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Baker football and track standout Rasean Jones announces commitment to Mountain West powerhouse Boise State

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One of Oregon’s top two-sport athletes is headed just a little down Interstate 84 for college.

On Tuesday morning, Baker’s Rasean Jones announced on his social media that he’s committed to Boise State.

Jones is a standout at Baker in both football and track and field.

The 6-foot-1, 195-pound receiver is considered a three-star recruit per 247Sports, which lists him as the No. 6 recruit in Oregon’s class of 2026. Jones will likely be considered one of the top recruits in Idaho next year, as he is moving to Rocky Mountain High School in Meridian, Idaho for his senior year.

Jones was a second team all-state selection in Class 4A last fall. Like some of his Baker teammates, Jones struggled to stay healthy during the 2024 season as the Bulldogs fell to 1-8 and were last in the Greater Oregon League.

He also had offers from Idaho, Oregon State and Washington State.

Boise State is coming off a big 2024 season where the Broncos went 12-2 and won the Mountain West Conference. Boise State’s season ended on Dec. 31 in the College Football Playoff against Penn State.

For some Oregon high school sports fans, Jones is perhaps better known for his talents on the track. He’s a three-time Class 4A state champion in both the 110-meter and 300-meter hurdles, and has been the state’s top boys hurdler for years.

Jones’ personal best in the 110-meter (14.02) and 300-meter hurdles (37.03) are both No. 3 all-time in the state. The state record in the 110-meter hurdles is 13.73 set by David Douglas’ Bob Gray in 1988 and the 300-meter hurdle record is 36.1 set by Aloha’s Ken Scott in 1979.

According to Jones’ father, Jebron, he will just be focusing on football at Boise State.



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Five home contests highlight Raider non-conference schedule

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DAYTON – The Wright State men’s basketball team and head coach Clint Sargent announced the Raiders’ 2025-26 non-conference schedule on Tuesday afternoon, highlighted by five home contests inside the Nutter Center as part of a slate that includes three first-time opponents and some familiar foes.
 
Season tickets are on sale now, with opportunities to purchase single game tickets set to go on sale in the coming months. Wright State’s Horizon League schedule was announced last week.
 
The Raider non-conference schedule is highlighted by continuing a pair of longstanding in-state matchups with home contests against Toledo and Miami (OH) and an opening week trip to take on California, in addition to previously the announced game at Butler and taking part in the Greenbrier Tip-Off.
 
“I’m very pleased with how our non-conference schedule came together and want to thank our staff for their hard work,” Sargent said of the slate. “We aimed to create a competitively balanced schedule that challenges our team and provides opportunities to grow, while giving our fans plenty of chances to support us at home and on the road.”
 
The Raiders will officially open the season at home on November 3 against Franklin College before a cross-country trip and their first-ever matchup with California. The early season trip will be Wright State’s first visit to the state of California since the Raiders’ 2022 NCAA Tournament matchup against Arizona that was played in San Diego. The last time the Raiders played on the West Coast during the regular season was a trip to Seattle in 2009 when they opened the season at the Athletes in Action Classic. The state of California was also the site of Wright State’s first-ever win as an NCAA Division I institution, with the Raiders earning a 110-97 road victory over the former United States International University in San Diego on November 28, 1987.
 
Wright State returns home to the Nutter Center to take on Toledo for the 17th time in program history on November 11 before taking part in the Greenbrier Tip-Off November 15 and 16 against Radford and Kent State. The Raiders host Ohio Wesleyan at home on November 20 before finishing the month on the road, first in Florida on November 25 at Stetson before renewing a series with former Horizon League foe Butler on November 28 in Indianapolis.
 
The Raiders close out the non-conference with three December matchups, first traveling to Marshall on December 13 before a pair of home contests inside the Nutter Center. Wright State and Miami (OH) square off for the 41st time on December 16 before the Raiders host Eastern Michigan on December 22.
 
Wright State returns six players from a season ago while adding seven newcomers (four transfers, three freshmen). Logan Woods started 25 games in 2024-25 while shooting 48 percent overall, while Michael Imariagbe (18 starts, 64 percent shooting) and Solomon Callaghan (11 starts, 41 percent shooting) also had double-digit starts and shot over 40 percent from the floor and Andrea Holden connected at a 65 percent shooting clip with five starts. Transfers Sam Alamutu, TJ Burch, Bryan Etumnu and Dominic Pangonis join the Raiders with collegiate experience, along with redshirt freshmen Alex Bruskotter and Ayden Davis and true freshmen Michael Cooper, PJ Douglas and Kellen Pickett.
 
OPPONENT INFO

Franklin College (Nov. 3, Nutter Center)
Franklin ended 2024-25 with a 22-8 overall record and won the Heartland tournament title, advancing to the NCAA Division III Sweet 16 before falling to Washington University in St. Louis in the national tournament. Wright State and Franklin have met eight times previously, with the Raiders winning all eight times. The first matchup came in February 1974 and the most recent meeting was in January 1985.
 
Cal (Nov. 6, Berkeley, CA)
Cal finished with a 14-19 overall record and a 6-14 ACC record in its first year in the conference, falling in the second round of the ACC Tournament. Cal was 11-6 at home last season. Wright State and Cal have never met on the hardwood.
 
Toledo (Nov. 11, Nutter Center)
Toledo was 18-15 overall in 2024-25 with a 10-8 MAC record, ending the year in the second round of the MAC Tournament. Toledo was 6-9 in true road games last season. Wright State and Toledo have met 16 times previously, most recently last November, with the Raiders having won three of the last five contests in an 8-8 overall series.
 
Greenbrier Tip-Off (Nov. 15-16, White Sulphur Springs, WV)
Radford (Nov. 15) finished 20-13 last season with a 9-7 Big South record, ending the year in the semifinals of the Big South Tournament. Radford was 7-9 in true road contests last season but 3-1 in neutral matchups. Wright State and Radford have never met on the hardwood.
Kent State (Nov. 16) was 24-12 in 2024-25 with an 11-7 MAC record, advancing to the NIT Quarterfinals. The Raiders have faced Kent State seven times previously, with four of those meetings coming since 2016, in a short series with the in-state foe that dates back to the 1973-74 campaign.
 
Ohio Wesleyan (Nov. 20, Nutter Center)
Ohio Wesleyan finished 2024-25 with a 15-12 overall record and a 9-7 mark in the North Coast Athletic Conference, ending the year in the NCAC tournament semifinals. Ohio Wesleyan was a combined 7-8 in contests away from home last season. Wright State and Ohio Wesleyan have never met on the hardwood.
 
Stetson (Nov. 25, DeLand, FL)
Stetson was 8-24 last season with a 6-12 mark in the ASUN, ending the year in the opening round of the ASUN tournament. Stetson was 5-9 at home in 2024-25. Wright State and Stetson have met three times previously, facing off in Florida in January 1974, January 1975 and January 1976.
 
Butler (Nov. 28, Indianapolis, IN)
Butler ended 2024-25 with a 15-20 overall record and a 6-14 mark in Big East play, concluding the season in the quarterfinals of the College Basketball Crown. November’s matchup will be the 44th meeting all time between the former Horizon League foes and the first time since February 2012.
 
Marshall (Dec. 13, Huntington, WV)
Marshall was 20-13 overall and 12-6 in Sun Belt action last season, ending the year in the Sun Belt tournament quarterfinals. Marshall was 14-3 at home in 2024-25. Wright State and Marshall have faced off five times previously, including a Raider win last season inside the Nutter Center.
 
Miami (OH) (Dec. 16, Nutter Center)
Miami (OH) finished 2024-25 with a 25-9 record and a 14-4 MAC mark, ending the year in the MAC Championship game. Miami finished with a 15-1 home record last year, with its lone blemish coming in November as the Raiders handed them a 13-pint defeat in the 40th all-time meeting between the schools.  
 
Eastern Michigan (Dec. 22, Nutter Center)
Eastern Michigan was 16-16 last season with a 9-9 record in the MAC, falling in the opening round of the MAC tournament to close the season. Eastern Michigan was 6-10 on the road last season. This marks just the second meeting between Wright State and Eastern Michigan in a series that started last December.

 



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Assistant Coach for Track & Field in Cedar Rapids, IA for Coe College / Athletics

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Details

Posted: 10-Sep-25

Location: Cedar Rapids, Iowa

Type: Full-time

Categories:

Coaching

Coaching – Track & Field

Sector:

Collegiate Sports

Required Education:

4 Year Degree

This position will provide assistant track/field coach duties assigned by the Head Men’s and Women’s Coaches for Track/Field within the spirit, policies, and rules of Coe College, the American Rivers Conference, and the NCAA III in a manner that will further the fitness, wellness, personal, social, and academic development of Coe students. This position is responsible for vigorously recruiting students, including telephone recruiting, off-campus recruiting, and on-campus recruiting as assigned by the Head Men’s and Women’s Coaches for Track/Field. Plan, organize and supervise the activities/practices/competitions as assigned by the Head Men’s and Women’s Coaches for Track/Field, and any additional Responsibilities assigned by the Director of Athletics.

