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Red Flash Volleyball Heading To Connecticut For First Conference Matchup

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Women’s Volleyball | 9/25/2025 11:25:00 AM

Friday, September 26 | CCSU | New Britain, CT | Detrick Gymnasium | 6 p.m. | LIVE STATS | LIVE VIDEO  

Saturday, September 27 | CCSU | New Britain, CT | Detrick Gymnasium | 4 p.m. | LIVE STATS | LIVE VIDEO 

OPENING SERVE VS CCSU
Saint Francis and CCSU will have their 47th meeting of all time dating back to 1991 on Friday. The Red Flash is currently on a seven-game winning streak in the all-time series. Saint Francis beat the Blue Devils 3-1 during the last match in 2024.

THE WORD ON THE BLUE DEVILS

CCSU is entering this conference play with a 1-11 record, after ending the 2024 season 4-22. Currently, the Blue Devils have two hitters who are leading in kills, Olivia Keckler and Weronika Poczynek. Keckler collected 150 kills, 67 digs, and 16 blocks. Poczynek registered 127 kills, 35 digs, and eight blocks during the season. Anja Milosevic leads CCSU in digs with 126 and assists with 379.

PRESEASON POLL 
Saint Francis women’s volleyball was picked third in the Northeast Conference (NEC) Preseason Poll. LIU earned four first-place votes and earned the distinction of being the preseason favorite. FDU garnered the three other first-place nods to finish in second. After the Red Flash in third place, the defending NEC Champions, Chicago State, Mercyhurst, Stonehill, CCSU, New Haven, and Le Moyne round out the nine-team poll. New Haven is in its first year in the NEC, and along with Mercyhurst, is not eligible for postseason play.

NEXT TIME OUT 

The Red Flash is back at the Lo’ to play Stonehill. The first game starts at 6 p.m. on Friday (October 3) and is followed by a 1 p.m. game on Saturday (October 4).



RETURNERS TO TALK ABOUT


Korrin Burns returns for her final year as the team’s top kills per set leader (4.07) after ranking second in the NEC with kills (342) and sixth in service aces (0.45). To start this season, she has been burning the competition, collecting 227 total kills and 101 digs. Burns is ranked second in the NEC in kills per set (5.28) and points per set (5.59). She currently is ranked second in kills and kills per set, and third in points, and fourth in points per set in the nation. 

Kori McClure also registered 215 kills, coming in third in hitting percentage (.313) in 2024. Both of these outside hitters earned All-NEC first team looking to come back this season with a clear attack. McClure started the 2025 season off with 73 kills, 27 blocks, and 21 digs. She is third in the NEC in hitting percentage with .327%. 

Alexandra Sappia returns to collect more aces as she paced service aces per set (0.54), and she ranked second in assists (812). She was also announced to the All-NEC second team in 2024. Sappia showed out over the last three tournaments, dishing out points as she gathered 432 assists, which leads the NEC charts, and second in service aces with 20. Sappia is now 21st overall in the nation with assists. 

NEC HONORS
Gwen Atkins (Morristown, N.J./Morristown) has been named NEC/Molten Women’s Volleyball Rookie of the Week. This is the third time that she has been awarded this and the 36th time that a Saint Francis player has received it.  
  
Atkins emerged as a standout force for the Red Flash this weekend, delivering a breakout performance across all facets of the game. She helped the offense with 14 kills, showcased her defensive prowess by digging up 19 balls, and dominated at the net with five crucial blocks. Adding to her impact, Atkins also fired in four service aces, proving to be a relentless presence from the service line. Her all-around excellence was a key factor in the team’s success.  
  
Korrin Burns and Alexandra Sappia were also named Prime Performers. Burns registered a total of 45 kills throughout the weekend, highlighted by an impressive 29-kill performance that propelled the Red Flash to a 3-1 victory over Duquesne. She contributed 11 digs in the match against Robert Morris, extending her career total to 18 double doubles. Additionally, Burns recorded two service aces.  
 
Sappia totaled 89 assists over the weekend, highlighted by a 49-assist performance in the Red Flash’s win over Duquesne. She also added 11 digs, seven service aces, and three assisted blocks across the two matches. With these outings, Sappia now has six matches this season with 40 or more assists. 


