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A look at UCLA’s first year in the Big Ten

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When UCLA officially joined the Big Ten Conference on Aug. 2, 2024, it didn’t just shuffle opponents and game times — it stepped boldly into a new era of Bruin athletics.

For nearly 100 years, the Bruins called the Pac-12 home. Leaving behind decades of tradition wasn’t easy, but the promise of sharing the Bruin story nationwide, opening new doors for student-athletes and keeping our programs strong made the leap a bold but thoughtful step forward. Plus, with programs across the country watching expenses outpace revenue in the tumultuous landscape of college athletics, a lucrative annual payout between $60 million and $75 million made the move too good to pass up.

The stakes were clear: Could UCLA carry its legacy of academic and athletic excellence into a conference that stretched coast to coast? In year one, the answer was a resounding “yes,” and then some.

As Martin Jarmond, UCLA’s Alice and Nahum Lainer Family Director of Athletics, put it: “We were coming to win championships, and that’s what we did.” 

Players and staff of UCLA men’s water polo team pose with their NCAA championship trophy poolside at the Avery Aquatic Center in Palo Alto on Dec. 8, 2024.

UCLA Athletics

Players and staff of UCLA men’s water polo team pose with their NCAA championship trophy poolside at the Avery Aquatic Center in Palo Alto on Dec. 8, 2024.

 

UCLA closed out its debut Big Ten season by finishing fifth in the Learfield Directors’ Cup, an award that recognizes the top overall collegiate athletic programs in the United States, based on their performance in NCAA and NAIA championships. This was the program’s best showing since 2017–18 and a proud reminder that Bruins can thrive anywhere.

“Our success in the Big Ten this last year is a resounding statement,” Jarmond said, “It says that we’re here and we’re here to win championships and compete at the highest level. I’m extremely bullish and excited about our trajectory and future, especially this upcoming year. I think when you look at our programs — from top to bottom — you’d be hard-pressed to find another school in the country that has as many teams that are that are coming off excellent seasons and looking forward to building upon that.”

Championships, records and remarkable moments

On the field and court, Bruins teams didn’t just compete — they excelled.

UCLA won its 124th NCAA title, the second-most of any university in the nation and most in the Big Ten, when men’s water polo toppled USC, 11–8, in December.

Gymnasts Jordan Chiles and Brooklyn Moors brought home NCAA individual championships on the uneven bars and floor exercise, while the team came in second at the national championships.

Men’s volleyball finished second in the nation after advancing to the national final for the third consecutive year.

Nearly 60 Bruins earned All-America honors, with four winning individual national titles.

UCLA was the only school this season to have both softball and baseball teams advance to the College World Series. Men’s tennis continued its winning tradition by capturing the Big Ten tournament title and advancing to the NCAA quarterfinals for the 40th time since the NCAA adopted a bracket format in 1977. UCLA teams won a total of 10 conference titles, most among Big Ten schools.

“We won 10 conference championships — the most in the Big Ten,” Jarmond said. “Everybody was ready to go on day one, and the results showed.”

Bruins fans broke barriers, too. Women’s basketball set a new single-game attendance record at Pauley Pavilion, with 13,659 fans cheering on the blue and gold on two different occasions, and women’s gymnastics also set a program attendance record with 12,918 fans in attendance at the March 9 meet.

For women’s basketball, the Bruins’ inaugural Big Ten campaign was a historic one. They posted a 34–3 overall record (16–2 in the Big Ten), captured the Big Ten tournament crown, won national honors — including Lauren Betts winning Defensive Player of the Year honors and Cori Close earning Coach of the Year acclaim — and secured the program’s first Final Four appearance in the NCAA era.

Members of UCLA’s women’s basketball team celebrate their victory over the LSU Tigers in the NCAA tournament on March 30, 2025 — sending them to the Final Four.

Ross Turteltaub

Members of UCLA’s women’s basketball team celebrate their victory over the LSU Tigers in the NCAA tournament on March 30, 2025 — sending them to the Final Four.

 

Men’s basketball finished their inaugural Big Ten season at 23–11 overall (13–7 in the Big Ten), tied for fourth in conference play, and advanced to the NCAA tournament’s second round.

Football’s Big Ten debut put the Bruins on some of college football’s grandest stages and saw first-year head coach DeShaun Foster guide his team to four wins in the last six games. Historic matchups brought thousands of traveling fans, sparked new rivalries and gave our student-athletes the chance to play in some of the sport’s most legendary venues.

Miles traveled, lessons learned

Behind the headlines is a quieter story of resilience and adaptation.

