Sports
Homecoming: Trip to Hawaii Marks Return Home for Portland Volleyball
HONOLULU, Hawaii – It was Ice Cream Day for Portland Pilots Volleyball. A trip to Salt & Straw was in order, a chance for the Pilots to bond over Chocolate Gooey Brownie and Freckled Mint Chocolate Chip.
Post-delicious frozen treats, the team was called in by head coach Megan Burton and the rest of the staff to discuss the schedule. It was the standard fare as far as nonconference goes – trips to Idaho and Wyoming, a home tournament in Portland (that was a first since 2022), a matchup against Oregon, the usual suspects on the schedule.
And then, the big reveal; the Pilots were headed to Hawaii to play the Hawaii Rainbow Wahine for the first time in seven years.
“Everyone just started cheering and jumping around,” Portland middle blocker Taina Kaauwai said. “I thought it was a joke at first, but then she (Burton) was like, ‘No, we’re actually going to Hawaii.’ I was just surprised, shocked, happy.”
The Pilots take on the Rainbow Wahine in a pair of matches on Thursday and Friday, both at 10 p.m. Pacific time down in Manoa. The trek is different than just another set of road matches – it’s a homecoming for the wide variety of players and coaches from the Aloha State.
Portland’s Hawaiian contingent is strong. Four players on this year’s team hail from Hawaii, as well Burton, associate head coach Dylan Hamilton and assistant coach Kili Robins. Numerous players have come from the state to supplement Portland volleyball over the years.
The Hawaiian connection is in a lot of ways an intentional choice. Burton, coming from Honolulu herself, has numerous connections to volleyball throughout the state, giving her a pipeline to various players from Hawaii. The culture that creates is in many ways a reflection of the roster construction
“It’s ingrained in who I am, right? The culture of who I am as a person is because I was raised in Hawaii,” Burton said. “The values of family, community, respect, hard work and Aloha, all those things are represented in the culture that I have with my team here in Portland. And so, what better way to create the culture that I want than to get players that I know grew up in a similar culture?”
It creates a shared language that permeates throughout the team, helping build a culture that’s strong in the face of adversity. It makes The Bluff an appealing place to play, but also a comfortable place for student-athletes from Hawaii. For Kaauwai, who earned preseason All-WCC honors this season and hails from Hilo, that’s exactly what drew her to Portland in the first place.
“With a bunch of the Hawaii influence, I really felt like this is my home away from home,” Kaauwai said. “Having the mutual respect and understanding of the culture, and even for the girls who aren’t from Hawaii, they also have that respect… it made me feel like I belonged here.”

The scheduling of the matches themselves was borne out of a desire for Burton to always return home, and to give the players that same opportunity. With her strong relationship to the Wahine staff, the process to get Hawaii on the schedule began.
“I’ve always wanted to take my local players back home to Hawaii to play,” Burton said. “It is such a special experience for any individual to be able to go home and play in front of family and friends, and considering we have a lot of local players, and we’ve had a lot of local players in the past, it was just important to me to be able to do my best to try and get this match to happen.”
Burton and the staff got it done. The players were shocked by the news. Maui Robins, Portland’s other All-WCC Preseason team selection and a Kalihi native with her sister and assistant coach, Kili, was shocked when the news dropped, even though she had an inkling that it could happen.
“She (Burton) had told me ‘This one week we were either going to be in Hawaii or, if not, we’re probably just going to be home,'” Robins said. “I think it was maybe two or three weeks between the time she told the rest of the team and when she told me… so it was still a pretty big surprise to me.”
Once the news broke, Robins and the rest of the Hawaiian girls started prepping the team on what to expect. Volleyball at Stan Sheriff is unlike almost any other place in the NCAA. Hawaii Volleyball has ranked in the top five in attendance each of the last 12 years not including seasons affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. They ranked first in all NCAA Division I from 1996 all the way through 2012 in attendance. It’s a loud, raucous environment unlike what many athletes will see during their volleyball careers.
Robins is well-versed in the noise that envelops the Stan Sheriff Center – the home of Hawaii Volleyball – on any given game day. She went to plenty of matches as a kid with her family growing up, watching UH teams take the court while simultaneously trying her best to get on the Jumbotron whenever possible. In-between dance cam attempts, she witnessed plenty of high-level volleyball.
“We told the team this is going to be a pretty intense environment,” Robins said. “It’s going to be unlike any other place we ever played… they won’t know until they know, until they get into the actual environment and see it for themselves.”

