How to watch California Golden Bears vs. Virginia Cavaliers
Halftime Report Virginia’s defeat dropped their record down to 8-6. As for California, their loss dropped their record down to 7-7. Virginia has enjoyed the comforts of home their last five games, but now they’ll head out on the road. They and the California Golden Bears will face off in an ACC battle at 11:00 […]
Virginia’s defeat dropped their record down to 8-6. As for California, their loss dropped their record down to 7-7. Virginia has enjoyed the comforts of home their last five games, but now they’ll head out on the road. They and the California Golden Bears will face off in an ACC battle at 11:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday at Haas Pavilion. The Cavaliers’ defense has only allowed 61.5 points per game this season, so the Golden Bears’ offense will have their work cut out for them.
Who’s Playing
After a tough loss on the road their last time out, California looks much better today on their home court. A win is still up for grabs for either team after one quarter, but California is up 35-32 over Virginia.Virginia has won both of the games they’ve played against California in the last 10 years.
How To Watch
What to Know
Current Records: Virginia 8-6, California 7-7 Meanwhile, California’s recent rough patch got a bit rougher on Saturday after their third straight loss. They fell 80-68 to Clemson. That’s two games in a row now that the Golden Bears have lost by exactly 12 points. Virginia will head into Saturday’s match out to bounce back: they won a close one the last time they played, but unfortunately they suffered a serious change of fortune on Saturday. They wound up on the wrong side of a painful 70-50 walloping at the hands of Louisville. For those keeping track at home, that’s the biggest loss the Cavaliers have suffered since November 22, 2024. California entered the game with three straight defeats and they’re well on their way to making it four. Can they turn things around, or will Virginia hand them another loss? Only time will tell.California is a 4.5-point favorite against Virginia, according to the latest college basketball odds.The oddsmakers were right in line with the betting community on this one, as the game opened as a 4.5-point spread, and stayed right there. Andrej Stojakovic put forth a good effort for the losing side as he went 11 for 15 en route to 30 points. California struggled to work together and finished the game with only six assists. They were crushed by their opponents in that department as Clemson posted 18.See college basketball picks for every single game, including this one, from SportsLine’s advanced computer model. Get picks now.
Odds
Virginia didn’t have too much breathing room in their matchup against California when the teams last played back in December of 2016, but they still walked away with a 56-52 win. Will Virginia repeat their success, or does California have a better game plan this time around? We’ll find out soon enough.The over/under is 130.5 points.Virginia Cavaliers @ California Golden Bears Virginia is hoping to beat the odds on Wednesday, as the experts think they’re headed for a loss.
Series History
Despite their defeat, Virginia saw several players rise to the challenge and make noteworthy plays. Andrew Rohde, who scored 16 points plus three steals, was perhaps the best of all. The team also got some help courtesy of Isaac McKneely, who earned 13 points.
Concordia Supplants Northwestern as GPAC Volleyball Favorite
After winning the regular season and GPAC tournament titles in 2024, Northwestern College is picked to finish second in the conference in 2025 by league coaches. Concordia is the new favorite in 2025 after finishing as the runner-up a year ago in the regular season and conference tournament before advancing to the NAIA National Quarterfinals. […]
After winning the regular season and GPAC tournament titles in 2024, Northwestern College is picked to finish second in the conference in 2025 by league coaches. Concordia is the new favorite in 2025 after finishing as the runner-up a year ago in the regular season and conference tournament before advancing to the NAIA National Quarterfinals.
Northwestern was perfect in conference play last season and finished 32-1 overall after a loss in national tournament pool play kept the Raiders from advancing to the quarterfinals. Dordt tied for fifth last season with a conference mark of 8-8 but is picked seventh this year. The Defenders were 14-16 overall in 2024 which was a 10 victory improvement from 2023.
Northwestern opens the season in the Siouxland Invitational August 22-23 against Spartanburg Methodist(SC), Valley City State(ND), McPherson(KS) and Missouri Valley. Dordt begins the season out in Fullerton, California next weekend facing Benedictine(KS), Embry-Riddle(AZ), Northwest University(WA) and Life Pacific(CA).
