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Owls Drop Match to Hurricanes

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CORAL GABLES, Fla. – The Florida Atlantic women’s soccer team fell to Miami on Thursday evening by a score of 4-0.
 
Five minutes into the first half, senior Morgan McDonald attempted the first shot on goal of the match. The shot from McDonald marks her first shot on goal of the season. The first 30 minutes remained scoreless until the Hurricanes scored a goal with 30:08 on the clock to take the lead. At the end of the first 45 minutes, the Owls (0-2-1) trailed 1-0.
 
The Hurricanes (2-1-0) scored their second goal of the match early in the second half to extend the lead to 2-0. The third goal of the night for Miami came with 62:57 on the board. At 68:09 on the clock in the second half, there was a goalkeeper change for the Owls as transfer Megan Hogate checked in for the first time in an FAU uniform.
 
Sophomore Ashley Small finished the night playing a total of 68 minutes, registering two saves on the night to improve her season total to 15 on the year thus far. Freshman Keira Pabalan recorded 44 minutes for her freshman debut.
 
UP NEXT
FAU will return down south to face the Panthers of FIU on Sunday, Aug. 24, at 4 p.m. on ESPN+.
 
FOLLOW THE OWLS
To stay up to date on all things Florida Atlantic women’s soccer, follow FAU on social media @FAUWSoccer.
 



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Kentucky Wildcats volleyball results, recap vs Creighton

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Updated Dec. 13, 2025, 6:53 p.m. ET

The Kentucky Wildcats volleyball team won their 26th straight match on Saturday, and none are bigger than this one. The Wildcats are on their way to the Final Four after beating Creighton 3-0 (25-19, 25-13, 25-18).

Brooklyn DeLeye and SEC Player of the Year Eva Hudson were fantastic once again for Kentucky. Both had some huge kills at key moments in the match. DeLeye totaled 18 kills and 12 digs, while Hudson added 13 kills of her own.

The rest of the Wildcats roster was huge as well. Molly Tuozzo had a plethora of big-time digs that kept rallies going. Kassie O’Brien had a big day as well, setting up her teammates.



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Defense Leads Volleyball Cats to Final Four – UK Athletics

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The Kentucky volleyball team  used service pressure to beat Creighton on Saturday to advance to the Final Four. While serving is the first part of the equation, being able to get set defensively is the second part, and the Cats did that extremely well against the Blue Jays.

UK had 62 digs in the match and eight total blocks. After the match, UK head coach Craig Skinner praised his team’s defensive effort.

“To hold a team like that to .066 is a lot to do with your defense, and you know, it’s a mentality,” Skinner said. “We have to establish a defensive mentality in practice.  We hammer balls at them all the time, they’re flying all over the gym, making plays. We have a couple rules, we’ll reason why you don’t go for the ball; that would be out of bounds, hear the whistle, or some sort of danger is in the way. Outside of that, you better go for the ball. But it’s just, you have to set that in practice, and we’ve spent a lot of time this year, just hammering that into our team, and it’s, man, it’s fun to watch, too.”

Kentucky senior outside hitter Eva Hudson thought she and her teammates responded to the coaching staff’s challenge.

“Craig asked us to be relentless all evening,” Hudson said. “That sort of defense is so frustrating, one of your best shots and it being dug up. That was our mindset every time.”

Junior outside hitter Brooklyn DeLeye also thought that the coaches did a great job of putting together an effective game plan for Saturday’s match.

“Props to the staff, I mean they really had a good game plan going into the match and I think we just executed that at a high level,” DeLeye said. “Even if Creighton was making changes throughout the match, they were still telling us every single time we were at the net what to do.”

Creighton head coach Brian Rosen said after the match that Kentucky’s defense made it very difficult on his team.

“I just thought their defense tonight was the difference,” Rosen said. “They were an arm and ball back up. We ended up with nine blocks. I thought we could have had 18 tonight. They covered so well, just kept plays alive long enough for their outsides to terminate eventually. And so again, I just I give them a lot of credit for that.”

Defense wins championships, and on Saturday, that was true for Kentucky.





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Kentucky Sweeps Creighton, Punches 2025 NCAA Final Four Ticket – UK Athletics

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LEXINGTON, Ky. – In front of a sellout crowd at Historic Memorial Coliseum, the Kentucky Volleyball team punched its ticket into the 2025 NCAA Volleyball Final Four on Saturday afternoon as it swept Creighton 3-0 (25-19, 25-13, 25-18), advancing into the program’s second Final Four.

In the Final Four, Kentucky will play the winner of Sunday’s match between (1) Texas and (3) Wisconsin. The 2025 NCAA Volleyball Final Four will be contested in Kansas City, Missouri at the T-Mobile Center. The match will be played Thursday night at a time to be announced on ESPN. The match time will be announced by the NCAA and ESPN on Sunday night at the conclusion of regional play in Austin.

