Sports
Western Kentucky University Athletics
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. — WKU Volleyball is excited to announce their schedule for the 2025 season and new courtside seats at E. A. Diddle Arena. New For 2025 Want to watch high-level volleyball up close like never before? Courtside seats make their debut at Diddle Arena for the 2025 volleyball season. For just $200 each, catch the […]

New For 2025
Want to watch high-level volleyball up close like never before? Courtside seats make their debut at Diddle Arena for the 2025 volleyball season. For just $200 each, catch the action up close for all 15 home matches this season. Courtside seats can only be purchased by calling the WKU Ticket Office at 1.800.5.BIGRED.
Season ticket packages return and continue to offer the flexibility to attend every match, or mix and match during the season. Season ticket packages are $75 and provide fans with 15 vouchers to use throughout the season – that’s just $5 per ticket!
If you prefer to go game by game, single game tickets will go on sale closer to the beginning of the season. Season ticket prices will be $10 for adults, $7 for youth (under 12) and $5 for groups of 10+.
2025 Schedule
The 30-match slate includes 15 matches at E. A. Diddle Arena as well as matchups with four NCAA Tournament teams. Three of those four teams made it past the first round of the NCAA Tournament, while Louisville made it to the national championship match.
WKU opens its 44th season at home in the WKU Invitational. That tournament, held Aug. 29 and 30, will feature three matches for the Hilltoppers against Wright State, Loyola-Chicago, and Drake.
Hilltopper Volleyball will then go on a six-match road trip to play Drake, Marquette, and Buffalo at the Marquette tournament in Milwaukee, Wis., Sept. 5-6. After returning from Milwaukee, WKU will travel to Johnson City, Tenn. To take on High Point, East Tennessee State, and Virgina Commonwealth University on Sept. 12-13.
On Sept. 16, WKU is excited to host Vanderbilt Volleyball at E. A. Diddle Arena in the Commodores’ first indoor volleyball season since 1980. Later that same week, WKU Volleyball will host its eighth-annual Alyssa Cavanaugh Classic Sept. 19-20, featuring Bradley, Indiana, and Austin Peay.
After hosting Vanderbilt and the Alyssa Cavanaugh Classic, the Hilltoppers will travel to Louisville, Ky. on Sept. 22 to take on the national runner-up Cardinals.
Completing a preseason schedule that includes three AVCA Top 50 teams, WKU will open its Conference USA slate against Jacksonville State, Sept. 26-27.
New to Conference USA in the fall of 2025 is Missouri State. WKU will travel to Springfield, Mo. to take on the Bears, Oct 3-4. Continuing their road trip, the Hilltoppers head to Ruston, La. to play LA Tech Oct 10-11. After their four-match road swing, WKU returns to Bowling Green, Ky. to host Sam Houston Oct. 17-18, and UTEP Oct. 24-25.
In their 76th and 77th all-time matchup. WKU will travel to Murfreesboro, Tenn. for the 100 Miles of Hate rivalry against Middle Tennessee Oct 31- Nov. 1.
On Nov. 7-8, WKU welcomes new CUSA opponent, Delaware, to Bowling Green for their final two home matches of the season. Much like last season, WKU will round out its CUSA regular season schedule against Liberty on Nov. 14-15 in Lynchburg, Va.
The 2025 Conference USA Championship will take place at the Ocean Bank Convocation Center in Miami, Fla. from Nov. 21-23.
WKU returns eight returners—Callahan Wiegandt, Callie Bauer, Gabby Weihe, Izzy Van De Wiele, Faith Young, Alivia Skidmore, Camila Adams, and Abby Schaefer—and welcomes six new faces to the WKU Volleyball program. Four of those six are freshman, Kaira Knox, Kennedy Cherry, Kate Rush, and Sonja Laaksonen, while the Hilltoppers also welcome Austin Peay transfer Taylor Baron, and Colorado transfer Kendall Meller.
The Hilltoppers are coming off a 28-7 overall record and a perfect 18-0 in Conference USA. WKU also claimed its 10th regular season title and seventh CUSA Tournament title.
