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Sun Belt Conference Announces 2025 Outdoor Track & Field Awards

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NEW ORLEANS – The Sun Belt Conference on Thursday announced its Outdoor Track & Field awards, recognizing standout performances from the 2025 season. The awards were voted on by the head coaches within the league for both men’s and women’s.
 
The Sun Belt also announced the All-Sun Belt Conference honorees from the 2025 Sun Belt Outdoor Championships.
 
The student-athletes recognized include:
 
•    Men’s Outdoor Track Performer of the Year: Jacob Pyeatt, Arkansas State
•    Men’s Outdoor Field Performer of the Year: Aiden Hayes, Texas State 
•    Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Newcomer of the Year: Drew Donley, Texas State
•    Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Freshman of the Year: Lawson Jacobs, Louisiana 
•    Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Coach of the Year: John Frazier, Texas State
•    Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Elite Award Winner: Jacob Pyeatt, Arkansas State
 
•    Women’s Outdoor Track Performer of the Year: Abigail Parra, Texas State 
•    Women’s Outdoor Field Performer of the Year: Imani Moore, Georgia Southern 
•    Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Newcomer of the Year: Emma Russum, App State
•    Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Freshman of the Year: Charlize Goody, Texas State
•    Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Coach of the Year: John Frazier, Texas State
•    Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Elite Award Winner: Lara Roberts, Texas State
 
Men’s Outdoor Track Performer of the Year: Jacob Pyeatt, Arkansas State
Arkansas State’s Jacob Pyeatt finished as Co-High Point Scorer at the conference meet, scoring 20 points with golds in the 5000 meters and 10,000 meters to earn Men’s Outdoor Track Performer of the Year honors. He broke the meet record in the 5000 by nearly 10 seconds, finishing in 13:50.83, over 30 seconds faster than the runner-up finisher. In the 10,000, Pyeatt finished in 29:54.18. During the season, Pyeatt was the league’s top distance athlete, leading with program-record marks in the 5,000 (13:35.90) and 10,000 (28:28.50) while ranking second in the 1500 meters (3:45.80). In the West Region, Pyeatt enters the week ranked among the top 50 in both the 5K (33rd) and 10K (49th). After breaking his own school record in the 5K at the Raleigh Relays, Pyeatt earned SBC Men’s Track Athlete of the Week honors on April 2.
 
Women’s Outdoor Track Performer of the Year: Abigail Parra, Texas State
Texas State’s Abigail Parra was named the Top Meet Scorer at the 2025 SBC Championships, after she scored a total of 23 points in three events and helped the women’s team secure the SBC title for the 2nd year in a row. She won the 1500m with a time of 4:23.76 (2nd in program History), placed second in the 800m with a personal-best time of 2:08.58 (9th in program History), and ended the day placing fourth in the 5000m with another personal-best time of 17:02.06 (3rd in program History). During the season, Parra recorded the school record for the 1500m, with a time of 4:18.87, and is the only Sun Belt athlete this season to break the 4:20.00 mark in the event. No stranger to the record book, she holds six of the 10 fastest times in Texas State history for the event.
 
Men’s Outdoor Field Performer of the Year: Aiden Hayes, Texas State
Texas State’s Aiden Hayes earned first place in the high jump and tied the meet record and SBC record, with a mark of 2.25m, a mark that had not been touched since 1994 to earn Men’s Outdoor Field Performer of the Year honors. He now sits ranked tied for second for the event in the NCAA rankings and is tied at the top for the event in the NCAA West Region. He recorded three top two finishes this season in the high jump, winning both the SBC Championships and the Bobcat Invitational. He also recorded three of the top 10 high jump marks in Texas State history this season.
 
Women’s Outdoor Field Performer of the Year: Imani Moore, Georgia Southern

Georgia Southern’s Imani Moore was the Sun Belt Conference Champion in the Long Jump and Triple Jump and the highest women’s field event scorer to earn Women’s Outdoor Field Performer of the Year honors. Moore is the current Sun Belt Conference Leader in the Long Jump & Triple Jump and is ranked inside the top 10 in the long jump in the south region and top 25 in the long jump nationally. She broke both the Georgia Southern program and Georgia Southern facility record in the long jump and currently holds the second best mark in the record books in the triple jump. For her efforts this spring, Moore has qualified for the NCAA East Regional in both the long jump and triple jump.
 
Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Newcomer of the Year: Drew Donley, Texas State
In his first season competing for Texas State, Drew Donley became the Sun Belt Champion in the 200m and placed third overall in the 100m. He set the school record for Texas State in the 100m (10.22) and holds four of the five fastest times ever recorded in the 100m in school history. He earned seven first place finishes throughout the season and was named Sun Belt Track Athlete of the Week twice during the season. Donley is ranked in the top 25 in the NCAA for the 200m and is qualified for regionals in both the 100m and 200m.
 
Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Newcomer of the Year: Emma Russum, App State
App State senior Emma Russum clinched the Sun Belt crown in the women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase with a time of 10:36.27 and secured silver in the women’s 5,000 meters with a time of 16:53.59. In the App State all-time list, Russum ranks second in the women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase and women’s 10,000 meters, as well as fourth in the women’s 5,000 meters. Over the course of the season, Russum has led the Sun Belt in the women’s 5,000 meters with a personal-best of 16:30.30, the women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase with a personal-best of 10:34.13, and the women’s 10,000 meters with a personal-best of 34:41.91. The senior also rounds out the NCAA Southeast Region’s top-25 in the women’s 10,000 meters and women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase categories.
 
Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Freshman of the Year: Lawson Jacobs, Louisiana
The Sun Belt 2025 Indoor Track Performer and Freshman of the Year, Louisiana’s Lawson Jacobs captured the outdoor 400m title, setting a school record with a time of 45.57, just 0.06 seconds off the SBC record. The freshman also ran the final leg of Louisiana’s gold medal-winning 4x100m relay squad that ran a 39.55. Jacobs’ record in the 400m broke a Louisiana record set back in 1973 and was the third-oldest men’s record still standing. Jacobs is 10th in the region in the 400m, and Louisiana’s 4×100 team is also 28th in the east.
 
Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Freshman of the Year: Charlize Goody, Texas State
In her first season as a Bobcat, Charlize Goody won the Sun Belt title in the javelin and placed second in the women’s discus. Goody is the only athlete in the Sun Belt this season to record a mark of 50 meters or better in the javelin, which she has done three times this season. She has won four of the five javelin competitions she has competed in this season, recorded the Texas State freshman record for the event and has four of the top-five marks in school history for the javelin throw. She is ranked top-20 in the NCAA West Region and 33rd in the NCAA for the javelin.
 
Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Coach of the Year: John Frazier, Texas State

Texas State head coach John Frazier was named both the Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Coach of the Year. He led the men’s team to its first SBC Outdoor title since 2019 and a total of 145 points. He led four men’s athletes to first place at the championship meet, and nine other athletes to the podium in their events. The Bobcats won the meet by 19 points and secured the title going into the men’s 4×400. Frazier also led the women’s team to the 2025 SBC Championship title after it secured 119 points. He coached four first-place finishers on the women’s side and had three more athletes reach the podium in their events. Frazier has coached Lara Roberts to not only a Sun Belt title, but also to the leading mark in the NCAA. He has helped two athletes break school records this season and seven athletes record top-10 times in Texas State History.
 
Frazier has led 14 male athletes, nine female athletes and one men’s relay currently qualified for the NCAA Regional meet and has led three athletes to being ranked in the top-10 of the NCAA in their respective events.
 

Arkansas State’s Jacob Pyeatt was named the 2025 Sun Belt Conference Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Elite Award Winner as Texas State’s Lara Roberts was named the 2025 Sun Belt Conference Women’s Outdoor Track & Field Elite Award Winner.
 
The SBC Elite Award recognizes the true essence of the student-athlete by honoring the individual who has reached the pinnacle of competition at the Sun Belt Conference Championship level in his or her sport, while also achieving the highest academic standard among his or her peers. The SBC Elite award is presented to the student-athlete with the highest cumulative grade-point average participating on the final day for each of the Sun Belt Conference’s championships.
 
2025 Sun Belt Men’s Outdoor Track & Field All-Conference First Team
Ethan Lipham, App State
Menachem Chen, Arkansas State
Colby Eddowes, Arkansas State
Bradley Jelmert, Arkansas State
Noa Isaia, Arkansas State
Jacob Pyeatt, Arkansas State
Mark Daley, Louisiana
Jonathan Gamarra, Louisiana
Chris Gravois, Louisiana
Camren Hardy, Louisiana
Jeremy Nelson, Louisiana
Lawson Jacobs, Louisiana
Joseph Patterson, Louisiana
Caemon Scott, Louisiana
Hunter Ullrich, Louisiana
Reuben Booysen, South Alabama
Kendal White, South Alabama
Piers Cameron, Southern Miss
Drew Donley, Texas State
Easton Hammond, Texas State
Aiden Hayes, Texas State
Chris Preddie, Texas State
Tydreke Thomas, Troy
 