UK never trailed by more than two points in any set at any point all evening long, and the Wildcats never allowed the Bluejays to get to 20 points in any of the sets, either. Kentucky held Creighton to a .066 hitting percentage for the match with eight blocks and a .000 hitting percentage in the second set alone. UK as a team hit .263 for the match, with 47 kills on 118 swings and only 16 errors. The Wildcats pegged the Bluejays for a pair of aces in the match and outdug Creighton, 62-47. Kentucky sided out at a mountainous 75 percent for the match, while holding the Bluejays to a 50.7% sideout ratio.

Kentucky’s two-headed monster of Brooklyn DeLeye and Eva Hudson were elite Saturday, accounting for 32 of the team’s 47 kills as DeLeye hit .326 with 18 kills on 43 swings and Hudson hammered home 13 kills on 33 swings with 15 digs for yet another double-double on the season. Asia Thigpen had eight kills for UK with a .429 hitting percentage and only two errors.

Defensively, Kentucky had three players with 10-plus digs led by Molly Tuozzo’s 17, who also led all players in the match. Tuozzo was joined in the 10-plus digs category with Brooklyn DeLeye and Eva Hudson who had 12 and 15 digs respectfully. Lizzie Carr led Kentucky’s net defense with five blocks as she was one of four UK players with multiple blocks.

Kentucky placed four players on the NCAA Lexington Regional All-Region Team with Brooklyn DeLeye named the most outstanding player. DeLeye was joined by Lizzie Carr, Eva Hudson and Molly Tuouzzo on the all-region team. Ava Martin and Sydney Breissinger from Creighton made the team along with Arizona State’s Noemie Glover.

Set 1

Kentucky took the 1-0 lead in the match thanks to a 25-19 opening set that swung the Wildcats way thanks to a strong 5-0 Trinity Ward service run midway through the stanza that took at 14-14 tie into the media timeout into a 19-14 lead in favor of the Wildcats. Creighton then had to use its second timeout when the Bluejays committed one of their six attack errors in the set off a block from Lizzie Carr to give UK the 23-16 lead and put the Wildcats two points away from the set. Creighton put together a 3-0 run thanks to a sideout and a pair of aces but a kill from Asia Thigpen and a Bluejay attack error on the following two successive points handed the Wildcats the set and a 1-0 lead in the match. Kentucky hit .282 for the opening set, while holding Creighton to .091 in the set. Both Eva Hudson and Brooklyn DeLeye had six kills each in the opening set with Hudson hitting .500 on her 10 attacks with only one error to speak of. Kassie O’Brien had 15 assists on 17 of UK’s kills and O’Brien led the UK defense with four digs alongside Molly Tuozzo and Molly Berezowitz who each bucketed three in the first set.

Set 2

It was a Kentucky blitz in the second set as Kentucky took the second set 25-13, holding Creighton to a .000 hitting percentage in the frame and closing the set on a 6-1 run after jumping out to a 10-3 lead to begin the set. Creighton called timeout down 10-3 and Kentucky leading by a then set-high number of seven points. The teams traded sideouts for the middle part of the set with UK then going on a 3-0 run thanks to the strong serving of Molly Berezowitz who got the Bluejays out of system on three-straight points to push the lead to 20-12 and CU called its final timeout of the set. With UK ahead by eight, the Wildcats closed things out winning five of the last six points out of the Bluejay timeout to make the 25-13 mark. Kentucky hit .289 with 16 kills in the second set and Creighton had eight kills and eight attack errors in the frame to hit zero. Fourteen of the 16 kills for UK were assisted on by Kassie O’Brien, who upped her total to 28 for the match through the first two sets. Eva Hudson had 10 digs to lead the UK backline with Molly Tuozzo logging nine, one behind Hudson to lead the match.

Set 3

The Wildcats and Bluejays were neck and neck in the early parts of the third stanza with the Bluejays collecting a two-point lead at 11-9. The Wildcats were able to make things 15-14 in their favor at the media timeout thanks to a huge stuff block by Kennedy Washington and Asia Thigpen on the left side to give UK the momentum. Creighton then had to call for time in the set two points later as Kentucky roofed the Bluejays again, this time being an Eva Hudson solo stuff to make things 17-14. UK won the next three points as Trinity Ward’s serve again caused havoc on the Creighton side of the net to make things 20-14 and UK sat just five points from a spot in the Final Four. Kentucky sided out the next five opportunities to make things 24-18 and kill by Brooklyn DeLeye sent UK into the Final Four for the second time in program history.

