Sports
Christian Teresi, Nate Toth lead Marist boys volleyball to another state title
When Christian Teresi and Nate Toth walked into Marist as freshmen, RedHawks boys volleyball coach Jordan Vidovic knew they were special.
“I saw how crazy talented they were,” he said. “I’ve known Christian since he came to a camp in second or third grade, and I’ve seen him grow. Plus, Nate, I can’t tell you what he’s meant.
“They are two different kids, but there’s a bond they’ve created. We expected a lot out of them, like we did from all these seniors.”
Led by the T&T combo, the RedHawks and their seniors are leaving with back-to-back state championships.
Teresi had 14 kills, 15 assists and seven digs from his right side/setter position. Toth totaled 11 kills from the outside as Marist captured its second straight title with a 25-20, 25-20 victory over Glenbard West on June 7 at Hoffman Estates.
It’s the fifth overall state championship for the RedHawks (40-2).
“We won it last year, and we had a target on our backs,” Toth said. “But we wanted championship No. 2, what more motivation do you need than that? This one is better.
“We came here to finish the job. There’s no one I’d rather do it with than Christian.”
Seniors Jacob Finley (18 assists, six digs), Devlin Biggs (five kills), Matt Rahn (four kills), Griffin McElroy (three kills, two blocks), Tommy Doherty (two kills, block), and Rorey Donnelly (11 digs, three assists) were also big for the RedHawks, who graduate 10 players.
The opening set was some high-impact action as there were 13 ties and four lead changes through 14-14. Then Teresi capped off a 6-1 run with a trio of kills. The Hilltoppers crept back within 22-20, but Biggs banged a kill, and two Glenbard West errors ended it.
There were eight ties in the second set, but the Hilltoppers never led. The last tie was 16-16, and once again the RedHawks had a 6-1 burst. Glenbard West never got closer than four the rest of the way. A Biggs kill ended it.
“I love hitting, it’s more exciting than setting,” Teresi said. “I was telling Jacob to keep setting me. The guys look to me, and Jacob is the quarterback of the team until I get in the back row.
“Nate and I came in together, and we really built it in the last two years, and the connection is there. I feel like we forgot about last year, and this one was more earned.”
The RedHawks’ only two losses were to out-of-state teams. They only dropped one set to an in-state team all season. That was in a 17-25, 25-14, 25-21 win over Lake Park on June 6 in a quarterfinal match.
“We weren’t playing Marist volleyball,” Toth said of the Lake Park match. “We had to regroup.”
Teresi, who had 15 kills and 13 assists, agreed.
“I felt it was a good thing for us,” he said. “We were too comfortable in the first set.”
Marist toppled Lane, which placed third, 25-15, 25-19 in the semifinals. The RedHawks are the 11th team in state history to have 40 or more wins in a season. Their only losses were to Mira Costa, Calif., which they also beat, and Indianapolis Roncalli. Those two teams finished the season ranked No. 1 and No. 3 in the Nation on MaxPreps.
“There is no doubt in my mind because we went out and did it,” Vidovic said of his team being among the best. “We went out and played the best of the best. We went toe-to-toe with the most stacked high-school volleyball teams, probably ever.
“I’ve been around some great Illinois teams as a player, as a spectator, as a sibling, as a coach, and I’ve seen some phenomenal teams, but the way the game is played right now, the speed and the way the ball is travelling, there was nothing like that back then.”
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Sports
21 NJAC Women’s Volleyball Players Earn Academic All-District Recognition
PITMAN, NJ — The New Jersey Athletic Conference had 21 student-athletes named to the 2025 Academic All-District® Women’s Volleyball Teams for NCAA Division III, as announced by the College Sports Communicators (CSC).
The Academic All-District® honor recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom. Honorees were considered for advancement to the CSC Academic All-America® ballot, with finalists denoted by an asterisk. First-, second- and third-team Academic All-America® honorees will be announced January 13, 2026.
