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Bear Beats: Episode 28, For Competition Through May 18

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ST. LOUIS, Mo. – The Bear Beats is a weekly release that will be posted on Mondays to provide a look back at the past week of action and to preview the events for the upcoming week. The 28th episode will feature men’s and women’s outdoor track and field, men’s and women’s tennis, baseball, softball, and golf.
 
A look in the rear-view mirror (events from May 12-18):
 
No. 1 Women’s and No. 20 Men’s Outdoor Track and Field

  • Track and Field competed one last time before the NCAA selections were announced at the Midwest Final Qualifier at Augustana.
  • For the women

    • 1500m

      • Senior Virginia Pridgen made the podium in third place with a time of 4:29.47
      • The mark is now the 24th best in Div. III this spring
      • Junior Katie Rector also finished in the top 10 with a time of 4:43.28

    • 800m

      • First year Lauren Raley and sophomore Caroline Echols went back to back in eighth and ninth place with times of 2:11.70 and 2:11.72, respectively
      • Sophomore Cate Christopher finished in 12th place with a mark of 2:13.43

    • 3000m Steeplechase

      • Senior Julia Patterson was third with a time of 10:44.55, marking the 15th best in Div. III this year
      • Junior Riley Clark finished in fifth place with a new 34th best time in Div. III in a time of 10:57.02

    • Pole Vault

      • Senior Yasmin Ruff won the final pole vault of the regular season with a clear of 3.86m
      • Junior Mackenzie Walker finished in seventh place with a clear of 3.41m

    • High Jump

      • Sophomore Olivia Theisen tied for second with a clear of 1.64m, a new 34th best mark in Div. III this year

    • Long Jump

      • Graduate Ebun Opata finish in third place with a leap of 5.62m

  • For the men

    • 1500m

      • Senior Frankie Lynch finished eighth in a field of 53 with a time of 3:53.26
      • Junior James Corbett was also a top finisher in 11th place with a time of 3:53.89

    • 800m

      • Sophomore William Frohling was a fifth place finisher with a time of 1:51.86
      • Junior Brandon Brazil set a new personal best with a ninth place time of 1:53.69

    • Pole Vault

      • The Bears had three of the top four finishers
      • Sophomore Peter Lichtenberger won the event with a successful clear of 4.95m
      • First-year Zachary Duckworth and junior George Bourdier both cleared 4.80m, but due to tiebreakers Duckworth finished third and Bourdier finished fourth

  • A full list of results can be found here.

 
No. 4 Golf

  • WashU finished fifth at the NCAA Championships, moving up four spots from day three.
  •  The Championships were held at the Kingsmill Resort in Williamsburg, Va.
  • The Bears finished with a four-day team score of 1,206 (311, 296, 299, 300), finishing just three strokes behind fourth-place George Fox.
  • Senior Sydney Kuo was the top finisher for the Bears, tying for seventh with a 293 (74, 76, 70, 73).
  • Junior Tiffany Chan finished 24th with a 298 (78, 72, 75, 73) and sophomore Amy Beanblossom finished 50th with a 302 (79, 74, 75, 74).
  • Sophomore Reagan Robinson finished with a 313 (80, 74, 79, 80) and first-year Nicole McGuire finished with a 324 (83, 80, 80, 81).
  • The Women’s Golf Coaches Association Awards were announced at the championships with several Bears earning recognition.
  • Kuo was named a First Team All-American which marks the fourth-straight First Team All-America honor for her.
  • Chan earned a spot on the Second Team and Beanblossom earned an Honorable Mention, both marking their first-career All-America honors.
  • Kuo, Chan, Beanblossom and McGuire were also all named to the WGCA All-Central Region team.
  • Additionally, Head Coach Dave Reinhardt was named the Central Region Coach of the Year.

 
No. 10 Softball

  • WashU team lost to Wartburg 3-4 on Thursday in the opening game of the NCAA Tournament.