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’m just really proud of our team and the performance that they had this weekend was impressive, and we asked our team to be relentless and we were relentless all evening and you can’t thank our players for giving themselves to this team and this program enough. They have done it all year long and can’t thank our administration enough for giving us the resources to build a special program. So, it takes a collective effort, a lot of people to get to this point and want our players to build and experience a Final Four, which we’ve got that chance to do. It’s awesome. But our job isn’t finished and we’ve got to get ready to play some good volleyball in Kansas City, so magical season needs to continue.”

 

On what it means to coach in Memorial Coliseum for the tournament…

“A lot, magical stuff. It’s just it’s hard to do. It takes a collective effort and administrators, coaches, people, players, staff, managers, all of that. I’ve been there before, done it, and obviously I can’t wait to do it again, but I just want our players to be able to feel what it’s like to be at that level, because it’s a really cool experience, and I don’t worry about the effort we’re going to give on Thursday night, so I just I want to make sure we can enjoy the opportunity and anything happens in the Final Four.”

 

On the crowd …

“It’s a dream to do that, and it’s hard to convince people by just saying it and talking about it and I just felt like I had to do something that would get the attention to people that don’t pay attention to volleyball. And so now that they’ve come, they’re hooked, and they’re gonna be hooked for a while, it just is an exciting brand of sports and, you know, a rising tide lifts all boats, and the more we can do for the University of Kentucky, and the other teams in this department, it makes us all better. We can’t do that without the help of administration to see the value in volleyball.”

 

On the effort the entire team puts into defense…

“One hundred percent. To hold a team like that to .066 is a lot to do with your defense, and you know, it’s a mentality. We have to establish a defensive mentality in practice.  We hammer balls at them all the time, they’re flying all over the gym, making plays. We have a couple rules, we’ll reason why you don’t go for the ball; that would be out of bounds, hear the whistle, or some sort of danger is in the way. Outside of that, you better go for the ball. But it’s just, you have to set that in practice, and we’ve spent a lot of time this year, just hammering that into our team, and it’s, man, it’s fun to watch, too.”

 

On what Eva Hudson has contributed to the team this year…

“Yeah, I just thank Eva for giving Kentucky a chance the third time, twice striking out to get her here and I think she saw something in this program that could bring something out of her. But I think everybody in the stand sees the level of competitor that she is, and there is zero that will fear her in the eyes of competition. It’s fun to be a part of people like that, and when you have people like these two at the table and others that are just competitors every single day, they’re going to win in life and Eva is, there’s no doubt about that. She’s going to win in life because she’s relentless in what she does, and I think people want to watch her play all the time.”

 

Kentucky Student-Athletes

#7 Eva Hudson, OH

On her last game in HMC …

“I mean it was absolutely magical. Every time they exceed expectations our whole team has for them. There was a time there at the end when I just looked around when it got really chaotic and it was a really cool experience and I just can’t thank them enough for an amazing year.”

 

On the team’s defense …
“Craig asked us to be relentless all evening. That sort of defense is so frustrating, one of your best shots and it being dug up. That was our mindset every time.”

 

On flipping the switch to another level in the second half …
“In the first, especially the first few points of the first set it was hard to find the rhythm with a game with so much pressure and a lot of high expectations, but I think in the second and third, we really found groove, our flow state, and we just capitalized on it.”

 

#17 Brooklyn DeLeye

On the team’s defense …

“Also props to the staff, I mean they really had a good game plan going into the match and I think we just executed that at a high level. Even if Creighton was making changes throughout the match, they were still telling us every single time we were at the net what to do.”

 

On Trinity’s play …
“You know she’s just one of the hardest workers out there, and I know when she got her shot to come in to serve she was going to make the most out of it. So, I mean, just props to her and just the person she is, because she was just a huge momentum shift whether that was her serving or just her presence out there, she will be your biggest hype man.”

 

Creighton Postgame Quotes

Creighton Head Coach Brian Rosen

On Kentucky’s serving…

“I thought our service did a nice shot. We had them under a 2 for most of the match. So I thought we did a decent job there. They shot well, their outsides were obviously really good, and even when we defended some of the balls, we just couldn’t find a way to win some of those long rallies. I just thought their defense tonight was the difference. They were an arm and ball back up. We ended up with nine blocks. I thought we could have had 18 tonight. They covered so well, just kept plays alive long enough for their outsides to terminate eventually. And so again, I just I give them a lot of credit for that. We fought as long as we could and just couldn’t find those stretches late in the first and the third when I thought we had chances.”

