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Braves Minor League Recap

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Braves Minor League Recap

Sunday saw some exciting performances on the Atlanta Braves farm system, and the fantastic Augusta GreenJackets have started to get hot and taken over first place in the division. Then in Double-A Didier Fuentes may have had to leave his start early, but he also left us with a lasting impression as he finally turned in the performance we’ve been waiting for out of him since his promotion.

(21-29) Gwinnett Stripers 0, (23-26) Louisville Bats 6

Box Score

Statcast

  • Jarred Kelenic, CF: 0-4, .261/.363/.398
  • Eddys Leonard, 3B: 2-4, 2B, .228/.299/.490
  • Jose Suarez, SP: 5 IP, 6 H, 6 R, 3 ER, 0 BB, 3 K, 4.24 ERA

There was shockingly little to write home about in this game, as the Stripers trailed early, trailed throughout the game, and didn’t do much on the offensive end to inspire confidence in a comeback effort. In the third at bat of the game Eddys Leonard ripped a 108 mph single, giving a little bit of early excitement to the action. That would be the last hard-hit ball for the Stripers in the game. Leonard has been quite easily the best player on the Stripers roster over the past month, with his two hits in this game running his May OPS up to .881. His stark improvement this season in power production while also improving his contract rates has been impressive, but he’s been poor on the defensive end so it’s unfortunately hard to believe he could fit in anywhere in Atlanta right now.

Jose Suarez was himself a victim of Leonard’s glove this game, though he didn’t do himself a ton of favors in the game. Outside of the results of his changeup Suarez was struggling to miss bats, and it all came down to poor command of his pitches. While Suarez was mostly in the zone, he was living in the hear of the plate and especially could not keep his slider down. Fortunately the resulting contact was mostly weak through the first three innings, and he was able to hold Louisville to one run until a disastrous fourth inning. Suarez allowed three hits in the inning to chase home a couple of runs, though the contact quality still wasn’t impressive, and his tendency to live in the middle portions of the zone weren’t doing him favors. A bouncer over to Leonard should have ended the inning, but he was eaten up by the hop and couldn’t knock the ball down leading to another run and extending the inning. That would end up costing Suarez three runs when he left a slider center cut that David Wendzel was able to tattoo for a two-run home run.

Swing and Misses

Jose Suarez – 6

Davis Daniel – 2

(21-22) Columbus Clingstones 0, (22-22) Montgomery Biscuits 1

Box Score

  • Didier Fuentes, SP: 4 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 9 K, 4.98 ERA
  • Jake McSteen, RP: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, 2.95 ERA
  • Luis Vargas, RP: 2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, 4.05 ERA

Didier Fuentes finally had the breakout outing he needed in Double-A, though he unfortunately left the game early due to an issue with a blister. Fuentes has been due a game like this, and it finally felt like he was finishing at bats effectively as he racked up nine strikeouts across four innings. Despite his huge drop in strikeouts in the first four games he played at Double-A, Fuentes was getting whiffs at around 30%, slight better than his swing-and-miss numbers when he had a 32% strikeout rate in A-ball last year. It was only a matter of time before he finally put together a game to kick his numbers back up where we expect him to be, and he had complete command of this game despite allowing a couple of pitches to get away from him and hit batters. It’s amazing to see a guy who is still just 19 years old looking not only ready for but dominant at Double-A, and while his changeup is still a work-in-progress he’s going to start to create real conversations about moving him to Triple-A. He’s continued to get high whiff rates with his fastball and this was the best we have seen him this season spotting that fastball at the top of the zone and breaking the slider down off of it. Unfortunately for him that offense did absolutely nothing to help him out.

