Sports
Beth Alford-Sullivan – Penn State
After 13 years and 106 NCAA All-Americans on the women[apos]s side, as well as six years and 32 All-America honorees with the men[apos]s squad, Beth Alford-Sullivan enters her 14th year at the helm of the Nittany Lion women[apos]s program and her seventh campaign as the Director and Head Coach of Track and Field/Cross Country, overseeing both the men[apos]s and women[apos]s programs.
Sullivan[apos]s decorated resume is undoubtedly among the most impressive in the country, as it includes two NCAA [quote]Trophy[quote] Team finishes, six Big Ten team titles, one Big Ten [quote]Triple Crown,[quote] as well as three individual NCAA Champions, and one NCAA Champion relay.
Since taking the reigns of both the men[apos]s and women[apos]s programs in 2006, Sullivan has remained steadfast to the vision of having two programs in the top tier of the conference and the NCAA, with both the men[apos]s and women[apos]s squads making outstanding statements during the 2011-12 campaign, highlighted by the Nittany Lions[apos] haul of 12 USTFCCCA First Team All-America finishes on the year.
Sullivan continued to coach the Nittany Lions to countless milestones in 2011-12, including a head-turning performance of 3:01.52 by the men[apos]s 4×400-meter relay at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. The relay rewrote the record books on numerous occasions in 2012, setting the indoor school record at 3:05.22 at the Alex Wilson Last Chance, and following up with a second-place standing at the NCAA Indoor Championships – the highest-ever finish by a Nittany Lion relay at NCAA Indoors. The Lions clipped off the own record little by little over the outdoor season, beginning the year at 3:07.19 – all the way down to 3:01.52, with the foursome of Aaron Nadolsky, Brandon Bennett-Green, Casimir Loxsom, and Brady Gehret on both All-America squads.
Sullivan would also oversee an outstanding effort from the Nittany Lion throws contingent at the NCAA Outdoor Championships, with underclassman duo Laura Loht, and Lauren Kenney providing a three-four finish in the women[apos]s javelin, to go along with a fourth-place showing from Joe Kovacs in the men[apos]s shot put.
Through the course of the 2011-12 campaign, Sullivan also coached a grand total of eight individual Big Ten Champions, and two conference champion relays. Kicking off the conference accolades was then-senior Caitlin Lane, who captured top individual honors at the Big Ten Cross Country Championships, and parlayed the effort into the 16th-place and All-America standing at the NCAA Cross Country Championships. Lane[apos]s finish – which was the second highest in Sullivan[apos]s Penn State tenure – paced the Lions to a 13th-place finish in the team standings – the best finish from the PSU program in nearly two decades.
Penn State Track and Field/Cross Country
Under Beth Alford-Sullivan …
* 138 NCAA All-Americans
* 78 Big Ten Individual Champions
* 16 Big Ten Champion Relays
* 24 Coach of the Year Awards
* 27 USTFCCCA Regional Athletes of the Year
* 8 Big Ten Championship Records
* 4 NCAA Champions
* 5 Big Ten Athletes of the Year
* 6 Big Ten Team Titles
* 7 Big Ten Freshman of the Year
* 3 Olympians
* 2 World Championship Qualifiers
* 2 IAAF World Junior Medalists
* 2 NCAA Trophy Teams
* 4 Penn Relays Wheels
* 1 Big Ten Triple Crown
Program Success …
Under Sullivan, the Nittany Lion women[apos]s team has become a national mainstay, scoring at the national meet in last 11 NCAA Outdoor Championships, and 10 of the last 11 NCAA Indoor Championships. The women[apos]s squad has also recorded top four [quote]trophy team[quote] finishes in two of the last four years, placing fourth at the NCAA Outdoor Championships in 2008 and 2010.
Since taking over the women[apos]s program in the fall of 1999, Sullivan has guided the Nittany Lions to a grand total of 13 top 25 finishes at the NCAA level, including top 10 efforts from the women[apos]s team in 2003, 2008, 2009, and 2010. The men[apos]s program has followed suit, earning top 25 standings in the last six NCAA track and field competitions, including an 11th-place standing at the 2011 NCAA Indoor Championships – the second-highest indoor finish in men[apos]s program history.
The Nittany Lions success under Sullivan does not end on the track, however, as the Nittany Lion women[apos]s track and field and cross country teams have earned United States Track and Field/Cross Country Coaches[apos] Association (USTFCCCA) All-Academic honors in each of her 13 seasons at the helm of the program. Both the Nittany Lion men[apos]s and women[apos]s cross country squads earned the academic standing, via grade point averages of 3.0 or better for the 2011 fall semester, while the women[apos]s program once again achieved the feat in the spring of 2012. In fact, the 2009-10 version of the women[apos]s squad was named USTFCCCA [quote]Scholar Team of the Year[quote] for the outdoor season, which is awarded to the team with the highest NCAA finish with a 3.0 GPA.
The Nittany Lions also been consistently recognized as one of the most successful programs in the NCAA, with the men[apos]s team earning 11th place in the 2010-11 [quote]John McDonnell Program of the Year[quote] standings. The award honors the institution that has achieved the most success in each academic year (spanning the cross country, indoor track & field, and outdoor track & field seasons) based on the institution[apos]s finish at the NCAA Division I Championships. Sullivan[apos]s women[apos]s squad has also been heavily recognized nationally, placing 17th in the [quote]Terry Crawford Program of the Year[quote] rankings for the 2010-11 seasons.
In 2010, the Nittany Lion women placed third in the Program of the Year standings, following only perennial stalwarts Oregon and Florida. The men have also been consistently mentioned in the rankings, as Sullivan[apos]s men[apos]s squad was recognized for the honor in 2009, finishing 14th.
A Record-Breaking 2012 …
Led by the 4×400[apos]s sizzling NCAA performance, the Nittany Lions once again laid claim to numerous Penn State records. In fact, Sullivan-coached athletes now hold all but six school records on the women[apos]s side, with then-sophomore Bekka Simko taking down the Nittany Lions[apos] long-standing record in the women[apos]s 800-meters this past spring, running 2:03.09. The women[apos]s squad would also reset several additional school bests during the 2012 campaign, with Lane running 2:44.24 to better her own indoor 1000 record, and the women[apos]s DMR of Lane, Ije Iheoma, Simko, and Kara Millhouse going 11:05.16.
Sullivan and the Nittany Lions continued to excel outdoors, thanks to Simko[apos]s effort, as well as a school-record 32:57.33 from Millhouse in the 10,000. Simko and Millhouse were also the bookends on the record-setting DMR during the outdoor season, along with teammates Iheoma, and Marta Klebe. The squad ran 11:08.41 on their way to the top of the charts.
