Kentucky’s reward for torching its side of the bracket? A date with the program it’s never beaten.
Sports
Raider Volleyball unveils 2025 schedule
DAYTON — Winners of five of the last six regular season Horizon League championships, the Wright State volleyball program and head coach Travers Green announced its 2025 schedule on Tuesday afternoon. The schedule that includes nine conference matchups inside McLin Gymnasium and is highlighted by the Raiders hosting power conference opponents Pittsburgh and Ohio State as part of the Tru by Hilton Beavercreek Invitational in September.
The Raiders will host Cincinnati for their lone exhibition match ahead of the regular season, opening action at the WKU Invitational against Western Kentucky, Drake and Loyola. Wright State then treks to the Midwest for its first two matches against power conference opponents, taking on Nebraska and California in Lincoln, Nebraska at the Ameritas Players Challenge. The Raiders then return to what will be an exciting atmosphere inside McLin Gymnasium for Tru by Hilton Beavercreek Invitational, welcoming power opponents Pittsburgh and Ohio State, along with in-state foe Ohio, September 12-14. Non-conference action wraps up the following week as the Raiders stay in town for the Dayton Flyer Invitational with matches against Illinois State, UC Santa Barbara and Dayton.
The Horizon League scheduling model remains the same from last season, with conference opponents playing each other on back-to-back dates on Fridays and Saturdays at one location this year. The Raiders will have four home double dips and four weekends on the road against the same opponent, while the schedule does feature home-and-home Tuesday matchups with Northern Kentucky.
The Raiders begin Horizon League play with a pair of home contests against IU Indianapolis in late September, later hosting Youngstown State and Milwaukee in four-straight matches inside McLin in mid-October, along with a midweek home tilt against Northern Kentucky. Wright State wraps up the regular season at home against Oakland in mid-November.
Wright State’s Horizon League road map begins with a midweek trip to Northern Kentucky on September 30, followed by a visit to Cleveland State to open October. The Raiders will see a stretch of six of seven matches on the road to end October and open November, traveling to Green Bay, Robert Morris and Purdue Fort Wayne on consecutive weekends.
The Horizon League Championship will take place November 21-23 at the site of the regular season champion. The Raiders and McLin Gymnasium have recently taken on hosting duties for the 2019, Spring 2021, 2023 and 2024 championships.
OPPONENT INFO
Cincinnati (Aug. 23, McLin Gym; exhibition)
– Cincinnati finished 2024 with a 14-15 overall mark and a 5-13 record in the Big 12, compiling a 9-8 record in road and neutral site matches. Danijela Tomić takes over as head coach of the Bearcats, a familiar face to the Raiders after 13 seasons at Bowling Green. The Raiders made the short trip to Cincinnati last season for an exhibition, winning in four sets, and have faced the Bearcats 33 times in regular season action over the years.
WKU Invitational
Western Kentucky (Aug. 29, Bowling Green, KY; season opener)
– Western Kentucky tallied a 28-7 overall record in 2024 with a perfect 18-0 record in CUSA action, grabbing the regular season and tournament titles before falling in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament to Minnesota in four sets. Wright State is 4-2 all-time against the Hilltoppers, with the last meeting in 2013. All six previous meetings have also taken place as part of tournament action.
Drake (Aug. 29, Bowling Green, KY)
– Drake compiled a 20-10 overall mark with a 16-2 Missouri Valley record a season ago, with a 2-6 mark in true neutral site matches. Wright State and Drake have faced off just once before, in September 2022, a five-set Drake win.
Loyola (Aug. 30, Bowling Green, KY)
– Loyola finished 2024 with a 22-12 overall mark and a 13-5 record in the A-10, tallying a 6-3 record in true neutral site matches last season. The Raiders and Loyola have met 53 times previously, with Wright State most recently facing off against the former Horizon League foe in 2023.
