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NCAA semifinals pits men’s volleyball against Hawaiʻi in 2023 championship rematch

A rematch over two years in the making could be telling of what may soon be a dogfight. And a shootout may exactly be what happen as No. 3 seed UCLA men’s volleyball (21-6, 10-2 MPSF) prepare to face No. 2 seed Hawaiʻi (27-5, 7-3 Big West) on Saturday evening at the Covelli Center in […]

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A rematch over two years in the making could be telling of what may soon be a dogfight.

And a shootout may exactly be what happen as No. 3 seed UCLA men’s volleyball (21-6, 10-2 MPSF) prepare to face No. 2 seed Hawaiʻi (27-5, 7-3 Big West) on Saturday evening at the Covelli Center in Columbus, Ohio, for the NCAA tournament semifinals. UCLA enters the matchup having swept No. 6 seed Belmont Abbey in the quarterfinals, while Hawaiʻ’i defeated No. 7 seed Penn State in four sets in its first-round affair.

The last time the Bruins and the Rainbow Warriors squared off came in 2023 when the former defeated the latter in the national championship.

Although it’s been two years since that last contest, UCLA returns a roster headlined by four 2025 AVCA All-Americans – three of whom contributed to the program’s 20th NCAA title. Among the trio is junior setter Andrew Rowan, whose 60 assists against Hawaiʻi have been matched just one time since.

(Darlene Sanzon/Assistant Photo editor)
Junior setter Andrew Rowan (left) sets the ball to junior middle blocker Cameron Thorne (right) at Pauley Pavilion. (Darlene Sanzon/Assistant Photo editor)

Nonetheless, the three-time AVCA First Team All-American selection has continued to develop alongside his outside hitter duo redshirt junior Cooper Robinson and junior Zach Rama.

In UCLA’s quarterfinal victory over Belmont Abbey, Rowan posted 37 assists across three sets, helping produce a combined 24 kills for the pin-hitting duo on .529 and .476 hitting percentages, respectively.

While the Rainbow Warriors aren’t unfamiliar to these returning Bruins, new faces give first-year coach John Hawks new tricks to pull out of his sleeve.

Freshman outside hitter Sean Kelly has proved valuable in replacing senior Ido David, who has been in and out of the rotation because of injury and will most likely play as a serving specialist in the tournament. Just two years ago, the outside hitter/opposite led the squad in its championship game with 23 kills, but looks to be a non-factor here.

Kelly, a 2025 All-MPSF Freshman Team selection, has posted double-digit kills in seven of his last nine outings, with his last two performances featuring .400-plus hitting clips.

UCLA may need to rely on momentum going into its upcoming semifinal appearance to stymie a Hawai‘i team looking for vengeance from the 2023 finals.

Across three sets in the quarterfinals, the Bruins outscored the Crusaders by 25 points and held them under 20 points in two of the three frames. Additionally, the Bruins held a double-digit advantage in kills, blocks and assists.

(Andrew Diaz/Daily Bruin)
Junior middle blocker Cameron Thorne rises to strike the ball over the net for a kill. (Andrew Diaz/Daily Bruin)

Contributing to this success was junior middle blocker Cameron Thorne, whose six-block performance marked the seventh time he’s achieved such measure.

Throne’s two-way skillset – hitting at a .526 percentage and ranking 11th in the nation in blocks per set with 1.09 – may be vital to building a Bruin lead and mitigating the Rainbow Warriors’ attack, one spearheaded by 6-foot-11-inch setter Tread Rosenthal.

The 2025 AVCA First Team All-American selection ranks third in the nation in assists per set and has led Hawai‘i to the sixth-best hitting percentage in the country.

Receiving his passes is outside hitter Adrien Roure. The second 2025 AVCA First Team All-American ranks third in the country in kills per set but garnered just five kills and a -.038 hitting percentage against Penn State in the quarterfinals.

Notably, neither Rosenthal nor Roure were in college yet at the time of the last UCLA and Hawai’i matchup, meaning precedence is no easy indicator of repeated victory.

Hawai‘i might have all the motivation in the world to avenge its national championship loss two years ago, defeating No. 1 seed Long Beach State twice in the final five matches of the season.

But roster upheaval and new faces on both sides of the court will most likely make this a tightly-contested affair, incomparable to the one that took place in 2023.

Regardless of who wins, one of the squads will have the opportunity to face the winner of No. 1 seed Long Beach State and No. 5 seed Pepperdine for the chance to crown themselves the 2025 national champions.



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Reaching Her Full Potential: Chioma Njoku’s Journey From Delaware to Maryland Ends With NCAA Championship Berth

Njoku began competing in the shot put and discus throw at Padua Academy, winning an outdoor state championship in each of her four years. She also won two individual indoor state championships in back-to-back seasons in 2017-18 and 2018-19.  Her success caught the eye of college recruiters, earning her an athletic scholarship to the University […]

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Njoku began competing in the shot put and discus throw at Padua Academy, winning an outdoor state championship in each of her four years. She also won two individual indoor state championships in back-to-back seasons in 2017-18 and 2018-19. 

Her success caught the eye of college recruiters, earning her an athletic scholarship to the University of Delaware. There, Njoku continued competing less than half an hour from home. She was recruited primarily to compete in the shot put. 

Njoku was later introduced to the hammer and weight throws. But it wasn’t until her junior year that coaches suggested she focus solely on the hammer throw. The decision paid off, as she made her postseason debut in the event as a senior. But fresh off her successful 2022-23 campaign, Njoku entered the transfer portal, where she was sought after by coaches to compete in the hammer and weight throws.  

Burdorff was immediately interested once he discovered Njoku was looking for a new home. He was already familiar with her, as Njoku was a freshman at Delaware during his first year coaching at the Division I level at Towson. Both schools are part of the Coastal Athletic Association (CAA).

Burdorff recalled coaching the No. 2 and No. 3 seeds for the hammer throw in the CAA championships in 2021. However, it was Njoku who beat both competitors, placing second with a 53.39-meter throw as a redshirt freshman. 

“I vividly remember once I saw her name and saw that she was looking for a home outside Delaware,” Burdorff said. “I was like, ‘I remember you very clearly, because you beat us.’ … It was interesting to see everything come full circle.”



