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Gymnastics Set to Begin 2025 Campaign Friday at #9 Missouri

Story Links Meet #1‘Beauty and the Beast’ Missouri Quad-Meet Teams: Southeast Missouri (0-0)Missouri (0-0)Ball State (0-0)Illinois State (0-0) Meet Information: Date: Friday, January 3, 2025Time: 6:00 P.M., CT. Location: Columbia, Mo. Venue: Hearnes Center Head Coaches:SEMO: Ashely Lawson (Seventh Season, 40-89-1)Missouri: Shannon Welker (12th Season)Ball State: Joanna Saleem (12th Season)Illinois State: Bob Conkling (20th Season) Follow the Redhawks: X: @SEMOGymnasticsLive Stats: MU AthleticsWatch: ESPN+ Gymnastics Begins 2025 Campaign Friday at MissouriSoutheast Missouri Women’s Gymnastics will begin the 2025 season […]

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Gymnastics Set to Begin 2025 Campaign Friday at #9 Missouri

Meet #1
‘Beauty and the Beast’ Missouri Quad-Meet
 
Teams: 
Southeast Missouri (0-0)
Missouri (0-0)
Ball State (0-0)
Illinois State (0-0)
 
Meet Information: 
Date: Friday, January 3, 2025
Time: 6:00 P.M., CT. 
Location: Columbia, Mo. 
Venue: Hearnes Center
 
Head Coaches:
SEMO: Ashely Lawson (Seventh Season, 40-89-1)
Missouri: Shannon Welker (12th Season)
Ball State: Joanna Saleem (12th Season)
Illinois State: Bob Conkling (20th Season)
 
Follow the Redhawks: 
X: @SEMOGymnastics
Live Stats: MU Athletics
Watch: ESPN+
 
Gymnastics Begins 2025 Campaign Friday at Missouri
Southeast Missouri Women’s Gymnastics will begin the 2025 season on Friday, January 3, at the ‘Beauty and the Beast’ Quad-Meet hosted by Missouri. Competition is slated to begin at 6 p.m., CT. from the Hearnes Center in Columbia, Mo. 
 
Who We Face
The Gymhawks will be one-of-four teams at the meet on Friday night, headlined by the host and #9 ranked Missouri. The Tigers are one of seven SEC members ranked inside the WGCA Top 10 Preseason Poll. 
 
Ball State and Illinois State also received votes in the preseason campaign. The Cardinals just missed out on cracking the top 36 with 136 points in the poll. 
 
Fellow Midwest Independent Conference member Illinois State received 35 points in the WGCA Preseason Poll. 
 
2025 Outlook
The 2025 season marks the seventh for head coach Ashley Lawson in control of the program that finished a season ago with a 7-17-1 overall record and a fourth-place finish at the 2024 Midwest independent Conference Championship meet. 
 
The 2025 squad will be made up of 13 returnees and six newcomers. 
 
Seniors
The senior class is made up of Nyah Reader, Lindsay Ockler, Janelle Lopez, and Madison Greene
 
Juniors
Juniors Sydney Crouch, Kailyn Hamilton, Taylor Ingle, and Ailey Kuehn all return after making significant contributions a season ago. 
 
Sophomores
Sophomores Ava Johnsonton and Jordan Napolitano headline the second-year Gymhawks as they were the only two who compete last season. Amelia May, Courtney Henry, and Savannah Poulos are the returnees while newcomers Leah Parton and Jaidan Kossuth both look to make an impact after transferring from Lindenwood. 
 
Freshman
Four new gymnasts call Cape Girardeau their home after signing with the Redhawks in 2024. Joselene Hernandez, Olivia Heubach, Gracie Jones, and Anna Lee Phillips will all don the Gymhawks leotard in 2025. 
 
Coaching Staff
The seventh campaign for head coach Ashley Lawson will feature two new assistant coaches on her staff. Assistant coach and former Redhawk gymnast, Lydia Test, was hired on after serving as the student assistant coach a season ago. The 2025 campaign will mark the third for her on staff within SEMO Gymnastics. Test will oversee the vault and floor routines for the Gymhawks. 
 
