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Inside revived SEC Volleyball Tournament’s bid to be ‘premier volleyball event nationally’ – The Battalion

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Texas A&M volleyball fans Paul and Shawna Ricks had a weekend to remember.

The first leg of their family trip took them from their home in Colorado Springs, Colorado, to College Station for A&M football’s game against Samford at Kyle Field. Then, it was off to Enmarket Arena in Savannah, Georgia, to watch the Aggies in the Allstate Southeastern Conference Volleyball Tournament.

“We follow the girls on the volleyball team,” Shawna said before A&M’s semifinal matchup against Texas. “We love them all. We’re so proud of how great they’ve done this season, and we just want to celebrate them.”

Though A&M fell short in the semifinals, the opportunity to see the Aggies play live was cherished by one member of the Ricks family especially — 14-year-old Brooklyn Ricks, a high school volleyball player herself. She was especially excited for the opportunity to see A&M senior opposite hitter Logan Lednicky.

“It ended up being more than we could ever ask for,” Paul said. “She asked Logan, when she stopped by, ‘What would you give [as] advice?’ And Logan took the time to talk to her about what to do, how to stay focused. So as a parent, it was really cool.”

The Ricks’ daughter wasn’t the only young volleyball player looking up to the stars of the show. Of the fans in attendance, plenty sported shirts supporting local — or non-local — volleyball clubs and plenty of players from several teams spent time in the crowd taking pictures and signing autographs with fans before and after their matches.

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Kentucky volleyball and Texas face off in the SEC Volleyball Tournament final at Enmarket Arena in Savannah Georgia on Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025. (Ian Curtis/The Battalion)

But as the dust settled with the 1-seed Kentucky Wildcats taking home the tournament title, the SEC’s revival of its volleyball tournament — played for the first time in 20 years after being axed in 2005 — sparked significant questions.

Namely, is the tournament good for the SEC — and is it good for the sport of volleyball — in the same way it was good for fans like the Ricks family?

A divided postseason

Unlike most non-football NCAA-sponsored team sports, women’s volleyball’s postseason is divided. 

Of the 31 conferences that sponsor Division I women’s volleyball, 27 of them hold some sort of postseason tournament to decide their automatic qualifier for the NCAA Tournament. Most of these mid-major events are held on campus sites and only invite the top teams from the conference. The Atlantic Coast Conference, Big Ten and Big 12 all do not have a conference tournament.

Volleyball, on a power conference level, doesn’t have the neutral-site, big-event feel that men’s and women’s basketball and diamond sports tournaments deliver in the postseason. The SEC wants to change that with all 16 of its teams.

“We want this tournament to evolve into the premier volleyball event nationally, something fans look forward to every year,” SEC Assistant Commissioner for Competition and Student-Athlete Engagement Misty Brown said via email before the tournament. “ … Over time, we envision this growing into a must-see postseason showcase that expands our brand, attracts new fans to the sport, and becomes another signature championship in the SEC.”

Brown, a Savannah native, said she was excited to bring an SEC Championship event to a partner city like Savannah with a three-year deal and stressed the importance of fan engagement. 

One person in particular was excited to help with that last point — on the mic.

A growing game

When the SEC reached out to DJ Jay Shalé, the international emcee, artist and performer jumped at the chance to work the event.

The crowd — 3,880 at the tournament final between Texas and Kentucky — may not have compared to the crowds at Atlanta Falcons and Atlanta Hawks games she’s worked,  along with her own tours, but the tournament held a special significance to her.

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An artist paints a picture during the SEC Volleyball Tournament final at Enmarket Arena in Savannah Georgia on Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025. (Ian Curtis/The Battalion)

A former collegiate athlete herself — Shalé bowled at Texas Southern — the Germany native described herself as a huge women’s sports fan and was excited to play her own small role in the sport’s growth.

“Volleyball is the next major sport stateside,” Shalé said. “And to be a part of the early wave of all that getting picked up, I think is incredibly awesome. Like I said, all the women are incredibly talented, and they deserve a platform like this.”

From her stand next to the crowd, 20 or so yards from the baseline of the court, Shalé kept a wide variety of spectators — neutral fans, folks cheering for eliminated teams, kids there to see high-level volleyball like the Ricks’ daughter Brooklyn and, of course, a healthy dose of Kentucky’s Big Blue Nation — entertained throughout every single match through songs, mini-games and plenty of interaction with the crowd.