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The Battle For Professional Volleyball Has Officially Begun

Megan Courtney-Lush was ready to retire. She played four years of college volleyball at Penn State and then went on to play professionally in Puerto Rico, Poland, Turkey, and Italy. After 10 years, she had decided that it was time to come home and move on to the next stage of her life. She bought […]

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Megan Courtney-Lush was ready to retire. She played four years of college volleyball at Penn State and then went on to play professionally in Puerto Rico, Poland, Turkey, and Italy. After 10 years, she had decided that it was time to come home and move on to the next stage of her life. She bought a house in Columbus, Ohio and was several months pregnant in 2023 when she got an unexpected phone call. Someone was starting a professional women’s volleyball league in the U.S., and they wanted her to play. “I said ‘No thanks, I’m out,'” she told me, laughing.

But the calls kept coming. Columbus would have a team, they told her, coached by Ángel Pérez, former captain of the Puerto Rican men’s national team. Pérez called Courtney-Lush himself, trying to see if he could get her on the court, and she kept looking for excuses to stay home: “I played hardball. I kept coming up with all these random things I would need and they kept saying yes.” Four months after having her first child, Courtney-Lush found herself back on the volleyball court, playing in the first active professional women’s volleyball league in the United States since 1989.

Her teammate Jill Gillen’s story is almost the opposite. Gillen wanted to go pro, but didn’t think she had any chance at it. She’s short (for a volleyball player) and didn’t go to a school known for the sport. “I just thought nobody’s gonna want to take a 5-foot-7 kid from Kansas who went to Arkansas,” Gillen said. But in 2023, her Razorbacks team made a run into the NCAA women’s tournament, and she started getting phone calls and hearing from coaches. “I remember thinking, OK, wow, this is really happening.”

Courtney-Lush and Gillen both play in the Pro Volleyball Federation (PVF), which just finished its second year. But this season, competition didn’t just come from other teams in the league—it came from another organization entirely. In January, League One Volleyball, (LOVB, which the league wants people to pronounce as “love”) kicked off their own professional season featuring six new teams.

Add to the mix Athletes Unlimited—which runs a short-form fall season—and 2025 was an embarrassment of riches for the American volleyball fan. But it was also a year of confusion. Who was playing where? How do you watch? Which league is the one to pay attention to? Which games are worth attending? “Honestly, I’m sometimes just as confused as everyone else,” Courtney-Lush told me.

Megan Courtney-Lush jumps for a ball.
Megan Courtney-LushPhoto via Columbus Fury

To make things even more complicated, one of the most popular teams in the PVF announced in January that it would be leaving to start its own new league: Major League Volleyball (MLV). If MLV gets off the ground on its proposed time table, something not everyone is convinced will happen, there will be three professional women’s volleyball leagues in action next January.

As a volleyball sicko, I’ve spent the last two years watching almost every PVF and LOVB game, along with Athletes Unlimited, the Olympics, and the Volleyball Nations League. For this story, I spoke with over 20 people in the volleyball world, including 10 athletes, six team staff, and nearly a dozen die-hard fans of both PVF and LOVB. Nearly everybody told me the same thing: It’s exciting, but also a little bit scary.

At a time when interest and investment in women’s sports is at an all-time high, the battle for women’s volleyball provides both inspiration and caution. Everybody wants to win, but if the wealthy investors behind the scenes can’t put their egos aside and come to some kind of agreement, it might be the players who ultimately lose.


It’s not that surprising that new investment is flooding into women’s volleyball. The NCAA game has surged in popularity in the last decade. In 2023, over 90,000 people filled the Nebraska Cornhuskers’ football stadium to watch the women’s team play. That same year, the NCAA championship final between Nebraska and Texas was watched by 1.69 million people. Volleyball is now the No. 1 team sport in high school for girls in the United States. 

From a less mercenary perspective: Volleyball is fun! The sport moves quickly, someone scores on every single play, and the rules are pretty easy to learn. Some of these women jump over 11 feet into the air, then make reflexive dives onto the floor to save a ball. Almost everybody I talked to for this story, when asked how to get people into volleyball, told me that you just have to show it to them. Fans in the stadiums are glued to their seats, so much so that it’s actually kind of a problem. “Our venue partner wants us to do more breaks so people leave their seats and buy concessions,” Mary Kay Huse, president and general manager of the PVF’s Indianapolis Ignite, told me.

And yet until recently, volleyball’s inherent qualities weren’t enough to attract investment into a professional league. “I always wanted to play pro, and I always knew in my head it was going to be in Europe somewhere,” Aiko Jones, opposite hitter for the Atlanta Vibe, told me. Her teammate Leah Edmond said the same thing: “I for sure didn’t want to go overseas.” Edmond played in Puerto Rico for a year, but she didn’t want to go any farther. “I was just like, we have to find some other options to be able to stay in the States.” 

Morgan Hentz, a libero for the Vibe, did go abroad. “When I was overseas, I felt like I was putting my life in the U.S. on hold,” she said. “And it was really difficult to see friends’ and family’s lives continue on while I just felt so distanced and disconnected from them.”

Volleyball’s surge in popularity, coupled with the general boom in investment in women’s sports, made a pro league an enticing investment for people from all kinds of industries. LOVB started developing its pro league in 2020, and three years later secured $60 million in investments from Billie Jean King, Amy Schumer, Chelsea Handler, Lindsey Vonn, and Kevin Durant. In 2023, PVF announced an influx of cash from investors like Dan DeVos, Jason DeRulo, Danny White, and Joe Burrow. And in 2024, LOVB announced that it had received $100 million more from Atwater Capital, although not all of this investment was purely for the professional side of the LOVB business.

Madisen Skinner signs autographs
Madisen Skinner signs autographsPhoto via LOVB

These investors have chosen sides not just in terms of branding and players, but business models. The PVF is a more traditional American sports league, where each team has its own franchised ownership. LOVB is centrally owned: Players sign contracts with the league, and are assigned to teams. LOVB says that in the future it will sell its teams off to owners, but hasn’t put a timeline on that.