 

On Ava and Kiara …

“They’re like the two people that I knew the most and met when I took this job as an assistant a long time ago. Ava played on the same club team as a player I had just committed at a previous stop. I was the head coach at Nova Southeastern University before I got here, and committed a kid named Taylor Stockman to that program, and Ava was on the same team. And so I knew her really well when I came here, and then Chiara was the only athlete that I met when I was on my visit. They are just two really special individuals, getting Ciara to come back for the sixth year, allowed us to have the run that we had, her play is really, really good, and I think she’s one of the best middles in the country. But what she does beyond that is so much more important to our program. She’s the best leader, and the best teammate and does everything the right way, and then she jokes about being the team mom, and she really is. Even in her six years, making sure everyone has the right jerseys and spandex and all those kinds of things, but also brings so much joy. And Ava, the way she plays and competes is a pleasure to watch. I mean, sometimes in practices and film, the amount of times like my mouth drops watching her play is just remarkable. This is her last college game. I’m excited that she was able to go on this run, excited to watch her play at the next level. She’s earned this opportunity to play in the pro leagues and have a great career. She’s just special good and always shows up in the big moments and the two of them, the mark that they’ve left on our program, I know Kiara will be the winningest player to ever play at Creighton and it’s going to be hard for anyone to beat that. Ava, I believe, like just set the postseason record for kills. She’ll finish top three in her career and maybe cement herself as the best player to ever play at Creighton, and we have a pretty good list of players so it says a lot about who she is.”

 

On crowd atmosphere…

“I think volleyball has been booming for years now. It started with the woman behind you. I see Kathy DeBoer back there, putting volleyball on her back and trying to grow it as much as she could. When I was at Nova, she called me to start a beach team once. It’s grown and grown and grown since I started getting into it and starting watching it, and so I love that moments like this are now on ESPN. We got to get the first and second rounds on ESPN too. So I love that it’s on TV more. I know tonight there was a Kentucky men’s basketball game I heard down the street and still sold this place out tonight, which says a lot about a place that I know at one point was a basketball school. Maybe they’re a volleyball school now. We like to joke that we’re volleyball school too. And so I think so many fans and communities are seeing like how special this sport is. I think it’s the most spectator friendly sport there is. It’s so fast paced, it’s so athletic, it’s physical, it’s gritty, it’s fun. And so I’m just so grateful that all these fans are getting to see this in person, and people are able to see it at home, and I hope even though it didn’t go the way we wanted, I hope the match was fun for viewers to see, and they come back and watch more next time.”

 

On the message to the team in the locker room after the loss…

“I love them. I said that before but just that I love them. I’m so grateful to them. Again, back in April, when Coach Booth stepped down, every single one of them could have left. You know, even (Ava) Martin could have got a lot of money to go to a lot of places and chose to stay here and fight and wear that Creighton blue. And Kiara could have said, you know, never mind on the sixth year, but all of them stayed committed to represent Creighton, to play for me and for this staff. And so the biggest thing I told them was that I love them and how grateful I am to them for not just sticking with me, but showing up every day and fighting like crazy, not just for me, but for the people next to them. And, you know, the two things that I talked about in my first press conference was I’m gonna fight to keep the culture, and we’re gonna keep the same goals of going to a final four. These two and everyone else in that locker room are our culture. And they did everything they could to protect it this season. And obviously, we fell a few sets short of going to a final four this year, but I’m so proud of the fight they had. I don’t know how many people anywhere put us in an elite eight this season with losing 4 all Americans and all the things we did. But I know they did. And so just grateful for them and for all they did this season for our Creighton community.”

 

Creighton Student-Athletes

#8 Ava Martin, OH

On making adjustments…

“It’s always frustrating when things aren’t going your way. Their swings, I feel like they would just have little things that nothing really seemed to go our way. It happens, and I think it stinks and obviously we’re trying to make adjustments throughout the game, but our main goal was just to keep going for it.”

 

On playing for Creighton’s and what it means to her…

“I just have so much love for Creighton volleyball. Oh, I mean, even with Booth leaving I think all of us had it down our mind that we would stay just because of what we have here, and culture is so special and so amazing, and even the people that transfer in, they really let us know how lucky we are to have what we do. And our big thing is playing with joy, and I really hope other people can do that because we just have so much fun out there playing together, and that’s what we really want to show. We’ve had a good time and we love each other, and we want other people be able to see that as well. I think that’s just what makes us so hard is because we just love each other so much and we love the sport and volleyball and we’re just happy to be out there playing. Obviously we have big goals, final four and all those things, so that stinks, but I think one of the main things is just, you know, our time, together being done. It’s just really hard. And I’m just so thankful for Creighton. It’s just had very special place.”

 

On the program moving forward…

“It’s something we talk about every year. Obviously, it stings, and I wish we had another chance to get it back. The team next year is going to want to keep working for that too. I think it’s just an expectation here at Creighton now, to keep building off that and keep getting better. And yeah, obviously this hurts, but they’re going to get back in the gym this offseason and they’re going to continue to keep working toward that goal.”