2025 Sun Belt Men’s Outdoor Track & Field All-Conference Second Team
Matthew Gray, App State
Ethan Turner, App State
Brandon Williams, Arkansas State
Terrique Webb, Coastal Carolina
Samuel Mika, South Alabama
Sacha Perrier, South Alabama
Javel Fullerton, Southern Miss
Conner Mozee, Southern Miss
Kelsey Singleton, Southern Miss
Shedrack Akpeki, Texas State
Daniel Harrold, Texas State
Michael Hermes, Texas State
Kason O’Riley, Texas State
Connor Warzecha, Texas State
Altwayne Bedward, Troy
Evan Brown, Troy
Michael Eady, Troy
Keylan Hicks, Troy
Imani Coleman, ULM
Matthew Malcolm, ULM
Santana Richardson, ULM
Stafon Roach, ULM
J’Marcus Sewell, ULM
 
2025 Sun Belt Men’s Outdoor Track & Field All-Conference Third Team
Armonte Ferguson, App State
Ray Lee, App State
Brandon Parker, App State
Jonathan Wilson, App State
Thomas Wlazlowski, App State
Kamil Przybyla, Arkansas State
Trey Kraimer, Coastal Carolina
Adam Groves, Coastal Carolina
William Howard, Louisiana
Federico Bovo, Louisiana
Teodor Borgius, Louisiana
Dallas Beck, South Alabama
Javon Glen, South Alabama
Bobby Gray, South Alabama
Tre Hill, South Alabama
Marlon Miller, South Alabama
Jordan Morrison, South Alabama
Zayne Palomino, Southern Miss
De’Aundre Ward, Southern Miss
Mihajlo Katanic, Texas State
Daniel Strooh, Texas State
Carlo Martinez-Jaramillo, ULM
Devin Bilbo, ULM
 
2025 Sun Belt Women’s Outdoor Track & Field All-Conference First Team
Emma Russum, App State
Carly Pujol, Arkansas State
Molly Jones, Coastal Carolina
Amanda Kinloch, Coastal Carolina
Shatalya Dorsett, Georgia Southern
Emani George, Georgia Southern
Imani Moore, Georgia Southern
Devine Parker, Georgia Southern
NaJ Watson, Georgia Southern
Kimola Hines, Louisiana
Isabelle Russell, Louisiana
Jaellene Burgess, Southern Miss
Taliyah Lindsey, Southern Miss
Addison McLaurin, Southern Miss
Kennedi Sanders, Southern Miss
Alana Simon, Southern Miss
Abigail Parra, Texas State
Melanie Duron, Texas State
Lara Roberts, Texas State
Charlize Goody, Texas State
Savanna Lawson, ULM
Katerina Natsiopoulou, ULM
 
2025 Sun Belt Women’s Outdoor Track & Field All-Conference Second Team
Lilly Nichols, App State
Miranda Burgett, Arkansas State
Michelle Ogbemudia, Arkansas State
Kennedy Hood, Georgia Southern
Leonaya Knox, Georgia Southern
Holly Mpassy, James Madison
Amairi Ashford, Louisiana
Alaysha Veal, Louisiana
Destiny Berryman, Marshall
Iyana Johnson, South Alabama
Calli Stokes, South Alabama
Joidon Boddie, Southern Miss
Cadence Lapp, Southern Miss
Tacherria Lawson, Southern Miss
Valencia Watson, Southern Miss
Jasmine Jimenez, Troy
Aaliyah Murphy, Troy
Kady Schwietz, Troy
Haley Wilson, Troy
 
2025 Sun Belt Women’s Outdoor Track & Field All-Conference Third Team
Tyra Nabors, Arkansas State
Amilia Wise-Sweat, Coastal Carolina
Christine Fitzgerald, James Madison
Esther Germain, James Madison
Erica Moolman, James Madison
Kadence Wilson, James Madison
Lily Murray, Louisiana
Quincy Simon, Louisiana
Reem Tammam, Louisiana
Jaala Thymes, Louisiana
Chaniqua Tonge, Louisiana
Shenell Tucker, Louisiana
Hannah Wyler, Marshall
Taylor Spencer, Marshall
Charleen Elizondo, South Alabama
Ava Wheaton, South Alabama
Jelese Alexander, Southern Miss
Sophia Haberer, Texas State
Shanyah Washington, Troy
Alice Hultberg, ULM
 



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UTSA to face FIU in First Responder Bowl on Dec. 26 – UTSA Athletics

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SAN ANTONIO — UTSA has been selected for its sixth straight and seventh overall bowl appearance, as the Roadrunners will face FIU in the SERVPRO First Responder Bowl on Friday, Dec. 26, in Dallas, Texas. Kickoff is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Gerald J. Ford Stadium and the game will be televised nationally on ESPN.

