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MiLB FGOTD

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MiLB FGOTD

August 1, 2025 | 03:03:10

Robby Snelling (MIA No. 2 prospect) and Jacksonville face Jhonkensy Noel – nicknamed Big Christmas! – and Columbus. Visit MiLB.TV for more.

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Feeling Elite: Badgers battle in Regional Finals for eighth-straight season

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AUSTIN, Texas – For the eighth consecutive season, the No. 3 Wisconsin volleyball team will compete in the Regional Final, this time against No. 1 Texas from the Lone Star State on Sunday, Dec. 14. First serve is set for 6:30 p.m. CT at Gregory Gymnasium and the match will be televised on ESPN. 

The Badgers (27-4) are fresh off of one of their most complete performances of the season—turning in a four-set victory over No. 2 Stanford (25-17, 21-25, 25-23, 25-22) in the Regional Semifinals on Friday afternoon to earn their first top-10 win of the year. 

Offensively, UW put together their top showing in program history in a Regional Semifinal match, swinging .420 against the Cardinal. Outside hitter Mimi Colyer led the way with 27 kills, eclipsing the 2,000-kill mark in her career. The senior also broke the school record for most kills in a season —surpassing Badger great Sarah Franklin’s 535 from last season. Colyer enters Sunday’s match with 543 kills on the year. 

Setter Charlie Fuerbringer distributed the wealth at a high rate once again, recording a career-best 61 assists on Friday. The Hermosa Beach, California, native averaged 15.25 assists per set against Stanford, as the Badgers improved their record to 10-0 since she made her return from injury. 

From the front row, middle blockers Carter Booth and Alicia Andrew continued to excel, each finishing errorless versus the Cardinal. Booth impressed by tying a career-best 14 kills, as she last did so in the Regional Semifinal last season versus Texas A&M. The senior did so while hitting .700. Andrew was more of the same, going 7-of-9 for UW. 

Outside hitter Una Vajagic rounded out the numerous standouts from Friday’s battle, racking up her 10th double-double of the season behind a 13-kill, 11-dig performance—hitting .444 (13 – 1 – 27). 

The Badgers will take on Texas for the second time this season, as the Longhorns (26-3) earned a sweep of UW at the Opening Spike Classic at the Kohl Center on Aug. 31. Right side Grace Egan led the way with 16 kills for Wisconsin, as the redshirt sophomore notched the final kill in both the third and the fourth set against Stanford on Friday. The Longhorns hold a 6-4 record all-time over the Badgers.

Sunday’s match will also mark the first time Wisconsin and Texas have battled in the postseason since the 2023 season in Tampa, Florida, in the NCAA National Championship Semifinal match. 

“We are certainly looking forward to the challenge,” head coach Kelly Sheffield said. “I think our team has grown, and as the season has gone on, I think we’re playing with confidence and you need that confidence to be able to go in and do what we’re hoping to be able to do.” 

UW will look to punch their ticket to the NCAA Championship for the sixth time in program history and for the second time in the past three seasons.



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Purdue vs Pittsburgh NCAA volleyball tournament live score updates, TV channel

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7:38 pm ET

Purdue vs Pitt volleyball score tonight

The Boilers got out to a 3-1 start but a couple of errors led to Pitt evening the game at 5.

7:29 pm ET

Purdue volleyball vs Pitt start time

Fortunately, the match before this one ended early (on time?) with Kentucky and former Boiler Eva Hudson punching their ticket to the Final Four with a sweep of Creighton. We should be ready to go momentarily. We’re about four minutes away.

7:20 pm ET

Who did Purdue volleyball beat in NCAA volleyball tournament Sweet 16?

The Boilermakers looked awful in the first set against SMU, trailing 18-5 at one point, and fought their way to a four-set win.

7:10 pm ET

Who did Purdue volleyball beat in NCAA volleyball tournament second round?

Here’s how the Boilers punched their tickets against Baylor in the second round.



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Elite Eight scores and highlights

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Updated Dec. 13, 2025, 7:14 p.m. ET



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Creighton volleyball falls in Elite Eight match, finishes season 28-6

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Creighton volleyball fell Saturday in three sets against the Kentucky Wildcats in the Elite Eight round of the NCAA Volleyball tournament.

The Wildcats owned all three sets, winning with scores of 25-19, 25-13 and 25-18.

Kentucky’s ruthless offense kept the Bluejays on the defense as the game churned into the third set. Following the second set, Kentucky’s coach Craig Skinner told the ESPN2 crew that he was relying on his team’s “big dogs to get it done.”

“Serving pressure was a big factor,” Skinner said heading into the locker room. “Reinhardt hasn’t been able to get involved as much. To keep them away from the net, to limit the number of options is huge.”

Creighton coach Brian Rosen, who’s leading the Creighton team through the NCAA tournament for his first time, said he told his team they needed to change their mindset heading into the third set.

“We’ve got to clean some things up,” Rosen told the ESPN2 crew. “We’re not putting any points on our serves right now, so we got to push it.”

