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Brooke Slusser speaks out on SJSU trans teammate’s alleged plan to hurt her

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EXCLUSIVE: Former San Jose State University volleyball co-captain Brooke Slusser is eight months removed from her final season, which included a conference investigation into an alleged plan to harm her by former teammate Blaire Fleming — a biologically male transgender athlete. 

Slusser has now come forward with new allegations related to the matter. 

Fox News Digital interviewed San Jose State athletic director Jeff Konya to inquire about Slusser’s claims and other details of the investigation. But Konya stood up after just around five minutes of related questions and walked away, saying “I’m done.”

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Slusser previously alleged in a lawsuit, signed by 10 other current or former women’s college volleyball players against the Mountain West and representatives of SJSU, that Fleming and other teammates snuck out the team hotel the night before an Oct. 3 game against Colorado State and met with an opposing player. 

The lawsuit alleged a teammate who snuck out with Fleming later told players and coaches of an alleged plan by Fleming, in a conspiracy with the Colorado State player, to have Slusser spiked in the face during a match. 

The lawsuit and complaint alleged the players who snuck out told other players and coaches they saw Fleming also hand over an SJSU scouting report with an agreement to throw the match in Colorado State’s favor. 

In November, the Mountain West Conference launched an investigation into the allegations but concluded “sufficient evidence” could not be found. 

Slusser now claims she had a conversation with a teammate who was interviewed as part of the conference’s investigation into Fleming’s alleged plan. Fox News Digital is not disclosing the identity of the teammate. 

“Based on what I was told, exactly what one of my teammates had seen go on that night — about talking about the scouting report and leaving the net open — was told to those lawyers. So, that should have been sufficient evidence [of the alleged plan by Fleming],” Slusser told Fox News Digital, adding she wants to see the investigation reopened. 

“People are telling you this happened, and it’s not second-hand information. She sat there and heard the conversation between Blaire and [former Colorado State volleyball player] Malaya [Jones]. So, to me, just from what I know without even having to dig deep into this investigation, there is sufficient evidence, and they were told sufficient evidence.” 

Fox News Digital cannot independently verify that Slusser’s teammate corroborated the allegations against Fleming when speaking to investigators.

Brooke Slusser and Blaire Fleming

Brooke Slusser (10) and Blaire Fleming (3) of the San Jose State Spartans call a play during the first set against the Air Force Falcons at Falcon Court at East Gym Oct. 19, 2024, in Colorado Springs, Colo. (Andrew Wevers/Getty Images)

Fox News Digital played a video clip of Slusser reciting these allegations for Konya at Mountain West media days July 15. 

“I have no idea if she’s telling the truth or not,” Konya said of Slusser’s claims. 

Konya could not confirm or deny whether any of the witnesses interviewed corroborated the allegations against Fleming.

“I have no idea,” Konya said. 

Public records obtained by Fox News Digital show Konya sent emails to help set up interviews with at least six witnesses for the November investigation. Konya said he was not made privy to any of the information shared in interviews.

When asked if he was satisfied with the “accuracy and thoroughness” of the investigation, Konya said, “Yeah, I believe it was done professionally.” 

The Mountain West announced the investigation had closed without finding “sufficient evidence” and that no discipline was “necessary” in a Nov. 15 letter obtained by Fox News Digital. That letter and the emails coordinating interviews for the investigation, obtained by Fox News Digital, repeatedly incorrectly stated the game took place Oct. 2. 

Konya said he was not aware that the incorrect date had repeatedly been used. 

However, in Konya’s emails setting up interviews with witnesses, he consistently referenced the incorrect Oct. 2 date for the game, and never cited the correct Oct. 3 date. 

The Nov. 15 letter announcing the investigation had closed without sufficient evidence was sent just three days after the first emails to set up interviews with witnesses were sent. 

When asked if he believed this was enough time to carry out a thorough investigation, Konya said, “I’m not going to answer anymore of these questions. I haven’t had the sufficient details to answer these questions.”

Slusser said she sustained a concussion her junior year in 2023 and looked to avoid hits to the head out of fear of permanent brain damage.

Konya said he was not aware of this either. 

When asked if he was satisfied with how the university handled the controversy involving Fleming in 2024, Konya said, “I think everybody acted in the best possible way they could, given the circumstances.”

The Mountain West hired the same law firm to carry out the investigation that was hired to defend the conference against Slusser’s claims

Fox News Digital reported in June that the law firm hired by the Mountain West Conference to carry out the investigation into Fleming’s allegations, Willkie Farr & Gallagher (WFG), was the same law firm that represented the conference against a request for a preliminary injunction to keep Fleming eligible for the women’s volleyball season and postseason. The request was filed by Slusser and the 10 other former and current Mountain West players and the University of Utah. 

The investigation and legal battle took place in the same month, November 2024. 

Now, Fox News Digital has obtained a court document that shows WFG not only defended the Mountain West against Slusser’s request for a preliminary injunction, but the firm is also defending the conference against Slusser’s lawsuit, according to a Jan. 25 motion to dismiss. The document was signed by multiple WFG attorneys.