The connection to UH volleyball is close for Robins. She comes from a volleyball family, with numerous relatives having played at the collegiate level. Robins’s dad, Duke, played for Hawaii’s men’s team back in college as well. Only thing is, Robins didn’t know just how good her dad was.
Her dad, being a man with a very dry sense of humor, joked with the family that he played intramural ball at Hawaii. During an interview her senior year of high school, she was asked about her family history and said that she was pretty sure her dad just played at that level, not any higher. Since she said it, that’s what went in the paper.
Once the article came out, her family sent a picture of the article and quote, quickly correcting her. He was a proud alumnus of Hawaii men’s volleyball, and also a sarcastic one.
“I was like ‘Why joke about it so much then!'” Robins said, laughing now about it while also admiring her dad’s humility. “He doesn’t flash that stuff.”
Both Burton and Kaauwai have had the chance to play at Stan Sheriff. As a senior in high school, Burton played in the arena for Iolani School in the state championships. Kaauwai did the same with Kamehameha back in her senior year.
Burton notes that watching and playing with the Wahine at the club level was a formative experience for her, as it would be for any young player. Everyone growing up wants to play for Hawaii, watching the teams put together by the legendary Dave Shoji, who transformed Hawaii into a collegiate powerhouse. Shoji’s second in NCAA history in career wins at 1,202 with an .855 career winning percentage. He’s a three-time national champion and was national coach of the year twice, winning in 1982 and 2009.
Burton didn’t play for the Wahine. She went on to have a highly successful career with the Saint Mary’s Gaels, twice earning All-WCC First Team honors and winning a WCC championship in 2009. She’s still the all-time leader in blocks and hitting percentage for the Gaels as well. She credits a lot of that to what she learned watching and playing with at the club level the Wahine.
“I wanted to be a Wahine and be on the floor and play for Dave Shoji,” Burton said. “As I got older and realistically looked at what my future could be like as a college athlete, I decided to go a different path, but I always had a great relationship with the coaches at UH, and I had teammates that went there, and it’s fun to compete against them.”
Robins has never played at Stan Sheriff herself, with Thursday marking her first time. She’s prepared for the noise that a stadium of 10,300 fans can bring. Among the 5,000 fans that make up the average attendance of UH Volleyball this year will be her family, who’s coming in droves to support her and the Pilots.
“My uncle, from the minute we found out we were playing Hawaii, he was texting me that he wanted to make shirts,” Robins said, laughing at the concept of the shirt. “I was just like ‘You know what, Uncle? You make the shirt, let me know how I can help.'”

Kaauwai’s family will also be there for the weekend. Being from Hawaii, it’s harder for family to make the trips up to Portland or elsewhere for matches. These two matches represent an opportunity for family to watch that might not otherwise get the chance.
“My family doesn’t get to travel as much, so going home and being to have them there and watch a game is very exciting,” Kaauwai said. “I’m just very grateful for this opportunity.”
Hawaii is a volleyball haven, and its imprint is everywhere in the NCAA. Kaauwai notes that everywhere you look, college rosters across the board almost always have at least one Hawaiian connection on the team. Whether they’re staying home or playing in the states, Hawaii’s impact on the sport is easy to spot.
“I feel like every single team that we’ve played, even if they weren’t in our conference, I’ve seen someone from Hawaii on the team, or maybe their coach is from Hawaii,” Kaauwai said. “It’s the influence that Hawaii has in volleyball right now, or that it’s always had, but I feel like for some reason now, it just feels more prominent than ever.”
As great as the homecoming will feel, the Pilots are still there on business. The Pilots enter the matches on Thursday and Friday after a stellar showing as hosts of the Portland Invitational, sweeping the Eastern Washington Eagles before taking a thrilling five-set match against the CSUN Matadors.
Combined with a dominant showing at the Idaho Invitational, with the Pilots sweeping all three matches, and a valiant effort against the Oregon Ducks, Portland sits at 5-1 on the season. Only the Pilots and the Seattle U Redhawks have five wins through the first two weeks, a strong start the team wants to keep rolling.
The Pilots have taken down the Wahine before. In 2018, the Pilots beat Hawaii 3-2 at Stan Sheriff for their first and only win over Hawaii. Burton’s hoping for similar results with back-to-back games against the hosts.
“The last time University of Portland went, they won,” Burton said. “We want to live up to that legacy.”
Regardless of result, the trip will have an impact on all the players. Robins talked about how previously, she talked with her grandfather, called Papa, about convincing the staff to put Hawaii on the schedule. Papa passed away during her sophomore year.
