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Spain triumphant with historic fourth crown

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Overview


Image Source: Spanish winners/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Spain became the first nation to win this title four times ahead of Greece, Italy, Serbia and Hungary. The last came well before any of the current batch of players was born — 1991 when it beat Cuba for the title in California, USA. Previous titles were in 1987 and 1983. It last played a final in 2011, losing to Serbia and before that, second to Italy in 1993. It is the seventh medal after also collecting bronze in 2005.

For USA, the silver medal was an improvement on 2023’s first medal at this level — a bronze medal-win over Greece. A handful of players from 2023 returned for this year’s event.

In beating Hungary for bronze, Croatia now has two of that colour to go with two gold and four silver. Hungary lost its chance to increase its record of 11 medals since the tournament’s inception in 1981.

In the lower rankings today, Serbia took fifth place over Montenegro 21-14, Greece overcame Italy 12-10 for seventh, Germany nudged out Australia 13-12 for ninth, China played a blinder to defeat Iran 17-11, Brazil was too good for Canada for 13th place and Argentina took 15th, beating Kazakhstan 14-7.

Final Placings

1. Spain
2. United States of America
3. Croatia
4. Hungary
5. Serbia
6. Montenegro
7. Greece
8. Italy
9. Germany
10. Australia
11. China
12. Iran
13. Brazil
14. Canada
15. Argentina
16. Kazakhstan
17. Colombia
18. Singapore
19. South Africa
20. New Zealand.

Awards

Most Valuable Player
Ryder Dodd (USA)


Image Source: MVP Ryder Dodd (USA) with Stavroula Kozompoli (TWPC Secretary) and Sandro Sukno (CRO)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Best Goalkeeper
Aran Pina (ESP)


Image Source: Best goalkeeper Aran Pina (ESP) with Stavroula Kozompoli (TWPC Secretary) and Sandro Sukno (CRO)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Highest Goal-Scorer
Vlaho Pavlic (CRO) — 30


Image Source: Croatian legend Sandro Sukno presents the top scorer award to Vlaho Pavlic (CRO)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Media All Star Team

Goalkeeper
Aran Pina (ESP)
Centre Forward
Semir Spachits (GRE)
Field Players
Oier Aguirre (ESP)
Ryder Dodd (USA)
Apostolos Georgaras (GRE)
Oliver Leinweber (HUN)
Vlaho Pavlic (CRO)

Match Reports

Classification 1-2

Match 62, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 11 SPAIN 13 (1-3, 6-2, 1-3, 3-6)


Image Source: USA v Spain/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Spain was jubilant, especially after having to come from 8-5 behind early in the third quarter and three go-ahead USA goals in the final period. It was the sustained pressure and resilience of the Spanish that grabbed two important goals inside the final three minutes and then the final “icing-on-the-cake” halfway shot from match hero Albert Sabadell. USA had worked hard for victory but it was Spain’s day, becoming a four-time champion.


Image Source: Tomas Perrone (ES)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Spain controlled the first quarter and rejected a Ryder Dodd penalty shot thanks to goalkeeper Aran Pina. Sabadell scored his third to start the second quarter when smothered by players for 4-1, an advantage snuffed out in quick fashion by the resurgent North Americans. Peter Castillo, Ryan Ohl and tournament MVP Dodd made sure of that. Marc Rodriguez scored on extra close in for the 5-4 Spanish lead. Bode Brinkema, Ben Liechty on penalty and Ryan Ohl took USA to 7-5 by 0:47 and halftime.


Image Source: Silver medallist USA/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Ryan Ohl made it three for him to start the third period and an incredible three-goal lead over the only unbeaten team in Zagreb. Eudald Flaque responded with a lob shot at 4:40. Both teams went to a timeout with no result. However, at 1:56, Joan Villamayor converted a penalty foul and Biel Gomila equalised off the right-post position on extra with the cross-pass goal for 8-8 at the close of the quarter. Brinkema, Corbin Stanley and Liechty played “swapsie” with Spain’s Oier Aguirre, Sabadell and Gomila for 11-11 at 4:33. Sabadell threw the extra-man goal for a Spanish lead at 2:28. Dodd bounced over an open goal with Tomas Perrone converting a penalty for 13-11 at 0:55. USA sent seven field players up, lost the ball and Sabadell scored into an empty goal from well inside his half. It was 14-11 and there was no way USA was coming back from that. Spain had retained its unbeaten sequence to six wins.


