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Assistant Women’s Volleyball Coach in Lewiston, ME for Bates College

Details Posted: 18-Jun-25 Location: Lewiston, Maine Type: Full-time Categories: Coaching Coaching – Volleyball Sector: Collegiate Sports Required Education: 4 Year Degree The Assistant Coach is responsible for aiding the Head Coach in administering a competitive NCAA Division III intercollegiate program. This position supports the development of student-athletes through mentorship, guidance, leadership opportunities, community building, and […]

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Details

Posted: 18-Jun-25

Location: Lewiston, Maine

Type: Full-time

Categories:

Coaching

Coaching – Volleyball

Sector:

Collegiate Sports

Required Education:

4 Year Degree

The Assistant Coach is responsible for aiding the Head Coach in administering a competitive NCAA Division III intercollegiate program. This position supports the development of student-athletes through mentorship, guidance, leadership opportunities, community building, and a commitment to social justice. The Assistant Coach focuses primarily in the areas of planning and directing recruitment, conditioning, training, and performance of student-athletes, along with fiscal management of the program. This is a professional assistant coaching position, and all of the duties of the position must be conducted in adherence with the policies, rules, and regulations of affiliated national, regional, and state intercollegiate athletic associations, the NESCAC Conference, and the College. The Assistant Coach will have significant night and weekend commitments. This position reports to the Head Coach.


Job Duties:


– Adheres to and enforces all policies and procedures of the Department of Athletics & Physical Education and the College as well as the rules and regulations of the NESCAC, the NCAA and other authorities that may legitimately influence the intercollegiate athletics program. – Completes all required departmental and institutional training and certification programs and participates actively in available professional development opportunities. – Assists in the recruitment of student-athletes as directed by the head coach. Ensures full compliance with NESCAC and NCAA guidelines in all aspects of the recruiting process. – Provides leadership and instruction in the personal and athletic development of student-athletes, including counseling team members in academic, disciplinary and personal matters. – Assists the head coach in monitoring the eligibility status and academic progress of student-athletes. – Provides support in carefully tracking expenditures for all team accounts to ensure fiscal responsibility. – Works with the head coach and equipment manager to initiate and coordinate the selection, purchase, fitting and maintenance of team equipment; to include uniforms, athletic equipment and supplies. – Assists the head coach in developing and implementing strategies for motivating student-athletes to perform at maximum levels as both individuals and a team. – Arranges team travel transportation arrangements through Assistant AD for Student-Athlete Services and Internal Operations and team lodging arrangements through the Business Manager. – Works closely with the strength and conditioning and sports medicine staff to ensure that student-athletes are physically prepared for competition. – Assists with approved fund-raising activities as requested and coordinates all such efforts through the Director of Athletics and Office of College Advancement. – Compiles data and reports in a timely fashion when requested by the head coach or any senior level administrator.

Experience

  • Experience playing or coaching the sport, college level preferred.
  • Experience and/or demonstrated success in supervising young adults and managing programs preferred.

About Bates College

About
Bates is one of the nation’s leading liberal arts colleges, with a long history of commitments to principles of human dignity and diversity.

Since its founding by abolitionists in 1855, Bates has welcomed men and women from diverse racial, ethnic, religious, and economic backgrounds. Bates was the first co-educational college in New England, and some of its earliest students were former slaves. The college continues to live that promise of inclusiveness.

Bates offers a rigorous and highly personalized education that centers on deep and sustained interactions among students, faculty, and community. Bates engages the forces — intellectual trends, demographic changes, and technology — that are transforming higher education and the world into which our students graduate.

Bates has highly competitive admission, graduates over 90% of its entering students, and over half of its alumni earn graduate degrees. Bates has 1,700 students, 200 faculty members and 550 staff and administrative employees.

The college is proud of its deep roots in the Lewiston/Auburn community, Maine’s second largest urban area, with a population of approximately 65,000. Bates is located on a beautiful, 109-acre, traditional New England campus in Lewiston, a small city with an entrepreneurial climate, a lively arts scene, and a dynamic business community. Bates is 35 miles north of Portland, 140 miles north of Boston, and 350 miles north of New York City.

