Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

Sports

Beyond The Diamond – California Golden Bears Athletics

Published

on



Beyond The Diamond


Andrew Madsen/KLC Fotos

From an early age, Holly Medina endured many trials and tribulations leading up to the moment she decided to dedicate her life to Christ.


Holly Medina Takes Leap Of Faith

This feature originally appeared in the 2025 Spring edition of the Cal Sports Quarterly. The Cal Athletics flagship magazine features long-form sports journalism at its finest and provides in-depth coverage of the scholar-athlete experience in Berkeley. Printed copies are mailed four times a year to Bear Backers who give annually at the Bear Club level (currently $600 or more). For more information on how you can receive a printed version of the Cal Sports Quarterly at home, send an email to CalAthleticsFund@berkeley.edu or call (510) 642-2427.

 

Audience of one.

 

For some, it doesn’t mean much. But it’s a motto that California outfielder Holly Medina embodies. Reminded every time she’s in the batter’s box and with every sip of water – with the initials AO1 written on her bat and water bottle – she is never concerned about the opinions of others nor needs their acceptance.

 

Medina’s journey has not always been easy. From an early age, she endured many trials and tribulations leading up to the moment she decided to dedicate her life to Christ.

 

During her childhood, religion was never a huge factor in the household and was not forced upon her at a young age. Instead, after learning of her friend’s religious views and deeper discussions with her grandparents, she began to beg her parents, Niki and Adam Medina, to start taking her to church. That is where her religious journey began to take form.

 

“It was never like – we have to go, and I was never in a Christian or Catholic school,” Medina said. “I remember my friends in elementary school were pretty religious, and I would go home and be like – ‘Mom, can you please take me to church and – can we go to church on Sunday?’ My grandparents had a big effect on it. They would talk to me about religion here and there.”

 

Growing up in Hesperia in Southern California, Medina made the varsity softball team during her freshman year at Oak Hills High School. But that wasn’t enough. She knew if she wanted to reach her career goals, she would have to venture outside her hometown to get exposure. She set a goal to make the Firecrackers Select 18U travel ball team in Huntington Beach, over an hour from her home.

 

“I was committed to the grind, but it was so much fun,” Medina said. “I finally met people who were at the same level and pushing me to be more. I was the underdog the whole time. I was constantly being pushed. I had the best memories on that team and being in Huntington Beach, playing softball and traveling with all those people. That was when I knew – this is what I am going to do.”

 

Despite finding success on the field, Medina still had not received any attention from major college programs leading up to her senior year of high school. She earned recognition from mid-major schools and visited several campuses, such as Southern Utah and Montana.

 

Even though Medina thoroughly enjoyed her official visit to Montana, she ultimately decided to remain patient. She traveled to Texas to compete in a tournament where college coaches were in attendance.

 

“I go to the tournament and I end up balling out,” Medina said. “We had a recruitment guy on our team that handled a lot of that for us, luckily, and he told me – you’re not going to believe it, but Cal and LMU are both interested.”

 

Overwhelmed with emotions, she immediately scheduled visits to LMU and Cal that following week. While visiting Berkeley, she immediately knew her future and officially committed to Cal during the visit.

 

“I knew I wanted to stay in California,” Medina stated. “It felt far enough from home to experience things and the fact I was getting this education and being able to play in a power school. That was great.”

 

While on campus during the fall of her freshman year, Medina wanted to commit and dive further into her faith. Despite establishing a foundation during her childhood, she finally felt that everything was coming together.

 

“In high school, a church opened in my hometown, and I started working at the coffee bar there,” Medina said. “I got into fellowship with that, but it didn’t click until college that I truly felt my faith start to flourish.”

 

In December of her freshman year, she made a New Year’s resolution to fully grow her relationship with Christ. After enduring many hardships throughout the year, she took a leap of faith and got a tattoo, displaying a cross on her lower left forearm. That decision marked a key moment in her religious journey.

 

“It was kind of the reminder to put God first and to grow in my faith, Medina said. “Ever since that moment, that has been something I have stuck with because I’ve never felt the way I have in my faith as strong as I do right now.”

 

As she returned to campus for her sophomore year in August 2024, and after many months of compiling the thoughts that raced through her head surrounding the idea of being baptized, she finally felt that she was ready for the next step in her journey.

 

“I had been wanting to get baptized for a while,” Medina said. “Over the summer, it was a big turning point for me. Prior to it, I was like – I would love to be baptized, but I didn’t know why, what the point was, or if I deserved to be baptized. Those are the thoughts that were going through my head.”