  • Previous coaching experience is preferred.
  • Valid driver’s license.
  • Applicants must be authorized to work for ANY employer in the United States as we are unable to sponsor or take over sponsorship of an employment Visa s at this time.
  • Successful completion of a background and driver check in accordance with Coe College policy.
  • Work harmoniously with coaches of all sports teams, athletic staff members, faculty members, and college administrators.
  • Exhibit exemplary personal conduct and character traits.
  • Serve as a role model for student-athletes.
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About Coe College / Athletics

Coe College is a private liberal arts college located in Cedar Rapids, IA. Coe was founded in 1851, and offers a long-standing tradition of academic and athletic excellence with approximately 1,400 students. Kohawk Athletics compete in the NCAA Division III, and belongs to the American Rivers Conference. The Kohawk Athletic and Recreation Complex underwent a transformative $18 million renovation, creating a contemporary multipurpose sports hub with a new performance arena, locker rooms, weight room, and fitness bridge.


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https://ncaamarket.ncaa.org/jobs/21656522/assistant-coach-for-track-field



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Coast native, Olympic gold medalist Brittney Reese joins collegiate track & field coaching staff

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GULFPORT, Miss. (WLOX) – Gulfport native and Olympic gold medalist Brittney Reese was named an assistant coach at Long Beach State University in California.

Reese is a three-time long jump Olympic medalist, including a gold medal in 2012, along with seven World Championship medals. She was also a standout student-athlete at the University of Mississippi, with back-to-back NCAA Outdoor long jump titles in 2007 and 2008.

RELATED: Coast Life: Gold Medalist back home and inspiring young athletes

Reese later returned to South Mississippi and led the Gulfport High School track and field program from 2023 to 2025.

Now, she will join Long Beach State’s coaching staff, focusing on mentoring jumpers and multi-event athletes.

“Gulfport High will always hold a special place in my heart. Coaching here allowed me to give back to the community that helped shape me, and I’m excited to take the next step in my career while continuing to inspire athletes to reach their full potential,” Reese said.

In addition to coaching, Brittney serves as a Tracktown USA Jumps Ambassador, promoting the jumps events nationally and continuing to elevate the sport.

See a spelling or grammar error in this story? Report it to our team HERE.



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Sam Alechko – Women’s Volleyball

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As a Senior in 2016

Missed almost all of the season with an injury, playing only on Senior Day against Saint Peter’s

– Combined with younger sister Natalie Alechko on the winning block on match point in the Saint Peter’s win. 

As a Junior in 2015

Played in 28 matches, including 26 starts

– Totaled 87 kills on the year on a .225 hitting percentage

– Ranked second on the team with 88 blocks

– Had nine kills in 20 attempts against San Jose State (9/12), while adding seven blocks (three solo)

– Had a season-high eight blocks (two solo) against Saint Peter’s (10/4)

– Tallied eight kills in 11 attempts against Hartford (11/4) 

As a Sophomore in 2014

Started in six matches

As a Freshman in 2013:

– Played in 25 matches

Before Quinnipiac:

– Graduated from Northern Valley Old Tappan High School in 2013 after lettering twice in volleyball

– Led Old Tappan in New Jersey to a 23-3 season in 2012 on the way to a league title, conference championship and the state sectional championship

– Led her team all the way to the Group 3 NJSIAA State Volleyball Championship during her final year with Old Tappan

– Posted team-highs throughout her senior year with a kill percentage of .405 to go along with 3.5 kills per set and 36 blocks on the season

– Selected to the First Team All-Group 3 after her senior campaign, she also earned BN National First Team and BCWCA All-Bergen Second Team honors.

Personal:

– Daughter of Rich and Jayme Alechko

– Has one younger sister Natalie, who is a freshman on the Quinnipiac volleyball team in 2016

– Majoring in Health Sciences.



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Head Men’s Volleyball Coach in Elmira, NY for Elmira College

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Details

Posted: 09-Sep-25

Location: Elmira, New York

Type: Full-time

Categories:

Coaching

Coaching – Volleyball

Sector:

Collegiate Sports

Required Education:

4 Year Degree

The person in this full-time position will manage all aspects of the sport program, including, but not limited to, practice planning, game preparation/scouting, in-game coaching, recruiting, budgeting, scheduling, team travel, equipment/apparel purchasing, staff supervision, payroll, academic monitoring, fundraising, alumni engagement, community service efforts, and general supervision of student-athletes.

  • Conducts training sessions to aid in the skill development of team members while keeping informed of current trends, tactics, and techniques, and managing game-day preparation and scouting of opponents.
  • Recruits and retains qualified student-athletes.
  • Monitors physical and mental health and well-being of team members, while working with professional staff to support the development and recovery of student-athletes.
  • Serves as a role model for team members with regards to personal and professional conduct by enforcing department and team expectations regarding general standard of behavior for student-athletes.
  • Coordinates essential team functions, including scheduling of contests, academic monitoring, eligibility tracking, budget management, transportation, and supply purchases.
  • Hires, supervises, and mentors assistant coaches, volunteer coaches.
  • Coordinates team fundraising, alumni engagement, and community service efforts.
  • Contributes to the overall success of the Athletics Department by performing all other duties and responsibilities as assigned. Responsibilities may include event management, facility supervision, assigned administrative tasks, committee work, or representing the Athletics Department at conferences/meetings.
  • Ability to work a flexible schedule and travel for both games and recruiting expected.
  • Evening and weekend availability is required.
  • Valid driver’s license required.
  • Ability to successfully complete a background check, motor vehicle check, and drug test.
  • Current CPR, AED, and first aid certifications required. Training and recertification can be provided if necessary.
  • Compliance with NCAA Division III rules and regulations required.
  • Compliance with athletic conference rules and regulations required.

Skills:

  • Demonstrated success in scouting, talent assessment, and recruitment of qualified student-athletes.
  • Excellent organizational, communication, and leadership skills, whether dealing with individuals or groups, and an ability to work well with different constituents.
  • Strong initiative, detail, and follow-up skills with student-athletes, staff members, and administration.
  • Strong strategic thinking and problem-solving abilities.
  • Ability to set and achieve or exceed goals and meet deadlines.
  • Ability to learn and apply University policies and procedures to ensure operational compliance and reliable judgement.
  • General computer knowledge with a proficiency in Word and Excel.
  • Experience with Front Rush or similar recruiting software preferred.
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About Elmira College

Elmira College is an NCAA Division III College, as well as a member of the Empire 8 Conference, the United Volleyball Conference and the United Collegiate Hockey Conference. Elmira College is an Equal Opportunity Employer committed to increasing the diversity of its community. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, age, religion, gender identity or expression, disability, or sexual orientation in our educational programs and activities or our employment practices.


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#18 Volleyball Hosts Bluejay Invitational This Weekend

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Bluejay Invitational

Rice vs. Northern Iowa • Omaha, Neb. • Friday, Sept. 13 • 4:30 p.m.

| LIVE VIDEO | LIVE STATS |

#4 Louisville at #18 Creighton • Omaha, Neb. • Friday, Sept. 12 • 8 p.m.

| LIVE VIDEO | LIVE STATS | CU NOTES |

Rice at #18 Creighton • Omaha, Neb. • Saturday, Sept. 13 • 4 p.m.

| LIVE VIDEO | LIVE STATS | CU NOTES |

Northern Iowa vs. #4 Louisville • Omaha, Neb. • Saturday, Sept. 13 • 6:30 p.m.

| LIVE VIDEO | LIVE STATS |

#4 Louisville vs. Rice • Omaha, Neb. • Sunday, Sept. 14 • 12:00 p.m.

| LIVE VIDEO | LIVE STATS |

Northern Iowa at #18 Creighton • Omaha, Neb. • Sunday, Sept. 14 • 3:30 p.m.

| LIVE VIDEO | LIVE STATS | CU NOTES |

This Weekend

After three straight weekends in Big Ten arenas, No. 18 Creighton Volleyball returns to Omaha to start a busy stretch of six home matches in a span of 10 days against some of the nation’s teams.

    First up is this weekend’s Bluejay Invitational, which starts on Friday, Sept. 12th and involves No. 4 Louisville, Rice and Northern Iowa.

    The event begins on Friday at 4:30 p.m. when Rice (2-3) faces off against Northern Iowa (3-3), followed by a nationally-televised Top 25 battle when No. 4 Louisville (4-0 before Wednesday) visits No. 18 Creighton (3-3) at 8 p.m.

    Saturday’s action starts with No. 18 Creighton  meeting Rice at 4 p.m., followed by No. 4 Louisville vs. Northern Iowa at 6:30 p.m.

    Play concludes on Sunday when Rice takes on  No. 4 Louisville at 12 p.m., and Northern Iowa meets No. 18 Creighton at 3:30 p.m.

Recognitions & Promotions

Brian Rosen will be honored before Friday’s match in recognition of his first win as Creighton head coach (Aug. 31 vs. No. 14 Kansas). The match will be a Powder Blue Stripe Out, with alternating sections highly advised to wear the appropriate color in a map to be viewed at http://GoCreighton.com/25pbstripes.

Powder Blue Stripe Out Sokol

    Ava Martin will be honored prior to Saturday’s match in recognition of her recording her 1,000th career kill last November. Saturday is also a camper reunion, as any camper from the past year can claim a discounted ticket to this match. Additionally, the first 500 fans can claim a tie headband from the marketing table.