“I remember he would always talk about ‘Oh, I really want to see you play UH,'” Robins said. “It’s super bittersweet, but I’m super happy to get to play in front of my family who don’t get to come up here to watch me play.”
“Wish my papa was here, but it’s okay,” Robins said. “I know he has the best seat.”
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Sports
Time, how to watch Final Four
Dec. 18, 2025, 6:07 a.m. ET
No. 1 seed Kentucky women’s volleyball will face off against No. 3 seed Wisconsin at the 2025 NCAA volleyball national semifinals on Thursday at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri.
The matchup includes some heavy-hitters on both sides, with two AVCA Player of the Year finalists, half a dozen 2025 All-Americans and even the AVCA Freshman of the Year getting ready to go head-to-head.
Kentucky first-team All-American outside hitter Eva Hudson is up for player of the year after hitting .317 with 4.54 kills per set and 504 total kills this season. The senior leads Kentucky’s offense, which is hitting .295. Outside hitter Brooklyn DeLeye was also named to the first team after racking up a team-high 521 kills this year.
Wisconsin will turn to veteran Mimi Colyer. The senior outside hitter had 20 or more kills in nine matches this season, including 23 kills against No. 1 Texas in the Elite Eight and 27 kills against No. 2 Stanford in the Round of 16. Colyer was named to the AVCA first team and is a finalist for player of the year.

2025 FINAL FOUR: NCAA volleyball semifinal matchups, starters, X-factors
MORE: The 11 best NCAA volleyball players in transfer portal
Both teams have won a national championship in the past five years. Wisconsin won its first title in program history in 2021. Kentucky hoisted its NCAA national championship trophy in 2020.
Here’s everything you need to know about the second NCAA volleyball semifinal matchup:
When is Kentucky vs. Wisconsin volleyball?
No. 1 Kentucky (29-2) will face off against No. 3 Wisconsin (28-4) in the second semifinal match on Thursday, Dec. 18 at 9:00 p.m. ET at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri.
Kentucky vs. Wisconsin volleyball: Channel, streaming
- Date: Thursday, Dec. 18
- Time: 9:00 p.m. ET (8:00 p.m. CT)
- Location: T-Mobile Center (Kansas City, Missouri)
- Channel: ESPN
- Stream: The ESPN App, Fubo

Kentucky Wildcats starting lineup
Head coach: Craig Skinner
- 6 Kassie O’Brien | S 6-1 – Freshman
- 7 Eva Hudson | OH 6-1 – Senior
- 10 Kennedy Washington | MB 6-0 – Sophomore
- 11 Molly Berezowitz | DS 5-5 – Junior
- 12 Molly Tuozzo | L 5-7 – Junior
- 15 Lizzie Carr | MB 6-6 – Redshirt Junior
- 17 Brooklyn DeLeye | OH 6-2 – Junior
Wisconsin Badgers starting lineup
Head coach: Kelly Sheffield
- 1 Una Vajagic | OH 6-0 – Redshirt Sophomore
- 7 Kristen Simon | L 5-8 – Freshman
- 15 Mimi Colyer | OH 6-3 – Senior
- 17 Alicia Andrew | MB 6-3 – Redshirt Senior
- 24 Charlie Fuerbringer | S 5-11 – Sophomore
- 32 Grace Egan | RS 6-1 – Redshirt Sophomore
- 52 Carter Booth | MB 6-7 – Senior
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Sports
Volleyball Adds McCloskey to Beach/Indoor Rosters
Morehead, Ky. – Morehead State Volleyball announces the addition of Newport, Kentucky, native Riley McCloskey to the roster for MSU Beach Volleyball this Spring and indoor for the Fall 2026 season.
McCloskey, a 2025 graduate of Kentucky high school powerhouse Notre Dame Academy in Park Hills, Kentucky, spent the 2025 season at Memphis. The 6-1 outside hitter appeared in 18 matches for the Tigers making eight starts. McCloskey slugged 70 kills averaging 1.63 kills per set. She notched season highs with 10 kills and six digs against Rice on October 5.
“We are excited to welcome Riley to the Morehead State Volleyball family,” said Morehead State head coach Kyrsten Becker-McBride. “We were able to watch her a lot when she was high school, and I was always impressed with the way she competed. She brings her passion for volleyball to the court and knows what it takes to win.”
McCloskey missed her most of her senior campaign at Notre Dame in 2024 due to injury. In 2022, as a sophomore at Notre Dame, she was part of a Panda team that won the Kentucky state championship. In 100 sets played, McCloskey tallied 223 kills, posting a .259 hitting percentage.