“I felt like there wasn’t really any expectation, because they haven’t been here in 20 years, so it was very important for me to set that bar high,” Shalé said. “So that way, people know like, ‘Next year, what are the dates? You need to come.’ … It was just important for me to be like ‘Okay, let me make sure I’m doing my part and making sure that people had a great time over these five days, and are inclined to want to come back when it comes back for future years.”

And with Brown and the SEC pitching the event as the nation’s premier volleyball showcase, at times — it’s a 16-team tournament, after all — the environment did live up to the hype.

Take, for example, the tournament final. Kentucky rallied back to reverse sweep 3-seed Texas, 3-2, in an all-time classic of a title match. The crowd wouldn’t set the highest attendance mark for either team, but you wouldn’t know it from how loud chants of “Go Big Blue” and “Texas! Fight!” battled throughout the evening.

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The Kentucky wildcats are introduced before the SEC Volleyball Tournament final against Texas at Enmarket Arena in Savannah Georgia on Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025. (Ian Curtis/The Battalion)

“It was a great environment, very competitive,” Kentucky junior libero Molly Tuozzo said. “There was a lot of fans who weren’t even from Kentucky, but I heard of a couple of families from all over the place that just came to support us, and we’re fun to watch. So I think it’s just a really cool environment, lots of little teams and little girls that look up to us.”

That’s easy to say if you’re the tournament champion. But other schools agreed. 

Two narratives dominated this year’s SEC Tournament’s early stages: the rise of 15-seed Vanderbilt and 14-seed Ole Miss. After lackluster conference slates, each double-digit seed went on a run into the quarterfinals of the tournament, before losing to 2-seed A&M and 3-seed Texas.

And, even after losing the final to Kentucky in heartbreaking fashion, Texas coach Jerritt Elliott couldn’t help but acknowledge the impact he feels the tournament will have on volleyball itself.

“You’re starting to see the explosion of this,” Elliott said. “It’s the fastest-growing women’s sport in the country right now, and there’s a really good [return on ad spend] that’s happening on this. You’re starting to see really good TV ratings from it. … But this is kind of happening for these incredible women that are playing at the high level they’re playing.”

Future questions

While it’s clear that SEC coaches, players and fans largely view the tournament as a success, there is one elephant left in the room: How does the SEC fare in this year’s NCAA Tournament? 

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An SEC sign outside of Enmarket Arena in Savannah Georgia on Monday, Nov. 24, 2025.

Five SEC schools made the Big Dance, and the two top dogs, Kentucky and Texas, each earned No. 1 seeds.

The conference’s team closest to the bubble — 6-seed Missouri — lost its first matchup in Savannah, so there isn’t much to tell about how the SEC Tournament affects a team’s bubble chances. 

But other questions remain. Does playing high-level competition just before Thanksgiving prepare a team better for the rest of the postseason, or does playing three matches in three days set up a team poorly for the NCAA Tournament?

A&M, despite its semifinal loss to Texas, seems to prefer the former.

“It’s only gonna get tougher from here,” Lednicky said after the loss to Texas. “I think we needed just that, honestly. We got pushed a little bit in [non-conference] against two really good teams. I think [the Texas match was] exactly what we needed heading into the postseason for the NCAA Tournament.”

So what are the other power conferences thinking? 

“Big Ten coaches, at least in the past, have had very different opinions about a conference tournament,” Lincoln Journal-Star sports columnist Amie Just, who covers Nebraska volleyball, the sport’s powerhouse program, said. “I’m just curious to know whatever happens with the SEC, if that changes people’s opinions, or if it strengthens how they feel about potentially adding it to the Big Ten.”

As the SEC and coaches like Elliott stress the event’s television value, Just can’t help but point out that all matches — including the tournament final — were limited to the SEC Network and not a main ESPN channel.

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Junior libero Molly Tuozzo prepares to serve in Kentucky volleyball’s SEC Volleyball Tournament semifinal matchup against Tennessee at Enmarket Arena in Savannah Georgia on Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025. (Ian Curtis/The Battalion)

“One of the things we talk about when we put up this hypothetical question of ‘What would it look like if the Big Ten had a conference tournament?” Just said. “One of the first things people point to is what the TV situation would look like. And now that we see what the SEC has for its tournament, I think it would be fair to say that some people are disappointed.”