Ameritas Players Challenge
Nebraska (Sept. 5, Lincoln, NE)
– Nebraska finished 33-3 overall with a 19-1 Big Ten record a season ago, falling in the national semifinal in five sets to Penn State. Nebraska was 22-1 in home matches a year ago, and will face off against the Raiders for the first time in program history.
California (Sept. 6, Lincoln, NE)
– California recorded a 15-17 overall record with a 7-13 mark in the ACC in 2024, tallying a 4-1 record in true neutral site matches. Wright State and Cal have never faced each other on the volleyball court.
Tru by Hilton Beavercreek Invitational
Pittsburgh (Sept. 12, McLin Gym)
– The 2024 season saw the Pitt finish at 33-2 overall, falling to Louisville in the national semifinals. The Raiders and Pitt have met six times previously, first in 1975 and most recently in 2012. This will be the first meeting inside McLin Gymnasium.
Ohio State (Sept. 13, McLin Gym)
– Ohio State was 14-16 overall with an 7-13 Big Ten record last season, recording a 4-8record in road matches. Wright State and Ohio State have previously met 11 times, with the Raiders tallying a four-set victory in Columbus last September.
Ohio (Sept. 14, McLin Gym)
– Ohio finished 2024 with a 14-15 overall mark and a 10-8 record in the MAC, tallying a 5-7 record in road matches last season. The Raiders and Ohio have met 26 times previously, with the Raiders grabbing a three-set sweep at Ohio in last year’s opening weekend action.
Dayton Flyer Invitational
Illinois State (Sept. 19, Dayton, OH)
– Illinois State finished 17-16 overall with an 11-7 Missouri Valley record a season ago, falling in the Missouri Valley Tournament semifinals. Illinois State was 5-2 in true neutral site matches a year ago, and will face off against the Raiders for just the third time, but the second time in Dayton after previously meeting in UD’s tournament in 2021.
UC Santa Barbara (Sept. 20, Dayton, OH)
– UC Santa Barbara recorded a 14-16 overall record with a 10-8 mark in the Big West in 2024, tallying a 3-4 record in true neutral site matches. Wright State and UC Santa Barbara have never faced each other on the volleyball court.
Dayton (Sept. 20, Dayton, OH)
– The 2024 season saw the Dayton finish at 31-3 overall as champions of the A-10 as the Flyers advanced to the NCAA regionals before falling at Nebraska. The Raiders and Dayton have played each season recently dating back to the Spring 2021 campaign, opening the series in 1973, and have faced each other 63 times in the all-time series.
Horizon League
IU Indianapolis (Sept. 26 and 27, McLin Gym)
– IU Indianapolis finished 2024 with a 15-17 overall record and a 9-9 Horizon League mark, winning five of their matches in true road contests. The Raiders tallied a pair of road wins last season and now lead the all-time series 18-8.
Northern Kentucky (Sept. 30, Highland Heights, KY | Oct. 28, McLin Gym)
– Northern Kentucky tallied an 11-18 overall mark last season with a 7-11 HL record, going 8-6 at home and 2-9 on the road. Wright State grabbed a pair of three-set sweeps last season, while the teams have met 48 times in program history dating back to 1977.
Cleveland State (Oct. 3 and 4, Cleveland, OH)
– Cleveland State ended 2024 with a 23-10 overall record and an 11-7 Horizon League record, finishing with more wins nine home wins. The Raiders grabbed two wins last season against the Vikings, but Cleveland State captured the HL Tournament title. Wright State now leads the all-time series 47-37.
Youngstown State (Oct. 10 and 11, McLin Gym)
– Youngstown State recorded a 9-21 overall record and a 3-15 HL mark last season, with the Raiders grabbing a pair of sweeps in the teams’ meetings. Former Raider standout Sam Ott joined the YSU coaching staff this spring, entering an all-time series that Wright State leads 45-12.
Milwaukee (Oct. 17 and 18, McLin Gym)
– Milwaukee was 20-12 overall last season with a 15-3 Horizon League record, grabbing nine wins both at home and on the road. The Raiders and Panthers split their meetings in 2024, with both matches going five sets, and have met 71 times in a series that dates back to 1980.