In her junior season at Notre Dame in 2023, McCloskey appeared in 93 sets, smacking 245 kills averaging 2.6 kills per set, while posting a .266 attack efficiency and helping lead the Pandas to the Kentucky high school state championship match.
McCloskey joins the Eagles with definite ties to Morehead State. Her mother, the former Megan Hupfer, was a standout for the Morehead State women’s basketball team from 1992-1996. In her four seasons at MSU, she poured in 1,444 points averaging 13.6 points per game and ranks 14th on the MSU all-time scoring list. She sank 593 field goals in her career, ranking 10th in program history. She scored 30 or more points 35 times in her career and was a 50% shooter from the floor over her career.
McCloskey’s former prep coach is Leslie Litmer (formerly Schellhaas), who starred at Morehead State as a defensive specialist from 2010-13. Schellhaas is Morehead State’s all-time leader with 2,232 career digs and set MSU’s top-three season highs in program history for digs her final three seasons at Morehead State. She was named the Ohio Valley Conference Defensive Player of the Year in 2013 when she set the program record with 685 digs and helped lead the Eagles to their fourth consecutive OVC regular season championship and second OVC Tournament championship in three seasons.
Sports
Merritt’s heart: A second chance at life and the Nebraska volleyball connection that sparked a smile
OMAHA, Neb. — Little Merritt and big Merritt met Dec. 5. They share a cosmic connection, at first not evident on that Friday.
Little Merritt does not usually embrace strangers.
For the past nine months, Merritt Squire, soon to be 2, has waited for a new heart. When her doctors confirm a match, a team of cardiothoracic surgeons will fly from Omaha to secure the organ. If the call comes on Christmas, they will leave their families to save her life.
“We’re ready at a moment’s notice,” said Dr. Jason Cole, medical director of the advanced pediatric heart failure and transplant program at Children’s Nebraska.
Two to four weeks later, according to the plan, Merritt will leave the hospital for the first time since February. She has lived nearly half of her life in the cardiac intensive care unit here.
Sadness began to overwhelm Merritt’s mother, Mari Jo Squire, in the days before Thanksgiving. She uprooted her life in Indianola, Iowa, and quit her job. Mari Jo and her older daughter, 6-year-old Monica, stay at the Carolyn Scott Rainbow House, apartment-style residences provided for families of patients near the hospital at which Merritt receives care.
“It’s the holidays,” Mari Jo said. “We don’t even have our tree up at home.”
She sees friends on her social media feeds visiting Santa and taking their kids to look at Christmas lights.
“You start to feel one thing after another,” she said, “and you start to feel more sad.”
And then, Mari Jo said, “something like this happens.”
Her husband, Layton Squire, and his two teenage sons, live at home in Iowa. They drive two-plus hours to Omaha on weekends and for important moments — like on that Friday early this month when Merritt Beason stopped by Children’s Nebraska to see the Squire family.
Beason, 22, is a former first-team All-American who spent two seasons after a transfer from Florida as co-captain of the University of Nebraska volleyball team. The No. 1 pick in the November 2024 Pro Volleyball Federation draft, Beason signed in August with the Omaha Supernovas after one season with the Atlanta Vibe.
When Beason arrived in Omaha recently to begin training camp, officials from Children’s Nebraska and the Supernovas set up the meeting. After a quick standoff, little Merritt offered a few high fives. She held big Merritt’s hand and sat in her lap. They listened to little Merritt’s favorite songs and danced.
“The nurses shared with me that it doesn’t normally happen like that,” Beason said. “It was surreal, one of those humbling and grounding moments.”
Merritt Squire has been at Children’s Nebraska since February, awaiting a heart transplant. (Courtesy of Children’s Nebraska)
Merritt Squire was not the only baby tied to the Nebraska fan base who was named after Merritt Beason in 2023 and 2024. Little Merritt is the only one, though, to have spent an hour, just hanging out, with the 6-foot-4 opposite hitter.
“I think it’s an honor that we get to share the same name,” Beason said.
Beason granted Mari Jo a reason to smile. The visit allowed the Squires to feel normal, Mari Jo said. It reminded her that good things can happen for them.
“Never in a million years would I have thought my Merritt would meet big Merritt,” Mari Jo said. “It was a much-needed day, a very good day. We felt very loved. And it brought my spirits back up.”
Mari Jo and Layton met four years ago. Originally from Kansas, Mari Jo played volleyball and ran track at Nebraska-Kearney. Layton played football at Graceland University in Lamoni, Iowa.