The records continued to roll in on the men[apos]s side in 2012, with Creese leading the charge indoors with his Collegiate, American Junior, and Penn State record 2:19.53 for the 1,000-meters. Casimir Loxsom also took hold of the men[apos]s 600-meter school standard at 1:16.66. The men[apos]s 4×400 (Nadolsky, Bennett-Green, Loxsom, and Gehret) would end the season at 3:05.22 – also an all-time Penn State best.
Kovacs, who tore through the competition during the 2012 outdoor campaign, launched a lifetime-best 69-2 (21.08) at the most opportune time, finishing fourth in the shot put at the US Olympic Trials – finishing as the top collegiate in the field, and just inches shy of a spot on the US Olympic Team.
A Banner 2010 …
In 2010 Sullivan[apos]s men[apos]s and women[apos]s squads experienced unparalleled success, highlighted by a fourth-place finish from the women[apos]s team at the NCAA Outdoor Championships – the squad[apos]s second [quote]Trophy Team[quote] finish in the last four years. The NCAA effort also included a national-title victory from then-senior Bridget Franek in the 3,000-meter steeplechase.
The Nittany Lion women were just as successful on the Big Ten stage, capturing team titles in cross country, and indoor and outdoor track and field to earn the coveted conference [quote]Triple Crown.[quote] The cross country victory was the first in program history, led by an individual victory from Franek. Meanwhile, the women[apos]s outdoor victory not only completed the 2009-10 [quote]Triple Crown,[quote] but was the program[apos]s third-straight outdoor conference victory.
Along with the women[apos]s fourth-place effort at the NCAA Outdoor Championships, Sullivan[apos]s men[apos]s squad also made a splash nationally, claiming a pair of top 25 standings, including a 14th-place finish at the NCAA Indoor Championships – the program[apos]s highest finish in nearly two decades. The men would go on to tie for 23rd outdoors, which was also the first top 25 finish since 1993. Individually, the Nittany Lion men earned a trio of bronze-medal finishes at the NCAA Championships, with Ryan Foster (800-meters) and Joe Kovacs (shot put) each earning third-place standings indoors, and Blake Eaton taking third in the shot put at the outdoor championships. The women were also consistent members of the nation[apos]s upper echelon a year ago, placing 14th in cross country, and 13th indoors.
International Acclaim …
Internationally speaking, Sullivan added a pair of IAAF World medalists to her coaching resume in 2010 as Casimir Loxsom earned silver-medal honors while representing the United States at the IAAF World Junior Championships in Moncton, Canada. Loxsom[apos]s second-place standing was the highest-ever finish by a U.S. athlete in the distance event since the meet[apos]s inception. Meanwhile, rising sophomore Evonne Britton claimed second-place status in the 400-meter hurdles.
More recently, Loxsom and teammate Gehret represented the United States in international competition, competing at the NACAC Under-23 Championships. Both Loxsom and Gehret qualified for the final in their respective events, with Loxsom leading the way with a fourth-place finish in the 800.
Current junior Kirsten Nieuwendam also represented the Nittany Lions as well as her home country of Suriname this summer, competing in the 200-meters at the Olympic Games in London.
Sullivan also boasts a tremendous amount of international experience in her own right. Most notably in 2004, Sullivan was named a member of the Olympic coaching staff for the Athens Games, where she helped the United States squad to nearly 25 medals in the sport of track and field. More recently, Sullivan served as the Head Coach for the United States women[apos]s team at the 2011 Pan Am Junior Championships.
She was also selected to represent the United States as an assistant coach at the 2003 World Championships in Paris where she guided the middle distance runners for the world[apos]s top ranked track and field team. She also has served as an assistant on the 2001 U.S. World Championships Team, guiding middle-distance and distance team members throughout the trials and the championships held in Edmonton, Canada. Prior to that appointment, Sullivan guided the U.S. Junior Team to the 1997 World Cross Country Championships in Turin, Italy. She was also the coach for the 1994 U.S. team that competed in the Beijing International Ekiden and was an assistant coach for the 1995 U.S. Olympic Festival staff in Colorado Springs.
NCAA Accolades …
Throughout her tenure in Happy Valley, Sullivan has overseen the successes of four of the most-prolific NCAA careers in program history in Connie Moore, Shana Cox, Aleesha Barber, and Bridget Franek. All sensational sprinters, Moore, Cox, and Barber each totaled 11 All-America finishes throughout their Nittany Lion careers, with Cox claiming the 2008 NCAA Outdoor title at 400-meters – the first victory by a Nittany Lion woman in the track event in the NCAA era – and Cox and Barber, running as members of the 2008 NCAA Champion 4×400-meter relay. Sullivan coached Franek, who totaled 10 All-America finishes over her career, to top honors in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the 2010 NCAA Outdoor Championships – marking the fourth NCAA victory by a Nittany Lion under Sullivan[apos]s watch. Franek also achieved a rarely matched feat over her Penn State tenure, qualifying for every NCAA opportunity in cross country, and indoor and outdoor track and field over her career – a perfect 12-for-12 appearances.
Sullivan[apos]s first NCAA title at Penn State came in 2003, when Deshaya Williams claimed national gold in the discus. The Lions have had quite a presence in both the 4×400 and the steeplechase on the NCAA stage under Sullivan[apos]s watch, with a Penn State mile relay making the NCAA field during both the indoor and outdoor seasons over the past five years, and earning All-America standing on six of those occasions. Sullivan has also coached at least one NCAA qualifier in the steeplechase in seven NCAA meets since the event was added to the women[apos]s program in 2001.
In her six years with the men[apos]s program, Sullivan has coached at least one entrant in the NCAA track and field meet on the men[apos]s side in 11 of 12 opportunities, including graduate Ryan Fritz, who earned a grand total of four All-America certificates during his Penn State career. Sullivan also coached Tyler McCandless to an All-America finish in the 10,000-meters in 2010, becoming the first Nittany Lion to earn the honor in the event since 1994. The Nittany Lion men have also achieved six bronze-medal finishes under Sullivan, including two from Kovacs in the shot put in 2010 and 2011, and third-place efforts from Foster in the 800 in 2010, and the mile in 2011. The 4×400 added to the haul this past academic year, placing second indoors and fourth during the outdoor season.