The newest addition to the coaching staff is first year assistant coach, Keira Boetel. Boetel will handle the beam rotation and in-gym conditioning for the Gymhawks. Boetel graduated from the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse in 2024 where she competed for the UWL gymnastics team during her freshman and sophomore seasons (2021 & 2022) before medically retiring from the sport. She graduated from UWL with a degree in Exercise & Sports Science with a minor in Nutrition in 2024.
 
2024 Season Highlights
Set program record team score of 197.050 at the Tennessee Collegiate Classic
-Senior Lindsay Ockler became just the second Redhawk to register a perfect 10.000 on the bars at the Tennessee Collegiate Classic
-Former Redhawk Lydia Webb surpassed former Redhawk and current head coach Ashley Lawson‘s all-around record with a 39.575 at the Tennessee Collegiate Classic
-Swept the SEMO Tri-Meet versus Winona State (189.025) and Talladega College (190.175) with a 195.625
-Defeated Sacramento State at the Air Force Tri-Meet with a 194.575-194.475 victory
-Beat fellow MIC member Illinois State, 194.375-193.650, at the University of Nebraska Quad-Meet. 
 
All-Conference Gymnasts
Last season, four Redhawks finished the 2024 campaign with All-Midwest Independent Conference honors headlined by Taylor Ingle who finished the meet with a 39.100 in the all-around, placing her on the first team.
 
Madison Greene picked up second team honors for her floor routine, finishing with a 9.850. Sophomore Ava Johnston also finished with second team honors with a 9.775 on the bars. 
 
The Schedule
The 2025 schedule features four home meets for the Redhawks beginning on Friday, January 31st, as Illinois State comes to Cape Girardeau. Friday, February 14, will be the SEMO Tri-Meet featuring Centenary (MIC) and Northern Illinois. Two weeks later another tri-meet will feature Bridgeport and Fisk and will conclude home meets inside Houck Field House. All home meets will be held at 6:30 p.m.
 
The final home meet of the season will be on Saturday, March 8, when SEMO welcomes in Greenville. The meet will take place in the Show Me Center and will begin at 6:30 p.m.
 
The Missouri Quad Meet will mark the first-of-five road meets for the Gymhawks to begin the season as SEMO will travel to Muncie, Indiana on Sunday, January 12, to take on Ball State. 
 
Five days later, the Gymhawks will face off with their second MIC foe of the season on January 17 at Texas Woman’s University in Denton, Texas. Three days later, SEMO will travel to Centenary (Jan. 20) for a tri-meet with the host and West Chester. 
 
Sunday, January 26, the Redhawks will travel to Bowling Green, Ohio for a dual meet with Bowling Green from the Mid-American Conference (MAC) at 2 p.m.
 
SEMO will round out the road schedule beginning with a dual meet at Central Michigan (Feb. 6). The Gymhawks will then take place in a quad-meet at the Metroplex Challenge on Friday, February 21st. Oregon State, Arizona, and Arkansas will feature with the Redhawks in Fort Worth, Texas. 
 
The final road meet of the season will be the final meet of the regular season and will be a dual meet at Illinois State on Friday, March 14. The competition will begin at 7 p.m. in Normal, Illinois. 
 
This season’s Midwest Independent Conference Championship will be at Centenary, in Shreveport, Louisiana, on Friday, March 21. The competition will begin at 5 p.m. 
 
 

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Cal Poly Beach Volleyball dominate in day one of NCAA Championships, will face tough matchup in quarterfinals

Even in the unfriendly visiting environment of Gulf Shores, Alabama, Cal Poly Beach Volleyball looked right at home on day one of the NCAA Beach Volleyball Championships. The 32-team member cheering section couldn’t be missed on the ESPN 2 broadcast, and Cal Poly looked like a legitimate title contender on the sand, knocking out No. […]

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Even in the unfriendly visiting environment of Gulf Shores, Alabama, Cal Poly Beach Volleyball looked right at home on day one of the NCAA Beach Volleyball Championships.

