Sports
Tech Volleyball Announces 2025 Schedule – Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
THE FLATS – Georgia Tech volleyball and head coach Michelle Collier have announced the 29-match schedule for the 2025 season. The season contains 15 home matches, highlighted by not only a rematch of last year’s NCAA Tournament First Round match against Tennessee, but also a rematch of last year’s NCAA Tournament Second Round match against Wisconsin, and the return of Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate at McCamish Pavilion on Sept. 19, presented by Delta.
Coach Collier couldn’t more excited for the 2026 season saying, “We are looking forward to a challenging fall. It is exciting to be able to play against some great programs. We can’t wait to be back at O’Keefe Gymnasium with our supporters and to continue to work hard and compete at the highest level”.
Single game tickets for the 2025 season matches will go on sale Thursday, July 24 at 12 p.m.
O’Keefe Ticket Information
After selling out every match at O’Keefe Gymnasium for the third consecutive season last fall, Georgia Tech Athletics has set aside a limited number of single game tickets for each home match. Join the waitlist now to secure the hottest ticket in Atlanta by clicking HERE
General Admission Pricing
Adult – $15
Youth – $10
Group (10+) – $8
*Youth tickets cannot be purchased online.
McCamish Ticket Information
GT volleyball will play its fourth-ever match at McCamish Pavilion on Friday, September 19, at 7 p.m. against UGA, presented by Delta.
McCamish Ticket Pricing
Single tickets for the match are $20. Group tickets are available for $15 per person for groups of 10 or more. Click HERE to purchase your tickets
Premium Match Pricing
The Yellow Jackets are set to host a number of premier matches this season in O’Keefe Gymnasium. For the following matches, general admission tickets will be $20: Wisconsin (Sept. 12), Stanford (Oct. 26), Louisville (Nov. 21), and Pitt (Nov. 29). To join the waitlist for these high demand games, click here.
A Closer Look
Tech will see its first action of the season in the annual White & Gold scrimmage (Aug. 16) followed by a home scrimmage against Auburn (Aug. 23). The Yellow Jackets will play nine non-conferences matches, beginning with the official season opener Aug. 29 against Wofford at O’Keefe Gymnasium. The battle against the Terriers is one of three matches in the opening week, as Tech will take on Ole Miss on Saturday (Aug. 30) before hosting Sun Belt Tournament Finalist, Arkansas State Sunday afternoon (Aug. 31). Tech will take its first road trip of the season to West Lafayette, Ind. (at Purdue, Sept. 3, vs. Kansas, Sept. 4, and vs. Bowling Green, Sept. 5), and cap its early time on the road in Knoxville against NCAA Round One opponent Tennessee in the SEC/ACC Challenge (Sept. 9). The Yellow Jackets will then return to The Flats for a four-match home stand starting with NCAA Round Two opponent Wisconsin (Sept. 12), followed by Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate with Georgia (Sept. 19) set to be held in McCamish Pavilion, presented by Delta.
The home-stand continues in O’Keefe Gymnasium as Tech will open ACC play Sept. 26 against Miami and Sept. 28 against Florida State. October features four home conference matches against Duke (Oct. 10), North Carolina (Oct. 12), Cal (Oct. 24), and Stanford (Oct. 26). Tech will spend the remainder of the month traveling across the nation to play SMU (Oct. 3), Pitt (Oct. 5), Wake Forest (Oct. 17), NC State (Oct. 19), and Virginia (Oct. 31). The Jackets will begin November with four straight road games (Virginia Tech, Nov. 2, Boston College, Nov. 7, Syracuse, Nov. 9, and Clemson, Nov. 14). Four of the final five matches of the season are set to take place on The Flats, first against Clemson (Nov. 16), Louisville (Nov. 21), and Notre Dame (Nov. 23). Tech will make one final road trip to Palo Alto, Calif. to take on Stanford (Nov. 25) before the season finale at home against NCAA Semifinalist Pitt on Nov. 29.
Tech will play every ACC team once with three home-and-away series against Pitt, Clemson and Stanford. In total, Tech will play just under half of its matches against teams from the 2024 NCAA Tournament (16 of 29), including six of its nine non-conference opponents. The Jackets will take on half of last season’s Elite 8 programs with home-and-away series against Pitt (2024 Elite 8) and Stanford (Elite 8) as well as home matches against Louisville (2024 Semifinals) and Wisconsin (2024 Elite 8).
