Sports
Indiana freshman defies death, makes NCAA volleyball tournament
CHARLOTTE VINSON IS dying from toxic shock syndrome when she sees her grandma.
It’s May 2024. Charlotte is 16 years old and playing the best volleyball of her life until chills give way to a fever. Her organs shut down. She is in Riley Hospital for Children in Indianapolis on life support.
Her grandmother appears. The woman who adored tulips. Who taught Charlotte how to bake. Who loved watching her play volleyball. When her grandmother’s breast cancer returned, she vowed to live long enough to see where Charlotte would play in college. She died in July 2023, four days after her granddaughter committed to Indiana. But she’s with Charlotte now.
“I was moving through lights,” Charlotte says, sitting in the Indiana film room an hour before a November practice. “I was thinking I was going to die and accepting that fate.”
PHIL VINSON HEARS the muted whir of a helicopter flying over the family’s Muncie, Indiana, home. In his heart, he knows it’s Charlotte. Somewhere overhead, his daughter is fighting for her life.
He quickly stuffs a suitcase with shirts, pants and toiletries before heading to Riley, an hour-and-20-minute drive away in Indianapolis. Charlotte’s mom, Erin, is already on the road ahead of him.
It had been just three days since Charlotte started to feel sick. The Vinsons had gone to church that morning, Mother’s Day, and then brunch. A few hours later, Charlotte couldn’t stop shivering. Her fever spiked. By Wednesday, she was struggling to get out of bed, and she threw up when she did. Phil took Charlotte to see a doctor around 10 a.m. In the waiting room, she said something that terrified him.
“Dad, I can’t see.”
They rushed to the emergency room at IU Health Ball Memorial, where Erin, a family physician, met them. Charlotte’s blood pressure was low, her heart rate high, her organs were shutting down. She was diagnosed with toxic shock syndrome, a rare and sometimes fatal condition most associated with tampon use. In Charlotte’s case, the infection was caused by strep bacteria and unrelated to tampons. Paramedics loaded her onto a stretcher and boarded her onto the lifeline helicopter.
Hovering over the landing pad at Riley, the helicopter is loud, but Charlotte doesn’t hear a thing. The sky above the hospital roof is bruised gray and overcast as Charlotte is wheeled in.
“From there,” Charlotte says, “it’s just bits and pieces.”
Erin is still on her way to Riley when the attending physician, Dr. Courtney Rowan, calls. She wants permission to intubate Charlotte right away; there’s no time to wait.
Charlotte’s body has stopped sending blood to vital organs like her kidneys and liver and brain. Depleted of oxygen, her cells are dying and releasing lactic acid. Doctors do their best to stabilize her. They pump rounds of antibiotics and medication into her body to fight the infection and lessen the strain on her overworked heart.
But 24 hours later, on Thursday, Charlotte’s condition worsens. She codes that night, and Erin scrambles to make sure Phil is in the room. Get Phil, she pleads. She knows he will never forgive himself if Charlotte dies and he’s not there.
Dr. Rowan explains to Erin and Phil that Charlotte’s best shot is to go on ECMO, a machine that will function as her heart and lungs, because her body is too weak to pump blood.
“Will she die?” Phil asks.
Dr. Rowan is compassionate but blunt. Charlotte could die on ECMO, but she will definitely die without it. The Riley doctors perform the surgery to insert the tubes that night in Charlotte’s hospital room — she’s too sick to move into an operating room.
Three nurses are in the room at all times. One to monitor the ECMO machine, another assigned to the dialysis machine that acts as Charlotte’s kidneys, a third manages everything else. One of the nurses braids Charlotte’s hair.
Most of all what Charlotte’s body needs is time. Family members, coaches, teammates and friends shuffle in and out of the waiting room down the hall. Someone prints photos — Charlotte with her friends, Charlotte playing volleyball — and hangs them on the hospital room wall so they are the first thing Charlotte will see when she wakes up.
THE REV. THOMAS HAAN is driving home from his parents’ farm in Lafayette when he gets a call from his cousin Erin. As a priest, he is often on call; the church has an emergency line that connects to his cell. Someone is sick. There is an accident. A heart attack. Surgery gone wrong. Haan keeps his stole, prayer book and sacred oils in the glove compartment of his Ford F-150. Now he stands at the side of Charlotte’s bed. He holds the black prayer book in his left hand, flipped open and marked with ribbons, oil in his right, and administers the anointing of the sick.
