Arnold said, so it was easy to miss what Collins did. He didn’t start, but in his first at-bat of the opener, he saw nine pitches before grounding out. In the ninth inning, he drove a one-hop double off the wall in deep right-center. The next afternoon, Collins went 1-for-2 again.

The opportunities kept coming, and Collins kept producing. He has stayed sharp on the mental side by working with the team’s sports psychologists and said that makes a difference, too.

“For me, it was just ‘What’s within my control?’” Collins said. “That’s my mind, body and craft. And if I can really get the best out of all three of those three things, then I’m going to give myself the best chance to win.”

The Brewers – the Brewers!  – are making the most of those chances, and winning more than anybody else.


Gimme Five

Seattle’s Matt Brash on the slider

The Seattle Mariners travel to Williamsport, Pa., for Sunday’s Little League Classic against the Mets. If aspiring young pitchers want to learn a new pitch, they should seek out tips from Matt Brash.

Brash, a 27-year-old right-hander from Kingston, Ont., deploys one of baseball’s most devastating sliders. No American League pitcher (min. 30 innings) throws the slider more often than Brash, who uses it more than 60 percent of the time. And why not? Batters are hitting .188 off Brash’s slider, with no extra-base hits until Jackson Holliday beat him with a double in Baltimore on Wednesday.

Advertisement

A fourth-round pick from Niagara University in 2019, Brash was traded from San Diego to Seattle at the 2020 deadline for righty Taylor Williams. After leading the majors in appearances in 2023 with 78, Brash underwent Tommy John surgery and returned this May. As the primary setup man for All-Star Andrés Muñoz, Brash has a 1.42 ERA.


A look at Matt Brash’s slider grip. (Tyler Kepner / The Athletic)

Here are some thoughts on his signature pitch:

A teammate’s tip made the difference: “I’ve always been able to spin the ball really well, just from childhood. I used to throw a knuckle curve more going into college. In my junior year one of my teammates, Tyler Howard, threw a lot of sliders. I think he only threw in the low 80s, but it was a really good slider and I was like, ‘What’s your grip?’ You know, just ballplayers shooting the (bull). And I started trying it and it was okay, but once I got into pro ball, my velo started to tick up and the slider has gotten better and better each year. Now I’m just super comfortable with it, and I can throw it in any count, at any time.”

The old guys were nasty, too: “My dad’s a huge Jays fan, and I was a huge Jays fan growing up. So I’ve seen some of Dave Stieb’s stuff, maybe just like old clips of it, and he had a great slider. I love seeing some of the older pitchers throwing crazy stuff. I feel like we throw really good stuff now, but back in the day, there were still big sliders, big sweepers, whatever you want to call it.”

A trade and a year off helped: “I just saw it as a new opportunity. The Padres were kind of trying to change some stuff with my delivery — maybe they didn’t love the way I threw — but when I got to the Mariners, they were like, ‘Hey, just keep doing what you’re doing.’ And it helped after the COVID year I went from mid-90s to touching 100 that next spring. I worked really hard in the COVID year. I feel like my arm maybe needed a little break and I got my shoulder healthy and probably gained another 15 pounds and I did a real throwing program for the first time, maybe, ever.”

Play that funky movement: “I’ve had hitters, especially righties, say that it doesn’t get that normal depth and sweep on it. They think it’s going to drop, but it kind of just stays across and sweeps across the zone, so I get a lot of guys swinging underneath it. I think that paired with my velo, there’s just something about it. It’s a good pitch and I get whiff on it, so I throw it a lot.”

Dos and Don’ts: “When I get underneath it, it sometimes just gets spinny and isn’t as sharp. So I try to stay on top of it, almost like a curveball, and when I catch a seam, I get that good horizontal (movement). I always tell guys: ‘Middle finger inside the horseshoe, index is actually off the ball when I release. Throw it like a heater and let the grip do its thing.’ A lot of guys try to throw the big slider and sometimes you can see them trying to manipulate the ball. I feel like the good ones are coming right off your heater grip, same arm speed, obviously, and just with a lot of conviction. I feel like that’s why mine’s really good, too: I’m not trying to get big sweeping numbers, I don’t really care. As long as I’m throwing it hard and (with) full conviction, that’s what I’m going for.”