Sullivan has also overseen multiple recipients of USTFCCCA regional awards on a yearly basis. Most recently, freshman sensation Robby Creese was named Mid-Atlantic Men[apos]s Track Athlete of the Year during the 2012 indoor season, while Joe Kovacs garnered the [quote]Field Athlete of the Year[quote] nod and former sprints, hurdles and relays coach Chris Johnson earned Men[apos]s [quote]Assistant Coach of the Year[quote] nomination during the outdoor campaign. Sullivan has been recognized by USTFCCCA on numerous occasions, and was named Mid-Atlantic Men[apos]s Coach of the Year in 2009, becoming the first woman to win the award at the helm of a men[apos]s program.
Big Ten Success …
The Nittany Lions have also been highly successful in Big Ten competition under Sullivan[apos]s guidance, with the Penn State women totaling 50 individual victories, as well as 13 relay wins over the past 11 years. Conversely, the Nittany Lion men have earned 21 individual titles, and two relay wins in Sullivan[apos]s tenure. Under Sullivan, the Nittany Lion women have been at the top of the heap at the conference level for nearly a decade, having finishing no worse than fourth at any Big Ten track and field championship since 2003.
Cox, a 2008 graduate, remains at the top of the charts, with an outstanding total of 15 victories, while 2011 graduate Shavon Greaves stands with 14 total titles, including sweeps of the short sprints during both the indoor and outdoor championships in 2009 and 2010. Sullivan has also overseen a pair of wins in the men[apos]s javelin throw, including a Big Ten record 239-9 (73.09) effort by Allen Pettner in 2007. 2012 graduate Kara Millhouse also rose to prominence in the Big Ten record books under Sullivan, capturing two-straight conference victories in the 10,000.
The Lion have been recognized throughout the years for their conference success, including a pair of Big Ten [quote]Freshman of the Year[quote] citations for Creese in 2012. Also earning conference accolades last year was Lane, who won Big Ten [quote]Athlete of the Year[quote] honors on the heels of her victory at the Big Ten Cross Country Championships. Kovacs rounded out the year with a conference [quote]Field Athlete of the Year[quote] nod during the outdoor season.
The conference honors rolled in in 2009-12, with Franek earning Athlete of the Year honors in cross country, along with a Freshman of the Year citation for Nicole Lord. Sullivan would also be voted Big Ten Coach of the Year, thanks to the Lions[apos] cross country success. Sullivan would earn another conference Coach of the Year award indoors, while Franek was named Athlete of the Meet, and then-junior Shavon Greaves took Athlete of the Year status. Outside, Fawn Dorr was declared Athlete of the Meet, while Sullivan earned yet another Coach of the Year citation. On the men[apos]s side, Loxsom would earn Freshman of the Year status outdoors.
On the Big Ten stage, Sullivan[apos]s Nittany Lions claimed a combined total of 14 individual victories, to go along with three relay wins. Franek got the ball rolling in cross country, taking top honors at the conference meet – becoming the first Nittany Lion to win the conference cross country title since Kim McGreevy in 1994.
The Nittany Lions had a banner afternoon at the conference meet in 2009, highlighted by an individual victory from then-senior Franek. The Nittany Lions would put all five scoring finishers in the top 25 for a winning total of 71 points, with Franek in first, Lord in ninth – good for second-team all-conference honors – freshman Brooklyne Ridder in 16th, sophomore Caitlin Lane in 22nd, and sophomore Kara Millhouse in 23rd.
On the Cross Country Course …
Penn State squads have enjoyed outstanding success in cross country under Sullivan[apos]s watch. Last season was no different, highlighted by a 13th-place standing by the women[apos]s team at the NCAA Championships – the highest finish in nearly two decades. Caitlin Lane paved the way, finishing 16th overall to earn her first-career All-America citation. Lane[apos]s hot streak started at the Big Ten Championships, where she took top honors, becoming the second Nittany Lion to win the Big Ten crown in the last three years.
Also running well at the conference meet was then-senior Kara Millhouse,
Regionally, speaking Sullivan[apos]s Nittany Lions more than held their own in a field of national-caliber teams at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional Championships, with the women[apos]s team scoring a third-place standing, to go along with the men[apos]s fourth-place effort. Individually, the Nittany Lions garnered a grand total of seven all-region citations, led by a two-three finish from then-juniors Kyle Dawson and Vince McNally on the men[apos]s side. Then-junior Caitlin Lane was tops for the women in 12th place, followed by a quartet of Nittany Lions in the top 25, including Kara Millhouse, Natalie Bower, Maura Ryan, and Brooklyne Ridder.
Sullivan[apos]s charges were just as successful on the conference level, as the Nittany Lions turned in fourth-place finishes in both the men[apos]s and women[apos]s races. Dawson, who Sullivan coached to Big Ten Freshman of the Year honors in 2008, was the top finisher, earning all-conference second team honors via an eighth-place effort individually. McNally was on his heals in 13th, earning his second-career all-conference citation. Another duo of Nittany Lions mounted all-conference efforts in the women[apos]s race, led by then-sophomores Ridder, and Bower, who placed ninth and 14th, respectively.
A year prior, Sullivan coached the women[apos]s cross country team to a 14th-place effort at the 2009 NCAA Cross Country Championships, to go along with the program[apos]s Big Ten victory. The Nittany Lions would also receive representation on the men[apos]s side at the national level, with sophomore Vince McNally making his second-straight appearance at the NCAA meet.
Sullivan[apos]s Lions shined in the NCAA field, paced by Franek[apos]s 26th-place finish, which was also good for her second-career All-America effort in cross country. Ranked as high as 11th during the season, the Lions[apos] 14th-place effort was the highest since the 1996 campaign. Penn State advanced to the Championships via an at-large bid, thanks to in-season wins over outstanding programs such as Florida State, Illinois, Minnesota, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Providence, and SMU, earning more than enough qualifying points to make the field.
A year prior, Sullivan coached Franek to a 23rd-place effort and All-America honors at the 2008 NCAA Cross Country Championships. Sullivan also led the men[apos]s squad to its first appearance at the NCAA meet since 1994, thanks to a second-place finish at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional. The Nittany Lion men notched a 25th-place standing at the NCAA Championships.
The Nittany Lion men engineered an outstanding 2008 campaign, thanks to a group of seasoned veterans, two talented freshmen, and homegrown Pennsylvania work ethic, as six of the eight Nittany Lion men that traveled to the NCAA Championships are former Pennsylvania high school standouts.
The Nittany Lions continued to impress at the Big Ten Championships, posting a fourth-place effort in the team standings – the highest conference finish in nearly a decade. Dawson was also voted Big Ten Freshman of the Year following his effort at the conference championships, becoming the first athlete in Nittany Lion history to earn the honor in cross country.
