Sports
Field Hockey Rounds Out 2025 Staff
Rodijk will join the coaching staff as an assistant coach working with the backline. Underwood will work in a director of operations role. Additionally, Sam Brown was elevated to associate head coach over the summer while Sally Rutherford returns as an assistant coach, working closely with the goalkeepers.
“Our Syracuse hockey program values evolution and finding a way,” said Farquhar. “Julie exhibits that drive and is well connected in the hockey world. She has an entrepreneurial spirit that navigates towards excellence. Her journey as a player in the Dutch and NCAA system is an asset for our squad. Julie’s genuine leadership style is full of tenacity and complimented by relationships.”
Rodijk joins the Orange with several years of coaching experience, most recently with FDU Florham in New Jersey. She also coached youth club teams 5 year olds through high schoolers, since August 2019.
Rodijk brings international recruiting experience to the coaching staff as well, working with Plus31 Sports as a recruiting specialist, making connections with potential student-athletes abroad wanting to play college field hockey in the United States.
Over the course of her collegiate career, Rodijk played in 86 career games, including 66 contests with UAlbany before concluding her career as a graduate student at Ohio State. Rodijk logged 47 points in her career with 22 goals and three assists.
During her season in Columbus, Ohio, Rodijk scored 10 goals with two assists, including a goal in the Big Ten Tournament against Penn State. In four years with UAlbany, Rodijk scored 12 career goals and three assists.
Rodijk was a three-time NFHCA All-Region pick, earning All-Northeast Region honors with UAlbany twice and an All-West Region selection with Ohio State. In 2023, Rodijk was a Second Team All-Big Ten honor and Academic All-Big Ten.
While playing at UAlbany, Rodijk was an All-Region back for the Great Danes, earning a spot at the NFHCA Division I Senior Game in 2022 and was an America East Second Team All-Conference selection. She was also the America East Defensive Player of the Week twice in October 2022. During her junior season (2021), Rodijk was an All-Region Second Teamer and America East All-Conference Second Team while earning a spot on the NFHCA National Academic Team.
During a unique 2020-21 season, Rodijk was an America East All-Conference First Team pick and earned America East Defensive Player of the Week honors. The previous season, Rodijk was an America East All-Conference East Division Second Team honoree and was named to the America East All-Rookie team.
Rodijk earned her Bachelor of Science degree in business administration from the University at Albany, State University of New York with a concentration in marketing and entrepreneurship, and a minor in communications. She earned her Master of Kinesiology degree at The Ohio State University with a focus in sport management.
“Bryn’s passion and love for hockey is evident; whether it’s in pads, watching games or commentating matches,” noted Faruqhar. “We’re excited to welcome her enthusiasm and go-getter mentality. Bryn brings admirable characteristics, a contagious energy and desire to serve the team.”
A five-year starter and three-year captain at American University, Underwood played in 75 games for the Eagles, logging 4,673 minutes in goal. Underwood finished her collegiate career with a 1.18 goals against average, a program and Patriot League record, and a 44-27 record in goal.
During the 2024 season, Underwood was selected as the Patriot League Goalkeeper of the Year and named the League’s Scholar-Athlete of the Year for a second-straight season, in addition to First Team All-Patriot League and Academic All-Patriot League honors. Underwood finished that season with the seventh-best save percentage in Division I and the eighth-most shutouts with eight, both top marks in the Patriot League. She had the second-best goals against average (1.11) in the League and the fifth-most saves per game (4.42).
Underwood left a mark on the American University field hockey record books. Her eight shutouts in 2024 are tied for the second-most in program history and the most in a decade for the Eagles. Underwood reset the program’s career goals against average, while accumulating the third-most career saves (363), and the second-most shutouts (22). Underwood is one of two players in American’s program history with at least 20 shutouts while career save percentage of .802 is also the third-best at American.
The Sinking Springs, Pennsylvania native was the Patriot League Goalkeeper of the Year three times (2021, 2022, 2024), a two-timeFirst Team NFHCA All-Region selection (2022, 2024), a two-time Second Team NFHCA All-Region pick (2021, 2023) and was the Patriot League Rookie of the Year in 2020. In addition to three-time All-Patriot League First Team honors (2021, 2022, 2024), she was named as the Patriot League Tournament MVP in 2021, leading the Eagles to the conference title and NCAA Tournament berth where American pushed No. 3 Iowa to a one-goal result.