Image Source: Gold-medal final hero Albert Sabadell (ESP)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Match Heroes
Sabadell
was Spain’s hero with six goals for 17 in Zagreb. Aguirre was kept to one today but scored 22 and Tomas Perrone’s lone penalty goal gave him 15 for the week. Goalkeeper Pina made nine valuable saves and was named goalkeeper of the tournament, not bad considering he was sharing the duties with Didac Garcia who played one full match and two partials. For USA, Ryan Ohl (8) scored three with Liechty, Brinkema (12) and Dodd two for the second best here with 28 goals. Charlie Mills was again in form with 11 saves in goal.

Turning Point
The last three minutes when Spain kept the rampant North Americans scoreless after they dominated for a long period.


Image Source: Spanish winners Genis Blanch and Tomas Perrone/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Stats Don’t Lie
Spain converted five from 12 on extra and denied 11 of 13, On penalties, went three from four. USA had the steals at 5-3 and both teams shot 35 times.

Bottom Line
Spain knows how to win finals while USA had never been to the final match before. USA used its senior internationals with seven goals but Spain’s all-round play and eight scorers proved telling.

Editor’s note: Referee Veselin Miskovic (MNE) called this final in 2021 and Daniel Bartels (AUS) officiated the 2015 junior women’s gold-medal final.

Classification 3-4

Match 61, HUNGARY 8 CROATIA 13 (2-4, 2-4, 1-2, 3-3)


Image Source: Bronze medallist Croatia/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Croatia turned the tables on Hungary when it mattered most. On day three, Hungary trounced Croatia 15-11 but today belonged to host team Croatia and its adoring and raucous fans. Hungary started with two goals in three minute before Croatia changed the face of the match, scoring the next four before quarter time. This became 6-2 by midway through the second quarter with Luka Penava becoming the dual scorer on counter. A Hungarian timeout did not work and Ante Jerkovic made it 7-2. Vince Varga scored from the top on extra, barring down after more than 10 and a half minutes of drought. Vlaho Pavlic netted his second and Oliver Leinweber scored his second on penalty for 8-4 at halftime.


Image Source: Ivusa Burdelez (CRO)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Penava grabbed two more to start the third quarter. Martin Toth (CRO) and Gabrijel Burburan (CRO) were given their marching orders for fighting in front of the Hungarian goal just as Croatia had a clear counter opportunity. Maxim Cseh worked hard at centre forward for the 10-5 goal a minute from the final break. Leinweber hit the left post on penalty at the start of the final quarter and Cseh slotted two more to give Hungary hope at 10-7. Pavlic made it hard for Hungary on extra and Botond Balogh whipped in a missile on extra from the top right for 11-8 at 2:03. Possible but improbable. Pavlic put paid to any Hungarian hopes from the deep left at 1:24 when there was no Hungarian goalkeeper as there were seven field players in the pool. Maro Susic did the same with 50 seconds left, gifting the victory and the bronze medal to Croatia.


Image Source: Oliver Leinweber (HUN)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Match Heroes
Croatia’s best player was goalkeeper Mauro Cubranic with a tournament-high 18 saves. Pavlic and Panava scored four each with Pavlic’s contribution getting him to 30, the highest of the tournament. Susic scored twice and along with Jerkovic, finished with 13. Cseh, not on the scoring radar before today, stepped up when needed with three goals and Leinweber netted two, finishing with 22, eight more than Balogh, the next highest Hungarian. Goalkeeper David Szitas managed 10 saves.

Turning Point
Coming from two down to 7-2 ahead by midway through the second quarter was where Croatia won.


Image Source: Mislav Curkovic (CRO)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Stats Don’t Lie
Croatia converted five from 15 and stopped 14 of 19 on extra. Croatia scored one penalty goal and Hungary missed one of two. Croatia dominated the steals 7-5 and needed only 32 shots to Hungary’s 43.

Bottom Line
Croatia leaves with four victories and a better position than seventh in 2023. The bronze adds to two golds and four silvers. Only Hungary and Italy have played more finals. Outgoing champion Hungary will have to settle for fourth, but not what it came to Zagreb for.