She supported Nebraska. He cheered for Iowa. Nebraska volleyball united their fandom. Mari Jo was pregnant with their first child together in 2023. They learned late in the year that they were having a girl.
And while watching Beason and the Huskers in the NCAA Tournament two years ago, it hit them.
“We named her because of this person we saw on TV,” Mari Jo said. “We didn’t know her, but every time she spoke, she seemed so genuine.”
Three days after Nebraska lost against Texas in the national championship match, Merritt Squire was born. She was large at 10 pounds and suffered from shoulder dystocia during childbirth. For 85 seconds, she didn’t have air.
“But we took home what we thought was a normal baby,” Mari Jo said.
At 2 weeks old, Merritt refused to take milk. That night, she awoke screaming. Mari Jo unzipped her baby’s sleeper and saw her struggling for air. They rushed to Blank Children’s Hospital in Des Moines. Medical staff suspected a respiratory virus.
Her chest X-ray revealed an enlarged heart. One doctor, Amanda Jepson, studied the image and turned to face Mari Jo and Layton.
“You need to pick Omaha or Iowa City,” Jepson told them, “and we need to go now.”
They chose Omaha. Friends and family of Mari Jo’s lived nearby. An incoming winter storm grounded plans to travel by helicopter. They raced west on Interstate 80 in an ambulance. Merritt’s heart was functioning at 15 to 20 percent. Mari Jo cried throughout the ride as her parents followed. Nurses tending to Merritt told Mari Jo every few minutes that Merritt was OK.
“Looking back,” she said, “she was so close to not making it.”
In Omaha came the diagnosis: dilated cardiomyopathy. The primary chamber of Merritt’s heart had stretched and grown weak, unable to pump enough blood to the body. She was in heart failure. A genetic mutation caused the condition.
They spent 20 days surrounded by doctors and nurses during that first visit and returned home to Indianola with a medication plan for Merritt. She was slow to hit milestones in the first year of her life. Even eating wore her out.
The Squires stayed hopeful for nearly 13 months.
“Deep down inside,” Mari Jo said, “I knew she was struggling.”
Mari Jo Squire named her daughter Merritt after watching Merritt Beason at Nebraska. “Every time she spoke, she seemed so genuine.” (Courtesy of Children’s Nebraska)
On Feb. 20, 2025, they returned to Children’s Nebraska. Merritt had contracted RSV. She had an acute kidney injury, a result of the heart condition. More than once, Merritt’s morning heart rate reached 195 to 205. Doctors intubated her to prevent cardiac arrest. On March 5, she underwent open-heart surgery to install a Ventricular Assist Device — a Berlin Heart.
The VAD rests outside of Merritt’s body. It cannot be unplugged for more than 30 minutes at a time, but it provides the bridge to a transplant.
Without the VAD, Merritt would not have survived, Cole said. Optimistically, the doctor said he expects a patient like Merritt to wait nine to 12 months for a heart. Her time on the wait list, as of December, is within that range.
Factors in finding a match include time accrued on the list, geographic region, size of the heart required and other medical and genetic conditions.
Hours after confirmation, one surgical team at Children’s Nebraska will begin Merritt’s transplant procedure as the other team is airborne with the donor heart. The surgery in Omaha will require four to six hours.
Cole said the organ should last 20 to 25 years before replacement. In her first year after transplantation, Merritt must stay near her doctors in Omaha. Long term, Cole said he’s seen patients succeed in all areas of life.
“Merritt will have that,” Cole said. “We’re just waiting on the call to make it a reality.”
Before Merritt Beason was born, her parents welcomed a baby boy, Tanner. He suffered from hypoplastic left heart syndrome and lived for 14 days. Beason shared the story of the brother she never met with Cole and Mari Jo during her visit with the Squires.
“It brought tears to their eyes,” Beason said. “God is so intentional in how he uses us. It’s all connected. It makes me understand that my problems as a professional volleyball player are very slim.”
Beason didn’t connect only with little Merritt and her parents. Monica was there too.
“A bundle of joy,” Beason said. “We’re best friends now.”
Monica is making a bracelet for Beason, who studied in college with the intention of teaching third grade. She still wants to work with kids, but pro volleyball altered Beason’s path. Her season with the Supernovas begins in January.
The sport introduced her to the Squires. Beason will be back to see them, she said.
“One of the things that we could always do better is to provide those little snippets of joy for patients and parents through the holiday season,” Cole said. “Merritt coming here was one of those moments.”