Earning several academic honors as well, Underwood was a four-time NFHCA Scholar of Distinction (2020, 2021, 2022, 2023) was a member of the Academic All-Patriot League Team (2021, 2022, 2023, 2024), and a five-time Patriot League Academic Honor Roll member (2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024).
Beyond her accolades with American, Underwood was with USA Field Hockey at several levels, including the 2024-25 US Indoor Development Squad. In both 2024 and 2025, Underwood served as a head coach for teams at USA Field Hockey’s Junior Nexus Championships. From 2022-25 Underwood was involved in the Senior NexUS Championship and was in camp for the 2022 U21 Development Squad selection.
Sports
Nebraska volleyball sweeps Kansas, advances to Elite Eight
Sports
Maine wraps up Fall Semester with a win in Black Bear Invitational
ORONO, Maine – The University of Maine track and field program hosted their Black Bear Invitational meet on Friday December 12. The Black Bears hosted the University of Maine at Fort Kent Bengals and the Husson University Eagles at the New Balance Indoor Track. The Black Bears took home 1st place with a score of 97 points.
Cheyenne Figueroa continued her strong start to the season with another 1st place finish in the weight throw event with a final distance of 16.93m (55′ 7″). Ava Zollars took home second place overall finish with a distance of 13.96m (45′ 10″). Sabine SItes rounded out the top three with a final distance of 13.06m (42′ 10″).
Julia Bassi took home 1st place in the shot put with a distance of 11.86m (38′ 11″). Cheyenne Figueroa finished 2nd overall with a final distance of 11.83m (38′ 9.75″). Riley Gavigan finished with a top 5 performance, finishing 5th with a distance of 9.19m (30′ 1.75″).
Athena Cusson got the Black Bears to the top of the leader board again with a 5.58m (18′ 3.75″) jump in the Long Jump event. Saphryn Humason took home a second place overall finish with a distance of 5.41m (17′ 9″). Martha Baharova rounded out Maine’s top 3 finishers, finishing 4th overall with a distance of 5.02m (16′ 5.75″).
Lydia White was the only Black Bear to compete in the Pole Vault event. White took home a first place overall finish with a height of 3.00m (9′ 10″).
Saphryn Humason took home 1st place in the Triple Jump with a distance of 10.87m (35′ 8″), competing as the lone Black Bear in the event.
The Black Bears swept the competition in the Mile run as Megan Randall came out of the gates flying, finishing in 1st place with a time of 5:02.71. Ryan O’Connor took home a 2nd place overall finish with a time of 5:06.48. Lauren Hamilton rounded out the top three with a time of 5:08.41.
In the 600m, Addison Nelson took home a 1st place finish with a final time of 1:40.83. Searcy Mooney took home 2nd place with a final time of 1:42.51. Toni Vaillancourt wrapped up the top 3 with a time of 1:43.15.
Athena Cusson took home a 1st place finish in the 60m Hurdles as the only Black Bear to compete. Cusson finished with a final time of 10.47.
The Black Bears would once again take all three spots of the top 3 in the 60m Dash. Bayleigh Shanahan would take first place with a sub-8 second finish, finishing at 7.97. Catherine Primavera would finish with a time of 8.12, finishing in 2nd place. Maddie Chaput would round out the top three with a final time of 8.20.
Ruby Krasnow would run away with the 3000m Run with a final time of 9:58.32, finishing in 1st place. Freshman Kara Tschida and Natalie Johnson would round out the top three for the Black Bears. Tschida finished with a time of 10:29.42, while Johnson finished with a time of 10:47.70.
Maddie Cyr would finish with a time of 42.72 to capture a first place finish in the 300m Dash. Cassidy Novicka would take home a second place finish, finishing with a time of 43.16. Catherine Primavera, with a time of 43.25 would finish in 3rd place rounding out the top 3.
Meredith Walters would finish in 1st place with a time of 3:02.34 in the 1000m Run. Abby Rodriquenz would finish in 2nd place with a final time of 3:02.78. Emma Tessier would round out the top 3 with a final time of 3:09.71.
In the 4000m Distance Medley Relay, the group of Ryan O’Connor, Addison Nelson, Megan Randall and Ruby Krasnow would dominate the field finishing in 1st place with a time of 12:33.45. Natalie Johnson, Bri Harriman, Searcy Mooney and Kennedy Taylor would finish in 2nd place with a time of 12:49.99. Kara Tschida, Cassidy Novicka, Amy Rein and Lauren Hamilton would round out the top three with a final time of 12:55.76.
The 4×200 Meter Relay would end the evening as the group of Maddie Chaput, Lydia White, Catherine Primavera, and Saphryn Humason would take home a first place finish with a time of 1:50.13.