    Sunday is a Throwback Day as we Rally in the Valley. Join us for another throwback game as we reminisce on the Missouri Valley Conference days! The first 200 fans and 50 students can grab a retro-reversible bucket hat upon entry.

Broadcast Information

All six matches from the Bluejay Invitational will be either televised or video webcast.

    Friday’s Louisville/Creighton match will be nationally-televised by FS1, with Elise Woodward and Jill Dorsey-Hall on the call.

    Creighton’s matches on Saturday vs. Rice and Sunday vs. Northern Iowa will be streamed on ESPN+, which requires a subscription. Visit http://watchespn.com, then click on schedule, to find the exact link.

    The three matches of the Bluejay Invitational not including Creighton will be video webcast at no charge on Creighton’s YouTube page at https://www.youtube.com/@gocreighton/streams.

    Connor Happer and Shannon Smolinski will call Friday’s Rice/UNI contest.

    Jon Schriner and Jaclyn Taylor will broadcast both of Saturday’s matches, while Schriner and Shannon Smolinski will announce both of Sunday’s battles.

    

Live Stats Information

Every match this weekend will have free live stats at http://Creighton.StatBroadcast.com. 

    Links will also be on the GoCreighton.com volleyball schedule page.

Scouting #18 Creighton

Creighton is 3-3 on the season and ranked 18th nationally after a challenging schedule that has featured No. 2 Penn State, No. 5 Texas, No. 14 Kansas and No. 22 USC, among others. 

    The Bluejays, who return three starters from  last year’s team that went 32-3 and reached the Elite Eight, are still adjusting to the loss of All-Americans Kendra Wait, Norah Sis, Maddy Bilinovic and Elise Goetzinger as well as the departure of head coach Kirsten Bernthal Booth.

    Reigning AVCA National Assistant Coach of the Year Brian Rosen was promoted to head coach after three seasons assisting Booth, and he’s relied on senior starters Ava Martin (3.70 kps., 0.39 saps) and Kiara Reinhardt (2.22 kps., 0.83 bps., .398%) to lead a talented group.

    Three transfers who have made an immediate impact are setter Annalea Maeder (9.35 aps.), middle blocker Eloise Brandewie (1.70 kps., 1.25 bps.) and libero Saige Damrow (4.04 dps.).

     CU averages 12.61 kills, 1.39 aces, 14.70 digs and 2.30 blocks per set while hitting .179.

Scouting #4 Louisville

Louisville is 4-0 and ranked fourth nationally heading into Wednesday night’s top-five showdown with No. 2 Texas. Last year’s NCAA runner-up, the Cardinals swept Auburn, Morehead State and St. John’s before a 3-1 victory over Illinois on Sunday.

    Payton Petersen (4.08 kps., .342%, 3.17 dps.) has stepped into a starring role and is supported by Purdue transfer Chloe Chicoine (3.67 kps., 2.92 dps.), Kalyssa Blackshear (2.70 kps., 1.10 bps.), Reese Robins (2.50 kps., 1.50 bps.) and Addison Makun (2.00 kps., .333%).

    Nayellis Cabello (11.70 aps., 3.00 dps., .40 saps.) is setting for the Cards, and Kamden Schrand (5.77 dps.) has filled in admirably for former All-American libero Elena Scott.

    Louisville ranks in the top 10 nationally with 15.23 kills per set (2nd), 18.15 digs per set (3rd) and 3.08 blocks per set (8th) while hitting .289 as a team.

    Louisville was picked to finish second in the Atlantic Coast Conference Preseason Poll with Cabello, Chicoine and Cresse named to the All-ACC’s Preseason team.

Series History vs. Louisville

Louisville has won all three previous meetings against Creighton, with each contest lasting five sets.

    The meetings came on Aug. 29, 2015 in Champaign, Ill., Dec. 7, 2023 in Pittsburgh in the NCAA Regional Semifinals, and last Sept. 15 in Louisville as part of the Cardinal Classic.

    Brian Rosen is 0-0 vs. Louisville and Dan Meske is 0-0 vs. Creighton. Rosen and Meske have never met as head coaches.

Scouting Rice

Rice is 2-3 on the season after alternating wins and losses through five matches this season. The Owls have losses against Top 25 foes Texas A&M, Texas and Baylor but have defeated Central Arkansas and Saint Mary’s.

    Michigan State transfer Taylor Preston (4.38 kps.) is the lone Rice player averaging at least 2.00 kills per set, but six other Owls average between 1.00 and 1.93 kills per set.

    Gaby Mansfield and Darby Harris share team-high honors with 3.44 digs per set, Arissa Smith averages a team-leading 1.06 blocks per set and Savannah Skopal averages 7.33 assists per set.

    The Owls average 11.75 kills, 15.00 digs, 1.94 blocks and 1.06 aces per set while hitting .177 as a team.

    Rice was picked to win the American Conference, with Lademi Ogunlana and Cindy Tchouangwa joining Preston and Skopal on the American’s Preseason All-Conference team.

Series History vs. Rice

Creighton is 1-2 all-time against Rice. 

    Rice won in four sets in 1995 in Manhattan and in five sets in Houston in 2022 before CU handed the Owls a 3-0 loss in Louisville last September.

    Brian Rosen has never faced Rice, while Rice coach Genny Volpe is 1-1 all-time against Creighton. Volpe has not faced Rosen as a head coach.

Scouting Northern Iowa

UNI owns a 3-3 record. The Panthers have beaten South Dakota State, Stony Brook and Iowa State but were swept by Arizona State, SMU and Washington.

    Lily Dykstra (3.85 kps.) and Cassidy Hartman (3.85 kps.) have accounted for more than half of UNI’s kills, and Jadyn Petersen (0.45 saps., 3.90 dps.) leads the defense.

    Reese Booth (5.95 aps.) and Kate Shafer (4.85 aps.) share the setting responsibilities and Lindsay Oldendorf (0.83 bps.) tops the team in blocks.

    As a team, UNI averages 14.10 kills, 15.95 digs, 1.65 blocks and 1.20 aces per set while hitting .211.

    The Panthers, who went 26-8 a season ago, were unanimous picks to win the MVC and Hartman was named Preseason All-Valley.

Series History vs. Northern Iowa

Northern Iowa owns a 42-16 record all-time against Creighton, including an 18-6 mark in Omaha.

    After winning just three of the first 43 meetings, Creighton has won 13 of the last 15 match-ups in the series, including seven in a row. CU’s 13 wins are the most against the Panthers since 2012, two more than UNI’s 11 losses to Illinois State.

    Six of CU’s 16 wins against the Panthers have come in five sets.  Creighton’s last 11 victories over Northern Iowa have come in six different states (four times in Nebraska, three times in Kentucky, and once each in Iowa, California, Kansas and Illinois).

    Brian Rosen has never faced UNI as a head coach. Bobbi Petersen is 30-16 all-time against Creighton.

    Northern Iowa is 14-0 all-time when ranked and facing Creighton. Creighton is 10-1 all-time when ranked when facing UNI. Oddly, the teams have never met when both were ranked.

Creighton Coaches

Brian Rosen was named the fourth head coach in modern Creighton Volleyball history on April 6, 2025, as he was promoted following the departure of 22-year head coach Kirsten Bernthal Booth. He is 3-3 as Creighton head coach, defeating No. 14 Kansas on Aug. 31 for his first win on the Bluejay sideline.

    Named the 2024 AVCA National Assistant Coach of the Year, Rosen served as a Creighton assistant from 2022-24, during which time CU went 88-13, swept the BIG EAST regular-season and tournament tiles each fall, and defeated 10 Top 25 opponents.

    The 2008 South Carolina grad went 45-17 as head coach at Division II Nova Southeastern from 2019-21, though the 2020 season was cancelled due to COVID-19 without playing a match.

    Rosen is assisted by Angie Oxley Behrens, Adam Kessenich and Izzy Ashburn.

With A Win…

With a win on Friday…

– Creighton would improve to 1-3 all-time against Louisville.

– Creighton would extend its school-record home win streak to 33.

– Creighton would improve to 2-3 this season against ranked teams, the ninth time CU has defeated multiple ranked foes in the same year.

– Creighton would defeat a top-five team at home for the first time in eight tries.

– Creighton would improve to 4-13 all-time against teams that made the Final Four the previous season.

– Creighton would improve to 22-10 all-time in its home opener, and 15-2 all-time in its first match of the season inside D.J. Sokol Arena.

Kiara Reinhardt would become the 13th Bluejay to play in 100 career wins.

Milestone Watch

Creighton’s student-athletes are approaching all sorts of milestones as the 2025 season the home portion of its schedule gets underway…

    Kiara Reinhardt has played in 99 career wins and is one shy of 100 victories.

    Kiara Reinhardt is sixth in program history with 438 career blocks, nine behind Ashley Williams (447) to move into the top five.

    Annalea Maeder owns 2,974 career assists and is 26 shy of 3,000 for her career. All but 110 of her assists came at California.

    Ava Martin owns 1,194 career kills and is six shy of 1,200. Martin is also 11 attack attempts away from 3,000 in her career. Martin’s 90 aces are three shy of Madelyn Cole’s 93 for 10th-most in CU history.