LOVB is also tying its professional league to a push into the youth market by buying youth clubs around the country and taking over their operations, housing them under the LOVB Clubs umbrella. In theory, this means players could progress through junior clubs directly into a professional league, all within the same organization. “We wanted to create a pro league that was deeply connected to its youth community and provide this true pathway for women in this country to play professionally,” Rosie Spaulding, president of LOVB Pro, the professional side of the league, told me. This is the model for many clubs across lots of sports in Europe, but remains uncommon in the United States.

These different business models have pros and cons. Centralized ownership can be more stable as a league is getting off the ground. “I think when you’re in the beginning, the most important thing for us is that we’re sustainable and here for the long haul,” Spaulding said. “So we’re not just a flash in the pan, here for a couple of years and then gone.” (This isn’t entirely unprecedented in the U.S. sports world. Major League Soccer has a related structure: the league is a single business entity and team owners are shareholders in the league, but not true franchises.)

Some critics of LOVB have concerns that the league is using fees from youth sports to fund its professional league—essentially taking the money parents are paying for their kids to participate in youth club volleyball, to subsidize the pros. In an interview from June 2024, one of the founding LOVB athletes, Kelsey Robinson Cook, did a podcast interview with her husband Brian Cook, who, while answering a question about how a U.S. league might be able to last, said, “There’s so much money in youth club volleyball, and they’re kind of putting them all under one umbrella really optimizing things, making them even more profitable, and that money is being used to kind of start this pro league.” Spaulding told me that that is an incorrect description of their model: “Our club and pro businesses operate independently from one another, which means our club operations do not finance any of our pro operations.” Other critics of LOVB are concerned that the league buying up club teams constitutes “turning youth club volleyball into a private equity investment,” as Nikki DelZenero, the co-host of the Court Captains Podcast, put it.

Teams in the PVF seem to have a better connection to the places they actually play. “The teams have kind of embraced the personality of their local markets. What San Diego might do for fan engagement is not necessarily what Orlando might do, you know, and it’s just, you can cater to your markets,” said Rob Carolla, the vice president of public and media relations for the PVF. PVF games are more raucous and wacky. There are hype people and T-shirt tosses. The Orlando Valkyries have turned their towel guy into a whole character who does media interviews. The Indy Ignite have a mascot named Pepper who says things like, “I was born with this beautiful, round volleyball head and decided to make the most of it.”

Kevin Pflanger wasn’t a volleyball fan at all until he went to the season opener of the Supernovas, the PVF’s team in Omaha and one of the league’s most popular squads. Tickets were cheap, so he thought “Why not?” From that game on, he was hooked. Pflanger lives in Omaha, which has a LOVB team too, and he went to those games to check them out. But it wasn’t the same. “It feels like a more sterile, corporate environment,” he told me.

10 Jill Gillen Outside Hitter, CBUS FURY.
Jill GillenPhoto via Columbus Fury

On the flip side, nearly everybody I talked to agreed that the actual volleyball in LOVB is at a higher level than the PVF. The league has more international talent and 17 Olympians, a fact that their announcers seem contractually obligated to point out at least 10 times per match. Overall, the play is faster and teams are running more complex offenses. Only one player from the PVF was named to this summer’s U.S. National Team roster—Hentz, who’s been playing with the national team for years—while 14 LOVB players will be there. And several fans told me that they found LOVB games are easier to actually watch on TV, because the league has a deal with ESPN, whereas PVF games are spread across YouTube, CBS Sports, Roku, and Fox Sports.

It’s not all that unusual to see competing leagues at the beginning of a sport’s emergence into professional play. The National League and the American League ultimately became MLB. The NFL absorbed the All-America Football Conference and then merged with the American Football League. The NBA merged with the ABA. The NHL partially merged with the World Hockey Association. More recently, the two women’s professional hockey gambits were forced to merge into the Professional Women’s Hockey League. Even the leaders of some of these teams and leagues seem to know what’s coming. “There will ultimately be one league,” Kay Huse  told me.

In the meantime, some are happy to have a little rivalry. “A rising tide lifts all boats,” Kay Huse said. “Competition is a good thing. We’re constantly making each other better.” Spaulding, president of LOVB Pro, said the exact same thing, and volleyball experts seem to agree. “It’s better for players,” Kelly Wolinetz, of the Court Captains podcast, told me. “You get some competition with salaries and things like that.” DelZenero, her cohost, agrees. “I do think it’s better for player power. I don’t know that salaries would have increased the way that they did in the PVF without the presence of LOVB.”

Most people I talked to agreed that if there were simply two leagues, LOVB and the PVF, the professional game would sort itself out eventually, as it has many times before. 

It’s the third league that really throws a wrench into things.


In January of this year, the owners of the Omaha Supernovas announced that they would be leaving the PVF to start yet another league called Major League Volleyball. “The Supernovas will continue to play their home games at CHI Health Center in Omaha and remain Nebraska’s professional volleyball team,” the statement said, “ensuring the same world-class competition and hometown pride that fans have come to love.” (In case you weren’t keeping track, LOVB has a pro volleyball team in Omaha, which means that the Supernovas are not, in fact, the only pro team in the state.)

Details about the split, the future of the Supernovas, and MLV’s plans remain shrouded in mystery. The Supernovas’ move seems to have been instigated by a dispute between the team’s controversial co-founder Danny White and the league. Volleyball fan forums are full of rumors about exactly why White felt the need to leave the league and take his team with him, but nothing has been publicly verified, and nobody I spoke to could offer a concrete explanation. A spokesperson for the team told me via email that “at this time, plans for next season are still evolving behind the scenes, so it would be premature for anyone from the Supernovas to speak on the record.”

Since the announcement, MLV has made a handful of vague statements about what’s coming. The website is sparse on details, but it claims it’ll have the first serve in January 2026, with 10 teams. White brought some old business partners (like Jason Derulo) with him, and added in a new group of founders that includes Vivek Ranadivé, the owner of the Sacramento Kings, and Kerri Walsh Jennings, an iconic Olympic beach volleyball player.

On social media, MLV acknowledged being late to the party. “Multiple competing leagues are not ideal long term for this sport,” the league said in a statement on Instagram. The post went on, attempting to explain what will separate MLV from the other pro leagues: “MLV provides major league level ownership, major league level venues and major league level pay for players and staff. This isn’t just another league. This is major.” 

