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Four Comprise the 2025 WCU Athletics Hall of Fame Class

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Cullowhee, N.C. – Three former Catamounts representing baseball, women’s golf, and women’s track & field, as well as honoring the professional achievement of a former athletic trainer, comprise the four-member Class of 2025 slated for induction into the Western Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame scheduled for November
 
Todd Raleigh (Player,1988-91; Coach, 1993-95 and 2000-07), a former Catamount baseball player and coach, women’s track & field standout Alisha Bradshaw (2012-15), Ashley Hovda Kress (2002-06) from women’s golf, and former athletic trainer L. Ray “Slim” Davis (1980-84) will each be enshrined on Hall of Fame weekend, Nov. 14-15, 2025.
 

Raleigh is the 25th Catamount baseball player – and the fourth former WCU skipper – to be inducted into the WCU Athletics Hall of Fame. Bradshaw is just the fourth from the Catamount women’s track & field team to receive the honor, while Kress, who was previously inducted as part of the 2002-03 women’s golf team and enshrined back in 2014, is only the second women’s golf individual player to be inducted all-time.
 
Davis earns an honorary induction for professional achievement, the first for WCU since Gerald Austin was honored back in 2021.

Western Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame – Class of 2025 (Photo Gallery)

 This year’s Hall of Fame ceremony is scheduled for Friday, Nov. 14, in the third-floor Grand Room of the on-campus Hinds University Center. The evening event begins with a meet-and-greet social from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m., followed by the ceremony at 7 p.m. All four honorees will be recognized at Saturday’s Catamount football game against ETSU, with kickoff at Noon at E.J. Whitmire Stadium / Bob Waters Field.
 
Todd Raleigh was a two-time All-Southern Conference selection during his four-year playing career in Cullowhee from 1988 through 1991, collecting second-team plaudits in 1990 and first-team accolades in 1991 behind the plate. He went on to serve as an assistant coach for two seasons in the early 1990s before taking over as the ninth head coach in Catamount baseball history in 2000.
 
A two-time SoCon Coach of the Year (2002, 2007), Raleigh guided his alma mater to 257 victories, including a pair of regular-season crowns, a tournament championship, and two berths in the NCAA postseason, reaching the regional finals both times. His 257 victories and 132 SoCon wins rank him inside the Top 25 overall and Top 20 in SoCon tallies in league history. Raleigh’s teams turned in five top-three league finishes, scoring 30 or more wins in six of his eight seasons at the helm, with 42 wins in 2007 and 43 victories in 2003 as both squads played in the NCAA postseason. His 2000 squad orchestrated one of the largest single-season turnarounds in league history (+15), while the 2006 club was the only team in the nation to record nonconference road wins over a pair of College World Series teams, winning at both Clemson and Georgia that season.
 
The 2003 Catamounts ranked 35th in the NCAA in winning percentage (0.672, 43-21), while finished 37th nationally in scoring at 7.5 runs per game (455 total), with 58 home runs (71st, 0.91 per game), and 148 doubles (18th, 2.31 per game), and had 97 stolen bases (58th in NCAA).
 
Raleigh guided WCU to the Chapel Hill regional final in 2007 after a regular-season Southern Conference championship. The Catamounts posted a winning record against teams in the top 35 of the RPI, and were awarded a rare mid-major at-large bid to the field of 64 for the 2007 NCAA postseason. Western Carolina, which worked itself into a top 40 national RPI slot, was touted by ESPN college baseball analyst Kyle Peterson as featuring an “SEC-style offense,” finishing 11th in the nation with a .323 team batting average, with a program-record tying 148 doubles (7th in the NCAA), 12 triples, 87 home runs (6th in the NCAA), while scoring 520 runs to rank sixth in the NCAA on 725 total base hits. The 2007 team additionally ranked sixth nationally in slugging percentage (.517).
 
As a player, Raleigh led the Catamounts and the Southern Conference in RBI in 1991 with a program-record 78 runs driven in, a mark that continues to rank him third in WCU’s all-time single-season record books. He also collected Player of the Week plaudits in ’91 on his way to All-SoCon honors. Raleigh legged out a team-best four triples in 1990, tied for the most in the league that season. In a 1989 SoCon tournament game, Raleigh blasted a two-run home run in a 4-2 win over Marshall, adding to his plaudits by throwing out a runner at home plate from the outfield after being forced out from behind the plate by team injuries. He later earned SoCon All-Tournament team accolades in the 1991 postseason event.
 