Advertisement

Off the Grid

Pat Zachry, Phillies and Dodgers

Whenever the Immaculate Grid asks for someone who played for the Phillies and Dodgers, I think of Pat Zachry. This is unusual, I know — his rarity score was .05, meaning that just .05 percent of some 46,000 Grid players chose Zachry for that spot.

But we’re all a product of our experiences, right? And Zachry pitched mop-up relief for the Dodgers in Games 3 and 4 of the 1983 National League Championship Series at Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia. I was there, eight years old, totally enraptured by the whole scene. Two years later, Zachry ended his career with the Phillies. So that’s why he came to my mind.

Most people remember Zachry for something else. When he died last year, the headline of Zachry’s obituary said he was “known for a lopsided trade.” That’s true enough; it was Zachry’s fate to be the one pitcher the Mets acquired from the Reds when they foolishly traded The Franchise, Tom Seaver, to Cincinnati in 1977.

Zachry went 41-46 with a 3.63 ERA in six seasons with the Mets. His peak would always be 1976, when he was the co-Rookie of the Year and helped the Big Red Machine win a championship. He started and won Game 3 of the World Series, the first at the renovated Yankee Stadium, which gave writers the chance to share something truly memorable about Pat Zachry.

Here’s Stan Hochman in the next day’s Philadelphia Daily News. Never accuse Hochman of burying the lead:

Baseball, see, is a game of inches. Fractions of an inch, sometimes. Like the way the brass bullet barely missed shattering Pat Zachry’s spine back in Waco, Tex., nine years ago.

“I had this little accident with a gunshot,” Zachry said before going out to pitch the Reds past the Yankees on a raw, windy night.

“I was where I didn’t belong and the guy mistook me for a prowler,” Zachry said. “The bullet went through my kidney, through my lower intestine. Missed my spine by an eighth of an inch.

“Trying to steal something? Nah, just some old guy’s daughter. Lucky it was a brass bullet, a .22. They gave me lots of blood and I came out of it okay. I remember my daddy getting there, seeing me laying down in the ambulance. He said to me, ‘Maybe next time you’ll use the front door and ring the doorbell.’ I know from then on it was a long time before I went in anybody’s yard after dark.”

Pat Zachry ventured into somebody’s backyard after dark last night. The Yankees’ backyard.

That, folks, is sportswriting at its finest. Rest in peace, Pat Zachry.

Classic clip

It was 60 years ago today, the Beatles played a gig at Shea

On Aug. 15, 1965, the greatest band in rock history reached the pinnacle of its fame at Shea Stadium. The Beatles had never played before a crowd so big — 55,600 fans, screeching so wildly that John Lennon played the organ with his elbows; sound quality didn’t matter, anyway.

“At Shea Stadium,” Lennon would say years later, “I saw the top of the mountain.”

Advertisement

The Mets, who shut out the Astros in Houston that day, will be home on Friday at Citi Field, on the site of the old Shea parking lot. Ushers who worked at that 1965 Beatles concert will throw out the first pitch.

Howie Rose, the Mets’ venerable radio voice, was not there; he was only 11 years old then. But Rose cares as deeply and passionately about the Beatles as he does the Mets, which is saying something. The fact that those worlds once collided — even for just 30 minutes, many decades ago — has always had a powerful impact.

“In 2006, when we had the 1986 reunion, it was the first time they set me up as the emcee out at second base, which is where the stage was,” Rose said. “So I’m not exaggerating, the entire time I was out there, I’m looking up and I’m thinking, ‘This is exactly the view that the Beatles had.’ And some of these (players) had become friends over the years, right? These are guys I like and I want to punch up the introductions. (But) I’m just sailing through introducing these baseball players, and it was all I could do to stop myself from breaking out into ‘I’m Down’ or ‘Baby’s in Black,’ which I thought were the two best numbers in that concert.”


A wall at Citi Field commemorates The Beatles’ show at Shea Stadium in 1965. (Tyler Kepner / The Athletic)

On the ground floor at Citi Field, which opened in 2009, the hallway walls commemorate some of the great moments at Shea. To Rose, the image of the Beatles transcends the baseball highlights.

“We couldn’t have foreseen that, 60 years later, their music would still be a part of the culture that exists three generations out,” Rose said. “I’ll look at that picture, without fail, every night on my way to my car. I look at it and I go, ‘Wow — wow! That happened here.’”

