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How Peloton became key to Liverpool FC's fitness routine

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How Peloton became key to Liverpool FC's fitness routine

Image may contain Virgil van Dijk Chris Brunt Person Child Clothing Footwear Shoe Electrical Device and Microphone

Most people – especially pundits and punters – believe this year’s Premier League is a foregone conclusion. Unless you’re an anxious Liverpool FC fan or a very optimistic Arsenal supporter (Declan Rice’s free kicks might be the source of hope), the common consensus is that Liverpool have won it. 11 points clear with seven games to go, it’s in the bag and is a matter of when not if. Even a second defeat of the season at Fulham hasn’t shifted the narrative on Liverpool being champions elect.

Throughout Arne Slot’s first season, one of the reasons Liverpool have been able to be so dominant at the top of the table is their all-round fitness levels have remained consistently good. Compared to some of their closest rivals, Arsenal and Manchester City, they have been fortunate not to suffer as many injuries to key players. Indeed it’s only early April and the likes of Virgil van Dijk, Mo Salah, Ryan Gravenberch, Dominik Szoboszlai, Alexis Mac Allister and Andy Robertson have already played 39+ games – and not only that, they still look fresh, and raring to go.

With the season reaching a climax (or anti-climax if you were hoping for a close title race), we caught up with Liverpool captain van Dijk as well as fellow defenders Kostas Tsimikas and Conor Bradley to talk through the team’s fitness routine in a bid to find out any secrets to their success this year.

“Every player has their own fitness coach and before a game prepares differently, depending on what he wants specialised in the program. We each train specific things,” says Tsimikas. The exception to that rule is pre-match warm ups where everybody does the same.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND – JANUARY 21: Liverpool team group of (br) Alisson Becker, Virgil van Dijk, Ryan Gravenberch, Dominik Szoboszlai, Jarell Quansah, Curtis Jones, (fr) Conor Bradley, Darwin Nunez, Luis Diaz, Kostas Tsimikas and Mohamed Salah before the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 League Phase MD7 match between Liverpool FC and LOSC Lille at Anfield on January 21, 2025 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Richard Sellers/Sportsphoto/Allstar via Getty Images)Richard Sellers/Allstar/Getty Images

“We have a lot of good trainers who train a lot,” says van Dijk about Liverpool’s current squad. “But if we have to say one name then you probably say Mo [Salah].”

Goalkeeper Alisson Becker gets the nod as the most flexible player in the team, and the trio are unanimous in their nominations for the player most likely to smash a marathon: Dominic Szoboszlai.

From getting a good night’s sleep to what makes a good recovery session great, here’s how the players maintain their fitness levels throughout the season – with running commentary from an expert Peloton instructor.

Post-game routine

“Usually after a game I go in and just eat as much as I can. Then I get things like a nice bath and when I get home I’ll have a little stretch as well. It doesn’t really differ what time the game is, I usually just do the same as that. But if I’m on the bench and only come on for 15 minutes, after the game I’ll go out and do a bit of running. It’s up to the coaches how far or how quick and you do a bit of gym as well to keep yourself topped up.” Conor Bradley

“If you play regularly every three days, the turnaround is pretty quick so I definitely do a lot of work after the game. That could be until midnight or into the very early hours. And the following day is still all about recovery. To keep you in your best shape ever and in order to be as fresh as I can every three to four days for a game, I stick to my principles of a decent recovery session.” Virgil van Dijk

Getting to sleep after a big match

“For me personally, I sleep pretty good all throughout the week, but then I struggle to sleep after a game, with the adrenaline and things like that. So it could be 3 o’clock in the morning before I get to sleep. So that day, I’ll obviously try to have a nap during the day as well.” Conor Bradley

“There’s so many factors that play a part [to sleeping well].The mental side of it is definitely a big part of it. The way the game goes, obviously everyone hopes for a positive outcome, and you can still be thinking about so many moments during the game. So there’s a lot of things that can keep you up. There’s also ways that could get you into a state where you can sleep quicker in terms of breathing exercises, saunas and ice baths. But yeah, if you can’t sleep, the most important thing is to find a way the following day to get a nap in, to balance it all out. We have the right people here that will advise us on the right things as well.” Virgil van Dijk

Jumping on a bike

Given van Dijk is from the Netherlands (36% of Dutch people have a bicycle), he has always been quite used to cycling. “I’ve had a Peloton at my house already for a couple of years, a treadmill and a bike, and I like the Lanebreak [workout experience] on it – it’s a nice feature to have,” he says.