The 32-team member cheering section couldn’t be missed on the ESPN 2 broadcast, and Cal Poly looked like a legitimate title contender on the sand, knocking out No. 11 seed LSU with ease in a 3-0 sweep on Friday, May 2.

The all-around victory bodes well for the No. 6-seeded Mustangs, who have what may be the best shot at an NCAA title for the foreseeable future with their current lineup.

The Mustangs are faced with four graduating starters and Cal Poly roster cuts looming at the end of the tournament, but they played like a team with nothing to lose on Friday.

The Tigers were a much younger and more athletically imposing team, but Cal Poly’s familiarity with the NCAA tournament and veteran experience proved to be too great a challenge for the underdogs to overcome.

“The first year is pretty scary,” redshirt junior Ella Connor said earlier in the week. “It will be really nice to go back again and actually get to experience it like I did last year.”

Nine of the Mustangs’ 10 starters were also in the lineup for last year’s championship run that culminated in a third place finish.

Cal Poly will now take over the underdog role, likely for the rest of the tournament, starting with an early morning match against No. 3 seed Stanford on Saturday in the quarterfinals.

“We’ve been there before,” head coach Todd Rogers said. “That part I think gives us a real positive.”

 They will need to bring the same energy if they want to take down the top ranked opponent and move on to the semifinals for a second straight year.

Strong performances through the lineup

All five pairing won their first set against the Tigers, and their No. 3, No. 4 and No. 5 pairs won their second match as well, sealing the win just as quickly as it had begun.

Cal Poly’s No. 5 pairing of senior Abbey Reinard and freshman Elise Lenahan showed out, winning by an 11-point margin in their second set and stunning the unsuspecting Tigers.

Cal Poly’s depth has been a strong point for the team, as they possess noteworthy talent and experience through all five pairings.

Graduate student Lindsey Sparks brings national championship experience at the No. 3 pairing, as she won an NCAA title in 2019 with UCLA.

Now a Mustang, she is paired with sophomore Quinn Perry, a two-year starter who has been named an All-Big West honorable mention both seasons so far.

Connor is another highly decorated collegiate volleyball player playing at the No. 4 pairing in this tournament.

She has dealt with some injuries this season, but is coming off last season where she was in Cal Poly’s No. 1 pairing and won Big West Pair of the Year alongside junior Izzy Martinez.

That experience and reliability at the lower pairings, where many programs will put their youngest players, could be a major advantage to the Mustangs in the later rounds of this year’s tournament.

Stanford Rematch in quarterfinals on Saturday

Cal Poly’s scheduled matchup with Stanford will be a big test for the lineup, who lost to the Cardinal back on April 11 at the Center of Effort Challenge on Cal Poly’s home turf.

“I think we’re really looking for a revenge match on that one,” Connor said.

For the Mustrangs, the matchup holds some similarities to last year’s NCAA run, when they took on and beat No. 4 seed Florida State University as the No. 5 seed, sending them to the semifinals.

Stanford is an imposing opponent in this year’s bracket, and have only improved since the Mustangs saw them last, rising from No. 5 to No. 2 in the national rankings.

They beat No. 14 seed Boise State 3-0 in their first tournament match, setting the stage for a close matchup where at least one of the teams will be giving up their first points in the tournament.

The Cardinal are just one week removed from winning the MPSF Beach Volleyball Championship against fellow top-five seed USC, and need one more win to tie their all-time program record for wins with 32.

They have eight all-conference players to the Mustangs 10, but play in the challenging MPSF conference against top teams like UCLA, USC and Cal.

Both their No. 1 and No. 2 pairs were named to the All-MPSF first team, setting up a tough match for Cal Poly’s No. 1 pairing of senior Piper Ferch and sophomore Erin Inskeep as well as No. 2 junior Izzy Martinez and Logan Walter.

Neither Mustang pairing was able to finish their match on Friday against LSU, but had been putting up strong performances against highly ranked pairs before the match was clinched.