The Nittany Lion cross country squads have been a strong factor at both the conference, regional, and national levels since Sullivan[apos]s arrival in 1999, as the Penn State women have made NCAA appearances in 2002, and 2003, 2009, and 2010 while earning top five finishes in the Mid-Atlantic region on eight occasions. In 2000, Sullivan led Suzanne Heyer to a 14th-place finish at the NCAA Cross Country Championships – the highest-ever finish by a Nittany Lion woman in the NCAA era.
Before Penn State …
Prior to her tenure at Penn State, Sullivan was the Women[apos]s Coordinator for the Stanford track and field and cross country teams from 1995-99. During those four years, Sullivan coached over 30 NCAA All-America athletes including one NCAA individual champion (Monal Chokshi in the 3,000 meters), led numerous Pac-10 team and individual championship performers and led the team into national prominence. Under her coaching, Stanford placed in the top 10 at the NCAA Cross Country Championships all four years of her tenure including winning the NCAA championship in 1996. The Cardinal also took home runner-up honors in 1997 and a strong third place finish in 1998. In return, Sullivan was named Pac-10 Coach of the Year three times, NCAA Regional Coach of the Year twice and NCAA Division I Coach of the Year in 1996. Before her years at Stanford, Sullivan served as the head coach at Mankato State University from 1993-95 and as the assistant coach at Southeast Missouri State University from 1991-93. She earned conference-coaching honors and produced over 20 conference champions for these schools.
In 2007, Sullivan was inducted into the Minnesota Classic Lake Conference and the Hopkins High School Hall of Fame, both in Minnetonka, Minn. As a high school athlete at Hopkins High, Sullivan competed in track and field and cross country and was a member of the state championship cross country team in 1983, and the fourth-place 4×800-meter relay at the state level.
Sullivan earned a bachelor[apos]s degree in Social Work in 1989 from the University of Minnesota. As a Golden Gopher, she ran cross-country and track and field and captained her cross-country team her sophomore through senior years. She later completed a Master of Science degree in Sports Administration at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale in 1993. While at SIU, she began her college coaching career serving as assistant coach from 1989-91. During her time at SIU, she met and married her husband, Jim Sullivan. Jim is a full-time instructor with the Department of Kinesiology at Penn State and continues to be an important resource in developing training methodology. Dr. Sullivan volunteers his time as the Penn State pole vault coach. The couple lives in Boalsburg, Pa.
Sullivan[apos]s Coaching Awards and Honors
* 2010 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2010 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2010 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 2010 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 2009 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country
* 2009 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2009 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2009 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Men[apos]s Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 2008 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2008 Penn State Achieving Woman Award || Pennsylvania State University
* 2008 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach for the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 2007 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2004 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach for the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2004 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach for the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 2004 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 1998 Pac-10 Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1997 Pac-10 Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1997 USTFCCCA West RegionWomen[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1996 NCAA Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1996 Pac-10 Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1996 USTFCCCA West RegionWomen[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1995 North Central Conference Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field (Mankato State)
* 1995 Regional Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field (Mankato State)
* 1992 Ohio Valley Conference Coach of the Year || Cross Country (SE Missouri State)
* 1992 Missouri T&F/CC Coaches[apos] Association Coach of the Year || SE Missouri State
Sports
Dixon Sets New Indoor Record After Opening Day of the Season
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. – Southeast Missouri track and field teams opened their season winning eight events at the John Gartland Invitational hosted by Indiana State Friday night.
Included in the event wins was Brianna Dixon who set a new SEMO indoor record in the high jump reaching 5-10 to take the title.
Event Winners
Marshall Swadley won the weight throw with a personal-best mark of 65-9.5 and later captured the shot-put title with another PR of 60-10.5.
John Hartmann claimed first place in the high jump after clearing a personal-best height of 6-9.5.
Clara Billing earned the pole vault victory with a height of 12-11.75.
Kale Clements won the 800 meters in 2:26.4 during her first collegiate meet.
Sydney Burdine captured the 400-meter title with a time of 56.09.
Madelyn Gray won the mile with a time of 5:04.6.
Top Three Finishers
Sullivan Gleason placed third in the pole vault with a clearance of 16-2.75.
Dixon followed up her win with a second-place finish in the 60-meter hurdles, running 8.72.
The women’s 4×400-meter relay team of Burdine, Jasmine McClelland, Clements, and Gray finished second in 4:10.1.
The men’s 4×400-meter relay team of Marcus Gordon, Jon’David White, Jackson Witvoet, and Connor Moore placed third with a time of 3:31.4.
Byron Sowerby earned a runner-up finish in the 3,000 meters, clocking 9:02.7.
Jonas Davis finished third in the 200 meters with a time of 22.54.
McClelland placed second in the women’s 200 meters, running 25.77.
Moore finished second in the 400 meters with a time of 50.93.
Trenton Braswell placed second in the weight throw with a mark of 65-4.75.
Liberty Blackburn earned second place in the high jump with a clearance of 5-4.25.
Luke Busateri finished second in the triple jump with a leap of 46-11.
Andreese Ortiz finished in third in the shot put reaching 45-10 for a new personal best throw.
Other Notable Performances
Ortiz placed fourth in the weight throw with a personal-best mark of 58-3.25.
Alyssa Repke finished fifth in the weight throw with a mark of 55-5 while competing in her first collegiate meet.
Colin Beers earned a fifth-place finish in the pole vault after clearing 15-11.
Aarion Jackson placed fifth in the long jump with a leap of 22-3.5.
Matt Pluff recorded a mark of 22-1 in the long jump during his first collegiate competition.
White placed sixth in the 60-meter hurdles with a time of 8.33. Marcus Gordon Jr. followed closely with a seventh-place finish in the 60-meter hurdles at 8.35.
Jackson Witvoet finished sixth in the 200 meters with a time of 22.8 and also placed sixth in the 60 meters at 7.11.
Micah Grawer earned fifth place in the mile with a time of 4:26.12.
McClelland also finished sixth in the 60 meters with a time of 7.75 and Burdine placed seventh in 7.83.
Zavier Winton finished eighth in the weight throw with a mark of 55-5.
Bailie Hux placed seventh in the weight throw with a throw of 53-11.
Elliana Rhinehart finished ninth in the weight throw with a mark of 51-5.75.
Braswell added a fifth-place finish in the shot put with a mark of 52-2.5.
Mark Goldman placed eighth in the shot put with a throw of 47-11.75.
Quinton rounded out the shot put with a ninth-place finish at 46-2.
The meet will wrap up Saturday starting at 11 a.m. The Redhawks will have Luis Schadlich and Kannon Harlow finishing up the men’s heptathlon. Anna Thomason will compete in the women’s pentathlon.