BURNING PAST MILESTONES

Korrin Burns surpassed the 1,000-kill milestone as she adds 48 kills to her previous count, bringing her to a total of 1,092. She collected her 1,000th kill during the first game against Rutgers on her first kill of the night. Burns added her name in with seven other record holding women. Currently, Kristin Buter (2005-08) holds the most kill record of 1,427.  

Alexandra Sappia is working her way towards the 2,000-assist milestone. She added 95 more assists to her total, which brings her to 1,882 total career assists. Sappia now passes Kimmy Sweeney (2018-21) who held the number six place with 1,555 assists. Sappia sits in the number six spot and is looking to continue moving up in the top-10 career assists. She is now one assist behind Amelia Metzler who is in fifth place.

WELCOME TO THE LO’ 
Two freshmen continue to help the Red Flash gain another win: Gwen Atkins (Morristown, N.J./Morristown) and Hailey Atkins (Morristown, N.J./Morristown). Gwen Atkins collected 69 kills, 90 digs, 18 aces, and 14 total blocks in the start of her rookie year. Her sister, Hailey Atkins recorded 41 digs so far this season.  

Nevaeh Ingram (Rocky Mount, N.C./Northern Nash) had her collegiate debut against New Hampshire. She recorded four service aces this season, including a personal best of two aces in the win against Rider.  

In addition, sophomore Paloma Gonzalez Jaramillo (Coahuila, Mexico/Bishop Lynch) got her first Saint Francis start against UAlbany. During the 2024 season she played for Stonehill and collected 140 kills and 36 digs. This season she started for the Red Flash bringing in 73 kills and 40 digs, including her first double-double of her career in a Saint Francis win against Robert Morris.  

Sophomore Elsa Richards (Wilmington, Mass./Essex North Shore Technical and Agricultural) came from Adelphi. Richards is looking for her starting debut for Saint Francis this weekend. 

Graduate student Chandler Alter (Powder Springs, Ga./McEachern) transferred from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. She finished the 2024 season with 244 digs and 19 aces. Alter collected 64 digs so far on the season, recording a red flash personal best of 14 digs vs Duquesne.  

Staying with the team but from a viewpoint, is graduate assistant Raegan Rosi.  

ABOUT THE COACH 
Sara Spielvogel begins her tenth season in Loretto. She earned her first overall winning season in 2023, going 15-11 with a 10-4 record in conference play. Saint Francis earned two players on the First-Team All-Conference Team and made the NEC tournament for the third consecutive year. In her first season in Loretto, Spielvogel guided the team to wins over Buffalo of the Mid-American Conference and Iona in non-conference play. She picked up her first NEC victory in a triumph over FDU. In her first season, the Red Flash finished third in the NEC in digs and digs per set and had a pair of attackers record over 200 kills. Prior to Saint Francis, Spielvogel sent a season on the staff at the College of Wooster. The Fighting Scots had a four-win improvement from the previous season and had their best start to a season since 1969. 



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Onaway’s Boughner, Janusky, Pellston’s Irwin earn volleyball all-state

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Updated Dec. 26, 2025, 11:45 a.m. ET

The Cheboygan area saw several volleyball players earn nods on the Michigan Interscholastic Volleyball Coaches Association teams, including three all-state honorable mentions.  

Leading the way were Onaway’s Amya Janusky and Brooklyn Boughner, who secured spots on the MIVCA Division 4 all-state team as honorable mentions. Joining the two Onaway stars was Pellston’s Lanie Irwin, who earned honorable mention accolades. 



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Wyoming Valley Sanitary Authority uses new technology to restore interceptor beneath levee

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The Wyoming Valley Sanitary Authority faced a challenge rehabilitating a major interceptor line in Wilkes-Barre because it is beneath the Wyoming Valley Levee.

This aging reinforced concrete line, known as the authority’s East Side Interceptor, had to be addressed because it was installed in the 1960s and had reached the end of its service life. It carries wastewater from approximately 100,000 residents in 19 municipalities to the authority’s treatment plant in Hanover Township.

The traditional approach — excavating to remove and replace the line — would have cost an estimated $75 million or more and required extensive permitting and protective measures to ensure the flood control system along the Susquehanna River was not compromised, authority officials said.

Instead, the authority recently deployed a new engineering technology to restore the one-mile line for $14 million.

Authority Chief Technical Officer Samantha Albert said the solution involved steel-reinforced PVC that interlocks as it is fed through manholes into the pipe, creating a new standalone pipe within the existing line.