This is by far the worst stretch of the season for David McCabe, as he has struck out nine times with no walks over his past five games. Two of his today came against Ty Johnson, a guy who is a very tough assignment for any hitter, but the timing as of late has been a concern for McCabe. He is starting his hands a touch later in his swing than he was earlier this season, and he’s been consistently behind velocity and swinging over breaking balls for the past couple of weeks. His contact rates have taken a nose-dive, but it’s still important to zoom out and see a guy who has a 122 wRC+ this season and just happens to be going through a slump. Unfortunately the entire offense was slumping in this one, as Johnson had his fantastic fastball-slider combination working and was able to cut through the Columbus offense. Geraldo Quintero went hitless for the first time in what’s been an incredible series for him, though he drew a walk to move his on base streak to five games. Quintero’s aggression inside of the strike zone was at times a weakness for him over the past few seasons, but he has really done a much better job of picking when to jump on fastballs and drive them harder which has resulted in overall better numbers. The power and defense is still not MLB quality, but it’s been a remarkable showing for him at the plate this entire month.

Swing and Misses

Didier Fuentes – 17

Luis Vargas – 6

Jake McSteen – 3

(22-22) Rome Emperors 1, (24-20) Hub City Spartanburgers 2

Box Score

  • Patrick Clohisy, CF: 1-5, .252/.371/.368
  • Ambioris Tavarez, SS: 1-4, BB, .248/.362/.336
  • Garrett Baumann, SP: 5 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 6 K, 4.95 ERA
  • Isaac Gallegos, RP: 2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K, 1.17 ERA

We’ll get to some offense in a bit, but you’re going to have to wait out some more brutal hitting days as the Emperors and Spartanburgers combined to go the first eleven innings of this game with zero runs scored. Rome was just not getting guys on base until there were two outs, like in the fifth when they went strikeout, strikeout, Joe Olsavsky triple, then another strikeout. The sixth inning was the breath of life they needed. Titus Dumitru drew a leadoff walk, the first Emperor to reach with less than two outs, and Ambioris Tavarez followed by cracking a single into left field to put two runners on base. It was not meant to be, however, when Will Verdung grounded the next pitch straight to shortstop for a double play and EJ Exposito’s sharp fly ball to right was tracked down for the final out. The roles flipped in the eighth inning with Dumitru getting a base knock and Tavarez working a walk, but with two outs Verdung’s ground out ended any excitement. The Emperors had their prime chance in the 10th inning when Mac Guscette immediately moved over to third on a passed ball, but a strikeout, infield pop, and strikeout stranded him. Two ground balls at third base kept the Emperors at bay in the 11th, until finally in the 12th inning they actually got hits to fall. EJ Exposito’s single led off the frame and Guscette broke the scoreless tie with a bloop single. Rome had their chance to make it multiple runs, but a foul pop out and a ground ended the inning.

It’s starting to really look like Garrett Baumann is turning the corner, as he’s beginning to command the ball better at his higher velocity and with the Spartanburgers deploying a lefty-heavy lineup his changeup was in full force on Saturday. Baumann has been missing bats better over his past few starts than ever before in his career, and it’s been that ability to land the fastball up in the strike zone with velocity that’s made much of the difference. Of course we know that changeup is terrific, but where he has really improved throughout the season is his slider quality. The Braves have been experimenting with different grips to try to find a breaking ball that works for him, and for the first time he seems to have one that he can throw with power below the zone and get swing-and-miss. It’s still his third-best pitch, but it’s the first time in his career he has shown flashes of a major-league quality slider which answers the biggest question mark about his profile. Over his past five outings he has struck out 29.3% of batters while maintaining a 6.3% walk rate, and were it not for a cheap few home runs in the very hitter-friendly Greensboro park we would talking about him having clearly the best statistical stretch of his career.

The Rome bullpen did amazing work across six scoreless innings, and Isaac Gallegos put up a zero again to lower his ERA to 1.17. While you would typically expect a pitcher’s ERA to regress towards his FIP (3.84), Gallegos is in a spot this season where despite having an overall whiff rate north of 30% he has seen his strikeout rate almost halved compared to 2024. Similar to Fuentes earlier, the underlying swing-and-miss is too good for that number to be that low and Gallegos is almost certain to start getting his strikeout rate around 30% moving forward. Gallegos has improved his command this season overall, and with a plus slider as his carrying pitch it’s worth overlooking those strikeout numbers and seeing him as a legit middle relief prospect. After 11 innings of shutout baseball Rome finally cracked behind LJ McDonough in the ninth inning after he walked the leadoff hitter. Following a sacrifice bunt McDonough allowed an intentional walk to load the bases, and then left one over the plate that Quincy Scott sent into center field for a walk-off two-run single.