Family Ties

There are a ton of connections between many of the schools in this weekend’s Bluejay Invitational.

    Northern Iowa sophomore Reese Booth (5.95 aps., 2.30 dps.) is the daughter of former Creighton head coach Kirsten Bernthal Booth.

    Louisville sophomore Payton Petersen (4.08 kps., 3.17 dps.) and UNI redshirt freshman Jadyn Petersen (0.45 saps., 3.90 dps.) are twins and  daughters of Northern Iowa head coach Bobbi Petersen.

    Louisville head coach Dan Meske is married to former Creighton middle blocker Laurel Sanford, who accumulated 761 kills and 419 blocks (10th in CU history) in 107 matches from 2008-11.

    Creighton men’s basketball coach Greg McDermott played (1984-88) at and served as a head coach (2001-06) at Northern Iowa.

    Former Creighton Athletic Director Bruce Rasmussen is a 1971 graduate of Northern Iowa. He had been at Creighton since 1980, ascending to the Athletic Director  position in 1994, before retiring in August of 2021.        Northern Iowa women’s basketball head coach Tanya Warren played at Creighton and has spent two stints as an assistant coach with the Bluejays. Warren played for Rasmussen and is one of two Bluejay women’s basketball players with her name in the rafters inside D.J. Sokol Arena.

    Creighton Sports Information Director and volleyball contact Rob Anderson worked as Northern Iowa’s Volleyball SID in 2000 and 2001.

    The top women’s beach volleyball team in the United States features Taryn (Kloth) Brasher and Kirsten Nuss, as the duo tied for ninth place at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Kloth starred indoors at Creighton from 2015-18 before transferring to LSU as a grad student to pursue a beach volleyball career. At LSU, she was part of the top volleyball team in the country with Nuss. Nuss is engaged to Rice assistant coach Trey Cruz.     

Old MVC Rivals Get Reacquainted

Sunday’s match-up with Northern Iowa will be Creighton’s 59th against the Panthers since the program’s restart in 1994, the most of any opponent.

    The only other teams that Creighton has played more than 40 times are Wichita State (50) and Illinois State (43).

    UNI is the only opponent to defeat Creighton more than 30 times, something the Panthers have done 42 times.

    Creighton and Northern Iowa have played all but one season (2013) since the Bluejays restarted volleyball in 1994.

    The teams were Missouri Valley Conference rivals who played twice annually from 1994-2012, plus six more MVC Tournament meetings.

    Creighton is 11-2 against Northern Iowa since leaving the MVC, compared to a 5-40 mark when the two were Valley rivals.

Two Of The Best

Few teams in the country have been as successful in recent years as Creighton and Louisville.

    Since the start of the 2018 season, Creighton ranks fourth with 188 victories. Louisville is seventh with 183 wins. If you base success only by win percentage since 2018, Creighton (188-35) is sixth by winning at an .843 clip. Louisville (183-37) is eighth with a .832 win percentage in that era.

    Narrow the window to the start of the 2021 campaign and it’s even better. Louisville is tied for second with 124 wins while Creighton is fourth with 122 victories. When it comes to win percentage since the start of the 2021 season, Louisville (124-15) is tops nationally with an .892 winning percentage while Creighton (122-20) is sixth with an .859 mark.

The Streak At Home

Creighton had its first unbeaten home season in program history in 2023, going a perfect 13-0 in matches and 39-3 in sets.

    Last year CU did even better, going 19-0 and losing just two sets at home.

    That extends its program record to 32 straight home wins, surpassing a 15-match home win streak from Sept. 7-Nov. 30, 2018 that had been the standard.  Creighton’s 32-match home win streak is the third-longest active streak in the country. In that time, CU has lost just five sets total.

    Creighton has also won 34 straight sets at home dating to a third set loss to Marquette on Oct. 1, 2024, seven shy of the program record of 41 from Sept. 3, 2023 to Sept. 1, 2024

    . All told, Creighton has won 89 of its last 91 sets played at D.J. Sokol Arena overall, where it lost just one set in 12 matches against BIG EAST opponents last fall.

Creighton’s Longest Home Win Streaks

Wins    Dates    Snapped By

    32    Sept. 1, 2023 – Present    TBD

    15    Sept. 7 – Nov. 30, 2018    #22 Washington, 3-0

    13    Sept. 1, 2012 – Sept. 7, 2013    California, 3-0

    13    Sept. 9, 2016-Sept. 1, 2017    #18 USC, 3-0

Nation’s  Longest Active Home Win Streaks

Wins    Team    Next Home Match

    47    Nebraska    Sept. 12 vs,. #22 Utah

    37    Pittsburgh    Sept. 28 vs. #10 SMU

    32    Creighton    Sept. 12 vs. #4 Louisville

    16    UT Arlington    Sept. 13 vs. Arkansas-Little Rock

Home Openers

Creighton enters Friday’s match vs. Louisville with a 21-10 mark in home openers. That mark improves to 14-2 all-time in its first home match of the season at D.J. Sokol Arena, which opened in 2009.

    Since Creighton brought back volleyball in 1994, coaches are 2-1 in their home debut. Ben Guiliano lost his 1995 home debut to Bradley, while Howard Wallace swept Kansas City in 1997 and Kirsten Bernthal Booth’s 2003 team opened at home with a 3-2 win vs. Southern Illinois.

Another Loaded Field

This weekend’s Bluejay Invitational field features two teams (No. 4 Louisville and No. 18 Creighton) included in this week’s AVCA poll.

    Below is a list of each team to enter play while being ranked or having received votes in the AVCA Top 25 poll the week of the Bluejay Invitational. Those previous 32 teams are a collective 63-27 with 15 titles.

    Each of the past 12 (and 15 of 19 overall) Bluejay Invitationals have been won by a team that entered the weekend in the Top 25 or receiving votes. 

    In all but one occasion (2013) there’s been at least one team getting votes, the team to win it was the highest-ranked team coming in, though it’s worth noting that in 2010 and 2011 none of the participants were receiving votes.

Year    (Rank) Team    W-L at Bluejay Invite

2007    (RV) Middle Tennessee    3-0

2008    #16 Minnesota    3-0

2008    #21 LSU    2-1

2008    (RV) Texas A&M    0-3

2009    #10 Illinois    2-0

2012    #21 Kansas State    3-0

2013    #19 Creighton    2-1

2013    (RV) California    3-0

2014    (RV) Creighton    3-0

2015    (RV) Pacific    3-0

2015    (RV) Creighton    2-1

2015    (RV) Lipscomb    0-3

2016    #4 Kansas    2-0

2016    (RV) Creighton    2-1

2016    (RV) TCU    1-1

2017    #7 Creighton    2-1

2017    #13 Kentucky    2-1

2017    #18 USC    1-2

2017    (RV) Northern Iowa    1-2

2018    #14 Creighton    2-0

2018    (RV) Iowa State    1-1

2018    (RV) Wichita State    0-2

2019    #12 Washington    3-0

2019    #17 Creighton    2-1

2021    #19 Creighton    3-0

2022    #16 Kentucky    3-0 

2022    #17 Creighton    2-1 

2022    #25 USC    1-2

2023    #20 Creighton    3-0

2023    (RV) LSU    1-2

2024    #12 Creighton    3-0

2024    (RV) Missouri    2-1

2025    #4 Louisville    TBD

2025    #18 Creighton    TBD

Bluejay Invitational History

This will be the 20th edition of the Bluejay Invitational, where host Creighton is 37-17 all-time in the event. The Bluejays have never gone winless in the event, and have gone undefeated five times (2014, 2018, 2021, 2023, 2024). CU boasts six titles, winning the Bluejay Invitational in 2014, 2017, 2018, 2021, 2023 and 2024.

    Champions, by year, include Iowa State (2005), Iowa (2006), Middle Tennessee (2007), Minnesota (2008), Illinois (2009), Kansas (2010), Northern Illinois (2011), Kansas State (2012), California (2013), Creighton (2014), Pacific (2015), Kansas (2016), Creighton (2017), Creighton (2018), Washington (2019), Creighton (2021), Kentucky (2022), Creighton (2023) and Creighton (2024).

    Between 19 previous Bluejay Invitationals, (2005-24), two Creighton First Serve Festivals (1996-97), six Creighton Classics (2011, 2014, 2015, 2019, 2023, 2024), one MVC Tournament (2009) and six BIG EAST Tournaments (2013, 2015, 2018, 2020, 2022, 2024), Creighton has won 14 of the 34 tournaments (excluding NCAA Tournament action) it has hosted since the program’s 1994 restart. 

    CU has won at least one home tournament each of the previous eight seasons.

    Creighton has won each of the last five tournaments it has hosted and is on a 13-match home win streak in those contests.

More Bluejay Invitational History

Entering this fall there have been 36 schools (besides Creighton) to play in the Bluejay Invitational, including three appearances by UNI and two appearances each by Drake, Kentucky, USC, Omaha, Illinois, Kansas, Northern Colorado, Iowa State, Wichita State and Lipscomb. 

    This will be the first appearance in the Bluejay Invitational for both Lousville and Rice.