Gulf Shores is expecting heavy rain both Friday night and all-day Saturday, which could drastically impact how the game is played.

Matches will typically be played through rain unless there is lightning, but the wet sand and winds have the potential to change the momentum at any moment.

Cal Poly and Stanford will kick off the semifinals at 9 a.m., broadcasting on ESPN 2.

The winning team will move on to the semifinal matches later that day against the winner of No. 7 seed Texas and No. 2 seed TCU, starting at 2:30 p.m.



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Aggie Roundup: Women’s water polo players earn honors | Sports

IRVINE — Sophomore Bridget Miller earned a spot on the All-Big West Water Polo Second Team, while sophomore Chelsea Johnson, redshirt junior Gianna Nocetti, sophomore Sadie Henry and senior Kelly Hungerford picked up honorable-mention titles. After the 2024 season, Johnson and Miller were named to the All-Big West Freshman squad, while Nocetti has a repeat […]

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IRVINE — Sophomore Bridget Miller earned a spot on the All-Big West Water Polo Second Team, while sophomore Chelsea Johnson, redshirt junior Gianna Nocetti, sophomore Sadie Henry and senior Kelly Hungerford picked up honorable-mention titles.

After the 2024 season, Johnson and Miller were named to the All-Big West Freshman squad, while Nocetti has a repeat offense with the honorable mention title; making it the second year in a row that the trio earns conference nods. This is Hungerford’s first award after her knockout curtain closing season, and Henry’s first title as well.

Women’s tennis

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Hawaii water polo team cleans up in Big West awards

Hawaii’s clean run through the Big West women’s water polo season produced a clean sweep in the conference’s postseason awards on Friday. The Rainbow Wahine picked up the Big West Player of the year (attacker Bernadette Doyle), the Big West Coach of the Year (James Robinson) and the Big West Freshman of the Year (attacker […]

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Hawaii’s clean run through the Big West women’s water polo season produced a clean sweep in the conference’s postseason awards on Friday.

The Rainbow Wahine picked up the Big West Player of the year (attacker Bernadette Doyle), the Big West Coach of the Year (James Robinson) and the Big West Freshman of the Year (attacker Ema Vernoux).

Doyle, Vernoux and goalkeeper Daisy Logtens were named to the All-Big West first team while center Jordan Wedderburn was named to the second team.

Roni Perlman was named an honorable mention. Vernoux and Gabrielle Doyle were named to the All-Freshman team.

Robinson succeeded longtime coach Maureen Cole and has maintained a period of some of the greatest success in program history. UH (21-4), despite losing four of its top five scorers from its national semifinal team of 2024, has won 20 straight matches against Big West opponents on the way to the conference regular-season and tournament championships. UH attained its third straight 20-win season.

Bernadette Doyle’s top individual award was UH’s seventh in 12 seasons of Big West membership. Doyle, a native of Auckland, New Zealand, made good on a second chance with the program to become a two-way disruptor for opponents. She tied for second on the team in points (53 goals, 38 assists) and tied for the conference lead in steals (51). For good measure, the 5-foot-6 New Zealander had 13 field blocks.

She is one of only two players to reach 100 goals, 100 assists and 100 steals for a Wahine career.

Vernoux, of France, was UH’s sixth top Big West freshman honoree. Her 75 goals is the fourth highest in a season in program history.

Logtens, a sophomore from the Netherlands, made the first team for a second time. Her 9.02 goals-against average led the league.

Wedderburn, a senior from South Africa, was second on the team with 65 goals and drew a team-high 69 exclusions. She led UH in goals in conference games with 22. At Thursday night’s H Awards, Wedderburn received the Jack Bonham Award for the athletic department’s top honor to a men’s and women’s senior that “best exemplifies the ideals for which Jack Bonham stood for in the areas of athletic excellence, academic achievement, public service, leadership and character.” Wedderburn was tied with UH women’s basketball point guard Lily Wahinekapu tied with Wedderburn for the women’s award while football quarterback Brayden Schager received it for men’s sports.