The Black Bears wrapped up their fall semester and will take on the Bates College Invitational to open up the spring semester on January 17th.
-UMaine-
Sports
Historic Season Comes to Close
In one of the premier volleyball arenas in the country, the Hoosiers went blow-for-blow with the four-time national champions. IU lost by just a combined 11 points and reached the red zone (20+) in all three sets. Head coach Steve Aird‘s group recorded more kills (48-45) but couldn’t find a defensive answer for Texas’ All-American outside hitter Torrey Stafford.
Senior outside hitter Candela Alonso-Corcelles recorded 13 kills in her final game with the Hoosiers. It was the 74th time in her college tenure that she recorded a match with at least 10 kills. IU found great success in the middle with seven kills (.778) from senior middle blocker Madi Sell and eight kills (.700) from freshman middle blocker Victoria Gray.
Contributions from freshmen were felt from every part of the court. Freshman setter Teodora Krickovic dished out 38 assists while freshman outside hitter Jaidyn Jager contributed eight kills. Freshman outside hitter Charlotte Vinson had an ace and picked up her first career kill for the Hoosiers. Six of IU’s 10 players on the court were true freshmen on Friday.
In totality, IU’s 2025 team will go down as the greatest in program history. The Hoosiers broke single-season program records in the NCAA era for wins (25), regular season wins (23), Big Ten wins (14), road wins (9), ranked road wins (3). IU advanced to its second NCAA regional semifinal in school history.
How it Happened
• The defensive effort made the difference for Texas on Friday afternoon. The Longhorns racked up 10 more blocks than the Hoosiers (12.0-2.0). IU dug 38 balls but struggled to find points in transition. Texas had an answer for every IU swing in the match.
• Texas’ All-American outside hitter Torrey Stafford was virtually unstoppable on Friday. She picked up 19 kills on zero errors for a .679 hitting percentage. She dug eight balls and had a hand in four blocks as well. IU had more kills (48-46) but had 23 attacking errors.
Top Hoosier Performers
#3 Alonso-Corcelles, Candela
13 kills, 10 digs
#10 Krickovic, Teodora
38 assists, 7 digs, 2 kills
#23 Gray, Victoria
8 kills, .700 hitting percentage
Notes to Know
• Senior outside hitter Candela Alonso-Corcelles played her final career game for the Hoosiers. She provided 13 kills in the match, the 74th time that she’s had double-digit kills in a contest. She ends her career eighth in program history in kills (1,386). She’s the first IU player since Jordan Haverly (2009, 2010) with consecutive seasons of 400+ kills.
• The Hoosiers ended the 2025 season hitting .281 as a team. That is a new single-season program record, obliterating the previous IU standard (.246) from 1989. All three of IU’s pin hitters and all three middle blockers that played regular time finished with a hitting efficiency of .240 or better on the year.
• For players with at least 300 attempts in a season, freshman middle blocker Victoria Gray finished the season hitting .378 with 152 kills. That mark puts her second in a single season in program history while smashing the previous single-season freshman hitting percentage record.
• Senior opposite hitter Avry Tatum finished her IU career with a collective hitting percentage of .273 with 936 kills on more than 2,000 swings. Among all pin hitters in program history, no IU player hit at a better efficiency (min. 1,000 attempts) than Tatum did in her three seasons in Bloomington.
Sports
KU volleyball knocked out by unbeaten Nebraska in Sweet 16 sweep
Kansas Athletics
The Kansas volleyball team huddles during its match against Nebraska on Friday, Dec. 12, 2025, in Lincoln, Neb.
A promising season of Kansas volleyball under the guidance of first-year head coach Matt Ulmer came to a grim end on Friday night in Lincoln, Nebraska, as the Jayhawks found themselves on the receiving end of a dominant 3-0 sweep (25-12, 25-11, 25-12) by the host Cornhuskers at the Bob Devaney Sports Center.
KU was overmatched in all phases against No. 1 overall seed Nebraska (33-0), which has still lost just one set at home all season and hit .450 against a usually rock-solid defense. The Jayhawks did not record a block until they trailed 20-10 in the final set, while senior libero Ryan White was limited to five digs in her final collegiate match.
Middle blocker Reese Ptacek, outside hitter Rhian Swanson and opposite hitter Jovana Zelenović accounted for six kills apiece, but they came on 15, 30 and 22 attacks, respectively. Katie Dalton recorded 11 assists, and Cristin Cline had eight.