(Top photo of Isaac Collins: John Fisher / Getty Images)

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

Sports

ACU unveils 2026 indoor, outdoor Track and Field schedules

Published

on


The ACU Wildcats have released their 2026 track and field schedule, the team announced on social media.

ACU’s indoor season began December 6 with the 12-Degree McFerrin Invitational in College Station, Texas.

The Wildcats’ next meet is set for January 16-17 in Lubbock, Texas with the Corky Classic.

The rest of ACU’s indoor schedule is as follows:

  • January 23: Stan Scott Invite (Lubbock, TX)
  • January 30-31: Robert Platt Invitational (Houston, TX)
  • February 6-7: Charlie Thomas Invitational (College Station, TX)
  • February 13-14: Jarvis Scott Invitational (Lubbock, TX)
  • February 27-28: WAC Indoor Track & Field Championships (Spokane, WA)
  • March 13-14: NCAA Indoor Track & Field Championships (Fayetteville, AR)

RELATED | ACU extends coach Keith Patterson’s contract through 2029 season

The Wildcats are set to kick off their outdoor season March 20-21, as ACU is hosting the Wes Kittley Invitational.

The rest of their outdoor schedule is as follows:

  • March 26-27: Angelo State David Noble Relays (San Angelo, TX), Texas Tech Masked Raider Invite (Lubbock, TX)
  • April 3-4: Texas Relays (Austin, TX)
  • April 10-11: McMurry War Hawk Classic (Abilene, TX)
  • April 17-18: Tarleton State Joe Gillespie Invitational (Stephenville, TX)
  • April 24-25: Baylor Michael Johnson Invitational (Waco, TX)
  • May 1-2: Texas Tech Corky/Crofoot shootout (Lubbock, TX)
  • May 15-16: WAC Outdoor Championships (Arlington, TX)
  • May 27-30: NCAA Outdoor Championships – West Preliminary (Fayetteville, AR)



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Texas A&M volleyball wins first national championship

Published

on


KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Logan Lednicky had 11 kills, Maddie Waak had 29 assists and Texas A&M won its first NCAA volleyball championship, sweeping Kentucky 3-0 on Sunday.

The Aggies (29-4) accomplished the rare feat of defeating three No. 1 seeds. They defeated Nebraska and Pittsburgh earlier in the tournament. They did not drop a set in the final four.

Texas A&M led 13-10 in the third set before a kill by Lednicky started a 6-1 scoring run for a commanding 19-11 lead, six points from the national championship.

At 24-18 in the third set, Kentucky held off a couple of match points before the Aggies took advantage of a free ball and Ifenna Cos-Okpalla delivered the championship point, crushing a set from Waak out of the middle.

Kyndal Stowers finished with 10 kills and hit .304. Cos-Okpalla added eight kills, hitting .235 and Lednicky hit .250.

Eva Hudson had a match-high 13 kills for Kentucky and Kassie O’Brien had 34 assists.

The Aggies hit .257 as a team, compared to Kentucky’s .148.

Set scores were 26-24, 25-15, 25-20.

The Aggies trailed throughout the first set until they tied the score at 20 and also saved a set point to tie it at 24. The Aggies took their first lead at 25-24 on an attack error by Kentucky’s Brooklyn DeLeye, her fifth of the set. Stowers finished off the 26-24 first-set win for the Aggies with a tip off the Kentucky block.

After taking that 25-24 lead, the Aggies did not trail at any point in the rest of the match.

Kentucky (30-3) continued to struggle at the net in the second set. The Wildcats had nine errors in the first set and six more while falling behind 19-9 in the second. The Aggies continued to dominate, winning 25-15 after outhitting their SEC rival .253 — .077.

Stowers and Lednicky had eight kills each in the first two sets, with Stowers hitting .368 and Lednicky .240.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Texas A&M wins! Here’s where to buy 2025 NCAA Volleyball championship merch

Published

on


Texas A&M volleyball
For the first time in program history, the Aggies were crowned NCAA Volleyball champions after sweeping SEC rival Kentucky in three sets on Saturday.Fanatics/Canva

If you purchase a product through a link on our site, we may receive compensation.

The Texas A&M Aggies are national champions!

For the first time in program history, the Aggies were crowned NCAA Volleyball champions after sweeping SEC rival Kentucky in three sets on Saturday.