But tucked away in a press conference room at Enmarket Arena in Savannah, with a title shirt on and a championship trophy on the table in front of him, Kentucky coach Craig Skinner said the answer is clear: The SEC Tournament is the future of collegiate volleyball.

“Ninety percent of the eyeballs of volleyball world were on this match tonight, and then probably thousands more that don’t really watch volleyball because of it,” Skinner said after the tournament final. “ … We played 18 matches, but it wasn’t a fair schedule between all the teams, so the only way to determine a true conference champion was to have a tournament. And it’s a grind. I mean, it’s tough. These guys are worn out, but we have 10 days before the NCAA Tournament. … Every conference in America, if they don’t have a tournament, is thinking about it now.” 



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No. 12 BYU to face No. 22 Georgia Tech in the Pop-Tarts Bowl – BYU Athletics – Official Athletics Website

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PROVO, Utah — No. 12 BYU has accepted an invitation to play No. 22 Georgia Tech in the Pop-Tarts Bowl at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, on Saturday, Dec. 27. The game is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. ET and will be broadcast nationally on ABC.

The Cougars (11-2) and Yellow Jackets (9-3) are being featured in the 36th edition of the annual bowl game played in Florida that first began in Miami as the Blockbuster Bowl in 1990. This year’s game will be the third year under Pop-Tarts’ title partnership and the 25th played at Orlando’s Camping World Stadium. 

This is BYU’s 42nd bowl invitation which ranks No. 24 all-time among FBS teams. Georgia Tech is playing in its 48th bowl game, ranking No. 15. 

Series History
This will be the fifth meeting between BYU and Georgia Tech in a series that started in 2002. The Cougars own a 3-1 advantage to date, with a 2-0 record in Provo and 1-1 mark in Atlanta. This will be the first bowl matchup and neutral site game between the two schools. The last meeting was 38-20 BYU win at LaVell Edwards Stadium in 2013. Georgia Tech won the first game in Atlanta by a 28-19 score. 

Georgia Tech
Georgia Tech achieved a 9-3 record, including victories over then No. 12 Clemson and eventual ACC Champion Duke, to earn a No. 22 final CFP ranking on Sunday. Like BYU, the Yellow Jackets started the year with an 8-0 record to earn a top-10 ranking in the major national polls. Tech is coming off a hard-fought 16-9 defeat against now SEC champion No. 3 Georgia in Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. 

Georgia Tech and BYU played one common opponent during the 2025 season. The Yellow Jackets opened the year with a 27-20 victory over Colorado of the Big 12 in Boulder. The Cougars also visited Boulder this year, opening Big 12 Conference play on the road against the Buffaloes with a 24-21 come-from-behind victory. 

The Yellow Jackets boast an offense that ranks No. 12 in the nation, producing 466.3 yards per game with a balanced attack. Tech is ranked No. 19 in rushing offense at 203 yards on the ground on average and No. 29 in passing offense at 263.3 yards per game.

BYU Cougars
Led by 2025 Big 12 Coach of the year Kalani Sitake, BYU achieved its fourth double-digit victory season in the past six years and was one of just 10 FBS teams to finish the 2025 regular season with 11 or more victories. The Cougars reached the 11-win mark for the second consecutive season and for the fourth time under Sitake among a total of 14 overall 11-victory campaigns in the history of the program.

The Cougars have tied for the best conference record in back-to-back seasons and this year finished as the league runner-up after falling for the second time this year to No. 4 Texas Tech on Saturday in the Big 12 Championship game. Sitake has led the Cougars to 22-4 over the past two seasons, the sixth-best record in all of the FBS with a an .846 win percentage. 

BYU’s strong complementary football features the No. 19 scoring defense at 19.0 points per game and No. 34 scoring offense with 31.9 points per game. The Cougars were also among the best red zone teams on both sides of the ball, with the defense allowing scores just 72.92 percent of the time to rank No. 9 nationally and the offense scoring at a 92.45 percent clip inside the 20 for No. 10.

Ticket Info

BYU tickets for the Pop-Tarts Bowl go on sale on Monday morning. The Cougar Club and Corporate Sponsors will receive emails with their exclusive purchasing time windows and related codes and links to purchase tickets on Monday morning before tickets go on sale to the general public beginning at 11:15 a.m. MT. Fans can get more information about purchasing bowl tickets at BYUtickets.com.



