Sports
“I like a good challenge:” Montevallo tabs Matthew Allen to succeed Tena Niven as head volleyball coach – Shelby County Reporter
“I like a good challenge:” Montevallo tabs Matthew Allen to succeed Tena Niven as head volleyball coach Published 7:01 pm Friday, May 23, 2025 Montevallo High School named Matthew Allen as its new head volleyball coach as the former West Blocton head coach and Helena assistant will bring his track record of success to succeed […]

“I like a good challenge:” Montevallo tabs Matthew Allen to succeed Tena Niven as head volleyball coach
Published 7:01 pm Friday, May 23, 2025
- Montevallo High School named Matthew Allen as its new head volleyball coach as the former West Blocton head coach and Helena assistant will bring his track record of success to succeed the legendary Tena Niven. (Contributed/Allen Photography + Events)
By ANDREW SIMONSON | Sports Editor
MONTEVALLO – For the first time in 15 years, the Montevallo Bulldogs will have a new face on the sidelines at volleyball games as Matthew Allen returns to his roots and takes over the program.
Montevallo officially announced Allen as the new head varsity volleyball coach in a social media post on Friday, May 16. He was officially introduced to the team at a special meeting on Tuesday, May 20 at the MHS library.
“Montevallo is always kind of been like a home away from home, so this is very exciting for me and my family,” Allen said.

Allen led West Blocton to its most successful season ever in 2024 before heading to Helena and now Montevallo ahead of the 2025 season. (Contributed/Allen Photography + Events)
Allen served as the head coach of West Blocton for three seasons. In his most recent campaign in 2024, he led them to a 12-6 record, a nine-win improvement over the 2023 season and the most single-season wins since the Tigers started their program in 2010.
As a result, Allen’s West Blocton team finished second in Class 4A, Area 6 and advanced to the South Super Regionals for the first time since 2014. He was also named The Tuscaloosa News Volleyball Coach of the Year.
Prior to that, Allen coached boys basketball for a season at Morgan Academy and made it to the state championship game. He got his start at Cornerstone Christian, doubling up as volleyball and boys basketball coach while amassing a 54-15 volleyball record in three years with the Chargers.
While Allen didn’t graduate from Montevallo High School, his roots run deep in the area. He attended Montevallo Elementary School as a kid before moving to the Bibb County, and many of his family members graduated from MHS.
After leaving West Blocton, Allen headed to Helena in March and was set to serve as an assistant coach for both the Huskies’ varsity volleyball and boys basketball teams.
However, Allen ultimately left Helena without coaching a single game after a curious internal job search within Shelby County Schools led to him discovering that Montevallo’s volleyball coaching job was open.
He then reached out to Tena Niven who he knew from sharing an area with the Bulldogs in 2022 and 2023. After he confirmed Niven was retiring, he took time to pray and consider the position while Niven worked to help the opportunity come together.
While he never meant to leave Helena after less than three months at the school, he felt strongly that God was leading him in Montevallo’s direction.
“I’m a man of faith, and I firmly believe that this was a door that the Lord opened, and me and my family have a lot of peace about it,” Allen said. “And like I said, this wasn’t something that I took easily.”
Allen steps in for a program legend in Niven, who coached volleyball for the last 15 seasons as part of a 24-year coaching career at MHS. She racked up 270 wins as well as 10 area championships, three regional titles and two trips to the Elite Eight in her time with Montevallo volleyball.
He knows the expectations will be through the roof as he takes over for a beloved coach who he himself respects, but he is prepared for what lies ahead and looks forward to building on what Niven left behind.
“I understand the legacy that coach Niven has, and I understand it’s going to be a challenge trying to step in for somebody like her, but I like a good challenge,” Allen said. “Stepping in for her, I think it’s actually going to be pretty easy because she has a really good foundation built and really good program built, so (it’s) something I’m excited to do.”
Allen is no stranger to overcoming the odds. He came to Cornerstone initially as a boys basketball coach with all of his volleyball knowledge coming from watching his sister play. However, after a year on the basketball court, the Chargers needed a volleyball coach, so he stepped up.
Allen didn’t let his lack of knowledge stop him, and as he dove into learning about volleyball, he fell in love with it. His fast learning combined with a strong senior class to help Cornerstone reach the AISA Final Four in his first season ever as a volleyball coach.