Sports
Where to stream Kansas Jayhawks vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers NCAA Volleyball Tournament match today for free
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Two former Big 12 rivals meet with a spot in the regional final on the line, as the Nebraska Cornhuskers play host to the Kansas Jayhawks in the third round of the NCAA Women’s Volleyball Tournament.
The Cornhuskers rolled toward another Big Ten championship. Nebraska has been dominant. Not only are they undefeated, but they have also been nearly untouchable. For two months, the team did not lose a set. The team then went on to win its final five matches in straight sets, clinching a third consecutive Big Ten Championship.
Now, the program that has played in every national tournament since the AIAW days has its sights set on advancing to the final four for the fourth time in the past five seasons. Nebraska looks to avenge last year’s disappointing semifinal exit at the hands of the eventual national champions, Penn State.
Nebraska has yet to lose a set, hammering Long Island and Kansas State in straight sets.
The Jayhawks had a little bit of a tougher time getting to the Sweet 16. After beating High Point in the First Round, Kansas needed four sets to get by Miami last weekend. The J-Birds finished second in the Big 12 during the regular season, four games back of conference champion Arizona State.
NCAA WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT
Third Round
Kansas Jayhawks vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers
When: Friday, December 12
Time: 9:30 p.m. ET
Where: Bob Devaney Sports Center (Lincoln, Neb.)
Channel: ESPN2
Sports
Kansas women’s volleyball vs Nebraska: NCAA tournament final result
Updated Dec. 12, 2025, 10:50 p.m. CT
Kansas women’s volleyball faced off against Nebraska on Friday during the Sweet 16 of the NCAA tournament, and suffered a three-set sweep as KU’s season came to an end.
The Jayhawks, a No. 4 seed, had won its first two postseason matchups against High Point and No. 5-seed Miami (Fl.) coming into this contest. But the Huskers, a No. 1 seed, after defeating Long Island and Kansas State to reach this point, showcased just how talented they were. Nebraska advances to the Elite Eight.
Here is what happened during this matchup, which took place Friday at the Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln, Nebraska:
UPDATE: 10:47 p.m. (CT): END 3rd Set: Nebraska 25, Kansas 12 — Nebraska wins in 3 sets 3-0
UPDATE: 10:18 p.m. (CT): END 2nd Set: Nebraska 25, Kansas 11 — Nebraska takes 2-0 set lead
UPDATE: 9:49 p.m. (CT): END 1st Set: Nebraska 25, Kansas 12 — Nebraska takes 1-0 set lead
Pregame
Kansas’ starters
Here is when Kansas vs Nebraska is set to begin
Kansas arrives
Kansas women’s volleyball vs Nebraska matchup time
- Date: Friday, Dec. 12
- Time: 8:30 p.m. (CT)
- Location: Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln, Nebraska
What channel is Kansas women’s volleyball vs Nebraska matchup on today?
Kansas women’s volleyball’s NCAA tournament matchup against Nebraska will be broadcast on ESPN2 in 2025. The Jayhawks have another chance to advance in the NCAA tournament. Streaming options include ESPN+.
Kansas women’s volleyball vs Nebraska score
Jordan Guskey covers University of Kansas Athletics at The Topeka Capital-Journal. He was the 2022 National Sports Media Association’s sportswriter of the year for the state of Kansas. Contact him at jmguskey@gannett.com or on Twitter at @JordanGuskey.
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Sports
Live score, stats, time, how to watch
Updated Dec. 12, 2025, 11:51 p.m. ET
No. 1 overall seed Nebraska is taking on No. 4 Kansas in the NCAA women’s volleyball tournament Friday after opening the competition with back-to-back sweeps.
The Huskers (32-0) remain undefeated and have lost seven sets all year, with the last coming nearly a month ago, on Nov. 14, against UCLA. The team took down LIU and Kansas State to reach the Sweet 16. The Jayhawks (24-10) swept High Point and beat Miami in four sets to start the tournament.
Live score updates: Nebraska 3, Kansas 0
Set 3 final: Nebraska 25, Kansas 12
Nebraska swept Kansas after winning the third set, 25-12. The Huskers have now won 29 straight NCAA tournament matches at home. Andi Jackson (nine kills on .600 hitting) and Rebekah Allick (nine kills on 1.000 hitting) combined for 18 kills with no errors. Nebraska hit .450 collectively, while holding Kansas to .029 hitting.
Set 3: Nebraska first to 15 vs. Kansas
Nebraska is in the driver’s seat once again and was the first team to reach 15 points in the third se, leading 15-8. The Huskers are hitting .762, while Kansas is hitting .353 in the set so far.
Set 2 final: Nebraska 25, Kansas 11
No. 1 Nebraska went on a 5-0 run to claim the second set, 25-11. The Huskers have been dominant on both sides of the ball, recording 22 kills and 17 total blocks through the first two sets, all while holding Kansas to a negative hitting percentage (-.039).
“Our blocking. That’s probably going to be a season high for us,” Busboom Kelly said when asked what she’s liking from her team. “I just feel like we came out on a mission. Our goal was to block a lot of balls tonight.”
Nebraska’s Rebekah Allick has been the hot hand, with nine kills on nine attempts, hitting a perfect 1.000. Andi Jackson added five kills on .500 hitting, in addition to five blocks.
Set 2: Nebraska 13, Kansas 7
The Huskers cruised through the first set, but the second set started out much closer. Kansas cut Nebraska’s lead to 9–7, but the Huskers responded with a 4–0 run to go up 13–7. Rebekah Allick has been the hot hand, with nine kills on nine attempts, hitting a perfect 1.000.
Set 1 final: Nebraska 25, Kansas 12
Nebraska looked every bit like the No. 1 overall seed in a dominant first set against No. 4 Kansas. The Huskers collectively hit .357 and registered six blocks against the Jayhawks, who were held to a negative hitting percentage (-.024) in the first set. Rebekah Allick led the Huskers with six kills on six attempts, while Andi Jackson added four blocks and three kills.
Nebraska takes 12-3 lead vs. Kansas
It was all Nebraska to start. The Huskers jumped to a 12-3 lead over Kansas. Andi Jackson is already up to four blocks for Nebraska, while Harper Murray and Bergen Reilly each added two blocks. Kansas is hitting -.200.
How to watch Nebraska volleyball tonight vs. Kansas
The game Friday begins at 9:30 p.m. ET.
How to watch, stream Nebraska volleyball play Kansas in NCAA tournament
ESPN2 will broadcast the Nebraska vs. Kansas match.