Classification 5-6

Match 60, SERBIA 21 MONTENEGRO 14 (6-5, 5-3, 6-4, 4-2)


Image Source: Four-goal hero Vuk Vojic (SRB)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Montenegro held all the cards early on at 5-3 ahead with Serbia banging in three goals — two to Vuk Andelic — to grab the quarter-time lead at 6-5. From then on in it was a goal-fest with seemingly both teams throwing off the shackles of a possible medal match. Here it was all about pride between the separated conjoined twins and a chance to have a good time. Montenegro regained the lead through Danilo Stupar, for his third, and Tim Perov. Vuk Kojic, who scored Serbia’s first two goals, scored his third for 7-7 with Andelic and Miljan Dokanovic regaining the advantage at 9-7. By halftime, that score had changed to 11-8.


Image Source: Vuk Andelic (SRB) defends six-goal Danilo Stupar (MNE)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Srdan Janovic, who delivered the 9-8 goal for Montenegro, made it 11-9 at the start of the third period. Goals were traded with Kojic for Serbia and a double to Stupar. Two more Serbian goal rained in before Stupar responded. Serbia struck twice more and it was 17-12 at the final break. Goals were swapped early in the fourth quarter before Vuk Conkic rammed home a beautiful centre-forward goal. Goals were traded again and Relja Dankovic hammered the final nail in the coffin at 21-14 from deep right.

Match Heroes
Kojic
had five goals coming into today’s match and top-scored for Serbia with four. Luka Gladovic (12), Dokanovic (9) and Andelic (12) collected three each. Goalkeeper David Dimkovic pulled in 11 saves. For Montenegro, Stupar was in excellent form with six goals for 18 in total. Janovic scored three to close at 14. Goalie Andrija Bjelica snared nine saves.


Image Source: Srdan Janovic (MNE)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Turning Point
From 5-3 down to 9-7 ahead, Serbia enjoyed retaking the lead in the second quarter and stayed in front.

Stats Don’t Lie
Serbia scored four from eight on extra and Montenegro four from seven. Serbia converted bot penalty chance and Montenegro one. Montenegro stole the ball six to five and shot 41-38.

Bottom Line
Serbia goes home with four wins and down from silver two years ago. Montenegro had two wins, including one in a shootout but finished two better than in 2023. Serbia has eight medals and Montenegro one but as a conjoined nation for a period, collected two gold medals.

Classification 7-8

Match 59, ITALY 10 GREECE 12 (2-4, 3-2, 1-4, 4-2)


Image Source: Spryidon Lykoudis (GRE)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Greece and Italy squared off on day eight after playing each other on day one when Greece won 19-18. It was the same today except for the first quarter on day one it was a tie. Today, Greece led at all quarters. After Italy went 2-0 up, Greece replied with four goals. Italy responded at the start of the second period with swapping goals lead to a 6-5 halftime lead. Semir Spachits, showed why he was named centre forward of the tournament with his power centre-forward goal, edging out to the four-metre line at 5-3. Ioannis Tottis had his penalty attempt rejected.

Mattia di Corato levelled from two metres at the start of the third period only for Andrea Bitsakos to score his second and third goals from identical positions on the deep left. Two more Greek goals closed the period in favour of Greece 10-6.


Image Source: Andrea Nuzzo (ITA)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Giorgi Giacomone and Saul Granados traded goals at the top of the fourth period. Then Italy made a huge comeback with three goals, from penalty (Alessandro Gulotta), on extra (Andrea Nuzzo) and Giacomone from the top right. It was 11-10 at 3:31 and Italy in with a chance. Spyridon Lykoudis netted his third on extra from the top left for 12-10 at 2:11. Italy took a timeout at 0:59 but could not find a way through the Greek defence, having to settle for eighth position.

Match Heroes
Greek goalkeeper Dimitrios Partsoglu, normally sitting on the bench, played the whole match for a magnificent, match-winning 15 saves. Lykoudis (11), Bitsakos (13) and Giannatos (9) scored three each. Georgaras, who scored twice, finished the best for Greece with 17 goals. Second was brilliant centre forward Spachits with one today and 16 in all. For Italy, Giacomone scored three for 17 and Marini sent in two for 12. Gullotta, who scored one today, topped the Italian scoring with 18 goals.