    Creighton’s 37 wins are the most in Bluejay Invitational history, far ahead of Kansas’ five wins that are second-most. Northern Iowa is 3-6 in the event in three previous trips.

    Creighton (6 titles) and Kansas (2) are the only schools in history to win the event more than once.

    Creighton is the only program to win consecutive Bluejay Invitational crowns (2017-18 and 2023-24), and will try to become the first team to win three in a row.

Longitude Aptitude

Teams located west of Creighton are a combined 24-38 all-time with four Bluejay Invitational titles, while teams to the east of Creighton are 43-49 with nine titles. Creighton owns the other six titles, and is 37-17 in the event. Of this year’s field, Northern Iowa, Rice and Louisville are all east of Omaha.

    Creighton has won two or more matches in every Bluejay Invitational since going 1-2 in 2011, and has never been winless in the event.

Facing Final Four Teams

Creighton is 3-13 all-time against teams that reached the Final Four in the previous season, but 0-5 against runner-ups. Louisville finished as the 2024 NCAA runner-up, falling to Penn State.

Creighton is 3-13 Against Teams That Made 

The Final Four The Previous Year

(Home: 0-4, Away: 2-7, Neutral: 1-2)

Date     Winner     Loser      Previous Year Finish

9/25/01    Nebraska 3    Creighton 0    NCAA Champion 

9/10/05    Stanford 3    Creighton 0    NCAA Champion

9/24/06    Nebraska 3    Creighton 1    NCAA Runner-Up

8/31/07    Nebraska 3    Creighton 0    NCAA Champion

9/1/09    Nebraska 3    Creighton 0    Final Four

9/17/16    Nebraska 3    Creighton 1    NCAA Champion

9/8/16    Kansas 3    Creighton 2    Final Four

12/2/16    Creighton 3    Kansas 2    Final Four

12/10/16    Texas 3    Creighton 0    NCAA Runner-Up

9/6/18    Nebraska 3    Creighton  2    NCAA Champion

8/30/19    Nebraska 3    Creighton 1    NCAA Runner-Up

9/4/21    Creighton 3    Kentucky 0    NCAA Champion

9/7/22    Nebraska 3    Creighton 2    NCAA Runner-Up

9/10/24    Nebraska 3    Creighton 2    NCAA Runner-Up

12/13/24    Creighton 3    Texas 1    NCAA Champion

8/23/25    Penn State 3    Creighton 0    NCAA Champion

Damrow Digs It

Saige Damrow has owned 10 or more digs in each of her first six matches as a Bluejay, just the 13th time in program history a player has done that, and the fifth to do it in her first season witih the Jaysl.

    Damrow has owned 12 or more digs in each of her first six matches as a Bluejay.  She’s one of four women to do that, and just the second to start her CU career like that.

Consec. Matches, 10 or More Digs, To Start Year

    32*    Kate Elman    2012

    29    Janeen Piller     (every match) 2004

    27*    Bianca Rivera    2007

    18    Brittany Witt    2018

    16*    Abby Bottomley    2021

    9    Nayka Benitez    2010

    8    Brittany Witt    2019

    7    Erin Swanson    1999

    7    Kate Elman    2014

    6    Jaden Custer    2003

    6*    Julianne Mandolfo    2010

    6    Julianne Mandolfo    2011

    6*    Saige Damrow    2025

*first season at Creighton

Consec. Matches, 12 or More Digs, To Start Year

    27*    Bianca Rivera    2007

    18    Janeen Piller     2004

    9    Nayka Benitez    2010

    6*    Saige Damrow    2025

*first season at Creighton

All-Tourney Duo

Ava Martin and Kiara Reinhardt both picked up All-Tournament Team honors following the Trojan Invitational on Sunday.

    Martin led CU by averaging 3.50 kills and 0.42 aces per set, also contributing 1.67 digs per set.

    Reinhardt hit .457 and aveaged 2.33 kills and 0.83 blocks per set in the three matches.

    This is the ninth career All-Tournament Team accolade for Martin and second for Reinhardt.

High Five

Creighton and Louisville have played three times previously and all of those meetings have gone five sets.

    The Cardinals are the only opponent in CU history that that Bluejays have opened a series with three straight five-set matches against.

    Creighton once had five consecutive meetings with Evansville go five sets (from 1998-2000).

    The only other programs to play CU in a five-set match in three straight meetings have been Bradley (twice), Butler and Louisville.

    In case you’re wondering, Creighton is 19-5 all-time in five-set matches inside D.J. Sokol Arena.

    Creighton has also won its last four meetings at all sites against UNI to go five sets.

Kiara’s Weekend

Kiara Reinhardt was an unstoppable force in the first two matches of the Trojan Invitational as the sixth-year senior averaged 2.67 kills per set on .618 hitting.

    Reinhardt tied her career-high with 15 kills on Friday night vs. San Diego while setting a CU record for hitting percentage in a four-set match (.789).

    She followed that up with nine kills in 14 swings on Saturday, hitting .429 in a win over UCSB.

    Reinhardt is now hitting .398 this season while averaging 2.22 kills per set.

Reinhardt Eyes Century Mark

Kiara Reinhardt has played in 99 victories as a Bluejay and can become the 13th woman to reach the century mark with a victory this weekend.

    Creighton is 99-20 (.832) all-time in the matches Reinhardt has appeared in (they’re 35-4 in matches she doesn’t play in, including her redshirt year). Her current .832 win percentage ranks fourth-best in program history among those with 99 or more victories.

Most Wins, Appeared In As A Player

    119    Kendra Wait    2021-24

    116    Naomi Hickman    2017-21

    111    Jaali Winters    2015-18

    110    Kiana Schmitt    2019-23

    109    Taryn Kloth    2015-18

    109    Brittany Witt    2016-19

    109    Norah Sis    2021-24

    107    Megan Ballenger    2016-19

    106    Marysa Wilkinson    2014-17

    104    Lauren Smith    2013-16

    102    Melanie Jereb    2012-15

    101    Ashley Jansen    2012-15

    99    Kiara Reinhardt    2020-Pres.

    98    Jaela Zimmerman    2018-22

Best Win Pct. in Matches Appeared In As A Player (min. 99 wins)

    W-L    Pct.    Name    Years

    109-14    .886    Norah Sis    2021-24

    119-16    .881    Kendra Wait    2021-24

    110-16    .873    Kiana Schmitt    2019-23

    99-20    .832    Kiara Reinhardt    2020-Pres.

    109-24    .820    Taryn Kloth    2015-18

    116-26    .817    Naomi Hickman    2017-21

    109-25    .813    Brittany Witt    2016-19

    107-25    .811    Megan Ballenger    2016-19

    111-28    .799    Jaali Winters    2015-18

    106-32    .768    Marysa Wilkinson    2014-17

    102-31    .767    Melanie Jereb    2012-15

    101-31    .765    Ashley Jansen    2012-15

    104-34    .754    Lauren Smith    2013-16

The Amazing Ava

Ava Martin had a career-high 24 kills last Saturday vs. UC Santa Barbara, including three kills or more all five sets. It was the seventh time in her career that she’s had 20 or more kills, and she’s done it against some impressive competition.

Ava Martin’s 20-Kill Matches

    Kills    Pct.    Opponent    Date

    24    .286    vs. UC Santa Barbara    09/06/25

    22    .333    #14 Marquette    11/26/22

    22    .396    Northern Iowa    09/03/23

    22    .180    at #9 Minnesota    09/16/23

    21    .230    at Xavier    09/23/23

    20    .400    at DePaul    11/22/24

    20    .405    vs. Duke    08/27/23

Hey, Hey, Hayes!

After Destiny Ndam-Simpson got off to a slow start on Saturday, Creighton head coach Brian Rosen wasn’t afraid to give freshman Abbey Hayes a shot, and the move paid big dividends.

    Hayes entered the day with seven digs and one ace through the first four matches of her career, then had 14 digs and seven kills against UCSB. Hayes followed that with five kills and a pair of digs against USC on Sunday.

Top 10 Wins

Creighton owns 11 Top 10 wins in program history, all  of which have taken place in the previous 10 seasons. 

    All but one of the those Top 10 wins have taken place away from home, including wins over No. 6 Purdue and No. 10 Kansas on back-to-back days last September in Lawrence, Kan.

    Creighton owns four top-five wins in program history, and all of those were away from home.

    The highest-ranked teams that Creighton has ever beaten was No. 3 Washington (8/26/17) and No. 3 Kentucky (9/4/21). 

    CU’s lone top 10 home win in program history came on Nov. 9, 2019 over No. 9 Marquette, but the Jays will have chances to add to that in the next week with home matches against both No. 4 Louisville and No. 1 Nebraska.

Creighton’s Top 10 Wins

Date    Opponent    Score

09/05/15    vs. #10 Kentucky (at UNI)    W 3-1

12/02/16    at #4 Kansas    W 3-2

08/26/17    at #3 Washington    W 3-1

09/09/17    at #7 Kansas    W 3-0

08/24/18    vs. #5 Kentucky (at USC)    W 3-2

10/12/19    at #10 Marquette    W 3-2

11/09/19    #9 Marquette    W 3-1

09/04/21    at #3 Kentucky    W 3-0

09/16/23    at #9 Minnesota    W 3-2

09/20/24    vs. #6 Purdue (at Kansas)    W 3-1

09/21/24    at #10 Kansas    W 3-0

Top 25 History

Creighton is 234-51 all-time when playing as a ranked team, and also 26-31 all-time against ranked teams when ranked itself. That mark is 4-4 when both Creighton and its opponent are ranked in the top 10.