Lanebreak is a game-inspired experience available on both Peloton Bike and Peloton Tread that combines great music, immersive visuals, workout variety, and crucially, a leaderboard. “Each Lanebreak level is modelled around a workout similar to our instructor-led classes meaning it’s one of many ways to work out with Peloton especially for those who are achievement-oriented,” says Ben Alldis, an experienced Peloton instructor. “On the Bike, riders ride along a six-lane track using a virtual wheel they control with their cadence and resistance via the Bike’s resistance knob,” says Alldis. “Lanebreak launched on Tread in 2023, enabling users to control their virtual wheel using the incline and speed knobs as they run along the Lanebreak track.

For Tsimikas, who is from Greece where cycling isn’t nearly as popular, he only jumping on a bike for one reason, and that’s recovery. “Automatically after the bike, you feel that your legs are more ready. In my opinion, it helps a lot even if you want to do cardio or a bigger session,” he says.

Active recovery is key

All three players agree that static cycling, like on a Peloton bike, is the best way to speed up recovery after a game. “Some players use the [Peloton] bike before training just to get the legs flowing,” says Bradley, who has really come into his own this season as a very capable understudy for Trent Alexander-Arnold at right back. “But the only time I’d use it, personally, is in recovery. We’ll do a bit of stretching, a bit of meditation then jump on the bikes for a 10-15 minute spin.”

According to Alldis, jumping on a Peloton post-game is ideal when it comes to active recovery. “The best time to jump on a Peloton Bike after a long run or intense training block is 2-6 hours post-workout or the next day for active recovery, depending on how your body feels. A 10-20 minute low-impact ride shortly after exercise can help flush out soreness and improve circulation, while a 20-30 minute easy recovery ride the next day can aid muscle repair without adding strain. Keep the intensity low [Zones 1-2, 80-90 RPM, light resistance] and focus on movement rather than effort.

Don’t over analyse the stats

“As players, we decide what we do with our own body, but the [fitness coaches] here are a helping hand. There are tools for us to use and [Liverpool’s fitness coaches] want us to use them as well because everyone is on the same page to get better and to get success as a club and a team,” adds van Dijk. In line with what the Liverpool skipper says about players having all the tools available to them to track their fitness, Alldis believes access to these stats can help improve performance, but only if you use them wisely. “More data doesn’t automatically mean better results,” he says. “Key metrics like heart rate, power output, pace targets, VO2 max, and recovery scores can help optimise training, prevent overtraining, and track progress, but obsessing over every number can lead to burnout. The best approach? Use data as a tool, not a rule – track what matters for your goals, but always listen to how your body feels.”

A player knows his body best

“At the end of the day, we are the boss of our own bodies, “ says van Dijk. “Deep inside we know how we have to deal with certain situations, certain aches and pains.”

With this in mind, Alldis says the best way to digest fitness stats is to focus on what matters for your goals, track trends rather than fixate on daily fluctuations. “Key Peloton stats like output, cadence, resistance, pace targets, Powerzones, and FTP score can help guide training,” says Alldis. “Break it down into daily [real-time effort], weekly [training load & recovery], and monthly [progress checks like FTP and benchmark tests] insights. Most importantly, use data as a tool, not a rule – let it shape your training, but don’t let it override how you feel.”

What is the optimal Peloton bike workout

You don’t need to be a top Liverpool player to benefit from a decent piece of kit like a Peloton bike. Use it like the versatile tool that it is, and Alldis believes it has the potential to “enhance cardiovascular fitness, endurance, and metabolic conditioning while seamlessly complementing Peloton’s other classes, such as strength training, yoga, mobility, and meditation.”

So what does an optimal Peloton workout look like? Here’s what Alldis thinks:

“A short, low-to-moderate intensity ride (5-10 min) works well as a warm-up before strength training, helping to elevate heart rate and loosen up the body without causing fatigue. For endurance, Power Zone rides (30-90 min) build aerobic capacity, while Climb, HIIT and HIIT & Hills rides (20-45 min) improve power and metabolic conditioning – best done after strength training or on separate days to maximise both cardio and strength benefits. The low-impact nature of cycling also makes it great for active recovery, pairing well with stretching or mobility work.”