Image Source: Italy v Greece/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Turning Point
Greece overcoming the 2-0 deficit to 4-2 at the quarter-time buzzer. Italy came back to 6-6 but that was the closest it got.

Stats Don’t Lie
Greece converted six from 12 on extra and defended nine of 12. Greece missed one of two penalty attempts and Italy nailed its one chance. Italy made 12 steals to seven and outshot Greece 32-31.

Bottom Line
Greece, a triple winner, was fourth in 2023 but leaves Zagreb with three victories and the knowledge that it can beat Italy twice having won on day one 19-18. Italy was sixth two years ago and leaves with two victories but the knowledge that it was only three down on champion Spain on day two.

Classification 9-10

Match 58, AUSTRALIA 12 GERMANY 13 (3-3, 1-4, 3-3, 5-3)


Image Source: Max Spittank (GER)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Germany survived a late scare and a last-gasp Aussie shot by goalkeeper Oliver Purcell to secure ninth position. The scare was that Australia levelled at 11 and when Germany went two up, Australia struck back with plenty of time to spare. However, Germany held on and made sure of victory. Germany started with the first three goals, only for Australia to level by quarter time. Germany shuffled 5-3 ahead with Finn Taubert gaining a second goal. Australia missed a penalty chance and went three goals behind as Taubert earned his third goal. Australia called a timeout with no effect and had to face the music in the third quarter.


Image Source: Sean Bright (AUS) under heavy pressure/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Ashton Brown came to the party, converting a penalty foul as goals were traded. Brown scored another on counter but Germany held strong and scored the last two as first-quarter Aussie scorer Jamie Sharman was red-carded for striking the face of a defender. Germany was still three ahead. Jake Martin made his presence known for Australia with identical extra-man goals to start the fourth quarter. German star Till Hofmann converted a penalty and Aussie skipper Harper Stewart scored on extra, as did Martin to shut the gap. It was now 11-11 and 4:45 left on the clock. Fynn Janke netted his second and Luk Jaschke countered to give Germany a 13-11 gap at 3:21. Brown snapped in a goal from the right-post position off a near pass and Australia was back in the match at 0:38. Germany used its time and dumped the ball. Purcell grabbed it , swum up and bounced the ball to goal, which was stopped and Germany had the victory.

Match Heroes
Taubert
with his four goals to give him 11 for the week, seven behind Tillman, who made two today. Brown and Martin were best for Australia with three each while Daniel Magasanik, who was fouled out and kept from scoring today, finished top for the Aussies with 17 goals.


Image Source: Vukasin Simic (GER)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Turning Point
The three-goal start set the tone of the match, even though Australia came back to 3-3. Germany always held the edge and the slight buffer at the end.

Stats Don’t Lie
Statistics are unavailable, although Australia scored nine extra-man goals to three and missed one of two penalty attempts to Germany’s three from three.

Bottom Line
Germany has looked a good team all week and deserves the victory, finishing the tournament with five victories and just missing the top eight by one goal against Montenegro. It was 13th in Bucharest two years ago. Australia goes home with three victories and one better placing than 2023.

Classification 11-12

Match 56, IRAN 11 CHINA 13 (2-3, 2-1, 3-6, 4-3)


Image Source: Chinese captain Li Wangxiang/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Germany came through with an excellent, speedy game style that held out Iran who were reliant on captain Arman Shams, who finished with six goals and became one of the highest scorers of the tournament. China made the play in the first quarter with Iran catching up twice before Zhang Chengwei drilled from the top on extra for the 3-2, go-ahead strike. Shams, who found the net in the first period, equalised at 3:36 in the second quarter from the penalty line. Ali Shabanian gave Iran the frontal position with a blast from outside. Chinese captain Li Wanxiang converted extra from the top left on 0:58 for 4-4, the halftime scoreline. Ouyang Haiyuan found himself at the end of small passing contest to score from in front to open the third period and put China back in front, 5-4. Shams equalised on a short drive to the hole and Deng Zirui responded on a cross pass to the right post for 6-5.