Saturday is little Merritt’s second birthday. It comes one day before the NCAA women’s volleyball national championship match. The Squires’ favorite team won’t be in Kansas City, Mo., to play for the title. Nebraska, without Beason this year, lost its perfect season Sunday in a regional final against Texas A&M.
Mari Jo dreams this month about something more precious than a national championship. Printed on the red sweatshirt that she wore to meet Beason were five words: One day at a time.
Mari Jo is at peace with the waiting, but she struggles with what the end of it will represent.
“Being on the transplant list is a very hard thing to process,” she said. “I know there’s going to be another mom having the worst day of her life — and my child is getting a second chance at life.
“If it comes tomorrow, if it comes in another six months and my daughter stays healthy, that’s all I care about.”
Sports
Will the University of Pittsburgh volleyball reach championship match?
Some say it’s harder to reach the NCAA Women’s Volleyball Final Four than to win it.
Just ask the University of Nebraska fans who counted on making the short trip down the road to Kansas City, Mo., with hopes of watching their top-ranked Huskers at T-Mobile Center in the heart of the city’s downtown.
But fans of the University of Pittsburgh’s women’s volleyball team have no empathy for the Huskers, who’ve won four NCAA women’s volleyball championships — including the last Final Four held in Kansas City eight years ago. Pitt has advanced to its fifth-straight Final Four since 2021, but it has yet to reach the championship match.
The fourth-ranked Panthers (30-4) hope to change that Thursday night in their semifinal match (ESPN, 6:30 p.m. ET) against ninth-ranked Texas A&M (27-4). The Aggies prevented the Huskers from singing, “Kansas City, here I come,” after a shocking upset in Lincoln, Nebraska, last Sunday.
That didn’t stop Panthers coach Dan Fisher from appealing on social media for Huskers fans in attendance to adopt Pitt as their favorite team.
“That doesn’t mean I wouldn’t take just the regular Kansas City volleyball fan,” said Fisher before Thursday’s semifinal. “Hopefully, we’ll turn a few and maybe have a little bit of a home-court advantage.”
Courtesy of the University of Pittsburgh Department of Athletics
Before last year’s national semifinal loss at what essentially was a road match at Louisville, Fisher was presented a Louisville Slugger bat as a gift from the city. Despite the painful season-ending outcome, Fisher still followed through with his plan of displaying the bat in his Pitt office.
“I can simultaneously be proud of making the Final Four and be disappointed we didn’t advance,” said Fisher.
The Pitt Panthers are the first team since the Texas Longhorns, from 2012 to ’16, to make it to the NCAA Women’s Volleyball Final Four in five straight years. The difference, though, is that the Longhorns captured two NCAA titles during their five-year run.
Pitt attacker Olivia Babcock, a 6-foot-4 junior from Los Angeles, California, was the Panthers’ ray of light after last year’s semifinal loss against Louisville — a game that Fisher called one of the toughest setbacks in his career.
On Nov. 2, in a volleyball road match at the University of North Carolina, Babcock had the most dominating performance of any individual Division I player this season. Babcock tallied 45 kills, the most for any D-I player since 2019.
Babcock, the American Volleyball Coaches Association national player of the year last year, is a finalist for the same award this year, but with a different surrounding cast.
“In ’23 and ’24, [there were] a lot of the same players, but this year we had to completely restart, and we were able to jell really well,” said Babcock. “I just love this team, and I think they’re really deserving.”
Most disappointing about last year’s semifinal loss was that it was the best Panthers performance to that point in their four-year Final Four run.
This year, the Panthers may have gotten a break. Before top-seeded Nebraska’s loss against Texas A&M, the Huskers had won 33 straight. Perhaps the curse of being a No. 1 seed? The Panthers were the No. 1 overall seed in last year’s NCAA tournament.
“I think a lot of it is mental,” said Andrew Diaz de Padilla, an assistant volleyball coach at Jacksonville University who attended the Panthers’ open practice session Wednesday as a Pitt fan after working at its summer volleyball camps.
“They got here to the Final Four [for the] fifth year in a row, and they finally don’t have to face a Nebraska or a Louisville,” he said.
Of the four teams in Kansas City, the highest-ranked team is No. 2 Kentucky. The total number of national titles among the four teams is two, one each by Kentucky and Wisconsin. Texas A&M is making its first trip to the Final Four.
To open the season in late August, the Panthers traveled to Nebraska for the AVCA First Serve Showcase in a star-studded four-team field. After a loss against Florida, the Panthers began the year 0-2.
But at that time, Babcock said there were some early lessons.
“There were just really high-pressure moments, and the pressure kind of got to us,” she said. “We made mistakes, and I feel like, moving forward, we want to capitalize on those moments. Apply pressure on them instead of letting the pressure get to us.”