The 21 NJAC honorees are listed below by institution:
Aubre Adams, Kean
Annabelle Valencia, Kean
Bryn Bautista, Montclair State
Sofia DiProfio, Montclair State
Camryn Muuss, Montclair State
Lily Thomas, Montclair State
Katie Bishop, Ramapo
Ava Best, Rowan
Gabriella Cooper, Rowan
Hutton Cordrey, Rowan
Vanessa Hutchinson, Rowan
Shayla Moody-Santos, Rutgers-Newark
Jaedyn Simba-Malasarte, Rutgers-Newark
Kristen Burton, Stockton
Kate Louer*, Stockton
Lauren Sommer, Stockton
Rileigh Wilson, Stockton
Kristian Glenn, William Paterson
Laura Gruener, William Paterson
Abby Houpt, William Paterson
Cecilia Miller, William Paterson
Sports
Four Eagles Named To CSC Academic All-District Volleyball Team
GREENWOOD, Ind. – North Carolina Central student-athletes Neira Joldic, Loren Johnson, Makenzi Searcy and Manuela Cripa Nasser earned spots on the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District Division I Volleyball Team this week.
The CSC Academic All-District honor recognized student-athletes who were at least a sophomore academically and athletically, posted at least a 3.5 cumulative grade point average and played in at least 90 percent or started in at least 66 percent of the team’s games in the 2025 season. Liberos qualified as starters for nominating purposes.
The CSC Academic All-America® program separately recognizes honorees in four divisions — NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III and NAIA.
Sports
Three Monarchs Named to Academic All-District Volleyball Team
NORFOLK, Va. – The 2025-26 Academic All-District Women’s Volleyball teams, selected by College Sports Communicators, were announced earlier this week with Kate Kilpatrick, Adrienne Peji, and Elisa Maggi all earning the distinction.
The Academic All-District teams recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances both 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.
To be eligible for the honor, student-athletes must earn at least a 3.5 grade point average, compete in 90% of their team’s matches, or start in at least 66% of the team’s matches. Liberos, although not counted in stats as starters, were counted as such for nominating purposes. Nominees must also have completed one full calendar year at their institution and be at least a sophomore both academically and athletically.
Click here to view this year’s Academic All-District teams.
This marks the second time Kilpatrick and Magi have earned Academic All-District honors and it is the first time for Peji.
Kilpatrick appeared in 25 matches for the Monarchs this season, all at libero, and led the team with 28 service aces and 353 digs (3.84 per set). Her other season totals included 102 assists, 28 points, and a 93.6 serve receive percentage. The Raleigh, North Carolina native reached double-digit digs 21 times, to include a season high 23 digs versus Georgia State on Oct. 18. The junior became the first Monarch in program history to eclipse 1,000 career digs.
Peji played in all 27 matches for ODU, starting eight, and led the team in sets played with 99. Her junior season saw her tally 196 digs (1.98 per set), 26 assists, 17 aces, one kill, and 18 points. The defensive specialist from Virginia Beach had 10 double-digit dig performances, including a new career high of 16 digs at Coastal Carolina on Oct. 4.
Maggi started all 27 matches, played in 98 sets, and finished the regular season ranked fourth in the Sun Belt in both total attacks (1,006) and attacks per set (10.27). She led the Monarchs with 357.5 points and 315 kills (3.21 per set), was second on the team with 220 digs (2.25 per set), and was third with 21 aces and 39 blocks. The junior from Pavia, Italy turned in four double-doubles and was named to both the UMBC and VCU All-Tournament Teams.
Sports
A look to the future for the KU volleyball roster
Kahner Sampson/Special to the Journal-World
KU freshman Logan Bell (left) and sophomore Grace Nelson wait for an Iowa State serve during the Jayhawks’ match on Friday, Oct. 10, 2025, at the Horejsi Family Volleyball Arena in Lawrence.
One of the qualities that makes Nebraska so good, Kansas coach Matt Ulmer told reporters after his team got eliminated by the Cornhuskers last week, is that they’ve experienced disappointment in the past and it makes them “hungrier to keep building.”
“For us, this is the first time really that this group is going to feel this, so hopefully that makes our offseason that much better,” he said. “Again, hopefully there’s still great memories for the people that are graduating, but for the group that’s behind, we’re going to keep raising the bar, keep trying to go more deeper and deeper in the tournament.”