Kerri Walsh Jennings, on her own post announcing MLV, wrote, “Here in the states, there’s never been a league ambitious enough – MAJOR enough – to attract the BEST OF THE BEST.” It’s not clear who Walsh Jennings would like to see come to the U.S. to play, given that 11 of the 17 women on the U.S. Olympic team from Paris played in either the PVF or LOVB last season.

LOVB Austin
LOVB AustinPhoto via LOVB

The tone of these posts hasn’t gone over well with some players. “Respectfully, this ain’t it chief,” commented M’Kaela White, who played this past season on the PVF’s Orlando Valkyries. “Further dividing viewership and a quality product for audience retention isn’t a healthy approach to attaining a strong unified national volleyball league. PVF and League One are on the right track to develop something sustainable in the next 3-5 years and we need everyone to stand behind that.”

Haleigh Washington, a U.S. Olympian and middle blocker on the Salt Lake LOVB team, turned the announcement into a joke. “Since everyone and their Great Aunt Shirley wants to make a New Pro Volleyball League, here’s your chance to join in on the fun!” she wrote, followed by an ad-libs form:

“This just in! Coming in (year)! A brand new Professional Women’s Volleyball League! The (superlative) (synonym for Pro) Volleyball League! With key investors like (TikTok influencer), (random pop celebrity), (a volleyball player important enough to make this seem legit)!!! Launching in cities like (Midwest city) and (nickname of a city)!!!”

Fans have been turned off, too. “When I saw Major League Volleyball I was ‘Oh my god this is ridiculous,'” Mollie Turner, a Columbus Fury season ticket holder (and LOVB fan) who got into volleyball during the pandemic after watching the anime Haikyu!!, told me. Every other fan I talked to said some variation of the same thing. Pflanger told me he won’t be going to Supernovas games anymore if they play in MLV. “I’m kind of furious,” he said, and told me that he’ll probably be switching his allegiance to LOVB Omaha.

Pflanger might not have to make that choice. It’s not clear right now whether MLV is actually going to get off the ground at all. Starting a sports league isn’t easy. It took both LOVB and the PVF several years to get going; signing players, designing logos, securing venues, finding coaches and local sponsors, and getting their legal structures figured out took a great deal of time and effort. While MLV might have a jumpstart with the Omaha team, many people I spoke with found the idea that they’d be able to launch a whole league with 10 teams by January of next year hard to believe. 

The mystery seems to extend even to insiders. Most athletes are free agents now, and some of them told me that if MLV’s contracts are good, they’d be open to playing there. But their agents haven’t been able to figure out what is going on, or if the league will exist at all. Brooke Nuneviller, the Supernovas’ star outside hitter, laughed when I asked her what was going on with MLV. “It’s such a mystery to everybody,” she said. “I’ve heard tiny bits of details, but nothing concrete. I’m just as curious about it as you are.” I reached out to several people involved in MLV, and no one was willing to comment. One Supernovas fan told me that they’d been getting calls from the team trying to sell a season ticket package for next year. When they asked the representative whether the Supernovas would be playing in the MLV, they were told “that’s the plan.”

LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY - APRIL 11: Logan Eggleston #33 of LOVB Austin serves during a semifinals match against LOVB Atlantaat KFC YUM! Center on April 11, 2025 in Louisville, Kentucky.
Logan EgglestonEmilee Chinn/LOVB/Getty Images

It’s this additional drama that has people most nervous. Competition might be good, but it’s not a given that any of these leagues will actually succeed. No matter what the perky Instagram captions say, both leagues right now are precariously positioned. Both have struggled with live attendance numbers. The PVF final’s stands were barely half full. LOVB’s weren’t much better. Taking the Omaha Supernovas from the PVF—the most successful team thus far in terms of ticket sales—could spell trouble for that league as a whole. Bryan McCann, a fan and occasional volleyball historian, told me that losing the Supernovas would be like MLB losing the New York Yankees. Carolla told me that PVF plans to add a team in Dallas for the 2026 season, but nothing official has been announced yet, and he hinted by email that there may be other additions, too. “While I have nothing new to report on that front, the Board is consistently evaluating opportunities for new teams,” he told me.

Lots of fans and players are worried that the sport can’t actually support quite this much competition. “People are just going to be like, ‘Oh, my god, I can’t follow volleyball, there’s all these leagues,'” said Turner.


Meanwhile, the actual athletes are stuck in the middle of it all. “I think players just pray that a league sustains,” Hentz told me. “I think the worst thing that can happen would be these leagues stay stubborn and don’t merge one day, or they’re not fully funded. The resources right now are being so dispersed, and my fear is that maybe they all die out.”

The players I talked to all told me that they don’t really care who wins the Great Pro Volleyball Wars, as long as they get to play. “I don’t think really anybody cares about what letters are in front of the league we play for. We just want volleyball to be successful. We just aren’t the ones with the wads of cash,” Courtney-Lush said. She said she also can’t help but feel like the players are caught in the middle of an argument between rich people. “It feels like they’re doing it for the dollar sign, rather than doing it to support women’s sports and bring a product that’s worthy of equality. That’s the most frustrating thing. It feels like it’s all very money-driven. Which is how the world works. But we’re second-tier to their money.”

Logan Eggleston, a LOVB founding athlete, felt the same way. “I think that’s kind of where the people at the top have to maybe put their egos aside a little bit and decide what’s best for our sport, which is to not be competing against each other and instead be competing for one major goal, which is to create great volleyball in our country,” she said.

Eggleston is returning to LOVB next year, and she hopes to keep playing in the U.S. If the U.S. doesn’t work out, Eggleston will go back to Europe and play there. Courtney-Lush isn’t sure what she’s going to do. Maybe she’ll play another season in PVF. Maybe she won’t. In some ways, she’s lucky to be on the tail end of her career. She was ready to retire, anyway. Gillen won’t be staying in the PVF; she signed with a Swiss team just last week, so she’s going overseas no matter what happens with the domestic leagues. Nuneviller told me that she’ll go wherever she has to go to play. “We’re in a really fantastic situation right now with the opportunity to play in the states,” she said. “And absolute worst-case scenario, I go play in Italy, and that’s a pretty fantastic state to be in. I’m not stressed about my career, I’m excited to see how it will all play out.”

