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Counting out Bill Belichick, even after his disastrous debut, wouldn’t be wise

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CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — North Carolina will not be the 33rd NFL team this year. The Tar Heels probably won’t be the 33rd college football team, either.

This was made painfully obvious by Texas Christian, which reminded everyone Monday night that its football team has won a lot of games over the years and even played for the national championship three seasons ago.

That program was always going to destroy one slapped together on the fly, with 70 new players — 70 — jumping at the chance to play for an all-time great. Bill Belichick brought them in at a dizzying pace, all while selling the notion that his life in the NFL made him a good fit for the pay-for-play era of college football free agency.

Belichick actually had no idea what big-time college football was all about, and TCU’s Sonny Dykes and his Horned Frogs were happy to prove it. This 48-14 smackdown was beyond humiliating. It was soul-crushing for the North Carolina alums and fans who hadn’t seen an ACC football title since Lawrence Taylor’s days, and who showed up at Kenan Stadium looking for some Dean Dome magic in an unfamiliar place.

They showed up looking for a Division I version of the Tom Brady Patriots, and got a very poor man’s version of the Mac Jones and Bailey Zappe Patriots instead. No Belichick team had ever surrendered as many as 48 points.

The Tar Heels couldn’t stop quarterback Josh Hoover or receiver Jordan Dwyer or running back Kevorian Barnes, and they couldn’t protect the ball. The home team had no chemistry and no clue. Its game plan turned out to be as empty as the UNC depth chart distributed in the press box before the game.

“Obviously,” Belichick said afterward, “we have a lot of work to do.”

He seemed humbled by the mess his team made. Standing at a podium in his gray hoodie, with an arrangement of blue and white balloons and silver stars behind him, Belichick described the atmosphere as great and the fans as awesome.

But in the end, the paying customers and North Carolina dignitaries got what they always got from their football coaches — a raw deal on their investment. Fans started leaving with more than 23 minutes left on the clock and TCU holding a 34-7 lead.

Belichick had to be embarrassed by this standalone prime-time flop. His debut made Arch Manning’s look like the Mona Lisa.

While his players charged out of the tunnel to fireworks before the game, the 73-year-old Belichick walked slowly toward the field as he was surrounded by state troopers. He spent the rest of the night looking like an out-of-towner who had been pulled over for speeding.

Even when the Tar Heels opened the game with a fast break that made a proud man of the signature VIP in attendance, Michael Jordan, Belichick was just as stone-faced as he was in the NFL. Perhaps he knew that 83-yard touchdown drive wasn’t going to rattle a program as rock solid as TCU’s.

Perhaps he knew that the absence of preseason games at this level, and the inability to treat September as an extension of the preseason, would catch up to his raw Tar Heels in a big way.

But it wouldn’t be prudent to view this performance as hard evidence that the world’s oldest freshman is destined to fail in college after coaching 49 consecutive seasons in the pros. Belichick did lose 13 of his first 18 games in New England before leading the Patriots to nine Super Bowl appearances and six titles.

Just like any other freshman, he needs time to figure this thing out.

Time to show Robert Kraft and every other NFL owner who didn’t want him that they made a huge mistake by relegating him to the ACC after he went 4-13 in his final Patriots season.

Worst-case scenario

From here to eternity, the record will show that Mister “Do Your Job” didn’t do his on a day when the rest of America had off. At the end of a wild holiday weekend in college football, nobody had any idea what to expect from North Carolina and a coach whose legendary career surpasses that of Dean Smith.

It turned out to be the worst-case scenario times two.

Belichick took this job with the expectation of making North Carolina an extension of the NFL, team No. 33. And if he failed in that pursuit, he at least figured to solve one of the great longstanding mysteries of the college sports universe.

Given its campus, academic standing, branding power, alumni support and proximity to fertile recruiting grounds, why hasn’t North Carolina football ever approached the success of North Carolina basketball?