    Since the start of the 2012 season, 46 of Creighton’s 80 losses have come against ranked teams. In that same period, Creighton is 316-34 against unranked teams. Creighton has won all but three of its past 122 home matches over unranked teams and all but 13 of its last 177 matches at all sites against unranked teams.

Ranked vs. Ranked (CU is 26-31)

Home: 10-9    Away: 8-13    Neutral: 8-9

Date    Winner    Loser    CU Score

11/19/12    #11 Minnesota    #21 Creighton    1-3

08/30/13    #25 Creighton    #13 BYU    3-1

09/14/13    #11 UCLA    #24 Creighton    1-3

09/16/13    #7 Hawaii    #23 Creighton    2-3

08/30/14    #22 Kansas    #23 Creighton    1-3

09/03/16    #23 Kentucky    #22 Creighton    0-3

12/02/16    #21 Creighton    #4 Kansas    3-2

12/09/16    #21 Creighton    #17 Michigan    3-2

12/10/16    #5 Texas    #21 Creighton    0-3

08/26/17    #9 Creighton    #3 Washington    3-1

09/01/17    #7 Creighton    #13 Kentucky    3-0

09/02/17    #18 USC    #7 Creighton    0-3

09/08/17    #17 Purdue    #9 Creighton    1-3

09/09/17    #9 Creighton    #7 Kansas    3-0

09/16/17    #19 Iowa State    #8 Creighton    2-3

12/12/17    #12 Michigan St.    #15 Creighton    1-3

08/24/18    #13 Creighton    #5 Kentucky    3-2

08/25/18    #10 USC    #13 Creighton    2-3

09/06/18    #7 Nebraska    #14 Creighton    2-3

09/15/18    #8 Illinois    #10 Creighton    1-3

09/23/18    #10 Creighton    #21 Marquette    3-0

10/26/18    #10 Creighton    #18 Marquette    3-1

11/24/18    #9 Creighton    #16 Marquette    3-1

12/01/18    #22 Washington    #9 Creighton    0-3

08/30/19    #2 Nebraska    #18 Creighton    1-3

08/31/19    #20 Baylor    #18 Creighton    0-3

09/06/19    #23 Creighton    #12 Kentucky    3-1

09/07/19    #23 Creighton    #15 USC    3-1

09/14/19    #12 Washington    #17 Creighton    1-3

10/12/19    #13 Creighton    #10 Marquette    3-2

11/22/19    #12 Creighton    #9 Marquette    3-1

12/07/19    #7 Minnesota    #15 Creighton    2-3

02/05/21    #19 Creighton    #25 Marquette    3-2

02/06/21    #25 Marquette    #19 Creighton    0-3

09/08/21    #3 Nebraska    #19 Creighton    0-3

09/02/22    #17 Creighton    #25 USC    3-1

09/03/22    #16 Kentucky    #17 Creighton    1-3

09/07/22    #2 Nebraska    #17 Creighton    2-3

10/14/22    #21 Creighton    #16 Marquette    3-2

11/19/22    #16 Marquette    #11 Creighton    0-3

11/26/22    #15 Creighton    #14 Marquette    3-2

08/26/23    #18 Creighton    #16 Purdue    3-0

09/06/23    #4 Nebraska    #16 Creighton    1-3

09/16/23    #14 Creighton    #9 Minnesota    3-2

11/05/23    #17 Creighton    #25 Marquette    3-0

12/07/23    #7 Louisville    #17 Creighton    2-3

09/05/24    #11 Creighton    #20 USC    3-1

09/10/24    #5 Nebraska    #9 Creighton    2-3

09/15/24    #4 Louisville    #9 Creighton    2-3

09/20/24    #9 Creighton    #6 Purdue    3-1

09/21/24    #9 Creighton    #10 Kansas    3-0

12/13/24    #6 Creighton     #13 Texas    3-1

12/15/24    #2 Penn State    #6 Creighton    2-3

08/23/25    #2 Penn State    #12 Creighton    0-3

08/29/25    #5 Texas    #12 Creighton    0-3

08/31/25    #12 Creighton    #14 Kansas    3-2

09/07/25    #22 USC    #13 Creighton    0-3

09/12/25    #18 Creighton vs. #4 Louisville     8 p.m.

Against Ranked Foes

After a total of three top-25 wins from 1994-2014, Creighton has earned at least one top-25 win each of the last 11 seasons (2015-25). 

    Creighton is 31-92 all-time against ranked teams, with 30 wins coming under Kirsten Bernthal Booth and one under Brian Rosen.

    The highest ranked teams that Creighton has ever beaten at any site were No. 3 Washington (8/26/17 in Seattle) and No. 3 Kentucky (9/4/21 in Lexington). CU’s highest-ranked opponent it has defeated at home was a 3-1 win over then-No. 9 Marquette on Nov. 22, 2019.

    Last year was the eighth season that CU owned multiple Top-25 victories. The Jays beat three Top 25 teams in 2017, 2022 and 2023, and a record four in 2018, 2019 and 2024.

High FIve

Brian Rosen is Creighton’s first volleyball coach since the program’s 1994 reinstatement to pick up his first victory in a five set match, as Ben Guiliano, Howard Wallace and Kirsten Bernthal Booth’s first wins all came in 3-0 sweeps.

Record in 5-Set Matches

Coach    Years    Set 5 W-L

Ben Guiliano    1994-1996    2-10

Howard Wallace    1997-2002    13-18

Kirsten Bernthal Booth    2003-2024    70-42

Brian Rosen    2025-Pres.    2-0

Twice For Breissinger

Junior defensive specialist Sydney Breissinger helped Creighton erase a 3-0 deficit in the fifth set on Aug. 31 vs. Kansas, serving up a 9-0 run that helped the Bluejays take the lead for good. She also served a 9-0 run in the fourth set vs. UC San Diego on Sept. 5.

    Breissinger’s heroics were eerily similar to the 9-0 serving run she had in the fifth set on Sept. 16, 2023 in a win over No. 9 Minnesota. That win over the Gophers had been CU’s last previous five-set win.

    Since enrolling at Creighton in 2023, Breissinger owns 34 service runs of five or longer, eight more than the next-closest Bluejay (Norah Sis, who graduated in 2024). Next-most among her active teammates is the 19 by Ava Martin.

Watch This!

Four of Creighton’s first six matches this fall have aired on national television (one on FS1, three on BTN), while Friday’s battle with Louisville also appears on FS1.

    That also means that Saturday and Sunday’s battles won’t be televised. Creighton has won 37 straight non-televised matches, since an Oct. 6, 2023 loss at Marquette.

Champions Among Champions

Since the start of the 2012 season, Creighton, and Western Kentucky are the nation’s only schools to have won 12 conference regular-season titles. All but three of Creighton’s 12 crowns were outright titles, whereas WKU has shared five. Texas has won 11 titles in that time.

    Creighton has also won 11 conference tournament titles since 2012, the most in the nation.

Most Conference Titles 2012-2024

Regular-Season    League Tournament

12 (3 shared) Creighton    11 Creighton

12 (5) Western Kentucky    10 Western Kentucky

11 (1) Texas    9 Dayton

11 (1) Fairfield    9 Fairfield

9 (8) Florida A&M    

9 (5) Yale

9 (1) Colorado State    

    

142 Weeks As A Ranked Team

Creighton is ranked 18th in the Sept. 8 edition of the AVCA poll, the 142nd time in program history it’s been ranked. That’s 39th-most of all programs in NCAA history.

    All 142 rankings have occurred since 2012.

    The Bluejays are one of 13 schools (along with Baylor, Florida, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Penn State, Pitt, Purdue, Stanford, Texas and Wisconsin) to have been ranked each of the last 65 polls.

    Creighton’s 65 weeks in a row being ranked dates began on Sept. 6, 2021 and sets a program-record, breaking the previous-high of 64 from Oct. 31, 2016 to March 15, 2021. 

Preseason Ranking

Creighton was ranked 12th in the AVCA preseason poll on Aug. 7th. It was the 11th time in the past 13 years that the Jays have been ranked in the preseason, and fourth year in a row.

    The No. 12 slotting tied last year’s team for the second-best preseason ranking in program history, trailing only the 2017 team that was ranked ninth.

    Over the previous 17 seasons, 315-of-425 teams (74.1 percent) of teams have been in both the preseason and final polls, and in the 17 seasons from 2008-2024, 385-of-425 teams (90.6 percent) in the preseason top-25 polls would go on to reach the NCAA Tournament, as all but preseason No. 19 Arkansas and No. 25 Georgia reached the 2024 NCAA Tournament.

    This year marks the 14th straight season that CU has been ranked at least one week, extending a program record.