Live stream Nebraska volleyball on ESPN+ (subscriber only)
Nebraska volleyball’s starting lineup
Nebraska volleyball coaching staff
- Head Coach: Dani Busboom Kelly
Busboom succeeded longtime coach and mentor John Cook in January. The Nebraska alum won national titles with the program as a player in 2006 and as an assistant coach in 2015. Nebraska (32-0) has kicked off the Busboom Kelly era with its first undefeated season since 2000. Although Busboom Kelly said, “whoever is (coaching Nebraska) would be doing well,” her players argue otherwise.
“When (Busboom Kelly) came in here, that Nebraska standard wasn’t lost at all. She knew what she wanted and she really pushes us to reach that level,” Nebraska middle blocker Andi Jackson told USA TODAY Sports.
Nebraska volleyball assistant coaches
- Assistant Coach/Recruiting Coordinator: Jaylen Reyes
- Assistant Coach: Kelly (Hunter) Natter
- Interim Assistant Coach: Brennan Hagar
How tall is Harper Murray?
Harper Murray is listed at 6-foot-2.
How tall is Andi Jackson?
Andi Jackson is listed at 6-foot-3.
Nebraska women’s volleyball roster
| No. | Name | Class | Height | Position | Hometown | High School / Previous School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Keri Leimbach | Freshman | 5′4″ | DS/Libero | Lincoln, Neb. | Lincoln Lutheran |
| 2 | Bergen Reilly | Junior | 6′1″ | Setter | Sioux Falls, S.D. | O’Gorman |
| 3 | Allie Sczech | Senior | 6′4″ | Opposite Hitter | Sugar Land, Texas | George Ranch / Baylor |
| 4 | Campbell Flynn | Freshman | 6′3″ | Setter | Oakland, Mich. | Mercy |
| 5 | Rebekah Allick | Senior | 6′4″ | Middle Blocker | Lincoln, Neb. | Waverly |
| 6 | Laney Choboy | Junior | 5′3″ | DS/Libero | Raleigh, N.C. | Leesville Road |
| 7 | Maisie Boesiger | Senior | 5′6″ | DS/Libero | Firth, Neb. | Norris |
| 8 | Kenna Cogill | Freshman | 6′4″ | Middle Blocker | Gilbert, Ariz. | Perry |
| 9 | Virginia Adriano | Freshman | 6′5″ | Opposite Hitter | Turin, Italy | Liceo Artistico Statale di Brera |
| 10 | Olivia Mauch | Sophomore | 5′6″ | DS/Libero | Bennington, Neb. | Bennington |
| 11 | Teraya Sigler | Freshman | 6′3″ | Outside Hitter | Scottsdale, Ariz. | Horizon |
| 12 | Taylor Landfair | Senior | 6′5″ | Outside Hitter | Plainfield, Ill. | Plainfield Central / Minnesota |
| 14 | Manaia Ogbechie | Freshman | 6′3″ | Middle Blocker | Santa Rosa Valley, Calif. | Oaks Christian |
| 15 | Andi Jackson | Junior | 6′3″ | Middle Blocker | Brighton, Colo. | Brighton |
| 18 | Ryan Hunter | Freshman | 6′2″ | Opposite Hitter | Charlotte, N.C. | Cox Mill |
| 21 | Skyler Pierce | Redshirt Freshman | 6′2″ | Outside Hitter | Lenexa, Kan. | Olathe Northwest |
| 27 | Harper Murray | Junior | 6′2″ | Outside Hitter | Ann Arbor, Mich. | Skyline |
Kansas volleyball’s starting lineup
Kansas women’s volleyball roster
| No. | Name | Class | Height | Position | Hometown | Last School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | Grace Nelson | So. | 6′1″ | Pin | River Forest, Ill. | River Forest HS |
| 3 | Kenzie Dean | So. | 6′3″ | Pin | Johnston, Iowa | Dowling Catholic HS |
| 3 | Raegan Burns | Jr. | 5′5″ | L/DS | Lafayette, Ind. | McCutcheon HS |
| 4 | Rhian Swanson | Sr. | 6′2″ | Pin | McPherson, Kan. | McPherson HS |
| 5 | Selena Leban | Fr. | 6′0″ | Pin | Nova Gorica, Slovenia | Gimnazija Šiška |
| 7 | Katie Dalton | Sr. | 6′1″ | S/Pin | Parker, Colo. | Chaparral HS |
| 8 | Ellie Moore | So. | 5′9″ | S | Darien, Conn. | Darien HS |
| 9 | Jovana Zelenovic | Fr. | 6′7″ | Pin | Novi Sad, Serbia | OK Železnicar |
| 10 | Reese Ptacek | So. | 6′3″ | MB | Prescott, Wis. | Prescott High School |
| 11 | Cristin Cline | So. | 5′11″ | S | Stanfield, N.C. | Hickory Grove Christian School |
| 12 | Heidi Devers | So. | 5′4″ | L/DS | Olathe, Kan. | Saint James Academy |
| 15 | Ellie Schneider | Jr. | 6′5″ | MB | Metairie, La. | Metairie Country Day School |
| 17 | Aurora Papac | Fr. | 6′4″ | MB | Požega, Croatia | Sport Gymnasium Zagreb |
| 19 | Molly McCarthy | R-Jr. | 5′11″ | DS/L | Rancho Mirage, Calif. | Palm Desert HS |
| 20 | Brynn Kirsch | Sr. | 5′8″ | L/DS | Sioux Falls, S.D. | Lincoln HS |
| 22 | Ryan White | Sr. | 5′9″ | L/DS | Richland, Wash. | Richland HS |
| 24 | Aisha Aiono | Jr. | 6′3″ | MB | Liberty, Mo. | Liberty HS |
| 25 | Logan Bell | Fr. | 5′11″ | Pin | Beech Grove, Ind. | Roncalli HS |
Check out Harper Murray’s pregame routine
Nebraska outside hitter Harper Murray carefully tapes her hands before every match.
She inscribes ’27’ on the tape binding her left ring finger in honor of her late father Vada Murray, who died when she was 5 years old. He wore No. 27 while playing football at Michigan. Murray then writes former coach John Cook’s initials on her left pointer finger, “a father figure” that helped her grow as a player. She also adds Huskers head coach Dani Busboom Kelly’s initials on her middle finger as a reminder to lay it all on the line.
The initials on her right hand changes every year. She told USA TODAY Sports, “Every year for the past three years, I have written the location of the Final Four. On my pointer finger and my middle finger, I have the letters ‘KC,’ which is Kansas City, which is where the NCAA Tournament is held this year.” Full story here.
Nebraska setter Campbell Flynn suffers season-ending injury
Freshman setter Campbell Flynn suffered a broken pinky finger, according to former head coach John Cook’s pregame radio show. Flynn will be out the remainder of the season with the injury. The freshman averaged 4.50 assists per set.