Seven opponents finished last season in the AVCA Top 25: No. 2 Louisville, No. 3 Pitt, No. 5 Stanford, No. 7 Wisconsin, No. 9 Purdue No. 12 Kansas, and No 15. SMU. The Jackets’ 2025 opponents include four programs that finished last season receiving votes with Florida State finishing the year receiving the most votes of any non-ranked team (77). The Jackets came in at No. 22 in the final poll of the season, marking the 89th consecutive week in the Top 25 rankings, a streak dating back to the start of the 2020 season.
2025 Season Outlook
The Yellow Jackets are coming off their fifth-consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance in 2024, which tied the program record for consecutive NCAA Tournament berths. Tech is one of only 12 programs across Division I to have won a match in each of the last five tournaments after defeating Tennessee 3-2 last season.
Tech returns five of nine players from last year’s main rotation, including Liv Mogridge (MB), DeAndra Pierce (MB), Larissa Mendes (RS), Heloise Soares (S), and Sofia Velez (DS/L). Coach Collier added 10 newcomers to the roster thanks to a pair of transfers, red-shirt junior outside hitter Ital Lopuyo (Texas A&M) and junior outside hitter Bianca Garibaldi (Pittsburgh), along with eight incoming freshmen: Noemi Despaigne (OH), Anna Fiedorowicz (OH), Anika Groom (OH), Abi Li (S), Lameen Mambu (OH), Gabi Robinska (OH), Danielle Tansey (DS/L), and Sara Toth (S).
In typical GT volleyball fashion, the 2025 roster contains a strong international component. Nine of the 17 players on the roster come from outside the United States: Mendes (Fortaleza, Brazil), Soares (Joinville, Brazil) and Velez (Tulua, Colombia), Lara Martinez Casa (Buenos Aires, Argentina), Despaigne (Ivera, Italy), Fiedorowicz (Olsztyn, Poland), Garibaldi (Villa Carlos Paz, Argentina), Robinska (Warsaw Poland), and Toth (Budapest, Hungary). The Jackets return all three coaches from last season, all from Brazil.
Head Coach Michelle Collier enters her 12th season on The Flats with a 218-117 record. During the 2024 season she became the second coach in GT volleyball history to reach 200 wins, along with AVCA Hall of Famer, Shelton Collier (271 wins from 1991-2001). She enters 2025 with the most ACC wins (123), the most NCAA Tournament wins (8) in program history, and stands as the first coach to lead the Jackets into five-straight NCAA Tournaments.
Full Steam Ahead
Full Steam Ahead is a $500 million fundraising initiative to achieve Georgia Tech athletics’ goal of competing for championships at the highest level in the next era of intercollegiate athletics. The initiative will fund transformative projects for Tech athletics, including renovations of Bobby Dodd Stadium at Hyundai Field (the historic home of Georgia Tech football), the Zelnak Basketball Center (the practice and training facility for Tech basketball) and O’Keefe Gymnasium (the venerable home of Yellow Jackets volleyball), as well as additional projects and initiatives to further advance Georgia Tech athletics through program wide-operational support. All members of the Georgia Tech community are invited to visit atfund.org/FullSteamAhead for full details and renderings of the renovation projects, as well as to learn about opportunities to contribute online.
For the latest information on the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and at www.ramblinwreck.com
Sports
Track and Field Opens Indoor Season with the Alden Invitational
The Alden Invite saw three Bears set marks that landed on the program’s all-time top 10 performers list in their respective events. Senior Zoe Carter-Konate tossed a 17.88-meter weight throw, putting her sixth all time in women’s program history, beating her previous PR by 56 centimeters. Junior Alyssa Jackson ran a 7.55 60-meter dash, tying her for third in program history and beating her previous PR by .03 seconds. On the men’s side, sophomore Trevor Wilder finished the 60m dash in 6.86 seconds, putting him ninth in program history.
As a team, the Brown women took home first place out of four teams with 164 points, while the men’s team took second, trailing only Bryant with 116 points.
ALDEN INVITATIONAL
MEN
In the 60m final, Wilder’s 6.86 time placed him first in the event, with freshman Filippos Georgantas finishing second with a time of 6.92 and junior Skyler Hall finishing third with a time of 6.97. Hall also finished fifth in the 300m race with a time of 36.17.