Fans can show their Aggies pride with commemorative championship gear at Fanatics here.

You can also browse a variety of Texas A&M volleyball merch on Fanatics — like this Texas A&M Aggies Volleyball Pullover Hoodie, this Texas A&M Aggies GameDay Greats Pick-A-Player Jersey or this Texas A&M Aggies Volleyball Long Sleeve T-Shirt.

NCAA Volleyball Tournament

Final Four Results

Thursday, Dec. 18

Texas A&M 3, Pittsburgh 0

Kentucky 3, Wisconsin 2

Elite Eight Results

Saturday, Dec. 13

Kentucky 3, Creighton 0

Pitt 3, Purdue 1

Sunday, Dec. 14

Texas A&M 3, Nebraska 2

Wisconsin 3, Texas 1

Sweet 16 Results

Thursday, Dec. 11

Creighton 3, Arizona State 1

Kentucky 3, Cal Poly 0

Pitt 3, Minnesota 0

Purdue 3, SMU 1

Friday, Dec. 12

Texas 3, Indiana 0

Wisconsin 3, Stanford 1

Texas A&M 3, Louisville 2

Nebraska 3, Kansas 0

Joey Chandler is a sports commerce reporter for NJ.com. She’s earned Associated Press Sports Editors honors and won first-place writing awards for features, columns and breaking news in Ohio, Alabama and North…



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Indoor track & field preview: Amherst, Northampton lead the way in local indoor track scene

Published

on


Local high school runners have once again shifted to the oval following an exciting cross country season as the indoor track schedule has begun with the PVIAC’s weekly meets kicking off on Sunday, Dec. 14.

Smith College’s Indoor Track and Tennis Complex will once again host the competitions that feature teams throughout western Massachusetts. Meets will take place on the weekends, either on Saturday or Sunday, until the MIAA postseason commences in early February.

Here’s a closer look at all six area teams:

Amherst

The Hurricanes should be contenders once again this winter. The girls squad lost a fair amount of talent from last season, but as the cross country season showed, runners are always waiting in the shadows to step up for Amherst.

Ololara Baptiste returns with the most accolades for the ‘Canes girls as the junior was part of the state-championship winning 4×200-meter relay quartet last year. Ella Jamate (mid-distance), Juliana Albo (sprints, field events) and Genevieve Dole (long distance) will round out Amherst’s depth.

The boys will look to see continued growth from Nico Lisle (mid-distance) and Wesley Dunford (field events) this season.

Northampton

An encouraging cross country campaign should carry over into the indoor season for the Blue Devils, who bring back some skilled athletes.

Mairead O’Neil will be the catalyst for the girls team as the reigning Western Mass. cross country champion will attack the mile and 2 mile events for Northampton this winter. Ella Hoogendyk should collect plenty of points for the Blue Devils in field events as the senior will compete in the long jump, high jump and 600. Maddalena Figueroa-Starr (mid-distance, long distance) Maya Zink (long distance) and Allie Sullivan (sprints, field events) are other athletes to watch.

The boys team’s strength will reside in the long distance events, led by Gus Frey and Henry Daggett as Northampton’s 2-milers. Kai Webster (mid-distance) is another name to keep an eye on for the Blue Devils.

Holyoke

Yasani Thompson brings back a winning pedigree to the Purple Knights’ girls team this winter as the defending state champion in the 300. The senior will also strive to qualify for the New England Championships, according to fifth-year head coach Matt Benoit.

Seniors Ryan Kennedy (short, mid-distance) and Jaybriel Rivera Soto (short distance) will carry the Holyoke boys.

Frontier Regional

Expect the Redhawks to be in and around the top of the Valley North standings as both the boys and girls teams have impressive athletes sprinkled throughout their rosters.

The Frontier boys have a pair of seniors in Luke Howard (long distance) and Adrien Pazmandy (sprints) that’ll acquire the bulk of its points. Last season, the Redhawks won the league title after going 13-0. Head coach Walter Flynn enters his fifth season at the helm.

The Frontier girls have a near even split between returners and newcomers this winter. Maddie Antes, Julia Morse and Ashley Rivard count as the Redhawks’ senior class, while the Flagollet sisters (Emmanuelle and Louise) highlight their new runners. Louise Flagollet was Frontier’s top cross country runner on the girls team this past fall.