He chalks up his quick success to a strong work ethic and drive to be the best.
“I’m not going to just go in and halfway coach something even if I don’t know much about the sport,” Allen said. “I wasn’t there for volleyball. Basketball was my thing, so I could’ve easily just said, ‘I’m just going to get through it and get through to basketball,’ but started studying the game, started learning about it, and we had a fantastic year that year.”
He does carry over some principles from his time on the basketball court, namely a simple, fundamentals-based approach. In either sport, he isn’t focused on teaching specific plays or running a complicated offense and defense but instead wants to teach how to play the game the right way.
“I want my team to be very disciplined, want them to be very fundamentally sound, and once we get that established, we can start adding some things if we need to,” Allen said. “That’s the good thing about coming to coach Niven’s program is they’re going to be fundamentally sound, so there’s not much work to do there.”
With that foundation mostly laid, Allen hopes to instill a love of competition that paves the way for success both on and off the court.
“I want them to play together,” Allen said. “I want them to love competing, and not just competing on the court. Life itself is all about competition, and so if they can learn to compete on the court and learn how to overcome adversity, Nick Saban talks about the process, that’s what it’s all about. If we can get through that process of trying to be a winner, trying to be a champion, then they can learn some things that they can take with them throughout life and they can be a competitor in life.”
Montevallo enters its second season in Class 5A with high expectations after making the Class 5A Super Regionals in its first year in the classification. With a strong rising-senior trio of Emeli Guardado, Zoe Jones and Hunter Jordan returning fresh off All-State seasons, Allen will step into a program with a successful recent track record.
He wants to see the city of Montevallo get excited about the volleyball team this year and support them as they strive for even greater success in 2025.
“I really want to see is a big student section there every night, every game, big crowd there every night, every game, get this community rallied around these girls,” Allen said. “That’s what they want, and I think we can have a really special season.”
Sports
Women’s Volleyball Welcomes Kaeden Noble To Coaching Staff
Story Links SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – The UC Santa Barbara Women’s Volleyball program is excited to announce the hiring of Kaeden Noble as an assistant coach. Noble arrives as a recent graduate of Roanoke College in Salem, Virginia. Studying sport management, he captained the school’s Division III Men’s Volleyball team as […]

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – The UC Santa Barbara Women’s Volleyball program is excited to announce the hiring of Kaeden Noble as an assistant coach.
Noble arrives as a recent graduate of Roanoke College in Salem, Virginia. Studying sport management, he captained the school’s Division III Men’s Volleyball team as its starting libero. He was named 2025 First Team All-Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC), ending his career leading the program in digs and sets played, and holding 10 of the top 11 digs totals for a single match. Noble’s other accolades include Academic All-Conference honors and being selected for the USA D-3 Men’s Volleyball team for their summer 2024 Brazil tour.
As a coach, Noble was a student assistant on the Roanoke Women’s team through the 2024 season. Previously, he helped out with the East Carolina Junior Volleyball Club and was an assistant coach at his alma mater South Lenoir High School in Deep Run, North Carolina.
“I am extremely excited and grateful for the opportunity to work alongside this amazing staff and with this team,” Noble said. “The vision here is clear, and I’m proud to be part of what’s ahead.”
The Gauchos will begin their 2025 season in late August.
Sports
John U. Bacon examines the House v. NCAA settlement and how it changes college sports
College sports have entered a new era. Late last week, a California court approved a legal settlement that ends a longstanding ban on schools paying athletes directly. The House settlement is named after former Arizona State University swimmer Greg House, who sued the NCAA and five conferences. The agreement settles multiple lawsuits that were combined. […]


College sports have entered a new era.
Late last week, a California court approved a legal settlement that ends a longstanding ban on schools paying athletes directly. The House settlement is named after former Arizona State University swimmer Greg House, who sued the NCAA and five conferences. The agreement settles multiple lawsuits that were combined.
Michigan Public sports commentator John U. Bacon joined Morning Edition host Doug Tribou to take a closer look at the settlement.
Doug Tribou: There’s been a long run-up to this settlement and some things changed along the way, so to help our audience get caught up, I want to present a few of the key results and have you give us a summary of your thinking about each of them. Then we’ll get into some larger questions.