Nebraska has three Player of the Year semifinalists
When the AVCA Player of the Year semifinalists were announced in November, Nebraska had three of the 14 players on the list — Andi Jackson, Harper Murray and junior setter Bergen Reilly. It’s another example of the Huskers’ depth.
“We have arguably the best in each position for the country,” Andi Jackson told USA TODAY Sports. “We have the best setter in the country, we have the best outside in the country. And I think it just shows how strong our team is, especially at that front row that we have. When Harper (Murray), Bergen (Reilly) and I are up, we always give each other a smile because we know what we have to offer.”
The trio led Nebraska to the nation’s top hitting percentage (.353) and fourth-highest kill per set mark (14.72).
NCAA volleyball tournament regionals schedule
Friday, Dec. 12
Saturday, Dec. 13
Sunday, Dec. 14
- TBD | No. 1 Texas vs. No. 3 Wisconsin
- TBD | No. 3 Texas A&M vs. No. 1 Nebraska /No. 4 Kansas
NCAA women’s volleyball bracket
Find the full NCAA women’s volleyball tournament bracket on the NCAA website.
Nebraska stats, top players
Nebraska’s nation-leading offense is led by junior outside hitter Harper Murray (347 kills), junior middle blocker Andi Jackson (273) and senior middle blocker Rebekah Allick (235).
Murray also leads the team in service aces (30) and is among the top four on defense for digs. (212). Allick and Jackson lead the team in blocks (121 and 112, respectively).
Setter Bergen Reilly (1,011 assists) runs the show and also is second on the team for digs (264), behind Laney Choboy (276 digs). Olivia Mauch (256 digs) joins them in keeping the ball off the floor.
Kansas stats, top players
Kansas has a trio of heavy hitters with Jovana Zelenovic (369 kills), who also leads the team with 46 serving aces; Rhian Swanson (346 kills); and Reese Ptacek (325 kills).
Senior Katie Dalton (769 assists) and sophomore Cristin Cline (552 assists) anchor the team at the setter position. On defense, Ryan White (5-8 digs) and Grace Nelson (298 digs) lead the way.
The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.
Sports
Kansas City Yields Positive Results at Nebraska, Iowa State
Elsewhere in Lincoln, several other Roos put forth a great effort on the track, ending 2025 of a positive note heading into the New Year. Notably, distance runner Dalton Heller set a career-best in the mile, running a 4:18.52 and finishing third in the event. Right behind Heller was Luke Swarts, running a 4:20.68 to give the sophomore a new career-best time in the mile. Connor Jacober finished first in the 800-meter dash among several competitors, finishing with a 1:59.45 time. In the field, Hunter Roos earned himself a first place finish, cracking a triple jump mark of 14.32 meters. Brant Wilson finished as Kansas City’s best long jumper, leaping a mark of 6.84 meters which was good for third in the event.
On the women’s side, Jacky-Perez Vela nearly notched a program record in the 300-meter dash, recording a time of 39.86 seconds, finishing under a tenth of a second shy of the Roos all-time record at 39.79 set back in 2024. Naomi Eyanagho clocked a 60-meter hurdles time of 9.21 seconds, finishing fourth in the race and coming close to her career-best. In the women’s 60-meter dash, Tonique Fleming sprinted a third place time of 7.87 seconds while Sarah Wulfert came in sixth with a time of 7.92 seconds. Additionally, Wulfert and Fleming came in the top five finishers in the 200-meter dash, leaving the meet with times of 25.21 and 25.55 respectively.
In Ames, Kansas City put together a nice performance with Stephen Clunis getting a time of 6.68 in the 60-meter dash and Junior Powell notching a time of 6.91 in the same event. Kai White and M.J. Foster got times of 2:28.84 and 2:29.60 in the 1000-meter dash to close out Kansas City’s day at Iowa State. Kansas City takes a break for the holidays before hitting the ground running on January 10 for the Alexis Jarrett Invitational at Missouri.
Sports
Wisconsin defeats Stanford in NCAA regional semifinals: Updates, recap
6:20 pm CT December 12, 2025
Who does Wisconsin volleyball play next in NCAA tournament?
John Steppe
Third-seeded Wisconsin will face top-seeded Texas in the NCAA regional finals on Dec. 14 at a to-be-announced time. The Longhorns are coming off a sweep in the regional semifinals against fourth-seeded Indiana.
Here are some highlights from the Texas-Indiana match:
6:02 pm CT December 12, 2025
More to read from Wisconsin’s four-set win over Stanford
John Steppe
5:32 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin’s Charlie Fuerbringer goes out of her way to praise teammate Una Vajagic
John Steppe
3:20 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin volleyball advances to the regional finals, will face Texas
John Steppe
Wisconsin is headed to the NCAA regional finals following a four-set win over Stanford. The Badgers won the fourth set, 25-22. Check back for more postmatch updates.
3:18 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin calls timeout with 23-22 lead in fourth set
John Steppe
The fourth set is (once again) going down to the wire.
Wisconsin has a 23-22 lead, needing only two more points to go to the Elite Eight. Stanford’s Spencer Etzler will be serving after the UW timeout.
3:13 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin has 21-19 lead in fourth set
John Steppe
Stanford has called a timeout as the Badgers have a 21-19 lead following Mimi Colyer’s 25th kill. Not that you would sense this from UW’s .411 hitting percentage, but Stanford has made really some impressive digs this afternoon.
3:05 pm CT December 12, 2025
Stanford takes 13-12 lead in fourth set after 4-0 scoring run
John Steppe
Stanford has gone on a 4-0 scoring run to take a 13-12 lead in the fourth set. It’s the first lead change of the fourth set as momentum might be swinging back in the Cardinals’ favor.
Score: Stanford 13, Wisconsin 12 (fourth set; Wisconsin leads, 2-1)
2:59 pm CT December 12, 2025
See Kristen Simon’s kill in third set of NCAA regional semifinals match
John Steppe
2:55 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin takes 7-3 lead in fourth set, Stanford calls timeout
John Steppe
Wisconsin has gone on a 3-0 scoring run following three straight Stanford attack errors, and Stanford has called a timeout. The Cardinal are hitting minus-.100 so far in the fourth set.
Score:Wisconsin 7, Stanford 3 (fourth set; Wisconsin leads, 2-1)
2:48 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin takes third set, 2-1 set lead
John Steppe
Wisconsin won the third set, 25-23, following Grace Egan’s third kill of the afternoon. The Badgers now have a 2-1 set lead and the momentum here at Gregory Gym.