Belichick signed those 70 new players and politely asked a bunch of holdovers to leave, and the whole thing would have made a lot of noise even without the omnipresence of his 24-year-old girlfriend, Jordon Hudson, who would put in a trademark application for the term “Gold Digger.”

Belichick no longer rages against distractions. He invites them to lunch and asks them to stay for dinner.

But the man is in love, and if Hudson can help him bridge the divide between a Baby Boomer born during the Korean War and football players in her Gen Z demo, more power to her.

Except there was no apparent connection between Belichick and his players Monday night. His transfer-portal class was ranked among the nation’s top 10 by 247Sports, and yet the Tar Heels were deficient in every aspect of the game. Belichick spoke of how he looked forward to developing college players because “there are fewer bad habits to break,” and yet nothing but bad habits were served up to a national TV audience. His starting quarterback, Gio Lopez, went more than two hours without completing a pass.

“We’ll just keep working and keep grinding away,” Belichick said.

Yes, he will keep working toward the college career he’s long envisioned. His father, Steve, a lifer assistant and scout, raised him on football at the Naval Academy, where Bill grew up around his Heisman Trophy-winning heroes Joe Bellino and Roger Staubach. Steve said his boy was memorizing Navy’s plays by age 6 and breaking down film with precision by the fourth grade. Young Bill loved the community feel and the pageantry of the college game.

All these years later, Grownup Bill seemed to be having a blast reliving his childhood around student-athletes while employing his sons on staff, keeping them close like his dad had kept him close in Annapolis.

And then his Tar Heels ran smack into a defiant and disrespected TCU team. Suddenly, it felt like the end of something rather than the start of anything.

You could almost hear people out there scrambling to find Belichick’s career record without Brady as his quarterback.

This is why the same Falcons team he beat in a Super Bowl wouldn’t hire him. … This is why the same Jets team he tormented for so long wouldn’t even take a meeting with him.

It would be a bad idea to go down that road. Just like in 2000, his first year in Foxborough, Belichick needs a little time … and maybe a more potent quarterback. North Carolina still has only one ranked team on its schedule (Clemson) and a reasonable path to a winning season, which would buy Belichick some breathing room for a major jump in Year 2.

That reality seemed a million miles away on opening night, which was an unmitigated disaster for the world-famous coach. But Belichick did promise that his first college team would get better. It would be a wise choice to listen to him.

(Photo: Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images)





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LSU Beach Volleyball Announces the Addition of Two Transfers – LSU

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BATON ROUGE – LSU Beach Volleyball coach Russell Brock has announced the addition of two transfers – Emily Hellmuth and Zayna Meyer – who will join the Tigers for the upcoming season.

Hellmuth and Meyer come to LSU as grad transfers. The Tigers return 11 players from last year’s team. These two transfers join LSU in addition to six freshmen.

“Really excited about our two additions for this spring,” Brock said. “They are both athletic players with good size and great skills and are excited about the transition to beach. Both, are decorated indoor players who have been seasoned leaders for their teams. Their work ethic, positive attitudes and excitement will be fantastic additions to our culture and our team this year. Couldn’t be more excited to add them to our family.”

Hellmuth comes to LSU after a great four-year career playing indoor volleyball at Pepperdine and Texas A&M University. During her time playing indoor, she was a lethal outside hitter with over 1,000 career kills. Three of her four seasons she recorded at least 300 kills and during a match in her final season, she recorded a career high .667 hitting percentage.  As a senior last year, Hellmuth helped lead the Aggies to the NCAA National Championship Title with 72 digs, 45 blocks, 12 aces and eight assists.

“Emily has been tested as a passer and has great skills as a blocker and hitter. Her offensive ability will transition really well to the sand. She’s faced the biggest challenges under the brightest lights and has excelled in those moments.”

