Sports
Lizzie Carr’s 11 Kills Push Kentucky into Elite Eight Saturday – UK Athletics
LEXINGTON, Ky. – Thanks to a .419 hitting efficiency as a team and 11 kills from junior middle blocker Lizzie Carr, the Kentucky Volleyball team swept Cal Poly 3-0 (25-18, 25-19, 25-7) on Thursday afternoon inside Historic Memorial Coliseum to advance into Saturday’s Lexington Regional Final in Lexington.
Kentucky will now play Creighton on Saturday in the 2025 Lexington Regional Final for a spot in the Final Four. The match time has been conformed for 5 p.m. ET. The match will be televised by ESPN2. Tickets can be purchased at UKathletics.com/tickets. Creighton beat second-seeded Arizona State 3-1 on Thursday in the opening match of the regional.
UK had seven players who had multiple kills in the match Thursday as the Carr led the way with 11 and Eva Hudson having nine in the match without an error on 24 swings for a .375 hitting percentage. Brooklyn DeLeye had eight kills Thursday night with eight digs, as well as the Kentucky offense was firing on all cylinders during the match.
UK’s defense was the main story Thursday as the Wildcats held Cal Poly to a .114 hitting percentage for the afternoon, including a -.083 mark for the third set alone. Cal Poly was forced into 19 hitting errors during the match and Kentucky had nine stuff blocks as a team, including four in the third set alone as UK cruised to a 25-7 third-set sealing mark.
Kennedy Washington was errorless Thursday afternoon with seven kills on 10 swings to hit .700 and she also threw in three blocks as Carr’s six blocks led the way for UK’s defense. Between Carr and Washington, they combined for 18 kills and only one error in the match along with nine blocks in what ended up determining the difference in the outcome.
Kassie O’Brien ran the Kentucky offense to a .419 hitting percentage with 31 assists in the match. Molly Tuozzo had nine digs to lead the Wildcats in the floor defense category and Tuozzo also added in five assists to her stat line, as well.
Set 1
Kentucky hit .464 in the first set and took the opener, 25-18 over the Mustangs to grab a 1-0 lead in the match. UK jumped out to the quick 4-1 lead on two kills each by Lizzie Carr and Brooklyn DeLeye to put the Mustangs under immediate pressure. Cal Poly pushed back and pulled to within one at 4-3 but Kentucky then raced out to another three-point lead at 9-6 and never looked back. The Wildcats took a 15-12 lead into the media break following a Mustang blocking error and then after UK won two of the next three points out of the media timeout, they called one of their own, their first, at 17-13. A stuff by Kennedy Washington pushed Kentucky in front 21-17 and Cal Poly burned its final timeout. Kentucky arrived at set point leading 24-18 and an ace from Trinity Ward sealed the first set as UK won it, 25-18. Lizzie Carr had a team-best five kills in the first set, on five swings to hit 1.000 as Kentucky hit .464 as a team. Kassie O’Brien had 10 assists on 15 of UK’s kills with Kentucky logging 15 kills to two errors in the frame. UK never trailed in the first set.
Set 2
UK held Cal Poly to .079 hitting in the second set and claimed a 2-0 lead in the match with a 25-19 second-set victory. The Wildcats hit .257 for the frame and had 17 digs en route to taking the set. Kentucky trailed early at 5-2 but a 5-0 Trinity Ward serving run pushed Kentucky in front for the first time all set and the lead grew to multiple points on a kill from Eva Hudson on the left side to make things 7-5. Kentucky’s lead became four at 11-7 and at the media timeout, an extended-rally kill by Lizzie Carr pushed UK to 15-12 at the break. Cal Poly used its first timeout when it trailed 9-4 and then a pipe by Brooklyn DeLeye made things 20-14 as UK took the six-point lead for the first time all day. Cal Poly burned its final halt to play at 22-16 and a service ace ended the second set, just as it did the first, as Molly Tuozzo pushed across her first ace of the day to close the book on the second set with a 25-19 frame. Kentucky had 14 kills in the set and Kassie O’Brien had 21 assists through the opening two sets of play.