Despite dropping those August matches, Fisher sees the same championship potential as he did at the season’s start.
“I think, when we’re playing at our best, we’re really good. We don’t know what the outcome will be, but we certainly know how good we can be, so [we’re] just trying to be ourselves,” he said.
The Panthers went on to win 30 of their next 32 matches this season after the 0-2 start. The only losses after the AVCA First Serve Showcase were against the University of Miami and Stanford University, both on the road.
Without the Huskers or the Longhorns, who have combined to win nine NCAA titles, the door appears to be open for Pitt.
But like the fans from another Rust Belt City who watched their Buffalo Bills reach the Super Bowl in four straight years without winning it, the Panthers don’t want to be just good enough to reach the title match.
They want to win it.
Sports
Beach Volleyball Unveils 2026 Spring Schedule – University of South Carolina Athletics
COLUMBIA, S.C. – South Carolina beach volleyball first-year head coach Jose Loiola announced the program’s 2026 schedule Thursday. The spring slate features two home weekend tournaments, four road trips and a midseason Big 12 preview tournament.
Although official tournament schedules have yet to be finalized, the Gamecocks have identified potential opponents for each weekend. Among those teams, six are coming off appearances in the 2025 NCAA Championship 16-team field.
Dolphin Duals // Jacksonville, Fla. // Feb. 20–21
South Carolina will hit the sand for the first time Feb. 20 in Jacksonville, Fla., opening the season against North Florida. During the opening weekend, the Gamecocks will also face Florida Gulf Coast, Stetson and Jacksonville.
All-Time Series Histories: North Florida (4-6), Florida Gulf Coast (8-2), Stetson (5-10), Jacksonville (11-2)
Wheeler Beach Bash // Columbia, S.C. // Feb. 27–28
The home slate kicks off with the Wheeler Beach Bash. This year’s competition pool features Austin Peay, Coastal Carolina, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi and Chattanooga.
All-Time Series Histories: Austin Peay (1-0), Coastal Carolina (13-3), Texas A&M-Corpus Christi (1-1), Chattanooga (1-0)
Carolina Challenge // Columbia, S.C. // March 13–14
Following a bye weekend, the Gamecocks remain in Columbia to host the Carolina Challenge. The competition slate includes College of Charleston, Jacksonville, UNC Wilmington and fellow Big 12 opponent Boise State.
All-Time Series Histories: College of Charleston (18-2), Jacksonville (11-2), UNC Wilmington (14-0), Boise State (1-0)
TBD // Birmingham, Ala. // March 20–21
The Gamecocks begin a three-tournament road stretch in Birmingham, Ala. South Carolina will compete alongside UAB, Austin Peay, North Alabama and Oregon in the March to May tournament.
All-Time Series Histories: Austin Peay (1-0), North Alabama (1-0), Oregon (1-0), UAB (17-1)
Big 12 Preview // Fort Worth, Texas // March 27–28
As newly added members of the Big 12 Conference, South Carolina will compete in the Big 12 Preview, hosted by reigning national champion TCU. Arizona, Arizona State, Florida State and Boise State round out the field.
All-Time Series Histories: Arizona State (3-3), Arizona (0-0), Boise State (1-0), Florida State (0-27), TCU (3-6)
Wildcat Spring Challenge // Tucson, Ariz. // April 3–4
South Carolina remains out west, traveling to Tucson, Ariz., for the Wildcat Spring Challenge from April 3–4. The tournament field includes Florida Gulf Coast, Arizona, Hawai‘i and Colorado Mesa.
All-Time Series Histories: Florida Gulf Coast (8-2), Arizona (0-0), Hawai‘i (0-2), Colorado Mesa (1-0)
Senior Day // Columbia, S.C. // April 11
Competition at Wheeler Beach concludes April 11 as the program honors seven seniors in a matchup against Stetson.
All-Time Series History: Stetson (5-10)
Deland Cup // DeLand, Fla. // April 17–18
To close the regular season, South Carolina travels to Stetson for the DeLand Cup from April 17–18. UNC Wilmington and Georgia State will also compete.
All-Time Series Histories: UNC Wilmington (14-0), Georgia State (8-13)
Big 12 Conference Championship // Tucson, Ariz. // April 23–27
For the first time in program history, the Gamecocks will compete in the Big 12 Conference Championship, held April 23–27 in Tucson, Ariz.