The jump to the Big Ten meant transitioning from the Pac-12’s travel to mostly Western schools. Many teams found themselves crossing the country several times a month — some logging more than 20,000 miles in a single year, nearly triple what they’d traveled before.

But instead of letting all that travel slow them down, UCLA’s coaches, staff and student-athletes turned miles into momentum.

Teams stacked back-to-back away games to cut down on extra flights. Travel days doubled as study time. Hotel ballrooms turned into film rooms and pop-up study halls. The added miles tested not just their endurance, but their adaptability, time management and grit.

“Adaptability and flexibility are key attributes that you have to have when you make a change,” Jarmond said. “We learned a lot through the travel first year. We had a strong GPA. So academically, our student-athletes were very strong — they adapted well.”

Investing in mental health and academic support

The University knew that cross-country travel could add stress and make balancing academics even tougher. That’s why before the first Big Ten whistle blew, UCLA invested in mental health services for student-athletes.

Licensed therapists joined the athletics staff and new programs helped students build better sleep habits, handle jet lag and stay balanced while living out of a suitcase and keeping up GPAs.

Advisors and faculty worked hand-in-hand with coaches to make sure coursework flexed with travel schedules. Online lectures, recorded classes and one-on-one tutoring kept Bruins plugged in, whether in a study hall, at home or an airport terminal halfway across the country.

What emerged was a stronger culture of openness and support, a community that’s helping college athletes everywhere destigmatize mental health. Bruins spoke up, supported each other and showed that mental well-being is just as vital to success as physical training.

“Some of our teams learned they might have to leave a day early — and they made the adjustments during the season,” Jarmond said. “With anything new, you learn in year one, and that helps you better prepare and tackle it in year two.  Our coaches and Student-Athletes work extremely hard.”

The shift wasn’t just logistical; it was cultural. UCLA leaned into its student-first values and doubled down on support.

The power of community

If the extra miles tested our student-athletes, they also brought the Bruin family closer together. Games in Piscataway, College Park, Omaha and beyond became mini-reunions for thousands of Bruins living in Big Ten country.

To help Bruins rally behind this new chapter, the UCLA Alumni Association carried the spirit of Westwood on the road all season long. On Aug. 2, UCLA Alumni kicked things off with the B1G Event — a launch party celebrating this new chapter in UCLA Athletics history.

Sprits were high after the UCLA gymnastics team advanced to the NCAA final on April 17, 2025.

 

Bruin Bash pregame parties and Big Bruin Weekends turned game days into celebrations —  from the James West Alumni Center and the Rose Bowl to cities across Big Ten territory. Wherever Bruins gathered, there was always a place to reconnect, share stories and get the eight-clap going before kickoff.

Being part of the Big Ten has also brought opportunities for alumni to network and learn from our partner schools. This summer, UCLA Alumni hosted the Big Ten Alumni Relations Institute at the James West Alumni Center. The three-day conference welcomed alumni relations professionals from across the Big Ten to explore emerging trends, share innovative strategies and build meaningful connections.

“We have so many alumni and fans all over,” said Jarmond, “and as we continue, we need to make sure we’re connecting with them on the East Coast and the Midwest. In year two, I’d like to challenge our alumni … we have an exciting opportunity to support our young men and young women when they travel — and we need to show up and show out.”

From record crowds at home to loyal fans on the road, Bruins showed what makes UCLA special, no matter where the team plays.

Looking ahead

As UCLA enters its second year as members of the Big Ten, the national presence is already paying off. 

The Big Ten spotlight has amplified UCLA’s Olympic sports, opened new doors for students from the Midwest and welcomed thousands of new fans to the Bruin family.


“Our success in the Big Ten this last year is a resounding statement. It says that we’re here and we’re here to win championships and compete at the highest level. I’m extremely bullish and excited about our trajectory and future, especially this upcoming year.”

—Martin Jarmond, UCLA’s Alice and Nahum Lainer Family Director of Athletics


On the recruiting side, the football and men’s basketball programs attracted arguably the top transfers in the transfer portal in Nico Iamaleava and Donovan Dent, respectively, while men’s soccer reeled in the No. 1 class in the country. Returning stars abound, such as Lauren Betts and Kiki Rice in women’s basketball, Jordan Chiles in gymnastics, Roch Cholowsky in baseball, and Ryder Dodd in men’s water polo.

Financially, the move to the Big Ten kept all 25 varsity programs strong and boosted resources for travel, nutrition and wellness.