A machine was used to wind the large spools of PVC through the line, she said. The diameter of the line ranges from 4 to 6 feet, allowing crews to get inside during the installation, Albert said.

The authority could not use a different type of liner that requires a “curing” process with heat to dry and harden because the interceptor line would have to be completely dry for that option, Albert said.

The interceptor line could not be deactivated to dry because it handles a high volume of both wastewater and stormwater when it rains, she said.

“That was a huge advantage of the solution we chose because it still has to flow during the installation,” Albert said.

For the safety of crews, the contractor set up a temporary sewage bypass system — a large black pipe on the ground — to reduce the load passing through the line during installation, she said.

The section of line tackled in this project runs from the area of the Luzerne County Courthouse south to Riverside Drive, Albert said.

Albert said the line is “critical infrastructure” that must remain functioning to service residents and also protect the levee.

“We did not want this line to ever become compromised and impact the integrity of the levee,” Albert said. “It’s all about protecting the environment and the public.”

Georgia-based Ruby-Collins Inc. completed the project. The company has a specialized “trenchless division” to rehabilitate underground lines, its site says.

Luzerne County Council allocated $2 million of its federal American Rescue Plan Act funds toward the project. The authority also received a federal STAG Clean Water Community Project Funding Grant and secured a Pennsylvania Infrastructure Investment Authority, or PENNVEST, loan.

Albert said the authority will continue seeking grants to help fund work on other segments of the interceptor.

Christopher Belleman, executive director of the Luzerne County Flood Protection Authority that oversees the Wyoming Valley Levee, said his authority allowed access to land at the site to complete the project.

“They got us involved at the very start. They were a good partner,” Belleman said of the sanitary authority.

Belleman spoke favorably of the sanitary authority’s solution, saying the flood authority has used a lining to address damaged piping — an option available if the original pipe still has structural integrity.

“Fortunately, technology has advanced over the years so this type of work can be done in a way that saves costs without having to excavate,” Belleman said.

Approximately 170 pipes of varying dimensions run through the levee system, officials have said.

Belleman said the flood authority must inspect these pipes every five years in compliance with a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers mandate to keep the levee certified.

Reach Jennifer Learn-Andes at 570-991-6388 or on Twitter @TLJenLearnAndes.



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G-R to host open volleyball camp featuring UNI players | News, Sports, Jobs

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REINBECK – The Gladbrook-Reinbeck PTO is partnering with eight current members of the University of Northern Iowa (UNI) Panthers volleyball team in an effort to raise funds for a new, inclusive elementary school playground.

“We were trying to think of (fundraising) ideas. We’re pretty fortunate that [UNI] is so close to us and we knew that there were some girls from the area that play on the team. … We did some virtual meetings and here we are,” G-R elementary principal Shaun Lehmann told the newspaper about the inaugural three-day camp’s origins.

The all-skills camp is open to any girl – no matter the school district – in grades 3-8. Camp will take place on three consecutive Saturdays this coming January, including Jan. 17, Jan. 24, and Jan. 31, at the secondary building located at 600 Blackhawk St. in Reinbeck. Campers may register for a single session or multiple sessions at a discounted rate. Each session will be capped at 48 players. Grade groupings are as follows: grades 3-4 from noon to 1 p.m.; grades 5-6 from 1:30-2:30 p.m; and grades 7-8 from 3-4:30 p.m.

While G-R is hosting the camp, UNI volleyball players are running the show, Lehmann said, including freshman defensive specialist/libero Payton Askelsen; sophomore setter Reese Booth; redshirt freshman middle blocker Maryn Bixby – a Dike-New Hartford alumna; freshman defensive specialist/libero Sophie Buysse; senior opposite hitter Calia Clubb – a Clear Creek Amana alumna; freshman defensive specialist/libero Jadyn Petersen – a Dike-New Hartford alumna; redshirt sophomore middle blocker Kaitlyn Sellner; and redshirt freshman opposite hitter/middle blocker Kamryn Vogt.

The registration deadline for the volleyball camp is Dec. 31, 2025. More information, including cost and registration, can be found by visiting https://tinyurl.com/GRvbcamp. A spring camp for girls in grades K-2 is also in the works.

Profits from the camp will be split between G-R’s playground fund and the UNI volleyball players.

A playground for every child

G-R’s new, inclusive playground will be located on the south side of the elementary building in Reinbeck.