 

During the nearly seven-hour drive from her hometown back to campus, she convinced herself that it was time. After returning to campus, she visited her church, City Center, and one of the first topics that was being discussed during service was about baptism.

 

“That’s crazy,” Medina said in disbelief. “I really wanted to do it, but it was happening the next week, and school hadn’t even started.”

 

As a member of Athletes in Action on campus, Medina went to bible study the next day and confided to one of the mentors and AIA team leader, Karen Butler. During the conversation, she shared her concerns about getting baptized without having her support system with her, as most of her teammates hadn’t returned to campus yet, and her parents were seven hours away. That’s when she discovered that the organization, AIA, holds baptisms. She was immediately sold and committed to a date.

 

“It was not really about where. It was more about who was doing it and the community,” Medina said. “I knew that AIA had been a big thing at school, and it had helped me a lot. I knew all the people in my support system would be there.”

 

After crossing off the days on the calendar for months, the moment finally arrived. On November 6, 2024, surrounded by loved ones, teammates, coaches, members from her church, and even her therapist, Holly took the cold plunge into the tub of war and publicly declared her faith in Jesus Christ.

 

“It was just uniting. All my favorite people filled in one room. It was not just celebrating me but how I felt and the fruits of the spirit. It was such a joyful day.” Medina said. “Not everyone there, I don’t even think, was religious, but they were supporting me. It was so inspirational for them, which is God’s work itself.”

 



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Six Gators Featured on MLV Rosters for the 2026 Season

Published

on


Major League Volleyball (MLV) kicks off its 2026 regular season on Thursday, Jan. 8 with six former Gators on a roster across the nine teams.

Carli Snyder and Rhamat Alhassan, both of whom appeared in Florida’s 2017 national championship match, reunite on the Grand Rapids Rise. Former Gator teammates Anna Dixon and Elli McKissock join the Atlanta Vibe, while Marlie Monserez, who led the Vibe’s offense for the past two seasons, signed with the San Diego Mojo for the 2026 season. After making her professional debut with Indy Ignite last season, Isabel Martin will join the Dallas Pulse in its inaugural campaign.

Dixon, McKissock and the Atlanta Vibe host both of their opening-weekend matches, welcoming the Columbus Fury on Thursday before facing Snyder and Alhassan on Sunday, Jan. 10. Snyder and Alhassan will first return to their college state for the Rise’s 2026 debut against the Orlando Valkyries on Friday, Jan. 9.

Monserez makes her Mojo debut on Thursday in Omaha against the Supernovas before returning to her home state on Sunday, Jan. 11 to face the Orlando Valkyries.

Martin faces her former team on Saturday, Jan. 10 in the Pulse’s first-ever match.

MLV’s 2026 schedule can be found here.

Major League Volleyball, entering its third season, is the longest-running formal professional volleyball league for women in the United States. Designed to elevate the sport through world class competition, commercial innovation, and cultural relevance, MLV brings together elite athletes, visionary leadership and global ambition. With alignment to USA Volleyball and a commitment to Olympic development, MLV serves as the premier pathway from professional play to the world stage. For more information, visit ProVolleyball.com.

 

FOLLOW FLORIDA VOLLEYBALL

FloridaGators.com

Instagram | Facebook | X

 

 





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Men’s Volleyball Opens 2026 Season Against Spartans

Published

on


 
MALIBU, Calif. –  The Pepperdine men’s volleyball team plays the first match of the 2026 season Friday night against the Spartans of St. Thomas Aquinas College in Firestone Fieldhouse at 6 p.m.
 
LAST SEASON
• The Waves are coming off an incredible season with the farthest run in the NCAA tournament since 2019, losing to eventual National Champion Long Beach State in the semi-finals.
• Pepperdine finished 4th in the MPSF, making a run in the conference tournament hosted in Malibu, beating higher-seeded USC and UCLA to win the whole thing.
• In just three seasons under head coach Jonathan Winder, it is the team’s most successful season under his leadership.
 