Fans can find out more information regarding tickets by visiting goUTSA.com. Purchasing your tickets directly from UTSA Athletics ensures you preferred seating options and financially supports the UTSA Athletics Department. UTSA will be able to negotiate preferred bowl options in the future based on previous ticket sales numbers and fan attendance. Seating will be allocated in RAF Loyalty Points order.

For more information about the bowl game, please visit UTSA’s Bowl Central website at goUTSA.com/bowlcentral. For the third straight year, Ancira Auto Group is the presenting sponsor of UTSA’s bowl game appearance and radio broadcast.

Under the direction of sixth-year head coach Jeff Traylor, the Roadrunners will make their second appearance in the SERVPRO First Responder Bowl, as they also played in the game in 2020. UTSA won two of its last three games to close out this regular season with a 6-6 overall record, including a 4-4 mark in the American Conference.

FIU will enter the bowl game at 7-5 overall. The Panthers are riding a four-game winning streak that helped them finish 5-3 in Conference USA.

This will mark UTSA’s fifth all-time meeting with FIU, as the two teams met four times as members of Conference USA. The series is tied at 2-2 with the Roadrunners registering a 30-10 triumph on Oct. 14, 2022, in Miami in their last matchup with the Panthers.

The Roadrunners will travel to Dallas in search of their third straight bowl win. Last December, UTSA raced past Coastal Carolina, 44-15, in the Myrtle Beach Bowl in Conway, South Carolina, to improve to 2-4 all-time in bowl games. In 2023, the Roadrunners defeated Marshall, 35-17, in the Frisco Bowl for the program’s first-ever bowl victory.

Three years ago in the Cure Bowl, No. 22 UTSA built a 12-0 first-half lead, but No. 23 Troy rallied for an 18-12 win in Orlando, Florida.

In 2021, 24th-ranked UTSA met nationally ranked San Diego State in the Frisco Bowl. The Aztecs pulled away late for a 38-24 victory.

In Traylor’s first season at the helm, UTSA nearly completed a comeback against No. 16 Louisiana in the 2020 First Responder Bowl. The Roadrunners rallied from a 24-7 deficit to tie the game, only to see the Ragin’ Cajuns score a late touchdown and escape with a 31-24 victory.

UTSA made its first bowl appearance in just its sixth season of play at the 2016 New Mexico Bowl in Albuquerque. New Mexico built a 10-point lead and held on for a 23-20 win over the Roadrunners on a cold and windy afternoon at University Stadium.

First played following the 2010 season, the annual bowl game in Dallas began honoring first responders for the 2014 game. First responders include police officers, firefighters, EMS workers, correctional officers, search and rescue, dispatchers, security guards, federal agents, border patrol agents and military personnel who have specialized training and are the first to arrive and provide assistance at the scene of an emergency.

In 2018, the game was officially renamed the SERVPRO First Responder Bowl to reflect the efforts to show appreciation to first responders. Tickets for first responders are underwritten by corporate partners.

Gerald J. Ford Stadium has served as the site of the last six contests, four of which have been decided by a touchdown or less. The game, previously known as the Heart of Dallas Bowl and TicketCity Bowl, was originally contested at Cotton Bowl Stadium.

The SERVPRO First Responder Bowl is one of 17 college football bowl games owned and operated by ESPN Events. For additional information, please visit FirstResponderBowl.com and follow on Facebook and Twitter/X. 

-UTSA-

 



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Men’s Swimming and Diving Help Bentley to 2nd Place Finish at WPI Gompei Invitational

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WORCESTER, Mass. – The men’s swimming and diving teams helped Bentley to an overall second place finish at the WPI Gompei Invitational this weekend with several podium finishes.

Combined, the men’s and women’s teams had 5,091 points to finish in second place overall among the 10 teams in the meet.

Matt Walden won the 200 IM with a time of 1:53.03 and the junior from Cumberland, Rhode Island had two other podium finishes on the weekend. He was second in the 200 back (1:50.38) and third in the 400 IM (4:05.03).