Fourth-seeded UH faces Cal (19-5) in the NCAA quarterfinals on May 9 at IUPUI’s IU Natatorium in Indianapolis, Ind., on May 9.

Brian McInnis covers the state’s sports scene for Spectrum News Hawaii. He can be reached at brian.mcinnis@charter.com.



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Boys volleyball surges in Minnesota during first year under state high school league

Boys volleyball has been and continues to be on the rise in Minnesota. Shakopee has been on the cutting edge for a while. “The amount of kids we have at open gyms, the tryouts have grown every single year,” said Shakopee junior setter Grant Menke. “In clubs, it’s growing. Throughout the state, it’s growing. Even […]

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Boys volleyball has been and continues to be on the rise in Minnesota. Shakopee has been on the cutting edge for a while.

“The amount of kids we have at open gyms, the tryouts have grown every single year,” said Shakopee junior setter Grant Menke. “In clubs, it’s growing. Throughout the state, it’s growing. Even up north, there are now teams where in the past there hadn’t been at all.”

This year’s boost comes in the first season the sport is officially sanctioned by the Minnesota State High School League (MSHSL). For the players and coaches, this year feels new in multiple ways, some more tangible than others.

“We had a bus for the first time, since it’s sanctioned now,” said Shakopee senior setter Dom Tor. “That was very cool to have a bus to away games because before we would have to drive ourselves or commute to away games.”

“It felt different. It absolutely did,” said Shakopee’s head coach Krista Flemming, who played a major role in getting the sport sanctioned. “We’re doing so many of the things the same as we had been doing (as a club team). But it’s the whole thing of feeling more official.”

Over at Eastview High School, the first-ever official season brought some new players.

“This year, in some of our younger teams, we saw some kids that were football or basketball, or other fall and winter sports, that were like, ‘yeah, I can make that my spring sport,'” said head coach Ryan Dehnel.

History is on the line too. Shakopee won the last club boys’ volleyball state tournament in 2024. This season, a gauntlet can be thrown. Like many teams, Eastview wants to win the first ever MSHSL state title.

“That is the ultimate goal, “said Eastview senior outside hitter Keuni Saki. “To win the first high school state tournament.”

“Just being remembered in history as the first team to win the sanctioned sport,” said Eastview opposite hitter Colin Nathan. “It’s very enticing.”



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Wahinekapu, Wedderburn, Schager named 2025 Bonham Award winners

Reading time: 4 minutes The Jack Bonham Award was presented to Lily Wahinekapu (women’s basketball), Jordan Wedderburn (women’s water polo) and Brayden Schager (football) at the 12th annual H Awards on April 30. The Bonham Award is the University of Hawaiʻi Athletics Department’s highest individual honor. Leadership on the court, in the pool and on […]

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Reading time: 4 minutes

Wahinekapu, Wedderburn, Schager and Jack Bonham Award graphic

The Jack Bonham Award was presented to Lily Wahinekapu (women’s basketball), Jordan Wedderburn (women’s water polo) and Brayden Schager (football) at the 12th annual H Awards on April 30. The Bonham Award is the University of Hawaiʻi Athletics Department’s highest individual honor.

Leadership on the court, in the pool and on the field, along with excellence in the classroom and service in the community link the 2025 recipients.

Lily Wahinekapu

female basketball
Lily Wahinekapu

ʻOhana has been at the core of Wahinekapu’s decorated three-year athletic and academic careers as a member of the Rainbow Wahine basketball program. Playing in front of family and friends in the arena and alongside her sister in the UH backcourt, Wahinekapu led the team in scoring each of her three seasons while helping the ‘Bows capture two Big West regular-season titles and a conference tournament championship on their way to three national postseason tournament appearances.

She was twice named to the All-Big West first team and in 2025 became the third UH player to be named Big West Player of the Year. She became the 25th member of the program’s 1,000-point club and ended her career 17th on the all-time scoring list. She also ranks seventh in made 3-pointers.