Meyer is coming to LSU following a four-year career playing indoor volleyball in which she finished her final season at UCLA with a total of 187 assists, 62 digs and 11 blocks. During the 2023 season, Meyer was named Big West Setter of the Year while playing indoor at Long Beach State and averaged 10 assists per set.

“Zayna is quick and springy. As one of the elite offensive setters in the country, she brings excellent control of the ball both as a setter and a hitter. Her ability to play above the net will also be a great asset defensively.”





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Volleyball Adds Wisconsin Transfer Trinity Shadd-Ceres

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OMAHA, Neb. — Wisconsin outside hitter Trinity Shadd-Ceres has signed to join the Creighton Volleyball program later this month. Shadd-Ceres is Creighton’s third high-profile transfer this winter, joining Ayden Ames (Texas) and Katie Dalton (Kansas).

“Everyone we have talked to about Trinity says she is the best teammate and hardest worker, so she is going to fit right in here at Creighton,” said Creighton head coach Brian Rosen. “She may also be the best overall athlete in any sport to come through! Trinity is so explosive off the floor, has a great arm, and ability to play six rotations. With experience in the Final Four this season, she can handle the big moments. With Angie’s training, there is no limit to her potential and we are all so excited to get her in the gym this spring!”

Shadd-Ceres played in nine matches for Wisconsin’s Final Four team in 2025, finishing the season with 12 kills, six digs, four assists and two blocks. Eight of her 12 kills came during the NCAA Tournament, including four kills in the First Round vs. Eastern Illinois on Dec. 4th and three more in a Regional Final win at Texas on Dec. 14th.

That came after Shadd-Ceres played in four matches as a freshman in 2024, starting two. She finished her rookie campaign with 10 kills, seven digs and three blocks in four matches played. Among her teammates in 2024 was current Bluejay defensive specialist Saige Damrow.

The 5-foot-11 native of Ontario, Canada, was named the Senior Female Volleyball Athlete of the Year in 2023 and a member of Team Canada’s U19 Women’s National Team. She was also a track standout before enrolling at Wisconsin, as she was named Junior Female Track & Field Athlete of the Year in 2022 and Senior Female Athlete of the Year in 2023. She also partcipated in Canada’s Olympic Trials in the Long Jump in 2024.

Creighton finished the 2025 season with a 28-6 record, appearing in its 14th straight NCAA Tournament, winning its 12th consecutive BIG EAST regular-season title, earning sixth BIG EAST Tournament title in a row and reaching its second straight Elite Eight.



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What Is LOVB? Everything to Know About League One Volleyball

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League One Volleyball is serving up a new season. 

While League One Volleyball (a.k.a. LOVB, pronounced “love”) may still be new to the mainstream sports conversation, its 2025 debut was more than enough to cement it as one of the fastest-growing women’s leagues in the game.

And that momentum isn’t slowing. Before its sophomore season tips off Jan. 7, LOVB has already expanded, with the league adding three new teams of top-tier athletes to join in 2027. 

So what’s next in the meantime? USA Insider has everything you need to know about LOVB ahead of the 2026 season.

Now, channel your inner Jordan Thompson and dive in. 

WHAT ARE THE LOVB TEAMS

LOVB currently has six franchises located out of Atlanta, Austin, Houston, Madison, Nebraska and Salt Lake City. 

Each team bears a sleek, abstract logo representing its homebase—paired with a unique shade from the league’s signature bright color palette. 

WHO ARE LOVB’S A-LIST SUPPORTERS

LOVB has found champions across the sports world and beyond, including investors such as Olympian Lindsey Vonn, WNBA alum Candace Parker, Houston Rockets star Kevin Durant, Amy Schumer (who played high school volleyball) and Chelsea Handler, to name a few. 

And, not to mention, supporters who are already in, well, love with LOVB.

“The momentum in women’s volleyball is unreal, and we’re fired up about what’s coming next,” Reddit co-founder and entrepreneur Alexis Ohanian shared on X, after his firm announced it will lead the ownership of LOVB’s upcoming Los Angeles franchise. “Get ready, LA. Your new favorite team has officially landed.”