All-Time Conference Tournament Record (CCSA): 14-18
South Carolina joined the Big 12 Conference in September alongside Boise State and Florida State, joining Arizona, Arizona State and TCU. The Gamecocks previously competed in the Coastal Collegiate Sports Association (CCSA).
Sports
Four Huskers Named AVCA All-Americans – University of Nebraska
Four Nebraska volleyball players were named to the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) All-America Teams on Wednesday.
Andi Jackson, Harper Murray and Bergen Reilly were selected to the AVCA All-America First Team. Rebekah Allick was chosen to the AVCA All-America Second Team.
The Huskers’ four All-America selections bring their nation-leading total to 111 all-time.
Murray and Reilly are now three-time AVCA All-Americans, but both earned first-team honors for the first time in their careers.
Jackson earned a second straight nod on the first team, while Allick was named an All-American for the first time.
AVCA All-America First Team
Andi Jackson, Jr., MB, Brighton, Colo.
• Jackson was chosen to the AVCA All-America First Team for the second straight year, as well as the All-Big Ten First Team. She was also an AVCA Player of the Year Semifinalist.
• Jackson averaged 2.74 kills per set on .467 hitting with 1.12 blocks per set, and she served 16 aces.
• Jackson’s .467 hitting percentage leads the nation and was the No. 3 hitting percentage in school history for a single season.
• In conference-only matches, Jackson hit .559 to break the Big Ten record for hitting percentage in conference-only matches in a season, which was .541 by Arielle Wilson from Penn State in 2008.
• Jackson has a career hitting percentage of .437, which is the No. 1 mark in school history and the No. 1 mark among active Division I players.
• Jackson earned Big Ten Player of the Week, Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week and AVCA First Serve Match MVP honors this season.
Harper Murray, Jr., OH, Ann Arbor, Mich.
• Murray earned AVCA All-America and All-Big Ten First Team honors for the third straight year.
• Murray led the Huskers with a career-best 3.54 kills per set on a career-high .295 hitting percentage.
• A standout six-rotation player, Murray also contributed 2.16 digs per set and 0.60 blocks per set along with a team-high 34 aces. She totaled a career-high 4.21 points per set for the season.
• One of the best passers in the nation at her position, Murray passed a 2.52 throughout the season.
• Murray finished the season at 1,181 career kills, which ranks 19th all-time in school history and 10th in the rally-scoring era.
• Murray’s career kills per set average of 3.38 ranks third at NU in the rally-scoring era behind only Sarah Pavan and Jordan Larson.
• Murray’s 109 career aces are the sixth-most at NU in the rally-scoring era.
Bergen Reilly, Jr., S, Sioux Falls, S.D.
• Reilly has been an AVCA All-American each year of her Husker career but earned a first-team accolade for the first time after a record-breaking season.
• Reilly set the Huskers to a school-record .351 hitting percentage, shattering the previous record of .331 in 1986. NU’s .351 hitting percentage ranks first nationally and is the best hitting percentage by a Big Ten team since 2009 Penn State.
• Reilly averaged 10.47 assists per set and 2.70 digs per set. She also totaled 73 kills, 67 blocks and 19 aces.
• Reilly was named Big Ten Player of the Year and AVCA Region Player of the Year, as well as Big Ten Setter of the Year and All-Big Ten First Team for the third time.
• Reilly set Nebraska to a .400 or better hitting percentage nine times on the season, a school record in the rally-scoring era. She had double-doubles in all six of the Husker matches that went longer than three sets, and she had four double-doubles in sweeps.
• Reilly ranks No. 3 in school history in career assists in the rally-scoring era with 3,723. Her career assists per set average of 10.70 ranks No. 4 among active Division I players and No. 2 in school history in the rally-scoring era.
• Reilly was named Big Ten Setter of the Week four times this season, giving her 13 for her career.
AVCA All-America Second Team
Rebekah Allick, Sr., MB, Lincoln, Neb.
• Allick earned the first AVCA All-America honor of her career after being named All-Region three times. She also earned All-Big Ten First Team accolades for the first time.
• Allick had the best season of her standout career with 2.56 kills per set on .450 hitting with a team-high 1.27 blocks per set.
• Allick’s .450 hitting percentage ranks as the No. 4 single-season mark in school history, as well as the No. 4 mark in the country this season.
• Allick finished her Husker career at No. 5 in career blocks in the rally-scoring era with 543. Her career blocks per set average of 1.31 ranks fourth.
• Allick was named AVCA National Player of the Week, a two-time Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week, and to the AVCA All-First Serve Team.
• Allick was on the AVCA Player of the Year Watch List at the midway point of the season.
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