First, the deal creates the framework for colleges and universities to pay their athletes directly. Right now, the total amount allowed for each school is about $20.5 million based on a calculation on TV revenue, ticket sales, and other factors, which some schools disputed. What’s your view of the direct revenue sharing plan?
John U. Bacon: Well, first, that’ll be the first of about ten thousand disputes, but anyway. I find it inevitable. It’s long overdue in many ways, but it’s going to be incredibly complicated. For all the money that college sports produces, all but a few athletic departments are losing money. And one of the early complications: Will this turn student athletes into employees? If so, that will complicate their lives too, including taxes, kids! Hey, have fun! [Laughs]
“For all the money that college sports produces, all but a few athletic departments are losing money.”
John U. Bacon
DT: [Laughs] The agreement also caps roster limits for sports, which is likely to eliminate the concept of the walk-on athlete as we know it. But the House settlement also allows schools to offer every athlete a full scholarship. What jumps out at you there?
JUB: Well, if you’re looking at the quote-unquote “spirit of college athletics,” you know, sound mind, sound body, a true student-athlete, this is going to impinge on that quite a bit. Not only will walk-on athletes likely be reduced, you’re going to put a lot of pressure on schools to limit or cut their Olympic sports like gymnastics, swimming and track, which almost never make any money.
DT: Another major pillar of the House settlement is $2.7 billion in back pay, going to athletes who competed between 2016 and 2024 and were not able to maximize their name, image and likeness earnings — NIL — because of old rules. The NCAA and its conferences will pay out that back pay over time. What’s your view on the back payments for athletes?
JUB: It’s a good idea. It’s more parity for the athletes. Certainly they had it coming, but it’s also going to be another very large expense — $2.7 billion — that will put pressure on everything else.
DT: And we want to note here that a group of eight women has appealed the settlement, saying the division of the back payments is not fair to female athletes and that its structure violates aspects of Title IX, which prohibits gender discrimination in education. It appears that appeal will delay the start of those back payments, but the revenue sharing with current athletes is likely to move forward.
John, I’m just going to take a guess that this will not be the last legal action we’ll see…
JUB: [Laughs] Doug, I love you. And we’re going to be talking about this every Friday for about the next five years. So yeah, I think your impulse is correct here.
In an open letter, athletic director Warde Manuel announced the University of Michigan has a long-term goal of reducing its athletic department staff by 10 percent as a cost-saving measure.
DT: Let’s turn to some local effects. After the settlement was finalized, University of Michigan Athletic Director Warde Manuel published a letter about U of M’s plans. Manuel said the changes create a nearly $27 million deficit for the athletic department — from more than $6 million in new scholarship money the department will pay out and that maximum $20.5 million that all universities are allowed to pay directly to athletes.
Manuel listed a lot of ways U of M can make up the short-term and long-term costs. One that stood out to me was, “the department staff will gradually decline in number through two methods: attrition, with a long-term goal of a 10 percent reduction in total staff, and through a stricter approval process for new hires.”
Were you surprised to hear that the Michigan athletic department is planning to downsize?
JUB: Well, I was impressed by Manuel’s directness and his plan here, but I was a little surprised because this move was about ten years overdue. Manuel inherited a bloated payroll from a previous athletic director, Dave Brandon, that had increased the budget of the department from $100 million to $140 million in just four years. And Warde had done nothing to reduce it until now. But better late than never.
And I think his approach — attrition with fewer future hires — is both smart and compassionate. Trust me, every athletic department out there will be doing the same, so Michigan has very little choice here.
DT: Michigan State’s new athletic director, J Batt, who was just announced as the AD this month, also released a letter. What a time to get a new job, by the way, you take a new job as an AD and they rewrite how college sports works [Laughs].
JUB: [Laughs]
DT: He did note that MSU is committed to distributing the maximum amount. Again, that’s that $20.5 million to its athletes. He also promised to share more details about MSU’s plan in the near future.
Some people might be wondering about the schools that do not have the ability to do that sort of maximum spending and that don’t have these full scale programs that you see at U of M or MSU or Ohio State. For example, Oakland University has a very competitive basketball program at the Division I level, but does not have an NCAA football team.
How do you expect this to affect the schools in those types of situations?
JUB: For those schools, this is going to be brutal. It’s going to increase the already growing gap between the haves and the have-nots. Oakland U., [Mid-American Conference] schools like Eastern [Michigan], Western [Michigan], and Central Michigan, they’re going to have some very tough choices. And they’re going to find it very hard to compete in a lot of sports and they’re going to start cutting sports. It’s almost inevitable.