Volleyball isn’t going away. But for all the promotional material that the three leagues have generated about how amazing it is to have opportunities to play in the U.S. for players, they don’t seem to take into account how their behavior could wind up meaning that nobody does.





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West Coast Conference Announces The Addition Of Three Championships

Story Links SAN BRUNO, Calif. – The West Coast Conference will add conference championships in men’s soccer, women’s soccer and softball, as the Presidents’ Council ratified the three championship proposals during their annual spring meeting that concluded June 5, 2025.   All three championship events will begin in the 2026-27 academic year.   […]

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SAN BRUNO, Calif. – The West Coast Conference will add conference championships in men’s soccer, women’s soccer and softball, as the Presidents’ Council ratified the three championship proposals during their annual spring meeting that concluded June 5, 2025.
 
All three championship events will begin in the 2026-27 academic year.
 
“Following a thorough evaluation of each championship proposal, the membership was aligned in adding championship events in men’s soccer, women’s soccer and softball,” West Coast Conference Commissioner Stu Jackson said. “We look forward to hosting high-caliber championships and are excited for our programs to have the opportunity to compete for a title and secure the Conference’s automatic qualification to their respective NCAA Championship.” 
 
The men’s and women’s soccer championship formats will be four teams with the highest seed hosting each event. The semifinal matches will be played on Wednesday, and the championship match will be contested on Saturday preceding NCAA selection.
 
The West Coast Conference is a perennial multi-bid league in both men’s and women’s soccer. West Coast Conference teams have made three appearances in the NCAA Women’s College Cup in the last five seasons with Santa Clara capturing the 2020 NCAA title and the Broncos and BYU advancing in 2021. In the last three men’s soccer seasons, Portland (2022) and LMU (2023) advanced to the quarterfinals and San Diego (2024) reached the third round of the NCAA Championship.
 
The softball championship format will be a four-team, double elimination, tournament contested on the Thursday-Saturday preceding NCAA selection. The championship will be held at a pre-determined campus site.
 
Three different softball programs have captured a West Coast Conference title the last three years. LMU won in 2023, Saint Mary’s won in 2024, and the Gaels and Santa Clara were co-champions this past season, as the Broncos earned the tiebreaker to secure their first bid to the NCAA Championship.
 
 
About the West Coast Conference
The West Coast Conference was formed in 1952 and has evolved and grown to become a nationally recognized and competitive force in Division I intercollegiate athletics. The West Coast Conference is fueled by the conviction to achieve its goals with strong core values of integrity, respect, collaboration, innovation, and inclusiveness that create a holistic student-athlete experience. The conference sponsors 16 sports with a three-state footprint that includes Gonzaga, LMU, Pacific, Pepperdine, Portland, Saint Mary’s, San Diego, San Francisco and Santa Clara. Seattle will become the West Coast Conference’s newest member on July 1, 2025. We Create Champions on the field of competition and leaders in life. For more information, visit WCCsports.com and follow the West Coast Conference on X, Instagram, and Facebook @WCCsports.
 



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When Are The 800-Meter Events At The 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships?

Sprinters get to be known as the fastest athletes around. Relay team members are revered for their speed, coordination, timing and teamwork. Long-distance runners are admired for their pace and patience. In between, are the middle-distance events that may not be as flashy, but they still demand a balance of technique, endurance and strategy.  Among […]

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Sprinters get to be known as the fastest athletes around. Relay team members are revered for their speed, coordination, timing and teamwork. Long-distance runners are admired for their pace and patience.

In between, are the middle-distance events that may not be as flashy, but they still demand a balance of technique, endurance and strategy. 

Among those races is the 800-meter event, complete with its own stars and fans, all ready to see who claims the 800m national titles this year at the 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships.

The meet will take place over four days – June 11-14 – at Hayward Field on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene, Oregon.

The semifinals of the men’s 800m event will be June 11 at 8:58 p.m. Eastern, and the final will take place June 13 at 9:14 p.m. EDT.

The semifinals of the women’s 800 will be June 12 at 8:58 p.m. Eastern, and the final will be run June 14 at 10:43 p.m. EDT.

Catch all the action from the 2025 Division I Outdoor Championships live on ESPN+, and visit FloTrack for breaking news, results, highlights and more. 

Portions of the competition on June 11-12 also will be broadcast on ESPN, while some events on June 13-14 will air on ESPN2.

To earn their spots at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, the student-athletes battled their way through a pair of regional competitions to determine the field for the national event at Hayward Field.

Every individual event at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships will feature 24 athletes – 12 from each regional – while each relay welcomes 24 teams – 12 from each regional event.

The 2025 NCAA Division I Track and Field West Regional was held in College Station, Texas, and the East Regional took place in Jacksonville, Florida. Both were held May 28-31.

Below, are the lists of men and women who qualified for the 800-meter events, respectively:

Men’s 800m Qualifiers

  1. Christian Jackson (Virginia Tech) – 1:45.31
  2. Rynard Swanepoel (Wake Forest) – 1:45.42
  3. Tinoda Matsatsa (Georgetown) – 1:45.36
  4. Abdullahi Hassan (Miss State) – 1:45.64
  5. Handal Roban (Penn State) – 1:45.47
  6. Nicholas Plant (Virginia Tech) – 1:45.90
  7. Samuel Navarro (Miss State) – 1:46.47
  8. Patrick Tuohy (NC State) – 1:46.60
  9. Kirk Dawkins (Florida A&M) – 1:46.62
  10. Tyrice Taylor (Arkansas) – 1:46.64
  11. Sam Whitmarsh (Texas A&M) – 1:46.68
  12. Kyle Reinheimer (Washington) – 1:46.82
  13. Rivaldo Marshall (Arkansas) – 1:46.97
  14. Aidan McCarthy (Cal Poly) – 1:47.01
  15. Matthew Erickson (Oregon) – 1:47.07
  16. Dugion Blackman (Iowa State) – 1:47.13
  17. Lloyd Frilot (TCU) – 1:47.15
  18. Koitatoi Kidali (Oregon) – 1:47.17
  19. Yared Kidane (Wichita State) – 1:47.35
  20. Samuel Rodman (Princeton) – 1:47.24
  21. Brian Kweyei (Clemson) – 1:47.28
  22. Allon Clay (Penn State) – 1:47.29
  23. Patrick Hilby (Wisconsin) – 1:47.30
  24. Andrew Casey (Wisconsin) – 1:47.30