Image Source: Arman Shams (IRI)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Quarter three was full of action with China winning 6-3 for a three-goal margin at the last break. China used six different shooters while Iran relied heavily on Shams who added another three to his tally, including a penalty conversion. Farbod Borghei steered in a left-post ball from the near-side pass to open the fourth-quarter scoring. Goals were traded to 12-10 with Ali Abolgasemi netting twice, the first on penalty and the second from the top for 12-10. China pushed it out to three goals when Liu Jinyi went on counter to scoop in against the advancing goalkeeper at 2:53. Shams scored his sixth goal from the top at 1:58, forcing China to a timeout to settle the team at 13-11 ahead. It worked as no-one scored after that and China had 11th classification.


Image Source: Zhang Yiwen (CHN)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Match Heroes
Iran’s Shams was the highest scorer with six goals, giving him 23 for the tournament. China’s Li Wanxiang topped the scoring with three and Yang netted two to make him his team’s best with nine goals. Zhang Yiwen took 11 saves in goal.

Turning Point
When China went ahead at the start of the third period and never relinquished the lead.

Stats Don’t Lie
China converted eight from 11 and defended six of 10 on extra. China scored both penalty attempts and Iran three. Iran made nine steals to four and shot 32 times to 27.

Bottom Line
China last played this event in 2019, finishing 16th, so a big improvement. Iran was 15th in 2023. China leaves with three victories and Iran two.

Classification 13-14

Match 56, BRAZIL 17 CANADA 8 (4-2, 5-1, 3-3, 5-2)


Image Source: Patrick Romanholi (BRA) defends Canadian captain Leo Hachem/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Brazil came through for its fifth victory in Zagreb while Canada has to be happy with four victories. Brazil was in total control in the first half with positive numbers, especially keeping Canada scoreless for 10 minutes. Lucas Wulfhorst has been the go-to man for Brazil all week and his penalty taking is excellent. He scored two in the first quarter and another in the second as Brazil kept steamrolling the Canadians. At 4-2 by the first break, Canada shot to 7-2 before Canadian head coach Pat Oaten called a timeout. Brazil then called a timeout after two minutes of not scoring and took another minute before Cesar da Silva made it 8-2 and thereafter Eduardo Carraresi from top right for 9-2. With 16 seconds left on the clock, Canada drew a penalty for Giancarlo Marquez to convert.


Image Source: Patrick Romanholi (BRA) defends Canadian captain Leo Hachem/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

It was a tied third period as Canada came alive, Pavle Jelic converting extra, Nicholas Furneaux from the top and Marquez from the top left. Da Silva gained a second at centre forward and Carlo Martinelli scored two — from deep, either side of the goal — for 12-6 at the buzzer. Brazil sailed forth with two quick goals to 14-6 in the fourth. Canada then put the foot on the accelerator with two unanswered goals before Marquez and Brazil’s Luca Cereser were red-carded for brawling. Luiz Zerbielli scored a pair and Wulfhorst slotted his fourth penalty goal for 17-8.


Image Source: Lucas Gomes (BRA)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Match Heroes
Wulfhurst
(ARG) top-scored with four goals to bring him into the 20 club while Martinelli scored three. Diaz scored one for 15 in total. Lucas Gomes saved nine balls in goal. For Canada, Marquez sent in three and could have been more if he was not ejected from the pool. His tally was 19 goals with captain Leo Hachem second on 12.

Turning Point
From 4-2 to 9-2 and keeping Canada scoreless for 10 minutes.

Stats Don’t Lie
Brazil nailed two from five on extra and defended five from six. Canada scored all four penalty shots and Canada one. Canada made six steals to one and Brazil was on top with total shots at 34-27.

Bottom Line
Brazil was 10th in 2023 while Canada’s last appearance was 2021 when it was also 10th.

Classification 15-16

Match 55, ARGENTINA 14 KAZAKHSTAN 7 (5-2, 2-0, 3-2, 4-3)


Image Source: Alejo Teijeiro (ARG)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Argentina began strongly with the first four goals — three to Alejo Teijeiro — to lift him to 19 for the week. Aldiyar Akimbay responded for Kazakhstan with a score on extra from the top and then on counter for 4-2. Adriano Mazzoni closed the scoring from the penalty line just before quarter time. Mazzoni started the second quarter from top left. It was some time later that Santiago Rivera needed VAR to decide whether his shot from the top left was over the line, which it was, for 7-2. There were only three shots on target for the rest of the period.