Indeed, disappointing though the loss was — 3-0 (25-12, 25-11, 25-12) at the hands of one of college volleyball’s great powers — it can serve as an opportunity for development.
“It’s all part of the experience that you learn to grow from as a college athlete,” sophomore middle blocker Reese Ptacek said, “and so it’s just how do you take this and how do you apply it to what will be the rest of your career?”
And it came at the end of what was ultimately a successful season for Ulmer in his first year with the Jayhawks, one in which they came together despite a roster overhaul and a coaching change to reach the program’s fourth-ever Sweet 16.
“To me, it’s a great first start, and now we keep building the roster how we need to to be able to compete at the highest level,” Ulmer said.
The roster
Building a team is never straightforward in modern college athletics, and prospective transfer-portal entries and acquisitions could certainly alter the outlook for the 2026 Jayhawks (and in some cases already have done so). But they are currently poised to return a sizable chunk of their production from Ulmer’s inaugural campaign, with a few key exceptions.
Six players went through senior day: Katie Dalton, Brynn Kirsch, Molly McCarthy, Ellie Schneider, Rhian Swanson, and Ryan White. Kirsch did not play in 2025, McCarthy served as a periodic defensive specialist and Schneider appeared in just four sets after the month of September. The three biggest losses from that group are those of the starting setter Dalton, the kills-per-set leader Swanson and the starting libero White.
Dalton was one of the stories of KU’s season, a longtime backup to Camryn Turner in earlier years who rose to the occasion as a senior and turned in some standout performances, averaging 8.76 assists per set and earning a second-team all-conference honor. She recently announced her transfer to Creighton.
Her rise was all the more striking because it happened despite the offseason addition of Cristin Cline, an all-freshman selection for Ulmer at Oregon. While Dalton ultimately served as KU’s primary setter, Cline still played pretty extensively, both in certain matches against top competition that she handled on her own and along with Dalton in the occasional 6-2 system. (Both she and Dalton were team captains.)
The Jayhawks also still have Ellie Moore, a former recruit of Ray Bechard’s who redshirted during the season and has received the occasional mention from Ulmer for the competition she provides during practice; in all, KU looks to be well situated at setter, at least to start out.
Swanson, much like Dalton, was a Bechard holdover who seized the opportunity for increased playing time with a new group of teammates during her senior season. The McPherson native was one of KU’s most consistent attackers on a team that never quite got its offense playing as well as its defense. The Jayhawks will likely need to become more terminal in the years ahead, and they’re already set to supplement a group of returnees headlined by all-conference selection Grace Nelson with freshman signees like Tessa Dodd, Avery Poulton and Ryan Sadler. (Selena Leban transferred to Florida.) Ulmer has praised the athleticism and especially the leaping ability of his new group of pins.
White, a transfer from Oregon State, originally planned to join Ulmer at Oregon and followed him to Kansas. The libero Ulmer used to tell his Ducks to hit the ball away from proved quite a valuable addition, particularly given that KU’s previous libero Raegan Burns tore her ACL and meniscus early in the season. White, the third captain along with Cline and Dalton, averaged 3.92 digs per set.
The prospect of bringing back Burns surely helps matters on the defensive end, as does the extensive playing time Logan Bell received as a defensive specialist (188 digs in 129 sets) during her freshman season, although her future may be as an undersized pin hitter in the vein of Ulmer’s former Oregon standout Brooke Nuneviller.
With that in mind, it makes a lot of sense that Ulmer has already secured the transfer-portal commitment of Olivia Hasbrook, a 5-foot-8 libero from Ohio State, originally from Eureka, Missouri, who has two years left to play. Hasbrook played every set for the Buckeyes each of the last two seasons, averaging 3.73 digs per set in 2024 and 3.38 in 2025, and will add a veteran presence to the group.
Elsewhere, there’s a lot to like about what KU has coming back, or at least is projected to retain. Ptacek continues to excel as one of the league’s top middle blockers and still has two years of eligibility remaining, and while Croatian freshman Aurora Papac, who blocked well in her first taste of college volleyball, is reportedly in the portal, Aisha Aiono garnered more playing time late in the season. Jaeli Rutledge is joining the fold at that position in the class of 2026 too, as is two-sport athlete Cydnee Bryant, who also plays basketball.