Women’s 800m Qualifiers 

  1. Michaela Rose (LSU) – 1:58.91
  2. Meghan Hunter (BYU) – 1:58.95
  3. Gladys Chepngetich (Clemson) – 1:59.47
  4. Makayla Paige (North Carolina) – 1:59.73
  5. Roisin Willis (Stanford) – 1:59.81
  6. Smilla Kolbe (North Florida) – 2:00.09
  7. Lauren Tolbert (Duke) – 2:00.27
  8. Janet Jepkemboi Amimo (Kentucky) – 2:00.36
  9. Sophia Gorriaran (Harvard) – 2:00.46
  10. Veronica Hargrave (Indiana) – 2:00.51
  11. Laura Pellicoro (Portland) – 2:01.44
  12. Alli Bookin-Nosbisch (Iowa) – 2:01.70
  13. Emma Sullivan (Kennesaw State) – 2:01.71
  14. Makayla Clark (Iowa State) – 2:01.75
  15. Victoria Bossong (Harvard) – 2:01.83
  16. Emma Kelley (Wisconsin) – 2:01.87
  17. Kaylie Politza (Oklahoma State) – 2:02.04
  18. Jenna Schwinghamer (Kentucky) – 2:02.38
  19. Tessa Buswell (BYU) – 2:02.54
  20. Fanny Arendt (Texas Tech) – 2:02.63
  21. Aaliyah Moore (Kansas) – 2:02.87
  22. Marie Warneke (UCLA) – 2:02.93
  23. Sanu Jallow (Arkansas) – 2:03.16
  24. Maeve O’Neill (Providence) – 2:03.44

Who Won The National Titles In The 800-Meter Events At The 2024 NCAA Outdoor Championships?

At last year’s NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships, Virginia senior Shane Cohen took the men’s 800m title with a 1:44.97 performance, finishing ahead of Texas A&M’s Sam Whitmarsh (1:45.10) and Iowa State’s Finley McClear (1:45.66).

The women’s champion in the 800 was Stanford’s Juliette Whittaker, who completed the coveted double in 2024 by winning the 800 at the NCAA’s indoor and outdoor championship meets. 

Whittaker won the outdoor title with a time of 1:59.61, besting her teammate Roisin Willis (2:00.17) and Oklahoma State’s Gabija Galvydyte (2:00.23).

How To Watch The 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track And Field Championships

The 2025 NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships will take place June 11-14 at Hayward Field on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene, Oregon.

Live coverage will be provided by ESPN+ starting at 3 p.m. Eastern on June 11; 12:45 p.m. EDT on June 12; 2:45 p.m. on June 13; and 3:30 p.m. on June 14.

On June 11, ESPN will broadcast men’s action at 7 p.m. Eastern. On June 12, the women will be on ESPN at 7 p.m. EDT. On June 13, the second day of men’s competition will air on ESPN2 at 8 p.m. EDT. On June 14, the women will take the ESPN2 spotlight at 9 p.m. EDT.

For the entire event, FloTrack will be your one-stop shop for breaking news, highlights, results and more, so make sure top pop open that extra tab.

NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships – Men’s Schedule

All Times Eastern

Wednesday, June 11

Field Events

  • 4:30 p.m. – Hammer Throw Final
  • 7:35 p.m. – Pole Vault Final
  • 8:15 p.m. – Javelin Final
  • 8:40 p.m. – Long Jump Final
  • 9:10 p.m. – Shot Put Final

Combined Events

  • 3 p.m. – 100m (Decathlon)
  • 3:40 p.m. – Long Jump (Decathlon)
  • 4:55 p.m. – Shot Put (Decathlon)
  • 6:10 p.m. – High Jump (Decathlon)
  • 9:43 p.m. – 400m (Decathlon)

Track Events

  • 7:05 p.m. – 4×100 Relay Semifinals
  • 7:21 p.m. – 1,500m Semifinals
  • 7:38 p.m. – 3,000m Steeplechase Semifinals
  • 8:08 p.m. – 110m Hurdles Semifinals
  • 8:25 p.m. – 100m Semifinals
  • 8:41 p.m. – 400m Semifinals
  • 8:58 p.m. – 800m Semifinals
  • 9:14 p.m. – 400m Hurdles Semifinals
  • 9:29 p.m. – 200m Semifinals
  • 9:56 p.m. – 10,000m Final
  • 10:36 p.m. – 4×400 Relay Semifinals

Thursday, June 12

Combined Events

  • 12:45 p.m. – 110m Hurdles (Decathlon)
  • 1:35 p.m. – Discus (Decathlon)
  • 2:45 p.m. – Pole Vault (Decathlon)
  • 5:15 p.m. – Javelin (Decathlon)
  • 9:43 p.m. – 1,500m (Decathlon)

Friday, June 13

Field Events

  • 5:15 p.m. – Discus Final
  • 7:30 p.m. – High Jump Final
  • 8:10 p.m. – Triple Jump Final

Track Events

  • 7:50 p.m. – National Collegiate Wheelchair 100m Final
  • 8:02 p.m. – 4×100 Relay Final
  • 8:12 p.m. – 1,500m Final
  • 8:24 p.m. – 3,000m Steeplechase Final
  • 8:42 p.m. – 100m Final
  • 9:02 p.m. – 400m Final
  • 9:14 p.m. – 800m Final
  • 9:27 p.m. – 400m Hurdles Final
  • 9:37 p.m. – 200m Final
  • 9:55 p.m. – 5,000m Final
  • 10:21 p.m. – 4×400 Relay Final

NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships – Women’s Schedule

All Times Eastern

Thursday, June 12

Field Events

  • 4:30 p.m. – Hammer Throw Final
  • 7:35 p.m. – Pole Vault Final
  • 8:15 p.m. – Javelin Final
  • 8:40 p.m. – Long Jump Final
  • 9:10 p.m. – Shot Put Final