    • Wartburg had a three-run sixth inning to take a lead on the Bears.
    • In the bottom of the sixth inning, senior Maggie Baumstark drew a one-out walk, stole second and advanced to third on a grounder from senior Erin Reardon.
    • First-year Harper Nix drew a walk and senior Natalia Pilpil singled up the middle, scoring Baumstark for a 3-1 game. 
    • The Bears rallied for two runs in the bottom of the seventh inning, starting with a lead-off walk from sophomore Kristina Donaldson. Junior Sydney Schneider reached base on a fielder’s choice and sophomore Kennedy Grippo singled to center. Sophomore Julia Nicholus singled up the middle, scoring Schneider for a 4-2 game. First-year Emma Dow, who came on to run for Nicholus, stole second and scored on a sacrifice fly from Baumstark.
    • Sophomore Maria Brooks took the loss in the circle, pitching six innings with seven hits, four runs and six strikeouts.
    • The box score can be found here.

  •  The No. 10 Washington University in St. Louis softball team earned two wins on Saturday afternoon to advance to the NCAA regional final series on Sunday.

    • Game 1: WashU 4, Lake Forest 2

      Due to weather, WashU and Lake Forest played two full innings before the game was halted. The game continued on Saturday morning at nearby Lindenwood University.
    • The Bears had a two-run fourth inning to break the scoreless deadlock. 
    • WashU added two more in the top of the sixth inning. 
    • Lake Forest answered with two runs in the bottom of the sixth inning. 
    • Reardon finished 2-for-4 and Grippo went 2-for-3 with one RBI. Cendana finished 1-for-2 with one run scored and two RBI.
    • Senior Jordan Rossi earned the win in the circle, pitching 5.1 innings with four hits, one run, and three strikeouts.
    • The box score can be found here.
    • Game 2: WashU 3, Wartburg 2 

      Wartburg struck first with a run in the bottom of the first inning.
    • The Bears got on the board in the top of the fifth inning. With one out, Baumstark doubled down the left field line, and Reardon was hit by a pitch. Senior Brooke Capparelli flied out to right field, moving the runners up a base and both went on to steal with Baumstark scoring to make it a 2-1 game.
    • WashU tied the game in the top of the sixth inning. With two outs, Grippo singled to short and Nix drew a walk. Sophomore Julia Nicholus, on to pinch hit, singled to right field, scoring Grippo for a 2-2 tie.
    • In the top of the seventh with one out, Reardon was hit by a pitch. With two outs, Pilpil singled up the middle and senior Taylor Geluck singled through the left side, scoring Reardon for a 3-2 Bears’ lead.
    • Sophomore Maria Brooks earned the win in the circle, pitching 3.2 innings of relief with two hits, no runs, and six strikeouts.
    • The box score can be found here.

  • WashU ended its 2025 run with a 2-0 loss in the NCAA regional final to No. 11 Redlands on Sunday afternoon.

    • Redlands scored its two runs in the bottom of the third inning, starting with a lead off single from Ady Kim. Saya Fuji laid down a sacrifice bunt and Paige Messenlehner was hit by a pitch. Both runners moved up on a passed ball and went on to score on a double down the left line from Brooklyn Bard.
    • The box score can be found here.