Sports
Women’s Track and Field Sweeps Annual Illinois Athletic Awards for Second-Straight Season
Story Links CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – The Fighting Illini women’s track and field team has won all three University of Illinois Annual Athletic Awards including Athlete, Newcomer and Freshman of the Year as voted on by Illinois head coaches and DIA executive staff for the second-consecutive season. Long jumper Tacoria Humphrey […]

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – The Fighting Illini women’s track and field team has won all three University of Illinois Annual Athletic Awards including Athlete, Newcomer and Freshman of the Year as voted on by Illinois head coaches and DIA executive staff for the second-consecutive season.
Long jumper Tacoria Humphrey earned the title of Dike Eddleman Female Athlete of the year on the heels of earning All-America honors and Big Ten Champion status during both the indoor and outdoor seasons.
She won her Big Ten Indoor title with the third-furthest long jump in NCAA Indoor history, 6.94m (22-9 1/4). This mark is also the Big Ten, program and B1G Indoor Championships record. Following this performance she was named to The Bowerman Watch List, only the third Illini woman ever to be named to that prestigious list. She finished the indoor season with a silver medal at the NCAA Indoor Championships, the highest finisher ever in program history.
In the outdoor season she won her second-consecutive Big Ten Outdoor title to become a three-time Big Ten Champion. At the NCAA Outdoor Championships, she became an All-American in her fourth-place finish which is the highest finish in program history. She’s only the program’s second All-American in the event as the last was 43 years ago with Becky Kaiser on Illinois’ first NCAA-qualifying team in 1982.
Humphrey is the fifth consecutive recipient from the Illini women’s track & field program to earn the Eddleman award, and the third of coach Petros Kyprianou‘s three-year tenure. She is the 23rd winner overall from track since the Illinois Female Athlete of the Year award was first presented in 1977. Track & Field has the most selections among Illini women’s sports programs.
Shot putter Abria Smith was named Illinois Newcomer of the Year from her incredible growth in her first year in the Illini throws program. Working with coach J.C. Lambert she improved her personal best by over three meters from 15.84m (51-11 3/4) to 18.92m (62-1). Her 18.92m heave is not only a program record, but it’s the 14th-furthest throw in NCAA Outdoor history.
She finished the outdoor season as the shot put national runner-up, throwing 18.85m (62-1 1/4), to become the highest finisher ever in program history. A month prior she became the Big Ten Outdoor Champion in the shot put throwing 17.95m (58-10 3/4), the program’s first B1G Outdoor Champion shot putter since Olympic medalist Ashley Spencer in 2009.
During the indoor season Smith earned All-America honors with her program-record throw of 17.99m (59-0 1/4) to place seventh at the NCAA Indoor Championships after a fourth-place finish at the Big Ten Indoor Championships with a mark of 17.87m (58-7 1/2).
Smith is the second consecutive member of the Illini women’s track & field program to earn Newcomer of the Year, joining 2024 honoree Darja Sopova.
Melissa Wullschleger was tabbed Illinois Freshman of the Year to go along with her Big Ten Freshman of the Year honor. She became a first-team All-American in the heptathlon with a program record 5,928 points in her fourth-place finish at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. She’s the program’s third-ever All-American in the event and the first since Carmel Corbett in 1996. As part of her school-record breaking score, Wullschleger also threw the program’s third-furthest javelin, 44.20m (145-0), to propel her into the top-4 at the national meet.
A month prior to the national meet she took fourth in the heptathlon at the Big Ten Outdoor Championships with 5,749 points. During the indoor season she placed seventh in the pentathlon at the Big Ten Indoor Championships with the program’s fourth-highest score of 3,984 points.
Wullschleger is the 11th Freshman of the Year for the Illinois women’s track & field program and the second-consecutive one following teammate Elizabeth Ndudi’s selection in 2024.
Sports
Iran strike crew members graduated from Nellis AFB’s Weapons School, top general says
LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — “Most” of the crewmembers involved in the attack on one of the nuclear sites in Iran were graduates of the Air Force Weapons School based at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said. Gen. Dan Caine detailed the background of the crewmembers involved […]

LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — “Most” of the crewmembers involved in the attack on one of the nuclear sites in Iran were graduates of the Air Force Weapons School based at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said.
Gen. Dan Caine detailed the background of the crewmembers involved in the strikes on the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant during a Pentagon briefing Thursday on the attacks dubbed Operation Midnight Hammer.