Raleigh continues to rank in WCU’s career record books with his 43 career doubles. Defensively, he ranks tied for 12th with a .984 career fielding percentage over 873 career chances (17th),  with 746 career putouts, the 19th-most in program history.
 
Originally from Swanton, Vermont, Raleigh signed a professional free agent contract with his longtime favorite baseball franchise, the Boston Red Sox, in 1991, following his WCU career. He played the following summer in the Florida State League before returning to New England, where he earned his start in coaching at the University of Vermont, with the NCAA’s other Catamounts. That opened eight developmental years where he honed his leadership philosophy with five different programs.
 
Raleigh first parlayed the Vermont position into his return to western North Carolina as an assistant coach in 1993-94 on staff in Cullowhee. In six seasons as either a player or an assistant coach, Raleigh helped lead WCU to four SoCon Championships – two apiece in both roles – and advanced to four NCAA regionals. The 1994 squad led the SoCon with a league-best .295 team batting average.
 
Raleigh then bounced from Belmont Abbey (NCAA Division II), James Madison, and East Carolina over the next five seasons, before trading in the other two shades of purple and gold of his alma mater in 2000, with his first head coaching opportunity coming at WCU.
 
In addition to earning league coach of the year accolades, Raleigh was also named the North Carolina Baseball Coaches Association Coach of the Year in 2003. He coached three SoCon Players of the Year in Donovan Minero (2002, media), Alan Beck (2003, coaches), and Kenny Smith (2007, coaches & media). Between 2000 and 2007, a combined 12 Catamount baseball players were drafted, with three others signing as free agents. Of those 15, three – Greg Holland, Jared Burton, and Charles Thomas – each played in the Major Leagues.
 
Todd Raleigh joins his former head coach, Jack Leggett (inducted in 2001), former teammate and head coach Keith LeClair (inducted in 2002), and his brother Matt Raleigh (inducted in 2004) in the Western Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame.
 
A two-time graduate of WCU with his undergraduate degree in 1991 and his Master of Science degree in 1994, Raleigh is married to the former Stephanie Deitz of Sylva, N.C., and the couple has four children – Cal, who played collegiately at Florida State and plays in the Majors with the Seattle Mariners; Emma Grace, who played collegiate volleyball at Bradley; Carley, who started her collegiate volleyball career at Mercer and is now at Lincoln Memorial; and Todd Jr., who caught while his father pitched to his brother Cal in winning the 2025 MLB All-Star Game Home Run Derby.
 
Alisha Bradshaw remains one of the most decorated field performers within a storied Western Carolina University track & field program. The Salisbury, N.C., product was a four-time Southern Conference Most Outstanding Performer, twice earning honors during both the indoor and outdoor seasons in 2013 and 2015. She is one of just two Catamount women’s student-athletes to earn multiple Field Athlete of the Year awards, joining fellow Hall of Famer Laura Tieszen (2004-05).
 

Her litany of awards includes Southern Conference Outdoor Track & Field Freshman of the Year honors in 2012, collecting All-Freshman honors in four different events – indoor shot and weight throw, outdoor discus, and hammer throw – as a rookie. She was a three-time champion in the weight throw in 2013, 2014, and 2015, and thrice won the SoCon women’s shot-put competition.
 

Bradshaw’s efforts allowed WCU to win three straight SoCon Women’s Indoor Track & Field Championships from 2013 through 2015, and post a runner-up finish in 2012 indoors. The Catamounts also won the SoCon Outdoor Championships twice in 2013 and 2015, also posting a pair of runner-up team showings in 2012 and 2014.
 
Bradshaw was a four-time SoCon Field Athlete of the Week from 2012-14, one of just five SoCon student-athletes to collect four or more weekly plaudits in a career. She is also WCU’s only three-time SoCon Outdoor Field Athlete of the Month, earning honors in March 2013, April 2013, and April 2015, one of just two SoCon women to have more than two monthly awards.
 

