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Judge blocks Trump admin’s efforts to defund Planned Parenthood

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By KIMBERLEE KRUESI, Associated Press

A federal judge on Monday ruled Planned Parenthood clinics nationwide must continue to be reimbursed for Medicaid funding as the nation’s largest abortion provider fights President Donald Trump’s administration over efforts to defund the organization in his signature tax legislation.

The new order replaces a previous edict handed down by U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani in Boston last week. Talwani initially granted a preliminary injunction specifically blocking the government from cutting Medicaid payments to Planned Parenthood members that didn’t provide abortion care or didn’t meet a threshold of at least $800,000 in Medicaid reimbursements in a given year.

“Patients are likely to suffer adverse health consequences where care is disrupted or unavailable,” Talwani wrote in her Monday order. “In particular, restricting Members’ ability to provide healthcare services threatens an increase in unintended pregnancies and attendant complications because of reduced access to effective contraceptives, and an increase in undiagnosed and untreated STIs.”

A provision in Trump’s tax bill instructed the federal government to end Medicaid payments for one year to abortion providers that received more than $800,000 from Medicaid in 2023, even to those like Planned Parenthood that also offer medical services like contraception, pregnancy tests and STD testing.

Although Planned Parenthood is not specifically named in the statute, which went into effect July 4, the organization’s leaders say it was meant to affect their nearly 600 centers in 48 states. However, a major medical provider in Maine and likely others have also been hit.

In her Monday order, Talwani said that the court was “not enjoining the federal government from regulating abortion and is not directing the federal government to fund elective abortions or any healthcare service not otherwise eligible for Medicaid coverage.” Instead, Talwani said that her decision would block the federal government from excluding groups like Planned Parenthood from Medicaid reimbursements when they have demonstrated a substantial likelihood of success in their legal challenge.

In its lawsuit, Planned Parenthood had argued that they would be at risk of closing nearly 200 clinics in 24 states if they are cut off from Medicaid funds. They estimated this would result in more than 1 million patients losing care.



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Texas A&M Ends Nebraska’s Perfect Season With a Five-Set Stunner

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LINCOLN—The Nebraska volleyball team stood in a circle in the middle of the court. Their faces were slack with shock. Tears were beginning to flow. Harper Murray talked to them before bringing them together for one final break.

After shaking hands with Texas A&M, the Huskers turned and walked to the locker room. Rebekah Allick, with red eyes and damp cheeks, raised her arms to acknowledge the sold-out crowd of 8,650.

Andi Jackson consoles Rebekah Allick (5) after Nebraska's season came to an end.

Andi Jackson consoles Rebekah Allick after Nebraska’s season came to an end. | Amarillo Mullen

Only a few minutes earlier, Logan Lednicky’s final attack hit the floor as Texas A&M had accomplished something no other team had done this season — beat Nebraska. 

The final point came at the end of a 2-hour, 46-minute marathon, but it also came suddenly.  

Nebraska (33-1) dropped the first two sets but rallied to force a fifth set after a wild, marathon fourth in which NU faced three match points. The Huskers staved off one more set point before the Aggies finished off a 25-22, 25-22, 20-25, 35-37, 15-13 victory Sunday afternoon in the NCAA regional final. 

Murray said even though they were devastated after the loss, many of them apologized after the match, and she didn’t fault any of her teammates for coming up short. 

“It sucks right now, but we have to walk away with our heads high,” said Murray, who finished with a career-high 25 kills. “We do so many amazing things every year, and it might not work out the way you want to, but there’s so much to be proud of.”

Harper Murray (27), Virginia Adriano (9), and Andi Jackson (15) walk off the court.

Harper Murray, Virginia Adriano, and Andi Jackson walk off the court. | Amarillo Mullen

The setback was Nebraska’s home loss since falling to Minnesota on Nov. 26, 2022, and its first postseason loss at home since losing in the regional final to Texas in 2013. 

Texas A&M moves on to play Pitt in its first-ever national semifinal on Thursday at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City. The Aggies twice reached the regional final in 1999 and 2001, but fell short both times. The other semifinal will match Kentucky and Wisconsin. 

A&M coach Jamie Morrison said he was proud of his players for the effort they put in and for not backing down in front of an impressive NU team and an enthusiastic crowd, earning a win that was broadcast nationally on ABC. 