Swing and Misses

Garrett Baumann – 14

Isaac Gallegos – 5

Ryan Bourassa – 5

(24-19) Augusta GreenJackets 6, (19-25) Charleston RiverDogs 5

Box Score

  • John Gil, SS: 2-4, 2B, RBI, .243/.327/.318
  • Isaiah Drake, CF: 1-3, BB, RBI, .275/.354/.394
  • Mason Guerra, 1B: 2-4, 2 HR, 3 RBI, .244/.341/.538
  • Rayven Antonio, SP: 4.2 IP, 3 H, 4 R, 4 ER, 3 BB, 5 K, 2.81 ERA

So we finally have proof that Braves prospects are allowed to score runs. It naturally helps when you have Mason Guerra on the squad on an insane heater. Guerra added two more home runs to his season total this year, extending his team lead to seven after just 24 games. Even more insane, though he is a part-time player with 14 games this month he leads the entire Carolina League with six home runs in the month of May. Of course early on in this one it wasn’t looking too pretty, and Augusta entered the ninth inning trailing 5-2 and needing magic from the top of the lineup to try to piece together a comeback. John Gil has been red hot at the plate, as he is finally dialing in the swing and getting the barrel on pitches in the upper half of the zone. Earlier in the third inning he turned on a high cutter, roping one into the left field corner for a double, his fifth extra base hit of the month. One pitch into the ninth inning and he stood on first base after sending a 96 mph fastball right back up the middle for a single to start a rally. Owen Carey followed him up by turning on a fastball for a line shot single, and quickly the GreenJackets had the tying run up to bat with Isaiah Drake. Drake hit a hard grounder as well, but this one found the glove of the first baseman for what should have been an easy out. That is, whenever the hitter doesn’t have Isaiah Drake’s speed. He beat the pitcher down the line to get an RBI single, and in an instant all of the pressure was on the back of the RiverDogs. Then the worst case scenario, Colby Jones grounded one straight at second base for a potentially back-breaking double play to give Charleston their first two outs of the inning. But Augusta wasn’t done. Douglas Glod came up and drew a walk, and Guerra had one last chance to add to his third inning home run and win the game for Augusta. He did just that. Guerra got an 0-1 slider hung in his power zone, and he demolished it to left for a no-doubt walk-off home run.

It’s been a breakout year for Rayven Antonio, but Saturday was his biggest hiccup since the opening game of the season. Like the two previously mentioned pitchers, much of Antonio’s ascension has been him finally getting the strikeout numbers that his whiff rates indicate he should be getting. The rest has been the progress of his command, but this was one of the days where the young arm just couldn’t find the mitt. Whether walking guys or giving up a couple of home runs, Antonio struggled especially the second time through the order when the RiverDogs took the time to wait him more than they did when he had a couple of successful innings to open. Despite having far from his best stuff Antonio managed to battled to keep the game reasonable and nearly got through five innings. The bullpen was marvelous and kept the game within striking distance for Augusta, three of those innings coming from Reibyn Corona. Corona had not pitched more than two innings this season, but covered ten outs while allowing only one run to set the stage for that late inning comeback.

Swing and Misses

Rayven Antonio – 8

Reibyn Corona – 7

Trent Buchanan – 4

(6-9) FCL Braves 0, (10-5) FCL Rays 3

Box Score

  • Juan Mateo, SS: 1-4, .259/.306/.310
  • Jose Perdomo, DH: 1-3, BB, .293/.348/.362
  • Kendy Richard, SP: 5 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, 5.40 ERA

Well, we are back to shutouts. The FCL Braves only had four hits in this game, but it’s nice to see two of them coming from the guys we really want to see hitting. Jose Perdomo had one of those and drew a walk, and Perdomo is now working on a five-game hitting streak. Juan Mateo also had a hit to extend his streak to six games, but also added in a couple of strikeouts.