Humana-Paredes, Wilkerson back at Montreal beach volleyball stop after Olympic silver
MONTREAL — Brandie Wilkerson and Melissa Humana-Paredes know they’re in for a warm welcome this week in Montreal — especially as Olympic medallists. MONTREAL — Brandie Wilkerson and Melissa Humana-Paredes know they’re in for a warm welcome this week in Montreal — especially as Olympic medallists. Set to compete on home soil for the first […]
MONTREAL — Brandie Wilkerson and Melissa Humana-Paredes know they’re in for a warm welcome this week in Montreal — especially as Olympic medallists.
MONTREAL — Brandie Wilkerson and Melissa Humana-Paredes know they’re in for a warm welcome this week in Montreal — especially as Olympic medallists.
Set to compete on home soil for the first time since winning silver at last summer’s Paris Games, Canada’s beach volleyball stars can already sense the excitement, whether it’s through social media or while walking down the street.
“We’ve been feeling an immense amount of support,” Wilkerson said Wednesday. “Random people are stopping us, telling us about their experience watching or their love for the game, and just sending a lot of love.
“We’re anticipating a really great Canadian crowd.”
Two years ago, Wilkerson and Humana-Paredes lit up Montreal’s Elite16 stop on the Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour, capturing the first gold medal of their months-old partnership and setting the stage for a historic 2024 season.
Now they’re back at Parc Jean-Drapeau, set to begin pool play Thursday, a little more than one full year removed from their memorable underdog run in Paris.
Under the bright lights at Eiffel Tower Stadium, the Toronto duo became the first Canadian women to reach the Olympic podium in beach volleyball.
After a disappointing 1-2 start, they won their lucky-loser match and advanced through the knockout rounds in a stunning turnaround to reach the final, falling in three sets to Brazil’s Ana Patricia Ramos and Eduarda Santos (Duda) Lisboa — also competing in Montreal this week — on Aug. 9, 2024.
Canada’s only other medal in the sport was a men’s bronze at the 1996 Games in Atlanta.
Since their historic finish in Paris, Humana-Paredes and Wilkerson have felt the expectations on them increase, but nothing compares to the standards they set for themselves.
“There is always a target on your back when you get a label like Olympic medallist, and it changes how people can perceive you,” Humana-Paredes said. “What doesn’t change is how we continue to show up and how we continue to want to improve.
“We know what we’re capable of and we know what we want to achieve … we’re also constantly never done trying to get better, no matter what results we achieve.”
The former York University volleyball teammates feel far from done despite their climb onto the Olympic podium.
They have their sights set on gold at the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles. That’s despite the fact they’ll both be in their mid-’30s — Humana-Paredes is 32, Wilkerson is 33 — and considered calling it quits years ago.
“I wasn’t sure if I would even go to Paris after Tokyo,” Humana-Paredes said. “However, I think after Paris, no matter how difficult it was, for me there was an immediate confirmation that I would absolutely want to do another Olympic run to L.A., and without a doubt with Brandie.
“I was like, ‘I hope she’s on the same page!’”
Wilkerson was, believing they’d only begun scratching the surface two years into the partnership.
“If this is what we could accomplish in two, give us another four,” she said. “I’m very excited about what’s coming up next.”
On the sand, their skill sets are a great fit. The athletic, five-foot-11 Wilkerson is a premier blocker in beach volleyball, while the five-foot-nine Humana-Paredes — a former FIVB defender of the year — covers the backcourt.
They’ve competed in four events this season, finishing in the top five three times under new head coach Ricardo de Freitas, who replaced Marcio Sicoli.
In the lead-up to Paris, the relatively new partners focused on setting a foundation with consistent passing, setting and serving, without much time to evolve beyond that.
With three years until the next Olympics, Humana-Paredes believes the areas they can grow are endless. They’re learning new offensive sets, working on situational play calls and exploring different ways to utilize their serves as a weapon.