“I got to tip my cap to Nebraska, and I’m looking forward to going back and watching that match,” he said. “I think it might have been one of the most entertaining matches in the history of the sport, but I’m just beyond proud.”

Texas A&M players celebrate a point against Nebraska in the NCAA Tournament Regional Final in Lincoln.

Texas A&M players celebrate a point against Nebraska in the NCAA Tournament Regional Final in Lincoln. | Kenny Larabee, KLIN

Nebraska rode the energy of the environment and jumped out to a 10-3 lead after four straight points, including two backrow kills from Murray. However, A&M began to chip away, winning five of the next six rallies. The Aggies then went in front with a 10-0 run that featured two aces by Ifenna Cos-Okpalla, three kills from Emily Hellmuth and all four NU hitting errors in the set. 

Cos-Okpalla said after the match, she had no idea that her service run had reached 10 points in a row. She said whether it was the Huskers’ early lead or falling behind Louisville 0-2 in the regional semifinal on Friday, they just worry about the next point.

“We always talk about response is everything, whether we’re down a couple points, down a set or two,” she said. “Obviously, we responded pretty well on Friday. Just coming into this match again, we knew who we were playing, but we just focused really on us. The response was great today.”

Down, 20-15, freshman middle blocker Manaia Ogbechie checked in and sparked NU with a kill on the first rally. Nebraska closed to 21-20. After the teams traded service errors, the Aggies won three of the final four rallies, including an ace by setter Maddie Waak. 

Manaia Ogbechie (14) celebrates a block.

Manaia Ogbechie celebrates a block. | Amarillo Mullen

Ogbechie appeared in four of the five sets in place of Andi Jackson, who struggled and finished with six kills and five errors on 22 attacks. Busboom Kelly said she tried to give the Huskers a spark by turning to the freshman middle blocker, and it worked early on. 

“We all were watching the game, so I think Andi was hitting like .100 and nothing was going right for her,”  she said. “I thought, ‘Okay, let’s give Manaia a try.’ She made a few plays, and so we left her in there.”

The Aggies went up 4-1 in the second set after another ace by Waak. Nebraska took a brief lead at 8-6 after scoring four points in a row. However, Waak responded with a pair of aces and went up 14-12. Nebraska couldn’t close the gap the rest of the way. NU got as close as 24-22 before Lednicky ended the set with a kill. 

Texas A&M set the tone during the first two sets with its serve. Eight of its nine aces came in the first two sets, including four by Waak. In addition, the Aggies recorded six blocks in the second set, and their physicality wore on the Huskers. 

Nebraska outside hitter Taylor Landfair attacks against Texas A&M in the NCAA Tournament Regional Final in Lincoln.

Nebraska outside hitter Taylor Landfair’s attack is blocked by Texas A&M in the NCAA Tournament Regional Final in Lincoln. | Kenny Larabee, KLIN

Busboom Kelly said A&M got a lot of hands on their attacks and it took them time to counter their strength at the net. The Aggies finished with 17 blocks, including nine by Morgan Perkins and eight by Cos-Okpalla. 

“We started out the match trying to do that and out-physical them, and that’s not going to happen,” she said. “ As the game went on, we adjusted well and started swinging high. We got a little bit one-dimensional, but I think that was a little bit passing. I thought our passing was okay, but that got us out of our comfort zone.”

Eventually, the Huskers adjusted, started the third set with more fight, and went up 10-5 after a kill by Virginia Adriano. The Aggies responded with four points in a row, including a kill by libero Tatum Thomas. Teraya Sigler put the Huskers up 12-9 with an ace. Eventually, A&M closed to 18-17 after an ace from Thomas, but Allick and Murray had back-to-back kills to put NU in the red zone. Murray later wrapped up the set with her sixth kill in the frame. 

In the fourth set, Texas A&M went up 11-7 after four straight NU hitting errors. The Aggies led by as much as 18-11 before the Huskers fought back. 

Bergen Reilly and Teraya Sigler celebrate as Nebraska beats Texas A&M in the fourth set of the NCAA Tournament Regional Final

Bergen Reilly and Teraya Sigler celebrate as Nebraska beats Texas A&M in the fourth set of the NCAA Tournament Regional Final, 37-35. | Kenny Larabee, KLIN

They won eight out of the next nine rallies to tie it up at 19-all. The teams traded pairs of points until Adriano gave Nebraska its first set point at 24-23. 