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‘U’ Falls in Sweet 16 to No. 4 Pittsburgh

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PITTSBURGH, Pa. — The No. 4 seeded Minnesota volleyball team fell to the No. 1 seeded Pittsburgh Panthers on Thursday night at the Petersen Events Center in three sets. The set scores of the match were 25-16, 25-23, 25-22.

The Gophers season ended in the Sweet 16 for the 21st time in program history with a 24-10 (12-8 B1G) record.

“Congrats to Pittsburgh on the win and for the university and city for being such great hosts,” said head coach Keegan Cook. “I’m proud of the way our team battled tonight and throughout the season. We just fell a little bit short tonight. I told the team I have loved coaching them all year and appreciate their willingness to learn and grow. We’re going to miss these seniors next year, but we’re glad to get back to the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament and continue to push the program forward.”

Kelly Kinney and Carly Gilk led Minnesota with nine kills while Stella Swenson had 28 assists, three blocks and three aces. Julia Hanson was held to eight kills in her final collegiate match.

The Gophers (24-10, 12-8 Big Ten) were outhit the Panthers (29-4, 18-2 ACC) .271 to .178, leading in kills (47 to 33) and digs (48 to 34). Minnesota had more aces (4 to 3) and blocks (10 to 5).

Julia Hanson commented on her time at Minnesota and what it meant for her to end her career as a Golden Gopher.

“There were times that I questioned myself and how things were going after my sophomore year,” Hansen said. “But I’m so glad to be a part of this program and so proud to have that ‘M’ on my chest. It means everything to me. I’m so thankful for my time at Minnesota.”

For Pittsburgh, Olivia Babcock had 19 kills while Brooke Mosher went for 35 assists. Bre Kelly and Blaire Bayless also had eight kills for the Panthers.

How It Happened

SET 1 | Pittsburgh started out hot, scoring six of the first seven points before Minnesota called a timeout. The Gophers tallied a pair of kills to get it to four at 7-3 before the Panthers scored three straight on two kills and a block to go up 10-3. An attacking error followed by a kill from Kinney and a block from Myers cut it to four again at 11-7. Following a service error from Minnesota, the Gophers scored four of the next five to force a Pitt timeout, trailing 13-11. Swenson tallied an ace, Gilk had a kill and Taylor combined with Gilk on a block. After the timeout, the Panthers bounced back by scoring four of five, taking a 17-12 lead and forcing coach Cook’s final timeout of the frame. The Gophers would get no closer than five the rest of the way as the Panthers closed out the first frame, 25-16. Pitt hit .267 for the set while Minnesota hit just .026.

SET 2 | Minnesota came out strong, scoring seven of the first 12. Swenson had two aces while Kinney tallied a pair of kills. A kill from Myers and a block from Kinney and Myers put the Gophers up 10-9 before three straight from Pitt forced a Minnesota timeout, trailing 12-10. Kills from Swenson and Gilk combined with a Panthers attacking error helped give Minnesota back the lead at 14-13. The Panthers scored three of the next four to tie it up at 16-16. Two more kills put them up 18-16, forcing Minnesota’s final timeout of the set. Pitt would go up by as many as three at 22-19 before two errors cut the lead to just one at 22-21, leading to a Pitt timeout. A Panthers hitting error and kill from Hanson tied it up at 23-23, forcing one more Pitt timeout. A kill and a block won the set for Pitt, 25-23.

SET 3 | Pitt scored seven of the first 11 points before kills from Taylor and Gilk combined with a block from Hanson and Taylor tied it up at 7-7. The Panthers went on a 5-2 spurt after that, getting four kills and an ace to go up 12-9, forcing a Minnesota timeout. The Gophers would battle back, scoring five of the next seven to cut it to 15-14. Kills from Gilk and Myers combined with an ace from Garr tied it up at 17 apiece. A pair of kills from Myers put Minnesota up 19-18, leading to a Panthers timeout. After the break, Minnesota got a block and a Pitt error to go up 21-19 before the Panthers answered back with two more to tie it at 21. The two teams exchanged the next pair of points before the Panthers closed out the match on a 3-0 run to win, 25-22.