Through this holy anointing, may the Lord and his love and mercy help you with the grace of the Holy Spirit.
He gently anoints Charlotte’s forehead and the palms of her hands.
May the Lord who frees you from sin, save you and raise you up.
Standing at the side of her daughter’s bed, Erin rubs her rosary beads and prays.
Please.
Charlotte wakes up five days later. But not for long. She drifts in and out of sleep.
A machine breathes for her and she can’t speak. Charlotte gestures for a whiteboard in her room. It’s early still, and only Erin and Charlotte’s aunt are in the hospital room. Charlotte takes the marker and writes. “Grandma.” Erin thinks Charlotte is confused — her grandpa was in the room just the other night — but Charlotte is adamant. “All white,” she writes. “I saw Grandma.”
Erin cries.
It takes five people to help Charlotte stand from her hospital bed. One nurse at the front to steady her by the shoulders, three to support Charlotte from the back, a fifth person by her side to manage the handful of tubes and wires sprouting from Charlotte’s body. Once she’s standing, she’s walking, marching around the hospital floor at a determined clip with IV and oxygen tank in tow.
The Vinsons pass hours at the hospital watching “The Bear” in Charlotte’s room, closing the door because they are at a pediatric hospital and sometimes there is swearing in the show.
“Who watches TV shows together anymore? Nobody.” Erin laughs.
“For almost two weeks, it was every day,” Phil says.
Charlotte is discharged on June 11, 27 days after being airlifted to Riley. Balloons and pinwheels line the family driveway. A lawn sign reads, “Welcome home Charlotte.”
THE YORKTOWN HIGH volleyball team practices in the school gym, and Charlotte sits on a chair on the side of the court. It’s July, and Charlotte had been attending — watching — the summer workouts for a few weeks.
She’s grown restless. Charlotte stands up and asks coach Stephanie Bloom if she can try to serve.
Please? It’s just a serve, a motion so deeply entrenched in muscle memory that at the hospital, when she could barely move her limbs, Charlotte mimicked serves from bed, closing her eyes and imagining exactly this.
“In my head I’m like, ‘This is a really bad idea,'” Bloom says.
Bloom tries to temper expectations. One week ago, she reminds Charlotte, you were using a walker.
But Charlotte walks to the service line. She throws the ball up in the air. Her palm makes contact. The ball lands 10 feet in front of the net. Bloom’s heart aches. The gym is quiet. None of the girls know how to react. Charlotte is the best player on their team. As a sophomore at Yorktown, she led the Tigers to the state finals. She committed to Indiana the summer before junior year. She was a top-25 recruit — one of Indiana’s highest-ranked ever. Now she’s struggling to serve.
“It rattled everybody,” Bloom says.
Charlotte tries to laugh it off — “Oh my gosh, this is so embarrassing” — but Bloom sees the realization dawn on her face. This is going to be hard.
“She was as sick as a human being can be,” says Dr. John Parent, Charlotte’s cardiologist at Riley.
She lost more than 20 pounds on her 6-foot-2 frame and was trying to regain weight while her appetite hadn’t returned. Swallowing was still a delicate process.
Parent was frank with the Vinsons: Charlotte might never play volleyball again. Her heart was weakened from the infection and dealing with inflammation. There could be scarring, which would further reduce heart function. The probability of her playing again, at the level she wanted to, was slim.
“I would say less than 1% back when she was in the ICU,” Parent says. “By the time she left the hospital, maybe 10%.”
But this is Charlotte Vinson.
“I remember the first day she was allowed to stand,” says Mike Lingenfelter, co-director of Munciana Volleyball, one of the top clubs in the country. “She’s mad because she can’t run. She can start to run, now she’s mad she can’t jump. She’s allowed to jump, she’s mad because she doesn’t jump as high.”
Charlotte made Lingenfelter promise he’d help her get back to where she was before.
At the Munciana gym, Lingenfelter shook his head. “Why do we want to be where we were?” he asked Charlotte. “Why wouldn’t we want to be better?”
Charlotte threw herself into rehab, a grueling process she naively once thought might take a week, but was actually several long months.
She was determined to save her senior season.
“She was very adamant with me,” Bloom says now. “Like, ‘I will be back this fall.’ I didn’t know if that was going to happen, but she really believed it.”
Erin figured Charlotte could perhaps make it back at some point before the season ended. “In my mind I was like, ‘Well maybe senior night at the end of the season it can be like a little token serve,’ you know? That’s not where Charlotte’s brain was.”