Peloton is Liverpool FC’s Official Digital Fitness Partner. Together the two brands teamed up for Sprint to the Kop, Powered by Peloton, a celebration of passion, fitness, and football. Peloton provides expert instruction and world-class content to create impactful and entertaining workout experiences for members anywhere and at any stage in their fitness journey.

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Friar Track Competes At BU’s Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener

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BOSTON, Mass. – The Providence College men’s and women’s track teams competed at the Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener at Boston University on Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025. The women’s team was paced by junior Maeve O’Neill (Cork, Ireland) who won the 600 meters in 1:28.09.
 
RESULTS: https://lancer.trackscoreboard.com/meets/394/events
 
Also for the women’s team, junior Kiera Hall (Christchurch, New Zealand) won her heat and finished 14th in the mile (4:54.98). Friar senior Cara Laverty (Derry, Ireland) finished 20th in the 3,000 meters in 9:25.43 while freshman Gemma Galvin (Clare, Ireland) placed 40th in the 3,000 meters in her first collegiate indoor race in 9:41.57.

For the men’s team, senior Zane Powell (Auckland, New Zealand) and sophomore Daniel Prescott (Christchurch, New Zealand) ran in the 3,000 meters. Powell finished 54th (8:09.62) while Prescott placed 63rd (8:13.87).

 

In the 5,000 meters, sophomore Elliott Pugh (Tauranga, New Zealand) won his heat in 14:08.90 while sophomore Ryan LoCicero (Bloomfield, N.J.) placed third in the same heat in 14:19.00.

The Friars return to action on Jan. 17 at the Harvard Beantown Challenge in Cambridge, Mass. 

 

For more information on the Providence College men’s and women’s indoor track teams, follow @FriarsXCTrack on X and Instagram.

GO FRIARS!



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Nebraska and Creighton match times, opponents in NCAA Tournament

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NCAA Volleyball Tournament: Match times, opponents for Nebraska and Creighton

REPORTING FOR KETV NEWSWATCH SEVEN. I’M JOHN GRINVALDS. CREIGHTON. VOLLEYBALL. BACK IN THE NCAA TOURNAMENT FOR THE 14TH STRAIGHT SEASON, BLUE JAYS HAVE THEIR SIGHTS SET ON MAKING IT TO THE FINAL FOUR, AND THAT PURSUIT BEGINS TONIGHT IN OMAHA. KETV NEWSWATCH SEVEN’S MATT SOTTILE LEIGH IS LIVE OUTSIDE DJ SOCAL ARENA WITH THE STORY. HEY MATT. HEY, QUANECIA. HEY, ROB. IT MAY BE FRIGID OUTSIDE OF DJ SOCAL ARENA, BUT INSIDE THIS BUILDING, THE BLUE JAYS ARE RED HOT. THEY HAVE WON 44 OF THEIR LAST 45 MATCHES HERE AT HOME, MAKING THEM NEARLY UNBEATABLE THIS SEASON. A 25 AND FIVE RECORD AND A SIXTH STRAIGHT BIG EAST TOURNAMENT TITLE EARNED THE BLUE JAYS THE RIGHT TO HOST MATCHES AT HOME, AND THE PLAYERS KNOW THAT COULD PROVE TO BE A BIG ADVANTAGE. OH MY GOSH, WE LOVE PLAYING AT CREIGHTON IN FRONT OF OUR HOME FANS. I MEAN, I THINK IT GIVES US WE HAVE SUCH A GREAT HOME COURT ADVANTAGE. I THINK OUR FANS REALLY BRING IT. THE CREIGHTON COMMUNITY JUST SHOWS UP FOR US AS A WHOLE, AND IT JUST FEELS SO GREAT TO BE SUPPORTED IN OUR OWN GYM. SO WE’RE SO EXCITED. I OBVIOUSLY LOVE PLAYING IN SOCAL AND I’M SO EXCITED TO GET ONE LAST WEEKEND HERE. THE JAYS ARE HOSTING MATCHES HERE AT HOME FOR THE FIFTH STRAIGHT SEASON. THAT PUTS THEM IN ELITE COMPANY. THEY ARE ONE OF JUST SEVEN SCHOOLS IN THE COUNTRY THAT CAN SAY THAT RIGHT NOW, UTAH AND NORTHERN IOWA ARE SQUARING OFF INSIDE THE BUILDING. CREIGHTON AND NORTHERN COLORADO WILL TAKE CENTER STAGE AFTER THAT. REPORTING OUTSIDE DJ SOCAL ARENA MATT SOTTILE KETV NEWSWATCH SEVEN SPORTS. THANKS, MATT. YOU’RE RIGHT, IT DOE