Meanwhile, Nebraska’s Rebekah Allick recorded a kill all nine times she swung. The Cornhuskers’ setter Bergen Reilly, the Big Ten’s player and setter of the year, finished with 30 assists. Middle blocker Andi Jackson equaled Allick with nine more kills.
At the service line, the Jayhawks committed six errors with one ace.
“You’re really having to nitpick to try to figure out what to do to make (Nebraska) uncomfortable and you have to just execute at a much higher level than what we were able to do,” KU coach Matt Ulmer told reporters after the match. “We tried to serve some different spots, they held out pretty good. We tried to serve aggressive, but then you can’t miss too much. I just thought we had to be much cleaner from the service line to even apply some pressure.”
The Huskers didn’t let any of the three sets remain close for long, but they certainly opened the match with a bang as they came out with a 10-1 run capped off by consecutive aces by Olivia Mauch on reception errors by Logan Bell. The Jayhawks were able to get Zelenović going a bit with three kills late in the set, but the margin never got close, thanks in large part to Allick’s performance.
KU looked briefly like it might hang around longer in the second set when a kill by Dalton cut its deficit to 9-7. But Nebraska proceeded to score the next four times, while the Jayhawks only got four points the rest of the set.
The Huskers weren’t going to slip up and lose a set at home for the first time since Sept. 12. Instead, they strung together another 7-1 run early, featuring a couple of kills by Teraya Sigler, and never looked back.
The result brought a decisive end to the Jayhawks’ season in the Sweet 16, with one of their primary goals still accomplished as they had managed to make it out of the first weekend for the first time since 2021. They concluded the campaign with a record of 24-11 and a second-place finish in the Big 12 Conference.
“For us, as not good as right now feels, it’s been a great year for us and it’s been a great season and we’ve achieved so much, so I’m really proud of them,” Ulmer said. “I know it’s hard to feel that in the moment, but big picture, it was a great year for Kansas.”
The Jayhawks will have some holes to fill with six players having gone through senior day, including key contributors Dalton, Swanson and White. However, many of their top players were underclassmen, including a trio of international freshmen.
Kansas AthleticsKansas pin hitter Grace Nelson makes a pass against Nebraska on Friday, Dec. 12, 2025, in Lincoln, Neb.
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KU volleyball knocked out by unbeaten Nebraska in Sweet 16 sweep
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No. 1 Nebraska volleyball powers past Kansas, sets regional final date with Texas A&M

LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN) — The No. 1-ranked Nebraska volleyball team took care of business Friday night, sweeping Kansas in the regional semifinal of the NCAA Tournament.
The Huskers won 25-12, 25-11, 25-12 at the Bob Devaney Center.
As a team, the Huskers boasted a .450% hitting percentage, compared to the Jayhawks’ .029%.
It was both middle blockers for Nebraska that paved the path to victory.
Rebekah Allick and Andi Jackson each had a team-high nine kills. Allick finished the match with a perfect 1.000% hitting percentage, and Jackson had a team-high five blocks.
Harper Murray followed close behind with seven kills and a .238% hitting percentage. She also tallied a team-high 10 digs.
Bergen Reilly led an efficient offense with 30 assists, and Olivia Mauch racked up three aces.
The Huskers will face off against Texas A&M on Sunday for a chance to go to the Final Four in Kansas City.
First serve is set for 2 p.m. on ABC.
Sports
Thirteen Student-Athletes Earn Degrees in Fall
Highlighting the 13 who graduated this fall were eight members of the K-State football team, and one each from the baseball, volleyball, rowing, soccer and women’s track and field programs.
The group of graduates was also honored Friday at the department’s annual graduation reception.
K-State continues to rank among the league’s best in terms of academic success as all programs are currently well above the required NCAA APR standard in addition to ranking among the best in the Big 12 in graduation rates – including five teams that have Big 12-leading marks this year.
2025 Fall Graduates
Baseball
Cadyn Karl, Finance
Football
JB Bradley, Integrative Human Sciences
Jet Dineen, Communications
Sam Hecht, Construction Science and Management
Damian Ilalio, Athletic Training and Rehab Sciences
Jacob Knuth, Management
Isaac Koch, Finance
Sterling Lockett, Management
Brayden Loftin, Kinesiology
Rowing
Emma Johnson (Jaelley), Elementary Education
Volleyball
Ava LeGrand, Finance
Soccer
Paige Dickson, Life Sciences
Women’s Track and Field
Brooklyn Jones, Integrative Human Sciences
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