Toward the end of August, Charlotte was clear: She would play in Yorktown’s game against Wapahani on Sept. 3. That day, Charlotte had a battery of tests and three appointments with doctors at Riley before being cleared to play — front row only — later that night. Fans greeted her with a standing ovation. Some cried. Charlotte delivered a match-high 13 kills from her outside hitter position.
She played in every game after that, leading the Tigers to another state final. She played in her final club season for Munciana that summer and later traveled to Croatia as part of the U19 national team.
By the time she arrived on Indiana’s campus this summer, Charlotte felt like she had regained the fitness she had lost. She felt like she had fulfilled Lingenfelter’s promise to get even better.
CHARLOTTE CALLS ERIN CRYING. She was a few weeks into summer workouts with Indiana and had just left a meeting with the team doctor and coach Steve Aird. She tells her mom that Indiana doctors want to learn more about her condition before they will medically clear her to play. To Charlotte it felt like a hard reset, sending her all the way to the beginning.
She had ambitious goals — to play in college, win an NCAA championship — and at age 16, when most kids are getting their driver’s license, she had learned there was a finite time to accomplish them. She had learned that you could get a fever one day and never wake up. The very condition that made her a walking liability is what made her eager to crash into her freshman season full steam ahead.
“I was angry,” says Charlotte, dressed in a brown Alo sweatsuit. Inside the team film room, white binders and a scouting report for tomorrow’s game against Oregon litter the table in front of her. “I’m someone who likes to have a plan, like this is what I’m going to do, no one’s going to stop me. For that to be put on hold, it made me question things.”
Her nails are painted mint green. The color on her right thumb is irreparably chipped. When she pauses, she fills in the blanks by talking with her hands; her fingers are slender, long enough to easily palm a volleyball.
“It took me a while to be like, ‘OK, this is my new plan, this is what I’m doing now.'”
Charlotte’s older sister, Kate, an assistant director of compliance at Indiana and a former volleyball player at Ball State, absorbed much of Charlotte’s frustration. Charlotte spent a lot of time in Kate’s office over the next few weeks, eating her lunch and stewing.
“It was a big struggle mentally,” Kate says. “I don’t think she knew how hard it was going to be. She’s been a starter on every team she’s ever played on and had to change her mindset to, ‘All right, in practice I’m going to be the best I can be for the team.'”
Aird wouldn’t budge. He had learned in the few weeks of Charlotte being on campus that she valued honesty. He liked that a lot. She wanted to be coached hard, even if the message was blunt. Now Aird was being blunt.
“He basically told me to suck it up.” Charlotte says, laughing.
She’d been through so much, Aird said. Compared to everything else, this was a minor setback.
Aird had been in the waiting room of the ICU while Charlotte was sedated and hooked up to multiple life-saving machines. Later, the Indiana coaching staff would visit in shifts once it looked like Charlotte would be OK.
Aird pauses. “I’m not talking about OK as in playing volleyball. I’m talking about OK as in being on the planet.”
With Charlotte, Aird balanced conflicting desires. Charlotte wanted to play. He didn’t want her collapsing midgame. Charlotte wanted to play now. He saw her as part of a long-term plan for the program. They discussed the idea of redshirting, which Charlotte rejected. Aird preached patience.
“I want to do what I love now,” Charlotte says. “Going through that big change in my life, not every day is promised. I don’t know what can happen in three, four years from now.”
But Charlotte tried her best to reconcile her plans for freshman year with her coach’s long-term vision. Doctors cleared Charlotte 10 games into the season. Six matches after that, on Oct. 12 against Michigan State, Charlotte played in her first collegiate match. She had two attack errors and a service error. Phil and Erin sat in the stands and cheered.
CHARLOTTE TWIRLS THE BALL twice in her right hand before lofting it impossibly high, 8 to 10 feet into the air. Her right arm rears back like a loaded bow and, at the very top of her jump, slingshots the ball over the net in a beautifully violent motion. It’s a Thursday in November, the day before Indiana’s game against Oregon. The team has split onto either side of the net, balls slinging cross-court that student managers wrangle onto carts.
Charlotte grabs another ball. She’s practicing the same topspin serve that two Oregon players favor so her teammates will be familiar with their opponents’ serve on Friday. Charlotte’s float serve is more consistent, but her jump topspin serve is nasty. Most of her playing time right now comes when Aird subs her in to serve.