 


Image Source: Almat Madimar (KAZ)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Almat Madimar started the Kazakhstan scoring and Nurassyl Satbergen closed on counter. In between, Mazzoni collected his third; Augusto Oliva beat the buzzer from seven metres and Teijeiro claimed his fourth on penalty. Akimbay had a penalty attempt thwarted. Argentina went into the final period 10-4 ahead. Teijeiro and Ivan Saavedra both scored from the penalty stripe with Madimar converting extra and Aslan Ospanov scoring from the deep left. Mazzoni gained his fourth for 13-6; Kazakhstan missed another penalty chance and goals were traded in the last minute with Kazakhstan’s Mstislav Bobrovskiy scoring his first goal of the week on penalty 30 seconds from going home.

Match Heroes
Teijeiro
led the Argentinian scorers with five goals to take him to 21 for the tournament. Mazzoni’s four gave him a tally of 13. Martin del Rosso made 10 saves in goal. For Kazakhstan, Akimbay came into the match with 15 goal and finished with 17, the same number as Madimar, with his two today.

Turning Point
Argentina racing to 4-0 proved to be a killing point for Kazakhstan, something it struggled to recover from.


Image Source: Martin del Rosso (ARG)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Stats Don’t Lie
Argentina failed to score its two extra-man chances but saved five of seven Kazakhstan chances. Argentina put away all seven penalty attempts with Kazakhstan missing two from three. Kazakhstan won the steals 14-7 and the overall shots 35-22, showing just how accurate Argentina’s shooting was.

Bottom Line
Argentina was 16th two years ago, so this is progression. Kazakhstan was 14th four years ago and did not compete in 2023.





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MSU Denver women’s volleyball captures first NCAA DII National Championship

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The Auraria Campus as the fall semester begins. Aug. 24, 2022.

Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

The Metropolitan State University of Denver women’s volleyball team capped a historic season by winning its first-ever NCAA Division II National Championship with a 3-1 victory over Concordia Saint Paul over the weekend.

It was a marquee moment for the college, which has a total enrollment over 18,000 students in downtown Denver.

“It’s huge, I think it puts us on the map in a lot of ways. So it’s just great to see the support we have out here and the way that people are coming behind us,” head coach Jenny Glenn said after the game. “MSU Denver’s a great place, and we love our volleyball. So it’s great to have a national championship to go along with all that.”   

The Roadrunners finished the season with a 32-3 record, the most wins in program history. They’re the first team from the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference to win a volleyball national title. The team gave the school its first national title since the women’s soccer team won in 2006. 

MSU Denver won the final match by taking three of four sets at 25-22, 25-20, 20-25, 25-21. But they had to overcome a slow start during the first set to get rolling at the Sanford Pentagon in Sioux Falls, S.D., 

MSU Denver trailed 19-15 late in the first set. But, the team was able to get back on track with a series of defensive stops, keeping them alive and closing out the set with a 10-3 run.

Glenn said her team displayed fearlessness throughout the last three matches of the season. But after dropping the third set to the Golden Bears, she wanted to finish the job.

“I thought it was a really fun battle of two high-powered offenses and gritty defense at different times. And that fourth set got a little tight,” Glenn said after the match. “I was thinking, we need to get this thing done now. I saw the look in my athletes’ eyes at one of those last timeouts, and I was like, we’re in. We’re going to get this thing done.”

After All-American Annika Helf went down with an injury, Megan Hagar turned in a clutch performance with her first career double-double with 18 kills and digs. The junior outside hitter from Casper, Wy., led the team in kills in both the semifinal and national championship matches.

“Megan has been grinding this entire season. I have nothing but great things to say about that girl on and off the court and off the court,” said Skyler Michael, junior outside hitter from Loveland.  “She is there for every single person, no matter how she feels. Her identity is literally, she brings value to the team and she brings value to each one of us, and she brings out our value as well.”