Caine told reporters that the crews who attacked Fordow were active duty Air Force and members of the Missouri Air National Guard, “and most were graduates of the Air Force Weapons School, headquartered at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada.”
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“I will state for the record that there is no beach volleyball or football at the Air Force Weapons School,” he joked, appearing to reference the “Top Gun” film franchise about Naval fighter pilots.
There were men and women aviators in the mission, Caine said, and the crew members’ rankings ranged from captain to colonel.
According to the Air Force website, the Weapons School “trains tactical experts and leaders to control and exploit air, space and cyber on behalf of the joint force.”
About 150 weapons officers and enlisted tacticians graduate from the school every six months, the website states. They go on to serve as instructors and advisers to military leaders at all levels.
The Weapons School has 21 weapons squadrons and eight advanced instructor courses. Thirteen of those squadrons are based at Nellis Air Force Base.
Sports
Para-athletes, emerging talent shine at University of Michigan inclusive track meet
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – The University of Michigan is set to host the 2025 Miller Family Open Track and Field Meet, an inclusive competition for athletes with and without disabilities. The event, taking place on Saturday, June 28, 2025, offers a unique opportunity for storytelling and imagery to showcase the incredible talent of adaptive athletes. […]

ANN ARBOR, Mich. – The University of Michigan is set to host the 2025 Miller Family Open Track and Field Meet, an inclusive competition for athletes with and without disabilities.
The event, taking place on Saturday, June 28, 2025, offers a unique opportunity for storytelling and imagery to showcase the incredible talent of adaptive athletes.
The meet will bring together para-athletes, athletes with intellectual and developmental disabilities, and non-disabled competitors from institutions such as the University of Michigan, the University of Cincinnati, and the University of Alabama.
Emerging competitors ages 14 and up are encouraged to participate, as the meet also serves as a talent identification event.
This open-format meet is a World Para Athletics and Move United-sanctioned qualifier for the 2025 Move United and USA Track & Field Nationals.
The event is part of the Guardian’s Adaptive Student Athlete Program (ASAP), which aims to expand access to competitive sports for college-level athletes with disabilities.
The event will take place at the University of Michigan Track and Field Stadium, located at 2540 S. State Street, Ann Arbor, and is open to the public.
Challenging perceptions of athleticism
Beyond showcasing the dedication of adaptive athletes, the meet reflects the efforts of Dr. Oluwaferanmi Okanlami and the U-M Adaptive Sports and Fitness program to challenge traditional perceptions of what it means to be an athlete.
Now in its second year, the Miller Family Open Track and Field Meet continues U-M Adaptive Sports’ partnership with organizations such as Athletes Without Limits, Virtus, Move United, and USA Track & Field, creating competitive opportunities for a diverse range of athletes.
In addition to established national and international athletes, emerging competitors ages 14 and up are encouraged to participate, as the meet also serves as a talent identification event.
The event is part of the Guardian’s Adaptive Student Athlete Program (ASAP), a national initiative in partnership with the University of Michigan’s Adaptive Sports and Fitness program, which expands access to competitive sports—including track and field, wheelchair tennis, and wheelchair basketball—for college-level athletes with disabilities.
ASAP works to break down barriers to participation by increasing awareness, accessibility, and support for adaptive athletics.
Admissions to the event are free.
Additionally, a special ceremony will recognize donors from recent giving campaigns, with a surprise gift planned for incoming student-athletes.
The event starts at 9:30 a.m., and doors will open at 7:30 a.m.
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Events will feature the 100M, Open 100M, 200M, 400M, 800M, 1500M, 3000M, and Universal Relay (4*100M)
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Long jump, high jump, javelin, shot put, discus, and club
Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.
Sports
AVP Contender beach volleyball event starts Friday with qualifying in Virginia Beach – The Virginian-Pilot
The Association of Volleyball Professionals is returning to Virginia Beach for its second “Contender” event of the season, featuring some of beach volleyball’s rising stars. The winners and runners-up in the $60,000 event at 12th Street and Atlantic Avenue will receive wild-card berths into the AVP’s Manhattan Beach Open in August. Qualifying is set for […]

The Association of Volleyball Professionals is returning to Virginia Beach for its second “Contender” event of the season, featuring some of beach volleyball’s rising stars.