That means WFG is defending the conference against a lawsuit that includes the very allegations against Fleming, which the law firm cleared in November.

Emails obtained by Fox News Digital show the lead WFG attorney for the Mountain West Conference in the Fleming investigation, Tim Heaphy, coordinated with Konya and SJSU and California State University legal counsel Dustin May to set up interviews with at least six witnesses in November. SJSU head volleyball coach Todd Kress was one of the witnesses. The identities of the other witnesses were redacted.

Slusser and former SJSU assistant volleyball coach Melissa Batie-Smoose told Fox News Digital they declined to be interviewed for the investigation. 

Kevin Marino, attorney for Bill Stepien, former campaign manager for Donald Trump's 2020 campaign, left, speaks to Tim Heaphy, chief investigative counsel for the select committee, during a hearing of the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the US Capitol in Washington, D.C., US, on Monday, June 13, 2022. The committee today sets out to prove Donald Trump was directly and even legally culpable in the storming of the US Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, making the case he kept pushing his stolen-election claim knowing it wasn't true.

Kevin Marino, attorney for Bill Stepien, the former manager of Donald Trump’s 2020 campaign, left, speaks to Tim Heaphy, chief investigative counsel for the select committee, during a hearing of the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the US Capitol in Washington, D.C., June 13, 2022.  (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Fox News Digital has asked May, Heaphy and Mountain West representatives multiple times if any of the witnesses who were interviewed corroborated the allegations against Fleming but has not received a response. 

WFG later deleted a Nov. 27 online press release from its website that announced the legal victory to keep Fleming eligible. The page is still viewable via an online archive. Fox News Digital has asked WFG multiple times why the page was deleted but has not gotten a response. 

Then, on Feb. 6, Heaphy reached back out to May, offering legal counsel in navigating a federal Title IX investigation into the situation involving the trans athlete, as seen in emails obtained by Fox News Digital. May responded on Feb. 18, declining Heaphy’s offer. Heaphy responded the next day, writing, “Please let me know if we can help in any way on this or other issues.” 

Slusser and her family have been emotionally affected and have lingering fears from the situation

Slusser was never hit in the head during the Oct. 3 game. But she recalled moments in the game that raised suspicion before she even knew about the allegations against Fleming. 

“There was a lot of court open, more than usual, when it came to where I was supposed to be playing defense,” Slusser said. “After finding out that it was [allegedly] purposeful, that the block wasn’t there, I was enraged, because … it could take one more slam to my head, and I could be done with volleyball forever.” 

Fleming had 10 errors in the game as SJSU lost in straight sets. 

Batie-Smoose previously told Fox News Digital she recalled Fleming refusing to follow orders during the game. She also recalled a moment at the end of the first set. 

“Close to the end of that set was when [Fleming] overpassed a serve right on top of the net for Malayla to hit toward Brooke Slusser, and then those two were kind of always doing eye contact and making smirks up to that point. But then, when that happened, they both laughed, and [Fleming] said, ‘Thank you,’ and that’s when Blaire blew her a kiss,” Batie-Smoose alleged.

Slusser alleged in her lawsuit against the Mountain West that, the night before the Oct. 3 game, one of her teammates approached her with a warning after the teammate received a text message. Slusser previously told Fox News Digital of this incident in October, before the allegations against Fleming came to light.

“One of my teammates got a DM, basically saying that she, and then my team, needed to keep [their] distance from me on game day against Colorado State, because it wasn’t going to be a good situation for me to be in and that my team needed to keep their distance,” Slusser alleged.

It is unclear whether that warning stemmed from Fleming’s alleged plan to have Slusser spiked in the face.

Slusser’s parents, Paul and Kim Slusser, told Fox News Digital they traveled to Colorado State for the Oct. 3 game and sat in a row in front of Fleming’s mother.

Former San Jose State University women's volleyball star Brooke Slusser with her parents, Paul and Kim Slusser.

Former San Jose State University women’s volleyball star Brooke Slusser with her parents, Paul and Kim Slusser. (Courtesy of Kim Slusser)

Slusser reflected on the emotional toll on her and her family after witnessing how the investigation was carried out. She claims she didn’t feel safe. 

“I really wasn’t safe with anyone at the school or even the people that they would hire to come in and help,” Slusser said of her experience with the university and volleyball program. “It was hard for my parents to handle. The fact that they’re all the way in Texas, and they couldn’t be there for me every single day was hard.”

Fox News Digital could not independently verify that Slusser’s safety was ever at risk while at SJSU.

Paul Slusser said he was “disappointed” with the nature and outcome of the investigation.

“It was very disappointing because we thought like, ‘Oh my God, maybe something positive will come of this and shine some light on what’s actually going on,'” he said.

Police protection persisted at SJSU games throughout the season after the Oct. 3 game, after the situation involving Fleming and Slusser drew national attention, all against the backdrop of a heated election season. 

The wave of attention first started shortly after Brooke Slusser joined a lawsuit, led by Riley Gaines and funded by the Independent Council on Women’s Sports (ICONS) against the NCAA in September. In November, Slusser filed her lawsuit, funded by ICONS, alongside Batie-Smoose and 10 other Mountain West players against San Jose State and the Mountain West. 