Green Bay (Oct. 24 and 25, Green Bay, WI)
– Green Bay tallied a 16-17 overall record in 2024 with an 11-7 mark in the Horizon League, advancing to the HL title match. The Raiders earned two regular season wins last season wins over Green Bay last season before Green Bay knocked Wright State out of the HL Tournament semifinals. Wright State leads all-time series lead to 42-32.
Robert Morris (Oct. 31 and Nov. 1, Moon Township, PA)
– Robert Morris finished 9-20 last season with a 4-14 Horizon League record, tallying just one win in true road matches with five home victories. The Raiders won both 2024 meetings in three-set sweeps and lead the short all-time series 12-0.
Purdue Fort Wayne (Nov. 7 and 8, Fort Wayne, IN)
– Purdue Fort Wayne ended 2024 with a 17-15 overall record and a 10-8 Horizon League record, finishing with 10 wins at home. The Raiders grabbed a pair of wins last season against the Mastodons and lead the all-time series 19-10.
Oakland (Nov. 14 and 15, McLin Gym)
– Oakland recorded an 8-22 overall record and a 4-14 HL mark last season, with the Raiders and Golden Grizzlies splitting the two matchups in 2024. Wright State leads the all-time series 20-14 in a series that dates back to 1978.
Sports
Doris Lemngole Wins The Bowerman
GRAPEVINE, Texas – Alabama track and field phenom Doris Lemngole has been named the recipient of The Bowerman, as announced Thursday at the Gaylord Texas Resort & Convention Center. It marks the first time in program history that a Crimson Tide student-athlete has captured collegiate track and field’s most prestigious award.
The program’s ace, from West Pokot County, Kenya, topped an impressive group of finalists that included Pamela Kosgei of New Mexico and Savannah Sutherland of Michigan. All three student-athletes were their school’s first-ever finalist for The Bowerman.
Thursday marked the sixth time in the last seven years that a female athlete from the Southeastern Conference has won The Bowerman. Lemngole joins 2024 winner Parker Valby (Florida), 2022 winner Abby Steiner (Kentucky), 2021 winner Athing Mu (Texas A&M), 2019 winner Sha’Carri Richardson (LSU) and 2018 winner Keturah Orji (Georgia).
Doris Lemngole – 2025 Track and Field Résumé
- Two national titles
- Indoor 5,000m
- Outdoor 3,000m Steeplechase
- National runner-up
- Three SEC titles
- Indoor 3,000m
- Outdoor 3,000m Steeplechase
- Outdoor 5,000m
- Two collegiate records
- Indoor 5,000m
- Outdoor 3,000m Steeplechase
- USTFCCCA National Women’s Athlete of the Year
- Honda Sport Award finalist for Track and Field
- Additional accolades during the 2025 season include:
- Finished fifth at the World Championships in the women’s 3,000m steeplechase, representing Kenya
- Two-time SEC Women’s Scholar Athlete of the Year (indoor and outdoor)
- Named the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Women’s Track and Field Academic All-America Team Member of the Year
Sports
Pitt loses to Texas A&M in NCAA volleyball final four
Pitt lost 3-0 to Texas A&M in the final four of the NCAA women’s volleyball tournament on Thursday.
The No. 1-seeded Panthers lost to third-seeded Texas A&M in the national semifinal match at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri. Pitt’s season ended in the final four for the fifth consecutive season, while Texas A&M is headed to its first-ever national championship.
Jamie Schwaberow/NCAA Photos via Getty Images
Pitt lost the first set 29-27, lost the second set 25-21, lost 25-20 in the third set. It was the first time this season that Pitt was swept.
“An incredible season comes to an end in the National Semifinal,” Pitt volleyball posted to social media after the match.