Editor’s notes: Some quotes in this article have been edited slightly for length and clarity. You can play the audio of the full interview near the top of the page.
The University of Michigan holds Michgan Public’s broadcast license.
Sports
Readers vote volleyball player Riley Greene Sarasota-Manatee Girls Athlete of the Year
The Sarasota Herald-Tribune is proud to honor area high school sports programs with our annual Sarasota-Manatee High School Sports Awards, which was held on Friday, May 30, 2025, at the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall in Sarasota. Throughout the year, The Herald-Tribune selects an All-Area team in each FHSAA sport. From those teams, we select Players […]
The Sarasota Herald-Tribune is proud to honor area high school sports programs with our annual Sarasota-Manatee High School Sports Awards, which was held on Friday, May 30, 2025, at the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall in Sarasota.
Throughout the year, The Herald-Tribune selects an All-Area team in each FHSAA sport. From those teams, we select Players of the Year for every sport, and also an overall Girls Athlete of the Year.
We selected Riverview High softball player Allison Cole as our Girls Athlete of the Year. We then asked you, our readers, to vote and select the athlete you think deserved to be the Athlete of the Year.
After a week of voting, you selected Cardinal Mooney Catholic’s volleyball player Riley Greene with 51.36% of the vote. The 6-foot-1 middle hitter was the Cougars’ kills leader with 169. In the first season of head coach Allan Knight, the Cougars went 22-5, losing to Berkeley Prep in the regional final. Greene had an impressive kill percentage of 47.3 while averaging 2.2 kills per set. For Knight’s team, she added 44 blocks and 44 digs.
To see the poll results CLICK HERE
Sports
George Pickens Receives Endorsement of Cowboys Captain
George Pickens Receives Endorsement of Cowboys Captain originally appeared on Athlon Sports. FRISCO – George Pickens arrived at The Star with a clean slate inside the building, but also lots of critics outside of it. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement Some in the Pittsburgh Steelers organization said it was Pickens’ behavior on the field and in the […]

George Pickens Receives Endorsement of Cowboys Captain originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
FRISCO – George Pickens arrived at The Star with a clean slate inside the building, but also lots of critics outside of it.
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Some in the Pittsburgh Steelers organization said it was Pickens’ behavior on the field and in the locker room that led head coach Mike Tomlin to finally give up on the talented receiver. The Cowboys traded for him in an effort to provide a reliable No. 2 receiver opposite CeeDee Lamb.
Despite Pickens’ reputation, the Cowboys immediately welcomed him with open arms. Both vice president Stephen Jones and Lamb himself claimed Pickens is a “No. 1” receiver.
Now a couple of days into minicamp and quarterback Dak Prescott is adding to the chorus of positivity surrounding the Cowboys’ newest weapon.
“I think that’s why you should never really listen to what somebody else says about somebody,” Prescott said about Pickens. “I think you should find out for yourself who they are and allow them to reveal their character to you. The guy’s been great. He’s been phenomenal.
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“It’s a guy that loves football, loves his teammates, and he’s been excited every day that he’s been there. He’s been early, too, so no concerns on the personal matters of G.P. or anything about it. I’m just super excited that he’s on our team. He’s one of us, and he’s our brother, and he’s all about continuing to grow and making sure he’s putting the best out there; and that’s his approach.”
Related: ‘Legacy Be Damned’ as Cowboys’ Dak Focuses On Super Bowl ‘Sanity’
Related: Jerry’s Cowboys Should Sign These Five Stars Immediately
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 13, 2025, where it first appeared.
Sports
Augusta University Announces Addition of Men’s and Women’s Indoor Track and Field
Story Links AUGUSTA, Ga. – Augusta University Athletics is proud to announce the addition of men’s and women’s indoor track and field, with competition beginning in the 2025–26 academic year. The new offering marks the next step in a series of strategic investments into Augusta’s nationally competitive cross country and track and […]

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Augusta University Athletics is proud to announce the addition of men’s and women’s indoor track and field, with competition beginning in the 2025–26 academic year.
The new offering marks the next step in a series of strategic investments into Augusta’s nationally competitive cross country and track and field programs. With this move, Augusta joins many of the premier NCAA Division II institutions that provide year-round opportunities for their cross country and track student-athletes. It also marks the first NCAA sport added by Augusta University since 2013.