“We now have time to experiment with and evolve and make more consistent,” Humana-Paredes said. “We’ve both been to two Olympics, so to have that feeling at this point in our careers, like, ‘Oh, we’re just tapping the surface and we can really build on our foundations,’ feels really exciting.”
A podium finish this season still escapes them, but perhaps they’ll have some more magic in store in Montreal.
“We had an amazing time the first go around. We were so impressed with the energy from the fans,” Wilkerson said. “To come back now, post-Olympics and just feeling even more ready, I think even more volleyball fans than before, I’m very much looking forward to seeing how it all comes together.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 13, 2025.
Newport water polo star Maddie Musselman Woepse honors late husband with pier swim
Pat Woepse developed a dependable morning swim with a couple of friends during the coronavirus pandemic. The group would go from 34th Street on the Balboa Peninsula to the Newport Pier and back. More than 150 people took those strokes Saturday morning, a show of support for Woepse’s family, his widow and NUT Carcinoma research. […]
Pat Woepse developed a dependable morning swim with a couple of friends during the coronavirus pandemic.
The group would go from 34th Street on the Balboa Peninsula to the Newport Pier and back.
More than 150 people took those strokes Saturday morning, a show of support for Woepse’s family, his widow and NUT Carcinoma research.
The Patrick Woepse Foundation, created to honor Woepse’s life and legacy, hosted the first PWF Swim. People from the water polo community and beyond participated.
Swimmers paddle along the route during Saturday’s Patrick Woepse Foundation swim off the coast of Newport Becah.
(Courtesy of Jeff Musselman)
Woepse is a former Mater Dei High and UCLA men’s water polo standout who died last October at the age of 31 after developing the rare cancer.
His widow Maddie Musselman Woepse, a former Corona del Mar High and UCLA star who is a three-time Olympian and two-time gold medalist, called the turnout for Saturday’s event great.
She couldn’t participate in the swim as she recovers from a pair of hip surgeries, but she offered support to everyone in the water as well as a large group of walkers.
Maddie Musselman Woepse, center, poses with U.S. women’s national water polo team coach Adam Krikorian, left, and UCLA women’s water polo coach Adam Wright at Saturday’s event.
(Courtesy of Jeff Musselman)
“When I started the foundation, I was like, this has to be the swim,” said Musselman Woepse, 27, who is gearing up to start physician assistant school at Marshall B. Ketchum University in Fullerton next week. “It holds a lot of meaning for Pat and all of his friends. For our foundation’s event, it’s like the perfect swim. It’s not too long, where people don’t want to do it, but it’s not short where Pat would be like, ‘What’s the point of swimming it if it’s not hard?’”
Pat Woepse’s mantra was “We can do hard things.” Several members of his family participated in the event, including his father, Greg, who kicked off the swim.
The Patrick Woepse Foundation was founded to honor the late Pat Woespe, whose favorite saying was “We can do hard things.”
(Courtesy of Jeff Musselman)
CdM boys’ water polo coach Lucas Reynolds, who played two years with Pat Woepse at UCLA, brought nearly 40 of his current Sea Kings players to participate in the swim.
“I beat a couple of my kids, so I’m pretty happy about that,” Reynolds said with a laugh. “It was a fun event, and it was nice to see so many people come and support Pat … I just think it was awesome, something that Pat would appreciate for sure. He loved the idea of people getting together.”
Though the swim was not technically a competition, Olympians Ryder Dodd and Rachel Fattal were the fastest to finish among the men’s and women’s competitors, respectively.
Maddie Musselman Woespe, right, poses with friends and family including Pat Woepse’s best friend and UCLA teammate Dr. Danny McClintick, second from right, his wife and former CdM and UCLA women’s soccer star Annie Alvarado, center, and their son, Lennon Patrick McClintick. Also pictured is Pat Woepse’s mom Sherry and nephew Jones.
(Courtesy of Jeff Musselman)
Musselman Woepse called it a weekend of celebration. Sunday would have been Pat’s 32nd birthday, and a family dinner that night marked the occasion.
She said many who didn’t even know her late husband came up to talk to her about him at the swim.