There was concern the extra miles would stretch the budget and the athletes too thin. But year one showed that smart planning, strong support and the Bruin spirit can turn challenges into an edge.

The miles aren’t going away, but maybe that’s not so bad.

The systems built this year — from mental health resources to flexible classes — laid the groundwork for even bigger success in year two and beyond.

“We want to be consistent,” Jarmond said. “In year two, you’ll see us build off the foundation we’ve laid. And E.L.I.T.E. is the standard: Energy, Leadership, Integrity, Toughness and Excellence. It’s a mindset Bruins carry into every venue, in every sport, coast to coast. We don’t need to change a whole lot. We need to adapt and welcome new environments. We’ve always done that, and that will continue.” 

Final whistle

A year ago, the Big Ten move felt like a leap into the unknown. Today, as the final whistle has blown following the 2024–25 campaign, it’s now a blueprint for how Bruins can grow without giving up what makes us special: championship ambition, student-first values and a family that shows up — whether the team is playing at home or 2,800 miles away.

Bruins didn’t just adapt; they excelled. They brought home trophies, broke attendance records, raised the bar for mental health and proved success is about more than wins and losses. It’s measured in study sessions on late-night flights, in professors who work with deadlines across time zones and in teammates who lift each other up through long road trips.

UCLA Athletics Director Martin Jarmond stands at podium in front of a line of NCAA championship trophies

UCLA Athletics

Since Martin Jarmond’s appointment as athletics director in 2020, UCLA has captured six NCAA championships, bringing the university’s overall total to 124 — the most in the Big Ten and second-most in the nation.

 

Most of all, it’s measured in the unshakable spirit of Bruins everywhere — a reminder that wherever we play, we play together, for each other and for UCLA.

“To all of our fans, supporters and alumni,” Jarmond said, “We have a program you can be proud of, and we’ll continue to compete at the highest level in our new conference.

“Competing in the Big Ten allows us the opportunity to engage Bruins everywhere and bring the Bruin community together in a unique way. In our second year, I encourage all Bruins to come out, watch a game, get a watch party going and just engage with other Bruins. Let’s come together and get behind these student-athletes, because they’re some of the best in the country. We’re going to keep working hard, adapting and being flexible, and achieving success at an elite level.”



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All-Area Volleyball First Team | Winchester Star

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Aaliyah Green

Millbrook — Junior 

Outside hitter

Green ranked first in the area in kills per set (5.40), sixth in digs per set (2.95) and eighth in aces per set (0.68). Class 4 State, Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection. Northwestern District and Winchester Star Player of the Year. 

Brenna Corbin

James Wood — Senior

Outside hitter

Corbin led the area in total aces (96) and tied for first in aces per set (0.99). Ranked third in digs per set (3.69) and fifth in kills per set (2.94). Class 4 State, Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection. 

Kennedy Spaid

James Wood — Senior

Outside hitter

Spaid ranked first in the area in total kills (458) and third in kills per set (4.87). Ranked seventh in digs per set and aces per set. Class 4 State, Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection. 

Isabel Aliveto

Clarke County — Junior

Outside hitter

Aliveto ranked second in area in total kills (428) and kills per set (5.16). She ranked ninth in aces per set (0.66) and tied for 12th in digs per set (2.37). Class 2, Region 2B and Bull Run District First Team selection. Bull Run District Player of the Year. 

Breeze Johnson

Handley — Sophomore 

Outside hitter

Johnson ranked 4th in the area in kills per set (3.73) and digs per set (3.65) and placed 3rd in aces per set (0.82). Class 4 State Second Team and Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection. 

McKenna Homans

Millbrook — Freshman

Setter/hitter

Homans ranked 14th in kills per set (1.62), sixth in assists (4.32), seventh in blocks (0.57), 11th in digs (2.42) and 12th in aces (0.61). Only area player to rank top 15 in all five major statistical categories. Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection.

Bryn Franzen

Clarke County — Senior

Middle hitter

Franzen ranked 5th in area in blocks per set (0.65) and 11th in kills per set (1.89). Class 2 State Second Team. Region 2B and Bull Run District First Team selection. 

Avery Curtis

Sherando — Freshman

Middle hitter

Curtis led the area in total blocks (78) and blocks per set (1.05) and ranked 6th in kills per set (2.45). Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection.

Kate Madden

Millbrook — Junior

Libero

Madden led the area in total digs (368) and digs per set (4.91). Ranked 13th in  aces per set (0.60). Region 4D and Northwestern District First Team selection.