    Year    Preseason Rank    Final W-L    Final Rank

    2013    25th    23-9    NR

    2014    23rd    25-9    NR

    2016    18th    27-9    9th

    2017    9th    26-7    16th

    2018    13th    29-5    13th

    2019    18th    25-6    16th

    2020    16th    12-4    NR

    2022    18th    27-5    21st

    2023    18th    29-5    15th

    2024    12th    32-3    5th

    2025    12th    TBD    TBD

Crowded House

Each of Creighton’s first three crowds of the season have been 10,000 fans or more, and they constitute the largest neutral-site crowds to ever see the Bluejays.

    CU’s opener vs. Penn State drew 10,438 fans to Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln, Neb.

    The following week in Madison, Creighton played before an announced crowd of 10,072 vs. Texas and 11,678 fans vs. Kansas.

    Looking ahead, CU’s Sept. 16 home match vs. Nebraska is expected to challenge the NCAA regular-season indoor volleyball-only attendance record of 17,037, as less than 1,000 tickets remain for that in-state showdown.

    Let’s take a closer look:

Largest Home Crowds

    Att.    Opponent    Date    CU Result    Facility

    15,797    #2 Nebraska    09/07/22    L 2-3    CHI Health Ctr.

    14,022    #7 Nebraska    09/06/18    L 2-3    CHI Health Ctr.

    13,081    #18 Cal Poly    09/02/07    L 0-3    CHI Health Ctr.

    12,112    #1 Nebraska    09/24/06    L 1-3    CHI Health Ctr.

    11,279    #3 Nebraska    09/08/21    L 0-3    CHI Health Ctr.

    10,131    #4 Nebraska    09/15/15    L 0-3    CHI Health Ctr.

    8,037    #2 Nebraska    10/05/08    L 0-3    CHI Health Ctr.

    2,665    Ole Miss    12/06/24    W 3-0    Sokol

    2,653    Auburn    12/02/22    L 2-3    Sokol

    2,578    #13 Kentucky    09/01/17    W 3-0    Sokol

Largest Away/Neutral Crowds

    Att.    Site        Date    CU Result

    11,678    vs. #14 Kansas (at Wisc.)    08/31/25    W 3-2

    10,072    vs. #5 Texas (at Wisc.)    08/29/25    L 0-3

    10,438    vs. #2 Penn State (at Neb.)    08/23/25    L 0-3

    8,924    at #5 Nebraska        09/10/24    L 2-3

    8,656    at #4 Nebraska        09.06/23    L 1-3

    8,627    at #5 Nebraska        09/29/02    L 0-3

    8,450    at #2 Nebraska        08/30/19    L 1-3

    8,277    vs. Montana St. (at Neb.)    09/16/16    W 3-0

Production Returns

Creighton returns 11-of-19 letterwinners to the court from last season, including three starters.

    From last year’s team, Norah Sis, Elise Goetzinger, Kendra Wait, Abbey Milner, Maddy Bilinovic, Audrey Clark, Katie Maser and Emma Ziegler are not back.

    All told, of the seven categories listed below, Creighton returns 294.5 of a possible 700% back (42.1 percent), the smallest amount returning since it headed into Howard Wallace’s final season in 2002.

    Below is a breakdown of the production that is back:

Stat    Returners    Departures

Assists    119 (7.6%)    1,450 (92.4%)

Aces    115 (51.3%)    109 (48.7%)

Digs    598 (35.7%)    1,076 (64.3%)

Points    1,115.5 (50.2%)    1,107.0 (49.8%)

Kills    843 (50.1%)    841 (49.9%)

Matches Started    104 (49.5%)    106 (50.5%)

Blocks    157.5 (50.1%)    157.0 (49.9%)

One Tough Schedule

Of Creighton’s 12 non-conference matches, seven are against ranked teams and three others against programs that received votes in the preseason AVCA Top 25 poll.

    Creighton is the only team in the preseason Top 25 with 10 or more non-conference matches against teams getting votes, as Texas and TCU are next-closest with eight each.

A Bunch of Winners

Creighton’s 32 victories last season were fourth-most in the country, trailing only Final Four qualifiers Penn State (35), Pittsburgh (33) and Nebraska (33).

    Creighton’s three losses last fall were tied for the third-fewest in the nation, one more than Penn State and Pittsburgh’s two losses.

    When it comes to sets, Creighton’s 102 sets won were tied for second-most in the nation (Penn State had 105), while its 15 sets lost were tied for the fewest in the nation (with Pittsburgh).

    In its last 54 matches dating to 2023, Creighton is 47-7 and has won 146-of-179 sets. Four of the seven match losses came in five sets.

    In its 35 matches against BIG EAST schools since October 7, 2023, Creighton is 35-0 and has dropped just four sets to league opponents.

Most Matches Won in 2024

Rk.     Matches Won    Team

1.    35    Penn State

2.    33    Pittsburgh

    33    Nebraska

4.    32    Creighton

5.    31    Dayton

Most Sets Won in 2024

Rk.    Sets Won    Team

1.    105    Penn State

2.    102    Creighton

    102    Pittsburgh

    102    Nebraska

Fewest Matches Lost in 2024

Rk.     Matches Lost    Team

1.    2    Pittsburgh

    2    Penn State

3.    3    Creighton

    3    Dayton

    3    Nebraska

    3    Arizona State

    3    Texas-Arlington

    3    South Dakota State

Fewest Sets Lost in 2024

Rk.    Sets Lost    Team

1.    15    Creighton

    15    Pittsburgh

3.    19    Dayton

4.    20    Nebraska

    20    Arizona State

Fewest Sets Lost in 2023

Rk.    Sets Lost    Team

1.    22    Creighton

    22    Nebraska

    22    Dayton

4.    23    Wisconsin

    23    Tennessee

    23    Western Michigan

No Losers Here

Creighton has been as good as anyone at avoiding losses in recent seasons.

    Creighton and Pittsburgh are the nation’s only teams with five losses or less in the 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024 seasons. 

    If you go back two years more, the nation’s only teams to lose six times or less in the 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024 seasons are also Creighton and Pittsburgh.

    Creighton is also the only school nationally who have won 25 matches or more in every season between 2014-24 (not counting the 2020 COVID-19 year, when CU only played 16 times).

13 Straight NCAA’s

Creighton Volleyball has made the NCAA Tournament in each of the last 13 seasons. They are the first women’s team in any sport at Creighton to make 13 straight NCAA Tournament appearances.

    The only other sport in Creighton history to make even 10 straight NCAA Tournament appearances is the men’s soccer program, which qualified in 17 straight seasons from 1992-2008.

     Creighton is one of seven teams nationally to have appeared in each of the last 13 NCAA Tournaments (2012-24). That group features BYU, Creighton, Florida, Kentucky, Nebraska, Penn State and Texas.

    There are also 12 schools that have appeared in 14 of the last 15 NCAA Tournaments, a group that includes Creighton, Florida State, Hawai’i, Minnesota, Purdue, Stanford and Washington. Florida, Kentucky, Nebraska, Penn State, and Texas have appeared in every NCAA Tournament since at least 2010.

A Great Start

Ava Martin entered her senior season with 1,109 kills in her career. The 1,109 kills were the fifth-most ever by a Bluejay in their first three seasons.

    If Martin can duplicate her 428 kills from last year, she’d finish her career fifth in Bluejay history with 1,537 career putaways.

Most Kills at Creighton, First 3 Seasons

Name    Year 1    Year 2    Year 3    3 Yr Total

Jaali Winters    546    448    398    1,392

Norah Sis    435    489    302    1,226

Melissa Walsh    341    428    435    1,204

Leah Ratzlaff    180    516    479    1,175

Ava Martin    264    417    428    1,109

Survival of the Fittest

Since the move to rally scoring in 2001, Creighton has won 10 matches when surviving a match point and lost four contests when holding a match point of its own.

Surviving Match Points Since 2001

Date    Opponent    MP(s) Faced    Final Set 5

09/27/02    Evansville    13-14, 14-15    19-17

08/30/03    vs. McNeese State    13-14, 15-16    18-16

10/10/03    Wichita State    13-14    16-14

10/13/06    at Wichita State    12-14, 13-14, 14-15    17-15

09/11/07    at Drake    13-14, 14-15    17-15

08/26/11    vs. UTSA    12-14, 13-14    16-14

11/16/12    at Wichita State    13-14    16-14

09/20/15    Kansas State    23-24 (4th set)    15-13

11/20/15    at Georgetown    23-24, 26-27 (4th set)    15-7

08/24/18    vs. #5 Kentucky    16-15, 19-18    22-20

Tournament Tested

Creighton has played multiple matches in 27 tournaments since the start of the 2021 calendar year, and won 18 of them. 

    Keep in mind that when Kirsten Bernthal Booth was hired in 2003, Creighton had been 17-33 in 15 regular-season tournaments all-time, with just one tournament title (the 2000 Iowa State Heritage Classic).

