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Here are Tuesday's top prospect performances from the Minors

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Here are Tuesday's top prospect performances from the Minors

The first day of July featured some early holiday fireworks, including a pair of Top 100 prospects tallying multihomer games at Triple-A. Carter Jensen and Joe Mack represented their catching brethren well, but they weren’t the only heavy hitters. Midwest League sluggers Zyhir Hope and Josue Briceño tried to one-up each other in a head-to-head matchup while Michael McGreevy and Trevor Harrison hung up zeros on the pitching side.

Zyhir Hope, OF, Great Lakes (LAD No. 2/MLB No. 37)
Hope kicked off July with a pair of hits, continuing the hot streak he was on at the end of last month. The 20-year-old doubled twice and drove in three runs during his fourth multihit performance in five games. Hope ended June by hitting in five consecutive games and is slashing .299/.400/.470 with 49 RBIs and 29 extra-base hits in 73 games for High-A Great Lakes. His 20 doubles are second in the Midwest League. Gameday

Josue Briceño, 1B/C, West Michigan (DET No. 4/MLB No. 58)
Briceño’s All-Star-worthy campaign gained more steam with his fourth consecutive multihit game for High-A West Michigan. The 20-year-old, who leads the circuit with 14 roundtrippers, reached base five times and doubled on a three-hit night to lift his average to a season-high .291. Briceño paces the Midwest League in slugging (.599) and OPS (1.015) to go along with 52 RBIs in 51 games. Gameday

Carter Jensen, C, Omaha (KC No. 3/MLB No. 73)
Jensen is still finding his footing for Triple-A Omaha, but he has the power aspect down pat. The lefty-swinging backstop tallied his first multihomer game as a pro and drove in four runs to pace the Storm Chasers’ offense. Jensen has been one of the Minors’ best hitters since May, which earned him a promotion from Double-A after slashing .292/.360/.420 with 37 RBIs in 68 games for Northwest Arkansas. Gameday

Joe Mack, C, Jacksonville (MIA No. 4/MLB No. 94)
Mack kicked off July by going deep twice, driving in a season-high four runs and scoring three times for Triple-A Jacksonville. The 2021 Draft pick has turned on the power in the past week, leaving the yard six times in five games after slugging four homers in his first 59 contests of 2025. Mack, who belted a career-high 24 long balls last year, has an .808 OPS in 64 games between Double-A and Triple-A this season. Gameday

Robert Calaz, OF, Fresno (COL No. 3)
Calaz got back into the home run column in a big way, cracking a pair of solo jacks for his first two-dinger game as a pro. The native of the Dominican Republic did not leave the yard in April, although he missed most of the month with an unspecified injury, slugged five roundtrippers in May and then went without a jack in June, despite batting .291 across 79 at-bats. Calaz, who has played the entire year for Single-A Fresno at 19 years old, has three consecutive multihit games and five in his past seven contests. Gameday

Humberto Cruz, RHP, Lake Elsinore (SD No. 4)
Cruz impressed during his first affiliated start for Single-A Lake Elsinore, twirling three scoreless frames and striking out four. The 18-year-old struggled in the Rookie-level Arizona Complex League prior to his promotion, posting an 8.31 ERA in eight starts, but he showed no such issues in his California League debut. Cruz allowed one hit — a leadoff double in the second — and fanned a pair in his final frame, finishing his outing with 41 pitches (26 for strikes). Gameday

Gavin Cross, OF, Northwest Arkansas (KC No. 5)
Coming off his best month in what has been a tough season for him to date, Cross doubled, drove in a run and equaled a career high with four hits to extend his modest hitting streak to four games for Double-A Northwest Arkansas. The ninth overall pick in the 2022 Draft has hit safely in eight of nine overall, and despite his overall struggles, has driven in 32 runs in 59 games after plating 59 for the Naturals in 2024. Gameday

Michael McGreevy, RHP, Memphis (STL No. 9)
McGreevy won for the eighth time in nine decisions after tossing six scoreless frames for Triple-A Memphis. The UC Santa Barbara product struck out five and surrendered a pair of singles during his 81-pitch outing. McGreevy rebounded from one of his worst starts of the season and lowered his ERA to 2.28 — second-best among qualified hurlers at Triple-A — after not allowing more than one run for the ninth time in 13 starts. The 24-year-old has a a 69-to-12 K/BB ratio in 67 innings. Gameday

Trevor Harrison, RHP, Charleston (TB No. 10)
Harrison’s strong sophomore campaign continued with a second consecutive scoreless outing for Single-A Charleston. The 19-year-old completed seven innings for the first time in 31 pro appearances (30 starts) and is unscored upon in the past 13 frames. Harrison struck out five and tossed 87 pitches (56 for strikes) while lowering his ERA to 2.81 in 14 starts. Gameday

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Wisconsin defeats Stanford in NCAA regional semifinals: Updates, recap

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6:20 pm CT December 12, 2025

Who does Wisconsin volleyball play next in NCAA tournament?