Slusser has alleged university officials hid knowledge of Fleming’s birth sex from her while allegedly frequently pairing the two in the same bedroom on overnight trips. 

“I’m openly changing in front of this person, thinking that it’s a woman, and … I could have had the chance to take myself out of that situation and at least go to a different room and request to be switched to another room and didn’t,” she said. “So, I got that opportunity of my choice to be taken away from me.” 

Slusser said after she joined the first lawsuit in September, interactions with Fleming turned hostile. 

“After I joined the lawsuit, Blaire did not like me whatsoever. There was a time where Blaire said, ‘I never want to speak to you again.’ And I said, ‘OK, that’s fine,'” Slusser said. “I just knew there was hatred toward me from Blaire.”

Slusser also claimed communication with Fleming during games changed after she joined the lawsuit. 

“There was a point where Blaire would not touch me, wouldn’t look at me, speak to me for a while until the coaches were like, ‘Get your crap together, we’re trying to play here,'” Slusser said. 

The on-court cooperation between Slusser and Fleming continued amid the tension all the way to the Mountain West Tournament championship match in Las Vegas Nov. 30, when SJSU lost to Colorado State, the same opponent with which Fleming was accused of conspiring. 

For Fleming and Slusser, it was their last game of NCAA women’s volleyball eligibility.

Slusser abandoned the SJSU campus and returned to her family’s home in Texas shortly after the start of the 2025 spring semester. She previously said she faced constant harassment and threats from students who disagreed with her stance against Fleming. So, she went home and finished her degree online. Paul Slusser also said the coverage by California media outlets played into her decision to abandon the campus. 

“I didn’t realize how much it had affected her. It really was shocking to me when she came home. She was not herself at all. She was a shell of herself,” Kim Slusser said. “It was very traumatizing to her.” 

NEVADA VOLLEYBALL PLAYERS WERE PRESSURED WITH ‘LEGAL ISSUES’ TO PLAY SJSU TRANS PLAYER DURING FEUD WITH SCHOOL

Kim Slusser provided a photo to Fox News Digital of the family at a game Sept. 8, saying, “Honestly, this was the last fond memory we have of her playing and (the) last game we wore San Jose gear.”

Former SJSU volleyball star Brooke Slusser and her parents Paul and Kim Slusser at a game on Sept. 8, which Kim claims is "the last fond memory we have of her playing."

Former SJSU volleyball star Brooke Slusser and parents Paul and Kim Slusser at a game Sept. 8, which Kim claims is “the last fond memory we have of her playing.” (Courtesy of Kim Slusser)

Slusser made an attempt to return to play one season of beach volleyball in the NCAA, which she had a year of eligibility for, entering the transfer portal this past spring around the time of her graduation from SJSU. 

But after communicating with several Division I coaches about potential offers, she pulled herself out of the transfer portal and abandoned the idea. 

Slusser said she came to the decision after praying. 

However, Slusser also cited concern about her well-being and potential retaliation for her beliefs and public profile, citing her experience with SJSU, Fleming and the controversial investigation into the trans athlete’s alleged plan to harm her. 

“I could have gotten there and could have had a lot of retaliation from just students or staff or the athletes even, and I didn’t know if that was something I could handle going through again,” Slusser said, adding she had no faith “at all” she would be protected in the event of retaliation. 

“I was never shown that at an institution I thought I could trust … so I could really trust no one. … There was a lot of fears going through that transfer process.” 

Slusser’s parents said the experience motivated her to become more devoted to Christianity, and she got baptized in the final week of June. 

Slusser has since relocated to North Carolina to begin her adult, post-college life. But she is still involved in her legal battles against the NCAA, Mountain West and representatives of San Jose State. 

The ongoing legal battle and federal investigation remains unsettled; Mountain West has made questionable claims

Slusser’s attorney, William Bock, filed a response to motions to dismiss one of the cases June 23. The response made mention of the allegations against Fleming to harm Slusser. Bock has provided a statement to Fox News Digital addressing the revelations of the Mountain West hiring WFG to conduct the investigation into the allegations against Fleming. 

“It is outrageous, improper and deceptive that the MWC hired the same law firm to both conduct a supposedly independent investigation of its member SJSU and defend the MWC in a federal lawsuit,” Bock said. 

“Hiring WFG to perform such conflicted and mutually exclusive roles suggests that Commissioner Nevarez and the MWC had no interest in discovering the truth. Instead, the MWC has long been focused solely upon advancing the interests of SJSU and pushing the narrative that men should be allowed in women’s college sports locker rooms and showers and to compete against women in college sports.” 

None of WFG’s attorneys have been accused of violating any applicable rules of professional conduct.

Fox News Digital asked Mountain West Commissioner Gloria Nevarez at her Mountain West Media Days press conference why the conference hired WFG to both conduct the investigation into Fleming and defend the athlete’s eligibility in court and if there was any concern about a conflict of interest.

Nevarez responded, “Well, that is a question concerning active litigation, so I’m not going to comment on ongoing litigation. But the statement that the same law firm represented the school in defending the player is incorrect.”