DOES LOVB HAVE OLYMPIC ATHLETES 

Nineteen, representing 35 Olympic appearances, in fact.

Among them, gold medalist Xiangyu Gong (LOVB Madison) and two-time Olympians Ana Carolina da Silva and Anne Buijs (LOVB Nebraska). 

WHAT NEW LOVB TEAMS HAVE BEEN ANNOUNCED

Starting in 2027, LOVB will expand from six to nine teams, adding Los Angeles, San Francisco and Minnesota to the roster.

“Being part of the founding of LOVB has been one of the great honors of my career, and helping launch LOVB San Francisco feels like the next chapter in that same purpose-driven journey,” three-time Olympic medalist Kelsey Cook said in a statement shared by the league. “We built LOVB to reshape what’s possible for volleyball players in this country, and bringing a pro team to one of the sport’s strongest and most passionate communities is a dream come true.”

WHEN DOES LOVB’S NEW SEASON BEGIN

LOVB’s second season begins Jan. 7, 2026, with 2025 champions LOVB Austin hosting LOVB Nebraska for the league’s First Serve. 

HOW TO WATCH LOVB

To witness the excitement in person, fans can secure their tickets on LOVB’s website. 

For those wanting to watch at home, the league’s Match of the Week will air on Wednesday nights at 8 p.m. ET, exclusively on USA Network (including the 2026 LOVB Championship Match). 

All six teams play every week, with one weekday head-to-head match and one weekend three-match series.



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Volleyball Welcomes Four – Vanderbilt University Athletics – Official Athletics Website

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Vanderbilt volleyball will welcome four transfer student-athletes to its roster this spring, the program announced Friday.

“Bringing this transfer class to Nashville will be a defining moment in our young program’s history,” head coach Anders Nelson said. “All four student-athletes will raise the level of athleticism in our gym immediately, but more importantly to us, they’re competitive, driven and academically gifted. We cannot wait to integrate them into our program and get to work on realizing Team 2’s potential.”

Carly Hendrickson, a 6-foot-2 outside from Cincinnati, Ohio, will join the Commodores as a graduate transfer from UCLA. In 2025, Hendrickson appeared in 29 matches and 101 sets, recording 25 service aces. This season, she registered nine kills and six blocks vs. Oral Roberts, hitting at a .412 clip. She recorded a career-high10 kills vs. Texas State. To end the season, she served up a pair of aces in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Hendrickson will return to the SEC in 2026 after beginning her collegiate career at Florida.

Molly Kate “MK” Patten, a 6-foot-5 opposite, comes to Nashville after spending two seasons at Georgia. The Alpharetta, Georgia, native played in 96 sets as a sophomore, recording 228 kills, ranked second on the team, with a .254 hitting efficiency in 2025. At the net, she posted 90 total blocks, recording seven matches with five or more blocks. As a freshman, Patten missed all of nonconference play due to an injury but saw the court in 13 matches. That season, she totaled 71 kills and 48 blocks.

Avery Scoggins, a 6-foot setter from New Bern, North Carolina, played two seasons at Arizona before transferring to Vanderbilt. During her freshman campaign, she tallied 1,184 assists and 289 digs, both stats ranking top 5 in Arizona freshman history. Scoggins was named the 2024 AVCA Pacific Region Freshman of the Year and to the All-Big 12 Second Team and Big 12 All-Rookie Team. In 2025, she led the Wildcats with 1,190 assists and ranked second on the team with 314 digs.

Hailing from Austin, Samantha Wunsch is a graduate transfer from Texas State where she garnered AVCA All-Southwest Region honors in 2024 and three All-Sun Belt Conference nods. In 2025, the 6-foot-3 opposite recorded 336 kills while hitting .205, 263 digs and 86 blocks. She led Texas State in kills during back-to-back seasons in 2024 and 2025. She was named the SBC Offensive Player of the Week on four occasions, Texas State Invitational MVP in 2023 and has earned spots on two all-tournament teams.