Junior Aaron Caveney claimed first in the 1,000 meter run with a time of 2:29.11. Freshman Duncan Frisbie-Smith followed in second with a time of 2:30.34.
In the 3000m, freshman Will Smitas finished second with a time of 8:42.85. Sophomore Kit Jackson finished third with a time of 8:44.34 and sophomore Nick Strayer finished fourth in 9:15.71.
Junior Mubaraq Aderogba finished first in the long jump final at a mark of 7.06 meters. Freshman Jerald Evangelista finished third by leaping 6.86 meters.
Two freshmen had big first impressions in the shot put with Sean Wilton taking first place (15.98m), and Argenis Luciano finishing fifth at 13.83 meters.
In the weight throw, junior Ethan Wordell captured first with a 16.84m throw. Freshman Grayson He made a big impression by finishing fourth at 15.40m.
WOMEN
Jackson’s 7.55 60m dash was good enough for first place. Sophomore Mackenzie Fulgham had a podium finish in third place with a time of 7.74 seconds.
In the 300m dash, two freshmen shined for the Bears with Sydney Ruckett taking first place with a time of 39.42 and Jannah Maguire placing third with a time of 40.15. Junior Maddelynn Brooks finished fourth with a time of 40.42 seconds.
In the 600m race, freshman Mia Reaugh captured first with a time of 1:36.28. Junior Katrina Sortland finished third with a time of 1:37.26 and freshman Megan Jasinski finished fourth with a time of 1:38.04.
Sophomore Bria Benigni ran the 1,000 meters for the Bears and finished fourth with a time of 3:07.44
In the mile, junior Nina Kruzewska finished third with a time of 5:09.26 and senior Juli Gonzalez finished fourth with a time of 5:11.76
Senior Olivia Bergin claimed first in the 3,000-meter race with a time of 10:37.40. Senior Sara Perez followed behind Bergin, placing second with a time of 10:39.22. Sophomore Eve Siff-Scherr also ran in the race, placing fifth with a time of 11:05.12.
Elle Riley’s 8.55-second time in the 60m hurdle finals placed her second overall, and 0.07 seconds shy of her own school record. Maguire finished third at a time of 8.84 and senior Simone Dunbar finished fourth in 8.86 seconds.
In the high jump, sophomore Adanna Obuba placed second by clearing 1.56 meters.
Sophomore Naa Adua Annan finished third in the long jump with a 5.35-meter mark.
In the triple jump, freshman Clara Fan placed second with a mark of 11.21 meters. Senior Rachel Bibiu placed fifth with a mark of 11.06 meters.
In the shot put, junior Amiya Hopkins placed third with a 12.30m mark and freshman Angela Volkova placed fifth with a mark of 11.86 meters.
Carter-Konate’s 17.88-meter toss in the weight throw placed her in first. Junior Jillian Leahy placed third with a toss of 16.44 meters, and sophomore Giana DeCesare placed fourth at 16.08m.
URI MULTI-MEET
At the URI Pentathlon, junior Rosie Volpintesta and freshman Nyla Blake-Soden each scored points for the Bears with Volpintesta finishing in third place with 3,520 points, and Blake-Soden finishing fifth with 3,364. As part of the event, Volpintesta finished second in the shot put and third in the high jump, and Blake-Soden took third place in the 800 meters.
On the men’s side at the URI Heptathlon, Gabriel Liem Thai led the way for Brown in fourth place out of 17 competitors with 4,666 points. He finished third in the event’s pole vault by clearing 4.50 meters.
The Bears will return to action after the holiday break on Saturday, January 10 at the Dartmouth Relays in Hanover, N.H.
BROWN UNIVERSITY SPORTS FOUNDATION
The Brown University Sports Foundation (BUSF) is the backbone of our athletics program, playing a crucial role in enhancing the student-athlete experience. This is possible through philanthropic support from our alumni, parents, fans, and friends. Your gift through the Sports Foundation can immediately impact today’s Brown Bears, helping them excel in the classroom, in competition, and, most importantly, in the community. Please click here to learn more about how you can support the Bears.
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL
For the latest on Brown Athletics, please follow @BrownU_Bears on X and @BrownU_Bears on Instagram. Like BrownUBears on Facebook and subscribe to the BrownAthletics YouTube channel.