 

#5 Kiara Reinhardt, MB

On Creighton’s play tonight…

“I mean I thought our serve receive was pretty strong all throughout the match. We were in system a lot and our defense, especially in the third set, we were scrapping, unfortunately, offensively. I think we weren’t where we wanted to be tonight. Again, cuddos to Kentucky’s defense they did great. I think defense and serve receive we were really good at tonight. I think there were, especially those small hard tough rallies that were just kind of a lot of junk kind of being thrown around. I mean, we were in a lot of those, and there were so many of them tonight, I feel like. So, I hope those showed a little bit of good tonight.”

 

On going through the last postseason run and showing the new players the ropes…

“It’s been a joy. I’ll remember you all, especially since you’re seniors just below me. I’m so thankful for the time I got to spend here. A lot of people said, ‘Wow, you really got them all, you’re so lucky,’ and it truly has been an honor and a privilege. They’ve kept me young and they’ve kept me laughing, and honestly, I got a lot more out of this than I expected by coming back for another year. It was really special to be able to connect with some of the younger girls I hadn’t spent much time with before, and to get to know them better. They’re such a sweet and special group, and I’m really so grateful.”





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Nebraska Volleyball’s Dominating 2025 Season Like This Isn’t Normal

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On this week’s Saturday Morning Coffee Show, Jack Mitchell and Josh Peterson welcomed the two hosts of Volleyball State, Jeff Sheldon and Lincoln Arneal, onto the podcast to dive into the 2025 Nebraska volleyball season. Has this level of dominance been a surprise? Are there weaknesses other teams could exploit?

They discussed those topics and more. Below is a lightly edited transcript of select conversations from the episode.


“Enjoy this dominance”

Josh: I don’t think that any of us are surprised that we are now chatting on December the 13th and the program sits one win away from another Final Four. But just kind of going big picture first, are you shocked at all by the domination that this program and this particular team has been able to show now for three-plus months running? Where they’re barely dropping any sets. Has it shocked you at all?

Nebraska coach Dani Busboom Kelly talks with setter Bergen Reilly during a timeout against Kansas State in the second round o

Dani Busboom Kelly, Bergen Reilly, and the rest of the Nebraska volleyball team has ran through competition at every step of the way. | Kenny Larabee, KLIN

Jeff: What we’ve seen pop up in the last couple of weeks is the saying “this match could have been an email.” It’s sort of become a running joke with Nebraska volleyball. I mean, just in my opinion, yeah, I think it is surprising because you don’t really see this level of dominance in 2025 when the talent is a little bit more spread out than it was maybe 15, 20 years ago. And the athleticism is just so good in the women’s college volleyball game.

For one team to kind of do this is really, really impressive. And kind of the thing that I know sounds crazy when talking about it, and I talk about it on the show with Lincoln, too, there are still kind of areas of Nebraska’s game where you think they can get better. You’re like, “Eh, you know, this part wasn’t super strong,” or “Man, I think, you know, they could go to another level if this player did a little bit better.” And then you turn around, you look at the score and they hold Kansas to the lowest score that’s ever been totaled in a Sweet 16 match, and you sound insane. Because it was like 12, 11, 12 last night and Kansas didn’t really look ready for prime time, but Nebraska kind of makes a lot of teams look that way.

Lincoln: [sarcastically] Nebraska’s outside hitters; none of them hit above .300 last night. So they really need to shape up and really step up their game a little bit, too.

But to go to your question, Josh, I’m not that surprised. I was really high on this Nebraska team as well too. It’s the level of dominance that’s maybe a little surprising, but for Nebraska to be in this position, I fully expected it to, and it’s fun to watch.

Nebraska's two wins over Penn State, including the second match in Lincoln, showed the level of play this group could rise to

Nebraska’s two wins over Penn State, including the second match in Lincoln, showed the level of play this group could rise to. | Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

So I think that’s one thing that Jeff and I have also talked about all season, is enjoy this dominance because it’s not very often that a team of this caliber comes along. Nebraska started the year strong with very big wins against Pittsburgh and Stanford, but I think that Penn State match you saw on that first Friday of October when a similar score to completely beat down a hobbled defending national title champion. But you saw what Nebraska can do when they’re locked in and really focused on doing what they do well. And we’ve seen that several times this year, including a little bit of it last night against Kansas. So, it’s impressive what they can do.


Nebraska volleyball is a story of what you hope for from higher education

Jack: I’ve got a question that I don’t want it to go into a place where you know that’s uncomfortable, so I’ll try and ask it in the best possible way. I think we know based on the personalities, the social media, and everything on this team, there are some players on this team that wouldn’t otherwise probably be close for a lot of reasons. And there have been discussions about that.