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Eagles Flash Potential Despite Defeat at No. 3 South Carolina

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COLUMBIA, S.C. – North Carolina Central gave an inspired effort in a 106-42 women’s basketball loss to national powerhouse South Carolina at Colonial Life Arena on Sunday. 

Tierney Coleman scored a team-high 14 points for the Eagles, who led briefly early and gave glimpses of their potential as their non-conference season winds down. The NCCU guard was 5 of 8 from the floor, including a career-tying four three-pointers on six attempts. She added four rebounds and two steals. 

Coleman scored 11 first-half points as the Eagles were energetic early. Aniya Finger, who finished with nine for the game, knocked down her first career three-pointer for a 3-2 NCCU lead. 

Dianna Blake canned a short jumper to put the Eagles ahead 5-4, and Victoria Morris added a corner jumper to extend the margin to 7-4. 

In the opening five minutes, NCCU was 4 of 8 from the floor for 50 percent, including 2 of 3 behind the three-point line for 67 percent. 

The third-ranked Gamecocks stormed ahead 26-11, but Coleman wowed the crowd with a three-pointer at the buzzer to end the first quarter. 

USC (9-1 overall) led the rest of the game, but the Eagles gave maximum effort. In the first half, the Eagles led the Gamecocks in field goal percentage (43.5 percent to 40.5 percent) and three-point field goal percentage (40 percent to 20 percent). NCCU was on fire in the second quarter, making 62.5 percent of its shots. 

Coleman shot 4 of 7 in the first half, including 3 of 5 behind the three-point arc. She added three rebounds and two assists. 

The Eagles (1-8 overall) made their last three jumpers to end the first half, including a Coleman three-pointer to slice the margin to 42-25. The Gamecocks led 46-25 at halftime. 

The Gamecocks took complete control in the second half, winning the third quarter 28-2. 

 The Eagles continued to battle in the fourth quarter. Morris scored four points and Coleman and Aysia Hinton both added three points while Najah Lane dished out three assists in the final frame. 

NEXT UP 

The Eagles are off the rest of the week before traveling to face High Point on Sunday, Dec. 14, at 2 p.m. 

For more information on NCCU Athletics, visit NCCUEaglePride.com. 



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UTSA to face FIU in First Responder Bowl on Dec. 26 – UTSA Athletics

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SAN ANTONIO — UTSA has been selected for its sixth straight and seventh overall bowl appearance, as the Roadrunners will face FIU in the SERVPRO First Responder Bowl on Friday, Dec. 26, in Dallas, Texas. Kickoff is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Gerald J. Ford Stadium and the game will be televised nationally on ESPN.

Fans can find out more information regarding tickets by visiting goUTSA.com. Purchasing your tickets directly from UTSA Athletics ensures you preferred seating options and financially supports the UTSA Athletics Department. UTSA will be able to negotiate preferred bowl options in the future based on previous ticket sales numbers and fan attendance. Seating will be allocated in RAF Loyalty Points order.

For more information about the bowl game, please visit UTSA’s Bowl Central website at goUTSA.com/bowlcentral. For the third straight year, Ancira Auto Group is the presenting sponsor of UTSA’s bowl game appearance and radio broadcast.

Under the direction of sixth-year head coach Jeff Traylor, the Roadrunners will make their second appearance in the SERVPRO First Responder Bowl, as they also played in the game in 2020. UTSA won two of its last three games to close out this regular season with a 6-6 overall record, including a 4-4 mark in the American Conference.

FIU will enter the bowl game at 7-5 overall. The Panthers are riding a four-game winning streak that helped them finish 5-3 in Conference USA.

This will mark UTSA’s fifth all-time meeting with FIU, as the two teams met four times as members of Conference USA. The series is tied at 2-2 with the Roadrunners registering a 30-10 triumph on Oct. 14, 2022, in Miami in their last matchup with the Panthers.

The Roadrunners will travel to Dallas in search of their third straight bowl win. Last December, UTSA raced past Coastal Carolina, 44-15, in the Myrtle Beach Bowl in Conway, South Carolina, to improve to 2-4 all-time in bowl games. In 2023, the Roadrunners defeated Marshall, 35-17, in the Frisco Bowl for the program’s first-ever bowl victory.

Three years ago in the Cure Bowl, No. 22 UTSA built a 12-0 first-half lead, but No. 23 Troy rallied for an 18-12 win in Orlando, Florida.