Sports
‘U’ Sweeps Fairfield in NCAA Tournament Opener
“I’m proud of our team for playing our brand of volleyball,” said head coach Keegan Cook. “Serving, blocking and playing really clean. Tomorrow will be a big challenge. Iowa State is a great team in a lot of facets, especially defensively,”
In their 30th NCAA Tournament appearance and 11th straight, Minnesota improved to 29-1 in first round matches. The Gophers set a school record tonight, hitting a blistering .582. The previous best was .562 in 2025 vs. Jackson State.
“You’d rather be in the Pav than anywhere else,” said head coach Keegan Cook. “We want to make the most of this experience as we had to work hard to be here. We can’t wait to play in front of our fans one more time tomorrow night. We know they’ll always show up.”
Julia Hanson had 13 kills to lead Minnesota while Carly Gilk had seven kills, six digs and four blocks. Lourdes Myers totaled seven kills and six blocks while Stella Swenson had 31 assists.
With Hanson’s third kill of the match, she became the latest Golden Gopher to hit 1,000 for her career. She talked about that milestone after the match.
“When I hit that back row attack from Stella I knew that was my 1,000th,” Hanson said. “It’s not something I was focusing on, but it was at the back of my mind.”
The Gophers (23-9, 12-8 Big Ten) outhit the Stags (25-6, 17-1 MAAC) .582 to .056, leading in kills (40 to 27), digs (31 to 21), aces (8 to 1) and blocks (11 to 1).
For Fairfield, Allie Elliott had seven kills while Mamie Krubally had six.
How It Happened
SET 1 | Minnesota came out red hot, scoring seven of the first eight points. Fairfield would score six of the next eight to make it 11-7. The Gophers heated up after that, tallying eight of the next 10 to go up 19-9, forcing a Stags timeout. Minnesota tallied two blocks while Gilk had two kills. Hanson and Taylor had one each in the spurt. After the timeout, Fairfield tallied a pair of points before Kinney and Swenson had kills, Hanson put down an ace and Myers was in on a pair of blocks. The ‘U’ took a 25-12 set one win.
SET 2 | Fairfield started out with a 3-1 lead before the Gophers responded with five straight to make it 6-3. Hanson and Kinney each had a pair of kills in the spurt. After the two teams split the next few points, Minnesota went on a 5-0 run to go up 12-5 and force a timeout. After the break, Gilk had an ace before Myers went for a block with Hanson. Another kill by Myers, an ace from Hanson and an attacking error by Fairfield made it 18-6, Gophers, forcing the visitors’ final timeout. Minnesota would close on a 7-1 run getting a block, four kills and an ace to win, 25-7.
SET 3 | The Stags came out hot, scoring seven of the first 12. Minnesota would respond with a 4-0 run to go up 9-7, getting kills from Taylor and Gilk along with an ace from Kinney. After a timeout, Fairfield would get back within one at 11-10 before Minnesota scored five more in-a-row. Myers and Hanson had kills along with three errors from Fairfield. After another Fairfield timeout, The Gophers extended it to 21-12 after a couple kills from Kinney and an ace from Chloe Ng, her first of the season. Minnesota scored the final four points two win, 25-13, getting a kill from Crowl, an ace from Kinney and a block from Hanson and Taylor.
Game Notes
» Minnesota is now 2-0 all-time against Fairfield, winning in sweeps in the 2019 and 2025 NCAA Tournaments.
» The Gophers are now 29-1 in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
» The ‘U’ hit a season-best and program-best .582 tonight. They had 40 kills and just one error on 67 swings.
» .582 was the best mark by any team in the NCAA this season.
» Every Gophers hitter hit over .500 for the first time in school history. Julia Hanson was the ‘lowest’ at .522.
» Minnesota is now 20-3 against unranked opponents this season.
» McKenna Garr (10) posted 10+ digs for the 22nd time in 2025.
» Julia Hanson (13 kills) posted 10+ kills for the 25th time this season.
» The Gophers improved to 13-4 at home this year.
» Lourdes Myers had six blocks, her 12th time with five-or-more blocks this year.
» Chloe Ng tallied an ace for the first time this season and fourth time in her career.
Up Next
Minnesota will take on No. 5 seeded Iowa State tomorrow at 7 p.m. in the Round of 32 at Maturi Pavilion. ESPN+ will stream.