NCAA Volleyball Tournament: Match times, opponents for Nebraska and Creighton

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Updated: 9:59 PM CST Dec 6, 2025

Editorial Standards

Nebraska and Creighton are moving on in the 2025 NCAA Volleyball Tournament.The Huskers will play Kansas on Friday at 8:30 p.m. at the Devaney Center in the third round of the tournament.NU swept both LIU and Kansas State in the first two rounds in Lincoln.The Jays will face Arizona State in the regionals on Thursday at noon in Lexington.The match will be broadcast on ESPN2.Creighton took down Northern Colorado in five sets in the first round and UNI in four sets in the second round at the D.J. Sokol Arena. Make sure you can always see the latest news, weather, sports and more from KETV NewsWatch 7 on Google search.NAVIGATE: Home | Weather | Local News | National | Sports | Newscasts on demand |

Nebraska and Creighton are moving on in the 2025 NCAA Volleyball Tournament.

The Huskers will play Kansas on Friday at 8:30 p.m. at the Devaney Center in the third round of the tournament.

NU swept both LIU and Kansas State in the first two rounds in Lincoln.

The Jays will face Arizona State in the regionals on Thursday at noon in Lexington.

The match will be broadcast on ESPN2.

Creighton took down Northern Colorado in five sets in the first round and UNI in four sets in the second round at the D.J. Sokol Arena.

Make sure you can always see the latest news, weather, sports and more from KETV NewsWatch 7 on Google search.

NAVIGATE: Home | Weather | Local News | National | Sports | Newscasts on demand |



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Oji Leads Record-Breaking Performances at Penn Opener

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PHILADELPHIA – The University of Pennsylvania track & field program opened the 2025-26 indoor season with a series of standout performances at the Penn Opener, highlighted by multiple event victories, three school records, one Ivy League record, and the nation’s leading women’s shot put mark.

Freshman Jessica Oji delivered the standout performance of the meet, winning the shot put with a mark of 17.72m (58′ 1.75″). Oji’s mark set a new Ivy League indoor record, Penn school record, and currently ranks first in the NCAA. 

Adannia Agbo added another record-breaking performance in the triple jump, winning the event with a school-record jump of 13.05m (42′ 9.75″), ranked second in the NCAA. 

On the men’s side, senior Jake Rose led the way winning the heptathlon with a school-record total of 5647 points. Rose won six of the seven events, recording personal-best marks in long jump (7.12m (23′ 4.5″)) and high jump (1.92m (6′ 3.5″)). 

First-year standout Joseph “Tiago” Socarras added the first school record on the track this season, winning the 1000m with a time of 2:20.39. 

Penn closed the competition with a fifth school record, as the 4x400m relay team of Leo Francis, Nayyir Newash-Campbell, Tiago Socarras, and Ryan Matulonis ran 3:09.78 to claim victory. 

First Place Times/Marks

Penn controlled the men’s 3000m race claiming four of the top five places including a winning time of 8:09.33 from Nick Carpenter.

Freshman Rianna Floyd won the 300 meters at 38.75, then returned to anchor the winning 4x400m relay (3:45.22) with teammates Jailyn Milord, Sofia Swindell, and Mary Ramey.

Evangeline Thomson cleared 3.92m (12′ 10.25″) to claim victory in the women’s pole vault. 

Ryan Matulonis recorded a personal-best 60m hurdles time of 7.96, finishing first. 

Thomas Bucks made his debut in the red and blue stripes claiming first in pole vault at 4.90m (16′ 0.75″). Leo Francis won the long jump at 6.92m (22′ 8.5″). 

Up Next

Penn track and field will return from winter break in January hosting the Penn Select on Jan. 10 at the Ott Center. 