Set 3
Kentucky ran away and hid in the third set, jumping out to a 13-3 lead thanks to a huge serving run by Trinity Ward, whose serve caused problems for the Mustangs all afternoon long. Ward exited the run with Kentucky ahead by 10 and the Wildcats quickly grew the lead to 12 at 16-4, the largest lead for the Wildcats in any set this tournament. The lead grew to 25-7 late in the set as a kill by Kennedy Washington put the match away with her seventh kill of the night. UK hit .609 for the third set with 14 kills and zero errors with 12 assists for O’Brien.
For the latest on UK Volleyball, follow the Wildcats on Twitter and Instagram at @KentuckyVB.
Kentucky Postgame Quotes
Kentucky Head Coach Craig Skinner
Opening Statement…
“I told Caroline at the end of the match, that the last set was no indication of her team. They had a heck of a year, and one of the things that was really important for us in this match was to apply a lot of serving pressure so their lightning-fast offense couldn’t get going, which it did in the first set. I think the pressure was really good, and the offensive connection between Kassie and Lizzie and Kennedy in our middles really helped spread the offense so that we were multi-dimensional, which I think caused problems. I’m really pleased with our focus in the first set to be able to give us some separation when we needed to.”
On the game plan to go to the middle…
“I think a little bit of both. I think it was important, you know, Kyle talked to the starts about the game plan before the match, and definitely establishing the middle is important in any match. As it continued to go very well, there’s no reason to go away from it. You know, so we’re continuing to score, got to keep going. Cassie did a really good job of finding them, both in serve, receive and transition.”
On Cassie’s performance as a freshman…
“I mean, her demeanor has been the same since January, and we’re in December now. Her demeanor at practice games, matches, SEC championship match, first match of a weekend, it’s always the same. So, I credit her for her toughness to weather pretty much anything that’s thrown in her direction. Very proud as a coach to see the way she handles things.”
Kentucky Student-Athletes
#15 Lizzie Car, MB
On Lizzie being the go-to hitter this game…
“We know that a lot of teams are going to draw a lot of attention to Brooklyn and Eva and so we have to find a way to score from another part of the court and tonight, Kassie was able to put me and Kennedy in really good positions, and then we would score from the back side as well. We were just able to score from other avenues at the court, which is going to be really important going forward.”
On message for her teammates…
“I was just talking about given props to Trinity. She had an amazing few star runs throughout the game, and we would not have been able to see what we did without her putting so much pressure on them from behind the line and that I talked about how we were going to need to we knew going into this match, we were going to need to have really good defense, not just blocking, but digging the ball as well. I also talked about how going into tomorrow or Saturday and the next game, we’re going to need to be able to bring that again because there’s going to be a lot of great hitters and so we’re going to need to use our block and our backcourt to defend them.”
On the fans …
“I just think that we obviously got the second got to host the second and third round, and so it’s really cool to be able to have BBN show out and make it feel like a real home court advantage because without them, there wouldn’t really be a huge difference in it being here or someone else besides some of the like routine stuff getting ready for pregame and so the whole entire crowd being blue and being so loud is just what’s such a big benefit for us. “
#6 Kassie O’Brien, S
On connection with the middles…
“I think each day in practice, it’s something that we want to work on, and it just continues to grow. And so tonight, I don’t know, we’re just kind of feeling it, and our passing did a great job to put us in a good position in order for you to do it to Lizzie and then to Kennedy, too.
But I think being able to balance the difference between the two hitters has been a challenge, but, you know, they do a great job of communicating with me and we connect really well, and so just finding that connection has been really big.”
On what she saw on the court…
“I think spreading out the offense is such an important piece of the game and going into this match we knew that so many other hiters were going to have a lot of success and then also opening or setting the middles in the rights are just going to open up them even more. Just finding that throughout the game has just been something that we’ve continued to work on and it was very good tonight.”