Daniel Ivanchikov won the 200 fly with a time of 1:53.06

Distance freestyle swimmer Leighton Wielgoszinski had second place finishes in the 500 (4:41.26) and the 1650 (16:22.07).

In the diving events, Owen Angkatavanich was second in both the 1 and 3 meter dives. In the 1 meter he scored 330.55 and the 3 meter 325.95.

The Falcons also performed well in the relays. The 800 free team won in 6:58.54 with the team comprised of Jakub Zukowski, Wielgoszinski, Alex Kosel and Ivanchikov.

The 200 free team of Ivanchikov, Zukowski, Jack Meekins and Ethan Rehkopf were second (1:25.30) and the 400 free team were second as well (3:07.32). That squad was comprised of Meekins, Ivanchikov, Kosel and Rehkopf.

Kosel had a third place finish in the 200 free (1:43.50) and Rehkopf was third in the 50 free (21.43).

The swimming and diving teams have wrapped up competition in the fall semester. They kickoff competition in the spring semester on January 8 at Saint Michael’s.

 



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Women’s Basketball Edged Out By Lipscomb

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NASHVILLE – Tennessee State women’s basketball showed strong stretches on both ends of the floor Sunday afternoon, taking a 34–28 lead into halftime and battling throughout before ultimately dropping a hard-fought 63–55 road decision at Lipscomb.

The Lady Tigers (1–7) were paced by another standout performance from Aaniya Webb, who poured in 16 points and added two steals as she continued her steady offensive rhythm. Erin Martin gave TSU a major spark off the bench with 12 points and six rebounds, while Brianna Wooldridge controlled the paint with nine points, seven boards and two blocks.

TSU’s effort on the offensive glass was one of the bright spots of the day. Led by Kiki Roberts and her five offensive rebounds, the Lady Tigers attacked the boards with energy, grabbing 17 offensive rebounds that turned into 15 second-chance points — a category TSU dominated.

Defensively, Tennessee State put together one of its stronger outings of the season, holding Lipscomb to just 36.2 percent shooting from the field and a cold 21.7 percent from three-point range.

The Lady Tigers will look to build on the positives from Sunday’s performance as they continue their road stretch.

How It Happened

Tennessee State got off to a slow start offensively, until Brianna Wooldridge sparked a 7-4 run to end the first quarter up 10-9.

The Lady Tigers responded with their best stretch of the game to open the second period, erupting for a 6–0 run highlighted by buckets from Xai Whitfield, Aaniya Webb, and Wooldridge to make it 25-19 halfway through the second quarter. TSU controlled much of the quarter with solid execution and transition play, heading into halftime with a 34-28 advantage thanks to continued defensive pressure.

Lipscomb rallied in the third, using a late push to take a 46-43 lead entering the final quarter. A pair of free throws from Erin Martin, a forced turnover, and a bucket from Whitfield, and the Lady Tigers regained the lead early in the fourth. The teams traded leads before a late Bison layup lifted Lipscomb passed the Lady Tigers.

Game Notes

» The Lady Tigers held the Bisons to only 36.2 percent shooting from the field.

» The Tennessee State bench came alive by scoring 24 points to its scoring output.

» The Tennessee State defense forced 23 turnovers.

» The Lady Tigers were active in affecting shots on the defensive end, recording nine blocks as a team.

» Tennessee State cleaned up on the offensive glass, collecting 17 offensive boards in the game.

» Aaniya Webb led the Lady Tigers with 16 points.

» Tennessee State got a team-high 10 rebounds from Kiki Roberts.



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Pacific Adds STUNT Program as 21st NCAA Sport

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STOCKTON, Calif. – University of the Pacific is adding STUNT as a varsity sport, making it the university’s 21st NCAA Division I program.

“We are thrilled to create more opportunities for student-athletes to excel in ways that few other schools are doing,” said Pacific President Christopher Callahan. “Athletics Director Adam Tschuor is at the forefront of identifying creative new ways to grow , that not only benefits athletics but also elevates the entire university community.”

The rapidly growing sport of STUNT is a head-to-head, four-quarter sport in which two teams perform the same routines of partner stunts, pyramids and tosses, jumps and tumbling, and team routines. Judges score the competition based on execution, technique and synchronization.

“The addition of STUNT places Pacific at the cutting edge of one of the fastest-growing women’s sports in the country,” Tschuor said. “The program not only expands competitive opportunities for women but also aligns perfectly with our department’s commitment to innovation, equity and community engagement. STUNT brings an exciting, high-energy sport to our campus, and we are proud to invest in a program that reflects the strength and ambition of Pacific Athletics.”