Top Five Results

Women’s 

Shot Put

1. Jessica Oji – 17.72m (58′ 1.75″) *Ivy Record, School Record, Ranked 1st in NCAA

Weight Throw

2. Stella Inman – 17.20m (56′ 5.25″)

5. Ella Neskora – 16.42m (53′ 10.5″)

Pole Vault

1. Evangeline Thomson – 3.92m (12′ 10.25″)

5. Rebecca Hoover – 3.47m (11′ 4.50″)

Long Jump

2. Paris Ivery – 5.96m (19′ 7.50″)

5. Amelia Kristen – 5.79m (19′ 0″)

Triple Jump

1. Adannia Agbo – 13.05m (42′ 9.75″) *School Record, Ranked 2nd in NCAA

60m H – Finals

2. Chikaodinaka Akazi – 8.55

5. Sofia Swindell – 8.66

60m – Finals

3. Keira Beaumont – 7.44

4. Jordyn Reed – 7.57

600m

3. Giuliana Ligor – 1:34.41

4. Yuliya Maslouskaya – 1:34.62

300m

1. Rianna Floyd – 38.75

3. Jailyn Milord – 39.18

4x400m

1. Milord, Swindell, Ramey, Floyd – 3:45.22

Pentathlon 

2. Raina Pietrzak – 3560 pts 

3. Avery Elliott – 3437 pts

Men’s 

High Jump

2. Mark Hellwig – 2.06m (6′ 9″)

Pole Vault

1. Thomas Bucks – 4.90m (16′ 0.75″)

4. Alex Georgiev – 4.75m (15′ 7″)

Long Jump

1. Leo Francis – 6.92m (22′ 8.5″)

Triple Jump

2. Matthew Kathiravelu – 15.06m (49′ 5″)

Shot Put

3. Kai Deines – 16.21m (53′ 2.25″)

Mile

3. Brian Gent – 4:15.94

4. Sebastian Pizarro – 4:21.44

60m H – Finals

1. Ryan Matulonis – 7.96 *PR

4. Sean Golembiewski – 8.30

60m – Finals

2. Simeon Adams – 6.81

1000m

1. Joseph Socarras – 2:20.39 *School Record

5. Nathan Blades – 2:29.04 *PR

300m

4. Simeon Adams – 34.33

3000m

1. Nick Carpenter – 8:09.33 

3. Kofi Fordjour – 8:15.16

4. Shane Murphy – 8:17.91

5. Vinay Raman – 8:24.39

4x400m

1. Leo Francis, Nayyir Newash-Campbell, Tiago Socarras, Ryan Matulonis – 3:09.78 *School Record

Heptathlon 

1. Jake Rose – 5647 pts *School Record

 



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No. 1 Nebraska volleyball punches ticket to Sweet 16 with sweep over Kansas State

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LINCOLN, Neb. (WOWT) – No. 1 Nebraska volleyball advanced to the Sweet 16 with a sweep of Kansas State on Saturday night (25-17, 25-21, 25-16).

The Huskers (32-0) will host a second weekend in Lincoln, beginning with the Kansas Jayhawks in the Regional Semifinal on Friday, Dec. 12 at 8:30pm. The winner will play either Louisville or Texas A&M in the Regional Final.

Andi Jackson and Harper Murray led the Huskers with 10 kills apiece in a game where Nebraska had to step outside its comfort zone to defeat the Wildcats.

“Kansas State played great. They really challenged us in a lot of areas,” head coach Dani Busboom Kelly said. “I thought this was one of the first matches in awhile that we had to gut it out with our serve and pass and floor defense.”

After taking the first set, 25-17, Kansas State took control in Set Two. Wildcats setter Ava Legrand hit the Huskers with a set over to take a 10-9 advantage. The Papio South native had four kills in set.

Despite a late 4-0 run from KSU, Nebraska closed out the frame on a 3-0 run with a Jackson-Murray block serving as set point, 25-21.

Kansas State opened the third set in front 5-3 before Nebraska went to work, compiling runs of 8-1 and 6-1 to take a 23-13 advantage. Taylor Landfair drilled a kill off the block for match point, sending the Huskers on to the Sweet 16 for a 14th straight season.



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Sjöberg Becomes Eighth-Fastest 3k Athlete In NCAA History

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BOSTON/WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Vera Sjöberg (8:43.06) is now the eighth fastest 3k athlete in NCAA history as she shattered the twenty-two-year-old school record held by Shalane Flanagan in the women’s 3000m. Sjöberg is not only the first woman in school history to run a sub-nine-minute 3k, but she also broke the record by 17 seconds.