On the fans …
“I think it’s super cool. I feel like even in that third set, it was we kind of talked about it, it was like, kind of the loudest that we’ve heard it and it just being a Thursday at 3:30, you wouldn’t really expect that, but it just shows how much, you know, BBN really shows out for us and is there.”
#7 Eva Hudson
On Lizzie’s game…
“Well, personally, I’ve been with her for a very long time, so it’s like a proud mom moment, and I love watching her swing away with confidence and she’s such a great player. So I’m glad she is reaping the amazing success. But as if for a team, she brings so much energy to the team in the first place, and then when she’s scoring relentlessly that is so fun and then it makes me in Brooklyn’s job so much easier.”
On the fans …
“It’s just absolutely amazing. Some people were like, do you think we’ll get a crowd? And our whole team was like, ‘Nah, like, we’ll have a crowd cause they show up every single time.’ And it’s so funny cause we don’t even know what Craig’s up to and then we see the post and he’s in a plane, so we’re about in the dark, as you all. It’s absolutely amazing being able to play in front of them and then being able to play in front of them on Saturdays,
Cal Poly Postgame Quotes
Cal Poly Head Coach Caroline Walters
Opening Statement …
“All good things come to an end I guess. And my seniors here, the three of them, we have overwhelming gratitude for this journey. Kentucky is an amazing volleyball team, and I was telling my assistant, you know, on film, and we get a ton of numbers, and we watch so much film, the hardest thing to assess is serving from film. And I thought they served the toughest serving match of any team we played this year. So, you know, forced us to get off the net. And from there, it’s tough to kill balls against them, because they are so big as blockers and play tremendous defense. So hats off to them. I told Craig to win it, and then we can tell people we finished second. No, I again, just, just this has been an amazing, amazing time for us, these past few weeks of whirlwind and gratitude to represent Cal Poly on national stage. You know, we’re hearing from people all over the country, and it’s just been incredible to represent not only our great university, but mid majors in general, and to be here in a sweet 16 competing against an amazing university and a beautiful facility. Yeah, we’re just thankful for that. I personally am thankful to be one of three female head coaches of a sweet 16 team, I think it’s really important to be visible, not only as a female but a mother. It’s something that, you know, I want to model for these guys, and I hope that a few my players over the years will want to stay in coaching, because they see the way I’m able to balance my personal and professional life. And Emmie, when she first came her freshman year. She I mentioned this the other day. She was a kids coach. She grew up in her dad’s, her dad’s program, Division Three, football, Whitewater, Wisconsin. And as she came, one of her first things she said to me is, I’m never going to be a coach. Like, I hate that life for kids, blah, blah. And I’m like, I didn’t have kids then, and then I had kids. And I’m like, okay, and over the years, I think that one of the coolest things is, like, Emmie’s plan when she goes back is she wants to be a coach and like, this is incredible. Making a sweet 16 is great. But to influence my athletes, like, want to be in this profession and be able to do it while being a mother, that’s going to sit on my heart for a while.”
On Kentucky going to the middle so much …
“Yeah, you know, scouting wise, you look at the numbers, and they’re receiving, you know, a bulk of that, and they were able to find their middles, you know, I thought we served well at times. I think that they, they just settled in service, you passing, and were able to stay in system. And, yeah, they said, especially the slide, right, like that wasn’t something that was being said at a high percentage. So they ran the middle really efficiently and effectively. And we spent a lot of time preparing our blockers for the balls going that way. If it’s not going that way, be ready for the one out of the middle, like we have to be able to slow that down. And I thought that Craig did an incredible job of finding not only the middles. I thought they said the opposite effectively as well any of the athletes want to address that.”
Cal Poly Student-Athletes
#4 London Haberfield, L/DS
On making it to the Sweet 16 …
“Yeah, I just think us seniors will hold on to this forever. We’re just so happy that we could put Cal Poly on the map. As a senior, and leaving that legacy behind, that’s something that you dream about. So just riding that high, I’m going to ride it for the rest of my life. Yeah, just the past few weeks, just being in the tournament, it’s just, it’s so amazing. I’m just so grateful for every single one of these people.”