“She’ll hit it with a lot of spin and then it cuts one way or the other,” assistant coach Matt Kearns says. “Eventually, that serve is going to be a real weapon for her.”
In addition to serving, Charlotte has been working with Kearns since August on the timing of her hits. Making contact with the ball at the peak of her ascension to optimize her power instead of swinging on the way down. The Indiana coaching staff is excited for the offseason, when Charlotte can start adding the muscle and physicality needed to make the technique she’s learning really pop. They envision moving her to opposite hitter next season.
Near the end of practice, Aird runs the Hoosiers through one last drill. It’s 6 vs. 6. He throws the ball at the net or spikes it at the back row, unpredictable actions that are supposed to simulate the middle of a play. It’s fast and chaotic and it’s supposed to be.
“I’m trying to make you lose this,” Aird says, tapping at his temple. “All of my best teams stay calm.”
A student manager dials up the scoreboard: Oregon vs. Indiana. Charlotte is playing for Oregon. The gym explodes in a cacophony of noise, exclamations of mine! and short! and set! staccato the air.
It’s 3-2 Indiana. Charlotte rears up and gets blocked, the ball ricocheting high and into the hands of “Oregon’s” setter. Undaunted, Charlotte loads once more, scrambling back before taking three big lunges toward the net and yelling. “Again! Again!” This time, she beats the block. Sitting at the scorer’s table, the student manager updates the scoreboard for Indiana. Charlotte notices, and looks incredulously at the lit-up board.
“You just gave them a point!”
She’s smiling, but her point is clear. Fix the score.
“You just play hard,” assistant coach Kevin Hodge laughs. “Don’t worry about how the points get distributed.”
The score stays 4-2 Indiana.
Aird gathers his team at midcourt at the end of practice. A white gym towel is slung over his shoulder. He tells the players to take care of each other. Check in on each other. An Indiana tennis player was hospitalized just a few days ago after an e-scooter accident. As a parent, he says, the idea of a scooter accident scares the bejesus out of him. As a coach … he implores his players to ask for a ride from teammates or staff if they need one.
“What we do today,” he tells them, “matters tomorrow.” He reminds them to soak in the energy of the home crowd tomorrow night — “We’ve earned that!” — and then closes out practice.
CHARLOTTE DOESN’T PLAY against Oregon, but Indiana wins in four sets to get its first victory over Oregon in program history. Charlotte finds her family waiting courtside after the game.
She hugs Kate, Erin, Phil, and her grandpa. Kate and Erin tease her. She smells fresh, like her elbow and shin pads are finally, thankfully being laundered, likely by a diligent Indiana staffer. In high school, Charlotte infamously neglected to wash her gear. Opening her gym bag felt dangerous, and when Charlotte stashed the offending bag into the car, Kate refused to ride with her. Charlotte scrunches up her nose. Sniffs the red and white sleeves she had slipped off after the game and crumpled into her fists.
“It’s not bad!” she says, and together they laugh.
Charlotte committed to Indiana for the chance to build something new, yes, but this, with her family, is what she had pictured too.
Erin and Phil have made it to almost every game. Her younger brother Andrew comes. Kate, who lives 10 minutes from campus, is a regular in the stands. One of the nurses from Riley attended a game earlier this season. Bloom made it to one, too. Indiana earned a spot in the NCAA tournament for the first time in 15 years and will host the first two rounds in Bloomington. The fourth-seeded Hoosiers play Toledo on Thursday.
Charlotte almost died when she was 16 years old, before her friends and family could ever watch her play for Indiana. She remembers very little of those critical days at Riley. They can’t forget. Kate still cries, somber and grateful, talking about those first 48 hours at Riley. Erin, too, describes herself as more emotional these days.
“I mean, I’m crying at TikTok videos and stuff!” She laughs at herself. “Why am I crying at the kid who got a dog for Christmas?”
Erin keeps a tote bag in the basement filled with cards, photos and signs that friends and family and strangers sent to the hospital. There’s a banner with Charlotte’s name on it that people in Yorktown signed. Praying for Charlotte.
“I figure we’ll keep it if she wants it,” Erin says. “I don’t know if she wants to see it or not. She wants to move forward. Her focus was, ‘I want to get stronger.'”
Erin pauses and sighs. “I don’t know. Sometimes I wonder if she — can you ever fully process what happened? … You don’t have to think about all the things you went through because you’re moving forward. Maybe it’s self-preservation.”