Jillian Emmart

Clarke County — Senior

Setter

Emmart led area in total assists (596) and assists per set (7.64) and averaged 1.94 digs per set.

 



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Best Gainesville-area Big School Volleyball Player for the 2025 season

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Dec. 26, 2025, 4:00 a.m. ET





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Petoskey’s Katie Parker earns News-Review Volleyball POY, see All-Area

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Dec. 26, 2025, 4:01 a.m. ET

PETOSKEY — Katie Parker made an impact on the varsity volleyball court in all four seasons of her Petoskey career. 

After each season, she set her sights on becoming even better, something her Petoskey teammates and coaches were grateful for. 

Then came the 2025 campaign and eventual end. There was no next, something that hit home with Parker, though it’s a four-year career that most can only dream about.

“I didn’t really realize how much playing school ball meant to me until it was over,” Parker said. “Since I started my freshman year I always through, ‘One more year…one more year.’ But then realized this year is the last year. That final game really took an emotional toll on me.”

Parker’s absence within the lineup is sure to take a toll on Petoskey as well. 

Petoskey's Katie Parker was the engine to the team's production over her career and will be a huge piece to replace after a 2025 News-Review Player of the Year honor and standout career.

The senior leaves Petoskey with the second most career assists with 2,901, placing her within the statewide career lists of the MHSAA. 

As a setter, she knows she’s in a position where she needs her teammates for success as much as they need her and she credits that bond as the biggest factor of her career. 



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All-Lowcountry teams for cross country, volleyball and more

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Girls Cross country

2025 Coach of the Year: Josh Michael, Philip Simmons. Michael led both the boys and girls team to state championships in Class AA this season. It was the fourth consecutive championship for the girls team and the second for the boys team.

2025 Runner of the Year: Morgan Howell, Porter-Gaud. Howell, a freshman, won her second straight SCISA Class AAAA state championship and recorded the fastest time in the area among all classifications with a time of 17:47. Earlier during the season her time of 17:16 was the fastest in the state in 2025.

All-Lowcountry Team

Morgan Howell, Porter Gaud: SCISA AAAA State Champion, 17:47

Taylor Blackwelder, Summerville: AAAAA Div. I, State Runner-up, 18:17

Anna Cavallon, Wando: AAAAA Div. I, 4th place, 18:34

Avah Mallek, Philip Simmons: AA State Champion (3rd straight), 18:37

Nora Brahim, Bishop England: AAAA, 3rd place, 18:38

Corrie Reinhardt, North Charleston: AAA, State Runner-up, 18:40

Evelyn Mercer, Palmetto Christian: SCISA AAAA, 5th place, 19:01

Lydia Scanlon, Lucy Beckham: AAAAA Div. II, 3rd place, 19:10

Sophia Lee, Wando: AAAAA Div. I, 12th place, 19:18

Laura Perry, Philip Simmons: AA, 4th place, 19:23

Colby DeLamielleure, Hanahan: AAA, 6th place, 19:24

Boys Cross Country

2025 Runner of the Year: Brayden Bunt, Academic Magnet. Bunt was the highest-finishing runner among all Lowcountry runners in state meet competition, finishing as the state runner-up in Class AA with a time of 15 minutes, 47 seconds, which was two seconds faster than Summerville’s David Greer.

All-Lowcountry Team

Brayden Bunt, Academic Magnet: AA State, Runner-up, 15:47

David Greer, Summerville: AAAAA Div. I, 4th place, 15:49

Wilson Scapellato, Charleston Collegiate: SCISA AA State Champion, 15:56

Ari Laurient, Wando: AAAAA Div. I, 8th place, 15:59

Connor Good, Bishop England: AAAA, 3rd place, 16:08





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Allie Landry named 2025 Putnam County Volleyball Player of the Year | Sports

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A year after winning a sectional title in 2023, Greencastle’s volleyball team had high expectations of going a step further in 2024.

Instead, a small late season wobble saw an experienced Tiger Cub team finish third in the WIC after being swept by Indian Creek and fail to win a set in its sectional title defense against Parke Heritage.

For a roster full of underclassmen, the loss stung but in the long run, might have been the catalyst needed for Greencastle to embark on an epic 2025 campaign.

The Tiger Cubs finished 30-5, sweeping the Monon Athletic Conference title with a 7-0 mark, claiming the Putnam County Volleyball Tournament after letting it slip the prior year, and winning not only a sectional title, but the school’s first volleyball regional title since 1998.