GAME NOTES
• This season marks the 56th and final season with Firestone Fieldhouse as the home for Pepperdine Men’s Volleyball
• Pepperdine will move into the Mountain at Mullin Park for the 2026-27 season.
• The Mountain is a new 3,600-seat arena that will give Pepperdine a state-of-the-art competition venue, complete with a 360-degree high-definition scoreboard, VIP and hospitality spaces, and custom team locker rooms.
• Owning 5 NCAA titles and 18 MPSF titles, with the most recent being earned last year, the Waves are no stranger to what it takes to put together a championship-level team.
• With one of the toughest schedules in the NCAA, Pepperdine is setting the season up for success with a NCAA quarterfinal rematch against Loyola Chicago, a semifinal rematch with Long Beach State and a trip to the islands, taking on No. 2 Hawai’i in March.
• Opening No. 4 in the AVCA preseason poll, the Waves are only behind LBSU, Hawai’i, and conference-foe UCLA.
Ryan Barnett, Cole Hartke, and Jacob Reilly all return as All-Americans for the Waves.
• All three played on some level of the national team this summer.
Ryan Barnett earned a silver medal with the U23 team at the Pan American Cup while also playing on the senior USA team with Jacob Reilly in the Pan American Cup.
Cole Hartke earned a bronze in the FIVB World Championship with the U21 team, the farthest the USA has ever gotten in the tournament.
• Redshirting last season, Grant Lamoureux is a player to keep an eye out for on this star-studded roster.
• Named the Junior Male Indoor Athlete of the Year this past year, the redshirt freshman brings plenty of experience regardless of never logging collegiate minutes.
• This summer, Lamoureux was a captain of the U19 World Championship squad with team USA where he led the team in kills nearly every time out.
• Redshirt Ford Harman transferred into Pepperdine from national-champion Long Beach State.
• This summer, Harman earned a Silver medal at the 2025 Men’s Beach Collegiate Challenge for team USA.
• Harman is originally from Santa Barbara, playing at Santa Barbara HS before college.
• Outside of the United States, the Waves represent three other countries in Cuba, Serbia, and Switzerland.
Andrej Polomac, a transfer from Purdue Fort-Wayne, is the sole Serbian on the squad, brings elite experience as a setter with an average of just under 9 aces per set last season.
• The Waves add even more international experience next year with two of the three commits coming from overseas, bringing another Serbian to Malibu as well as a middle blocker from the Czech Republic.
• In his fourth year at the helm, Winder is coming off his most successful season last year with a run to the final four in the NCAA tournament.
• Last season, Winder led the Waves to an MPSF title, the program’s first since 2019.  
• As the ninth coach at the helm, Winder is an alum of the program himself, earning a National Title with Pepperdine in 2005.
 
First serve is scheduled for 6 p.m. The game can be streamed on B1G+ (subscription required) with live stats available on pepperdinewaves.com
 
ABOUT PEPPERDINE MEN’S VOLLEYBALL
Pepperdine men’s volleyball boasts one of the richest histories in collegiate volleyball, with five NCAA National Championships. Four of those championships came under the direction of Hall of Fame coach Marv Dunphy who totaled 612 victories in 34 seasons at the helm. With 19 NCAA Appearances and 63 All-Americans, the program has consistently been a destination for top talent across the country. Under current head coach Jonathan Winder, the Waves reached the NCAA Final Four in his third season at the helm in 2025.
 
TICKETS
For more information and to purchase tickets to upcoming home events, visit here.
 
FOLLOW
To stay up-to-date on the latest Pepperdine women’s soccer news, follow the Waves on social media @PepperdineMVB_ .
 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

No. 3 Beach Begin 2026 Campaign with Home Matches Against Lindenwood, No. 15 McKendree

Published

on


LONG BEACH, Calif. — Fresh off a national championship season, No. 3 Long Beach State Men’s Volleyball opens the 2026 campaign at the LBS Financial Credit Union Pyramid with a pair of home matches, beginning with a season opener against Lindenwood on Friday, January 9, followed by a ranked showdown with No. 15 McKendree on Saturday. The opening weekend marks the start of a demanding schedule for the Beach, who enter the season as a Big West preseason favorite and a consensus national contender.

In the Rankings

• After finishing the 2025 season as the National Champion, Long Beach State starts the 2026 season ranked No. 3 in the AVCA National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll. The Beach garnered 460 total points and five first-place votes.

• McKendree is ranked No. 15 in the AVCA National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll. The Bearcats accumulated 167 points.

• The Big West is one of the most competitive Division I Men’s Volleyball conferences as all six Big West schools are nationally ranked, with No. 2 Hawai’i and No 3. Long Beach State sitting in the Top 5.