Charlotte has her own reminders of what she endured and what she survived.
Back in the Indiana film room, she sweeps her dark straight hair aside and brushes her fingers over a quarter-sized scar on her neck from where the ECMO tube connected into her body. She has a matching scar near her upper thigh. A simple plastic surgery procedure can reduce the scarring, doctors told her, but Charlotte chose to keep them.
“It’s a part of me now,” she says.
During her rehab, Charlotte decided she wanted a tattoo, but waited until she turned 18. When she arrived on campus for her freshman year, she got two. She has a line of four hearts, drawn by each family member, on her right wrist. The second tattoo is hidden on her rib cage. A tulip, for her grandma. Vinson written in cursive, curls up the stem.
“She was there for me,” Charlotte says. Her voice drifts off. “I think …” She pauses and starts again. “I think she pushed me back down and it’s like, ‘OK, you’re going to keep living.'”
Sports
No. 3 Badgers stifle Panthers to kick off postseason action
The Badgers (25-4) advanced to the Second Round of the NCAA Tournament with the help of a .435 (47 – 10 – 85) hitting percentage—jumping out of the gates in set one.
Outside hitter Mimi Colyer continued to lead the way for UW, tallying six kills on eight attempts in set one. The Badgers won 13-of-14 rallies early on to take a 17-3 lead, forcing a Panthers’ (24-8) timeout.
From there, UW never looked back in the first frame, as right side Grace Egan racked up a kill to put away Eastern Illinois with a 25-11 final score.
The Badgers put together their best showing of the season in the second set, winning 25-6. The six points allowed were the least by a Wisconsin unit in the rallying scoring era in the NCAA Tournament, dating back to 2007. UW earned four service aces in the set—including a pair from setter Charlie Fuerbringer.
Wisconsin enjoyed another large run in the second frame, winning seven-straight rallies to go up 19-5. Outside hitter Trinity Shadd-Ceres provided a quality spark off of the bench in set two, recording back-to-back kills in the latter half of the frame. The sophomore earned four kills on four attempts, a season-best.
Eastern Illinois provided a response in the third set, but the Badgers were able to answer quickly to earn the sweep. Middle blocker Tosia Serafinowska concluded the match with her first kill of her postseason career, punching the Badgers’ ticket to a battle with North Carolina tomorrow evening at the UW Field House.
Colyer tallied double-digit kills for the 16th consecutive match, finishing with 10 on a .562 swinging percentage. Vajagic put together a solid showing in her postseason debut, also accumulating 10 kills to complement her five digs.
Defensively, libero Kristen Simon was a staple in the back row, as the freshman notched 15 digs—tying her highest total since the Badgers’ match against Indiana on Nov. 9.
The middle blockers for UW continued to be efficient, as seniors Carter Booth and Alicia Andrew combined for 12 kills and zero hitting errors.
Fuerbringer did it all for the Badgers to round out the standouts, paced by 35 assists. The sophomore added eight digs, four blocks and a pair of service aces, too.
Straight from the Court
Head Coach Kelly Sheffield (on tonight’s performance): “Really happy with the way we came out and played. We did a lot of good things. Kristen really set the tone behind the service line and was aggressive defensively, getting balls and just hunting, making strong moves.”
(On everyone gaining in-match experience): “You certainly don’t go into the match thinking you’ll empty the bench. We have a lot of people who work hard and when an opportunity presents itself in the NCAA Tournament where you can add year played to their experience, especially in the Field House, that is pretty special.”
Middle Blocker Alicia Andrew (on what went well tonight): “I was really impressed with both Mimi and Kristen. They were really going for it on their serves and it showed. They got the team out of the system a lot and that was so much fun to watch. I think our side out transition game, like Coach mentioned, we were able to be in the system a lot of the time courtesy to Kristen and that was really good.”
Libero Kristen Simon (on continuing to build confidence): “It’s been a process just building up my confidence and going for every ball. Obviously, you find more range and just find more confidence behind the defensive line and just reading your hitters.”
Notes:
- With the sweep over EIU, Wisconsin moves to 27-1 all-time in the First Round of the NCAA Tournament, and 71-29 all-time in the NCAA Tournament.
- The match-up against EIU marked the first time the two teams met since 1995. Wisconsin improves 5-2 all-time against the Panthers.
- For the seventh time this season, the Badgers hit .400 or better (47-10-95). The Badgers outhit EIU .435 to .022.