Sports
Hartford Men’s Track and Field Rewrites Record Book In Yale University Season Opener
NEW HAVEN, Conn. – On Saturday, the University of Hartford men’s indoor track & field team kicked off the 2025-26 campaign competing at the Yale Season Opener in New Haven. Today was highlighted by record-setting performances as several Hawks rewrote the program record book.
Rapid Recap:
- Graduate student Kaden Leonard (Webster, N.Y.) headlined for Hartford breaking records on this Saturday season opener. He took fourth place in the 60 meter dash with a time of 6.92 seconds. Leonard out beat his own all-time record at Hartford which was previously at 6.94 seconds and continues to hold the number one all-time spot in the 60 meter dash. Along with his fourth place finish Leonard took eighth in the 200m sprint event crossing the finish line at 22.70 seconds.
- Sophomore Owen Klein (Coventry, R.I.) earned second place in the men’s mile event crossing the finish line with an impressive time of 4:29.78. Along with this feat, Klein also took third in the 3000m event at 9:11.95. In that same event senior Gulian Marconi (Southampton, Mass.) placed seventh with a time of 4:35.92. Along with teammate sophomore Daren Johnson (Meriden, Conn.) on his tail coming into eighth place at 4:36.06.
- Sophomore Marlon Pierre (Baldwin, N.Y.) finished in second place in the 60m hurdles event with a time of 8.58 seconds. With this race Pierre now holds the second fastest time in Hartford history. Just behind Pierre was freshman Burrell Laneau (Valley Stream, N.Y.) making his first collegiate debut earning fourth place with a time of 8.79 seconds
- Junior Thomas Yonkers (Farmington, Conn.) claimed second place in the pole vault event clearing a height of 4.10 meters.
- Sophomore Aidan Lybarger (South Burlington, Vt.) took third place in the men’s shot put with a distance of 14.76m on his second throw, earning also the second furthest distance of all time for the history books at Hartford. Lybarger also took 10th in the men’s weight throw, tossing a distance of 14.91 meters.
- Freshman Julius Lowe-Wannamaker (Springfield, Mass.) launched his collegiate debut earning second place in the long jump event clearing a distance of 6.82m. He also finished in 6th place in the high jump event clearing a height of 1.90 meters.
- Sophomore Ethan Fiorenza (Dover, N.H.) took third place in the 5000m event crossing the line at 15:51.81.
- Hartford ended the day with a strong showing in the 4×400 event, it was senior Spencer Beane (North Reading, Mass.), Yonkers, freshman Mikael Isaacs (Danbury, Conn.), and sophomore Aidan Quee (Springfield, Mass.) to earn fourth place with a team time of 3:31.32.
Post Game Press:
“During my time off, I focused on cleaning up my form and building strength so I could come back more efficiently and ready to make a run at nationals,” said graduate student Kaden Leonard (Webster, N.Y.). “Even though I wasn’t competing, I was hungry the whole time, ready to chase PRs. My teammates fed off that energy adn ambition during block starts, workouts, the weight room, and time trials. Iron sharpening iron.”
“We had an incredible season opener,” said head coach Connor Green. “Now while school records and and top 10 marks are a goal and excellent when they happen, what we really loved with seeing all of our new athletes was to get a chance to showcase all of the hard work they’ve been putting in. As well as all of our returners really stepping up and putting themselves in a great position for the rest of the season. Across the board it was a stellar day and we are thrilled with how our athletes performed. We can’t wait to see what’s next.”
Up Next:
The Hawks will compete next Saturday, December 13th at the SCSU Art Kadish Invitational.
For the latest information on Hartford Athletics follow the Hawks on Facebook, Instagram, X, and YouTube.
Sports
UW-Oshkosh volleyball wins 2025 Division 3 national championship
BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (WBAY) – The UW-Oshkosh volleyball team is the best in the country for the first time in program history, as the Titans took down La Verne to secure a Division 3 national championship.
The Titans won 18 consecutive sets in the national tournament en route to the championship. They last dropped a set against UW-Eau Claire in the WIAC championship match on Nov. 15.
The volleyball title marks the 33rd Division 3 national championship in the history of the UW-Oshkosh athletic department.
Copyright 2025 WBAY. All rights reserved.
Sports
Lea’s Facility and School Record Headlines Impressive Bison Opener for Women’s Track & Field
Results
Lea’s time obliterated her old personal best of 40.88, which was fifth in school history, and reaffirmed to the track & field world that the second-year runner has gained additional speed. The time is Lea’s first facility record, her first indoor school record, and third overall school record.