  • Sophomore Kennedy Grippo and Reardon were named to the All-Tournament Team

 
RV Baseball

  • Despite losing an early lead, WashU opened up its regional bracket with a 10-9, walk-off win over Ohio Northern on Friday.
  • The Bears got things started in the bottom of the first inning when senior Brandon Buday reached on an error by the Polar Bears. A sacrifice bunt by graduate Colter Couillard-Rodak pushed Buday over to second. Then with two outs, graduate Will Yarbro hit a single through the right side that allowed Buday to race around and score from second, putting WashU ahead 1-0.
  • WashU would add three runs in the second, two runs in the third and one run in the fourth to jump out to a 7-2 lead.
  • Both teams scored two runs in the sixth inning as the Bears maintained their seven-run lead, 9-4.
  • However, ONU got two runs in the seventh and three in the top of ninth to tie the score at 9-9.
  • After sophomore Anthony Equale flew out to center to start the bottom of the ninth, Buday hit a hard single to the shortstop and slid into first, head first, to reach safely. A bloop single to center by Couillard-Rodak put runners on first and second.
  • Graduate Noah Reichman then stepped up and smacked a single to left that was played off the wall. Buday had to wait and tag up, but once he started, he ran through third, touching the base, and made another slide, this time into home around the nearly simultaneously arriving throw from the third baseman for the walk-off run.
  • Sophomore Parker Guthrie got his first postseason win of his career, pitching the final three innings.
  • The box score can be found here.
  • Against No. 2 Wisc.-Whitewater, the Bears dropped a heart breaker 4-3 in 11 innings.
  • UWW got on the board first in the bottom of the third inning. The Warhawks used a hit batter and a walk to get runners on before a double put them ahead 2-0. A single then allowed UWW to take a 3-0 lead after three.
  • The Bears began their comeback in the sixth inning when Reichman led off with a single through the right side. Yarbro followed with a walk. Then with one out, senior Braden Mazone singled through the left side to load the bases. The third WashU hit of the inning came from junior Shane Pellegrino, who collected two RBIs and cut the Bears’ deficit down to just one, 3-2.
  • When it seemed that UWW would be able to escape in nine innings, first-year student Cooper Greene launched his second home run of the season over the fence in right field to tie the game and send the contest into extra innings.
  • A scoreless 10th inning then led the Warhawks to the bottom of the 11th. WashU was able to induce a groundout and strikeout before UWW earned a walk. They then followed with a double to right that allowed the runner to score from first for the 4-3 win.
  • Equale led the Bears at the plate, going three-for-four while Reichman went three-for-five with a run scored. As a team, WashU was able to turn three double plays during the game.
  • Junior Miles Quemuel-Labrador took the loss, pitching the final 4.2 innings and striking out three.
  • The box score can be found here.
  • The loss had the Bears play back-to-back with a chance to reach the regional final. It was in this contest that WashU had to face off against regional host Adrian.
  • With one out in the bottom of the first, Couillard-Rodak singled through the left side before Reichman doubled to right-center field, scoring the Bears’ first run, 1-0. The Bulldogs then took the lead, scoring a single run in both the second and third innings.
  • The fourth and fifth innings belonged to the Bears as Yarbro led off the fourth with a double to left and scored when first-year student Ryan Soong hit a single up the middle to tie the game at 2-2. WashU loaded the bases with just one out before Adrian got a pair of outs.
  • Then, with one out in the bottom of the fifth, Couillard-Rodak hit a triple to right and then scored when Reichman safely reached first on a fielder’s choice. The run gave the Bears a 3-2 advantage.
  • Unfortunately, that was the final run of the season as the regional host went on to score at least one run in each of the final four innings to close the Bears’ season with a 7-3 win over WashU.
  • The box score can be found here.

 
 
 
On the horizon:
 
No. 1 Women’s and No. 20 Men’s Outdoor Track and Field

  • The 2025 NCAA Championships will be held May 22-24 at the SPIRE Institute’s Outdoor Track and Field facility in Geneva, Ohio.
  • The selections have been made for both the men’s and women’s programs
  • For the Women
  • For the men
  • The Championship Landing page can be found here.

 
 
No. 10 Women’s Tennis

  • WashU has reached the Elite 8 for the second year in a row and will face off against No. 1 Chicago on Tuesday, May 20 at the Biszantz Family Tennis Center in Claremont, Calif.
  • Following the conclusion of the team bracket, both sophomore Eleanor Archer and first-year Caitlin Bui will participate in both the singles and doubles portion of the national championship.
  • Bui is currently ranked No. 11 while Archer is ranked No. 35.
  • Combined the duo is ranked No. 2 after winning the ITA Small College National Championship in the fall.
  • Live stats and will be available here.

 
No. 28 Men’s Tennis
 

  • WashU had four members of the team qualify to participate in the 2025 NCAA Div. III Singles and Doubles Championship.
  • Seniors Pato Garcia Muriel and Stefan Hester were selected as a doubles team and are currently ranked #11 in the latest ITA Poll.
  • The enter with a 14-5 record at the top doubles spot for the Bears while also picking up a 6-1 win over the No. 2 team from Denison.
  • In singles, juniors Colin Scruggs and Eric Kuo have been chosen to compete for a national title.
  • Scruggs is currently ranked No. 18 while Kuo has moved up to No. 21 in the ITA poll.
  • The opening rounds begin on Friday, May, 23 at the Bizantz Family Tennis Center in Claremont, Calif.
  • Live stats and video can be found here.