Pitt defeated UMBC, Michigan, Minnesota and Purdue to reach the final four. The Panthers finished the season 30-5, claiming at least a share of their fourth consecutive Atlantic Coast Conference title.
Texas A&M will play the winner of Wisconsin-Kentucky on Sunday for the championship.
Sports
The top moments from Bowerman winner Jordan Anthony’s 2025 season
Arkansas’ Jordan Anthony won the 2025 Bowerman as the most outstanding man in track and field. Anthony is the third athlete in Arkansas history to win the Bowerman, joining fellow men’s Razorback winners Jarrion Lawson (2016) and Jaydon Hibbert (2023).
Anthony swept the NCAA titles in the short sprints across seasons, winning the 60 meters and 100 meters. He also ran the second-fastest all-conditions 100 meters in NCAA history.
RELATED: A complete history of the Bowerman
Anthony had a fantastic season filled with great performances. Here are some of her top moments from her award-winning season.
SEC Indoor 60m
Anthony won his first title of the 2025 season with a 6.54-second finish to win the SEC Indoor 60 meter title. It was a sign of more titles to come in 2025.
Razorback Jordan Anthony with the lean to win a very close 60m final at SEC Indoor pic.twitter.com/EYjC9o1aZl
— Arkansas TF/XC (@RazorbackTF) March 2, 2025
Prelims Indoor 60m
In a 60 meter race for the ages, Anthony ran 6.47 seconds in the semifinals at the 2025 NCAA indoor championships. That time is the third-fastest ever ran in collegiate history, but Anthony finished second in the race.
Indoor 60m title
After a fast semifinal round, all eyes were on the title race in the men’s 60 meters. Anthony didn’t dissapoint with a 6.49-second finish and the win.
First sub-10 at Mt. SAC
Jordan Anthony previewed what would be his fastest season yet when he ran under 10 seconds for the first time of his collegiate career at Mt. SAC relays with a 9.98 (+1.2) finish.
2025 Mt. SAC Relays
100m Elite
1) 9.98 Jordan Anthony [PR, UA school record]
2) 10.05 Ilias Garcia
3) 10.07 Benjamin AzamantiAnthony betters UA record of 10.04 shared by Jarrion Lawson (2015) and Lance Lang (2024)
No. 3 in world for 2025, No. 2 collegian pic.twitter.com/WI1Jj6IZWR
— RazorbackTF/XC (@RazorbackTF) April 19, 2025
SEC sweep
Anthony solidified hisself as a national title threat by sweeping the sprints in the hardest conference in track and field, the SEC. Not only did he sweep the 100 and 200 meters, he also set PRs.
2025 SEC Championships | M 100m final
1) 9.95 Jordan Anthony [PR, UA record]
Wind 0.0Betters his own UA record of 9.98
Sweeps SEC 60m and SEC 100m title in same season pic.twitter.com/MfzIA3OrEB
— RazorbackTF/XC (@RazorbackTF) May 17, 2025
2025 SEC Championships | M 200m final
1) 19.93 Jordan Anthony [PR, UA No. 2]
8) 20.61 Connor WashingtonAnthony sweeps SEC 100m and 200m with career best times in each pic.twitter.com/00hfXuZmnt
— RazorbackTF/XC (@RazorbackTF) May 18, 2025
9.75 shocks the world
The race the got the world’s attention. When Jordan Anthony ran 9.75, everyone stopped to check the clock. While the wind reading said +2.1, the time itself was correct. Anthony put the world on notice.
Jogs 200m in “Incredible” fashion
After running a 9.75, Anthony still had to qualify for the 200 meters at nationals. He took his time with this race, finishing in 20.20 seconds while looking very relaxed.
Jordan Anthony out here running races like Dash 😭 pic.twitter.com/ItpFQZ942l
— Travis Miller (@travismillerx13) May 31, 2025
From Lane 9 for the win
After only finishing fourth in his heat, Jordan Anthony was placed all the way out in Lane 9 for the 100 meter final. It’s a far spot for a favorite entering the championship meet and can be missed from the action in the middle of the track. Anthony snuck up from the outside to win the title, surprise many who forgot about the Razorback.