Track Events

  • 7:05 p.m. – 4×100 Relay Semifinals
  • 7:21 p.m. – 1,500m Semifinals
  • 7:38 p.m. – 3,000m Steeplechase Semifinals
  • 8:08 p.m. – 100m Hurdles Semifinals
  • 8:25 p.m. – 100m Semifinals
  • 8:41 p.m. – 400m Semifinals
  • 8:58 p.m. – 800m Semifinals
  • 9:14 p.m. – 400m Hurdles Semifinals
  • 9:29 p.m. – 200m Semifinals
  • 9:56 p.m. – 10,000m Final
  • 10:36 p.m. – 4×400 Relay Semifinals

Friday, June 13

Combined Events

  • 2:45 p.m. – 100m Hurdles (Heptathlon)
  • 3:45 p.m. – High Jump (Heptathlon)
  • 5:45 p.m. – Shot Put (Heptathlon)
  • 9:43 p.m. – 200m (Heptathlon)

Saturday, June 14

Field Events

  • 3:30 p.m. – Discus Final
  • 8:30 p.m. – High Jump Final
  • 9:10 p.m. – Triple Jump Final

Combined Events

  • 6:30 p.m. – Long Jump (Heptathlon)
  • 7:45 p.m. – Javelin (Heptathlon)
  • 10:43 p.m. – 800m (Heptathlon)

Track Events

  • 8:50 p.m. – National Collegiate Wheelchair 100m Final
  • 9:02 p.m. – 4×100 Relay Final
  • 9:11 p.m. – 1,500m Final
  • 9:24 p.m. – 3,000m Steeplechase Final
  • 9:42 p.m. – 100m Hurdles Final
  • 9:52 p.m. – 100m Final
  • 10:02 p.m. – 400m Final
  • 10:14 p.m. – 800m Final
  • 10:27 p.m. – 400m Hurdles Final
  • 10:37 p.m. – 200m Final
  • 10:55 p.m. – 5,000m Final
  • 11:21 p.m. – 4×400 Relay Final

About Hayward Field

Hayward Field, which was built in 1919, is no stranger to top-tier track and field events, including the Diamond League and the U.S. Olympic Team Trials.

The venue is named after Bill Hayward, who ran the University of Oregon track and field program from 1904 to 1947. Though it originally was intended for Ducks football, many additions and renovations over the century have helped it become a premier destination.

In September 2023, the venue became the first facility outside of Zurich or Brussels to host the two-day season-ending Wanda Diamond League Final, where the year’s 32 overall champions were crowned.

What Schools Won The Team Titles At The 2025 NCAA Division I Men’s And Women’s Outdoor Track And Field Championships?

The Arkansas women took home the outdoor team title in 2024, sweeping the indoor and outdoor championships for the 2023-2024 season.

Florida, led by legendary head coach Mike Holloway, secured the men’s title in 2024, giving the Gators three consecutive outdoor men’s titles. Florida became the first team to three-peat since Texas A&M (2009-2011).

What Schools Have Won The Most Titles At The NCAA Division I Outdoor Track And Field Championships?

The NCAA Division I Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships first was held in 1921. 

USC owns the most men’s titles with 25, while Arkansas is the only other program with 10 or more (10).

The NCAA Division I Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships first was held in 1982. 

LSU has won the most women’s titles with 14. The next-closest is Texas with five.

From FloTrack YouTube

Aidan McCarthy Runs One of The Top NCAA 800m Times At Franson Last Chance

FloTrack Is The Streaming Home For Many Track And Field Meets Each Year

Don’t miss all the track and field season action streaming on FloTrack. Check out the FloTrack schedule for more events.

FloTrack Archived Footage

Video footage from each event will be archived and stored in a video library for FloTrack subscribers to watch for the duration of their subscriptions.

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Semifinal Matchups Set In CIAC Baseball, Softball, Lacrosse And Volleyball Tournaments

After a week and a half of slogging through rainy conditions and/or enduring postponements, 72 high school teams from the state have reached the semifinals of the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) state tournaments in baseball, softball, boys’ and girls’ lacrosse and boys’ volleyball. Nine teams have a chance to duplicate their 2024 triumphs, including […]

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After a week and a half of slogging through rainy conditions and/or enduring postponements, 72 high school teams from the state have reached the semifinals of the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) state tournaments in baseball, softball, boys’ and girls’ lacrosse and boys’ volleyball.

Nine teams have a chance to duplicate their 2024 triumphs, including semifinalists in all four girls’ lacrosse brackets (New Canaan, Masuk, New Fairfield, Lauralton Hall). Cheshire, Daniel Hand and New Fairfield have a chance to repeat in boys’ lacrosse, while Masuk and Woodland Regional have a shot at retaining their softball titles.

New champions will be crowned in all four baseball finals and both boys’ volleyball title contests, as none of the defending champions in those sports qualified for the final four this year.

Find out what’s happening in Across Connecticutfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Tickets to CIAC semifinal and championship games are only available by pre-ordering through the website, which may be accessed here. No tickets will be sold at the gates.

Here is the schedule of semifinal events, click the class headers for complete brackets.

Find out what’s happening in Across Connecticutfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

BASEBALL

Class LL
Tuesday, 6/10, Palmer Field (Middletown)

  • No. 4 Fairfield Warde vs. No.32 Glastonbury, noon
  • No. 2 South Windsor vs. No. 3 Norwalk, 3:30 p.m.

Class L
Tuesday, 6/10, Municipal Stadium (Waterbury)

  • No. 5 Berlin vs. No. 8 Guilford, 3:30 p.m.
  • No. 3 Lyman Hall vs. No. 10Cheshire, 7 p.m.

Class M
Tuesday, 6/10, Muzzy Field (Bristol)

  • No. 6 Killingly vs. No. 15 St. Joseph, 3:30 p.m.
  • No. 1 Suffield vs. No. 4 Stonington, 7 p.m.

Class S
Tuesday, 6/10, Sage Park (Berlin)

  • No.3 Shepaug Valley vs. No. 10 Holy Cross, 3:30 p.m.
  • No. 1 St. Paul vs. No. 5 East Catholic, 7 p.m.

SOFTBALL

Class LL
Tuesday, 6/10, West Haven HS

  • No. 1 Cheshire vs. No. 4 Southington, 4 p.m.
  • No. 6 Fairfield Warde vs. No. 18 Ridgefield, 7 p.m.