 
To stay up to date on all things WashU athletics, visit washubears.com, or download the WashU Bears mobile app for iPhone and Android.
 
Watch the Bears on the WashU Sports Network, also available in 1080 HD on Amazon Fire, Roku, and AppleTV.
 



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2025 All-Area Volleyball: Meet the complete team | Sports

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All-Area First Team

Player YR. Pos. School

Lily Bosworth Sr. MB Mahomet-Seymour

Maddy Doggett Jr. OH Westville

Sophie Duis Sr. MB Cissna Park

Addison Lucht Sr. OH Cissna Park

Reis McFarland Sr. OH Bismarck-Henning/Rossville-Alvin

Mady Melton Sr. L Monticello

Cassidy Monahan Sr. OH St. Thomas More

Josie Neukomm Sr. OH Cissna Park

Jillian Schlittler Sr. S/OH Unity

Ava Yeakel Sr. OH Mahomet-Seymour

All-Area Second Team

Player Yr. Pos. School

Brin Armstrong So. OH Champaign Central

Nia Bolton Sr. L Centennial

Laila Carr Sr. OH LeRoy

Erin Dallas Sr. S Mahomet-Seymour

Mady Marcott Jr. S Cissna Park

Tinley Parkerson Sr. S/OH Armstrong-Potomac

Thayren Rigsby Sr. MB Watseka

Bella Romine So. MB Arthur-Lovington-Atwood-Hammond

Aeralyn Thrasher Sr. OH Sullivan

Paige Young Sr. L Prairie Central

All-Area Honorable Mention

➜ Arcola: Kiera Leal (Sr. OH), Maddie Pilkington (Sr. S), Ema Simpson (Sr. MB)

➜ Argenta-Oreana: Khloe Hartrich (So. MB), Alexis Havener (Sr. L), Mya Hill (Sr. OH)

➜ Armstrong-Potomac: Ashlyn Ackerman (So. MB), Makenna Ackerman (Sr. DS), Isabel Bullington (So. OH), Carly Grant (Jr. S), Elie Lomax (Jr. OH/MB)

➜ Arthur Christian: Maddie Goff (Jr. MB), Avery Herschberger (So. S), Aselynn Kauffman (Jr. OH), Brileigh Mast (Sr. OH), Sheri Miller (Sr. DS)

➜ Arthur-Lovington-Atwood-Hammond: McKenna Blaudow (Jr. OH), Savannah Butcher (Sr. OH), Morgan Casteel (Jr. S), Summer Melton (Sr. OH), Annabelle Vanausdoll (So. S), Karaline Vanausdoll (Sr. L)

➜ Bismarck-Henning/Rossville-Alvin: Ella Acton (Sr. MB), Mallory Brines (Jr. S), Raylynn Hearnley (So. MB/OH)

➜ Blue Ridge: Ava Franzen (Jr. MB)

➜ Centennial: Journey Davis (So. MB/OH), Kate Pitcher (Jr. S)

➜ Cerro Gordo/Bement: Rylan Petty (Jr. S), Avery Stoerger (Fr. MB)

➜ Champaign Central: Summer Abudayeh (Jr. OH), Grace Bandy (Jr. L), Ava Clark (Sr. S), Avery Miller (Fr. OH), Prestyn Roberts (Jr. S)

➜ Chrisman: Jaidyn Alexander (Sr. OH), Leah Phipps (Sr. S/OH)

➜ Cissna Park: Marina Day (So. MB), Ava Henrichs (Jr. OH), Kendyl Neukomm (So. L), Ella Schluter (So. S)

➜ Clinton: Paisley Schick (Jr. L)

➜ Deland-Weldon: Ellie Hayward (Sr. OH)

➜ Fisher: Avery Carleton (Jr. OH), Brooklynn Kellems (Jr. S), Bella Kelsey (So. OH), Raegan Kilman (Jr. OH)