Seven seniors led the squad in various capacities, including 2024 Putnam County Volleyball Player of the Year Makenzie Creviston, Keely and Roan Amis and Haley Owens along the front line, Meilani York and Ellie Knuth in the back row. Sophomore back row Janae Greenlee and freshman all-rounder Sophia Gooch made a critical impact all over the floor.

With so many potent attackers up front and defenders sweeping up behind, Allie Landry was given the task of pulling the strings to make everything work.

Landry had been the Tiger Cubs’ sole setter as a sophomore in 2023 but split duties as a junior with Kaitlin Welker in 2024.

Back in charge of the operation in 2025, Landry orchestrated an offense with four hitters that claimed over 100 kills and a fifth on 94 kills, the senior setter adding 88 kills of her own while recording 949 assists, 236 digs, 108 aces and 37 blocks.

Landry’s mastery of the offense and decision-making on the floor led her to be named the Putnam County Volleyball Player of the Year for the 2025 season.

The disappointment of the finish to her junior season was a rallying cry for the seniors heading into the 2025 season.

“In the first round of sectionals, we got smoked last year,” Landry said. “That was not what we were expecting. We had way more goals than that.

“Coming off that season, all of us, especially having so many seniors, we wanted to come out stronger this year, knowing we were going to get everyone back, it made it easier for us to get together in the offseason and set goals for ourselves that we could attain as we were very excited for the upcoming season.

“It was really nice having Makenzie and Keely as they are super driven and both of them had the highest amount of kills on the team coming into this year,” Landry added. “Getting to play with them for so long and knowing we had one season left, it really motivated us to do all we could in the offseason and make the most out of the time we had left.

“We wanted to make our last season our best season.”

Landry’s athletic prowess is not limited to volleyball, having qualified for the IHSAA Girls’ Tennis Individual Regional for a second time in three years, as well as helping Greencastle win a fifth-straight sectional title.

A focus on tennis led to Landry relinquishing club volleyball, initially seen as ideal in her pursuit of the sport, but the draw of volleyball was strong enough to cause her to reconsider her plans before her senior year began.

“I wasn’t going to play club volleyball last year, having decided to focus on tennis,” Landry said. “I had played from fourth grade all the way until freshman year, stopped as a sophomore and had planned not to play again until I randomly got offered a spot on another club team as they needed another setter.

“That really helped. I really didn’t want to take another year off as I missed playing when I did. That spot felt like a sign that I needed to keep playing volleyball.

“Initially, I thought I was just going to be playing tennis in college and felt it was a waste of time if I did play volleyball,” Landry added. “I used the offseason to get really good at tennis and was going to do the same, having thrown all my club stuff out, but I ran back to get it and have since committed to playing both tennis and volleyball at DePauw.”

The club, Rev Volleyball Academy, came about thanks to a local connection to Greencastle in Suzanne Masten, offering a chance to get more time on the court as well as different perspective by working with a new set of teammates.

“This was an entirely new team,” Landry noted. “I had played for (Crossroads of America) in previous years, so I went in knowing only coach Masten, who got me on the team.

“It was so different playing on a team with nobody that I knew as I had only played with my same group of friends and a few others. It was a really great experience as it helped me connect with new hitters and learn from them.

“Going back and forth between two different sets of hitters, especially different middles as everyone has different timings that they like, was hard,” Landry added. “It was easier to shift from club to my school teammates than the other way because of muscle memory but it was definitely helpful to have the extra training.”

On top of getting back into club ball, Landry said the Tiger Cubs opted for a different plan in the summer, going for more time on the court as a team rather than individual work.

“We did something different by going to the Dunes Camp,” Landry said. “Usually, we go to a college like Ball State or Indiana University.

“Instead of focusing on drilling, we wanted to get a lot of playing experience, feel out a bunch of different lineups and throw people into different spots. We played 10 games over two days and were so tired after that.

“We stayed in a house together and all the togetherness was so fun,” Landry added.

The time at the camp was also a chance to work in Greenlee and Gooch into the fold, forming the bases of the team that would explode into life in a few months’ time.

“The Dunes Camp was the first time we had all played together as a group,” Landry noted. “We played with Janae the previous year, though she had a smaller role on the varsity last year but she was a great personality and was a great addition to the team this summer.

“We’ve known about Sophia for a few years so we were so excited to have her join. People asked if she would take away some of the spotlight from players in our senior year but we wanted her and all of the success that comes with having her on the team. We absolutely love her.”

Once the 2025 season arrived, Landry said the team was dialed in far more than the previous year, going in with the mindset of not leaving anything on the table every night on the court.