Then things got wild as they entered bonus points: Adriano attempted her only serve of the match. Teraya Sigler played the front row. Ogbechie served for just the second time this season, and then the set went long enough for her to get her third attempt. Texas A&M had three match points, but couldn’t convert. 

After both teams ran out of substitutes, challenges and timeouts, the Huskers finally ended the marathon on their 10th set point when Adriano got a touch call on an attack. 

“I did have a lot of confidence that we were going to win that,” Busboom Kelly said. “It wasn’t a panic moment when we ran out of subs. It was like, ‘Well, this crew is good enough to win this set.’ I kept telling myself that, and it was pretty great to see us make it through two times with no subs. I thought that they were just really confident, even though they hadn’t done that all year.”

Nebraska middle blocker Rebekah Allick and outside hitter Harper Murray celebrate a point against Texas A&M.

Nebraska middle blocker Rebekah Allick and outside hitter Harper Murray celebrate a point against Texas A&M in the NCAA Tournament. | Kenny Larabee, KLIN

The Aggies went in front 5-3 after back-to-back Nebraska hitting errors. The Huskers looked like they were about to tie the set at 7-all, but the officials said the ball touched Allick after she tooled it off the A&M block. 

Texas A&M led by as much as 13-9 before Nebraska scored three points in a row to cut its deficit to one point. NU fought off one match point, but Lednicky ended it with a kill. 

“It’s hard to beat us in our own gym, and they found a way to do that,” Murray said. “ I don’t think we could get a lot of momentum going, and that really hurt us in the end.”

Kyndal Stowers led Texas A&M with 25 kills and 16 digs, while Lednicky added 24 kills. Emily Hellmuth chipped in 13 kills and a pair of aces. 

After a season of good health and only minor injuries, NU’s luck ran out during the final week of the season. Senior opposite Allie Sczech tripped on a ball during serving practice before the match. After she was helped to the locker room, where she stayed until the start of the third set, she returned to the bench in street clothes and a walking boot. 

Nebraska opposite hitter Allie Sczech tripped over a ball during warmups.

Nebraska opposite hitter Allie Sczech tripped over a ball during warmups. She would change out of her uniform and join the team on the bench. | Kenny Larabee, KLIN

In addition, Bergen Reilly was battling an illness and wasn’t at full strength. The Huskers had to stick with her after backup setter Campbell Flynn broke her hand in practice and wasn’t available. 

Reilly finished with 58 assists and 13 digs as NU hit .270 for the match. Busboom Kelly said even after dropping the record-setting fourth set, they were ready to carry the fight on to the fifth. 

“It’s tough. You look at our setter, and it’s like, ‘Are you gonna make it?’ And she’s looking at you like ‘I don’t know.’” Busboom Kelly said. “ Other than that, I felt like everybody else was in there willing us to win. We’re going to make this as easy as we can for Bergen. We had no other option at that point.”

Allick put up a career-best 15 kills on a .480 clip and four blocks in her final match as a Husker. Olivia Mauch led the team with 13 digs and didn’t commit an error in 20 serve receptions. 

Nebraska volleyball coach Dani Busboom Kelly walks off the court after losing to Texas A&M in the NCAA Tournament Regional Fi

Nebraska volleyball coach Dani Busboom Kelly walks off the court after losing to Texas A&M in the NCAA Tournament Regional Final. | Kenny Larabee, KLIN

Although Nebraska’s season ended earlier than everyone expected, Busboom Kelly said she wasn’t upset with the effort. She said Texas A&M played a great game and relied on its experience to pull out the victory. 

“As a coach, I don’t feel upset. I know we didn’t make the Final Four. We’re not winning a national championship, but we maxed out today,” Busboom Kelly said. “When we can walk away from the last game this season and feel like we gave it our all and look back and have no regrets, that’s what I’m really proud of, and I hope these players don’t have any regrets either.”


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25 for 25: The Top 25 Student-Athletes From The Last 25 Years

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Maryland Athletics is celebrating the first 25 years of the 21st century by looking back at some of the greatest Terps from all of our sports. Listed in alphabetical order, these Terps represented the best of the University of Maryland from 2001-25. Join us each week in the month of December as we look back at some of the greatest to ever don the red, white, black and gold.

Note: Student-athletes were selected based upon their performance from Jan. 2001 to Dec. 2025. Student-athletes needed to compete in at least two seasons during this 25-year period.