Head coach Bob Smith, who is in the midst of his 47th season leading the Redhawks, feels experience and team pride are the strengths of this year’s team, while sprints will be an area to grow.

Hampshire Regional

The Raiders girls have a handful of distance runners that’ll secure plenty of points this winter. Brooke Hockenberry, Charlotte Letendre and Kathleen Barry all earned first or second-place finishes at the first PVIAC meet.

Hampshire’s boys trio of Aidan Conklin (mid-distance), Owen Cubi and Oscar Schiff (both long distance) will surely be athletes to keep track of for the Raiders.

South Hadley

The Tigers may not have the high-end talent as some of the other Hampshire County teams, but both boys and girls teams have several athletes who will hold their own on the oval.

Grace Cooney and Margaret Healey raced well in the first PVIAC meet and will anchor South Hadley’s girls’ distance crew.

For the boys squad, Matt Gillis (sprints, field events) and Trevor Sullivan (long distance) are two Tigers athletes who can make an impact this season.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Texas A&M wins first NCAA volleyball championship after upsetting three No. 1 seeds

Published

on


KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Jamie Morrison was confident for good reason.

The Texas A&M volleyball coach saw greatness in his team before its stunning run through the final two weekends of NCAA Tournament play. As underdogs by seed in each of its last four matches, A&M dispatched three No. 1 seeds consecutively, culminating Sunday with a three-set victory against Kentucky at T-Mobile Center.

The Aggies won 26-24, 25-15, 25-20 to take home their first national championship in women’s volleyball. They are the 13th program in 45 years to hoist the trophy.

A&M’s quartet of All-Americans led the way again. Logan Lednick paced the Aggies with 11 kills. Kyndal Stowers added 10. Ifenna Cos-Okpalla notched eight kills and four blocks. Setter Maddie Waak dished out 29 assists.

Morrison, the third-year A&M coach, came to Aggieland in December 2022 as the centerpiece move of former athletic director Ross Bjork as part of an effort to “strategize differently and envision a new approach” as volleyball emerged as a rising sport nationally.

In his first collegiate head-coaching post, Morrison directed A&M to the opening round of the postseason tournament in 2023, losing at Texas, the eventual national champion. The Aggies fell in the round of 16 a year ago against perennial power Wisconsin.

A&M entered regional play in Lincoln, Neb., as the No. 3 seed, but Morrison said that he and the Aggies weren’t scared of elite competition. They won the final three of five sets in a reverse sweep against Louisville to stay alive, then pulled the upset of the season in defeating No. 1-ranked and previously undefeated Nebraska in a five-set thriller.

By comparison, the Aggies’ first Final Four was a walk in the park. They swept Pitt, another top regional seed, on Thursday. And on Sunday, A&M made fast work of the lone remaining No. 1 seed.

The Aggies trailed throughout much of the first set, and by as many as six points. Down 18-12, they used a 4-0 run capped by a Stowers kill to get within two points for the first time since it was 2-0. The Aggies tied it for the first time at 20 on a block of Eva Hudson and won the opening set on another Stowers kill.

They did not trail in the second or third sets. The championship point came on a kill by Cos-Okpalla.

In this all-SEC final, the title was a second for the conference. Kentucky won the league’s first in the 2021 spring season, moved from 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

A&M avenged an Oct. 8 defeat in College Station. Kentucky had lost previously this season only against Nebraska and Pitt.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Kentucky Volleyball falls to Texas A&M in National Championship

Published

on


It was a big day for the Big Blue Nation as the Kentucky Volleyball team played Texas A&M for a National Championship in Kansas City. In the first-ever all-SEC championship match, the Cats got swept as they fell 3-0 to the Aggies.

The Cats came out hot, leading the majority of the first set by five or six points, as they put the Texas A&M squad on their heels.

However, coming out of a time-out, the Aggies’ defense flipped a switch, and they never looked back. Whether it was in the block or in the outside hitting, Craig Skinner’s squad could never quite get into rhythm, ending a special season for the program in Lexington.

With this, we will say goodbye to one of the best players to wear the UK jersey in Eva Hudson. It was a special season for the Purdue transfer that came up just one win short. However, the Cats could return the majority of their roster next season, setting up for another special run in 2026.

It stings now, but it was a fun season.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending