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Hometown hero Logan Webb pitches Giants to stabilizing win in West Sacramento

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Hometown hero Logan Webb pitches Giants to stabilizing win in West Sacramento

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Matt Cain, throughout his long tenure as a load-bearing pillar in the San Francisco Giants rotation, adhered to a personal code whenever he’d hand over the baseball at the end of a day’s work.

No matter how well he pitched at the Giants’ waterfront ballpark, no matter how few runs scored on his watch, no matter how comfortably the home team was ahead and no matter how loudly the crowd cheered his effort, the stoic right-hander refused to tip his cap if he left a runner on base. Something about it just didn’t feel right.

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Logan Webb has a little Matt Cain in him.

“I wish I had given a wave or something,” said Webb, who walked off the mound with two on and two out in the seventh inning at Sutter Health Park on Saturday night to the kind of ovation reserved for hometown heroes. “It’s always awkward in those moments, and I don’t know why. But I felt the love from the Sacramento crowd. It was awesome to pitch at home.”

Because their Las Vegas-bound former Bay Area rivals are carpetbagging it in the Central Valley for at least three seasons, the Giants are playing a major-league series in a minor-league stadium. It happens to be the Triple-A ballpark down the road from where Webb grew up in Rocklin. He fidgeted in his seat here many times as a kid, watching the Sacramento River Cats when they were still an A’s affiliate.

Maybe something happens when so many of your formative memories of professional baseball come in a ballpark that doesn’t have a second deck and where every seat is close to the action. Maybe there’s less emotional distance between you and the players. It might be one of the reasons Webb has remained so grounded and so rocksteady since he established himself as one of the league’s best pitchers in 2021. You can’t injure yourself by falling off a pedestal when you never put yourself on one.

Webb delivered another of his typical starts on an otherwise atypical night. He pumped strikes and mixed his pitches; a Giants lineup that included a freshly activated Matt Chapman and a resurgent Willy Adames did the rest in a 7-2 victory.


The crowd salutes its hometown hero. (Darren Yamashita / Imagn Images)

The legions of Giants fans who barely had a moment to cheer here in Friday night’s 11-2 loss came out of the auditory woodwork this time. But the sellout crowd of 12,298 could be better described as pro-Webb than pro-Giants. The moment Webb walked out of the bullpen in the bottom of the first inning, he was showered with shouts of “Go Rocklin” and “Go Thunder” from fans who more than likely once applauded the touchdown drives he directed in high school.

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Webb’s cheering section for home games in San Francisco is so vocal that his coaches would tease him about it. So you knew his loyalists would be out in full force when he started a game in his own backyard. You can’t call it a cheering section when the support stretches from pole to pole.

“Every time I got an out or a strikeout, it felt like the whole crowd was cheering me on,” Webb said.

Webb continues to raise his own high bar in what’s turning into the best season of his career. He reclaimed the major-league lead with 120 1/3 innings, and his 133 strikeouts are second only to Philadelphia’s Zack Wheeler among National League pitchers. Giants manager Bob Melvin referred to Webb as a no-brainer to make his second NL All-Star team.

He completed at least six innings for the eighth consecutive start and continues to be a stabilizing force every time he takes the mound. That’s precisely what the Giants needed one night after Melvin questioned the team’s focus in a sloppy loss.

Perhaps it’s no coincidence that the Giants played several of those unfocused games over the past four weeks without Chapman, who sustained a significantly sprained hand while getting picked off a month ago. The team was missing more than its leading home run hitter and Gold Glove third baseman. Chapman is also Melvin’s conduit to the clubhouse and the unofficial captain who sets high standards for his teammates.

“That’s what he’s been about his whole career,” said Melvin, who also managed Chapman with the A’s in Oakland. “From the minute he’s gotten here, he embraces the leadership role. He plays a certain style of baseball that we want to play. So it’s huge to have him back and not just the production part. It’s what he does on the field, it’s his presence in the dugout, in the clubhouse. It’s a big part of who we are.”

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The Giants’ lineup without Chapman lacked continuity, as well. Even after the stunning June 15 trade with the Boston Red Sox that netted Rafael Devers, one of the best left-handed hitters in the game, the lineup over the past couple of weeks competed like a group that had dressed itself in the dark. The expectation now is that with Devers and Chapman in the middle of the order, and Casey Schmitt expected to become the everyday second baseman Monday when he’s eligible to be activated from the injured list, a deeper and more stable lineup will be able to win its share of games without requiring near perfection from a rotation firmly led by Webb and Robbie Ray and a bullpen that has been baseball’s best in the first half.

“I’d like to think I can make an impact,” Chapman said before the game. “Finally, we get to play together (with Devers). We’re one step closer to everybody being together and getting comfortable playing with each other and to start playing the baseball that we expect to play.”

But there’s no thinking more wishful than “everybody being together” when you’re dealing with a 26-man roster and a 162-game season. The next injury or inconsistent stretch is always right around the corner. Not an hour passed after Chapman’s pregame session with reporters before there was a roster update: left-hander Erik Miller to the injured list with a left elbow sprain.

The news wasn’t too surprising. Something seemed off with Miller most of the year. There had to be occult forces behind his 1.50 ERA in 36 games because Miller totaled more walks and hit batters (22) than strikeouts (20) in 30 innings. His 14 percent drop in strikeout percentage is the largest year-over-year decrease among all major-league pitchers who’ve thrown at least 20 innings. Yet Miller remained an important part of the Giants’ late-inning mix, and he was a huge key to Wednesday’s win at Arizona when he entered Landen Roupp’s bases-loaded, no-out situation and limited the damage to one run on a sacrifice fly.

A sprained elbow is often a precursor to Tommy John surgery, but Melvin said Miller’s MRI did not show major structural damage, and the hope is that he will recover with a rest interval. For now, the Giants selected the contract of a familiar face, left-hander Scott Alexander, whom they recently signed on a minor-league deal, to replace Miller on the roster. Joey Lucchesi is another lefty in the bullpen, but his role for as long as he’s here is to pitch multiple innings. Former Detroit Tigers lefty Matt Gage signed a minor-league contract with the Giants on Saturday. Triple-A left-handed starter Carson Whisenhunt could be introduced to the big leagues in a relief role, too.

The trade deadline is more than three weeks away, and a team’s needs tend to fluctuate, but left-handed relief almost certainly has sped to the top of club president Buster Posey’s list.

If only the Giants could clone Randy Rodriguez, who replaced Webb and stranded both inherited runners. Rodriguez is unscored upon in 36 of 38 appearances and is the Giants’ top All-Star candidate after Webb and Ray. An argument could be made that, given his standing among his relief cohort, Rodriguez is the most deserving Giant on the team.

“The numbers say he’s been the best reliever in baseball,” said Webb, who also lobbied for Tyler Rogers to become a first-time All-Star after several seasons in which he merited a place. “I really hope he gets it.”

The Giants will play two formidable opponents in the final homestand before the All-Star break when the Philadelphia Phillies and Los Angeles Dodgers come to San Francisco, but there is still a chance to create the momentum they couldn’t gather while struggling with their demons in the past several series against sub-.500 teams. Adames hasn’t been out of action like Chapman, but his bat hasn’t made an impact for most of the season. It’s starting to heat up now. He hit a pair of two-run singles Saturday, including a crisp line drive in the first inning after A’s right-hander Luis Severino hit Heliot Ramos and Chapman with pitches.

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Both hit batters glared back at the mound. Ramos has been hit 11 times this year after getting hit just twice last season. Chapman didn’t appear to appreciate getting plunked in his first plate appearance after missing a month with a hand injury. A week ago, Webb expressed exasperation with the number of Giants batters getting hit and levied a not-so-veiled threat when he said that “the game finds a way to even itself out.”

Webb couldn’t risk getting ejected Saturday night and didn’t hit any batters in retaliation. But it sure was interesting that he made two kneecap pitches in the fourth inning — a 1-0 sinker to Jacob Wilson and an 0-1 sinker to Brent Rooker — that missed their spots by a lot more than his usual location mistakes.

It was one more reminder: Some of Webb’s most fervent fans never have to buy a ticket to see him pitch. They can watch from the dugout for free.

(Top photo: Darren Yamashita / Imagn Images)

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Huskers Cruise Into Regional Final – University of Nebraska

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LINCOLN, Neb. – The No. 1 Nebraska volleyball team cruised into the NCAA Regional Finals with a 25-12, 25-11, 25-12 sweep of No. 16 Kansas on Friday night in front of a crowd of 8,800 at John Cook Arena at the Bob Devaney Sports Center. 

The Huskers (33-0) were dominant from start to finish, never trailing in the match. NU hit .450 – its third-highest attack percentage of the year – and stifled the Jayhawks (24-11) to a season-low .029 hitting percentage. Nebraska also out-blocked Kansas, 10-1, out-dug the Jayhawks 48-30 and had six services aces and only three errors while KU had one ace and six errors.

Nebraska’s middles were dominant, combining for 21 kills on 28 error-free swings (.750 attack percentage) while adding eight blocks. Rebekah Allick had nine kills on nine swings to hit 1.000, and she added three blocks. Andi Jackson also had nine kills on .600 hitting with five blocks. Manaia Ogbechie produced three kills on four swings in the third set.

Harper Murray added seven kills and had a match-high 10 digs. Bergen Reilly dished out 30 assists while Olivia Mauch had a season-high three aces.

Three players led Kansas with six kills.

Set 1: NU got off to a 4-0 start on Choboy’s serve with a kill by Allick and two blocks by Jackson, one with Adriano and one with Murray. After Kansas got on the board, NU scored a 6-0 run with Mauch serving a pair of aces to go up 10-1. Jackson’s fourth block – with Reilly – and a kill by the junior middle blocker made it 13-3 Big Red. The Jayhawks scored three in a row to cut it to 13-6, but four kills by Allick put NU ahead 18-7. Landfair set Allick for her sixth kill on six swings, and a solo block by the senior middle blocker made it 21-8. Jackson and Landfair tacked on kills for a 25-12 win.      
 
Set 2: Adriano had an early kill and an ace, and Murray and Jackson each posted a kill and a block together as the Huskers built a 7-3 lead. KU pulled within 9-7, but a Murray kill started a 5-0 run with Allick providing two kills and a block with Adriano. The lead grew to 10 at 19-9 after a block by Allick and Adriano and a kill by Murray. An Adriano kill made it 20-9, and Jackson and Murray teamed up for a block and a 22-11 lead. The Huskers closed out a 25-11 win on a Choboy ace. 

Set 3: Sigler had two kills, and Landfair and Jackson pounded away for a 9-4 NU lead. Landfair tacked on another kill before one by Manaia Ogbechie put NU ahead 13-6. Ogbechie, Murray and Jackson added kills, and Murray served an ace to help the Huskers go up 20-9. NU went on to finish the sweep, 25-12. 

Up Next: Nebraska will take on No. 6 Texas A&M in Sunday’s NCAA Regional Final at 2 p.m. on ABC. The Aggies beat No. 9 Louisville, 3-2 in a reverse sweep, in the first match on Friday. 

Nebraska Post-Match Notes

  • With the win, Nebraska advanced to an NCAA Regional Final for the 34th time in program history. The Huskers’ 34 regional final appearances are the most in NCAA history. Nebraska has made an NCAA Regional Final in 13 of the past 14 seasons.
  • The Huskers played their 175th NCAA Tournament match tonight. Nebraska and Stanford are the only two programs to play 175 NCAA Tournament matches.
  • With the win, Nebraska improved to 137-38 all-time in the NCAA Tournament. The Huskers rank second in NCAA history in postseason wins and winning percentage (.783).
  • The win was Nebraska’s 33rd consecutive victory. The Huskers are 33-0 this season, marking the third straight season Nebraska has won 33 matches. The 33 wins tie for the second-most victories in a season by a Husker team in the NCAA era (1981-present).
  • Nebraska improved to 34-7 all-time in NCAA Regional Semifinal matches, including a 17-1 record in matches played in Lincoln.
  • The Huskers improved to 90-7 all-time in home NCAA Tournament matches, including a 35-2 record at the Devaney Center.
  • Nebraska has won 90 home matches in the NCAA Tournament while only four other schools have 90 or more total victories in the NCAA Tournament.
  • NU has won 29 consecutive home matches in the NCAA Tournament, a school record.
  • Overall, Nebraska has won 63 consecutive home matches dating back to Dec. 1, 2022. That ties for the fifth-longest streak in NCAA Division I history and ties for the second-longest streak in Husker history.
  • With the win, Nebraska improved to 13-0 against ranked opponents this season. The 13 victories against ranked opponents are tied for second in school history, one shy of the school record (14 in 1998).
  • Nebraska won the first two sets and is now 106-2 all-time in the NCAA Tournament when taking a 2-0 lead.
  • Nebraska was the first to 20 points in each of the three sets. The Huskers are now 95-0 this season in sets when reaching 20 points first.
  • The Huskers held Kansas to fewer than 15 points in all three sets. That marked the second time this season that Nebraska has held its opponents to fewer than 15 points in every set, with both occurrences coming against top-25 teams (also against No. 25 Penn State on Nov. 28).
  • Nebraska won the first set, 25-12. That marked the Huskers’ 46th consecutive set won at home this season. That is a school record for consecutive sets won at home in one season, eclipsing the 45 consecutive home sets won by the 2004 team.
  • Overall, Nebraska has now won 48 consecutive sets at home which ties for the second-longest streak in school history, trailing only the 52 consecutive home sets won spanning the 2001-02 seasons.
  • Nebraska stuffed four of Kansas’ first 11 swings of the night, recording four blocks in the first eight rallies. The Huskers had as many blocks in the match’s first 15 rallies (5) as they did in their second-round sweep of Kansas State last Saturday.
  • Fueled by the block, Nebraska won 13 of the first 16 rallies of the match to take a 13-3 lead.
  • Nebraska finished with 10 blocks in the match, tying for its highest block total in 13 matches.
  • The Huskers hit .450 in the match, its third-highest attack percentage this season. Two of Nebraska’s three matches this season hitting .450 or better have come in the NCAA Tournament.
  • Nebraska has now hit above .400 in nine matches this season, the most in a single season in the rally-scoring era (2001-present).
  • The Huskers played three middle blockers in the match in Rebekah Allick, Andi Jackson and Manaia Ogbechie. The middles combined for 21 kills on 28 error-free swings. Allick had a kill on each of her nine swings.
  • Allick also had three blocks in the match, increasing her career total to 539 blocks and moving into 10th place on Nebraska’s all-time blocks list.
  • Harper Murray had seven kills in the match, increasing her career total to 1,156. She passed Lexi Sun and moved into 10th place on Nebraska’s career kills list in the rally-scoring era.
  • Olivia Mauch had a season-high three aces in the match.
  • Nebraska limited Kansas to a season-low .029 attack percentage. The Jayhawks’ previous low was a .104 hitting percentage against Kansas State on Oct. 24.
  • The Huskers have held 15 opponents under a .100 hitting percentage this season.
  • Kansas did not have a block until the 31st rally of the third set. The Jayhawks finished with one block, marking the third time this season a Husker opponent has totaled only one block.



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Kentucky Faces ‘Balanced’ Creighton in Regional Final on Saturday – UK Athletics

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When the Kentucky volleyball team takes the floor in Saturday’s regional final (5 p.m. ET, ESPN2), UK junior Molly Berezowitz will see some familiar faces across the net.

Berezowitz, who transferred to Kentucky this season from Marquette, has faced Creighton five times during her college career and knows the Blue Jays well.

“When I was at (Marquette), they were our biggest rivals, so we played them last year like three times,” Berezowitz said. “So, I kind of wanted to play them because obviously it’s different this year. They have a good offense and they have a lot of experience. I think it’s going to be a challenging game.”

Berezowitz knows that Creighton is a very experienced team.

“I feel like those girls have been there forever,” Berezowitz said. “I’ve played them like three years in a row. I think they have a lot of competitive maturity and I know we do as well. They’re a really good team, they’re always fun to play and they’re nice girls.”

UK head coach Craig Skinner knows that Creighton is much more than just stars Ava Martin and Kiara Reinhardt.

“Looking forward to playing Creighton. Obviously, a team that’s had a lot of success this year and presents lots of challenges with their offense and the way they play,” Skinner said. “It’s going to be exciting. Very balanced team. Everyone talks about Ava Martin and Reinhardt but with (Jaya) Johnson behind the setter and (Eloise) Brandewie, who played at Ohio State. They have a group that is very experienced, very mature in the way they compete. They’re not going to give us a whole lot of points.”

UK sophomore middle blocker Kennedy Washington believes that she and the team have a formula for success on Saturday.

“Just playing to our standard, spreading the offense and really defending,” Washington said. “Last night, we did a really good job of blocking and holding their star players to a lower hitting percentage.”

Berezowitz knows that it will take a team effort to beat a talented team like Creighton.

“Just using all 14 players, and we’re going to need everyone tomorrow,” Berezowitz said. “I think it’s important to just treat it like every other game we’ve played.”

Skinner believes that serving will be crucial on Saturday. How important is it?

“Very. It was very important last night against Cal Poly and then, because of the diversity that Creighton throws at you with their offense, it will be important again,” Skinner said. “We’re going to have to find the right spots to hit in the right rotations.”

Saturday’s match between two talented teams should be fun to watch. And the winner will advance to next week’s Final Four in Kansas City.