➜ Georgetown-Ridge Farm: Addisen Ellis (So. MB/OH), Milee Ellis (Sr. OH), Rubyrae Fraser Soule (Sr. S), Hadlee Hayes (Sr. MB/OH), Madi Spesard (Jr. DS)

➜ Gibson City-Melvin-Sibley: Abby Brown (Sr. MB), Bailey Bunting (So. OH), Bailey Grider (Sr. S), Maci Lindelof (Jr. OH), Londyn Roderick (Jr. S)

➜ Heritage: Addison Hopper (Jr. L), Faith Latham (Sr. S/OH), Bre Ploense (Jr. S/OH), Brooklynn Powell (Jr. MB)

➜ Hoopeston Area: Addyson Kelnhofer (Sr. MB), Abby Steiner (Sr. MB)

➜ Judah Christian: Liza Carder (Sr. OH), Olivia Dailey (Sr. OH), Kisandra Fazio (Sr. L), Mackenzie Jackson (Sr. S), Avoni Kelly (Sr. MB)

➜ LeRoy: Ella Mennenga (Jr. L), Sadee Owens (Jr. S), Kendyl Spratt (Sr. S/OH)

➜ Mahomet-Seymour: Pfeifer Manuel (So. L), Hannah Martin (Jr. MB), Addy Reigart (Sr. OH), Joelle Snodsmith (So. OH), Anna Streicher (Sr. OH)

➜ Milford: Erica Felton (Sr. MB), Lillie Harris (Sr. OH), Kami Muehling (Jr. L), Sydney Seyfer (Sr. OH)

➜ Monticello: Emma Arnold (Jr. S), Addison Finet (Sr. S/OH), Madison Highland (Jr. MB), Shelby Smith (Sr. OH), Emerson Snook (Sr. OH), Ashley Stiverson (Sr. MB), Sadie Walsh (Sr. DS)

➜ Oakwood: Sophia Hart (Sr. L), Mady Nicoson (Sr. MB), Kendyl Rogers (Sr. OH/DS)

➜ Paxton-Buckley-Loda: Emmy Bagwell (Jr. MB), Ellie Dirks (So. OH), Logan Loschen (So. S), Olivia Rehg (Sr. OH), Kylie Rust (Jr. S)

➜ Prairie Central: Kyah Creek (Sr. S), Mia Elliott (Jr. MB), Miranda Hari (Jr. OH), Lydia Kilgus (Sr. DS), Charlee Popejoy (Jr. DS), Jules Woodrey (Sr. OH)

➜ Rantoul: Airiana Bell (Sr. OH), Lauren Herbert (Sr. S), Josie Roseman (Sr. L)

➜ Ridgeview: Claire Edwards (Sr. S/L)

➜ St. Joseph-Ogden: Katie Ericksen (Sr. L), Hadley McDonald (Jr. OH), Emma McKinney (Sr. S), Emerson Williams (Jr. OH)

➜ St. Thomas More: Audrey Gooding (Sr. L), Sophia Hill (Sr. OH/MB), Avery Humphrey (Fr. S), Juju Kerr (Jr. S/OH), Campbell Phillips (Sr. MB)

➜ Salt Fork: Rain Pitlik (Sr. MB/OH), Ava Ringstrom (Sr. S), Maya Smith (Sr. OH)

➜ Schlarman: Izzy Bogen (Sr. OH), Addison Forsyth (Jr. S), Irene Rangel (Jr. L)

➜ Sullivan: Kate Bushue (Sr. MB), Mae Dawkins (Sr. S), Nevaeh Dovell (Sr. MB), Mya Dyer (Jr. L)

➜ Tuscola: Sawyer Cleland (Jr. OH), Reese Davis (Sr. L), Lilly Kurtz (Sr. MB), Sicily Moss (Jr. S), Bella Wishard (So. OH)

➜ Unity: Lauren Stratton (Sr. L), Olivia Williams (So. OH)

➜ Urbana: Sophia Sheyko-Frailey (Jr. OH)

➜ Villa Grove: Piper Kiser (Sr. S/OH), Hayden Thomas (Sr. L)

➜ Watseka: Christa Holohan (Sr. S), Gabby Kohl (So. MB), Liana Navas (So. S), Avery Pufahl (So. OH), Noelle Schroeder (Sr. L)

➜ Westville: Gwen Bennett (Jr. OH/S), Ady Blakeney (Jr. OH), Carlee Miller (Jr. MB), Lainey Wichtowski (Sr. S), Daylin Zaayer (Jr. L)





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Volleyball Wildcats face Texas A&M for national championship

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LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) – For the second time in school history, the Kentucky volleyball Wildcats will be playing for a national championship, when UK faces Texas A&M on Sunday.