Game Notes

» Minnesota is now 1-3 all-time against Pitt, including 0-2 in the NCAA Tournament.

» The Gophers are now 10-11 in the NCAA Regional Semifinals.

» Minnesota posted 10+ blocks for the 15th time this season.

» Minnesota is now 4-7 against ranked opponents this season.

» McKenna Garr (10) posted 10+ digs for the 24th time in 2025.

» Lourdes Myers went for six blocks to lead Minnesota.

» Stella Swenson went for 28 assists and a team-best three aces.

Up Next

Minnesota’s spring season begins in January.



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Nebraska Volleyball keeping practices light-hearted as they prep for NCAA Regional

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LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – Nebraska volleyball is keeping the practices light-hearted as they prep to play Kansas in the NCAA Regional.

The Huskers come into the Round of 16 with a 32-0 record and a lot of pressure to make the Final Four. With the mountain of expectations, the players and coaching staff are keeping the training fun and focused on each round rather than the latter goals.

“We still have a lot of fun in our practice, so even though the level is so high, we’re still managing to find ways to have fun,” junior middle blocker Andi Jackson said.

The light-hearted practices and emphasis on playing freely, has really proven to help Jackson’s game. This season she is hitting a nation-best .483 and is averaging 1.14 blocks per set.

“If you look too far into the future, you’re probably going to get a little nervous and get a little stressed out. So just really focusing on what we’re doing in the moment and focusing on where our feet are,” junior outside hitter Harper Murray said.

Nebraska VB’s HC Dani Busboom Kelly, MB Andi Jackson, and OH Harper Murray Pre-Sweet 16 Press Conference | Dec. 11, 2025

No. 1 ranked Nebraska will face off against 16th ranked Kansas on Friday, Dec. 12. The match starts 30 minutes after the conclusion of the two-seed Louisville versus three-seed Texas A&M match, which begins at 6 p.m. CT.

Click here to subscribe to our 10/11 NOW daily digest and breaking news alerts delivered straight to your email inbox.



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Louisville vs Texas A&M channel, TV, UofL volleyball game time today

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Dec. 12, 2025, 5:10 a.m. ET

No. 2 Louisville volleyball takes on No. 3 Texas A&M in the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 today at Bob Devaney Sports Complex in Lincoln, Nebraska.

This match marks UofL’s seventh straight regional appearance and first with Dan Meske as head coach.

Here’s everything you need to know to follow today’s match from home:

Today’s match between No. 2 seed Louisville and No. 3 seed Texas A&M is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln, Nebraska.

Buy Louisville volleyball tickets here



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No. 3 Badgers stump Cardinal, advance to Regional Finals

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AUSTIN, Texas – The No. 3 seeded Wisconsin volleyball team defeated No. 2 Stanford (25-17, 21-25, 25-23, 25-22) behind another prolific performance on the offensive end—hitting .420 (70 – 15 – 131) by the conclusion of the four-set match. 

The Badgers (27-4) were clicking on all cylinders in the first frame, as UW exploded for a .514 swinging percentage to jump out to a hot start in the first frame. 

Wisconsin utilized a 5-0 serving run from libero Kristen Simon, highlighted by an ace turned in by the freshman—guiding the Badgers to a 15-9 advantage. UW and the Cardinal (29-5) continued to trade points throughout the latter half of the set, led by nine kills from outside hitter Mimi Colyer

Stanford was quick to provide a response in this back-and-forth affair, as they put together three separate 3-0 runs to put away the Badgers and even up the match. UW fought back late with the help of a kill apiece from middle blocker Carter Booth and Colyer. Unfortunately for the Badgers, it was not enough, as they fell 21-25 to even up the match at one apiece.

The teams continued to be even throughout the first half of the third frame, with Stanford building a 17-14 cushion. In one of the largest turning points of the match, freshman Natalie Wardlow stepped up in the clutch with three-straight service aces to give UW an 18-17 lead. Wardlow’s four aces on the afternoon tied a career-best, as she last finished with four against No. 1 Nebraska on Oct. 31. 