Rebekah Allick been outspoken about what she believes. Harper Murray, to some degree, has. And then you got [geography]; all kinds of different things, which you have on any college team. But I think there have been people trying to even say this year; people have been at our mentions Josh. Like, “hey why aren’t you talking about the rift?” Right? “Why aren’t you?” And I’m sure you guys have had way more of that than we have. The thought is still there when people think and talk about this team.

Rebekah Allick (5) smiles after a kill in the first set

The relationship between Rebekah Allick and Harper Murray has been debated throughout the season among fans. Yet, it hasn’t seemed to affect Nebraska at all on the court. | Amarillo Mullen

And again, I don’t want to go into that necessarily, but I haven’t ever seen anything that looks like [that]. In fact, I’ve seen like just the opposite, which I think is always a fascinating thing about college sports generally. There isn’t really a lab like that in many other places where you combine different geographic backgrounds, different races, different politics, different upbringings together, and then they’ve got a function like that. I mean, it really doesn’t happen many other places.

Lincoln: Where else are you going to get an Italian who’s with a girl from rural Colorado?

Jack: Different countries even, yeah.

Lincoln: And I think Jack, to go to this point, go watch Harper Murray’s TikToks that she put out this week, where she gifted her teammates all this free swag from Adidas. Harper is genuinely nervous before giving all of her teammates this free stuff because it means so much to her that she really does appreciate her work. And then just the pure joy that these young women are showing each other for Adidas shoes and luggage. 

The connection that this team has, again, it goes back to my kind of premise of Dani [Busboom Kelly] building this foundation of joy and trust and happiness, that really kind of infiltrated every aspect of this program.

Jeff: You know, to me, this is one the best parts about college, whether it’s college sports or not. The importance of higher education is you get to bring these people from different places and different backgrounds and put them together, whether it’s on a volleyball team or a basketball court or just a classroom, to be exposed to different ideas and different kinds of people. How boring would our lives be if everyone we knew thought the same way and believed the same things and have the same experiences? There’s enough of that in the state of Nebraska right now.

Harper Murray (left) and Dani Busboom Kelly chat before the start of the second set.

Dani Busboom Kelly has had a huge impact on this year’s Nebraska team. | Amarillo Mullen

And so I think it’s a wonderful thing that you have someone from place A and place B who have a different set of beliefs, maybe. And maybe they could talk about him and understand each other and realize that they’re still all on the same team and love each other. Work for the common goal. That’s kind of the whole point of higher education and I wish more people valued that.


Are they real concerns for why Nebraska can’t win a national title?

Josh: How many things can you actually name that you believe in in terms of why they won’t win a national championship?

Jeff: I mean, everyone’s gotta be healthy, right? And this is cold and flu season. And I sometimes worry that a really good serving team can make it hard for Nebraska to get in system to set their middles. Nebraska did a great job of serving Kansas [Friday] night, but you know, they’re not going to be the team that strings up the most aces. So if you run into a team like Kentucky or Texas with excellent pin hitters or Wisconsin, and Nebraska allows the other team to be in system, you know, that could be a problem.

And I just think Nebraska’s pin hitters have to be more terminal and, and it sounds insane, right? For a team that hit .450, but then you look, all of that came from the middles who didn’t have any errors and put up these crazy numbers. Harper Murray’s killing a third of her balls. Taylor Landfair killed about a third of her balls. And you’d like to get that closer to 50% like Wisconsin.

Taylor Landfair (12) smiles after the Huskers won set three to advance to the regional final.

Can anyone stop Taylor Landfair and Nebraska? | Amarillo Mullen

But, you know, I have to keep telling myself that’s not who Nebraska is. Like Wisconsin’s pin hitters carry them. Texas’s pin hitters carry them. Kentucky certainly does. Nebraska just does it a different way. They don’t have the country’s most terminal outside hitters. But they do have the best middle blocker duo in the country. And Bergen Riley does such a great job running that offense, and Nebraska plays such great defense, you can kind of get by with it. 

Lincoln and I used to say on the show, until this year, when Nebraska set a school record for hitting percentage, that Nebraska is the Iowa football of volleyball. They will beat you with defense and special teams and third block and defense. And they don’t always have a great offense. And this year they do.

So those are just a couple of things and you’re just looking for things that can go wrong at this point. And I think Jalen Reyes has said this too; his job is to find areas where they can get better and Landfair and Murray started [against Kansas] with one kill in their first ten attempts combined and you’re like, “man, Kansas could find their way out of first here; that could be trouble!” And then they just never did.


Is it good Nebraska avoids Louisville?