Bradshaw continues to hold the Western Carolina indoor track & field records in the shot put (15.04m), set in the 2015 SoCon Championships, and the weight throw benchmark at 19.27m, thrown in Winston-Salem, N.C., in 2014 at the JDL Fast Track. She additionally has WCU’s top mark in the women’s discus throw in the outdoor record books at 49.81m, unleashed at the Florida Relays in Gainesville, Fla., back in 2015. Additionally, in WCU’s outdoor records, Bradshaw holds two of the top five distances in the shotput – third at 14.33m (2013) and fourth at 14.14m (2015) – while also possessing two of the top five distances in the hammer throw – second with a mark of 53.36m and third at 53.08m.

In 2021, Bradshaw was again recognized as she was listed on the prestigious Southern Conference 100th Anniversary team, honoring the greatest student-athletes in the league from 1921 through 2021.

 

Bradshaw gained her start in track & field thanks to her late mother, Glorida Bradshaw, who was a founding member of the Salisbury Speedsters Track Club. She was a three-time individual state champion at Salisbury High as a prep, twice in discus and once in the shot put, which put her on the map and landed her in Cullowhee.

 

Enshrined along with her teammates on the trendsetting 2002-03 Western Carolina women’s golf team, Ashley Hovda Kress takes her rightful place among the Catamount immortals as an individual inductee into WCU’s Athletics Hall of Fame, celebrating her contributions to laying the foundation for the program’s success.

 

Kress was a three-time All-Southern Conference selection on the links, earning second-team recognition in 2004 and 2005 before collecting first-team plaudits in 2006. She was also one of just two WCU women’s golfers to earn a trio of SoCon Women’s Golfer of the Month accolades, joining Brandy Andersen (2003-06). During her Catamount career, Hovda recorded 17 Top 10 individual finishes – the third-most in program history – including nine Top Five showings with individual medalist honors three times. She twice won the team’s home event, the Great Smokies Intercollegiate at the Waynesville Country Club, in the fall of 2004 and 2005, while also winning the Elon Sea Trails Intercollegiate in September 2005.

 

Kress continues to hold WCU’s seventh-best single-season scoring average, averaging 74.81 over 26 seasonal rounds in 2005-06. She additionally has the top and third-best, 36-hole scores in program history with a two-round record of 134 (68-66) in winning the 2005 Great Smokies Intercollegiate, while ranking third with a 138 (68-70) at the Elon / Sea Trails Intercollegiate held in the fall of 2005. Over her outstanding four-year career, Hovda held a 77.38 stroke average over 105 career rounds, tied for the fifth-most rounds representing the Catamounts. She fired five career rounds in the 60s, twice shooting a school-record tying low round of 66, both coming in the fall of 2005.

 

While an undergraduate, Kress qualified and played in the 2005 Women’s United States Amateur Golf Championship. Also, during the summer of 2003, she scored a runner-up finish in the Ohio Women’s Amateur.

 

Kress recorded three Top 10 finishes at the Southern Conference Women’s Golf Championship, guiding WCU to a fourth-place showing in 2005 with a career-best runner-up finish individually that marked the second-best placement by a Catamount at the conference champion crowning event. She also finished in fourth place in 2004 and eighth in 2006. She was a part of WCU’s SoCon Championship team in 2003, as well as runner-up finishes in 2004 and 2006 as part of the program’s best four-year run.

 

Originally from Springfield, Ohio, Ashley Hovda Kress was one of just two Catamount women’s golfers selected to the SoCon’s 100th Anniversary team, joined by Desiree Karlsson (2006-10). She was a two-time Women’s Golf Coaches Association (WGCA) All-American Scholar in 2002-03 and 2003-04, and was a three-year member of WCU’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), serving as the women’s golf representative as a sophomore, the vice-president as a junior, and the committee’s president in her senior year.

 

Ashley is married to Catamount men’s golf alum Chase Kress (2001-05), and the couple has two sons – Knox and Maxwell.

 

An athletic training student at Western Carolina from 1980 through his graduation in 1984, L. Ray “Slim” Davis Jr. earned an honorary induction into the WCU Athletics Hall of Fame with the 2025 class. This year’s enshrinement marks his third Hall of Fame nod, selected to the Mid-Atlantic Athletic Trainers Association (MAATA) Hall of Fame in 2022, and in 2015, he was inducted into the North Carolina Athletic Trainers Association (NCATA) Hall of Fame.