Carolina notched four event wins at the Winston-Salem Season-Kickoff meet, including a podium sweep of the women’s weight throw, as Kosi Umerah (21.00m) became the third woman in program history to throw 21 meters. Umerah has the sixth-farthest throw in the NCAA this season. McKynzie Mauney (18.10m) moved into eighth all-time. Tommy Kitchell, the throws coach was making his coaching debut as well. Tyler Collins and Kyle Archie debuted for the Tar Heels by winning the women’s and men’s high jump, giving the jump squad an event sweep. Nick Pennington (4.95m) kicked off the winning ways as he won the men’s pole vault this morning.

W-S Season-Kickoff Recap

Nick Pennington (4.95m) opened the day in Winston-Salem with a win in the men’s pole vault. Today’s win marked his first career indoor victory, while giving him his third overall career victory. On the women’s side, Maddy Kelley (3.80m) and Peyton Berryman (3.80m) took second and third in their season debut.

Ethan Richter (17.26m) led the way for the men’s shot put crew, finishing in second. Carolina had three freshmen make their debuts: Jason Noel (13.39m), Cooper Williams (16.35m), and Nse Uffort (15.63m). The latter two also advanced to the finals. Skyler Bohlman (13.32m) finished in third on the women’s side.

Boston University Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener 

At the Boston University Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener, Aiden Neal set a four-second PR in the men’s 3k, breaking eight minutes for the first time in his career with a 7:59.11 as he took 23rd overall.

Sydney Masciarelli (4:33.20) made her season debut in the Women’s Mile Invitational, leaping from tenth to second all-time in the women’s mile as she finished third.

Colton Sands lowered his 5k personal record by over nine seconds, improving his own second-fastest time in program history that he set last year.

Results 

Winston-Salem Season Kick-Off 

Women’s Weight Throw

1. Kosi Umerah, 21.00m (68-10.75)

2. McKynzie Mauney, 18.10m (59-04.75)

3. Gracie Bolick, 17.08m (56-00.5) 

Men’s Shot Put

2.  Ethan Richter, 17.26m (56-07.50) 

5. Cooper Williams, 16.35m (53-07.75)

6. Nse Uffort, 15.63 51-03.50

14. Jason Noel, 13.39m (43-11.25)

Women’s Shot Put

3. Skylar Bohlman, 13.32m (43-08.50)

Men’s Pole Vault

1. Nick Pennington, 4.95m (16-02.75)

Women’s High Jump

1. Tyler Collins, 1.74m (5-08.50)

Men’s High Jump:

1. Kyle Archie, 2.04m (6-08.2)

 Women’s Pole Vault 

2. Maddy Kelley, 3.80m (12-05.50) 

3. Peyton Berryman 3.80m (12-05.50) 

BU Season Opener Results 

Women’s 3k Invitational 

2. Vera Sjöberg, 8:43.06 [Program Record]

Men’s 5k Invitational

5. Colton Sands, 13:17.88 [Second All-Time]

Women’s Mile Invitational

3. Sydney Masciarelli, 4:33.20 [Second All-Time]

6. Makayla Paige, 4:41.46

Men’s 3k

23. Aiden Neal, 7:59.11

For all the latest UNC Track & Field news, photos, and videos, follow on X, Instagram, and Facebook





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Nebraska volleyball sweeps through K-State in a dogfight | Sports

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The opening weekend in Lincoln for the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament featured two completely different storylines, but showcased how much of a storybook season that Nebraska volleyball has been on.

After drubbing Long Island in the opening match, the Huskers had to scrap and claw their way to a straight-set sweep over unseeded Kansas State. Nebraska will take on Kansas in a rematch of their spring match in April.

Over 8,600 people watched the Huskers win set one 25-17, set two 25-21 and set three 25-16. 

Here are a few quick takeaways from Saturday’s match:

Changing of the errors

Friday night’s game against LIU featured a boatload of service errors, but Saturday’s story was about the attack errors.

Part of the problem in Nebraska’s offense was how good Kansas State’s block was, recording their fourth straight game with eight or more stuffs. The Wildcats posted eight blocks in the game and accounted for nearly half of the Husker attack errors. The other ten attack errors, to get to the final total of 18, were off of some risky shots and cross-court attacks that went haywire. The 18 attack errors for Nebraska were their most since posting 26 against Creighton in a five-set thriller in September, and were their most for a three-set match this year.