Josh: Do you think DBK is happy, sneakily or maybe outspokenly, that they’re not having to play Louisville? Just to not have to deal with that discussion? They’re gonna take care of business, I imagine [against Texas A&M], but that that is a story that they don’t have to worry about going into this one.

Jeff: This was something I talked about on the show when the tournament came out; so a couple of weeks ago. I personally am glad that they’re not going to have to play Louisville because there’s just so much stuff that’s wrapped up in that. Although Dani would obviously have a pretty good scout on Louisville. I don’t know that it would have affected [the players] very much.

But [John] Cook has talked about before, when they played Wisconsin in the 2000 National Championship match, a team that he had like recruited all of those players; he wasn’t even able to enjoy it. He didn’t enjoy winning a national title and going undefeated because it came at the expense of players that he loved. And I’m sure it would have been an element of that for Dani Busboon Kelly as well.

One year ago, Dani Busboom Kelly was coaching Louisville in the national championship.

One year ago, Dani Busboom Kelly was coaching Louisville in the national championship. Is she happy they won’t play the Cardinals this December? | Sam Upshaw Jr./Courier Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Jeff: Yeah, I think Louisville may have been impacted more because they’re seeing their former coach there, but Nebraska would have been all right.


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Ex-SJSU coach defends Brooke Slusser against Blaire Fleming’s claims

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EXCLUSIVE: Former San Jose State assistant volleyball coach Melissa Batie-Smoose has stepped into the recent war of words between former players Brooke Slusser and Blaire Fleming. 

Fleming, who is transgender, made disputed claims that Slusser has been anorexic since they first met in 2023 and failed out of her classes at SJSU. Slusser denied Fleming’s statements, previously saying that she developed an eating disorder from the stress and anxiety of playing and rooming with Fleming after discovering Fleming was a biological male, and the highly publicized scandal that ensued. 

The conflict between the two players and subsequent lawsuits by Slusser against the NCAA and Mountain West conference over the situation put the players and entire program under immense national scrutiny in their final season together in 2024.

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blaire fleming brooke slusser copy

SJSU trans player Blaire Fleming and teammate Brooke Slusser went to a magic show and had Thanksgiving together in Las Vegas despite an ongoing lawsuit. (Thien-An Truong/San Jose State Athletics)

Now, Batie-Smoose has provided her perspective on the disputed claims between the two athletes.

“To my knowledge, Brooke’s mental health and academic performance were excellent during her first year and a half as a student athlete in the program. She was engaged, consistent and doing well both personally and academically. But after sharing her experience, the surrounding pressures intensified,” Batie-Smoose told Fox News Digital. 

“She was chastised on campus and on social media, which seemed to cause her well-being and academic performance to decline. From my perspective, that context matters and underscores how much she has been carrying in a short amount of time.” 

Batie-Smoose also expressed “disappointment” about Fleming’s disputed comments about Slusser.

“I’m a little surprised and disappointed by Blaire Fleming’s comments. Even if you’re frustrated or hurt by Brooke’s actions, I hoped there might be a little more empathy—especially from someone who has been the subject of personal attacks and understands how tough these things can get. Personal hardship should give us a deeper understanding of and more empathy for what others may be experiencing, not less,” Batie-Smoose added. 

“Struggles with food, mental health or academic pressure are serious matters that deserve compassion, not dismissal. Regardless of personal dynamics, speaking harshly about someone who is clearly going through a difficult period is not something we want to encourage or normalize. Brooke’s issues with food and her grades aren’t excuses, but rather signs of someone who’s been going through a lot.”

Fox News Digital was unable to reach Fleming for comment, as Fleming’s Instagram account has been deactivated in recent days. 

LAW FIRM THAT WORKED TO KEEP SJSU TRANS PLAYER ELIGIBLE ALSO CLEARED ATHLETE OF CONSPIRING TO HARM TEAMMATE

Slusser originally told Fox News Digital on Nov. 30 – the one-year anniversary of her final game with Fleming – about the impact the situation had on her body and academics.

“From the stress and how anxious I was every single day, I just wasn’t eating really at all,” Slusser said. “I went from around 160 to 128 [pounds] in that one semester. It definitely isn’t healthy for someone of my size to be that weight, and I ended up losing my menstrual cycle for nine months. So it was definitely severe.” 

The 5-foot-11 Slusser added that people at home started to take notice. 

“When I came home, some of my friends and family were very worried about me,” she added. “Some of my friends were just like, ‘You always looked tired all the time. You always look dead…’ I was able to come home three days that fall semester my senior year, and I had a friend later on tell me that when I saw her, she went home and cried to her mom, because she was so worried about me, just because she could tell I looked so unhealthily skinny.”