“That was so awesome, and makes me feel like what I’m doing with the foundation is so worth it,” she said. “Making a difference, even in the smallest way … I’m hopeful that this will be a yearly swim that people can get excited for and just build on, as we have different events in the future.”
Women’s water polo standouts who participated in Saturday’s swim included Emma Skelly, Kodi Hill Roberts, Erica Beebe, Rachel Fattal and Kaleigh Gilchrist, left to right.
Tennessee Tech moving to Southern Conference in 2026
Aug 13, 2025, 05:03 PM ET COOKEVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee Tech is switching to the Southern Conference on July 1, 2026, and leaving the Ohio Valley Conference, where the Golden Eagles had been members since 1949. “This historic move changes the trajectory of our athletic aspirations and makes a statement to our campus and our […]
COOKEVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee Tech is switching to the Southern Conference on July 1, 2026, and leaving the Ohio Valley Conference, where the Golden Eagles had been members since 1949.
“This historic move changes the trajectory of our athletic aspirations and makes a statement to our campus and our community that Tech sports will be a part of a vibrant conference with new geographic rivalries,” athletic director Casey Fox said Wednesday in a statement.
That will make the Southern Conference an 11-team league when Tennessee Tech joins East Tennessee State, Chattanooga, The Citadel, Furman, Mercer, North Carolina-Greensboro, Samford, Virginia Military Institute, Western Carolina and Wofford.
Tennessee Tech will have 14 of its 15 sports competing in the Southern Conference. Beach volleyball is not a conference sport.
The Golden Eagles are the preseason pick to win the Ohio Valley Conference-Big South title after going 7-5 overall and 6-2 in conference play last season. Tennessee Tech is ranked No. 22 in the Football Championship Series’ Top 25.
“Tech proves that winning and academic achievement go hand-in-hand — the Southern Conference standard,” Southern Conference Commissioner Michael Cross said.
OVC commissioner Beth DeBauche said the league has adapted to college athletics’ ever-changing landscape for 80 years.
“Our collective institutions and athletic programs remain committed to the conference, to one another and to our football association, and we will continue to aggressively pursue additional membership,” she said in a statement.
CC To Celebrate 50th Anniversary of Women’s Sports
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Join the Colorado College Athletic Department during the 2025-26 season to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Women’s Sports at CC. Kicking things off with be a signature event during homecoming weekend (Oct. 3-5).
50th Anniversary Celebration of Women in Athletics
Saturday, October 4 | 3:30–5:00 p.m.
Packard Hall and […]
Join the Colorado College Athletic Department during the 2025-26 season to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Women’s Sports at CC.
Kicking things off with be a signature event during homecoming weekend (Oct. 3-5).
50th Anniversary Celebration of Women in Athletics
Saturday, October 4 | 3:30–5:00 p.m.
Packard Hall and Courtyard
This commemorative event will feature a dynamic panel of accomplished CC alumnae sharing stories of how their athletic experience at Colorado College shaped their personal and professional journeys. It’s a chance to reconnect, reflect, and recognize the trailblazing spirit of CC women athletes and leaders — past and present.
Whether you competed, coached, cheered, or supported — you are part of this legacy.
We can’t wait to welcome you back to campus to celebrate this milestone together.
Light appetizers and refreshments will be provided.
Alumni Match Gives Husker Volleyball Unique Tune-Up
The kernel of an idea formed in a spring informal brainstorm. Nebraska’s volleyball coaches, including their new head coach, were kicking around notions of how to make the Huskers’ fall practice sessions go by without dragging. Preseason No. 1 Nebraska was marked to open the season at the AVCA First Serve Showcase, three weeks after […]
The kernel of an idea formed in a spring informal brainstorm. Nebraska’s volleyball coaches, including their new head coach, were kicking around notions of how to make the Huskers’ fall practice sessions go by without dragging.
Preseason No. 1 Nebraska was marked to open the season at the AVCA First Serve Showcase, three weeks after starting fall workouts on July 31. That was three weekends to fill.