- The Badgers surrendered just six points in the second set to EIU making it the lowest point total by an opponent in program history of the NCAA tournament.
- For the 16th-consecutive match, outside hitter Mimi Colyer totaled double-figure kills. She led the team with 10 kills. The senior is now tied at third in program history with Arlisa Hagan (1991-92) for most consecutive matches with double-digit kill totals.
- Sophomore Morgan Van Wie made an appearance in the third set as a serving substitute.
- The 49 digs marks the fourth-highest dig total in a three set match this season for the Badgers.
- Sophomore Maile Chan recorded her first service ace in the third set.
- Senior Carter Booth recorded her seventh match without a hitting error. Both totaled seven kills on 11 swings.
- Libero Kristen Simon led the team with 15 digs. This marks Simon’s 20th match with double-figure digs.
Up Next: The Badgers are back in action tomorrow evening in the Second Round of the NCAA Tournament, as they will take on North Carolina at 7:00 p.m. CT at the UW Field House. Wisconsin holds an 8-2 record all-time against the Tar Heels, as the two teams last competed against each other back in 2019. The match will be streamed on ESPN+.
Sports
Volleyball Closes Season Against No. 1 Kentucky in NCAA Tournament
LEXINGTON, KY. – The Wofford volleyball team was defeated by the No. 1 seeded Kentucky Wildcats 3-0 on Thursday night inside of Historic Memorial Coliseum in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. The Terriers close the season 17-14 with a 10-6 record in conference action. Kentucky will take on UCLA tomorrow night.
“Our mindset was to come out and leave it out there,” said head coach Lynze Roos. “I feel like we competed in some really good points. They got some separation and that was tough, but I’m really proud of the way that these women competed in the season that we had.”
Wofford totaled 27 kills on 26 assists throughout the match. On defense, the team posted 54 digs and four blocks. The Wildcats finished the match with 45 kills on 44 assists. Kentucky also posted 56 digs and four blocks.
Leading Wofford was Bradley Brown who had 10 kills on a .259 hitting percentage. Brown also led the team with three blocks. Following behind was Chloe Smith with six kills. Maddy Frazier dished out a team-high 13 assists, while Taylor Pecht had 10. Laney Klika recorded a team-high 13 digs, along with 10 from Caroline Przystup. Annemarie Rakoski and Natalie Arnold tallied one block apiece.
“We talk a lot about playing relentless defense and going for every single ball. We knew that tonight was going to be a tough task, but you never really know unless you go for it,” said Laney Klika.
“We talked a lot before the game about playing how we play and not letting their offense or defense change the way that we like to play,” added Annemarie Rakoski.
“It was amazing just to be able to have some family and friends that I don’t get to see very much anymore come watch me play. It was super cool to just have that support,” said Chloe Smith.
Kentucky grabbed the first two points of set one, but Wofford responded with a solo block by Annemarie Rakoski. Another solo block from Bradley Brown kept the Kentucky lead within one point. With the Wildcats leading 13-8, Kentucky would add four unanswered points to bring the Wofford deficit to nine points. The Terriers could not overcome the Kentucky lead, losing set one 25-11.
The teams were back-and-forth to start set two, as the Terriers would take an early 5-4 lead. Wofford took its biggest advantage – a 15-13 lead – after a pair of Kentucky attacking errors. The Wildcats fought back to take a 20-19 lead, and the team scored the final five points of the stanza to take set two 25-19. Bradley Brown totaled eight kills and one block in the second set alone.
Wofford jumped out to a 2-0 lead to start the third set of the match by way of a Bradley Brown kill. Kentucky responded with a 7-1 run, however, to regain the lead. The Wildcats would eventually take a 13-4 advantage. Wofford cut the deficit to six points a few rallies later, but the team would lose set three and ultimately the match.
Wofford concludes the season 17-14 with a 10-6 mark in Southern Conference play. The team entered the conference tournament as the No. 3 seed and defeated both No. 6 Samford and No. 2 Furman to reach the championship match. The Terriers took down No. 1 ETSU to win their third-straight conference championship and earn another bid to the NCAA Tournament.
Sports
Demon Deacons Open Season at Liberty Kickoff
Junior Seren Rodgers secured a third place finish in the pentathlon, totaling 3,771 points. With the result, the Taunton, England, native now sits sixth all-time in program history in the women’s indoor pentathlon.