Full recap
Here’s a look at all of Anthony’s accomplishments this year:
Championships:
- NCAA Indoor 60m champion
- NCAA Outdoor 100m champion
- SEC Indoor 60m champion
- SEC Outdoor 100m champion
- SEC Outdoor 200m champion
- SEC Outdoor Team champion
Collegiate Records and All-Time marks:
- No. 2 fastest all-conditions 100m in NCAA history
- No. 3 fastest 60 meters in NCAA history
Stan Becton joined NCAA.com in 2021 and has since served as a college football, FCS football, track and field, cross country and HBCU beat reporter. He has covered numerous NCAA championship events, including the FCS Championship, DI Track & Field Championships and Men’s Frozen Four. Additionally, he has covered the College Football Playoff and HBCU sporting events like the Celebration Bowl, MEAC/SWAC Challenge and Legacy Classic. Stan graduated from Carnegie Mellon University, earning a degree in Professional Writing and playing football as a five-year letterman. You can follow him on Twitter @stan_becton.
The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NCAA or its member institutions.
Sports
Shanley volleyball coach Taylor Preston steps down after 2 seasons – InForum
FARGO — Fargo Shanley volleyball head coach Taylor Preston is stepping down after two seasons.
Shanley activities director Mark Hollcraft announced the resignation late Wednesday night.
“Shanley volleyball coach Taylor Preston has submitted her resignation, and I have accepted it,” Hollcraft said in the release. “I am grateful for her three years of coaching our Shanley girls, including the last two as head coach.
“Taylor expressed much appreciation in getting to know the girls through coaching but believed it was time to take new steps forward in her life.”
Alyssa Goelzer/The Forum
Preston initially joined the Deacons staff as an assistant in 2023 under former coach Alexis Bachmeier. Shanley finished 26-11 that season and included runner-up finishes at both the East Region and Class A state tournament.
Preston took the reins of the program ahead of the 2024 season. The 2024 campaign saw the Deacons finish 29-7 overall, including 20-2 in the Eastern Dakota Conference for the regular season conference title. Shanley also qualified for the state tournament for the second straight year.
This past season saw Shanley finish 23-14 overall. Overall, Preston compiled a record of 52-21 over two years leading the program.
Hollcraft said the search for Shanley’s next head coach will begin immediately.
Our newsroom occasionally reports stories under a byline of “staff.” Often, the “staff” byline is used when rewriting basic news briefs that originate from official sources, such as a city press release about a road closure, and which require little or no reporting. At times, this byline is used when a news story includes numerous authors or when the story is formed by aggregating previously reported news from various sources. If outside sources are used, it is noted within the story.
Sports
Aggies sweep Pitt to reach NCAA title game
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — In the moments before Texas A&M’s match against Pitt in the NCAA women’s volleyball semifinals, coach Jamie Morrison had simple message.
“We are here,” he told his team. “We are here.”
The meaning was for A&M to stay true to its identity.
The Aggies did with three-set sweep over Pitt and will play for their first national title at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday against either Kentucky or Wisconsin, which played later Thursday in the other semifinal.
A&M’s identity — “we are the grittiest,” senior Logan Lednicky said after last week’s regional win over Nebraska — has power hitters in Lednicky and Kyndal Stowers up front, the middle blocking of Ifenna Coas-Okpalla and the “quarterbacking” of Maddie Waak.
Texas A&M won the first set, 29-27, on its fifth match point on a kill by Stowers, who had nine in the first set with no errors.
A&M appeared to have won earlier on a kill by Lednicky at 25-23 but the ball was ruled out, reversing the score to 24-24. Pitt would have its own set point later but didn’t convert.
In the second set, the Aggies fell behind 15-11 after an 8-0 run by Pitt but answered. Cos-Okpalla blocked a shot by Olivia Babcock to set up set point at 24-21 and A&M got the win when Babcock’s next attempt at a kill went long.