One would be taken up by the team’s annual Red-White Scrimmage, traditionally held the week before the season opener. But NU coaches felt the team needed more to break up the monotony of fall camp, even with the increased amount of practice scrimmaging Dani Busboom Kelly favors over her predecessor, John Cook.
In search of new blood to test a team with eight newcomers, Nebraska turned to, well…old bloods.
Hey, no bad ideas in a brainstorm, right?
“It was just a real short idea where we started asking around alumni who were still playing, and there was a lot of interest,” said NU assistant Kelly (Hunter) Natter.
Once both Nebraska assistant coaches, Kelly (Hunter) Natter, left, and Jordan Larson, will be teammates on Nebraska’s alumni team on Saturday / Amarillo Mullen
The whole thing may not have come off if not for Natter, who will have a foot in both worlds Saturday during the 6 p.m. CDT exhibition at the Devaney Center. Having finished her college playing career in 2017, Natter’s not exactly being brought out of mothballs to be the alumni team’s starting setter.
But being connected to multiple generations of Husker players – those who played with her, as well as those who came both before and after her – made Natter the nexus of Nebraska’s alumni outreach. The MVP? Her cell phone, and she put it to work calling and emailing former teammates like Kenzie Maloney Hoppes and Annika Albrecht Moulder, as well as former NU assistant Jordan Larson, a four-time Olympian who will play another professional season in 2026 with LOVB Nebraska.
Nebraska eventually got enough commitments from alumni players to bring the idea to fruition, which came as a bit of a shock to the current Huskers.
Call it a living history lesson for players like junior outside hitter Harper Murray. Evidence they’ve been smashing volleyballs and hanging banners around here for a long time.
“I was a little confused. I had heard comments made about it during our beach season, but I just didn’t think it was actually going to become a thing,” Murray said.
“Honestly, I barely know some of the people who are going to be playing with Kelly. It’ll be exciting, but it’s also going to be interesting. It’ll be the first time we have a true lineup out there and not mixing around as much.”
Nebraska outside hitter Harper Murray confers with Head Coach Dani Busboom Kelly after a call during the Red-White Scrimmage on Aug. 9, 2025. / Kenny Larabee, KLIN
Busboom Kelly didn’t need to be sold too hard on the idea. She had floated doing an alumni scrimmage at Louisville. And though many of the faces will be familiar to the coach, who played with or coached many of the alumni team’s members as a Nebraska assistant from 2012-16, Saturday’s exhibition allows her to run things like a match against a true opponent.
And the Huskers have a doozy of an opener Friday, Aug. 22, against No. 3 Pittsburgh at Pinnacle Bank Arena.
“We’ll look at some potential lineups and be able to make changes within those lineups that we’d potentially make the following weekend,” Busboom Kelly said. “You can just learn a lot more. It’s an exhibition against another team that a lot of programs do this time of year. This is our version of that, except it’s against alumni, which makes it more fun for our fans.”
Dani Busboom Kelly speaks to the media. / Amarillo Mullen
Fun for the participants, too. Murray said she recalled watching Maloney, a two-year starting libero who finished her college career in 2018, when Murray was in eighth grade and first beginning to dream of playing in college.
And Natter said she grew up idolizing Gina (Mancuso) Prososki, one of the alumni team’s outside hitters who shares Natter’s hometown of Papillion, Neb. Prososki played for the Huskers from 2009-12.
Other alumni players include outside hitters Ally Batenhorst and Lindsay Krause, and middle blockers Leyla Blackwell and Callie Schwarzenbach. The team will be coached by former Husker and current Omaha Skutt coach Renee Saunders.
But once the Huskers clear any stars from their eyes, it figures to be helpful business. While the Red-White Scrimmage allows coaches to evaluate individual players, the splitting of teams into two rosters means some players had to play roles they normally wouldn’t during the regular season.
The Alumni Match will be formatted like a regular best-three-out-of-five match, finally allowing the current Huskers to get reps against an opponent before facing another 2024 Final Four participant less than a week later.