Fox News Digital did not insinuate in its question nor has it ever reported that the law firm represented San Jose State.

The Mountain West later provided a statement to Fox News Digital that claimed Nevarez “believed” the initial question was asking about the law firm representing SJSU. 

“Commissioner Nevarez believed you were asking about our law firm, Willkie Farr & Gallagher, representing both the Mountain West and San Jose State. It was clarified that you were asking about a potential conflict of interest with the lawsuit related to a conference policy and the match investigation,” the statement said.

The statement also claimed that WFG did not defend Fleming’s eligibility in the November legal dispute. However, multiple documents and the law firm’s own announcement suggest otherwise.

“To be clear, Willkie Farr & Gallagher is defending the Mountain West’s policy regarding forfeitures, not a student-athlete’s eligibility. Eligibility is determined by NCAA policy and the university, not the conference office. The investigation was focused on alleged player misconduct. The two matters in question are unrelated and thus there is no conflict of interest.”

Four conference opponents forfeited games against SJSU in 2024, and the status of the forfeited matches and the effect on conference seeding was challenged in the request for preliminary injunction. However, Fleming’s eligibility to continue the season and play in the conference was challenged as well as a key point.

WFG’s deleted Nov. 27 press release announcing the victory for the Mountain West against Slusser’s request for preliminary injunction noted the athlete’s right to play as the first issue in the dispute.

“Willkie secured a high-profile win for collegiate athletic conference Mountain West Conference in a suit brought by members of San Jose State University’s women’s volleyball team and other Mountain West teams that played against SJSU. The suit sought to (i) prohibit a transgender woman on the SJSU team from competing in the MWC’s Championship,” the press release said.

“Plaintiffs sought an order preliminarily (i) blocking the player at issue from playing in any remaining matches this season.”

The WFG attorneys who represented the Mountain West argued against the request for a preliminary injunction and made no clear distinction to challenge the plaintiffs’ request to have Fleming ruled ineligible. 

“Preliminary injunctions are an extraordinary remedy only granted in true emergencies. The moving plaintiffs should not be granted such an extraordinary remedy based on the fabricated sense of urgency created by their decision to hold onto their grievances until the eve of this year’s conference tournament,” the Mountain West’s response brief to Slusser’s request for preliminary injunction said.

Slusser and the other plaintiffs argued in the proceedings that “Fleming has been continuously ineligible to play women’s volleyball pursuant to Title IX as Fleming’s sex is male and is therefore ineligible to play in, and should not be permitted by the MWC to play in, the MWC women’s volleyball tournament.”

The lead attorney who represented the Mountain West in November, Wesley R. Powell, repeatedly insisted that the Mountain West is not subject to Title IX, according to transcripts of the November hearing obtained by Fox News Digital. 

“Our position is that we’re simply not subject to Title IX,” Powell said during the status conference. “To be subject to Title IX, we would have to be recipients of federal government support, and the conference is not a recipient of any such support. And, so, from our perspective, all of the details, the expert testimony, you know, virtually everything that has been put into the record is ultimately irrelevant to us.”

San Jose State is under an ongoing Title IX investigation by the U.S. Department of Education over Fleming being permitted to compete on the women’s volleyball team from 2022 to 2024. 

The Department of Education recently reached an agreement with the University of Pennsylvania after a federal probe into a 2022 incident involving former UPenn trans swimmer Lia Thomas. The university agreed to apologize to all the female athletes who had to compete with and share a locker room with Thomas in the 2021-22 season and has agreed to rescind all of Thomas’ program records. 

With the UPenn situation resolved, U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon will continue working to address the SJSU investigation. 

“Our investigation will continue,” McMahon told Fox News Digital.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the Mountain West, Willkie Farr & Gallagher, San Jose State University, Kress, Colorado State University and Jones’ current school, Southern Methodist University (SMU), for a response to all reported findings and the allegations by the Slusser family and Batie-Smoose. Jones transferred to SMU after the end of last season. 

When asked if the Mountain West will disclose any evidence from the investigation, particularly if any of the witnesses interviewed corroborated the allegations against Fleming, the conference declined.

“With litigation ongoing, the Mountain West will have no further comment,” a conference spokesperson said.

San Jose State has declined to respond to Slusser’s claims as well. 

“Due to ongoing litigation and federal investigation, we are unable to respond to your inquiry,” a university spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

Fox News Digital has attempted to reach Fleming via social media for comment.

No response has been provided by the other parties.

May’s office initially responded to Fox News Digital’s request for comment after providing the public records, requesting a list of questions and background information be provided before speaking. Fox News Digital did not provide the information or list of comments and requested a virtual or phone interview. 

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May’s office then responded with a statement, saying, “Any speculation that the firm or attorney mentioned in your inquiry represented SJSU or the CSU is unfounded.” Fox News Digital had not posed that question or any other stipulation, only an interview request, at that point. 

Fox News Digital later followed up with May’s office requesting an interview to address other questions and fulfilled his office’s request to provide background information on what would be discussed. 

May’s office responded, saying, “He will not be available,” and has not responded to requests for further comment.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.