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Johansson Wins Shot Put at World University Games – University of Nebraska

Nebraska track and field senior Axelina Johansson won the shot put gold medal at the FISU Summer World University Games in Bochum, Germany on Tuesday.  Johansson, representing Sweden, threw 60-6 1/2 (18.45m) to earn the top spot on the podium. Johansson is a two-time NCAA champion in the shot put and six-time All-American, as well […]

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Nebraska track and field senior Axelina Johansson won the shot put gold medal at the FISU Summer World University Games in Bochum, Germany on Tuesday. 

Johansson, representing Sweden, threw 60-6 1/2 (18.45m) to earn the top spot on the podium. Johansson is a two-time NCAA champion in the shot put and six-time All-American, as well as the Nebraska school record holder in the event. She placed 10th at the Olympics last summer. 

Husker junior Miné De Klerk, representing South Africa, finished in fourth place with a mark of 56-10 1/4 (17.33m). De Klerk is a two-time All-American in the shot put and also competed at the Olympics last year. 

 



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Sharks Volleyball recognized with AVCA Team Academic Award

Story Links FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – The American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) has announced the 2025 Team Academic Award. To receive the honor, volleyball programs must maintain a year-long grade-point average of at least 3.3 on a 4.0 scale. The Nova Southeastern Sharks, under the direction of Head Coach Kacie Ehinger, […]

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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – The American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) has announced the 2025 Team Academic Award. To receive the honor, volleyball programs must maintain a year-long grade-point average of at least 3.3 on a 4.0 scale. The Nova Southeastern Sharks, under the direction of Head Coach Kacie Ehinger, received the honor for the third consecutive year in her tenure.  

Additionally, NSU Volleyball was recognized among the elite academic programs in NCAA Division II and was one of few programs to earn the distinction of being in the top 20% of Division II institutions.  

The Sharks Volleyball program continued to elevate its lofty academic standards, setting program records in both the fall and winter semesters. During the fall semester, NSU achieved the highest fall semester GPA (3.74) in program history, while placing 15 student-athletes on the Sunshine State Conference Commissioner’s Honor Roll. During the winter semester, NSU Volleyball earned the program’s highest semester GPA (3.85) on record.  

Nova Southeastern Volleyball will return to action in September 2025. To stay up-to-date on Sharks Volleyball, be sure to follow on Instagram at NSU_VBall and X at NSU_VB.



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Women’s Volleyball Announces 2025 Schedule

Story Links LA JOLLA, Calif.—UC San Diego women’s volleyball has released the full 2025 schedule, as announced by head coach Melanie Greene.   The 2025 season is set to begin at home in LionTree Arena on Aug. 29 when the Tritons play host to Eastern Washington in the first match […]

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LA JOLLA, Calif.—UC San Diego women’s volleyball has released the full 2025 schedule, as announced by head coach Melanie Greene.
 
The 2025 season is set to begin at home in LionTree Arena on Aug. 29 when the Tritons play host to Eastern Washington in the first match of the UC San Diego Invitational. UC San Diego will play 12 non-conference matches spread across four different tournaments before Big West play begins Sept. 26.

“We’re thrilled to get the 2025 fall season underway,” said Greene. “Our staff has onboarded many new faces to the Triton volleyball program that will bring international & power conference experience, as we face several top 50-100 opponents this preseason. We will be tested early on in our season to recognize our ability to adapt and unify our group as we prepare for a tough conference. We look forward to the experience.”

UC San Diego will continue the opening-weekend tournament, taking on New Mexico State (Aug. 30) and Northwestern (Aug. 31), as well as host three neutral matches between the participating teams during the weekend.

 

The next three weeks will see the Tritons on the road for three invitational tournaments. First, UC San Diego will travel to Idaho for the Boise State Classic, taking on the host Boise State (Sept. 4), Oregon State (Sept. 5) and Arizona (Sept. 6). 

 

Next up, the Tritons will head to Flagstaff, Ariz. for the Lumberjack Classic hosted by Northern Arizona (Sept. 11-13). UC San Diego will face the host on Thursday and take on Southern Utah and Texas Tech in a pair of neutral matches on Friday and Saturday respectively. 

 

In the final week of the non-conference schedule, UC San Diego will play a trio of matches locally around San Diego. The Tritons will take on crosstown foe San Diego State on Sept. 18 in Peterson Gym. UC San Diego will face off with Yale in a neutral match at SDSU on Sept. 19 and wrap up the weekend at the University of San Diego on Sept. 20.