John Steppe

Third-seeded Wisconsin will face top-seeded Texas in the NCAA regional finals on Dec. 14 at a to-be-announced time. The Longhorns are coming off a sweep in the regional semifinals against fourth-seeded Indiana.

Here are some highlights from the Texas-Indiana match:

6:02 pm CT December 12, 2025

More to read from Wisconsin’s four-set win over Stanford

John Steppe

5:32 pm CT December 12, 2025

Wisconsin’s Charlie Fuerbringer goes out of her way to praise teammate Una Vajagic

John Steppe

3:20 pm CT December 12, 2025

Wisconsin volleyball advances to the regional finals, will face Texas

John Steppe

Wisconsin is headed to the NCAA regional finals following a four-set win over Stanford. The Badgers won the fourth set, 25-22. Check back for more postmatch updates.



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

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LEXINGTON, Ky. — The Creighton Volleyball team practiced for just more than an hour before meeting the media in Lexington, Ky., on Friday afternoon as it completed preparations for Saturday’s Elite Eight match at No. 2 Kentucky.

After practice, Creighton head coach Brian Rosen, along with Eloise Brandewie, Jaya Johnson and Abbey Hayes met the media.

First serve between Creighton and Kentucky is set for 4 p.m. Central. The contest will be nationally-televised on ESPN2.

 



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What channel is Kansas women’s volleyball vs Nebraska? Time, schedule

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Dec. 12, 2025, 3:04 a.m. CT



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‘U’ Falls in Sweet 16 to No. 4 Pittsburgh

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PITTSBURGH, Pa. — The No. 4 seeded Minnesota volleyball team fell to the No. 1 seeded Pittsburgh Panthers on Thursday night at the Petersen Events Center in three sets. The set scores of the match were 25-16, 25-23, 25-22.

The Gophers season ended in the Sweet 16 for the 21st time in program history with a 24-10 (12-8 B1G) record.

“Congrats to Pittsburgh on the win and for the university and city for being such great hosts,” said head coach Keegan Cook. “I’m proud of the way our team battled tonight and throughout the season. We just fell a little bit short tonight. I told the team I have loved coaching them all year and appreciate their willingness to learn and grow. We’re going to miss these seniors next year, but we’re glad to get back to the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament and continue to push the program forward.”

Kelly Kinney and Carly Gilk led Minnesota with nine kills while Stella Swenson had 28 assists, three blocks and three aces. Julia Hanson was held to eight kills in her final collegiate match.

The Gophers (24-10, 12-8 Big Ten) were outhit the Panthers (29-4, 18-2 ACC) .271 to .178, leading in kills (47 to 33) and digs (48 to 34). Minnesota had more aces (4 to 3) and blocks (10 to 5).

Julia Hanson commented on her time at Minnesota and what it meant for her to end her career as a Golden Gopher.

“There were times that I questioned myself and how things were going after my sophomore year,” Hansen said. “But I’m so glad to be a part of this program and so proud to have that ‘M’ on my chest. It means everything to me. I’m so thankful for my time at Minnesota.”

For Pittsburgh, Olivia Babcock had 19 kills while Brooke Mosher went for 35 assists. Bre Kelly and Blaire Bayless also had eight kills for the Panthers.

How It Happened

SET 1 | Pittsburgh started out hot, scoring six of the first seven points before Minnesota called a timeout. The Gophers tallied a pair of kills to get it to four at 7-3 before the Panthers scored three straight on two kills and a block to go up 10-3. An attacking error followed by a kill from Kinney and a block from Myers cut it to four again at 11-7. Following a service error from Minnesota, the Gophers scored four of the next five to force a Pitt timeout, trailing 13-11. Swenson tallied an ace, Gilk had a kill and Taylor combined with Gilk on a block. After the timeout, the Panthers bounced back by scoring four of five, taking a 17-12 lead and forcing coach Cook’s final timeout of the frame. The Gophers would get no closer than five the rest of the way as the Panthers closed out the first frame, 25-16. Pitt hit .267 for the set while Minnesota hit just .026.