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Ep. 317: Chris Bucknam | Arkansas Razorbacks

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In this episode of The Hog Pod, newly retired Arkansas men’s track & field coach Chris Bucknam sits down for an honest, funny, and deeply reflective conversation about closing out his 18-year run leading one of college sports’ most storied programs. Bucknam talks about clearing out his office, leaving trophies where they belong and wrestling with the memories — the SEC Triple Crowns, 18 podium finishes, two national titles and the one-point heartbreaks that still stick with him.

He shares candid stories about replacing a legend in John McDonnell, what it felt like to sit in “that chair,” and why he always kept a picture of Coach McDonnell on his desk as a daily reminder of the standard he inherited. Bucknam also discusses the challenge of trying to win in all three sports — cross country, indoor and outdoor — with limited scholarships and why he believes that philosophy defined his tenure.

He opens up about the changing landscape of college athletics, the transfer portal, NIL and why the evolution of the sport played some role — but not the main role — in his decision to step away. Ultimately, he says, retirement is about family, health and passing the program to someone he trusts. Bucknam emphatically explains why longtime assistant Doug Case is the right person to lead Arkansas next, praising his loyalty, calm presence and technical mastery.

It’s a wide-ranging look back at a remarkable career — full of competitive fire, humility and the perspective that only comes at the end of a legendary run.



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Nebraska volleyball loss shocks world, fearless Texas A&M downs giant

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Updated Dec. 14, 2025, 9:22 p.m. ET



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NU’s Perfect Season Ends in Regional Final – University of Nebraska

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LINCOLN, Neb. – A memorable comeback attempt fell just short for the Nebraska volleyball team Sunday afternoon in a five-set loss to No. 6 Texas A&M in front of 8,650 fans at John Cook Arena at the Bob Devaney Sports Center.

Texas A&M won the first two sets to become just the third team this season to win two sets against the Huskers. Facing a 2-0 deficit, Nebraska fought back to win the third set then fought off three match points en route to winning the fourth set, 37-35. But the Huskers were unable to complete the comeback as the Aggies were victorious in the fifth set by a 15-13 margin.

Nebraska ended its season with a 33-1 record while Texas A&M (27-4) advanced to the NCAA Semifinals. Kyndal Stowers (25) and Logan Lednicky (24) each finished with more than 20 kills for Texas A&M, while Morgan Perkins had nine blocks.

Harper Murray paced the Husker offense with a career-high 25 kills, but Texas A&M had more kills (75 to 73) and a higher attack percentage (.275 to .270) than Nebraska. The Aggies also out-blocked Nebraska, 17-8. Bergen Reilly had 58 assists and 13 digs to post a double-double. Rebekah Allick had 15 kills on 25 swings and hit .480 in the match with four blocks. Reilly (13), Olivia Mauch (13) and Laney Choboy (10) each had double-figure digs for the Big Red.

Set 1: Murray had a block, a kill and an ace as the Huskers built a 6-2 lead. Kills by Reilly, Murray and Allick made it 10-3 Big Red. The Aggies pulled within 11-8 after a 5-1 spurt. Allick produced a pair of kills and Adriano tallied another to put NU up 15-10. But a 10-0 run by the Aggies gave them a 20-15 lead. Manaia Ogbechie subbed in and terminated a sideout kill, and Landfair found the corner before Ogbechie connected again to make it 20-18. After a Logan Lednicky kill, the Huskers won a challenge that resulted in a kill for Murray, and a block by Allick and Reilly cut it to 21-20. But Stowers tipped a kill for set point and the Aggies won 25-22 with their fourth ace of the set.    

Set 2: NU rallied from down 6-4 to go up 8-6 with kills by Jackson and Landfair and an ace by Murray. But A&M went back in front 14-11 after a 4-0 run. Murray tooled a block for a sideout kill, but the Aggies answered with back-to-back blocks for a 16-12 advantage. Consecutive A&M kills put the Aggies up 19-15 as Nebraska took a timeout. The Aggies earned set point at 24-20. An Ogbechie kill and Aggie hitting error gave NU hope, but the Aggies won 25-22 on a Lednicky kill. 

Set 3: The Huskers claimed a 10-5 lead with Murray tallying three kills out of the gate. But Texas A&M cut it to 10-9 with four straight kills. An ace by Sigler, and kills by Allick and Jackson put NU ahead 15-12. NU led 18-17 when Allick and Murray posted kills for a 20-17 lead. Adriano added one, and A&M committed three errors down the stretch as the Huskers won 25-20 on a Murray kill. 