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No. 3 Aggies Reverse Sweep No. 2 Louisville to Punch Ticket to Elite Eight – Texas A&M Athletics

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LINCOLN – The No. 3 seed Texas A&M volleyball team reverse swept No. 2 Louisville to secure its first NCAA Tournament Elite Eight berth since 2001 Friday evening at the Bob Devaney Sports Center, 3-2 (23-25, 22-25, 25-23, 25-18, 15-12).
 
With their season on the line facing a two-set deficit, the Aggies (26-4) pulled off a comeback for the ages to outlast the Cardinals (26-7). The win was spearheaded by two of the program’s all-time greats, as Logan Lednicky paced the offense with 20 kills while Ifenna Cos-Okpalla set the program record for blocks in a five-set postseason match with 12.
 

Texas A&M grabbed the momentum out of the gate, forging a five-point gap early in the frame (11-6). The advantage held at the media timeout, as Kyndal Stowers drove home her fourth kill of the game (15-10). Louisville chipped into the lead, as head coach Jamie Morrison gathered his squad with a break (17-15). The Cardinals continued their streak to lead by two (23-21), and despite a late push from the Maroon & White, Louisville stole the opener (25-23).
 

Back-and-forth scoring opened the second frame, as the teams were knotted through the opening 20 points (10-10). Breaking the deadlock was Texas A&M with a 5-2 scoring run capped off by a block from Cos-Okpalla and Stowers to send the Aggies into the media timeout up three (15-12). Keeping their foot on the gas, the Maroon & White pushed the lead out to four prompting a timeout from the Cardinals (19-15). Louisville flipped the momentum to take the set (25-22) and double its advantage, 2-0.
 

Nothing separated the teams in the early portion of the third frame, as they were level on eight occasions midway through the set (13-13). The contest remained in lockstep (20-20), but a two-point strike from Texas A&M had Louisville huddling up (22-20). Staying on brand for the set, the match was again all square late (23-23), but back-to-back kills from Stowers sealed the frame (25-23) and cut the advantage in the match to one, 2-1.
 
Taking all their rhythm into the fourth, the Aggies piled on the pressure early leading by four as they hit double digits (10-6). The onslaught continued as the nation’s premier middle blocker, Cos-Okpalla, recorded her seventh block of the frame forcing a Louisville timeout (17-8). The Cardinals battled back, cutting the gap to four as Coach Morrison called a break (21-17). Louisville’s comeback fell short, when Stowers once again sealed the frame with a kill (25-18) sending the match to five sets, 2-2.
 

The fifth frame opened with side-out volleyball, as each team traded points to the flip with Louisville holding the one-point gap (8-7). Firing out the turn was Texas A&M, as it captured the upper hand prompting the Cardinals to huddle up (10-9). The Aggies were able to grab the crucial two-point advantage, leaving them three points from victory (12-10). Points continued to be traded, but Stowers for the third-straight set dealt the final blow sealing the set (15-12) and punching the Maroon & White’s ticket to the next round, 3-2.
 
STAT LEADERS
Kills – Logan Lednicky – 20
Hitting Percentage (Min. 10 kills) – Kyndal Stowers – .300
Assists – Maddie Waak – 45
Aces – Tatum Thomas, Logan Lednicky – 1
Digs – Logan Lednicky, Maddie Waak – 12  
Blocks – Ifenna Cos-Okpalla – 12
 
GAME NOTES

  • Logan Lednicky extended her double-digit kill streak to 20.
  • Ifenna Cos-Okpalla broke the program record for blocks in a five-set postseason match.
  • The Aggies advanced to their third Elite Eight in program history.
  • The 26th win of the season marked the most in a year since 2001 (26-6).

 
UP NEXT

The Maroon & White return to the Bob Devaney Sports Center Sunday where they will face the No. 1 overall seed Nebraska with first serve set for 2 p.m.
 
FOLLOW THE AGGIES
Visit 12thMan.com for more information on Texas A&M volleyball. Fans can keep up to date with the A&M volleyball team on Facebook, Instagram and on Twitter by following @AggieVolleyball.





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Nebraska volleyball sweeps Kansas, advances to Elite Eight

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

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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-



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Historic Season Comes to Close

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AUSTIN, Texas. – The greatest season in program history came to an end on Friday (Dec. 12) afternoon at Gregory Gymnasium in Austin. Top-seeded Texas earned a tight sweep of the fourth-seeded Indiana volleyball team (25-20, 25-22, 25-22) to advance to the regional finals on Sunday. IU’s season comes to a close with a single-season program record 25 wins (in the NCAA era).
 
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.



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