• This season, Long Beach State will face ten nationally ranked opponents in No. 1 UCLA, No. 2 Hawai’i, No. 4 Pepperdine, No. 10 UC San Diego, No. 11 CSUN, No. 13 Penn State, No. 14 Ohio State, No. 15 McKendree, No. 17 UC Santa Barbara and No. 19 George Mason. Additionally, the Beach will play one team that is receiving votes in Fort Valley State (9).

About The Beach

• No. 3 Long Beach State open the 2026 campaign looking to build on a national championship 2025 season which saw the Beach post a 30-3 overall record. The Beach went 9-1 in Big West action winning their fourth-straight regular season title and fourth national championship title.

• Long time Long Beach State Head Coach Alan Knipe retired after his championship 22nd season. The winningest coach in LBSU Men’s Volleyball program history, Knipe owns a career record of 449-171 for a winning percentage of .724.

 

• Replacing Knipe at the helm is long-time former Associate Head Coach Nick MacRae. MacRae is joined by Assistant Coaches McKay Smith, Amir-Lugo Rodriguez, Matt Prosser and Technical Coordinator Jon Parry. MacRae, a seasoned coach under Knipe, has worked at Long Beach State for the last 13 seasons helping Long Beach State capture three NCAA National Titles, two Big West Championships, and has helped lead the Beach to eight NCAA Final Four appearances.

• The Beach return 12 players from one year ago and welcome five newcomers.

• Senior Skyler Varga and Sophomore Alex Kandev, both returners, were named to the 2026 Big West Preseason Team. Varga returns as one of the nation’s premier attackers. Both earned NCAA All-Tournament Team honors for their performance in the NCAA Championship match. Varga finished the 2025 campaign with 270 kills (2.73 per set) on a .368 attack percentage, while adding 33 service aces, 70 total blocks, and 341 points across 99 sets. In addition to his on-court excellence, Varga also received CSC Academic All-America recognition. Kandev concluded his freshman season with 210 kills (3.23 per set) while hitting .458, and added 21 aces, 36 blocks, and 250 points in 65 sets.

North American Challenge

Long Beach State hosted the North American Challenge, a preseason exhibition tournament, featuring a total of four teams from the United States and Canada.

The tournament took place on Friday, Jan. 2 and Saturday, Jan. 4 with four matches played on day one and four on day two. The tournament was held in both the LBS Financial Credit Union Pyramid and the Gold Mine.

The United States won the tournament after sweeping all eight matches over two days.

The Beach were led by senior outside hitter Skyler Varga who was named MVP of the Tournament.

Big West Preseason Favorite

The Big West released its 2026 Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Poll and Team, and defending Big West regular season and National Champion Long Beach State was selected as the preseason favorite. The Beach garnered 24 total points and four first-place votes from league head coaches, signaling strong expectations for another elite season.

Long Beach State’s status as a national powerhouse was further reinforced in the 2026 AVCA National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll (Dec. 23), where the Beach were ranked No. 3 nationally behind UCLA and Hawai’i.

The Beach also placed multiple student-athletes on the 2026 Big West Preseason Coaches’ Team, as Skyler Varga and Alex Kandev earned preseason recognition following standout performances during Long Beach State’s championship 2025 season.

Following Long Beach State atop the Big West preseason poll, Hawai’i was chosen second with 22 points and two first-place votes, and UC Irvine was tabbed third with 17 points. CSUN, UC San Diego, and UC Santa Barbara rounded out the poll, each earning nine points.

 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

UA beach volleyball to host 3 regular season home tourneys

Published

on


Tucson has several opportunities to catch UA’s beach volleyball team in action at home when the season kicks off in February. 






Arizona beach volleyball will host three regular season home tournaments this year. 




The Wildcats will host three regular-season home tournaments, in addition to their Red-Blue scrimmage and the Big 12 Championship in April. 

First up is the scrimmage at 2 p.m. on Feb. 13, before Arizona heads to Phoenix for Grand Canyon’s Lopes Invitational on Feb. 20-21 to face TCU, GCU, UC Davis and Colorado Mesa. 

The first home tournament, the Cactus Classic, will host UTEP, ASU, Oregon and Georgia State on Feb. 27-28. 

The Cats will head up I-10 to Tempe for the Sun Devil Classic on March 6-7, which will also feature Southern Mississippi, Nebraska, ASU and Arizona Christian. 