“The depth is pretty amazing. Our practices are really tough. That’s just going to make us stronger in the end,” Busboom Kelly said. “That’s why I’m very excited to play against somebody else, even if it’s alumni this weekend, to really see how our eight players can perform together – seven or eight – without playing against each other. It’s very hard to tell how good we are, how good one individual is, because the line is so thin between our top outside and maybe our fourth outside. It’s razor thin.”
dark. Next. Nebraska Volleyball Season Central. Nebraska Volleyball Season Central
Saturday will be a chance to soak in a little Husker history, but provide maybe a more meaningful look at what matches could look like in the near future.
“You want to scrimmage because you want to see what lineups go well, who passes next to each other well, who can block together,” Murray said. “I think it’s smart on Dani’s part to have us play as much as we do just because we get to see and feel out our lineups and feel who we play next to.”
Trash talk? Or respect your elders?
With 17 players – one of the biggest rosters in program history – most of whom were star-studded recruits, there’s no shortage of bravado in Nebraska’s practices.
But will that show its head on Saturday, or will the current Huskers have more of a “Respect thy elders” approach?
Natter’s ready for a stream of chatter when she’s on the opposing side of the net from her current charges.
“Being in the gym with these guys, they’re so competitive. They’re always talking smack to each other, and they’ll make little comments to me sometimes,” Natter said. “It’s really playful and really fun right from the start. I think it’ll be more joking competitiveness than serious, but I’m sure there will be some of those serious moments too.”
With a number of alumni players no longer playing regularly, some well past the end of their playing careers, Busboom Kelly said she’s heard a few of the alumni players might be hoping for a quick evening.
“I know there are some that are hoping it stays at three (sets), but I’m secretly hoping for a four-setter,” Busboom Kelly said. “We won’t be playing extra if it’s a sweep one way or the other.”
The alumni group hasn’t officially practiced, Natter said. But will be getting together to go over rotations on Saturday afternoon. Look for the alumni team to wear t-shirts instead of playing jerseys.
Setting a work in progress
Busboom Kelly said that after evaluating the Red-White Scrimmage, Nebraska’s setters Bergen Reilly and Campbell Flynn “have a lot of work to do” when it comes to location and tempo of sets to the pins, especially back sets to the right side of the court.
But, that’s nothing she didn’t expect two weeks into fall practice. Normally, the team would have another week of practice to refine those things before showing them to the public in the intrasquad scrimmage.
Nebraska setter Bergen Reilly during the Red-White Scrimmage on Aug. 9, 2025 / Kenny Larabee, KLIN
NU’s coach hasn’t been stingy with praise for her setting duo this fall, saying she thinks they’re the best unit in the country. They’re doing well at the things Busboom Kelly would hope at this point in the preseason – blocking, defense, and decision making. Consistency on the ball placement will come with more repetitions in the gym.
“They’re playing confident,” Busboom Kelly said. We already talked about their well-rounded games. Campbell has improved a ton from a defensive standpoint. A lot of those things you can’t really work on every day to get better at, we’re great. It’s the location and some of the tempo that we’ll continue to work on that’ll continue to get better and better the more we play and settle into a lineup.”
Quick sideouts
Busboom Kelly said Wednesday that while Nebraska doesn’t chart every serve in practice, libero Laney Choboy and freshman opposite hitter Virginia Adriano have stood out as servers in workouts. Adriano fired back-to-back aces in last weekend’s Red-White Scrimmage.
“We want to be one of the best serving and passing teams in the country,” she said. “Nebraska always is, and this team is no different. We want to continue to fine-tune that. That’s a pretty big priority going into the First Serve Showcase.”
Murray said the team celebrated senior middle blocker Rebekah Allick being named the team’s “Lifter of the Year” at the Red-White Scrimmage because of her dedication.
Nebraska middle blocker Rebekah Allick (right) poses with Director of Olympic Sports Performance Brian Kmitta after being named the team’s 2025 Lifter of the Year. / Kenny Larabee, KLIN
“She’s put in a lot of work, and I know she’s expressed how committed she is this year to putting in so much work and love into her senior year because this is her last year here and she’s from here,” Murray said. “She takes the culture and the family feel of Nebraska volleyball very seriously because she grew up watching it.”
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