In 2021, 24th-ranked UTSA met nationally ranked San Diego State in the Frisco Bowl. The Aztecs pulled away late for a 38-24 victory.

In Traylor’s first season at the helm, UTSA nearly completed a comeback against No. 16 Louisiana in the 2020 First Responder Bowl. The Roadrunners rallied from a 24-7 deficit to tie the game, only to see the Ragin’ Cajuns score a late touchdown and escape with a 31-24 victory.

UTSA made its first bowl appearance in just its sixth season of play at the 2016 New Mexico Bowl in Albuquerque. New Mexico built a 10-point lead and held on for a 23-20 win over the Roadrunners on a cold and windy afternoon at University Stadium.

First played following the 2010 season, the annual bowl game in Dallas began honoring first responders for the 2014 game. First responders include police officers, firefighters, EMS workers, correctional officers, search and rescue, dispatchers, security guards, federal agents, border patrol agents and military personnel who have specialized training and are the first to arrive and provide assistance at the scene of an emergency.

In 2018, the game was officially renamed the SERVPRO First Responder Bowl to reflect the efforts to show appreciation to first responders. Tickets for first responders are underwritten by corporate partners.

Gerald J. Ford Stadium has served as the site of the last six contests, four of which have been decided by a touchdown or less. The game, previously known as the Heart of Dallas Bowl and TicketCity Bowl, was originally contested at Cotton Bowl Stadium.

The SERVPRO First Responder Bowl is one of 17 college football bowl games owned and operated by ESPN Events. For additional information, please visit FirstResponderBowl.com and follow on Facebook and Twitter/X. 

-UTSA-

 



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Men’s Swimming and Diving Help Bentley to 2nd Place Finish at WPI Gompei Invitational

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WORCESTER, Mass. – The men’s swimming and diving teams helped Bentley to an overall second place finish at the WPI Gompei Invitational this weekend with several podium finishes.

Combined, the men’s and women’s teams had 5,091 points to finish in second place overall among the 10 teams in the meet.

Matt Walden won the 200 IM with a time of 1:53.03 and the junior from Cumberland, Rhode Island had two other podium finishes on the weekend. He was second in the 200 back (1:50.38) and third in the 400 IM (4:05.03).

Daniel Ivanchikov won the 200 fly with a time of 1:53.06

Distance freestyle swimmer Leighton Wielgoszinski had second place finishes in the 500 (4:41.26) and the 1650 (16:22.07).

In the diving events, Owen Angkatavanich was second in both the 1 and 3 meter dives. In the 1 meter he scored 330.55 and the 3 meter 325.95.

The Falcons also performed well in the relays. The 800 free team won in 6:58.54 with the team comprised of Jakub Zukowski, Wielgoszinski, Alex Kosel and Ivanchikov.

The 200 free team of Ivanchikov, Zukowski, Jack Meekins and Ethan Rehkopf were second (1:25.30) and the 400 free team were second as well (3:07.32). That squad was comprised of Meekins, Ivanchikov, Kosel and Rehkopf.

Kosel had a third place finish in the 200 free (1:43.50) and Rehkopf was third in the 50 free (21.43).

The swimming and diving teams have wrapped up competition in the fall semester. They kickoff competition in the spring semester on January 8 at Saint Michael’s.

 



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Women’s Basketball Edged Out By Lipscomb

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NASHVILLE – Tennessee State women’s basketball showed strong stretches on both ends of the floor Sunday afternoon, taking a 34–28 lead into halftime and battling throughout before ultimately dropping a hard-fought 63–55 road decision at Lipscomb.

The Lady Tigers (1–7) were paced by another standout performance from Aaniya Webb, who poured in 16 points and added two steals as she continued her steady offensive rhythm. Erin Martin gave TSU a major spark off the bench with 12 points and six rebounds, while Brianna Wooldridge controlled the paint with nine points, seven boards and two blocks.

TSU’s effort on the offensive glass was one of the bright spots of the day. Led by Kiki Roberts and her five offensive rebounds, the Lady Tigers attacked the boards with energy, grabbing 17 offensive rebounds that turned into 15 second-chance points — a category TSU dominated.

Defensively, Tennessee State put together one of its stronger outings of the season, holding Lipscomb to just 36.2 percent shooting from the field and a cold 21.7 percent from three-point range.

The Lady Tigers will look to build on the positives from Sunday’s performance as they continue their road stretch.