KU’s other first-team all-conference selection, and the American Volleyball Coaches Association’s freshman of the year for the Central Region, was Jovana Zelenović, the 6-foot-7 opposite from Serbia whose presence bolstered the Jayhawks greatly in multiple facets of the game, including as their best serving threat with 46 aces on the season. But she too is in the portal, On3 reported on Monday, which would be a significant loss.
The good news for the Jayhawks is that in 2026 signee Taylor Stanley, they have another highly touted right-side hitter in the pipeline. She hails from Overland Park and already has experience representing the United States internationally at the youth level. This could be a position at which KU looks to add in the portal.
Even with some needs to fill, it should be a significantly calmer offseason than Ulmer’s first at the helm, as the Jayhawks look to build on their results from the 2025 campaign.
Kahner Sampson/Special to the Journal-WorldKU sophomore Cristin Cline sets the ball for a hitter during the Jayhawks’ match against Arizona State on Friday, Sept. 26, 2025, at the Horejsi Family Volleyball Arena in Lawrence.
Kahner Sampson/Special to the Journal-WorldKU sophomore Reese Ptacek looks to the other side of the court before serving to Arizona State on Friday, Sept. 26, 2025, at the Horejsi Family Volleyball Arena in Lawrence.
Jay LaPrete/Ohio State AthleticsOhio State’s Olivia Hasbrook makes a pass against Miami on Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025, in Coral Gables, Fla.
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Volleyball’s Russell, Murphy named CSC Academic All-District
WORCESTER, Mass. – Highlighted by Academic All-Patriot League selection senior setter Katie Russell, two members of the Holy Cross volleyball team were selected to the 2025 College Sports Communicators Academic All-District Team the organization announced on Tuesday afternoon.
In order to qualify for the CSC Academic All-District Team eligible nominees must have a 3.50 GPA or higher, be at least a sophomore academically and athletically, compete in 90 percent of the institution’s matches played or must start in at least 66 percent of the institution’s matches. Liberos, although not counted in stats as a starter, may be counted as such for nominating purposes.
Joining Russell on the CSC Academic All-District Team is sophomore middle blocker Lacey Murphy.
Russell, a political science major with a 3.73 GPA, appeared in all 32 matches for the Crusaders in 2025, making 28 starts pacing the team in assists (821) and assists per set (6.73) while ranking second in aces (34), digs (233), and fourth in digs per set (1.91). This season, she climbed from not ranked to sixth place on the program’s career assist list (1,674). She finished the season ranking third in the Patriot League in assists (821) and third in assists per set (6.73).
Russell has posted two of the top three single-match assist totals in the Patriot League this season. During the 3-1 victory over New Haven (Oct. 21, Russell recorded a Patriot League season-high 65 assists which is currently tied for the most in a 4-set match in the NCAA this season. She then dished out 57 assists in a 3-2 comeback win over Lafayette (Nov. 15), the 57 assists were the third most in a match in the Patriot League this season.
Murphy, who is undeclared recorded a 3.77 GPA played in 28 matches for the Crusaders earning 22 starts in the middle. Murphy paced the team in total blocks (86.0) which was eighth in the conference and blocks per set (0.96) which was ninth. In league games, Murphy came in at seventh in blocks per set (1.02) and eighth in total blocks (52.0). The sophomore finished 2025 ranked fifth on the program’s single-season blocks per set list (0.96) and seventh in single-season total blocks (86.0).
Murphy also tallied 121 kills and 1.34 kills per set while hitting .239 on the season. She recorded a career-high eight total blocks at Marist (Oct. 7) and hit .440 with a personal-best 13 kills in a win over New Haven (Oct. 21).
The 2025 Academic All-District® 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 volleyball honorees in four divisions — NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III and NAIA.
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A new pro volleyball team shows the Bay’s women’s sports boom isn’t slowing
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For decades, the Bay Area sports calendar featured few women’s pro sports games. Now it’s filling in quickly as new franchises are looking to capitalize on surging interest in Northern California.