 

Davis received his Bachelor of Science in Health Education at Western Carolina in 1984 before earning his master’s degree in Sports Medicine from the United States Sports Academy in 1986. Following his graduation, he served as an assistant athletic trainer at UNC Charlotte, and served in the same role, as well as a CPR instruction at Washington & Lee  University before moving into middle and secondary education, including Apex High (19990-95), West Lake Middle (1995-2008), John A. Holmes High (2008-13), and Southeast Guilford High School (2013-2020), serving as a health science teacher and athletic trainer at Southeast.

 

His professional training experience also includes the National AAU Junior Olympics, IBM Fitness Center & Marriott Corporation (1988-90), and was the head athletic trainer with the Harlem Globetrotters and Washington Generals (1986-88).

 

Davis served in a variety of roles within the NCATA and the MAATA, including as the association’s treasurer for the NCATA. Serving 16 years in that role, he performed a remarkable job of overseeing the financial records of the organization and was also elected to assume the same role with the MAATA. He also served as the MAATA Evaluator of the Student Research Committee (2004).

 

During his illustrious career, Davis was selected to represent North Carolina at the annual Shrine Bowl of the Carolinas football game in 2011, and in 2009, joined the East-West staff in covering the East-West All-Star football game. He was named the Outstanding Teacher of the Year in 1999 at West Lake Middle, and has been recognized by both the NCATA and the National Athletic Trainers Association (NATA) with 25-year Service Awards. He received the NATA Service Award in 2013 and in 2014, was named the Secondary School Athletic Trainer of the Year.

 

Davis was also a volunteer trainer for the Special Olympics and events such as the Annual Spooktacular Run and the Spring Kiwanis Run. He is currently the MAATA District 3 Director and serves on Western Carolina’s Advisory Board for the College of Health and Human Sciences, representing athletic training.

 

Founded in 1990, the Western Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame pays tribute to those superior Catamount student-athletes, coaches, administrators, and alumni who have made major contributions to the honor and fame of WCU and Catamount Athletics. Including this year’s induction class, the WCU has enshrined 137 individuals, six athletic teams, 11 Patron Award recipients, and three individuals recognized for career achievements since its creation.

 

To be considered for induction into the WCU Athletics Hall of Fame, nominations must be submitted in writing to the Hall of Fame committee, where they are kept on file for five years before the nomination needs to be refreshed to remain active. A file for every nominee is kept and includes items such as biographical information and letters of support that the committee considers during the voting process.

 

Each spring, the committee convenes to vote upon a list of nominees that are approved by the Hall’s executive committee, which vets those nominated against the criteria put forth by the Athletics Hall of Fame Constitution. The appropriate nomination forms are available at CatamountSports.com as an online form and as a PDF.

Western Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame – Current Nomination LIst

WCU Athletics Hall of Fame - Online Forms - BANNER



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Brian Hosfeld Named New Mexico Volleyball Head Coach – Mountain West Conference

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Courtesy of New Mexico Athletics 

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – Brian Hosfeld has been hired as the 11th Head Coach of New Mexico Volleyball, Vice President/Director of Athletics Fernando Lovo announced on Sunday.

Hosfeld arrives in Albuquerque after a four-year stint as Associate Head Coach at Wichita State with over three decades of coaching experience under his belt. During Hosfeld’ s tenure in Wichita, the Shockers accumulated an 81-46 (.638) record, winning an AAC Tournament title and advancing to the NCAA Tournament in 2024. He also departed Baylor as the winningest head coach in school history in addition to winning a national title as an assistant at Long Beach State and reaching the Final Four three times as an assistant at Texas.

“I’m grateful to Athletic Director Fernando Lovo and his executive team—Ryan Berryman, Amy Beggin, and Kasey Byers—for the trust they’ve shown me throughout this process,” said Hosfeld. “I’m honored and excited to represent the University of New Mexico as the next head coach of women’s volleyball.

“The opportunity to build alongside our student-athletes—developing them on and off the court—is what excites me most. UNM is a special place with good history, and I can’t wait to begin this journey with the Lobo family.”

“We couldn’t be more excited to begin a new chapter for Lobo Volleyball with Brian at the helm,” said Lovo. “He brings an abundance of experience on the biggest stages of collegiate volleyball and is a proven winner with a commitment to the values we share as part of the Lobo family.