A week later, March 13-14, UA will face Cal Poly, CSUN, Santa Clara and UC Davis at Cal Poly’s Mustang Roundup in San Luis Obispo before returning home for the Arizona Invitational, March 20-21, which will include Tarleton State, UTEP, Missouri State and San Francisco. 

People are also reading…

Arizona will close out March in Fort Worth, Texas, for the Big 12 Preview, along with TCU, ASU, Boise State, South Carolina and Florida State. 

The team’s final home tournament, before it hosts the Big 12 Championship April 23-24, will be the Wildcat Spring Challenge on April 3-4 vs. South Carolina, FGCU, Colorado Mesa and Hawaii.

In between the Wildcat Classic and the Big 12 Championship, UA will be New Orleans-bound for the NOLA Classic, hosted by Tulane, April 17-18, to face Tulane, Louisiana Monroe, New Orleans and Florida International. 

This year’s NCAA Beach Volleyball Championships will be in Gulf Shores, Alabama, May 1-3.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Tulane hires new volleyball coach | Tulane

Published

on


Tulane named Derek Schroeder its volleyball coach on Wednesday.

Schroeder, who is 279-234 in 17 years, spent the last three seasons at Jacksonville State after coaching Mercer for six years and Samford for eight, leading Samford to the NCAA tournament in 2011 and 2014. He guided Mercer to its first regular-season championships in 2020 and 2021, earning Southern Conference coach of the year honors in 2021.

He was not as successful at Jacksonville State, inheriting a program that had gone 65-15 the previous three seasons in the Ohio Valley and Atlantic Sun before moving to Conference USA. The Gamecocks went 5-22 in 2023, 10-21 in 2024 and 14-15 in 2025.

Schroeder replaces Jordana Price, who was fired in November after going 40-77 overall and 15-56 in the American during a four-year tenure. Tulane’s last NCAA tournament appearance was in 2008.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Nebraska volleyball setter named finalist for prestigous award

Published

on


Jan. 8, 2026, 6:31 a.m. CT

A Nebraska volleyball player has been named a finalist for another prestigious award. Setter Bergen Reilly, along with Olivia Babcock from Pittsburgh, Eva Hudson from Kentucky, and Mimi Colyer from Wisconsin, are the four finalists for the Class of 2026 Honda Sport Award for Volleyball.

Reilly had a tremendous 2025 season, helping the Huskers to a 33-1 record and a third straight Big Ten Championship. She averaged 10.47 assists per set and 2.70 digs per set with 73 kills, 67 blocks and 19 aces.

The Sioux Falls, S.D. native was a first-team AVCA All-American, AVCA Setter of the Year, Big Ten Player of the Year, Big Ten Setter of the Year, AVCA Region Player of the Year and All-Big Ten First Team. 





Link

Continue Reading
Motorsports4 weeks ago

SoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener

NIL4 weeks ago

DeSantis Talks College Football, Calls for Reforms to NIL and Transfer Portal · The Floridian

Sports4 weeks ago

#11 Volleyball Practices, Then Meets Media Prior to #2 Kentucky Match

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

Stempien to seek opening for Branch County Circuit Court Judge | WTVB | 1590 AM · 95.5 FM

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Nascar legal saga ends as 23XI, Front Row secure settlement

Sports4 weeks ago

Maine wraps up Fall Semester with a win in Black Bear Invitational

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

Princeton Area Community Foundation awards more than $1.3 million to 40 local nonprofits ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news %

Motorsports3 weeks ago

Ross Brawn to receive Autosport Gold Medal Award at 2026 Autosport Awards, Honouring a Lifetime Shaping Modern F1

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Sunoco to sponsor No. 8 Ganassi Honda IndyCar in multi-year deal

NIL3 weeks ago

Downtown Athletic Club of Hawaiʻi gives $300K to Boost the ’Bows NIL fund

Rec Sports4 weeks ago

WNBA’s Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese and Paige Bueckers in NC, making debut for national team at USA camp at Duke

Motorsports4 weeks ago

NASCAR, 23XI Racing, Front Row Motorsports announce settlement of US monopoly suit | MLex

Sports4 weeks ago

Woods, Ogunribido Named CCIW Women’s Indoor Track & Field Student-Athletes of the Week

Sports3 weeks ago

Beach Volleyball Unveils 2026 Spring Schedule – University of South Carolina Athletics

Sports4 weeks ago

Hope College Tops MIAA Commissioner’s Cup Fall Update

Most Viewed Posts

Trending