On the challenges of Kentucky’s serving….
“Oh, yeah, they just, they pushed face and then they would catch you off guard with their drops and just clogging the routes for the middles and stuff. They were just so effective in the way that they chose who to serve and where to serve and specific pace on all. It’s something that it’s tough to practice, especially in a gym that’s filled with so many fans. Yeah, I’m just grateful that we could experience that and for them to go back into the gym and turn up that volume on that serve.”
On Cal Poly fans support…..
“Thank you. From the bottom of my heart, it’s been an incredible five years. And just the support is a lot – it’s so present and it’s just so felt by all of us on the court, off the court, seeing those stands packed, seeing the band there. I just couldn’t ask for a better environment to play”
#20 Annabelle Thalken, OH
On making it to the Sweet 16 …
“Yeah, I think trust was a huge work for us this entire time. We talked about having trust in each other, trust in our scout, trust in our ability, going into the big West tournament, and then after that, we just had continued with that. We kept our trust with each other and just believed that we could do something special. And we very clearly did.”
#14 Emmie Bullis, S
On making it to the Sweet 16 …
“Yeah, when I first opened my phone after we had won to go to the Sweet 16 and my brothers both texted me and said, we gotta get those pictures framed. I just think it’s something that will forever be with us. But it’s all of our hard work, but also our teammates hard work and the people that are behind the scenes that got us here. I mean, we’ve been playing volleyball since we were 11 and it’s our senior year, it’s lined up perfectly and we’re gonna go out on such a high. I’m just thankful to be around these people and be able to hold these memories in a frame somewhere in my house someday.”
On a moment of adversity that urged you to battle back….
“I mean, I think our low for the season was getting swept by Irvine in our last home match in Big West. And we all were, we could feel that. Like there were a few losses we had in conference that we could just visibly see our team taking heart. I took it to heart so much, but Caroline has said this before, if it wasn’t for that, I don’t think we would be here where we are right now because those losses have made us who we are. So if it wasn’t for those, if it wasn’t for the people challenging us in our conference, we wouldn’t be where we are today.”
Sports
Purdue volleyball beats SMU to advance to Elite Eight
Dec. 12, 2025, 8:21 a.m. ET
As Purdue volleyball marched through the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament, Bianka Lulić watched from the sideline.
Needing more size at the net to slow down SMU’s fast-paced offensive attack, Boilermaker coach Dave Shondell inserted the redshirt sophomore middle blocker during a pivotal moment of Thursday’s Sweet 16 match.
It was a coaching move that maybe saved Purdue’s season.
Lulić immediately recorded three blocks during a five-point stretch of the third set, giving the Boilermakers control. They rode that momentum to a 16-25, 25-19, 25-22, 29-27 victory over the No. 2 seed Mustangs to reach the Elite Eight for the third time in the past five seasons.
“There’s no team I love more than this team,” Lulić said. “The thought of us ending (our season) tonight, if I was called up, I didn’t have time to be nervous. I just wanted to do my best for my teammates and my coaches.”
Lulić finished with five blocks and a kill on her only swing, tying the fourth set at 14.
After spending two years at Miami, Lulić was one of three middle blockers to transfer to Purdue this season, including junior Dior Charles and fifth-year senior Lindsey Miller, who earned the nod for playing time over Lulić due to experience.
“She’s been on the outside looking in the last few matches, which is hard if you’re a selfish individual,” Shondell said of Lulić. “But if you’re the opposite of that, which she is, she’s ready when it’s her time.”
A Purdue team that lost essentially all of its offense outside of one player from a Sweet 16 run a season ago was picked to finish seventh in the Big Ten during the preseason. Now the Boilermakers are among the final eight teams remaining.
“Dave Shondell is coach of the year nationally in my book,” said SMU coach Sam Erger, whose 27-6 record this season included two, four-set losses to the Boilermakers.