Her father, Paul Slusser, then insisted that she move back home to Texas from San Jose after the 2024 season and fall semester ended. The family said she then attempted to finish her final semester and degree online, but later dropped the classes to focus on physical and mental rehabilitation. Slusser and her family say she has recovered from her anorexia, and is working on finishing her degree. She aspires to start her own business in dietetics. 

The family is still navigating the completion of her degree. 

Fleming responded to Slusser’s situation, making the disputed claims to Fox News Digital on Dec. 7.

“She’s been anorexic and struggled with food since I’ve known her[,] aka since 2023. She literally would weigh herself 2-3x a day and keep track of it on her whiteboard in her room…. So I really don’t care or feel bad for her. And she didn’t drop her classes[,] she failed out[,] hope that helps!” Fleming said. 

Brooke Slusser and Blaire Fleming

Brooke Slusser, left, and Blaire Fleming (Andrew Wevers/Getty Images)

Slusser promptly responded, calling Fleming’s statement “just not true.” 

“These statements are just not true. I have always lived a very healthy lifestyle. Before these events took place[,] I was very disciplined in fueling myself for athletics and [kept] track to make sure I was where I need to be[,] to be the best athlete. It wasn’t until all the craziness started that my healthy lifestyle turned very unhealthy into not eating the amount I should,” Slusser said.

“As for school[,] I decided to stay home after fall 2024 to better myself and heal. So no[,] I did not return to San Jose and enroll myself in more courses at an institution that didn’t have my best interest.”

Slusser has alleged in her lawsuits against the NCAA and Mountain West Conference that she was never told Fleming’s birth sex, and that the two regularly shared hotel rooms on away trips. Slusser has also said in the lawsuits that Fleming confessed to being transgender during a conversation over ice cream in April 2024. 

Slusser then joined Riley Gaines’ lawsuit against the NCAA in September 2024. What followed was a series of forfeits by opposing teams. Each forfeit compounded growing attention in an election-season media cycle, putting SJSU’s volleyball players and their opponents under a massive political spotlight.

President Donald Trump even mentioned the scandal on his campaign trail in October of that year, during a Fox News Channel all-woman town hall event. 

Police protection was assigned to the team on a regular basis. 

Slusser has alleged in her lawsuit against the Mountain West, which was filed in November, that she was allegedly informed by teammates of an alleged conversation Fleming had with an opposing player, discussing a plan to have Slusser spiked in the face during a match.

Batie-Smoose reported those same allegations in a Title IX complaint against the school, and was later suspended and did not have her contract renewed in January. Batie-Smoose has since filed her own lawsuit against SJSU over her termination. 

The Mountain West commissioned a third-party investigation into the allegations against Fleming, and determined that sufficient evidence could not be found to assign discipline. 

Fox News Digital has reported extensively on the conditions of that investigation and its handling, prompting critical responses by the White House, U.S. Department of Justice and members of Congress.

EX-SJSU STAR BROOKE SLUSSER MAKES NEW ALLEGATIONS ABOUT PROBE INTO TRANS TEAMMATE’S ALLEGED PLOT TO HARM HER

In the waning weeks of the 2024 regular season, Slusser and 10 other plaintiffs in her lawsuit against the Mountain West filed a request for preliminary injunction to have Fleming be ruled ineligible to continue playing, and to have the forfeits to SJSU reversed. Federal Judge Kato Crews, appointed by former President Joe Biden, denied the request, keeping Slusser and Fleming on the court together for practice and games. 

Slusser and Fleming were ultimately named to the Mountain West all-conference team, as SJSU’s only honorees. 

They finished the season with a 14-7 record, aided by six conference forfeits, then advanced to the Mountain West championship game after Boise State forfeited in the divisional round.

But they lost in the title game to Colorado State, three sets to one. The loss ensured that the Spartans wouldn’t take their scandal into the NCAA tournament.

Slusser left campus shortly after that at the insistence of her parents. According to The New York Times, Fleming also resumed classes remotely the following semester from Virginia.

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Slusser said she came close to returning to play NCAA beach volleyball this past spring, and even had discussions with coaches at other schools about recruitment. But she ultimately decided not to, and moved to North Carolina, where she has served as a youth volleyball coach. 

The U.S. Department of Education is currently investigating the university for potential Title IX violations related to its handling of Fleming. 

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Can ‘completely different’ Wisconsin upset Texas in NCAA tournament?

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Dec. 13, 2025, 6:51 p.m. CT

AUSTIN, Texas – Wisconsin volleyball’s first weekend of the 2025 season featured a high-profile match against Texas.

Wisconsin’s either final or penultimate weekend of the season – depending on whether UW can advance – also features a high-profile match against Texas.

But both sides will caution against reading too much into Wisconsin’s Aug. 31 loss to Texas ahead of a rematch in the NCAA tournament regional finals as each team seeks a return to the Final Four.



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