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No. 1 seed Kentucky volleyball advances to National Championship after beating No. 3 seed Wisconsin in 5-set thriller – Kentucky Kernel

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No. 1 seed Kentucky volleyball (30-2, 15-0 SEC) advances to the 2025 National Championship with a 3-2 win over No. 3 seed Wisconsin (28-5, 17-3 Big Ten) in the Final Four.

This will be Kentucky’s second National Championship appearance in program history, with the first coming in the 2020-21 season when Kentucky took home the title.

Kentucky Wildcats outside hitter Eva Hudson celebrates after scoring a point during the Final Four volleyball match against Wisconsin on Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025, at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Mo. Photo by Will Luckett | Photo Manager

Wisconsin dominated the first set from start to finish, taking a 1-0 match lead with a 25-12 win in set one. Kentucky used a 6-0 run late in set two to pull ahead and even the match with a 25-22 set two victory. The Badgers attack simply overpowered Kentucky again in set three, allowing Wisconsin to win the set 25-21 and take a 2-1 lead in the match. Kentucky fended off a late comeback attempt by Wisconsin in set four, taking the set 26-24 to even the match at 2-2 and force set five. Kentucky got out to a 8-2 lead early in set five before taking the set 15-13, winning the match.

AVCA All-American First Team member Mimi Colyer was the driving force behind a Badger attack that kept the pressure on all night. She led the match with 32 kills and had a .348% hitting percentage.

Behind Colyer, Wisconsin totaled 77 kills and hit .375% in the match.

The Wildcats powerful outside hitter duo of Eva Hudson and Brooklyn DeLeye were the engine of Kentucky’s attack. Hudson had a team leading 29  kills for a new season high and hit .455%. DeLeye added 15 kills of her own and led the team in blocks with five and digs with 14.

The Wildcats totaled 65 kills with a .254% hitting percentage.

Set One

Wisconsin began the match with a 3-0 run, with back-to-back kills from Colyer.

The Badgers extended this lead to 8-2 with a 3-0 run, this forced Kentucky to take its first timeout early in the first set.

Wisconsin had seven kills with a perfect 1.000% hitting percentage at this point, the Badgers were overwhelming the Cats defense early.

The Badgers perfect hitting continued through 10 attempts, pushing Wisconsin ahead 15-6. This forced Kentucky to take its second timeout of the set.

The Wildcats defense has been a strength this season, but Wisconsin’s attack tore it up in the first half of set one.

Wisconsin continued to extend its lead following UK’s timeout, pulling ahead 21-9 with a 5-1 run.

The Badgers dominated set one, taking a 1-0 lead with a 25-12 set win.

Wisconsin recorded 15 kills in the first set with a .682% hitting percentage, the Badgers made zero attack errors.

Kentucky recorded just nine kills with a .056% hitting percentage, thanks largely to seven attack errors.

Wisconsin’s Colyer and Carter Booth both recorded seven kills in set one.

The Wildcats seemed to lack any answers for Wisconsin’s attack in the set, and couldn’t get their own going.

Set Two

Kentucky pulled out to a 3-1 in the second set, thanks to a kill and block assist from DeLeye.

This lead was extended to 6-3 after a 3-1 run by Kentucky.

Wisconsin mounted 6-2 run to take a 10-9 lead.

Wisconsin took a 15-14 lead into the media timeout after the set was tied at 10-10, 11-11, 12-12, 13-13 and 14-14.

a 3-0 Wildcat run allowed Kentucky to pull ahead 21-20, forcing Wisconsin to take its second timeout of the set.

Kentucky continued its run through the timeout, with another 3-0 run to force set point at 24-20.

Wisconsin stayed alive with a 2-0 run that shortened Kentucky’s lead to two points. Kentucky called its first timeout of the set as a result.

Hudson recorded her sixth kill of the set after the timeout, allowing Kentucky to win set two 25-22 and even the match at 1-1.

The Badgers attack cooled off in the second set, while Kentucky’s began to find its rhythm.

Wisconsin had 14 kills in set two with a hitting percentage of .229%. The Badgers had six attack errors after having none in the first set. The Badgers also recorded six service errors.

Kentucky had 13 kills with a .258% hitting percentage.

Hudson not only led UK in kills in the set, she also recorded two blocks and four digs.

Booth had five kills in the set, bringing her total to 12 kills at a .786% hitting percentage through two sets.

Set Three

Colyer recorded four straight kills as Wisconsin got out to a 4-2 lead in set two.

Another 4-2 run by the Badgers gave them a 8-5 lead, with Colyer accounting for five of those points.

An injury forced Wisconsin to call its first timeout of the set with an early lead.

Wisconsin mounted a 4-1 run after its timeout to pull ahead 12-7, this forced Kentucky’s first timeout of the set.

The Wildcats mounted a 4-1 run that shortened the Badgers lead to 15-13.

A 3-0 run by Kentucky allowed the Wildcats to pull within one, Wisconsin called its second timeout of the set with a 21-20 lead.

Wisconsin forced set point at 24-21, leading to the Wildcats second timeout of the set.

The Badgers won the first rally out of the timeout to win set three 25-21, taking a 2-1 match lead.