Three of Lea’s teammates joined her in the 300-meter top ten list. Alison Cooke finished second logging 40.85, improving upon her sixth-best time in school history. Freshman Raygan Lust moved into seventh place after finishing third with a time of 41.22. Alexa Goll set a new personal record, running 41.41, for fourth in the event and eighth in Bucknell history.
Megan Baggetta began her junior campaign with a win in the triple jump. The Bison veteran jumped 38-2.75 for the comfortable win.
Anna Carruthers collected the decisive win in the 800-meter run. Her time of 2:16.34 easily paced the field.
Isabella Johns won the mile run with a time of 5:09.88. She broke her previous best time of 5:23.23 by nearly 14 seconds.
Two Bison freshmen made immediate impact in the 60-meter dash. Grace Camerlingo lit a roaring fire in the sprints corps by running 7.62 for a second-place finish. Her time ranks third in Bucknell history behind legends Meghan Quinn and Katie Salisbury. Piper Portacio also made an impressment, racing 7.76, for fifth place in the event and eighth in Bison history.
Madison Fowler collected two second place finishes in the weight throw and shot put. She posted a 43-0.25 mark in the shot put and threw 58-4 in the weight throw.
Noelani Sadler slotted third in the 60-meter hurdles, logging 8.92. She won the preliminaries with a time of 8.80.
Sara Bronson set a vastly improved personal record in the 3000-meter run. The Bison distancewoman ran 10:57.64 to finish third and shatter her old mark of 11:34.12.
The Bucknell “B” Team of Madeline Sipe, Ava Lomberto, Abigail Michaelson, and Juliette Reed finished third in the 4×400-meter relay combining for a time of 4:10.18.
Liliana Wakenshaw placed third in the high jump, clearing 5-3, in her return to competition after injury hobbled her last season.
Jordan Muraglia started her collegiate career by placing third in the long jump. The freshman jumped 18-2.50.
Elizabeth Bryant cleared 12-1.50 for third place in the pole vault.
Ella Boback finished sixth in the 200-meter dash, running 25.99.
Bucknell will return to action in 2026 at the Nittany Lion Challenge on Jan. 17.
Sports
ISU Falls at Minnesota in the Second Round
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – No. 23 Iowa State (23-8, 12-6 Big 12) ended its season at No. 17 Minnesota (24-9, 12-8 Big Ten) in the NCAA Championship Second Round Saturday night. Iowa State fell in straight sets by scores of 22-25, 21-25, 14-25.
Nayeli Ti’a went out to a double-double with an errorless 12 kills at a .500 clip and 11 digs ending her season with seven double-doubles. Ti’a led the Cyclones in both categories.
SET ONE
Ava Martin served up an ace to make it 4-3 with Minnesota ahead, and the home team was the first to 10 with the Cyclones close behind at 7. Minnesota’s Julia Hanson followed slamming down kill No. 7 on 11 attempts, putting the Gophers up 14-9 to cause an ISU timeout. The Cyclones pulled within four after Goolsby’s third kill (18-14), and the freshman put down another soon after to make it 19-15. With Minnesota at set point 24-19, ISU fought back with three-straight kills as the Gophers called their second timeout, but Minnesota took the opener on the next play with a block. Minnesota hit at .425 while ISU hit .293.
SET TWO
ISU went up two (6-4) after two straight Minnesota errors while the Gophers took a run of three to get the lead back at 7-6. After a tie at 8s, Minnesota scored five straight forcing a Cyclone timeout. ISU answered with a run of its own, taking four in a row to make it a one-point set (14-13) and cause a timeout by the host. Ti’a slammed down a kill to tie it out of the timeout, while Van Gorp had her second ace of the run to take the lead at 15-14. ISU held onto the lead before Minnesota flipped it at 21-20, and after another Hanson kill Iowa State took a timeout. Minnesota remained with the advantage, winning the second 25-21 on Hanson’s 20th kill.
SET THREE
Minnesota again hit 10 first with ISU holding six. Out of an Iowa State timeout, Amiree Hendricks-Walker and Goolsby put up a block to stop a Gopher run. Minnesota continued to control the set running ahead 19-12 hitting at .450 in the frame as ISU took its final timeout. The Gophers went on to seal the sweep on a 6-0 run at 25-14.
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