Set 4: A&M grabbed a 5-2 lead, but two Murray kills helped the Big Red get back even at 5-5. The Aggies rebuilt an 11-7 lead after a 4-0 run. Landfair ended it with a kill, but A&M went up 12-8 on a Stowers kill. The Aggies increased their lead to 18-11. NU roared back with an 8-1 run to tie it 19-19. Kills by Allick and Murray put NU in front, 21-20. Ogbechie recorded a kill for a 23-22 advantage, but an A&M block tied the score. Adriano terminated to grab set point for the Big Red, but Lednicky answered for A&M. Sigler found the floor for a kill, but Lednicky answered again. Reilly dumped a kill for a third set point try for the Big Red, but NU served out. A&M returned the favor, but Stowers terminated to keep it tied 27-27. Allick sided out once again for the Huskers to make it 28-27, but a block error by the Huskers tied it 28-28. Allick and Adriano teamed up for a block on the ensuing rally to make it 29-29 NU, but the Aggies came right back with a block. A&M committed an attacking error but followed with a kill to keep it tied. Ogbechie terminated, but so did Lednicky. The Huskers then hit wide to give the Aggies match point at 32-31. But A&M served into the net to keep NU alive. The teams then traded service errors to a 33-33 tie. Stowers and Allick traded kills for a 34-34 tie. A&M attacked wide to make it 35-34 NU, but Stowers got a kill off of NU’s fingertips to make it 35-35. Murray’s career-high 24th kill put NU ahead 36-35, and Adriano finally finished off the set in NU’s favor, 37-35.

Set 5: Allick and Adriano had early kills, and Ogbechie and Murray combined for a block, as the Huskers went up 3-2. But the Aggies gained a 5-3 advantage with a kill, a Husker hitting error, and a block. The Aggies hit long before a Murray ace tied it 5-5. A&M went ahead 7-5 when Reilly won a joust at the net to make it 7-6. But A&M scored the next three to go up 10-6. A service error ended the run, but A&M claimed a 12-7 lead after a kill and Husker hitting error. After a timeout, Allick posted her 14th kill to make it 12-8, and A&M hit into the net to cut the deficit to 12-9. Stowers answered with a kill to go up 13-9, but Allick answered for the Big Red with a kill. Choboy served an ace to make it 13-11, and A&M called timeout. Adriano and Ogbechie stuffed an A&M attack to make it 13-12, but Lednicky tooled a block for match point at 14-12. Murray stepped up with her 25th kill, but the Aggies got a kill from Lednicky to win 15-13.

Lincoln All-Regional Team

  • Chloe Chicoine, Louisville
  • Rebekah Allick, Nebraska
  • Harper Murray, Nebraska
  • Ava Underwood, Texas A&M
  • Kyndal Stowers, Texas A&M
  • Maddie Waak, Texas A&M
  • Logan Lednicky, Texas A&M (Most Outstanding Player)

Nebraska Post-Match Notes

  • With the loss, Nebraska fell to 137-39 all-time in the NCAA Tournament. The Huskers rank second in NCAA history in postseason wins and winning percentage (.778).
  • The loss snapped Nebraska’s 33-match winning streak, as the Huskers ended the year with a 33-1 record.
  • Nebraska fell to 18-16 all-time in NCAA Regional Final matches.
  • The Huskers fell to 90-8 all-time in home NCAA Tournament matches, including a 35-3 record at the Devaney Center.
  • Nebraska saw its 29-match home winning streak in the NCAA Tournament snapped.
  • Overall, Nebraska saw its 63-match home winning streak snapped, suffering their first home loss since Dec. 1, 2022.
  • Nebraska lost the first set, snapping its streak of 48 consecutive sets won at home. The streak was the second-longest in school history and the longest in a single season.
  • The Huskers fell behind 0-2, losing two sets for just the third time this season and falling behind 0-2 for only the second time this year (also against Kentucky).
  • Nebraska was the first to 20 points in only one of the first four sets. The Huskers won the third set when they were the first two 20 points, and NU ended its season 96-0 when it was the first to 20 points in a set.
  • Rebekah Allick finished with a career-high 15 kills, eclipsing her previous high of 13 kills.
  • In Nebraska’s four NCAA Tournament matches, Allick had 40 kills and hit .576.
  • Rebekah Allick finished her career with a .441 attack percentage and 88 blocks in the NCAA Tournament. Her postseason career attack percentage is the highest by a Husker in school history, while Allick’s 88 blocks rank No. 5 in Nebraska postseason history.
  • Harper Murray had a career-high 25 kills in the match, eclipsing her previous high of 23. That marked the second time this season and fifth time in her career she had at least 20 kills in a match.
  • Harper Murray had three service aces in the match. She increased her career total to 109 aces and passed Jennifer Saleaumua for the sixth-most aces by a Husker in the rally-scoring era.
  • Bergen Reilly had a double-double with 58 assists and 13 digs, and she tied her season high with five kills and two aces.
  • Nebraska ended its season with a team attack percentage of .351. That is a school record, breaking the previous record of .331 in 1986.
  • Andi Jackson finished the 2025 season with a .467 attack percentage. That ranks as the third-highest season attack percentage in school history.
  • Texas A&M hit .275 in the match, the highest attack percentage by a Husker opponent in 2025. The Aggies were also the only team to have a higher attack percentage in a match than Nebraska in 2025.
  • Texas A&M also had 17 blocks, the most by a Husker opponent in 2025.
  • The Huskers’ 37-35 victory in the fourth set marked the highest-scoring set in Nebraska’s NCAA Tournament history.