“This is a huge step for our program,” said Jacob Burgamy, head cross country and track & field coach. “Our athletes are very excited about having an additional opportunity to compete for a championship each year and have another full season of competition. Our team has had a lot of growth and progress over the past couple of seasons, and I’m very grateful for the investment that Augusta University and our AD, Ryan Erlacher, have been putting into us to help us continue that upward trend.”
Burgamy, named head coach in March 2023, will lead the indoor programs in addition to his current roles. Under his leadership, Augusta’s men’s cross country team has captured three consecutive Peach Belt Conference titles and earned national rankings each year. In fall 2024, Jordan Robertson became the program’s first cross country All-American, finishing among the nation’s top performers at the NCAA Championships in Sacramento. On the track, Avery Jaynes made history in spring 2025 as Augusta’s first NCAA Track & Field All-American with a podium finish in the 10,000m at the national meet in Pueblo, Colorado.
Indoor track will be a tremendous addition to our sports sponsorship lineup,” said Director of Athletics Ryan Erlacher. “Under Coach Burgamy’s excellent leadership, I have no doubt our indoor programs will be extremely competitive right away. We have some of the best athletes in the country and we look forward to seeing them compete for indoor championships in 2025-26.”
The launch of indoor track and field is a natural progression for a program that continues to raise its competitive standard. It also creates year-round competitive and developmental opportunities for Augusta’s distance, sprint, jump, and throw athletes—building on the momentum established across recent seasons.
This addition represents only one piece of a larger vision for the future of track and field at Augusta. As the program continues to grow, more enhancements are on the horizon to support the success and experience of Jaguar student-athletes.
Fans of Jaguar Athletics can GIVE by clicking here. Fans of Jaguar Athletics can subscribe to the email listserve by clicking here. Fans can follow Augusta University Athletics at www.AugustaJags.com and receive updates on Facebook at Augusta University Athletics and on Instagram @augustajags
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Volleyball Names Alverson as Associate Head Coach
Story Links BRONX, N.Y. – Fordham University Volleyball Head Coach Ian Choi announced Friday the hiring of Brooke Alverson as the Associate Head Coach for the Rams ahead of the fall 2025 campaign. Alverson joins the volleyball program after serving as Director of Administration and Branding for the Fordham women’s basketball […]

BRONX, N.Y. – Fordham University Volleyball Head Coach Ian Choi announced Friday the hiring of Brooke Alverson as the Associate Head Coach for the Rams ahead of the fall 2025 campaign.
Alverson joins the volleyball program after serving as Director of Administration and Branding for the Fordham women’s basketball team during the 2024–25 campaign. Before arriving at Rose Hill, she spent two seasons at West Texas A&M, where she was an assistant coach on the Lady Buffs’ 2022 NCAA Division II National Championship team and also worked as a sports information director.
Bringing a deep background in volleyball, Alverson previously served as an assistant coach at nationally ranked NJCAA program, Navarro College. Prior to that, she spent five years as the founder and director of Pineywoods Volleyball Club in Texas, starting in 2015. During that time, she also worked with the North Texas Region of USA Volleyball as an administrative assistant, collaborating with more than 200 club teams.
“I’m excited to have Brooke on our staff this season,” said Coach Choi. “I have no doubt that her relationships in the recruiting world coupled with her coaching experience on a National Championship program will help to propel and maintain our competitive culture and success.”
While with the women’s basketball program at Fordham last season, Alverson helped elevate its social media presence, increasing followers across all platforms by 12%. She also supported the sports information department with recruiting coverage and coordinated on-campus visits for prospective student-athletes. Additionally, she launched fan and alumni engagement campaigns and partnered with local schools and community groups to bring guests to games at Rose Hill Gym.
“I’m excited to join Coach Choi and the Fordham Volleyball program this fall,” said Alverson. “My time with Fordham women’s basketball gave me valuable perspective, and I appreciate Coach B for the opportunity to contribute and grow in that role. I’m looking forward to bringing that experience back to the volleyball court and continue to be part of the Fordham Ramily!”
Alverson is a two-time All-Southland Conference selection from her years playing at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, and received her Bachelor of Arts in Radio and Television Broadcast, with a Minor in Communication.
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