“Losing county and sectionals really lit a fire under us for this year,” Landry said. “We knew with the talent and the experience we had, we told ourselves we were going to county and not losing a set. We were going to sectionals and not losing a set.

“We had a don’t let up mindset against any team we faced. We didn’t want there to be any teams where we thought we could have played better against or we shouldn’t have lost to them.

“Every single game we played, we played with the intention of not losing any sets we didn’t need to,” Landry added. “We tried to fight in every match, even in losses like to Northview.

“We only lost two matches in which we didn’t win a set, which was different from past years where we’d gotten swept 3-0.”

Landry also set high goals for herself, wanting to better one of her own records and reach another major milestone as a setter.

“For settlers, reaching 1,000 assists is a big goal and one I had reached the previous year,” Landry said. “This year, my biggest personal goal was to reach 2,000 assists. That’s a huge goal.

“I also wanted to beat my ace record from sophomore year, which I didn’t quite get, but I was fifth in the state in aces. As a competitive person, I was tracking that leaderboard all season.”

A season-opening loss to Danville was followed up by a 13-match winning streak, cementing the start the team was looking for as well as showcasing the level of play the team had at its disposal.

“Our longest streak before this season was freshman year,” Landry said. “We started out 0-7 then won our next seven games. That was the longest streak I could think of.

“That stretch of the season was so fun. It’s very easy to let up in the middle of the season but I’m not sure we lost more than a set or two in that stretch.

“It was a case where we put our heads down, did the work and looked up to realize we were 13-0 over the past couple of weeks,” Landry added. “It was so fun to do that with my best friends.”

During the run, Greencastle won six of its seven Monon Athletic Conference games, all-but wrapping up the conference title a week into September, though Landry said the team almost didn’t notice their success at the time.

“We had talked about it last year when we played teams that were going to be in the new conference,” Landry said about winning the new conference. “Again, we put our heads down, put in the work, beat the teams we needed to beat and looked up to see we had won the conference.

“We hadn’t won conference before and it was exciting to be the first team to win the new conference title.”

The streak was broken when Greencastle hosted Northview, the only five-set match played by the Tiger Cubs on the season.

“Even though we lost to Northview, it was my favorite match of the year,” Landry said. “Just the name Northview, even if they’re in the middle of nowhere, they’ve been good at everything; there’s always some underlying tension thanks to club ball but they have smoked us year in and year out.

“This year, we thought if there was a year to beat them, this was it, so we went into that game so excited. It was a five-set match and so long and while we were sad afterward, we all realized how well we played and said we should be proud of ourselves, not sad. It was a fun game.”

The Tiger Cubs dusted themselves off, winning 10-straight matches to end the regular season and heading into postseason play with momentum at its back, though Landry said the team was reminded not to assume anything once sectional play began.

“We tried to have the mindset of not being too comfortable entering the postseason,” Landry said. “Everyone’s record is 0-0 at that point, something our coaches said to us a lot.

“In past years, we’ve had good seasons and gotten to the postseason thinking, it’s Parke Heritage, we’ve never played them before but thought we had it. They came out swinging and we weren’t ready for it at all.

“This year, we didn’t care about stats, records or if we played anyone in the sectional already, we wanted to clean it off as no one wants to be done and everyone is going to play as hard as they can,” Landry added. “We did our best to take care of business.”

Against the same Parke Heritage team that knocked them out of the tournament the year prior, Greencastle swept the Wolves to advance, eventually sweeping South Putnam and South Vermillion for a second sectional title in three years.

“We wanted to build on what we did sophomore year,” Landry said. “We won the sectional but we weren’t ready for the regional then.

“We wanted to give ourselves the opportunity to prove ourselves, that we weren’t just a team that won a sectional but could go beyond that. We were locked in during sectional week and the week after that getting ready for the regional.”

While sweeping through the sectional, Landry said the team was constantly being pushed in practice as head coach Denise Meyer put the squad through intense practices, utilizing Maggie York and Sarah Sprangler, former Marian University players and current Tiger Cub assistant coaches opposite the starting lineup.

“It really helps having a really good coaching staff like we had,” Landry pointed out. “They’re all so focused and wanted our success sometimes more than we did, so they were willing to do whatever it took and called whoever they needed to call to help us.

“They watched so many games of film and scouted teams. We spent so much time watching Covenant Christian and Barr-Reeve matches. The focus leading up to sectionals, the regional and semi-state, doing frustrating drills and other things that would get our minds working was with the goal of making things mentally easier during the match than during practices.”