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KC BOUND! Miracle upset in Lincoln sends Texas A&M to Final Four

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Match #31: #3 Texas A&M 3, #1 Nebraska 2
S1: A&M, 25-22; S2: A&M, 25-22; S3: NEB, 25-20; S4: NEB, 37-35; S5: A&M, 15-13
Records: Texas A&M (27-4, 14-1), Nebraska (33-1, 20-0)
Box Score


Major upsets often evoke Al Michaels’ ever-present 1980 question.

On Sunday, Texas A&M’s Jamie Morrison likely answered just as emphatically as he did last week inside Reed Arena:

“HELL YES!”

By taking down a Big Red machine of a different kind — the previously unbeaten Nebraska Cornhuskers — Aggie volleyball is headed to the Final Four for the first time in program history.

An already historic run turned miraculous when A&M (27-4) defeated Nebraska (33-1) on Sunday afternoon in five sets, as the Huskers’ happy place — the Bob Devaney Sports Center — watched the Maroon & White crash a Big Red party.

It is A&M’s first win over the No. 1-ranked team since 1995, and given the stakes, it’s much more significant.

“There is no little ounce of me that is scared of them, and I respect them a lot,” Morrison told the Aggies pregame. “I respect them, but I am not scared because we are prepared for this.”

Then, as if channeling Herb Brooks himself, Morrison added:

“I’m not scared because you were born for this as competitors to step out here and be in this environment, and it will be loud. Use your breath. Stay calm in those moments. It will be hard; they’re a good volleyball team, but we are prepped.”

From being prepped to now propelled to the college game’s biggest stage: The Final Four.

Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

In just his third season in Aggieland, Jamie Morrison is going where no Texas A&M volleyball coach has gone before!

Kyndal Stowers led the way with 25 kills on a .327 hitting percentage.

Logan Lednicky, already one of the greatest Aggie volleyball players ever, led the way with 24 kills and passed Hollann Hans (1,640) for third place on the Aggie leaderboard in career kills with 1,661.

Morgan Perksin and Ifenna Cos-Okpalla were dominant at the net with nine and eight total blocks, respectively. The latter moved into second all-time in program history in blocks with 556. She’s now six behind Jazzmin Babers’ 562 for the school record.

The A&M attack all began with Maddie Waak, who dished out a ridiculous 63 assists.

Before Sunday, the Big Ten champions had dropped just seven sets all season. As the NCAA Tournament’s No. 1 overall seed, Nebraska had been undefeated at home since Nov. 26, 2022, and had swept eight consecutive matches entering the regional final.

No more.

Morrison’s senior-laden Aggies snapped all those streaks and have staked their claim, turning the “Something great is about to happen” prophecy into reality.

From a great opportunity, A&M just authored the program’s greatest moment.

What they have earned here tonight is a trip to Kansas City as the Aggies will face Pittsburgh on Thursday, Dec. 18, at the T-Mobile Center.

Of course, it’s easy to describe Sunday’s victory as a miracle, but Morrison’s program is filled with the precursor: Belief.

And they’ll carry that belief with them all the way to the Final Four.

More to come shortly.





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