STUNT was developed by USA Cheer as a distinct competitive sport that emphasizes athleticism, technique and head-to-head competition.

“We applaud University of the Pacific for investing in women’s athletics with the addition of STUNT at the Division I level,” said Executive Director of USA Cheer Lauri Harris. “As the sport advances toward NCAA Championship status and continues its nationwide growth, Pacific’s decision reinforces the importance of creating competitive, meaningful pathways for female athletes. We are excited to welcome Pacific into this transformative moment for STUNT.”

Amy Haney, director of College and High School STUNT at USA Cheer, said STUNT will connect Pacific with “a strong pipeline of student-athletes while strengthening campus spirit and community engagement. This addition reflects the university’s commitment to providing impactful, competitive opportunities for female student-athletes, and we are proud to welcome Pacific to the STUNT community.”

The program will begin in the 2026-27 academic year and will begin to compete in spring 2027. More than 70 NCAA institutions currently offer STUNT programs.

Pacific also recently announced the reinstatement of men’s volleyball after a 13-year hiatus. Tschuor said the momentum behind both sports reflects strong community support, a growing

national landscape and the university’s commitment to expansion during a period when Division I programs are being cut nationwide.

“The return of men’s volleyball and the launch of STUNT reflect Pacific’s continued belief in expanding opportunities for student-athletes, not reducing them,” Tschuor said. “At a time when many institutions are contracting, Pacific is choosing to invest, grow and build programs that match the energy and passion of our community. These additions strengthen our department, broaden our reach nationally and create pathways for students to compete at the highest level.”

The new programs follow Pacific’s recent additions of men’s cross-country and men’s track and field as well as the addition of diving to both women’s and men’s swimming programs .With the addition of STUNT, Pacific will now offer 21 Division I athletics programs.

Prospective STUNT student-athletes can learn more about the program by contacting Director of Spirit and Community Engagement Andrea Sanchez-Johnson at asjohnson@pacific.edu.

#PacificProud

 





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NCAA women’s volleyball Sweet 16 bracket, schedule, times, TV channel

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Updated Dec. 8, 2025, 9:10 a.m. ET



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Kentucky set to host volleyball regional

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LEXINGTON, Ky. — The University of Kentucky is hosting the 2025 NCAA Volleyball Lexington Regional. Matches will be played Thursday and Saturday at Memorial Coliseum.


What You Need To Know

  • Kentucky hosts the 2025 NCAA Volleyball Lexington Regional at Memorial Coliseum, with matches Thursday, Dec. 11, and Saturday, Dec. 13.
  • Top-seeded Kentucky opens vs. Cal Poly at 3:30 p.m. ET Thursday; No. 2 Arizona State plays No. 3 Creighton at 1 p.m. ET; both matches air on ESPN2 
  • Thursday’s winners meet in Saturday’s regional final, with the winner advancing to the NCAA Final Four in Kansas City, Missouri
  • All-session tickets go on sale Monday at 10 a.m. ET through UK Athletics


Top-seeded Kentucky opens play Thursday afternoon at 3:30 p.m. ET against Cal Poly, who beat the No. 4 seed USC in five sets Friday to advance. In the regional’s opening match, second-seeded Arizona State will play third-seeded Creighton at 1 p.m. ET. ESPN2 will have live coverage of the matches Thursday, with both also shown live on the ESPN app. The two winners of Thursday’s matches will meet Saturday afternoon in the regional final, with the winner advancing to the NCAA Final Four the following weekend in Kansas City, Missouri. The Lexington Regional final on Saturday will be aired live on the ESPN networks, with a time to be announced Thursday.

All-session tickets for the 2025 Lexington Regional go on sale Monday at 10 a.m. ET through UK Athletics by calling the ticket office at 859-257-3838 or visiting the ticket office in the Joe Craft Center. Fans interested in purchasing single-session tickets can acquire those tickets beginning at 10 a.m. ET Tuesday. One ticket will get fans into both regional semifinal matches Thursday.

2025 NCAA Volleyball Lexington Regional Memorial Coliseum — Lexington, Ky.

Thursday, Dec. 11

  • Match 1: 1 p.m. ET — (2) Arizona State vs. (3) Creighton [ESPN2]
  • Match 2: 3:30 p.m. ET — (1) Kentucky vs. Cal Poly [ESPN2]

Saturday, Dec. 13

  • Match 3: Time TBA — Winner Match 1 vs. Winner Match 2 [TV TBA] — Winner advances to NCAA Final Four



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