Kentucky coach Craig Skinner won the 2020 NCAA championship, a first at UK.

The Wildcats and the Aggies met back in October, in College Station, with UK rallying from a set down to win the match, 3-1.

“I think it’s important just to treat it like every other game we’ve played in the last 30,” libero Molly Berezowitz said on Friday.

Kentucky, a number one seed and the number two seed overall, defeated Wisconsin on Thursday, 3-2, to advance to the final match.

“We’re at the pinnacle of our sport,” coach Craig Skinner said on Friday. “It’s a great opportunity for Kentucky volleyball and our fans to be in this moment.”

Sunday’s championship match marks just the seventh time two teams from the same conference will play for a title.

First serve in the national championship match is set for 3:30 p.m.

WKYT Streaming Apps



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Where to watch Texas A&M volleyball vs. Kentucky: Time, TV channel

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Texas A&M fell to the Texas Longhorns in the SEC Volleyball Tournament semifinals last month, but the Aggies have since fought their way to the top of NCAA competition.

The Aggies swept top-seeded Pittsburgh in the Final Four on Thursday, solidifying their matchup against No. 2 Kentucky in the NCAA volleyball title game Sunday in Kansas City, Mo. It’s the team’s first appearance in a national semifinal or final.

Here’s everything you need to know:

How to watch Texas volleyball vs. Kentucky: See date, start time, TV channel, streaming

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Last-minute madness: 79-yd TD pass sends UW-River Falls to DIII title game

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Football

Dec. 20, 2025

Last-minute madness: 79-yd TD pass sends UW-River Falls to DIII title game

Dec. 20, 2025

Tied late in the 4th quarter, University of Wisconsin–River Falls QB Kaleb Blaha connected with Blake Rohrer for a game-winning 79-yard touchdown in the final minute, stunning Johns Hopkins Blue Jays, 48-41, and punching the Falcons’ first trip to the Stagg Bowl.



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2025 All-Area Volleyball Player of the Year: Lucht a champion in all aspects | Sports

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1222025 AA VB Addison Lucht 1

Addison Lucht ended her volleyball career at Cissna Park in the best way possible: As a state champion. Lucht, who finished as the program’s all-time kills leader, produced 202 digs and 48 aces to go along with her team-high 339 kills this fall in leading the Timberwolves to the Class 1A volleyball state championship this season.




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CISSNA PARK — Anyone who knows Addison Lucht wouldn’t be surprised by how she reacted to winning The News-Gazette’s All-Area Volleyball Player of the Year honor.

“It’s a reflection of our whole team and what we were able to accomplish in this amazing season,” Lucht said. “I wouldn’t have been able to get that award or do what I’ve done without the team, how close we are and how much we push each other every day in practice. We’re in there grinding and making each other better. Even the people who don’t get the time on the court, they’re on the bench cheering us on really loud every game and working us really hard in practice on the other side of the net. I’m really excited and honored to receive this, but it goes right back to my teammates. I wouldn’t have been able to do it without them.”

Same humble nature she’s always had, redirecting all the praise despite deserving every bit of it. Just once, you might expect her to give herself some props. Maybe even brag a little. She’s earned that.

But take it from senior teammates Sophie Duis.

“She won’t,” Duis said with a smirk.

Lucht just wrapped up her final volleyball season at Cissna Park and couldn’t have ended it any better. She led the Timberwolves to a program-record 40 wins and a Class 1A state championship, the first state title for the school in any sport. She earned a third consecutive All-State First-Team honor and was the 1A state finals MVP. She totaled 202 digs and 48 aces to go along with her team-high 339 kills, which brought her to 1,359 for her career to become the program’s all-time kills leader.