A team captain as a senior, Wahinekapu received the Ah Chew Goo Award as the program’s “most valuable team player.” In the classroom, she earned Academic All-Big West honors each of her three years at UH and was twice named to the College Sports Communicators Academic All-District Team.

The product of Kāneʻohe, Wahinekapu also gave back to the Windward Oʻahu community in service projects including cleanups at Waimānalo Beach and Punaluʻu Loʻi. She also helped fundraise for the Hawaiʻi Foodbank as part of Maui wildfire relief efforts and has worked with special needs children with Team Impact.

“Lily Wahinekapu has been one of my favorite athletes to coach,” UH women’s basketball head coach Laura Beeman said. “She is passionate and an incredible teammate. She has represented the university and the state with pride.”

Jordan Wedderburn

female water polo player
Jordan Wedderburn

Prioritizing team success over individual accolades, Jordan Wedderburn has exemplified selfless leadership while contributing to the most successful four-year stretch in UH water polo history.

Wedderburn served as a team captain for South Africa’s water polo team in the Tokyo Olympic Games before enrolling at UH and has ranked among the team’s scoring leaders each of her four years while thriving in varying roles within the lineup. She further elevated her production as a senior, posting a career-high 65 goals entering the NCAA Championship to join UH’s career top 10. She also tied program records with three Big West Player of the Week awards this season and four in her career.

She has helped UH claim three Big West regular-season titles with a 26-1 cumulative record in conference play, and back-to-back Big West Championship crowns. She helped UH ascend to No. 2 in the national polls in 2024—the highest ranking in program history—and the ‘Bows have maintained a spot in the top three for much of this season.

“Jordan has always been the spirit of the team, providing energy in a positive manner whenever the team needs it,” UH water polo coach James Robinson said. “Jordan plays a role for this team that she never played before in her water polo career. Every year Jordan has had to make sacrifices and play a different role than she probably would like to, but she has never once complained.”

Wedderburn holds a 3.78 grade-point average while majoring in kinesiology and entered her senior year as a two-time Academic All-Big West and ACWPC All-Academic honoree.

She has served as a Student-Athlete Advisory Committee representative for two years and worked with Access Surf, helping those with physical or cognitive disabilities to swim or surf. She also participated in Kōkua Learning Farm work days and with the Child Life Program, spending time with children going through treatment for retinoblastoma (an eye cancer) and their families.

Brayden Schager

football player
Brayden Schager

On the field, Brayden Schager earned a place among UH’s storied line of quarterbacks over his career as a three-year starter. Off the field, his efforts to spread joy to young people with special needs—both in Hawaiʻi and his home state of Texas—drew national acclaim.

Schager made 37 starts at quarterback in his UH career, the second highest total in program history, including a record streak of 33 in a row. He picked up All-Mountain West honorable mention recognition in 2023 and closed his career ranked among the most prolific passers in program history at No. 4 in passing yards (9,096) and total offense (9,415). He’s also fifth in passing touchdowns (60) and touchdowns responsible for (68).

A three-time Academic All-Mountain West honoree, Schager was one of 11 FBS players nationally selected to the 2024 AFCA Good Works Team, which honored student-athletes for their unwavering commitment to community service and their “good works” off the field. He was also a semifinalist for the 2024 Wuerffel Award, considered college football’s premier honor for community service.

Throughout his stay in Hawaiʻi, he remained committed to organizing the Buddy Bowl, an event he founded with his sister in their hometown of Highland Park, Texas. The game gives athletes with physical and mental disabilities an opportunity to play with their peers with the support of fans, the Highland Park football team and cheerleaders. During his time in Hawaiʻi, he participated in the Unity Prom for special needs students and took part in the Night to Shine where he formed a close bond with a dear friend with special needs who he continues to call and text. He also helped develop the BraddahBall, with proceeds going to Maui relief efforts.

“He was a team captain for us and spent the last three years on our leadership committee,” UH football coach Timmy Chang said. “He has been a focal point of the program, not only on the field but off the field as well with his engagement within the community. … He is an exceptional individual and that was displayed during his time at the University of Hawaiʻi. Brayden Schager helped lay the foundation for the future of our program.”