Class L
Tuesday, 6/10, Eastern Connecticut State University

  • No. 2 Waterford vs. No. 3 Ellington, 4 p.m.
  • No. 1 Masuk vs. No. 5 St. Joseph, 7 p.m.

Class M
Monday, 6/9, West Haven HS

  • No. 1 Woodland Regional vs. No. 13 Oxford, 4 p.m.
  • No. 2 Foran vs. No. 3 Nonnewaug, 7 p.m.

Class S
Monday, 6/9, Eastern Connecticut State University

  • No. 1 North Branford vs. No.20 St. Bernard, 4 p.m.
  • No.2 St. Paul vs. No. 3 Hale Ray, 7 p.m.

BOYS LACROSSE

Class LL
Wednesday, 6/11, Fairfield University

  • No. 1 New Canaan vs. No. 4 Darien, 5:30 p.m.
  • No. 2 Ridgefield vs. No. 3 Staples, time TBA

Class L
Wednesday, 6/11

  • No. 1 Fairfield Ludlowe vs. No. 4 Conard, 1 p.m. (Municipal Stadium, Waterbury)
  • No.2 St. Joseph vs. No. 3 Cheshire, 4 p.m. (Guilford HS)

Class M
Wednesday, 6/11, Municipal Stadium (Waterbury)

  • No. 2 Joel Barlow vs. No. 3 Guilford, 5 p.m.
  • No. 1 Daniel Hand vs. No. 5 Brookfield, 7:30 p.m.

Class S
at University of Hartford

  • No. 1 New Fairfield vs. No. 4 Haddam-Killingworth (Tuesday, 6/10, 3 p.m.)
  • No. 2 Somers vs. No. 3 Sheehan (Wednesday, 6/11, 5:30 p.m.)

GIRLS LACROSSE

Class LL
Tuesday, 6/10, Fairfield University

  • No. 2 New Canaan vs. No. 3 Wilton, 5:30 p.m.
  • No. 1 Darien vs. No. 4 Ridgefield, 7:30 p.m.

Class L

  • No. 2 Cheshire vs. No. 3 Amity Regional (Monday, 6/9, 6:30 p.m., Sheehan HS)
  • No. 1 Simsbury vs. No. 4 Masuk (Tuesday, 6/10, 5 p.m., Brookfield HS)

Class M
Tuesday, 6/10, Guilford HS

  • No. 2 Branford vs. No. 3 Daniel Hand, 4 p.m.
  • No. 1 New Fairfield vs. No. 4 Suffield, 6 p.m.

Class S
at University of Hartford

  • No. 1 Lauralton Hall vs. No. 4 Somers (Tuesday, 6/9, 5:30 p.m.)
  • No. 2 Granby vs. No. 6 Sacred Heart Academy (Wednesday, 6/11, 3 p.m.)

BOYS VOLLEYBALL

Class L
Monday, 6/9, Southington HS

  • No. 2 Trumbull vs. No. 3 Maloney, 4:30 p.m.
  • No. 1 Conard vs. No. 4 Shelton, 7 p.m.

Class M
Tuesday, 6/10, Naugatuck HS

  • No. 2 Masuk vs. No. 3 New Canaan, 4:30 p.m.
  • No. 1 Joel Barlow vs. No. 4 Newington, 7 p.m.
St. Joseph has advanced to the Class M baseball semifinals after topping Ellington in extra innings Sunday. (Tim Jensen/Patch)

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Stanford’s Ryann Neushul Named 2025 Women’s Cutino Award Winner

Courtesy: Stanford Athletics SAN FRANCISCO – Ryann Neushul was recognized with the most prestigious honor of her career on Saturday night, named the 2025 Peter J. Cutino Award recipient in a ceremony at The Olympic Club of San Francisco. Presented annually to the most outstanding female collegiate water polo player in the nation as voted by Division […]

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Courtesy: Stanford Athletics

SAN FRANCISCO – Ryann Neushul was recognized with the most prestigious honor of her career on Saturday night, named the 2025 Peter J. Cutino Award recipient in a ceremony at The Olympic Club of San Francisco.

Presented annually to the most outstanding female collegiate water polo player in the nation as voted by Division I coaches, Neushul is the eighth player in school history to win the award. The Cardinal has been awarded 11 Cutino Award honors overall, with other honorees including Aria Fischer (2023), Makenzie Fischer (2019, 2022), Kiley Neushul (2012, 2015), Annika Dries (2011, 2014), Melissa Seidemann (2013), Jackie Frank (2003) and Brenda Villa (2002).

Neushul, who last month closed out a unique seven-year career which began as a freshman in 2019, became Stanford’s first four-time NCAA champion in school history (2019, 2022-23, 2025) following the Cardinal’s 11-7 victory over USC in the NCAA final on May 11.

One year after taking a leave of absence and redshirt year to train and compete with Team USA at the Paris Summer Olympics, Neushul returned for a seventh season and fueled the Cardinal’s 10th NCAA championship in school history and third over the last four years.

Recognized as the ACWPC Player of the Year last week, Neushul is a four-time ACWPC All-American (2019, 2022-23, 2025) who started all 26 contests as a senior and led the Cardinal in multi-goal games (20) while ranking second in goals (60), assists (39) and shot attempts (105). Neushul departed The Farm with 228 career goals, ranking fifth all-time in school history.

Joining older sisters, Jamie and Kiley, as All-American standouts on The Farm, Neushul was also recognized as Stanford’s eighth MPSF Player of the Year while also earning all-conference accolades for the fourth time. Neushul became the second student-athlete in MPSF history to earn both a player of the year and newcomer of the year honor (2019), joining UCLA’s Maddie Musselman.

Neushul is a four-time NCAA All-Tournament Team selection and three-time MPSF All-Tournament team pick.

A three-time ACWPC All-Academic honoree and three-time MPSF All-Academic selection, Neushul is once again on track for more scholastic honors as she boasts a 3.78 GPA in human biology. She remains in the running for CSC Academic All-America honors, looking to become Stanford’s fourth all-time recipient.

Neushul also serves as a teaching assistant for an on-campus Spanish service learning course and participates in the Bridge Peer Counseling Center, Stanford’s student-run peer counseling center.





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