 

The Tritons will open their conference schedule on the road at Cal State Fullerton (Sept. 26) and UC Irvine (Sept. 27). Additional road matches include UC Davis (Oct. 9), UC Riverside (Oct. 11), Long Beach State (Oct. 16), Cal State Bakersfield (Oct. 23), UC Santa Barbara (Nov. 7), Cal Poly (Nov. 8) and the regular season finale at Hawai’i (Nov. 21).

 

UC San Diego will begin the Big West home schedule by hosting Cal Poly on Oct. 3 and host UC Santa Barbara the following evening. Remaining home matches include Hawai’i (Oct. 18), CSUN (Oct. 25), UC Irvine (Oct. 31), Cal State Fullerton (Nov. 1), UC Riverside (Nov. 14), UC Davis (Nov. 15) and Long Beach State (Nov. 18).

 

The Big West Championship is set for Nov. 26-29, hosted by Long Beach State at Walter Pyramid. 

Season tickets will go on sale July 29 and single game tickets will be available at a later date through the Triton Box Office.

 



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Spain turn Greek fairy tale into tragedy in World Aquatics C’ships men’s water polo s-final

SINGAPORE – They rallied from 2-6 down to lead 7-6, and a berth in the World Aquatics Championships (WCH) men’s water polo final was within sight. But the Greek fairy tale turned into tragedy when they conceded an equaliser in the final second of their semi-final before world No. 2 Spain went on to win […]

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SINGAPORE – They rallied from 2-6 down to lead 7-6, and a berth in the World Aquatics Championships (WCH) men’s water polo final was within sight. But the Greek fairy tale turned into tragedy when they conceded an equaliser in the final second of their semi-final before world No. 2 Spain went on to win the penalty shoot-out 4-2 on July 22.

While the vocal Greek fans were left in shock and tears, the Spaniards will go into the July 24 final against Hungary hoping to win a World Cup and WCH double in the same year, and give stalwart Felipe Perrone the perfect send-off.

The Brazil-born 39-year-old Perrone, who has six WCH medals with Spain, including gold in 2022, told The Straits Times: “It was a really emotional game. We really struggled… we scored six goals and we couldn’t score one more.

“Then we scored in the last second to draw and won on penalties. This is the beauty of the game, and people who watched this game saw how all the players, not just us but also the Greeks, gave our hearts and souls.

“Never in my best dreams did I think I would be in the world championships final in my last tournament. I’m 39 and it is not easy.

“These guys have a lot of energy, and I worked a lot and gave everything to be here. Before the tournament, I wasn’t even sure if I would come, but my kids told me to enjoy it, and I’m really enjoying it now.”

Spain led from the start as they did well to elicit exclusion fouls on the fourth-ranked Greece and score the first two goals.

While Greece bounced back to reduce the deficit to 3-2, Aristeidis Chalyvopoulos incurred a four-minute exclusion after he punched an opponent underwater just two minutes into the second quarter.

Spain took advantage of their extra number to score three without reply for the 6-2 lead.

Then came the astonishing Greek fightback, after Alvaro Granados was red-carded in the third quarter.

While the attendance at the 3,000-seater OCBC Aquatic Centre remained in the hundreds, the decibel was raised with every Greek goal and save, with their staunch supporters singing, whistling, cheering and jeering relentlessly.

Amid the ruckus, Nikolaos Gkillas put Greece in the lead for the first time at 7-6 with less than two minutes remaining.

A desperate Spain saw two shots saved and Perrone hit the post, and had just three seconds in the last possession which Alberto Munarriz made the most of by piercing the defence at the death to silence the crowd.

In the shoot-out, Spain’s Perrone, Bernat Sanahuja, Munarriz and Marc Larumbe converted all their penalties, whereas Dimitrios Skoumpakis and Konstantinos Kakaris saw their shots saved by Unai Aguirre.

A crestfallen Greece captain Konstantinos Genidounias said: “We had the ball and we had only one job to throw it as far as we can and come back to defence. Unfortunately, the ball didn’t go far away, we gave them an opportunity to shoot and that’s the worst part.

“I’m feeling empty, really. That’s water polo, that’s sports, that’s life. One second you have something, the other second you don’t. I think it’s one of the worst ways to lose a game.”

The other semi-final was a goal fest, but similarly tight as the third-ranked Hungary edged out Olympic champions and world No. 5 Serbia 19-18 in the chase for their own historic double, as they are also in the women’s final where they take on World Cup winners Greece on July 23.

Hungary coach Zsolt Varga said the win served as a motivation for the team after their poor results at major tournaments.