The Badgers kept the pressure on, forcing the Cardinal out of the system for the remainder of the third set. Right side Grace Egan capped it off with a kill to secure a 25-23 victory. 

Set four brought the same intensity, as Wisconsin jumped out to a 10-6 lead with a pair of kills turned in by outside hitter Una Vajagic. The redshirt sophomore finished with her 10th double-double, hitting .411 with 13 kills, complemented by 11 digs on the defensive end.  

The Cardinal battled and tied it up at 14-14 before the Badgers’ rattled off three consecutive points. Colyer racked up her 2,000th kill of her career in the process—accumulating a match-high 27 at Gregory Gym. The senior earned her final three in the late stages of set four, pushing Wisconsin to the Regional Finals. 

Offensively, Booth tied a career-best with 14 kills, last doing so in the Regional Semifinal last season against Texas A&M. The Denver, Colorado, native swung .700 (14 – 0 – 20) against the Cardinal, as she finished errorless for the fourth-straight match. 

Middle blocker Alicia Andrew joined her in the process, racking up seven kills on nine attempts without an attack error. 

Setter Charlie Fuerbringer was the centerpiece throughout the entirety of the match, tallying a career-high 61 assists to guide the Badgers to their highest hitting percentage in a four-set match in program history. 

Straight from the Court

Head Coach Kelly Sheffield (on this afternoon’s match): “It was just two teams that were just battling like crazy. The level of talent out there on the court and the level of play out there, that easily could have been a Final Four match. It’s unusual to see that high level and back-and-forth in the Sweet 16.”

(On freshman Natalie Wardlow’s serving): “It was huge because we were down by a few points, and she got in there and got three aces in a row. She’s put in the work, and she’s got that ability to doubt people as a passer and get you doubting. She’s got that ability, we have a few of those players who can do that.”

Middle Blocker Carter Booth (on what went right offensively): “I think it was just coming into the match with the mentality that we’re on the attack, knowing that we have a bit of an advantage in transition from what we’ve studied over the film. I think it was really an emphasis for us to always be the ones throwing punches, not the ones taking them.” 

Outside Hitter Mimi Colyer (on playing in marquee matches): “I want to get in these big games and be competitive and play with a group of girls that want to win and need to win. I think our team is doing just that, I think we’re gelling at the right time and I think we’re gaining so much momentum.”

Setter Charlie Fuerbringer (on Una Vajagic’s performance): “I think she’s literally the most underrated player in the whole NCAA. She hit .444 and had 13 kills tonight, and she passes dimes. When Una passes, I think we hit over .500 every time, so I just don’t think she’s talked about enough and the amount she does for our team is huge.”

Notes: 

  • For the first time in program history, Wisconsin beat Stanford. The Badgers and Cardinal met six times previously in program history.
  • Wisconsin will advance to the Regional Finals for the eighth-straight season.
  • UW improves to 16-7 in program history in Regional Finals, and head coach Kelly Sheffield is 11-2.
  • The Badgers improve to 73-29 all-time in the NCAA tournament.
  • Wisconsin wore its black jersey for just the second time this season. The Badgers previously wore black in a 3-1 victory over Florida on Sept. 16. This marks just the third time in program history UW has worn black, and it’s first in 1999 at Penn State.
  • Freshman Natalie Wardlow tied a career-best with four service aces against Stanford.
  • Senior Carter Booth recorded a season-best 14 kills. She totaled 14 kills on 20 swings, while also hitting .700 for the match. This also marks her fourth-straight match without a hitting error.
  • For the 12th match this season, outside hitter Mimi Colyer tallied 20 or more kills. She had a match-high 27 kills on 51 swings while hitting 373. With 27 kills, Colyer joins the 2,000 career kill club.
  • For the eighth time this season, Wisconsin hit .400 or better. The Badgers hit .420 (70-15-131).
  • Badgers had three players with double-figure kills, Colyer (27), Booth (14) and Una Vajagic (13).
  • Setter Charlie Fuerbringer set a career-best 61 assists against Stanford. She previously totaled 59 against Ohio State on November 27, 2024.