How It Happened

Tennessee State got off to a slow start offensively, until Brianna Wooldridge sparked a 7-4 run to end the first quarter up 10-9.

The Lady Tigers responded with their best stretch of the game to open the second period, erupting for a 6–0 run highlighted by buckets from Xai Whitfield, Aaniya Webb, and Wooldridge to make it 25-19 halfway through the second quarter. TSU controlled much of the quarter with solid execution and transition play, heading into halftime with a 34-28 advantage thanks to continued defensive pressure.

Lipscomb rallied in the third, using a late push to take a 46-43 lead entering the final quarter. A pair of free throws from Erin Martin, a forced turnover, and a bucket from Whitfield, and the Lady Tigers regained the lead early in the fourth. The teams traded leads before a late Bison layup lifted Lipscomb passed the Lady Tigers.

Game Notes

» The Lady Tigers held the Bisons to only 36.2 percent shooting from the field.

» The Tennessee State bench came alive by scoring 24 points to its scoring output.

» The Tennessee State defense forced 23 turnovers.

» The Lady Tigers were active in affecting shots on the defensive end, recording nine blocks as a team.

» Tennessee State cleaned up on the offensive glass, collecting 17 offensive boards in the game.

» Aaniya Webb led the Lady Tigers with 16 points.

» Tennessee State got a team-high 10 rebounds from Kiki Roberts.



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Pacific Adds STUNT Program as 21st NCAA Sport

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STOCKTON, Calif. – University of the Pacific is adding STUNT as a varsity sport, making it the university’s 21st NCAA Division I program.

“We are thrilled to create more opportunities for student-athletes to excel in ways that few other schools are doing,” said Pacific President Christopher Callahan. “Athletics Director Adam Tschuor is at the forefront of identifying creative new ways to grow , that not only benefits athletics but also elevates the entire university community.”

The rapidly growing sport of STUNT is a head-to-head, four-quarter sport in which two teams perform the same routines of partner stunts, pyramids and tosses, jumps and tumbling, and team routines. Judges score the competition based on execution, technique and synchronization.

“The addition of STUNT places Pacific at the cutting edge of one of the fastest-growing women’s sports in the country,” Tschuor said. “The program not only expands competitive opportunities for women but also aligns perfectly with our department’s commitment to innovation, equity and community engagement. STUNT brings an exciting, high-energy sport to our campus, and we are proud to invest in a program that reflects the strength and ambition of Pacific Athletics.”

STUNT was developed by USA Cheer as a distinct competitive sport that emphasizes athleticism, technique and head-to-head competition.

“We applaud University of the Pacific for investing in women’s athletics with the addition of STUNT at the Division I level,” said Executive Director of USA Cheer Lauri Harris. “As the sport advances toward NCAA Championship status and continues its nationwide growth, Pacific’s decision reinforces the importance of creating competitive, meaningful pathways for female athletes. We are excited to welcome Pacific into this transformative moment for STUNT.”

Amy Haney, director of College and High School STUNT at USA Cheer, said STUNT will connect Pacific with “a strong pipeline of student-athletes while strengthening campus spirit and community engagement. This addition reflects the university’s commitment to providing impactful, competitive opportunities for female student-athletes, and we are proud to welcome Pacific to the STUNT community.”

The program will begin in the 2026-27 academic year and will begin to compete in spring 2027. More than 70 NCAA institutions currently offer STUNT programs.

Pacific also recently announced the reinstatement of men’s volleyball after a 13-year hiatus. Tschuor said the momentum behind both sports reflects strong community support, a growing

national landscape and the university’s commitment to expansion during a period when Division I programs are being cut nationwide.

“The return of men’s volleyball and the launch of STUNT reflect Pacific’s continued belief in expanding opportunities for student-athletes, not reducing them,” Tschuor said. “At a time when many institutions are contracting, Pacific is choosing to invest, grow and build programs that match the energy and passion of our community. These additions strengthen our department, broaden our reach nationally and create pathways for students to compete at the highest level.”

The new programs follow Pacific’s recent additions of men’s cross-country and men’s track and field as well as the addition of diving to both women’s and men’s swimming programs .With the addition of STUNT, Pacific will now offer 21 Division I athletics programs.

Prospective STUNT student-athletes can learn more about the program by contacting Director of Spirit and Community Engagement Andrea Sanchez-Johnson at asjohnson@pacific.edu.

#PacificProud

 





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