Going into the match against Covenant Christian in the regional, Landry admitted nerves were getting to the team beforehand but a 9-1 start in the opening set eventually led to a sweep of the Warriors.

“We were really nervous, especially with how the regional went sophomore year,” Landry said. “We said we were not letting that happen again. That could not be us.

“We knew it could be our last game and said we had to leave it all out there. Even though we had scouted them all week, we also knew they were going out to avoid playing their last game, too, so we had to go out expecting everything.

“It was so fun,” Landry added. “The start set the tone for the rest of the match as we were so hyped to be there and showed we came ready to play.”

The win saw Greencastle paired with 2A No. 1 Barr-Reeve in the opening round of the Bedford Semi-State and though the season would come to an end against the Vikings, Landry said the squad battled gamely and enjoyed the experience.

“Even though we lost 3-0, the scores were a little closer than they showed,” Landry said. “We played really hard with (Barr-Reeve) most of the time.

“It came down to a couple of errors here and there that we could have cleaned up that really would have made a difference. The opening set was 22-22 and if we had won that, it really would have made a difference.

“Going in, they were the favorite and we were the underdogs, but the thought was, why can’t it be us to beat them?” Landry added. “Even though it was likely going to be our last game, we were so excited to play and had so much energy going into it.”

Just a few weeks later, Landry and Creviston would find themselves sharing the same court as several of the newly-crowned state champions as part of the Indiana High School Volleyball Coaches Association All-Star Games.

“Makenzie and I both initially didn’t want to see them but it was so hard to be like that because they were so nice,” Landry said. “We told them we were rooting for them because if you lose to someone, it might as well be the state champions.

“Even if we were a little salty about losing to them, they were super sweet, so it was easy to cheer for them to win state and play with them at the All-Star game.”

Greencastle finished the 2025 season with a 30-5 record, a 7-0 mark in MAC play, the school’s 21st volleyball sectional title and fifth regional title.

“I could not have asked for a better way to end my senior season,” Landry said. “It could not have been any better or any more fun.

“I have no regrets from this season, no games where I felt like we should have won or played better. We played to our full potential, even nearly winning a couple of games 25-0.

“The dominance we had was so fun,” Landry added. “That came from all the work we put in together since we’ve been in fourth grade, driving to club practices, seeing all of that time and effort pay off.”

Landry credited getting back into the swing of club ball for helping her have a fitting final season for Greencastle and for performing as well as she did over the course of the campaign.

“I’m really glad that I joined the club team because last year, I felt I was rusty going into the season and I didn’t want that at all,” Landry said. “I was able to hit the ground running and work toward my 2,000-assist goal as well as all my team-oriented goals with my friends.”

Also helping was a change in system that featured Landry as the sole setter in the rotation, a formation Landry was happy to take back up after splitting setting duties a season ago.

“Being the competitive person that I am, I wanted to run a 5-1 system like we had run my sophomore season,” Landry said. “Switching from that system into a 6-2 system as a junior was kind of hard for me but I loved playing with Kaitlin and I do like hitting, so I was happy to get an extra season of swinging in.

“I was definitely very happy to get my 5-1 permission back. Even if we ran that system last year, I don’t think all of us had the same fire or urgency of last year playing together. It might not have changed as much as we think because we had a very different mindset going into this season.”

Though there’s more volleyball to come for Landry, doing it without the teammates she has had the past four seasons was going to be tough, though she added she hoped the returning players picked up the mantle and carried the program forward.

“I’m so grateful to have been a part of a program and the friendships I’ve gained from playing with these girls my whole life,” Landry said. “I would not have traded it for anything else.

“Rowan coming in, Greta (Szabo) coming in, it’s so welcoming and such a fun program to be a part of. I’m so sad to have to leave and a little jealous of all the underclassmen that have years left to play for Denise.

“The records I set are one thing but the culture that myself and the other seniors have created is important,” Landry added. “I hope our leadership and the bond we created with one another is something that others are inspired to carry on.”



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Palm Beach 7A-5A girls volleyball first team, second team, honorable mention and coach of the year

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FIRST TEAM

Sofia Concepcion, Dr. Joaquin Garcia, Volleyball. All-CountyDeerfield Beach on Tuesday, November 18, 2025. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun Sentinel)
Sofia Concepcion, Dr. Joaquin Garcia, Volleyball. All-County—Deerfield Beach on Tuesday, November 18, 2025. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun Sentinel)

Sofia Concepcion, MH, Dr. Joaquin Garcia senior: Led the Bulldogs to a district championship and to a 5A regional quarterfinal; recorded 151 total blocks, 98 kills and .370 hitting percentage; had 15 blocks in a match; Athlete of the Week recipient.