Up Next: The Badgers are set to take on No. 1 Texas in the NCAA Regional Final on Sunday, Dec. 14 for a trip to the NCAA Championship. Match time is still to be determined.



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Alabama A&M Graduates 26 at Fall Commencement

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THE HILL | Twenty-six Alabama A&M University student-athletes earned degrees at the University’s fall commencement ceremony on Friday at the AAMU Event Center.
 

Of the class, six of the graduates were baseball student-athletes, five were from volleyball, four were from women’s basketball, three were from football and softball, two from women’ s bowling and one each from men’s track & field, women’s soccer and women’s tennis.
 
Below are the graduates, listed by sport with their major.
 






























Name Sports Major
Isaac Casto Baseball Liberal Studies
Chevalier Dorris Baseball Mechanical Engineering
Brycen Hammonds Baseball Communications Media
Juan Rey Baseball Finance
Trey Scott Baseball Management
Avery Seaton Baseball Business Administration
Tyrell Lawrence Football Master’s in Business Administration
Jordan Milton Football Communications Media
Nikobe Myers Football Management
Preston London Men’s Track & Field Mechanical Engineering
Jalia Callway Softball Plant Biochemistry
Paige Scott Softball Political Science
Alyssa Charter-Smith Softball Liberal Studies
Moses Davenport Women’s Basketball Master’s in Business Administration
Kamaria Gibson Women’s Basketball Liberal Studies
Jaiyah Smith Women’s Basketball Liberal Studies
Mailyn Wilkerson Women’s Basketball Master’s in Business Administration 
Tamyra Long Women’s Bowling Biology
Megan Whorton Women’s Bowling Sport Management
Daniela Marroquin Women’s Soccer Business Administration
Yana Dhamija  Women’s Tennis Computer Science
Fatoumata Camara Volleyball Liberal Studies
Kemora Coachman Volleyball Business Administration
Bailey Duckett Volleyball Management
Myiah Porter Volleyball Psychology
Kennedy Robinson Volleyball Computer Science

 

For complete coverage of Alabama A&M Athletics – Huntsville’s only Division I program – check out the official homepage at www.aamusports.com. Remember to follow us on social media: Instagram (@aamuathletics), Facebook (aamubulldogathletics), Twitter (@_aamuathletics) and TikTok (aamuathletics).
 



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Nebraska track and field shines with record-breaking season debut

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Nebraska’s track and field team made a powerful start to their season at the Husker Holiday Open, securing event titles in 18 of 29 events and setting two new school records. Axelina Johansson highlighted the meet by breaking both the school and Swedish records in the shot put with a mark of 19.72m (64-8 1/2). Dyson Wicker also set a new school record in the men’s pole vault, clearing 5.62m (18-5 1/4).

Cade Moran claimed the men’s shot put title, achieving a mark of 20.07m (65-10 1/4), which ranks fifth in school history. Donna Douglas made an impressive debut, winning the women’s weight throw with a mark of 19.33m (63-5). Aspen Fears took the women’s pole vault title, clearing 3.96m (12-11 3/4).

Seth Schnakenberg set a personal best in the men’s weight throw with a mark of 20.87m (68-5 3/4), while Abrielle Artley won the women’s 300m with a time of 39.00. Elo Blessing Okpah and Ashriel Dixion excelled in the 60m races, with Okpah taking first in the women’s event and Dixion securing second in the men’s.

Brayden Bergkamp and Kate Campos both won their respective 60m hurdles events, with Bergkamp setting a personal best of 8.18. Alea Hardie and Gabe Nash claimed the mile titles, with Hardie achieving a personal best of 4:56.18.

In the men’s 600m, William McDavid emerged victorious with a time of 1:20.05. Ela Velepec claimed the women’s high jump title with a personal best of 1.83m (6-0). The Huskers also dominated the 4×400 relays, with both the men’s and women’s teams taking first place.

Desire Tonye-Nyemeck won the men’s high jump, clearing 2.14m (7-0 1/4). Nebraska will next host the Graduate Classic on Jan. 16-17 at the Devaney Sports Center Indoor Track.



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