“His leadership qualities, character and track record of success stood out to us in our search and will be pivotal as we strive to bring home championships to Albuquerque.”

Hosfeld began his coaching career at Long Beach State in 1993, winning the national championship in his first season with the 49ers – that season, the 49ers went 32-2, only dropping two sets in their entire NCAA Tournament run.

VB Coach Resume (1).jpgAfter three seasons at Long Beach, he was chosen to lead the Baylor program in 1996, departing eight years later as the winningest coach in program history with 129 victories to his name. Under Hosfeld’s leadership, Baylor reached the NCAA tournament for the first time in program history in 1999, going on to qualify again in 2001.

Following his tenure in Waco, Hosfeld joined the staff at Texas in 2004, working primarily with the Longhorns defense and middle blockers. He helped formulate one of the most productive defensive units in the nation, with the Longhorns winning three consecutive Big 12 titles and reaching the Final Four in 2008, 2009 and 2010 — UT advanced to the national championship match in 2009. With Hosfeld on staff, Texas posted an overall record of 186-33, winning at an .849 clip.

Hosfeld has also coached at the international level, leading the 2005 USA Volleyball A2 junior national team and USA Volleyball to a silver medal at the 1997 World University Games in Sicily, Italy. Prior to his work with that team, Hosfeld served as USA Volleyball’s director of the World University and National Team tryouts at the Olympic Training Center.

Hosfeld’s most recent collegiate coaching experience before heading to Wichita came as an interim assistant coach at Utah, where he spent the 2011 season before transitioning full-time to club volleyball. He helped found nationally-recognized Magnum Volleyball in 1986 and worked with Austin Juniors, Club Red, Arizona East Valley, Spiral and Catalyst before taking over as director of T3 in Coeur d’Alene, where he spent the previous decade before making his return to collegiate volleyball in 2022.





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Volleyball Adds Transfer Štiglic – Northwestern Athletics

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EVANSTON, Ill. – Northwestern volleyball has added undergraduate transfer Mara Štiglic to the roster ahead of winter quarter, Head Coach Tim Nollan announced on Monday. Štiglic, a sophomore, will join the Wildcats after two seasons at Utah State.

“I am very excited to welcome Mara to our Northwestern volleyball family,” said Nollan. “She has NCAA and international experience and has proven she can score points in big matches. I can’t wait to get her in the gym this winter to join in our preparation.”

Štiglic, an outside hitter, is coming off a sophomore season that earned her first team All-Mountain West honors. In addition to a team-high 431 kills over 32 matches, the sophomore also logged 29 service aces and 63 blocks for Utah State. All together, she tied for first on the team with 4.08 points per set.

That followed up an impressive first-year season for Štiglic, who recorded eight double-digit kill matches during her first fall in Logan. In addition to 52 digs, 30 blocks and seven aces across 15 matches in 2024, Štiglic’s 156 kills put her second on the team in kills per set, at 2.79.

A Rijeka, Croatia native, Štiglic made a name for herself on the national stage prior to her collegiate career. In 2019, she became the youngest player in HAOK Rijeka club history to start as a standard player, debuting at just 13 years and 11 months. Over a span of five seasons, she helped her team to numerous national and international honors, including silver medals in both the 2020 and 2021 U18 National Championships, and bronze medals in both the U16 and U18 National Championships during the 2021-22 season. In 2022, Štiglic helped lead the Croatian National Team to a fifth-place finish at the U19 FIVB Women’s World Championships, scoring 101 points along the way.

“Thank you, Northwestern, for this incredible opportunity to take my volleyball and academic career to the next level!” said Štiglic on the move. “I’m honored to be a part of this community and can’t wait to contribute to the team.”

 



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Texas A&M wins NCAA volleyball title with sweep of Kentucky

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Logan Lednicky celebrates Texas A&M's win over Kentucky for the NCAA volleyball title.

Logan Lednicky celebrates Texas A&M’s win over Kentucky for the NCAA volleyball title.

Tyler Schank/NCAA Photos via Getty Images

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — When Texas A&M hired Jamie Morrison to take over the volleyball program, the Aggies were coming off a 13-16 season and had not had a winning year since 2019.

Three seasons later, the Aggies are national champions.