As the market for women’s sports booms, a pro volleyball league is the latest entity betting that San Francisco is ready for more. League One Volleyball (LOVB (opens in new tab)) announced Thursday that it will expand to San Francisco with a women’s team debuting in January 2027.
The league, which launched this year with six teams, has announced three expansion franchises; clubs in Los Angeles and Minneapolis also debut in 2027. The San Francisco team is backed by a women-led ownership group with local ties, including three-time Olympic volleyball medalist Kelsey Robinson Cook — an Illinois native who lives in the Bay Area — and Bay FC founders Brandi Chastain, Danielle Slaton, and Leslie Osborne, plus other Olympians-turned-investors.
The league’s expansion to the Bay Area follows the region’s rapid emergence as a hub for women’s professional sports. It follows the debut of Bay FC in the NWSL in 2024, the Golden State Valkyries in the WNBA in 2025, and the addition of a San Francisco team in the Women’s Professional Baseball League set to launch next summer.
“San Francisco has an untapped market for women’s sports,” Robinson Cook said. “We can see it growing with the Valkyries, with Bay FC and how there’s been incredible fandom. You can see there’s a market for volleyball.”
Local fan interest in women’s sports isn’t the only reason LOVB views San Francisco as a natural fit. The league is built around a club-to-pro model that ties together youth programs, college teams, and a professional volleyball roster. LOVB already operates youth programs across the country, including in Redwood City, and serves more than 20,000 athletes nationwide.
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The Bay Area’s collegiate volleyball pipeline strengthens the case. Stanford, Cal, Santa Clara, San Jose State, Saint Mary’s, and the University of San Francisco have all produced elite volleyball talent, with the Cardinal standing as the most decorated program in NCAA history with nine national championships.
“One of the things that LOVB looks at when they’re thinking about expansion is what does the youth market look like,” Robinson Cook said. “And [the Bay Area] has an incredible youth market. There are so many athletes, young women that play the sport up in Northern California.”
Robinson Cook, who played professionally for 12 years overseas before joining LOVB Atlanta in the league’s inaugural season in 2025, experienced the same system abroad, where young players trained in the same facilities as professionals. “You create this connection with younger athletes who then get to dream of being in your shoes one day,” she said. “For a long time, there’s been a disconnect. And so now, face-to-face, we are bridging that gap.”
Mayor Daniel Lurie praised LOVB’s expansion announcement, calling San Franciscans “the best women’s sports fans in the country.”
“This women-led ownership group is investing in talent from youth clubs to the pro stage, and I look forward to cheering them on,” Lurie said in a statement.
LOVB’s 14-week season runs from January through early April, a window that fits neatly into the Bay Area’s robust women’s sports lineup. The franchise’s home venue is expected to be announced in 2026, but unlike the incoming San Francisco’s WBPL team set to play its first season at a neutral site in Illinois, LOVB will play at a venue inside city limits.
Three women’s pro volleyball leagues (opens in new tab) operate as competitors in the U.S., but LOVB has become a popular destination for top talent by offering guaranteed contracts and robust benefits. In the league’s debut season, players earned a minimum of $60,000 for the 14 weeks of competition and were exempt from being cut or traded.
The league has a media rights deal with Victory+, a streaming service headquartered in Texas that holds broadcast rights for NHL teams, the Texas Rangers, and select NWSL games.
Stable rosters, a broadcaster partner with a growing platform, and basing teams in regions with strong volleyball pipelines such as Omaha, Nebraska, and Madison, Wisconsin, give Robinson Cook and others hope that LOVB can develop recognizable stars, one of the inherent challenges the sport faces.
In recent years, women’s pro soccer has benefited from the popularity of Abby Wambach (a part owner of the LOVB San Francisco team), Megan Rapinoe, and Trinity Rodman, while women’s basketball has surged in interest thanks to a plethora of dominant stars, including A’ja Wilson, Caitlin Clark, and Napheesa Collier. Women’s volleyball needs players who generate more interest in the pro ranks.
“We have an incredible opportunity with kids coming out of college who have built these audiences and can carry that audience with them,” Robinson Cook said. “There hasn’t been that chance yet to do it right.”
If it does do it right, LOVB believes it will find a big and receptive audience in San Francisco.
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