Fans can follow Vanderbilt volleyball on Facebook, Instagram and X at @VandyVolleyball.





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Booth signs with Italian Serie A1 League

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MADISON, Wis. – After an illustrious collegiate career, middle blocker Carter Booth has signed with the Unione Yamamay Busto Arisizio of the Italian Serie A1 League to begin her professional tenure. 

For the second-straight season, the Wisconsin volleyball team will send an athlete overseas to Italy to play in the Serie A1 League, as Booth will join former UW standout Sarah Franklin, who is a member of Savino del Bene Scandicci. 

Booth emerged as one of the most dominant middle blockers in the country over the past few seasons, earning First Team All-Big Ten and AVCA Third Team All-American honors in 2025. The graduate posted a career-high 21 kills against No. 1 Kentucky in the NCAA National Semifinals to cap off her time as a Badger—finishing the year with the highest hitting percentage in a single season in school history at .466. Booth placed second in the nation with that mark as well. 

The Denver, Colorado, native caught fire down the stretch for UW—guiding the program to their seventh NCAA National Semifinal appearance in school history. 

In the NCAA Tournament, Booth recorded an impressive .579 (61 – 6 – 90) swing percentage in five matches to conclude her tenure in Madison—finishing three of those tournament battles with zero attack errors. 

The two-time AVCA All-American was a standout on the defensive end, too—shattering the school record for most blocks in a single season back in 2023 with 186. Booth led the team in the category in all three of her seasons in Madison.



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Making The Climb: 2025 Akron Athletics Fall Academic Success

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AKRON, Ohio – Student-athletes at the University of Akron combined to achieve a department-wide grade point average of 3.217 in the fall 2025 semester.

Collectively, Akron student-athletes own a cumulative departmental GPA of 3.27, with more than 69 percent of Zips maintaining an individual cumulative GPA of 3.00 or better at Akron.

 

The Zips registered 32 Academic All-Mid-American Conference selections across its five MAC-sponsored teams for the 2025 fall campaign.

 

For the fall semester of 2025, 14 of 16 Akron athletics teams achieved a semester grade point average of 3.00 or higher, led by women’s soccer earning a 3.72 team GPA for the semester. Additionally, swimming and diving (3.675), softball (3.609), rifle (3.59), lacrosse (3.563), women’s cross country (3.518), golf (3.472), baseball (3.30), women’s basketball (3.263), women’s track and field (3.241), men’s soccer (3.184), men’s cross country (3.178), volleyball (3.126) and men’s track and field (3.07) each surpassed the 3.00 team GPA threshold.

 

The excellence of the Zips in their academic studies was on display as nearly 73 percent of Akron’s student-athletes, 316 of 434, earned an individual GPA for the term of 3.0 or better, while more than 46 percent garnered a GPA of 3.50 or higher.

 

Fifty-three of the Zips’ student-athletes garnered a perfect 4.0 GPA for the fall semester, including lacrosse (7), women’s soccer (7), men’s soccer (6), swimming and diving (6), softball (5), women’s basketball (4), men’s track and field (4), women’s track and field (4), baseball (2), women’s cross country (2), football (2), rifle (2) and volleyball (2).

 

Football paced the combined list with 44 Zips earning between a 3.0-3.99 for the fall semester. They were followed by swimming and diving (32), baseball (26), lacrosse (24), women’s track and field (22), women’s soccer (19), softball (16), men’s track and field (16), men’s soccer (14), volleyball (10), men’s basketball (9), rifle (9), women’s basketball (7), golf (7) women’s cross country (5) and men’s cross country (3).

 

Sixteen Zips earned their degrees from the University of Akron following the fall 2025 semester.

 



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