Texas A&M swept Kentucky on Sunday to win the school’s first volleyball title and cap a run through the NCAA tournament that included a rally from down 2-0 in the regional semifinals against Louisville, a five-set win over top-ranked Nebraska on its home court, and wins over three No. 1 seeds: Nebraska, Pitt and Kentucky.

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“This is surreal,” Morrison said after the win. “So proud of this team.”

The Aggies (29-4) were led by nine seniors, including four who had played together on the Houston Skyline club team. They decided to stay after the coaching change and bought in to Morrison’s vision.

“We said a million times we wanted to build the program,” said Logan Lednicky, who led A&M with 11 kills on Sunday to go along with seven digs. “But this is beyond my wildest dreams.”

Lednicky, Maddie Waak, Ava Underwood and Morgan Perkins were four seniors who had played together since their days on the Houston Skyline club team, which won a national title in 2019 and were coached by Jen Woods, now an assistant at A&M.

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“There’s been so much put into this by every person involved in this program, said Underwood, who led the team with 10 digs on Sunday. ‘We’ve worked so hard and given so much. I feel like we deserve it.

Waak had 29 assists in the final and set up the winning kill by Ifenna Cos-Okpalla, another of the seniors.

“We persevere,” Cos-Okpalla said.

That was evident again on Sunday.  The Aggies trailed by six points in the first set and didn’t lead until 25-24 on a block by Cos-Okpalla. Kyndal Stowers finished off the 26-24 first-set win for the Aggies with a tip off the Kentucky block.

“Response, that’s what it’s been about all season,” Morrison said. “This team will not give up.”

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The second set was all A&M as the Aggies took a 15-7 lead and coasted to a 25-15 win. 

A&M’s pressure forced Kentucky to make 15 errors in the first two sets.

Texas A&M led 13-10 in the third set before a kill by Lednicky started a 6-1 scoring run for a commanding 19-11 lead, six points from the national championship. The Aggies won 25-20 with Cos-Okpalla getting the final point on a kill in the middle, which was set up by Waak.

Stowers, a sophomore, was one of the newcomers to the Aggies. She played as a freshman at Baylor but sat out a season because of concussions. After being cleared to play, she transferred to A&M.

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“This team was there for me,” said Stowers, who had 10 kills and six digs in the final. “If this isn’t pure joy, I don’t know what is.”

Reid Laymance reported from Houston.



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Texas A&M volleyball returns to Reed Arena after winning national title

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COLLEGE STATION, Texas (KBTX) – Texas A&M volleyball fans waited nearly two hours outside Reed Arena to welcome the national champion Aggie volleyball team back to Aggieland with high-fives, signs and cheers. After the team’s arrival, just after 1 a.m., head coach Jamie Morrison, libero Ava Underwood and opposite hitter Logan Lednicky spoke words of appreciation to the gathered crowd.



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2025 Washington County high school volleyball all-stars

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Dec. 22, 2025, 4:00 a.m. ET

Here are the postseason honors for the 2025 Washington County high school volleyball season (all averages are per set):

2025 Herald-Mail Volleyball Player of the Year

Caydence Doolan, North Hagerstown

Doolan, a senior, is the first three-time Herald-Mail player of the year of the 21st century. She set a county rally-scoring record by averaging 7.35 kills while leading the Hubs to their fourth straight appearance in the Class 3A state final. She earned AVCA All-America second-team honors and was named to the coaches’ all-county and Central Maryland Conference large-school first teams. She also averaged 3.43 digs and 0.85 aces. She will play college volleyball at Division I Marquette.



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Logan Lednicky caps dream with volleyball title at Texas A&M

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A few days before the NCAA women’s volleyball national championship, Texas A&M opposite hitter Logan Lednicky posted an old family video on her Instagram account. Lednicky is maybe 5 or 6 years old in the video, wearing a maroon A&M shirt and doing cartwheels on the grass at Kyle Field, A&M’s football stadium. “Say ‘Gig ‘Em, Aggies,'” her mom, Leigh Lednicky, implores her, and little Logan walks up to the camera, smiles and gives a thumbs-up.

Under the video, Lednicky wrote that she is living in that little Aggie’s “answered prayers.”

Her dad, Kyle, was a long snapper for the Texas A&M football team in the 1990s, and her mom worked in the football office. She chose Texas A&M because she always dreamed of being a fourth-generation Aggie, but that was only part of it. She wanted to help build a middling volleyball program into a powerhouse.