CU’s Multi-Match Tournaments Since Jan. 1, 2021

Year    Event    CU Record (Place)

2021    BIG EAST Tournament    2-0 (1st)

2021    Mizzou Invitational    3-0 (1st)

2021    Bluegrass Battle    3-0 (1st)

2021    Bluejay Invitational    3-0 (1st)

2021    Shocker Volleyball Classic    3-0 (1st)

2021    BIG EAST Tournament    2-0 (1st)

2021    NCAA Tournament    1-1 (T-17th)

2022    Rumble in the Rockies    3-0 (1st)

2022    Bluejay Invitational    2-1 (2nd)

2022    Omaha Invitational    2-0 (1st)

2022    Rice adidas Invitational    1-1 (2nd)

2022    BIG EAST Tournament    2-0 (1st)

2023    Reamer Club Xtra Special Premier    2-1 (1st)

2023    Bluejay Invitational    3-0 (1st)

2023    MN Hospitality Omaha Challenge    2-0 (1st)

2023    Diet Coke Challenge    2-0 (1st)

2023    BIG EAST Tournament    2-0 (1st)

2023    NCAA Tournament    2-1 (T-9th)

2024    Bluejay Invitational    3-0 (1st)

2024    Creighton Classic    2-0 (1st)

2024    Cardinal Classic    2-1 (2nd)

2024    Jayhawk Classic    2-0 (1st)

2024    BIG EAST Tournament    2-0 (1st)

2024    NCAA Tournament    3-1 (T-5th)

2025    Opening Spike Classic    1-1 (T-2nd)

11 Straight BIG EAST Regular-Season Titles

Regular-season champions from 2014-24, Creighton is the first team in BIG EAST volleyball history to win 11 straight regular-season titles.        The previous record had been seven by Notre Dame from 1999-2005.

    The Bluejay volleyball team is also the first Creighton program in any sport to win more than five straight league titles, more than doubling the previous high of five in a row by the men’s soccer program (1992-96) in the MVC.

    The only other volleyball team nationally with an active streak of more than five straight regular-season league titles is Kentucky, with eight.

Jays Earn Tourney Titles

Creighton has won at least one tournament each of the previous 13 seasons, a streak that dates to 2012.

     During that span, the Bluejays have won 35 tournament titles, not to mention 12 regular-season league crowns.

    Creighton has also now won at least one home tournament each of the previous eight seasons.

Creighton’s Tournament Titles Since 2012

Year    Titles Won    Tourney Hosts

2012    3    USF, UNC, MVC

2013    1    BGSU

2014    1    CU, BIG EAST

2015    1    BIG EAST

2016    1    BIG EAST

2017    4    WASH, CU, KU, BIG EAST

2018    3    SMU, CU, BIG EAST

2019    2    UNI, CU

2020    1    BIG EAST

2021    5    MIZZ, UK, CU, WSU, BIG EAST

2022    3    WYO, UNO, BIG EAST

2023    5    Purdue, CU, UNO, MINN, BIG EAST

2024    4    CU, CU, KU, BIG EAST

2-0 Better Than 0-2

Creighton is 421-11 (.975) all-time when leading a match 2-0, and 149-1 (.993) all-time at D.J. Sokol Arena when up 2-0 at the break.

    Per RichKern.com, Division I teams that won the first two sets won 94.9 percent of their matches from 2014-23.

    Conversely, the Jays are 17-211 (.075) all-time when trailing a match 0-2. Those 17 comebacks in program history from down 0-2 are listed below.

Date    Opponent    Sets 3-5 scores    Coach

09/19/97    at Bradley    15-11, 15-13, 15-8    Wallace

10/01/99    at Drake    15-6, 17-15, 15-11    Wallace

09/03/04    vs. Montana    30-20, 30-21, 15-11    Booth

10/15/04    at Bradley    30-22, 30-23, 15-11    Booth

10/15/05    at So. Illinois    30-25, 30-24, 15-8    Booth

09/21/07    at No. Iowa    31-29, 30-26, 15-12    Booth

11/16/12    at Wichita St.    25-16, 25-20, 16-14    Booth

09/05/14    vs. No. Iowa    25-16, 25-22, 15-5    Booth

11/08/14    at Butler    25-16, 25-20, 15-13    Booth

09/20/15    Kansas State    25-23, 26-24, 15-13    Booth

10/09/15    DePaul    25-21, 25-12, 15-11    Booth

11/20/15    at Georgetown    30-28, 26-24, 15-7    Booth

10/13/17    Butler    25-21, 25-23, 15-9    Booth

10/18/18    Xavier    25-17, 25-17, 15-13    Booth

01/31/21    at So. Dakota    25-20, 25-23, 15-7    Booth

10/07/22    at UConn    25-15, 25-12, 15-13    Booth

10/14/22    #16 Marquette    25-19, 25-16, 15-8    Booth

Set 1 Result A Strong Indicator

Creighton has gone 162-6 in its last 168 matches at all sites when winning the first set, compared to a 18-25 record in that same span when dropping the opener.

    Creighton has gone 198-4 (.980) in its last 202 matches against unranked foes when winning the opening set.

    Per RichKern.com, Division I teams that lost the first set won just 20.3 percent of their matches from 2014-23.

    Since Aug. 29, 2010, Creighton has gone 167-5 in its last 172 home matches when taking a 1-0 lead, losing only to Pacific (Sept. 12, 2015), No. 7 Nebraska (Sept. 6, 2018), South Dakota (Jan. 29, 2021), No. 16 Kentucky (Sept. 3, 2022) and Auburn (Dec. 2, 2022). 

    The Jays have won their last 31 home matches following a first set victory.

Against NCAA Tournament Qualifiers

This year’s team will play 10 matches against teams that made the 2024 NCAA Tournament with contests against Marquette (2x), Nebraska, Kansas (2x), Louisville, Northern Iowa, USC, Texas and Penn State.

Year    W-L vs. Previous Season NCAA Teams

1994    0-4

1995    0-2

1996    0-2

1997    0-3

1998    0-5

1999    2-4

2000    0-4

2001    1-6

2002    0-5

2003    0-3

2004    2-2

2005    0-6

2006    4-6

2007    4-9

2008    6-8

2009    1-11

2010    4-7

2011    2-6

2012    8-3

2013    6-6

2014    4-5

2015    11-5

2016    10-7

2017    8-6

2018    8-5

2019    5-4

2020    3-1

2021    3-1

2022    5-4

2023    11-3

2024    9-3

2025    1-3 so far

TOTAL    116-148

TOTAL Under Booth    113-110

TOTAL Under Rosen    1-3

Home Sweet Home

Creighton is starting its 13th season as a member of the BIG EAST since joining the league in the summer of 2013.

    Since then, the Bluejays are 112-4 in home matches against BIG EAST teams (101-3 in the regular-season, 11-1 in the BIG EAST Tournament).

    Since November of 2014, Creighton is 96-1 inside D.J. Sokol Arena against BIG EAST teams, which includes a 86-1 mark in league play and a 10-0 mark in the conference tournament. The only setback (on Feb. 6, 2021 vs. Marquette) was played as a non-conference match, only to be flipped to a league contest 19 days later.

    Put another way, since enrolling at Creighton in the fall of 2022, fourth-year Bluejay seniors Ava Martin and Sky McCune are 32-0 in home matches against BIG EAST teams, and 96-7 in sets.

    Creighton has won 46 straight matches against BIG EAST opposition at home.

BIG EAST’S Best

Since the reconfiguration of the BIG EAST in the  summer of 2013, Creighton, Marquette and St. John’s are the only teams to win any sort of BIG EAST volleyball title.

    Creighton owns 11 regular-season titles (3 shared) in that time, while Marquette owns four regular-season (3 shared) crowns.

    As it relates to BIG EAST Tournament titles, Creighton has won 10, Marquette one and St. John’s one since 2013.

    Below is a look at the record of each BIG EAST team since league realignment in 2013:

BIG EAST VB Standings, 2013 – Sept. 9, 2025

             BIG EAST only    All     matches

Team (NCAA Bids)    W    L    W    L

Creighton (12)    188    16    318    76

Marquette (11)    169    32    287    94

Xavier    116    86    185    171

St. John’s (1)    104    100    222    167

Butler    103    101    182    179

Villanova (1)    100    104    193    163

Seton Hall (1)    86    117    170    189

DePaul    65    139    152    204

Georgetown    44    152    112    226

Connecticut#    42    38    85    62

Providence*    30    158    116    212

*Providence rejoined the league for volleyball in 2014 and 

its 2013 overall record (12-20) is not included above.

#Connecticut rejoined the league in 2020 and 

its record from 2013-19 (96-121) is not included above.

Against The BIG EAST

Since the BIG EAST was restructured in 2013, Creighton owns a winning percentage better than .750 against each of the other teams currently in the BIG EAST.

    The Bluejays own 209 wins against BIG EAST competition (including BIG EAST Championship play) since 2013, 33 more wins than Marquette for most in the league.

    CU still has not lost to three league foes (DePaul, Georgetown, Providence) since joining the BIG EAST, and Marquette (6), Villanova (3), Seton Hall (3) and St. John’s (3) are the only BIG EAST programs to top the Bluejays multiple times since 2013. 

Opponent    Reg. Season    BE Tourney    Total

Butler    22-1    –    22-1

Connecticut    4-1    1-0    5-1

DePaul    24-0    3-0    27-0

Georgetown    22-0    –    22-0

Marquette    19-5    7-1    26-6

Providence    17-0    –    17-0

Seton Hall    19-3    2-0    21-3

St. John’s    20-2    1-1    21-3

Villanova    19-3    3-0    22-3

Xavier    22-1    4-0    26-1

Total    188-16    21-2    209-18



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