“Their block was doing a really good job of getting touches that we kept trying to bounce,” head coach Dani Busboom Kelly said postgame. “They were disrupting our offense, which usually is a bit crisper.”

In what found itself being crisp tonight, the Huskers tied their next-highest total in aces with seven tonight, and four of them came from their defensive specialists. Junior setter Bergen Reilly and freshmen outside hitters Teraya Sigler and Virginia Adriano also threw up an ace on the board. It marked the 11th time in 32 games that Nebraska has achieved five or more aces.

The offense had a hard time clicking throughout the night, but found itself playing its best volleyball at the end of the match. If there is ever a time to get better, it is at the end of the game. The hit percentage was on a roller-coaster through the game, but peaked near .400% in the third set. The adjustment coming out of the locker room was paramount and the Huskers did it.

“At some point [opponents] are going to switch it up on us,” junior outside hitter Harper Murray said postgame. “I think to beat us, you’re going to have to find different ways to score.”

Two woman wrecking crew

When Nebraska’s offense struggled to score, the defense picked it up.

Junior libero Laney Choboy earned the starting assignment for the second game of the postseason. In a competitive game like this, the defense would have to show up. Choboy’s counterpart, whom she has competed with all season, ended up sharing some of the glory with her.

Sophomore defensive specialist Olivia Mauch posted 13 digs in the win, posting her third-highest total of the year behind two outputs of 14 and a 16-dig performance against Creighton. She also contributed two of the seven aces on the night, just the fifth time this year she’s recorded multiple aces in a match. She was a key part in some big-time defensive plays to keep up some critical points.

Choboy got better as the night went along, getting 12 digs and five assists. She also got two aces tonight, her second multi-ace game of the year, as the other came against Illinois in early November. The critical digs, though, came up at massive turning points of the game, continuing her spectacular junior season as a first-touch receiver.

“I think when it comes down to defense, it comes down to [Mauch and Choboy],” Reilly said postgame. “They really kept us in that game.”

The defense as a whole had a spectacular night in what resembled “old-school Nebraska volleyball,” as Busboom-Kelly put it. Sigler helped contribute nine digs, Murray had six, and Reilly had five. It was truly an all-around effort, with five blocks to boot, to help the Huskers pull out a huge win.

“Our defense hung in there, we were ready for long rallies,” Busboom-Kelly said.

Home crowd advantage

Getting to host playoff games is not a privilege that every program is able to have. Getting to host playoff games for the second weekend in all three years of being a part of your volleyball team is something special.

“I don’t think people understand how much of an advantage [hosting at home] is and how cool it is too,” Murray said. “We say all the time, it’s really hard to beat us here.”

The crowd came alive for a play you would see out of a movie, where Mauch had to pancake an attack, but her pass went offline. Reilly got a hand on it and the ball seemed destined for the stands until Sigler swatted the ball across the net and back into play. The roof nearly blew off the building.

“That was the loudest I’ve heard Devaney, maybe all season,” Reilly said.

Continued sellouts and strong home-court advantage, even with a large contingency of purple-clad fans in the crowd making the three-hour trip north, have helped propel Nebraska far in the past. To this point, they have experienced a similar story. An added advantage comes in the way of the Final Four being hosted at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City. While only a maximum of two more home games remain, they should get to enjoy lots of the Nebraska faithful cheering them on.

What’s next

Nebraska will get the fourth-seeded team in their regional next Thursday, Dec. 11, or Friday, Dec. 12, in Kansas. The Jayhawks finished second in the Big 12 this season behind Arizona State and will come into the game 24-10. Kansas swept through High Point 3-0 in their first game and then defeated fifth-seeded Miami in four sets on Friday.

The winner of the Nebraska/Kansas game will face either Texas A&M or Louisville in the regional final. Both teams swept through their first round game, but the Cardinals had some added trouble against pesky Marquette, who took them the distance in a five-set thriller. The Aggies had to deal with a stingy TCU team that hung around through all four sets in their contest. The regional final will be either Saturday, Dec. 13, or Sunday, Dec. 14.

Danny Berg is a volleyball beat writer at The Daily Nebraskan. Follow him on X and Instagram.

sports@dailynebraskan.com 





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