Lednicky went beyond that little girl’s dreams Sunday, swatting 11 kills to lead Texas A&M to a sweep over No. 1 seed Kentucky for the program’s first national title. The senior from Sugar Land, Texas, was a linchpin in the Aggies’ improbable December postseason run, helping her team knock off three No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament.

In the final four matches of her career, when it mattered most, Lednicky amassed 69 total kills, a team high. She’s one of four seniors who have been with the program from the beginning — they went 13-16 as freshmen — and set the tone for the historic season. The past and present swirled through that class Sunday. With the Aggies cruising in the final set, coach Jamie Morrison high-fived Lednicky, and hung on to her hand.

“I think she had that moment where, ‘This might be the last four points of my college career,'” Morrison said. “I think she actually started getting a little teary on the court. I was like, ‘Oh, no, did I just ruin everything?’ No, it means the world.

“There was a group of them here from the beginning that said, ‘I want to be a part of this, I want to build this program.’ … I don’t think they were envisioning a national championship by the time they were done. I think when we were selling what we were doing, it was building something they could come back to in the future and be really, really proud they helped build.”

It was Lednicky who helped save the season on Dec. 13 in the Sweet 16, when the Aggies were down two sets to Louisville. She hammered a team-high 20 kills in a reverse sweep, and afterward, Lednicky mentioned a random note that someone left on the scorer’s table as her team was teetering toward elimination.

The note said, “Something great is about to happen.”

She has always been the charismatic optimist — the one who keeps things loose. Teammates call her everything from their “ride-or-die” to a best friend.

She has been a recruiter. When Morgan Perkins hit the transfer portal after her freshman season at Oklahoma three years ago, her first text came from Lednicky, an old club teammate. Perkins said the text was something along the lines of, “Hey, Mo-Mo, I see you’re in the portal …”

Lednicky, along with sophomore Kyndal Stowers, helped pull A&M together when the Wildcats sprinted out to a 15-9 lead in the first set. The Aggies later said they dealt with some jitters at the start of the match, but it was short-lived. Lednicky’s kill drew A&M within one, and then she teamed up with Perkins for a block that tied the game. Stowers’ kill completed the rally and gave the Aggies the set, 26-24.

From there, the Aggies dominated. They took a commanding 19-8 lead in the second and pulled away in the third with a Lednicky kill that made it 18-11.

“I was pretty emotional all day today,” Lednicky said, “just knowing that no matter the outcome of this game, it would be my last getting to represent A&M on my chest. Being able to do this with these girls — end like this, I just can’t even believe it.

“I’m so happy I get to carry this with me through the rest of my life and remember all the memories with these girls.”

In the waning moments of the match, a corner of the arena chanted, “Why not us?” It became a slogan for the Aggies in the postseason, during the match against Louisville. Late Sunday, Lednicky gave a shoutout to her boyfriend and teammate Ava Underwood’s boyfriend for coining it for the Aggies at a concession stand in Lincoln, Nebraska.

“We kind of took it and ran with it,” she said. “We started saying it. Ava and Addi (Applegate) wrote it on their shoe. Now it’s on a T-shirt somehow. Shout out to them.

“But, I mean, it’s true. It’s a testament to the hard work this program has put in all year long, staff, players. That’s such a great statement. ‘Why not us’ has turned into, ‘It is us’. I think with that dawg mentality all season long, all tournament long, we knew it was going to be us.”

Morrison, who came to A&M in December 2022 and overhauled the program’s culture, figured it would take at least five years to win it all. He credited the rapid ascent to his team’s work ethic.

Kyle Lednicky waited for his daughter after the match, marveling over how she and her teammates set out to change a program and did it so quickly, and dramatically. He said former A&M football coach R.C. Slocum texted her Sunday morning and wished her luck.

“That was pretty cool,” Kyle Lednicky said.

Of course he always hoped his daughter would go to his alma mater, but he says he never put pressure on her. Maybe it was osmosis, that all those football games, and that maroon clothing, would eventually seep into her consciousness, and her heart. It didn’t matter. That fourth-generation Aggie is now a first-generation champion.

Kyle Lednicky saw his daughter’s Instagram post Thursday, and it brought back a flood of memories.

“I had to put it away,” he said, “because I got teary-eyed when I was looking at it.”



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