The argument that Cissna Park doesn’t reach three straight state tournaments without Lucht is a valid one. Although, Duis and Josie Neukomm — both All-State Second-Team selections and All-Area First-Team picks in their own right — among other strong talents, might prove that theory wrong. Regardless, it’s never been about the individual accolades for Lucht. All she cared about was the team, which is why the team was so successful.

“Having had a month to reflect on it, it’s beginning to set in how big of a thing we just accomplished,” Lucht said. “It keeps getting cooler and cooler by the day. To know we did that and were able to end our last game and my volleyball career on a win on the biggest stage is amazing.”







11172025 CPvball 44

Cissna Park’s Addison Lucht (9) reacts to her medal in the Class 1A volleyball championship at CEFCU Arena in Normal on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025.




It’s one of the many reasons she’s so popular among her teammates. She’s one of the best athletes in Illinois, an All-State talent in four different sports, but she wants no part of the spotlight. Ironic that the biggest moments are when she shines brightest.

“She’s very humble, and everything she does goes unnoticed,” Neukomm said. “She’s been working her butt off since day one. Everything she has coming is extremely deserved. I don’t think there’s a single thing she doesn’t deserve. She’s just an amazing person, and seeing the path she’s going on is really exciting.”

As if all her athletic abilities weren’t enough, Lucht is also the valedictorian of her class at Cissna Park.

“A lot of people look at her and think it’s just a lot of natural talent,” Duis said. “Obviously, there is a lot of that, but a large part of it is the hard work she puts in behind the scenes. She’s a really good on- and off-the-court leader, and she’s super fun to have as a friend and teammate.”

And for Cissna Park volleyball coach and athletic director Josh Landon, “I could just say ‘Ditto.’

“I could go back and say it started in kindergarten watching them in PE,” Landon said. “I had all these girls from kindergarten through fourth grade for elementary PE, and you could see a little bit of that competitiveness happening. You’d have tears from some people because we weren’t winning or others weren’t trying as hard. You could see all this happening. There is the God-given talent, but you also have to buy in to reach that success.”

This is actually the second All-Area Player of the Year honor Lucht has earned, but the first was for basketball after leading the Timberwolves back to CEFCU Arena and winning their second 1A third-place trophy in as many seasons.

Two days after winning the volleyball title on Nov. 15, Lucht and Co. played their first basketball game, a 64-14 win against St. Thomas More. Lucht put up 20 points, seven steals and four assists in the winning effort, and she hasn’t needed to knock off any rust in another strong start to that sport.

Neither are Lucht’s top sport, however. While simultaneously placing fifth and eighth in last spring’s 1A state triple jump and long jump competition, she batted .579 with seven home runs for the Milford/Cissna Park co-op softball team. She signed her letter of intent to continue her softball career at Northwestern on Nov. 12.

“I’ve always loved every single sport I’ve been in, and what sport I’m in, that’s my favorite at the time,” Lucht said. “Being able to have these special seasons and do it with these girls is amazing. I’m not going on to college to play those sports, and I’m going to miss them a lot, but I’m excited to get up to Evanston and excited for this spring at Milford.”







11172025 CPvball  46

Cissna Park’s Addison Lucht (9) as Cissna Park won the 1A state volleyball championship at CEFCU Arena in Normal on Saturday, Nov. 17, 2025.




Amber McKean won the All-Area Player of the Year award back in 2003 for the Cissna Park/Crescent-Iroquois co-op, and she went on to have a successful volleyball career at Olivet Nazarene. Landon said nobody believed anyone like her would come through their town of fewer than 800 again.

Plenty of talented athletes have played for Cissna Park since then but none quite like Lucht. Not with the same level of ability, passion and dedication to that many sports. And certainly not with the same level of care off the court. She was already a champion. Now, she has the trophy to go along with it.