“This win is so, so important because last year, we had a few issues. We were fourth in the European championship, seventh in the world championships and then fourth in the Olympics,” he said.

“It’s important for us that we can prove that there is a Hungarian team who can fight till the end. No matter what happens, we will fight to the end.”

Serbian star Dusan Mandic rued their poor defending against the Hungarians.

“We’re very disappointed. We didn’t play like we wanted to play. We (conceded) 19 goals. This is too much.”

In front of hundreds of flag-waving fans, Hungary burst out of the blocks and raced to a 6-3 lead, only for Serbia to show their resilience by leading 8-7 before going into half-time at 8-8.

Pumping themselves up by celebrating every goal with a roar and clenched fists, the Hungarians were persistent and precise in their attacks as they opened up an 18-13 gap.

Still, Serbia, who were led by Mandic, the best male water polo player of 2024, got back to within a goal, but another later equaliser did not materialise.

The men’s water polo drama had started earlier in the day. Following Canada’s 16-11 win over Brazil in the 11th-12th play-off, Romania bounced back from a 4-12 half-time deficit to draw 16-16 before Japan won 4-3 in the shoot-out of the 9th-10th play-off.

In the fifth-eighth semi-finals, Montenegro beat Italy 12-8 before the top-ranked Croatia beat United States 14-9.



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Volleyball Earns AVCA Team Academic Award for 15th Straight Season

PROVIDENCE, R.I.  – Brown volleyball earned the 2025 American Volleyball Coaches Association Team Academic Award, the AVCA announced on Monday (July 21).   The Bears continued their strong success in the classroom, earning the Team Academic Award for the 15th-straight season. Brown is just one of 17 programs in women’s Division I volleyball to have a […]

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PROVIDENCE, R.I.  – Brown volleyball earned the 2025 American Volleyball Coaches Association Team Academic Award, the AVCA announced on Monday (July 21).
 
The Bears continued their strong success in the classroom, earning the Team Academic Award for the 15th-straight season. Brown is just one of 17 programs in women’s Division I volleyball to have a streak of 15 years earning the honor.
 
To earn the award, a team must post a year-long GPA of 3.3 or higher. This year, the AVCA honored 1,450 collegiate and high school volleyball teams.
 
BROWN UNIVERSITY SPORTS FOUNDATION

The Brown University Sports Foundation (BUSF) is the backbone of our athletics program, playing a crucial role in enhancing the student-athlete experience. This is possible through philanthropic support from our alumni, parents, fans, and friends. Your gift through the Sports Foundation can immediately impact today’s Brown Bears, helping them excel in the classroom, in competition, and, most importantly, in the community. Please click 
here to learn more about how you can support the Bears.

 

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For the latest on Brown Athletics, please follow 
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Weather turns mud volleyball into beach volleyball at county 4-H fair | Gcdailyworld

Mud volleyball is always a big hit at the Greene County Fair. The scene changed a bit Thursday night, as storms rolled in and lightning delayed the fun. Organizers made the tough decision not to postpone the fun to another date, but instead moved the event into the indoor horse arena where the teams played […]

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Mud volleyball is always a big hit at the Greene County Fair. The scene changed a bit Thursday night, as storms rolled in and lightning delayed the fun. Organizers made the tough decision not to postpone the fun to another date, but instead moved the event into the indoor horse arena where the teams played in the sand.

A total of 19 teams competed in three different age brackets. The youth bracket included ages 10 through 13, intermediate included ages 14 through 18 and the young adult bracket included ages 19 through 24.

The youth division had four teams vying for the win. The teams included American Hitters, Big Dogs, Setsy and We Know It and Classic Aces. The Classic Aces played three games, including the championship game against the Big Dogs in the youth division.

The intermediate division had the most entries, with a total of eight teams competing for the winning spot. Teams consisted of Net Ninjas, Dirty Divas, Gold Diggers, USA, Mud Dawgs, Muddy Buddies, Muddy Mayhem and The Goon Balls. The Dirty Divas played four games before picking up the win in the intermediate division.

The young adult division had seven teams battling it out. The teams were The Piggers, Smack That Ace, Matsch Monster, Indiana Farm Bureau, Dirty Sets, Hits and Giggles and Swamp Spikers. In the end, Indiana Farm Bureau earned bragging rights after playing four games.

Winning teams earned t-shirts and a cash prize to split.



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