Colyer had 12 kills in set three, leading the Badgers oppressive attack. Wisconsin had 21 kills total and hit .386% in the set.

The Wildcats had their best attacking set of the match with 16 kills and a .326% hitting percentage, but they were unable to keep up with Wisconsin.

DeLeye and Hudson each had five kills in the set.

Kassie O’Brien assisted on 15 of the Cats 16 kills in the set, nearly doubling her match total.

Set Four

Kentucky got out to a 3-1 lead in set four, Wisconsin responded with a 4-1 run that put the Badgers ahead 6-4.

The Wildcats mounted a 3-0 run, taking a 7-6 lead with a service ace from Molly Tuozzo.

Wisconsin responded with a 3-0 run of its own to pull ahead 9-7.

Kentucky went into the media timeout on a 5-1 run, allowing the Cats to hold a 15-13 lead. Hudson was responsible for 3 of these points, with two kills and a service ace.

A 3-1 Wildcat run allowed Kentucky to extend its lead to 19-16.

Wisconsin took a timeout after Kentucky pulled ahead 20-17.

The Badgers pulled within one point twice but called another timeout when UK pulled ahead 23-21.

The Wildcats forced set point at 24-21, but the Badgers pulled back to within one and forced a Kentucky timeout.

Wisconsin evened the set at 24-24, but Kentucky scored on two consecutive rallies to win the set 26-24. This evened the match at 2-2, forcing a shortened fifth set.

Set Five

A service ace by Trinity Ward gave UK a 2-1 lead in set five, a solo block by Lizzie Carr brought the lead to 3-1. Hudson’s kill turned this into a 4-0 run that forced a Wisconsin timeout.

The Wildcats continued through the timeout, an error by Wisconsin and kill from DeLeye put UK ahead 6-1.

O’Brien recorded a kill then assisted Hudson to put Kentucky ahead 8-2 at the side switch.

Wisconsin came out of the side switch with a 4-1 run to shrink UK’s lead to 9-6.

DeLeye’s third kill of the set put Kentucky ahead 11-7, forcing Wisconsin to call a timeout.

Wisconsin mounted a 2-0 run out of the timeout, coming within two points.

A kill by Hudson forced match point at 14-11, but Wisconsin responded with a 2-0 run to cut the Wildcats lead to 14-13. This forced a timeout from Kentucky.

Kentucky came out of the timeout and forced a block error to win the match with a 15-13 victory in set five.

The Wildcats will take on No. 3 seed Texas A&M in the 2025 National Championship at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri, on Sunday, Dec. 21, at 5 p.m. ET.

It will be the first time in NCAA history that two SEC teams will face off in the National Championship. The Wildcats are the only team to win the National Championship as a member of the SEC.

The Wildcats went on the road to defeat Texas A&M in four sets on Oct. 8, 2025, en route to Kentucky’s undefeated SEC run and ninth consecutive SEC regular season title.



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Jackson, Reilly Take Home AVCA Positional Awards – University of Nebraska

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Nebraska volleyball’s Andi Jackson and Bergen Reilly received top positional awards at the AVCA Awards Banquet at the Kansas City Convention Center on Friday. 

Jackson was named the Middle Blocker of the Year, while Reilly was named the Setter of the Year. The AVCA positional awards are new this season.

Pitt junior Olivia Babock was named the AVCA Player of the Year for the second straight season, as well as Opposite of the Year. Wisconsin’s Mimi Colyer took home Outside Hitter of the Year, and Iowa State libero Rachel Van Gorp was Libero of the Year. 

Reilly set the Huskers to a school-record .351 hitting percentage, as the Big Red concluded their season with a 33-1 overall record and 20-0 mark in Big Ten play en route to a third straight conference title. Reilly averaged 10.47 assists per set and 2.70 digs per set. She also totaled 73 kills, 67 blocks and 19 aces. 

Reilly was named a first-team AVCA All-American, Big Ten Player of the Year, Big Ten Setter of the Year, AVCA Region Player of the Year and All-Big Ten First Team. NU’s .351 hitting percentage ranks first nationally and is the best hitting percentage by a Big Ten team since 2009 Penn State.

A junior from Sioux Falls, S.D., Reilly set Nebraska to a .400 or better hitting percentage nine times this season, a school record in the rally-scoring era. Reilly had double-doubles in all six of the Husker matches that went longer than three sets, and she had four double-doubles in sweeps.

A three-time AVCA All-American and one of four finalists for AVCA Player of the Year, Reilly ranks No. 3 in school history in career assists in the rally-scoring era with 3,723. Her career assists per set average of 10.70 ranks No. 4 among active Division I players and No. 2 in school history in the rally-scoring era.

Jackson was chosen to the AVCA All-America First Team for the second straight year, as well as the All-Big Ten First Team. She was also an AVCA Player of the Year Semifinalist and AVCA All-Region Team for the third straight year. 

The junior middle blocker from Brighton, Colo., averaged 2.74 kills per set on .467 hitting with 1.12 blocks per set and 16 aces. Her .467 hitting percentage led the nation and was the No. 3 hitting percentage in school history for a single season. 