Overall, Rodgers recorded three podium finishes during the competition, including a pair of runner up results in the long jump, where she recorded a jump of 10.32 meters, and the 800m, crossing the line in 2:19.62. Rodgers also claimed third place in the 60m hurdles after clocking a time of 8.86 seconds.
Meanwhile, freshman Julia Aere also competed in the pentathlon, securing eighth place with 3,462 points in her collegiate debut. The Delray Beach, Fla., native placed inside the top-10 in all five events, highlighted by a third place finish in the shot put after recording a distance of 11.13 meters, as well as a fifth place result in the 800m after recording a time of 2:27.34.
Notable Finishes
Pentathlon
2025-26 Indoor Track and Field Top-10 Marks in School History
From the Staff
“I’m really pleased with how the competition progressed today. Julia and Seren competed well and this meet was a great measure of how hard we have worked throughout the fall semester. It gave us a chance to get out, perform at a high level and still recognize that we left some points on the table, which is exciting. We are in a great place heading into the holiday break and this will keep us motivated and hungry. These two ladies set the tone early for the team and we are eager for the rest of the team to compete this weekend.” – Assistant Coach Ryan Grinnell
Up Next
The Demon Deacons return to action on Saturday with a pair of meets. One group of Wake Forest athletes will travel to Boston to compete in the 5K race at the Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener. Meanwhile, several Deacs will compete at the Visit Winston-Salem College Kick-off at the JDL Fast Track.
Sports
Lopes unveil 2025-26 indoor slate
After the Lopes dominant WAC indoor run of 14 conference titles between the men’s and women’s teams, GCU will compete in its first season as a Mountain West member.
Grand Canyon’s indoor schedule will feature meets in trips to Flagstaff, Arizona; Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Reno, Nevada.
“Again, we are really excited about our indoor schedule,” Flood said. “We will again be competing at some of the finest indoor facilities in the country and against some of the best track and field programs in the country.”
The 2025-26 season begins Thursday as the Lopes travel to Reno, Nevada, before taking a break until the new year. From there, they will travel to Flagstaff and Albuquerque before heading back to Reno for the Mountain West Indoor Championships.
GCU aims to represent at the NCAA Indoor Championships, which will be held March 13-14 in Fayetteville, Arkansas.
For the full indoor schedule, click here.
Sports
Men’s and Women’s Track and Field 2026 Season Preview
A new era in Hope College track and field begins today with the first indoor meet of the 2026 season.
Beginning at noon, the Flying Dutch and Flying Dutchmen are competing at the Grand Valley State University Holiday Open under the leadership of first-year head coach Jordan Bartolazzi, the 11th women’s head coach in program history and the 13th men’s coach.
Bartolazzi, who built his alma mater, Elmhurst University (Illinois), into a College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin power before coming to Hope, is thrilled with the progress both teams made during preseason workouts.
“There was a lot of good stuff going on here to build on,” Bartolazzi said. “Our focus, with every practice, has been preparing to compete, whether we’re an All-American or trying to crack the conference lineup. We have a lot of student-athletes working really hard. We’ve been having a ball. There has been really good energy. I think it’s been a good start for us.”
The Flying Dutch, who finished third in the MIAA Women’s Indoor Track and Field Preseason Coaches Poll, feature a roster of 73, with 17 seniors, 17 juniors, 14 sophomores and 25 freshmen.
The Flying Dutchmen, who also tookl thjird in the MIAA Men’s Indoor Track and Field Preseason Coaches Poll, have a roster of 64, with 18 seniors, nine juniors, 17 sophomores and 20 freshmen.
Coaching Staff
Head coach: Jordan Bartolazzi, first season
Distance coach: Mark Northuis
Distance assistant coaches: Dan Campbell, Mike Northuis
Throws coach: Paul Markel
Jumps coach: Addy Gerig
Pole vault coaches: Jon Lunderberg, Ben Turner
Women’s Roster
Senior Sara Schermerhorn (Traverse City, Michigan / Traverse City West) is Hope’s top returner after claiming All-America honors in four events for the second consecutive season in 2025: indoor and outdoor 200 meters and indoor and outdoor 400 meters.
The exercise science major swept MIAA Most Valuable Indoor and Outdoor Track Athlete honors as a junior and earned MIAA Most Valuable Indoor Track Athlete accolades in back-to-back seasons. She became the first sprinter in league history to win titles in the 60, 200 and 400 at the same meet.