“There’s not really much there right now,” Lehmann said before adding that both the existing zip line and climbing apparatus will be removed to make way for the new equipment which will all be ADA-compliant. While Lehmann declined to disclose how much had been raised so far for the new playground, he did tell the newspaper the district will be contributing some funding and that they have “a ways to go” to meet the fundraising goal. But his hope is to have the new playground ready for the 2026-27 school year.

“Our playgrounds are used throughout the year by the community. We don’t have a fence. [An ADA-compliant] playground will be beneficial to all kids.”

To donate directly to the playground fund, contact Lehmann at 319-345-2822 or email shaun.lehmann@gr-rebels.net.





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All-Area Volleyball First Team | Winchester Star

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Aaliyah Green

Millbrook — Junior 

Outside hitter

Green ranked first in the area in kills per set (5.40), sixth in digs per set (2.95) and eighth in aces per set (0.68). Class 4 State, Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection. Northwestern District and Winchester Star Player of the Year. 

Brenna Corbin

James Wood — Senior

Outside hitter

Corbin led the area in total aces (96) and tied for first in aces per set (0.99). Ranked third in digs per set (3.69) and fifth in kills per set (2.94). Class 4 State, Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection. 

Kennedy Spaid

James Wood — Senior

Outside hitter

Spaid ranked first in the area in total kills (458) and third in kills per set (4.87). Ranked seventh in digs per set and aces per set. Class 4 State, Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection. 

Isabel Aliveto

Clarke County — Junior

Outside hitter

Aliveto ranked second in area in total kills (428) and kills per set (5.16). She ranked ninth in aces per set (0.66) and tied for 12th in digs per set (2.37). Class 2, Region 2B and Bull Run District First Team selection. Bull Run District Player of the Year. 

Breeze Johnson

Handley — Sophomore 

Outside hitter

Johnson ranked 4th in the area in kills per set (3.73) and digs per set (3.65) and placed 3rd in aces per set (0.82). Class 4 State Second Team and Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection. 

McKenna Homans

Millbrook — Freshman

Setter/hitter

Homans ranked 14th in kills per set (1.62), sixth in assists (4.32), seventh in blocks (0.57), 11th in digs (2.42) and 12th in aces (0.61). Only area player to rank top 15 in all five major statistical categories. Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection.

Bryn Franzen

Clarke County — Senior

Middle hitter

Franzen ranked 5th in area in blocks per set (0.65) and 11th in kills per set (1.89). Class 2 State Second Team. Region 2B and Bull Run District First Team selection. 

Avery Curtis

Sherando — Freshman

Middle hitter

Curtis led the area in total blocks (78) and blocks per set (1.05) and ranked 6th in kills per set (2.45). Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection.

Kate Madden

Millbrook — Junior

Libero

Madden led the area in total digs (368) and digs per set (4.91). Ranked 13th in  aces per set (0.60). Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection.

Jillian Emmart

Clarke County — Senior

Setter

Emmart led area in total assists (596) and assists per set (7.64) and averaged 1.94 digs per set.

 



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Best Gainesville-area Big School Volleyball Player for the 2025 season

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Dec. 26, 2025, 4:00 a.m. ET





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Petoskey’s Katie Parker earns News-Review Volleyball POY, see All-Area

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Dec. 26, 2025, 4:01 a.m. ET

PETOSKEY — Katie Parker made an impact on the varsity volleyball court in all four seasons of her Petoskey career. 

After each season, she set her sights on becoming even better, something her Petoskey teammates and coaches were grateful for. 

Then came the 2025 campaign and eventual end. There was no next, something that hit home with Parker, though it’s a four-year career that most can only dream about.

“I didn’t really realize how much playing school ball meant to me until it was over,” Parker said. “Since I started my freshman year I always through, ‘One more year…one more year.’ But then realized this year is the last year. That final game really took an emotional toll on me.”

Parker’s absence within the lineup is sure to take a toll on Petoskey as well. 

Petoskey's Katie Parker was the engine to the team's production over her career and will be a huge piece to replace after a 2025 News-Review Player of the Year honor and standout career.

The senior leaves Petoskey with the second most career assists with 2,901, placing her within the statewide career lists of the MHSAA. 

As a setter, she knows she’s in a position where she needs her teammates for success as much as they need her and she credits that bond as the biggest factor of her career. 



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