Several long rallies in the third set felt like a comeback for the Bluejays, but the team came up just short. Creighton was attempting to make program history by punching its the ticket to the Final Four but fell just short against Kentucky.

The season-ending loss capped another impressive season for the Bluejays, which included the program’s sixth-straight Big East title.

Senior players, Ava Martin and Kiara Reinhardt, will continue their volleyball careers when they trade their college jerseys for professional ones in the Major League Volleyball. In November. Martin was drafted second-overall to the Atlanta Vibe. Reinhardt was eighth-overall pick by the Omaha Supernovas. The two first-round picks made league history. Creighton was the first school to have two selections in the first round of the same draft.

The Bluejays finished the season 28-6.

The Nebraska volleyball team will look to continue its undefeated season Sunday against Texas A&M. The match will be broadcast at 2 p.m. CT on ABC. If the Huskers move on, they’ll play Thursday.

The NCAA Championship will be Sunday, Dec. 21 at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City.



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Creighton vs. Kentucky volleyball: Elite Eight scores, highlights

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Updated Dec. 13, 2025, 6:02 p.m. ET



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A reverse-sweep comeback over Louisville pushes Texas A&M volleyball to third-ever Elite Eight

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(KBTX) – In the middle of the third set of Friday’s NCAA Tournament region semifinal volleyball match, Texas A&M opposite hitter Logan Lednicky glanced at a random piece of paper in the middle of the score’s table.

After being the first team to 15 points in both of the first two sets, the third-seeded Aggies’ allowed No. 2 seed Louisville to rally and set up a three-game sweep. The Aggies needed a rare reverse sweep to keep their season alive. They were looking for an answer to the situation they found themselves in.

Sometimes the sign is literally a sign.

“Something great is about to happen,” the piece of paper read.

Three sets later, the Aggies were celebrating on the court of the Bob Devaney Sports Center in Nebraska, having rallied to beat Louisville 3-2 in a five set thriller. It was A&M’s first reverse sweep since September 29 of last year, when the Aggies’ came from behind to beat Missouri in Reed Arena.

“I’m like floating on air,” Lednicky said after the match. “That was the most insane experience I have ever been a part of.”

From the start, A&M appeared to be in control of the match, jumping out to a 17-12 lead. However, after A&M reached 15 points, Louisville did not commit another error in the set. The Cardinals closed out the set on a 6-3 run to take the first game.

History repeated itself in the second set. A&M pulled out to a 21-16 lead, but allowed a 5-0 Cardinal run to tie the game. An 8-0 run ultimately sealed the 2-0 start for Louisville and put the Aggies’ season in jeopardy.

It wasn’t unfamiliar territory for the Aggies. Not only did A&M travel to Nebraska last season for the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Tournament, they fell behind 2-1 to Wisconsin and needed to push the game to a fifth set to try to advance. That effort fell short in the final game, 15-13, ending the Aggies season.

The story of this season wouldn’t end the same way.

“I think we spent a lot of time under tension,” Aggie middle blocker Ifenna Cos-Okpalla said. “I think that was something we all said when we were in that fifth set, just knowing that we had been here before. We played here before. We’ve been in this exact situation before and it’s really just on us to turn it around and capitalize.”

The Aggie block leader was key at the net in the match turn-around. A&M finished the match with 17 blocks, 12 of which came from Cos-Okpalla. The Aggies had nine blocks in the fourth set, seven off the hands of Cos-Okpalla.

The senior finished with nine kills, to go along with her blocking effort and a .316 hit percentage.

“Even when I wasn’t getting blocked or good touches, I think I was in a good enough spot to like funnel out space for the defense to work behind me,” Cos-Okpalla said. “We can just run our offense from there. So yeah, it takes everybody on the team honestly, but, yeah, I’m just so proud.”

The fifth set saw nine ties and three lead changes in a back-and-forth struggle for the next line of the bracket. The Aggies needed a 3-0 run through the middle of the set to take a 10-9 lead, thanks to two Louisville errors and a block by Cos-Okpalla and Lednicky. Then, the Aggies closed the match out on a 5-2 run with outside hitter Kyndal Stowers recording the final kill.

Lednicky paced the Aggies with 20 kills and added 12 digs and seven blocks. Stowers had 17 kills and 11 digs.

Louisville’s Chloe Chicoine led all attackers with 26 kills.

A&M hit at a .277 clip, slightly better than Louisville’s .229.

The Aggies advance to the program’s third-ever regional final and will face the No. 1 overall seed Nebraska on its home court Sunday at 2 p.m. The Cornhuskers took down No. 4 seed Kansas 3-0 in a match directly following A&M’s win.

In the meantime, A&M can take a moment to relish in the program they’ve builtin the three years of the Morrison era.

“My No. 1 thing that I said when I first got here was to get it back to where its was and take it further and we have it back to where it was… Now, it’s time, in two days, to take it further,” Morrison said.



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