Purdue (27-6) will face top-seeded Pitt (29-4) at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, the same program that eliminated Purdue in its most recent Elite Eight appearance at Fitzgerald Field House, the same site as Saturday’s match.
While Lulić was the spark that got the Boilermakers over the top, Purdue also offset SMU’s attack with an inspired defensive effort from its top offensive player.
In addition to her match high 23 kills on .457 hitting, outside hitter Kenna Wollard provided 10 digs and tied a career-high with five blocks. And her offense helped Purdue overcome a first set rut where it fell behind 18-5.
“I did not want the season to be over and I knew this was a team that we could beat … ” Wollard said. “I really wanted to go out there and play my best and play like I know how to.”
Wollard and setter Taylor Anderson accounted for all of Purdue’s returning offense this season. Anderson provided 49 assists, three kills, three blocks and five digs. Libero Ryan McAleer pulled up 23 digs to go with two aces and six assists. Grace Heaney, who missed last season after having surgery to repair a torn labrum, added 11 kills, seven digs and five blocks.
Then, holding a match point advantage for the fifth time, senior transfer Akasha Anderson smashed kills 15 and 16 on the night to punch Purdue’s ticket to the next round, a seemingly unfathomable achievement after last season’s departures.
“It’s just nearly miraculous what these guys have done this season, how they’ve come together as a team” Shondell said. “Not just how much they love each other. We talk about that all the time. How they’ve just played with purpose.
“But then you’ve got to go out and beat people. And that’s not easy. You look at the list of top 20 teams we’ve beaten this season and it’s been very, very impressive.”
Sam King covers sports for the Journal & Courier. Email him at sking@jconline.com and follow him on X and Instagram @samueltking.
Sports
Volleyball Announces Signing of Hunter, Johnson and Vanlandingham
BALTIMORE — The defending America East champion UMBC Volleyball has signed Megan Hunter, Dasia Johnson and Elly Vandlingham, head coach Kasey Crider announced on Friday.
“We’re always looking for ways to upgrade after championship seasons – complacency is a reliable villain in stories of sustained success,” said Crider. “One of the easiest ways to upgrade is to add talent that fits your roster. In respect to the incoming class of freshmen, we absolutely feel like we’ve done that. We’ve added talent across the board, but more importantly, we’ve added good character, which is often the main characters in those same stories.”
Megan Hunter
Setter
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Markville Secondary School
Pakmen Volleyball Club
Coach Crider: “Our program has found really good success recruiting internationally. Megan continues that tradition. We believe she’ll be able to step in immediately to fill the sizeable hole left by Serin Maden, a four year starter at setter for us. She has excellent instincts and her experience competing for Canada’s various national team programs suggest she won’t be overwhelmed by the step up in level.”
Dasia Johnson
OH
Coral Springs, FL
North Broward Preparatory School
Wildfire Volleyball Academy
Coach Crider: “Dasia is an outside hitter that we spent quite a long time evaluating and recruiting. We feel like we got a long runway to understand her as a player and at every stage of the process, we felt like she would be a huge value add. She’s an elite athlete with excellent explosiveness as an attacker and blocker, and her history as a true six rotation outside hitter provides a particularly high floor from day one. Add in the Florida state high school championship this year, and we’re getting an elite player with elite pedigree.”
Elly Vanlandingham
L/DS
Gaithersburg, MD
Quince Orchard High School
Metro Volleyball Club of DC
Coach Crider: “Elly is local, which is always a huge plus. But adding her was never about checking a geographic box; it was about adding an extremely accomplished and solid defensive specialist. She comes from a nationally renowned club program and won’t be intimidated by a tough practice environment or challenging schedule.”
The Retrievers are coming off of their fifth America East Championship and NCAA Tournament appearance in the last six seasons.
Sports
Kevin LaSure Joins Track & Field Program as Assistant Coach
LaSure arrives at Columbia following a highly successful decade as Director of Cross Country and Track & Field at Academy of Art University, where he led the program to sustained national prominence at the NCAA Division II level. During his tenure, his teams earned 14 top-10 national finishes, including multiple top-five performances, while producing more than 20 individual national champions and over 300 All-Americans across sprints, hurdles, middle distance, jumps, and relays.