Hagar earned Tournament MVP honors, totaling 39 kills and averaging 3.25 kills per set, while adding 39 digs and four block assists over the final three matches of the tournament. Alyssa Boyte, Brooke Gennerman, and Karyna Werley joined Hagar on NCAA Division II All-Tournament Team.



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Four Tigers Honored to CSC Volleyball Academic All-District Team – LSU

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BATON ROUGE, La. — LSU placed a program-record four student-athletes on the 2025 CSC Volleyball Academic All-District Team, as announced Tuesday by College Sports Communicators.

Setter Lauren Brooker (mass communication), middle blocker Jessica Jones (mechanical engineering), libero Aly Kirkhoff (management) and middle blocker Angelina Lee (industrial engineering) earned recognition, marking the fourth consecutive season LSU has had multiple players selected to the Academic All-District Team.

Lee became a two-time CSC Academic All-District selection and is the third Tiger in program history to earn multiple academic honors, joining Lauren DeGirolamo and Anna Zwiebel. She started 24 of the 26 matches she appeared in this season and ranked second on the team with 0.83 blocks per set and 78 total blocks, including a team-high 11 solo blocks. Lee also hit .286 with 128 kills.

Brooker directed the LSU offense with 6.27 assists per set (640 total) and added 29 kills, 31 blocks, 11 aces and 142 digs. The California native recorded three double-doubles and posted a career-high 56 assists against Ole Miss on Nov. 12.

Jones was one of two players to appear in all 104 sets this season and led LSU with 1.03 blocks per set, 107 total blocks and a .313 hitting percentage. She recorded nine matches with at least five blocks, highlighted by a season-high nine blocks at Arkansas on Sept. 28. Jones also hit a career-best .688 with 11 kills on 16 errorless swings against No. 19 USC on Sept. 18.

Kirkhoff led the Tigers with 2.19 digs per set (199 total) and recorded 10 matches with double-digit digs, including five in the final six matches of the season. She posted the first double-double of her career with a career-high 11 assists and 15 digs against Auburn on Nov. 14.

For the latest news and information on Tiger volleyball, visit www.lsusports.net/volleyball. Fans can follow the team on its social media outlets, such as www.facebook.com/lsuvolleyball and @lsuvolleyball, as well as on Instagram and X.





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The top NCAA volleyball players in transfer portal

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Dec. 17, 2025, 8:46 a.m. ET





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Kentucky vs. Wisconsin volleyball: Time, TV channel, preview for the NCAA semifinal

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7:06 pm, December 16, 2025

Before the Wildcats and Badgers take the court at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, let’s take a look at how the two teams compare statistically.

Kentucky Statistic Wisconsin
29-2 (15-0 SEC) Record 28-4 (17-3 Big Ten)
No. 1 NCAA seed No. 3
.295 Hitting % .325
13.93 Assists per set 14.26
2.47 Blocks per set 2.43
.180 Opp hitting % .184
137/225 Service aces/errors 85/235

6:58 pm, December 16, 2025

Kentucky and Wisconsin won four matches to get to the national semifinals in Kansas City, with UK advancing with a dominant home tournament stretch, losing only one set so far. Wisconsin had slightly more drama, winning at top-seeded Texas in the regional finals.

No. 1 Kentucky Round No. 3 Wisconsin
Def. Wofford, 3-0 First Def. Eastern Illinois, 3-0
Def. No. 8 UCLA, 3-1 Second Def. North Carolina, 3-0
Def. Cal Poly, 3-0 Regional semifinals Def. No. 2 Stanford, 3-1
Def. No. 3 Creighton, 3-0 Regional finals Def. No. 1 Texas, 3-1



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Pitt vs. Texas A&M volleyball: Time, TV channel, preview for the NCAA semifinal

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Reaching the national semifinals in women’s volleyball is no small task. Since Dec. 4, teams have battled through a demanding NCAA tournament, with every match bringing them one step closer to a national title. Let’s take a look at how Texas A&M and Pitt powered their way into the Final Four.