Natalie Wardlow’s three service aces really shifted the momentum here. Mimi Colyer has 19 kills. Carter Booth has 13 kills (still without any attack errors).
The Badgers have the lead going into the fourth set despite Stanford’s .430-.418 advantage in hitting percentage.
2:41 pm CT December 12, 2025
Stanford calls timeout after Kristen Simon earns rare kill, service ace
John Steppe
Kristen Simon did something liberos rarely do. She earned a kill. The free ball found open real estate on the Stanford side of the court. The freshman then aced the Cardinal, prompting a Stanford timeout.
UW has a 22-21 lead in the third set.
2:35 pm CT December 12, 2025
Natalie Wardlow’s three consecutive service aces give Wisconsin lead in third set
John Steppe
Wisconsin has taken an 18-17 lead in the third set following three momentum-swinging service aces by freshman Natalie Wardlow.
2:30 pm CT December 12, 2025
Stanford has narrow 15-13 lead in third set of NCAA regional semifinals match
John Steppe
Stanford is ahead of Wisconsin, 15-13, in the third set. Wisconsin’s offense has struggled in the third set after an elite showing in the first set and a respectable showing in the second set as well. The Badgers are hitting .174 in the set with nine kills and five attack errors.
2:13 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin vs Stanford stat comparison through first two sets
John Steppe
- Kills: Wisconsin 37, Stanford 27
- Attack errors: Stanford 3, Wisconsin 6
- Hitting percentage: Wisconsin .500, Stanford .444
- Service aces: Stanford 4, Wisconsin 2
- Service errors: Stanford 4, Wisconsin 5
- Blocks: Stanford 2, Wisconsin 0
2:08 pm CT December 12, 2025
Stanford takes second set, 25-21
John Steppe
The Wisconsin-Stanford match is even at 1-1 after the Cardinal took the second set, 25-21. The Gregory Gym crowd has been treated to some really high-level volleyball here.
The Badgers fought off the first two set points before the Cardinal ultimately prevailed. Stanford pulled away with a 7-2 run earlier in the set, and that was too much for UW to overcome.
2:03 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin calls another timeout as Stanford goes on 3-0 scoring run and expands lead to 22-16
John Steppe
Wisconsin has some work to do in the second set with a 22-16 deficit in the set. Stanford, after hitting .391 in the first set, has been hitting .480 in the second set. Stanford’s Julia Blyashov has five kills so far in this set.
1:58 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin calls timeout as Stanford has 17-14 lead in second set
John Steppe
Stanford has a 17-14 lead so far in the second set. The Cardinal’s three service aces have been the differentiator in a close set.
Mimi Colyer is up to 12 kills while hitting .474. Carter Booth has eight kills and still does not have an attack error.
1:39 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin’s offense looks stellar as Badgers take first set vs Stanford 25-17
John Steppe
Wisconsin’s offense was stellar in the first set against Stanford, hitting .514. Mimi Colyer has nine kills while hitting .467. Carter Booth has five kills while hitting .833.
Lizzy Andrew, the sister of UW’s Alicia Andrew, leads Stanford with three kills on three total attacks.
1:33 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin has 20-13 lead in first set
John Steppe
As the Black Eyed Peas’ “I Gotta Feeling” plays in Gregory Gym, it’s been a good night – well, more like afternoon – so far for the Badgers. They have 17 kills without any attack errors and are hitting .654. Stanford has called a timeout.
1:28 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin goes on 5-0 scoring run, lead 15-9 in first set
John Steppe
Wisconsin has 12 kills without any attack errors as the Badgers have quickly built a 15-9 lead in the first set. Mimi Colyer leads UW with five kills already.
1:11 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin starters vs Stanford
John Steppe
- Una Vajagic
- Kristen Simon
- Mimi Colyer
- Alicia Andrew
- Charlie Fuerbringer
- Grace Egan
- Carter Booth
1:09 pm CT December 12, 2025
Wisconsin to wear alternate black uniforms vs Stanford
John Steppe
Wisconsin will be wearing its alternate black uniforms against Stanford.
1:07 pm CT December 12, 2025
What is Wisconsin’s all-time record against Stanford?
John Steppe
Wisconsin is 0-6 all-time against Stanford. Here are the past matches:
- Three-set loss on Sept. 1, 1993
- Three-set loss on Dec. 11, 2004
- Five-set loss on Dec. 10, 2016
- Four-set loss on Dec. 8, 2017
- Three-set loss on Dec. 21, 2019
- Four-set loss on Sept. 2, 2024
12:45 pm CT December 12, 2025
When will Wisconsin-Stanford NCAA regional semifinals match begin?
John Steppe
The official start time for the Wisconsin-Stanford match is 1:16 p.m. CT after Texas’ three-set win over Indiana.
12:33 pm CT December 12, 2025
What to read, watch ahead of Wisconsin volleyball’s NCAA tournament match vs Stanford
John Steppe
12:15 pm CT December 12, 2025
NCAA volleyball tournament bracket in Texas regional
John Steppe
Here is the bracket for the Texas regional, which is where the Wisconsin Badgers are playing:
First round
- Top-seeded Texas defeated Florida A&M in three sets.
- Eighth-seeded Penn State defeated South Florida in four sets.
- Fourth-seeded Indiana defeated Toledo in three sets.
- Fifth-seeded Colorado defeated American in three sets.
- Third-seeded Wisconsin defeated Eastern Illinois in three sets.
- Unseeded North Carolina upset sixth-seeded UTEP in four sets.
- Unseeded Arizona upset seventh-seeded South Dakota State in four sets.
- Second-seeded Stanford defeated Utah Valley in four sets.
Second round
- Top-seeded Texas defeated eighth-seeded Penn State in three sets.
- Fourth-seeded Indiana defeated fifth-seeded Colorado in three sets.
- Third-seeded Wisconsin defeated North Carolina in three sets.
- Second-seeded Stanford defeated Arizona in four sets.
Third round (regional semifinals)
- Top-seeded Texas vs. fourth-seeded Indiana (Dec. 12 at 11 a.m.)
- Third-seeded Wisconsin vs. second-seeded Stanford (Dec. 12, 30 minutes after Texas-Indiana match)
12:00 pm CT December 12, 2025
How to listen to Wisconsin vs. Stanford NCAA tournament match on radio
John Steppe
- 620 WTMJ-AM in Milwaukee, 100.5 WTLX-FM in Madison, 1430 WBEV-AM in Beaver Dam and the Badger Radio Network.
11:40 am CT December 12, 2025
How to watch Wisconsin vs. Stanford NCAA tournament match
John Steppe
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