Hailey Ferwerda, West Boca Raton, Volleyball. All CountyDeerfield Beach on Wednesday November 19, 2025. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun Sentinel)
Hailey Ferwerda, West Boca Raton, Volleyball. All County—Deerfield Beach on Wednesday November 19, 2025. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun Sentinel)

Hailey Ferwerda, OH, West Boca senior: Led the Bulls to a district championship and to a 6A regional final; recorded 21 kills in regional semifinal win; registered a team-high 228 kills, 171 digs and 47 aces.

Abi Chin Lee, Seminole Ridge, Volleyball. All CountyDeerfield Beach on Wednesday November 19, 2025. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun Sentinel)
Abi Chin Lee, Seminole Ridge, Volleyball. All County—Deerfield Beach on Wednesday November 19, 2025. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun Sentinel)

Abi Chin Lee, OH, Seminole Ridge junior: Team captain; recorded 296 kills, 287 digs, 281 service points, 241 receptions and 51 aces; Team Offensive MVP recipient; FACA All-State selection.

Bella Levitt, Dwyer, Volleyball. All CountyDeerfield Beach on Wednesday November 19, 2025. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun Sentinel)
Bella Levitt, Dwyer, Volleyball. All County—Deerfield Beach on Wednesday November 19, 2025. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun Sentinel)

Bella Levitt, MB/OH, Dwyer junior: Recorded 291 kills, 49 blocks and 25 aces; team captain; had 21 kills in regional quarterfinal and 18 kills in regional semifinal; JVA Watchlist Class of 2027; Prep Dig No. 7 ranked middle blocker in Florida for Class of 2027.

Alexia Marchese, Dwyer, Volleyball. All CountyDeerfield Beach on Tuesday, November 18, 2025. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun Sentinel)
Alexia Marchese, Dwyer, Volleyball. All County—Deerfield Beach on Tuesday, November 18, 2025. (Carline Jean/South Florida Sun Sentinel)

Alexia Marchese, OH, Dwyer junior: Led the Panthers to a 7A regional final; team captain; registered 275 kills, 262 digs and 45 aces; had 28 kills in a match; Dwyer Athlete of the Week; Team Offensive MVP recipient.

Kaija Fullerton, Jupiter Girls Volleyball (Courtesy/Jupiter High School)
Kaija Fullerton, Jupiter Girls Volleyball (Courtesy/Jupiter High School)

Kaija Fullerton, OH, Jupiter junior: Led the Warriors to a district title and 7A regional final appearance; registered 27 kills in regional semifinal win; recorded 328 kills and 141 digs; Jupiter High School Athlete of the Week selection.

 

SECOND TEAM

Victoria Addazio, setter, Dwyer freshman

Hadley Clark, libero, Boca Raton senior

Daniela Garrido, libero, Dr. Joaquin Garcia senior

Payton Lotz, libero, Dwyer sophomore

Elise Sergent, OH, Jupiter senior

Lillie Voss, setter, Jupiter junior

HONORABLE MENTION

Boca Raton: Meya Cooper, Lia Ray, Kiara Rose

Dr. Joaquin Garcia: Sophia Bui

Dwyer: Teaghan Greenman, Addison Inge

Jupiter: Ainslee Aden, Grace Lovell

Lake Worth: Illeysha Rodriguez

Palm Beach Central: Zoe Pikula

Park Vista: Madelyn Moye, Elsa Yonko

Royal Palm Beach: Camila Echeverry, Leslie Mentor

Seminole Ridge: Capri Corey, Emma Ginther, Kyla Wallace

Spanish River: Amelie Fortinho

Wellington: Nicole Koch

West Boca Raton: Hendrix Goodwin, Chloe Khoury, Sofia Maldonado

COACH OF THE YEAR

Blane Betz, Jupiter girls volleyball
Blane Betz, Jupiter girls volleyball

Blane Betz, Jupiter: The Warriors finished 23-5, won a district championship and reached a 7A regional final. “I feel like this year’s team and their success was really about learning how to bring a family of players together. We had players from all four grade levels. We had players from out-of-state and seeing them work together as a family to figure out how to be their best I think was most impressive about this team. Their patience throughout the season as we figured out the best scenarios for our team success was pretty great as well. And of course, I have the best coaching staff around. I could not do what I do without them.”



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