SET 2 | Minnesota came out strong, scoring seven of the first 12. Swenson had two aces while Kinney tallied a pair of kills. A kill from Myers and a block from Kinney and Myers put the Gophers up 10-9 before three straight from Pitt forced a Minnesota timeout, trailing 12-10. Kills from Swenson and Gilk combined with a Panthers attacking error helped give Minnesota back the lead at 14-13. The Panthers scored three of the next four to tie it up at 16-16. Two more kills put them up 18-16, forcing Minnesota’s final timeout of the set. Pitt would go up by as many as three at 22-19 before two errors cut the lead to just one at 22-21, leading to a Pitt timeout. A Panthers hitting error and kill from Hanson tied it up at 23-23, forcing one more Pitt timeout. A kill and a block won the set for Pitt, 25-23.

SET 3 | Pitt scored seven of the first 11 points before kills from Taylor and Gilk combined with a block from Hanson and Taylor tied it up at 7-7. The Panthers went on a 5-2 spurt after that, getting four kills and an ace to go up 12-9, forcing a Minnesota timeout. The Gophers would battle back, scoring five of the next seven to cut it to 15-14. Kills from Gilk and Myers combined with an ace from Garr tied it up at 17 apiece. A pair of kills from Myers put Minnesota up 19-18, leading to a Panthers timeout. After the break, Minnesota got a block and a Pitt error to go up 21-19 before the Panthers answered back with two more to tie it at 21. The two teams exchanged the next pair of points before the Panthers closed out the match on a 3-0 run to win, 25-22.

Game Notes

» Minnesota is now 1-3 all-time against Pitt, including 0-2 in the NCAA Tournament.

» The Gophers are now 10-11 in the NCAA Regional Semifinals.

» Minnesota posted 10+ blocks for the 15th time this season.

» Minnesota is now 4-7 against ranked opponents this season.

» McKenna Garr (10) posted 10+ digs for the 24th time in 2025.

» Lourdes Myers went for six blocks to lead Minnesota.

» Stella Swenson went for 28 assists and a team-best three aces.

Up Next

Minnesota’s spring season begins in January.



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Nebraska Volleyball keeping practices light-hearted as they prep for NCAA Regional

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LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – Nebraska volleyball is keeping the practices light-hearted as they prep to play Kansas in the NCAA Regional.

The Huskers come into the Round of 16 with a 32-0 record and a lot of pressure to make the Final Four. With the mountain of expectations, the players and coaching staff are keeping the training fun and focused on each round rather than the latter goals.

“We still have a lot of fun in our practice, so even though the level is so high, we’re still managing to find ways to have fun,” junior middle blocker Andi Jackson said.

The light-hearted practices and emphasis on playing freely, has really proven to help Jackson’s game. This season she is hitting a nation-best .483 and is averaging 1.14 blocks per set.

“If you look too far into the future, you’re probably going to get a little nervous and get a little stressed out. So just really focusing on what we’re doing in the moment and focusing on where our feet are,” junior outside hitter Harper Murray said.

Nebraska VB’s HC Dani Busboom Kelly, MB Andi Jackson, and OH Harper Murray Pre-Sweet 16 Press Conference | Dec. 11, 2025

No. 1 ranked Nebraska will face off against 16th ranked Kansas on Friday, Dec. 12. The match starts 30 minutes after the conclusion of the two-seed Louisville versus three-seed Texas A&M match, which begins at 6 p.m. CT.

Click here to subscribe to our 10/11 NOW daily digest and breaking news alerts delivered straight to your email inbox.



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Louisville vs Texas A&M channel, TV, UofL volleyball game time today

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Dec. 12, 2025, 5:10 a.m. ET

No. 2 Louisville volleyball takes on No. 3 Texas A&M in the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 today at Bob Devaney Sports Complex in Lincoln, Nebraska.

This match marks UofL’s seventh straight regional appearance and first with Dan Meske as head coach.

Here’s everything you need to know to follow today’s match from home:

Today’s match between No. 2 seed Louisville and No. 3 seed Texas A&M is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln, Nebraska.

Buy Louisville volleyball tickets here



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