In conference-only matches, Jackson hit .559 to break the Big Ten record for hitting percentage in conference-only matches in a season, which was .541 by Arielle Wilson from Penn State in 2008. Jackson ended her junior season with a career hitting percentage of .437, which is the No. 1 mark in school history and the No. 1 mark among active Division I players. 



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YSU Collegiate Invitational Presented by Southwoods Health Meet Information

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2026 Youngstown State University Indoor Track & Field 14th Annual Collegiate Invitational Meet Presented by Southwoods Health will start at 1 pm | Friday, Jan. 16

Entry Registration Opens up on Direct Athletics :

Friday, December 19 at 5pm

Time Schedule of Events

Running Events start at 1pm

All Field Events start at 1pm

Running Events — Rolling Schedule Women first, Men to Follow

1pm Women 5000M 

Men’s 60M Hurdles Qualifying Round

Women’s 60M Hurdles  Qualifying Round

Women’s 60M Dash  Qualifying Round

Men’s 60M Dash  Qualifying Round

Men’s 5000M

Men’s 60M Hurdles PRELIMS

Women’s 60M Hurdles PRELIMS

Women’s 60M Dash PRELIMS

Men’s 60M Dash PRELIMS

Women’s Mile Run 

Men’s Mile Run

Women’s 400M

Men’s 400M

Women’s 60M Hurdles FINALS

Men’s 60M Hurdles FINALS

Women’s 60M Dash FINALS

Men’s 60M Dash FINALS

Women’s 500M Dash FINALS

Men’s 500M Dash FINALS

Women’s 800m

Men’s 800m

Women’s 200M Dash

Men’s 200M Dash

Women’s 3000M Run 

Men’s 3000M Run

Women’s 1600M Relay

Men’s 1600M Relay

Field Events Start at 12noon

Seeded Women’s Pole Vault

Seeded Men’s Pole Vault

Unseeded Women’s Pole Vault

Unseeded Men’s Pole Vault

Women’s High Jump–Men’s High Jump to follow

Women’s Weight Throw–Men’s Weight Throw to follow

Men’s Shot Put–Women’s Shot Put to follow

Men (West Pit) and Women (East Pit)

Long Jump–Triple Jump follow 20 minutes upon completion of Long Jump

**Finals in field events will consist of the top Nine marks from the qualifying rounds.**

Meet : Open NCAA sanctioned Indoor Track & Field Competition.

Timing: Fully automatic FinishLynx system

Location: The Watson and Tressel Training Site (WATTS) on the YSU campus. The WATTS features a full-length Shaw Sportexe Power Blade HP+ synthetic turf system football field, a 300-meter state-of-the-art mondo track surface, two long-jump pits, a high-jump pit, four batting cages, protective netting, training room and locker rooms.

GPS address: 651 Elm St. | Youngstown, OH 44555

Entries: Entries are due by Tuesday, January 13 by 7pm on Direct Athletics, consisting of event entries with best marks from the previous year or realistic projected marks. All entries will be done on-line at www.directathletics.com.

Please visit the Direct Athletics website at your earliest convenience in order to familiarize yourself with how the entry process works.

Also, please limit FIVE athletes per event. If you have an event with more than five quality athletes, please text Brian Gorby at (330) 519-7591 and we’ll help to get more entry’s added, if needed.

We always try to help accommodate additional team /individual additional Entry’s.

**Note: Please check YSUsports.com after the entry deadline for changes or adjustments to the meet time schedule!

Internet Entry Lists: Final entry lists will be posted on our website, YSUsports.com on Thursday, January 15. Please check to make sure your athletes are entered correctly. If there are mistakes or scratches, please email bdgorby@ysu.edu & ysutrackmeets@gmail.com .

Entry Fees: $ 500 per each team, men &  women genders are separate, consisting of 10 or more individuals in unlimited events are paid online, when you complete Entry’s on Direct Athletics or $ 25 per individual event entry & paid online at Direct Athletics.

ENTRY FEES

$ 25 per ENTRY (i.e. 2 events entered would be $ 50 )  Entry fees must be paid in advance online when you enter on DirectAthletics (all major credit and debit cards accepted).

Relay only Entry’s $ 7 per runner for a total of $ 28 per relay team. 

REFUND POLICY

Outside of meet cancellation, there is a strict NO REFUND policy on entry fees.

Absolutely no refunds will be processed due to scratches, change of plans, inability to travel, illness, injuries, etc.

Spikes: ONLY 1/4 inch or shorter pyramid spikes will be allowed and all spikes will be checked prior to events. NO pin or needle spikes, spike elements, or any other type of spike will be allowed.

High Jump: All high jump competitions will be conducted on the Mondo surface.

Sections/Heats/Flights: Flights will be seeded by distance with best marks in the latest sections/flights.

Finals in field events will consist of the top nine marks from the qualifying rounds.

There will be prelims and finals in the 60 and 60h. All other races will be run as sections against time with the fastest heats being run first.

Implement Weigh-In: 30 minutes prior to event at the Throws area.



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Texas A&M volleyball advances to national championship with sweep of Pitt

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KBTX) – Texas A&M head coach Jamie Morrison and his squad have fought through the postseason for the ability to practice together one more time, he said.