“I hope we’re just getting started,” Lucht said. “I’m in the thick of it right now, and I’m so locked in and focused that I don’t think it’s ever going to end. It’s tough to realize these are some of the last games I’ll get to play in a Cissna Park jersey. It’s kind of surreal. I’m really fortunate that our volleyball season ended in the best way possible, and I’m hoping the same for basketball and the spring sports. I’m happy to get off to a really good start. Hopefully, it can end strong, too.”





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Population Boom Boosts Jackson County Volleyball Team — Grady Newsource

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The halls at Jackson County High School are growing busier each year, and so is the volleyball court.

As the county’s population surges, more students are filling classrooms, lockers and tryout lists. The squeak of sneakers and the thud of volleyballs echo through the gym as coaches call out drills, a reflection of how fast the community and its competition are growing.

With more players trying out than ever, coaches and athletes have had to adjust to a more selective environment that’s reshaping team dynamics. As the Panthers close the book on their season, which included a second-round playoff run for the second straight year, Laura Keefer is already reflecting on what she learned in her first year leading the program.

“So when I came for tryouts in May, we had 72 girls here for tryouts, and that was a lot,” Keefer said. “I’ve been at a smaller private school for the past nine years, but even when I talked to other friends in public high schools and I told them how many girls we had, they said that’s a really big number, too.”

Over the past decade, Jackson County has been one of Georgia’s fastest-growing areas. The high school, which opened in 2021 to accommodate the surge in population, has already hit capacity. Public development director Jamie Dove said the county’s growth is fueled by its location and livability.

“There are just a lot of things to drive people here,” Dove said. Jackson County is an interstate drive away from Atlanta and Greenville, S.C., “and I’m a day trip to the beach and a two-hour drive to the mountains. So it’s a gem of a location.”

Jackson County’s population jumped from 75,907 in 2020 to an estimated 93,825 in 2024, according to the development department. 

For two years in a row now, we have been the fourth-fastest-growing county in the country,” Dove said.

At Jackson County High, that growth has led to what students call “learning cottages,” temporary classrooms used to handle overflow. Siena Berthold, a senior at Jackson County and member of the volleyball team, mentioned this.

“They’re called learning cottages,” Berthold said, “but they’re not learning cottages — they’re trailers.”

A graph shows enrollment for Jackson County High growing much faster than other local public schools.
SOURCE: Georgia High School Association, ghsa.net. (Graphic/Ellie English)

Keefer brought two decades of experience from smaller schools and club teams to Jackson County High’s volleyball program. Now that the season is over, Keefer said the tryout and cut process is still on her mind, especially as she thinks ahead to next year.

“The positive side of that is I had a lot of talent in the gym to choose from,” Keefer said. “The hard part is I don’t think everybody realizes it’s truly a gut-wrenching process for me. I had to cut a lot of talent.”

For players, the population boom means that earning a jersey is no longer guaranteed. The competition drives everyone to push harder and succeed.  

​​“It’s just a great group because everyone wants to play volleyball,” Berthold said. “You have more competition, so everyone wants to play better.”

The volleyball team’s rise mirrors growing community pride. Home matches now draw bigger crowds. Jackson County Schools have also made athletic and academic expansion a strategic priority.

“Our board of education does a great job of letting us hire earlier than other school systems,” Hooper said. “It’s a daily tracking of enrollment, and for human resources, it’s a daily tracking of students.”

So far, the volleyball program has not faced gym or scheduling conflicts with other sports. Keefer said the athletic department’s collaboration has been essential to that success.

Our administration does a fantastic job and really all of our teams together,” Keefer said. “We support each other.”

As Jackson County prepares to open Hoschton High School in 2027 to accommodate population growth, the volleyball program at Jackson County High School may eventually face a split, with players and families drawn toward the new school. This shift could reshape existing rivalries and create new opportunities for athletes across the county.

After one season coaching in Jackson County, Keefer said she now better understands how deep that talent pool runs, and how a future school could split and reshape it. 

“I imagine most of the upperclassmen would stay and want to finish out and graduate where they’ve been,” Keefer said. “As far as the long term, obviously the pool of talent like we’ve had these huge numbers coming in right, that’s going to be divided now.”

Ellie English is a student in the undergraduate certificate program at the Carmical Sports Media Institute at UGA. 

 



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