Schermerhorn set MIAA records in the indoor 200 and 400 meters last season. She also ran on the MIAA champion 4×400 relay, which returns two other sprinters: senior Frances Cozzens (Lyman, New Hampshire / Saint Johnsbury Academy) and sophomore Sofia Fisher (Lombard, Illinois / Montini Catholic).
Hope returns three runners from the MIAA champion distance medley relay: senior Molly Durow (Glenview, Illinois / Glenbrook South), junior Amanda Markham (Hoffman Estates, Illinois / William Fremd) and sophomore Lily Sackrider (St. Johns, Michigan / St. Johns).
Durow is coming off an All-America cross country campaign this fall. The special education major finished 32nd at the Division III national championships and was runner-up at the Great Lakes Regional and MIAA Championships.
“We have great leadership,” Bartolazzi said. “Not only do we have some great upperclassmen, but we have some really wonderful seniors who have made an effort to welcome our freshmen and newcomers to the program. It’s a gift to have great senior leadership in year one.”
Men’s Roster
Hope returns senior sprinter Liam Danitz, the 2025 First Team All-MIAA honoree and MIAA Most Valuable Men’s Indoor Track Athlete.
Danitz (West Branch, Michigan / Ogemaw Heights) set an MIAA record in the 200-meter dash (21.59), earned First Team All-America honors with a fifth-place national finish in the 200 (21.93), and took second in the 60-meter dash (6.83) for All-MIAA Second Team honors.
The exercise science major also contributed to an All-MIAA Second Team 4×400 relay alongside returning junior Dylan Terpstra (Hudsonville, Michigan / Hudsonville).
Senior Erickson Kunzler (Marne, Michigan / Grand Rapids Catholic Central) returns as the MIAA 800-meter champion after posting a winning time of 1:56.09.
Senior Carston Cole (Holland, Michigan / West Ottawa) and junior Carter Dean (Traverse City, Michigan / Traverse City West) also return from last year’s All-MIAA First Team distance medley relay.
Cole recorded Hope’s top cross country finish at nationals this fall. The Flying Dutchmen placed 23rd in the nation as a team and made history with their first Great Lakes Regional title since 1980 and first MIAA crown since 1986.
Sophomore Logan Begeman (Portage, Michigan / Portage Central) ran away with the Great Lakes Regional and MIAA individual championships.
“They’re hungry,” Bartolazzi said of the Flying Dutchmen. “Having that breakthrough season in cross country is such a gift. They felt like they were close and believed they could compete at the conference and national levels. They showed they could. That carries over to the track season.”
Schedule
The Flying Dutch and Flying Dutchmen are scheduled to compete in 10 indoor meets and eight outdoor meets.
The MIAA Indoor Championships are Saturday, Feb. 28, at Trine University.
The NCAA Indoor Championships are Friday-Saturday, March 13-14, in Birmingham, Alabama.
Hope will host the MIAA Outdoor Championships on Friday-Saturday, April 30-May 1, at Brewer Track.
The NCAA Outdoor Championships are Thursday-Saturday, May 21-23, in La Crosse, Wisconsin.
“One thing I wanted to do this year was get our student-athletes on banked tracks a little more,” Bartolazzi said. “Nationals will be on a banked track, so I want them to know what that feels like. It’s a great thing in West Michigan — you don’t have to go far to race against really good people.”
Sports
Mustangs Open Track and Field Season This Weekend
Blue-Gold Invite
Loftus Sports Center – South Bend, Indiana
Friday, December 5, 2025
Live Results
McFerrin-12 Degree Invite
Fasken Indoor Track – College Station, Texas
Saturday, December 6, 2025
Live Results | Watch
Sharon Colyear Danville Season Opener
BU Track & Tennis Center – Boston, Massachusetts
Saturday, December 6, 2025
Live Results | Watch
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DALLAS, Texas (SMU) — The Mustangs will open up their 2025-2026 track and field season across three different meets this weekend. The distance ponies will split between Notre Dame’s Blue-Gold Invite and Boston University’s Sharon Colyear Danville Season Opener. The rest of the team will travel to Texas A&M’s McFerrin-12 Degree Invite.
This meet will serve as a soft opener for the Mustangs with the remainder of the season beginning in mid-January. The distance athletes are coming off a successful cross country season, which concluded with an appearance at the national championship for Rose Mburu, but this will be the first competition for the sprints, jumps, and multis after fall training.
The action will begin on Friday at Notre Dame and continue at the other two meets on Saturday.
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