A nationally recognized coach, LaSure has earned 11 NCAA Division II West Region Coach of the Year awards and coached athletes to five NCAA national records, multiple National Track Athlete of the Year honors, and an Olympic bronze medalist at the 2016 Olympic Games.
His impact extended well beyond performance, as his programs consistently posted strong academic results, including multiple USTFCCCA All-Academic Team honors and significant improvements in team GPA.
Prior to his time at Academy of Art, LaSure served as head coach of cross country and track & field at the University of New Haven for eight seasons after beginning his collegiate coaching career there as an assistant. Across both head coaching stops, his teams combined for numerous national qualifiers, conference championships, and regional honors, cementing his reputation as a program builder and elite developer of student-athletes.
In addition to his on-track success, LaSure is a longtime leader within the coaching profession. He has been deeply involved with the USTFCCCA Executive Committee, serving as president (2017–21) and executive council chair (2021–24), and remains a highly respected voice in collegiate track and field nationally.
While Coach LaSure will work with all track and field and cross country student-athletes, he will directly oversee the men’s and women’s sprints and relays squads.
Stay up to date on all things Columbia track & field and cross country by following the Lions on Twitter (@CULionsXCTF), Instagram (@culionsxctf) and on Facebook (@ColumbiaAthletics).
Sports
Loralai Ketner Of Sheridan HS To Run Track And Field At Augustana University – Sheridan Media
A Sheridan Lady Bronc hurdler will continue her running and jumping ways at the collegiate level.
Loralai Ketner has signed a written offer of athletic aid, to compete at Augustana College, which is a private Lutheran University, in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Last school year, as a junior, she was the state champ in the 4A Girls 300 meter hurdles race.
After quitting soccer, Ketner says she started competing in track in her 7th grade year.
She had also been considering the University of Sioux Falls, but liked the team bonding activities at Augustana College better.
“Comparing the 2, we fell in love with Sioux Falls and just the city itself and then Augustana, the coach is amazing, Emily is great and then the campus was great and we got to meet a lot of their team and we made bracelets, so I think things that build the team together is what pushed me more towards Augustana than USF or any other college that I had toured.”
Ketner adds she is considering majoring in nursing.
The Augustana University Viking and Lady Viking Athletic Program competes at the NCAA Division II level, in the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference.
Sports
Watch Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford in NCAA tournament; time, TV
Dec. 12, 2025, 8:30 a.m. CT
Wisconsin volleyball has a couple important streaks it will look to keep alive when it meets Stanford in an NCAA tournament regional semifinal.
The third-seeded Badgers [26-4] bring an 11-match winning streak into their showdown against the second-seeded Cardinal [29-4] on Friday, Dec. 12. They also have a seven-year streak in which it has advanced into the regional finals on the line.
Which was the last team to knock off Kelly Sheffield’s team in this round? That would be Stanford in 2017.
And one streak the Badgers would like to stop on Friday is a losing streak to the Cardinal. The Badgers have never beaten Stanford, a history that includes three losses to the Cardinal in the NCAA tournament.
The matchup features two storied programs. Wisconsin is playing in the second weekend of the tournament for a 13th straight season, while Stanford has more NCAA championships [9] than any program. It beat the Badgers for its most recent title in 2019.
Wisconsin-Stanford will follow the other semifinal in the region between top-seeded Texas and fourth-seeded Indiana.
Here’s how to watch the Wisconsin-Stanford match:
What channel is Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford? TV, livestream
- TV: ESPN
- Stream: You can stream the match on services that offer ESPN, including Fubo. A free trial is available.
Watch on Fubo
Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford time today
- Date: Friday, Dec. 12
- Time: 1:30 p.m.
Wisconsin plays Stanford in an NCAA tournament regional semifinal match at approximately 1:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 12, at the Gregory Gymnasium in Austin, Texas.