Learn more about at HawaiiAthletics.com.



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Men’s Volleyball Sweeps Daemen in NC Opening Round – Penn State

AMHERST, N.Y. – Penn State posted its fifth-consecutive sweep with a 3-0 (25-23, 25-21, 25-22) win over Daemen in the National Collegiate Championship Opening Round on Friday night at Lumsden Gymnasium. The Nittany Lions improved to 15-15, while the Wildcats, the champions out of the NEC, exited their first NC Championship appearance with an overall […]

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AMHERST, N.Y. – Penn State posted its fifth-consecutive sweep with a 3-0 (25-23, 25-21, 25-22) win over Daemen in the National Collegiate Championship Opening Round on Friday night at Lumsden Gymnasium. The Nittany Lions improved to 15-15, while the Wildcats, the champions out of the NEC, exited their first NC Championship appearance with an overall record of 15-13.

Penn State advances to the eight-team portion of the NC Championship as the seventh seed and will play second-seeded Hawaii on Thursday at Ohio State’s Covelli Center. That will be the location for the remainder of the championship event.

Matthew Luoma paced Penn State’s attack, hitting .345 with 14 kills in addition to three aces, three digs, and one block. The Nittany Lions hit .380 behind 30 assists from Michael Schwob, who joined Luoma with three aces of his own. It was the sixth-straight match that Schwob served for exactly three aces.

Owen Rose had an efficient night in the middle with six kills on .750 hitting. Carter Dittman also hit at a high clip, totaling five kills with a .455 percentage. Will Kuhns added six kills, while Gaige Gabriel chipped in with three.

Penn State libero Ryan Merk led all players with nine digs. Dittman and Kuhns contributed five apiece.

Daemen was led by Billy Wieberg with 12 kills on .308 hitting, while Zach Schneider, nephew of Penn State men’s volleyball alum Byron Schneider, hit .316 with nine kills. The Wildcats hit .301, which was the highest allowed by the Nittany Lions in their four postseason matches this season.

Set 1
Schwob tallied 12 assists while leading Penn State to .333 hitting in a 25-23 win in the opening set. Luoma led the way with six kills, Dittman contributed three, and Rose had two on two swings. Despite the close final score, the Nittany Lions never trailed after going up 3-1 with an early 3-0 run. The teams traded points from 17-17 all the way to 21-21. Penn State then went up 23-21 with a kill by Luoma and an ace by Schwob. The Wildcats scored the next two points to knot the score at 23-all. The Nittany Lions responded with a kill by Luoma and then took the set on a Daemen attack error.

Set 2
Schwob served for two more aces and led Penn State to .381 hitting in a 25-21 win in the second set. The Nittany Lions used a 3-0 run to go up 15-10 after Kuhns sandwiched a pair of kills around an ace by Schwob. They had their largest lead of the set at 17-11 after an ace by Kuhns and again at 18-12 following a Daemen service error. The Wildcats clawed their way back to tie the score at 21-all only to watch as the Nittany Lions closed the set with a 4-0 run. Luoma started the run with a kill and added another one after a Schwob ace. The set again ended on a Daemen attack error.

Set 3
Penn State hit .435 while closing the match with a 25-22 win in the third set. Luoma led the way with four kills on .571 hitting and had two of the team’s three aces. The Nittany Lions scored the first point on a block by Kuhns and Rose, and never trailed the rest of the way. They led by as much as six at 18-12 after going on a 3-0 run. Dittman started the run with a kill, which was followed by a pair of aces from Luoma. The Wildcats got as close as one at 21-20 and again at 22-21. Following a Daemen attack error, a Luoma kill made it 24-21. Daemen stopped the first chance at match point, but Penn State followed with a kill by Rose to get the sweep.

Career Highs
Matthew Luoma – aces (3)

Up Next
Penn State’s quarterfinal matchup against Hawaii is scheduled for Thursday at 1:30 p.m. It will mark the seventh postseason match all-time between the Nittany Lions and Rainbow Warriors.



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