In what turned out to be the deciding third set, A&M took its first lead at 11-10 on a strong serve by Waak. The Aggies finished it off at 25-20.
“We just played good volleyball and had fun,” Morrison said. “It’s pretty simple. They have a lot of grit and anytime another team makes a run, they answer. A lot of belief in that group.”
A&M’s sweep was the first in an NCAA semifinal since Nebraska’s win over Pitt in 2023. Pitt was making its fifth consecutive appearance in the Final Four but has yet to win a title.
Reid Laymance reported from Houston.
Sports
Previewing Kentucky Volleyball vs. Wisconsin Badgers in the Final Four
Wisconsin comes into the Final Four at 28–4, fresh off a brutal run through Eastern Illinois, North Carolina, No. 2 Stanford, and No. 1 Texas. Meanwhile, Kentucky sits at 29–2 after sweeping Wofford, Cal Poly, and No. 3 Creighton and outlasting UCLA in four. This isn’t a Cinderella story on either side; this is blue-blood versus rising powerhouse.
On paper, it looks like strength-on-strength almost everywhere you look.
Why Kentucky–Wisconsin is a heavyweight clash of efficiency, blocking, and star power
Kentucky’s offense is built around a vicious one-two punch on the pins. Brooklyn DeLeye is averaging 4.69 kills per set on .289 hitting with 521 kills, while Eva Hudson is right behind her at 4.54 kills per set on .317. That’s 1,000+ kills of high-volume, high-efficiency scoring from the outside and opposite positions. The Cats are hitting .295 as a team with nearly 15 kills per set—elite numbers for this level.
Wisconsin counters with its own superstar in Mimi Colyer, who’s putting up 5.39 kills per set on .340 hitting with 566 total kills. She’s the kind of terminal scorer who can take over a set all by herself. Around her, Carter Booth and Alicia Andrew give the Badgers a massive, efficient middle presence, both are hitting .454 with more than two blocks per match, while Andrew sits at .371 with steady production at the net.
Both teams defend at an absurd level. Kentucky holds opponents to .180 hitting and just over 12 kills per set, with 2.47 blocks per set and 1,653 digs on the season. Wisconsin is just as nasty: opponents are hitting only .184 with 1.79 blocks per set against them and fewer than 12 kills per set.
Translation: this match is probably going to be won at the pins and in transition, not by easy side-outs.
Serving and first contact might be the swing factor. Kentucky has 137 aces and 225 errors on the year, while Wisconsin has 158 aces and 304 errors—both aggressive from the line but willing to live with some risk to knock the other out of the system. The question becomes: who handles that pressure better in serve receive? The Cats have just 79 reception errors across 111 sets; Wisconsin has 85 in 106. Both are tough to rattle, but Kentucky’s backcourt has been incredibly steady during this tournament run.
Setter play will be under the microscope, too. Kassie O’Brien is the engine for Kentucky, averaging 11.02 assists per set and helping spread the ball between DeLeye, Hudson, Lizzie Carr in the middle, and Asia Thigpen on the right. Wisconsin uses Charlie Fuerbringer as its primary distributor, and she’s been excellent at keeping middles engaged while still feeding Colyer in big spots.
From a narrative standpoint, it’s simple: Wisconsin has dominated the head-to-head, winning both prior meetings and dropping just one set total. Kentucky has never gotten over that hump. This time, the Wildcats come in as the higher seed and arguably the more balanced team, while Wisconsin carries the “we’ve been here” aura.
If Kentucky’s passers hold up and DeLeye/Hudson can win enough rallies against a big Badger block, the Cats finally have the firepower to flip the script. If Colyer goes nuclear and Booth controls the middle, Wisconsin’s size and experience could send Kentucky home again.
Either way, it has all the ingredients of a classic: superstar pins, elite setters, massive blocks, and a trip to the national title match hanging in the balance.
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