The Badgers swept their first and second round matches – against Eastern Illinois and North Carolina – at the UW Field House. Stanford beat Utah Valley and Arizona by 3-1 scores in its first two rounds.
How can I listen to Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford on the radio?
Wisconsin volleyball score today
The Journal Sentinel will have live coverage from the NCAA tournament match with updates from reporter John Steppe live in Austin, Texas. Follow his live blog at jsonline.com/sports/badgers for the results and highlights.
Wisconsin volleyball bracket
First round
- Texas (1) defeated Florida A&M, 3-0, on Dec. 5
- Penn State (8) defeated South Florida, 3-1, on Dec. 5
- Colorado (5) defeated American, 3-0, on Dec. 4
- Indiana (4) defeated Toledo, 3-0, on Dec. 4
- Wisconsin (3) defeated Eastern Illinois, 3-0, on Dec. 4
- North Carolina defeated UTEP (6), 3-1, on Dec. 4
- Arizona defeated South Dakota State (7), 3-1, on Dec. 5
- Stanford (2) defeated Utah Valley, 3-1, on Dec. 5
Second round
- Texas (1) defeated Penn State (8), 3-0, on Dec. 6
- Indiana (4) defeated Colorado (5), 3-0 on Dec. 5
- Wisconsin (3) defeated North Carolina, 3-0, on Dec. 5
- Stanford (2) defeated Arizona, 3-1, on Dec. 6
Regional semifinals
- Texas (1) vs. Indiana (4), 11 a.m. Friday, Dec. 12
- Stanford (2) vs. Wisconsin (3), 1:30 p.m. or 30 minutes after the Texas/Indiana match
Sports
ECAC Announces 2025 Division I Women’s Volleyball All-ECAC and Major Awards
ECAC Announces 2025 Division I Women’s Volleyball All-ECAC and Major Awards
DANBURY, Conn. – The Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) has announced its 2025 Division I Women’s Volleyball All-ECAC Teams and major awards.
Korrin Burns from Saint Francis University won Offensive Player of the Year. Jessie Golden of Brown University won Defensive Player of the Year. Yale’s Ava Poinsett won Rookie of the Year and Lauren Steinbrecher of James Madison University won Coach of the Year.
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Korrin Burns – Saint Francis University, Outside Hitter
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Jessie Golden – Brown University, Libero
Ava Poinsett – Yale University, Outside Hitter
Lauren Steinbrecher – James Madison University, Coach
ECAC Division I Women’s Volleyball All-ECAC First Team*
TaKenya Stafford – Coppin State, Rs-Sr., OH
Kiannisha Santiago – Rider University, Sr., OPP
Korrin Burns – Saint Francis University, Sr., OH
Kennedy Louisell – James Madison University, Jr., OH
Izadora Stedile – Hofstra University, Sr., OH
Alexandra Sappia – Saint Francis University, Rs-Sr., S
Jessie Golden – Brown University, Sr., L
ECAC Division I Women’s Volleyball All-ECAC Second Team
Kali Moore – Stony Brook University, Sr., OH
Arianna Ugolini – Bryant University, Sr., OH
Maya Walker – Fairfield University, Sr., MB
Ava Poinsett – Yale University, Fr., OH
Sydney Draper – Princeton University, Jr., S
Coco Figueroa – Coppin State, Jr., L
*additional due to ties in voting
ABOUT THE ECAC
The ECAC is an eighty-six year old intercollegiate athletics organization with roughly 200 member schools for traditional sports across all three NCAA Divisions – I, II and III – that exists to enhance the experience of student-athletes participating in NCAA sports, and provide great value for universities, by sponsoring championships, leagues, bowl games, tournaments and other competitions throughout the country. The ECAC also hosts a comprehensive esports program, with over 300 schools, 4,000 teams and 10,000-plus participants in twenty-four different games titles.
STAY CONNECTED
Stay updated on the latest news, championships and more by connecting with the ECAC on Facebook (ECACSports), Twitter (@ECACSports) and Instagram (@ECACSports).
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