The winners and runners-up in the $60,000 event at 12th Street and Atlantic Avenue will receive wild-card berths into the AVP’s Manhattan Beach Open in August.
Qualifying is set for 9 a.m. Friday, with the 24-team main draws to follow Saturday and Sunday.
Also this weekend in Virginia Beach is the AVP Juniors 4-Star Mid-Atlantic Championships.
The men’s top seeds are Derek Bradford of Porter Ranch, California, and Evan Cory of Metairie, Louisiana, while the women’s top seeds are Maya Gessner and Jacinda Ramirez.
Three men’s pairs have a local player.
**Shawn Yoder of Virginia Beach is playing alongside John Valeiras of Richmond.
**Brett Rosenmeier of Virginia Beach is partnered by Nick Drooker of Henrico.
**Ayden Keeter of Yorktown is playing with Carson Barnes of Ocean View, Delaware.
Sports
Mountain West Announces 2025 Outdoor Track & Field Student-Athletes of the Year – Mountain West Conference
Colorado Springs, Colo. – A trio of field performers have been named the 2025 Mountain West Outdoor Track & Field Student-Athletes of the Year after a vote by the league’s head coaches. Air Force’s Texas Tanner earned the honor on the men’s side, while Colorado State’s Mya Lesnar and Fresno State’s Cierra Jackson were selected as co-recipients […]

Colorado Springs, Colo. – A trio of field performers have been named the 2025 Mountain West Outdoor Track & Field Student-Athletes of the Year after a vote by the league’s head coaches. Air Force’s Texas Tanner earned the honor on the men’s side, while Colorado State’s Mya Lesnar and Fresno State’s Cierra Jackson were selected as co-recipients for the women.
The honor is awarded to the best male and female student-athlete(s) in the Conference following the conclusion of the outdoor season.
A native of Sheridan, Wyoming, Tanner earned first-team All-America honors in the hammer throw at the 2025 NCAA championship after finishing fourth with a throw of 75.22 meters, becoming the first Falcon in 60 years to secure All-America honors in a men’s throwing event. He added a 20th-place finish and All-American Honorable Mention honors in the discus at the national meet.
The performance capped an outstanding year for the junior that saw him capture 2025 Mountain West titles and meet records in both the hammer throw (73.23m) and discus (63.59m), while setting the Conference’s all-time record in the hammer throw at 75.83 meters during the regular season. Tanner was named the MW Men’s Field Performer of the Meet for a second consecutive year and earned USTFCCCA Men’s Mountain Region Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year for the second time in as many seasons.
On the women’s side, both honorees came away with national titles at the 2025 NCAA championships.
Lesnar finished her stellar Ram career winning the shot put on her first attempt with a throw of 19.01 meters, becoming the first CSU thrower to win both an outdoor and indoor national title after her 2024 indoor shot put gold medal. Prior to the national championship, Lesnar picked up a second consecutive Mountain West shot put title at the 2025 Conference championship meet and set the Conference’s all-time record in the event in Fort Collins in May with a throw of 19.60 meters. The Alexandria, Minnesota, native was also named the 2025 USTFCCCA Women’s Mountain Region Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year.
Jackson, a Chandler, Arizona native, made history for Fresno State, capturing the program’s first outdoor title and the Bulldogs’ first NCAA title in 26 years with her gold in the women’s discus. The senior’s opening throw of 65.82 meters set a national meet record and proved to be the winning throw, earning her first-team All-America honors. Jackson also added an eighth-place finish in the shot put (17.70m) to garner a second first-team nod in Eugene. At the 2025 Mountain West championships, she took silver in the both the hammer throw (65.50m) and shot put (17.77m), finishing on the podium in both events for a second a straight year.
Sports
Chaminade volleyball adds 9 players
Chaminade women’s volleyball coach Kahala Kabalis Hoke announced her nine-player recruiting class for the 2025 season on Wednesday. Division I transfers Audrah Radford (6-2, outside hitter, Utah State) and Alizaysha Sopi (6-2, OH, Tennessee State) are among the group. Sopi is a Kapolei graduate. The class includes three incoming freshmen from local high schools. They […]
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