This edition of Aggies will get the maximum number of practices a team can hold.

Thursday, third-seeded A&M swept No. 1 seed Pitt (29-27, 25-21, 25-20) to punch its first-ever ticket to the NCAA Tournament national title game inside Kansas City’s T-Mobile Center.

The Aggies will face Southeastern Conference-mate Kentucky Sunday at 2:30 p.m. for a shot to hoist a national championship trophy.

“This is crazy,” middle blocker Ifenna Cos-Okpalla said. “This is an absolute crazy experience. We have had faith in ourselves all year, from the first game of the season. We knew that we were capable of this, but now living it, like, ‘Wow.’ This is insane. It’s really cool.”

Outside hitter Kyndal Stowers paced the Aggies with 16 kills, followed by Logan Lednicky’s 14. Pitt’s Olivia Babcock was the match’s leading attacker with 22 kills.

A&M dominated the service line through the match, which included six service aces.

The Aggies went hit-for-hit with Pitt through an opening set that saw 17 ties and eight lead changes. Pitt weathered four Aggie set points, and had two of their own, before A&M finally put Set 1 away with a kill from Stowers.

Pitt put together an 8-0 run through the middle of the second set to take a 15-11 lead, but the Aggies immediately countered with their own 9-2 run to pull the match back in their favor. A 4-0 run ultimately put the set on ice, giving the Aggies a 2-0 lead.

A&M has built upon the experiences of the season and this set is was no different. In the Aggies’ Elite Eight win over Nebraska, the Cornhuskers put together an 8-1 run through the middle of the marathon fourth set that the Aggies ultimately dropped. Thursday, they cut off the skid before it cost them a set.

“We were like, ‘Hey, we’re not doing that again,’” Stowers said. “’They’re going on a run right now. We’re going to recognize that, props to them for what they’re doing, but we are going to go respond and we’re not going to let that keep happening.”

A&M closed out the third set on a 5-1 run to claim the match.

The Aggies hit .382 to Pitt’s .344 in the match.

“I’m proud of our team just because we talk a lot about staying present and enjoying moments and I thought, in all of those moments, we enjoyed every single second of it,” Morrison said. “Every single time we were pushed, we talked a lot about responses, and we had a response and that’s all you can ask for in these moments.”

The Aggies will be out for revenge Sunday, as Kentucky is the only squad that downed the Aggies in SEC play this season in a 3-1 Wildcat win in Reed Arena. It will be the first time in the history of the tournament two SEC teams will face each other in the championship game.

“Y’all keep hearing, ‘Why not us?’” Lednicky said. “Like, literally, ‘Why not us?’ I think we are considered the underdog in a lot of moments, just because we haven’t been here before. But we know we have all the right pieces so, ‘Why not us?’”

KBTX reporter Dylan Chryst Watkiss contributed to this report from Kansas City, Mo.



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Two Rams Named to the CSC Academic All-District Team

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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – The 2025-26 Academic All-District® Women’s Volleyball Teams, selected by College Sports Communicators, recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the court and in the classroom. The CSC Academic All-America® program separately recognizes honorees in four divisions — NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III and NAIA.
 
The CSC Academic All-District® teams include the student-athletes listed at the links above.

Academic All-District® honorees were considered for advancement to the CSC Academic All-America® ballot.

For WSSU, Aria Caldwell and Zoe Chesson were named to the team.

Student-athletes selected as CSC Academic All-America® finalists are denoted with an asterisk and will advance to the national ballot to be voted on by CSC members. First-, second- and third-team Academic All-America® honorees will be announced Jan. 13, 2026.

The Division II and III CSC Academic All-America® programs are partially financially supported by the NCAA Division II and III national governance structures to assist CSC with handling the awards fulfillment aspects for the 2025-26 Divisions II and III Academic All-America® programs. The NAIA CSC Academic All-America® program is partially financially supported through the NAIA governance structure.



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Olivia Babcock Named Back-To-Back AVCA National Player of the Year

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KANSAS CITY – The American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) named Olivia Babcock the 2025 AVCA National Player of the Year on Friday. Babcock becomes just the fifth player in the award’s history to earn the honor in back-to-back seasons. Additionally, she was honored as the inaugural AVCA Rightside Hitter of the Year, an award introduced this season.

Babcock once again swept the sport’s top individual accolades in 2025, earning AVCA National Player of the Year, ACC Player of the Year and AVCA East Coast Region Player of the Year honors. She is the only player in Pitt history to be named a three-time AVCA First Team All-American and was recently selected as the Pittsburgh Regional Most Outstanding Player after leading the Panthers to their fifth consecutive National Semifinal.

Earlier this season, Babcock set the program’s single-match kills record with 45 against North Carolina. She is the only player in NCAA volleyball this year to reach that mark and the first since Cincinnati’s Jordan Thompson recorded 50 kills against UConn on Nov. 3, 2019.

Anchoring the Pitt offense, Babcock averaged personal-best marks of 5.17 kills per set and 2.09 digs per set. She earned AVCA National Player of the Week honors earlier this season and was named ACC Offensive Player of the Week five times during the 2025 campaign.



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