NO. 2 PITT ROUND NO. 3 TEXAS A&M
Def. UMBC, 3-0 First Def. Campbell, 3-0
Def. Michigan, 3-0 Second Def. No. 6 TCU, 3-0 
Def. No. 4 Minnesota, 3-0 Regional semifinals Def. No. 2 Louisville, 3-2
Def. No. 3 Purdue, 3-1 Regional finals Def. No. 1 Nebraska, 3-2

👉 Check out the full schedule, scores from the 2025 women’s volleyball tournament

Texas A&M (27-4)

No. 3 Texas A&M punched its ticket to the semis with a stunning 5-set upset of unbeaten Nebraska. The 3-2 victory not only marked the Aggies’ first Final Four appearance in program history, but it also etched them into the record books, becoming the first team since 2015 to eliminate a No.1 overall seed before the national semifinals. 

MUST-SEE: Texas A&M upsets unbeaten Nebraska in regional final

Pitt (30-4) 

No. 1 Pitt continued its dominant postseason run with a 3-1 win over No. 3 Purdue at home, earning a spot in the Final Four and its fifth straight national semifinal appearance. Despite their sustained success, Pitt is still chasing their first national title. The Panthers reached the semis in 2024, ultimately losing to Louisville in four sets. Now, with another shot at reaching the championship, Pitt is determined to flip last year’s narrative.

Neither program has taken home the trophy, and now only one question remains: Who wants it more? We will find out on Thursday, Dec. 18. Follow along here for live updates throughout the exciting match and live stats. 



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Hood Jr., Andrews, Garnett honored as MVC Track and Field Athletes of the Week

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ST. LOUIS – Indiana State track and field earned three of the four Missouri Valley Conference Athlete of the Week honors following a strong start to the Sycamores’ season at the John Gartland Invitational. Casey Hood Jr., Reneisha Andrews and Aliseonna Garnett all earned conference accolades Wednesday morning for their performances in the season opener.
 
Hood Jr. was tabbed the MVC Men’s Track Athlete of the Week, Andrews earned MVC Women’s Track Athlete of the Week and Garnett was named MVC Women’s Field Athlete of the Week. Andrews and Hood Jr. both rank in the top 10 nationally in the 60m, Hood Jr. also owns a top-15 national ranking in the 200m and Garnett owns top-25 national rankings in both throws events.
 
Hood Jr. started his 2025-26 season with a bang, claiming first-place finishes in both the 60m and 200m with meet record times at the John Gartland Invitational. The 2025 Second Team All-American clocked times of 6.71 in prelims and 6.63 in finals to win the 60m, breaking meet and facility records in the process, and he closed out his season debut with a 21.87 in the 200m, breaking the meet record by more than three-tenths of a second. Hood Jr.’s 60m time ranks third in the nation this season and is also the fastest in both the MVC and Great Lakes Region, while his conference-leading 200m time is also second in the Great Lakes Region and 13th nationally.
 
Andrews made an instant impression in her Indiana State debut, breaking meet and facility records in the 60m at the John Gartland Invitational. The Trinidad and Tobago native ran a 60m time of 7.51 in prelims and followed that with a 7.40 in finals, both of which broke the meet and facility records in the event. Andrews’ 60m time ranks ninth in the nation this season while also leading both the MVC and Great Lakes Region in the event.
 
Garnett recorded a pair of commanding first-place finishes in the throws events at the John Gartland Invitational, posting conference leading and top-25 national marks in both the shot put and weight throw. Her weight throw mark of 18.77m (61-7) was a career best in the event, while her throw of 15.48m (50-9.5) was the second-best mark of her career in the event. Garnett leads the MVC and ranks in the top three of the Great Lakes region in both throws events this season, with her shot put mark sitting 13th in the nation and her weight throw mark ranked 22nd in the nation.
 
The weekly honor is the seventh of Hood Jr.’s career, having earned MVC Track Athlete of the Week honors twice during the 2025 outdoor season and four times during the 2025 indoor season. Andrews and Garnett both earned their first career MVC weekly honor.
 
Indiana State returns to action after the calendar flips to 2026, as the Sycamores play host to longtime rival Illinois State for the Coughlan-Malloy Cup January 17 inside the Indoor Track and Field Facility.
 
Follow the Sycamores

For the latest information on the Sycamore Track & Field and Cross Country teams, make sure to check out GoSycamores.com. You can also find the team on social media including Facebook and Twitter. Fans can also receive updates on Sycamore Athletics by downloading the March On App from the both the App Store and the Google Play Store.
 

– #MarchOn –





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