The Huron Daily Tribune has announced its 2025 All-Tribune volleyball teams. The teams were carefully selected by sportswriter Tom Greene and were considered through all-conference, all-Thumb and all-state selections.
Sports
The best recruiter on Nebraska’s campus? Try the assistant volleyball coach
LINCOLN, Neb. — As a kid in Hawaii, Jaylen Reyes competed in club volleyball with a team of athletes straight out of the country club. In school, he befriended classmates from the Honolulu housing projects.
It is his superpower, Reyes said, the ability to connect. The way of life in his home state prepared Reyes for his career outside of it.
“In Hawaii, you have no choice,” he said. “You have so many cultures, you just learn how to interact with different people.”
Hired by Nebraska as an assistant in 2018 by then-coach John Cook, Reyes mixed his relational skills with a tireless work ethic to expand the recruiting reach of a program that won five national titles from 1995 to 2017.
At 33 years old, Reyes has emerged as the best recruiter on the Nebraska campus. His influence is all over the No. 1-ranked Huskers’ unbeaten season as they enter the final weekend of the regular season. Coaches in other sports at Nebraska so respect his acumen that they’ve tapped into Reyes’ recruiting expertise. No one else in the athletic department has assembled multiple top-ranked classes.
Reyes is such a known figure at Nebraska that he even hosts a weekly, hourlong radio show.
“He eats, sleeps and breathes recruiting,” said Cook, who retired after 25 seasons in January. “He wants to hoard players. Even when we were done recruiting, I’d be like, ‘Jaylen, we don’t have any more scholarships, we don’t need any more players.’
“And he was still recruiting. That’s why he’s great.”
A national championship has evaded Nebraska since Reyes arrived. Nebraska has played in four Final Fours in his seven seasons and lost twice in the championship match — against Texas in 2023 and Wisconsin in 2021.
Nebraska (28-0, 18-0 Big Ten) clinched a third consecutive conference title last week and will host Penn State and Ohio State on Friday and Saturday. A top seed in the NCAA Tournament awaits Sunday.
The Final Four this year will be played in Kansas City, Dec. 18 and 21. It’s ripe for a Nebraska takeover if the Huskers avoid an upset during the tournament’s first two weekends. Nebraska enters the postseason as a prohibitive favorite in large part because of the talent that Reyes stockpiled.
He recruited every player on the roster, which includes three of the 14 semifinalists for AVCA National Player of the Year and four returning All-Americans. Nebraska signed the No. 1-ranked recruiting classes in 2021 and 2023, and the No. 2 class last year.
Reyes signed a one-year deal at Nebraska after Dani Busboom Kelly returned to coach her alma mater, replacing Cook after leaving Louisville. Reyes could likely write his ticket as a head coach. He’s received opportunities, but he can afford to stay selective. His base salary of $170,000 exceeds the pay of some head coaches.
“There’s major turnover going on right now,” Cook said. “And he’s going to be at the top of those lists. But he’s got a few more things to continue to check off here. He’s not there yet, but he’s working toward it.”
A national championship next month would check a box. A big one.
Reyes’ dad, Tino, coached men’s volleyball for 17 years at the University of Hawaii as an assistant, then spent seven seasons as the head women’s coach at Hawaii Hilo. Even after Jaylen earned acclaim in the sport, first as a player at BYU and then for his role in building the Nebraska women’s program into a nationally recognized brand, he remained, at home in a volleyball hotbed, known most as Tino’s son.
Before his senior year of high school, Reyes figured he’d join his dad at Hawaii for college to play volleyball. But when Tino jumped islands to coach the women at Hilo, Reyes looked to the mainland.
Reyes knew he eventually wanted to coach. BYU appealed to him because it had produced the likes of Hugh McCutcheon and Kevin Hambly, great players who moved into coaching at the Team USA level and in the women’s collegiate game.
Reyes played libero on a Cougars team that lost in the NCAA title match in 2013. When he began his coaching career at BYU, Reyes saw others older than him in the men’s game being passed over for jobs coaching women.
Women’s volleyball offered better pay and more opportunities, so Reyes marked it as a goal. He never expected to hear from Nebraska.
Before his third year on staff at BYU — weeks after Cook’s team beat Florida in Kansas City to win the national championship — Reyes received a text out of the blue from the Nebraska coach.
Reyes was 25. Cook wanted a young coach who would stay in Lincoln. He had recently lost assistants in Busboom Kelly to Louisville, Chris Tamas to Illinois and Tyler Hildebrand to coach Olympians on the beach. Cook asked for a three-year commitment. Reyes offered him five.
“With him here, I knew it would help build our culture,” Cook said.
Cook was right. His players loved Reyes, whose recruiting talents had only begun to emerge.
“I’m still a firm believer that it’s about people,” Reyes said. “If you get to know them and let them get to know you, people still want to be around great people.”
Jaylen Reyes grew up as the son of a coach in Hawaii and played collegiately at BYU. (Courtesy of Nebraska)
Reyes leaned on his ability to connect.
“He’s that person who can push you when you need to be pushed but also support when you need that,” Nebraska libero Laney Choboy said, “And he could talk to anyone. He could talk to a wall if you asked him to.”
Reyes set a goal to clear hurdles that had slowed Nebraska’s push to bring the best talent to Lincoln. Reyes wanted top volleyball players and their families to see that the Huskers don’t play in a big arena next to a cornfield.
“I still hear about how Lincoln is not as diverse as Dallas or L.A.,” Reyes said. “And I’m not going to sit there and debate that. But since I got here, the diversity on our team has changed. We have kids from so many different backgrounds, whether it’s ethnicity or religion or where they come from.”
Undoubtedly, he’s opened doors for Nebraska to a wider range of athletes.
How?
“I’m literally a mix,” Reyes said. “My mom’s white. My dad’s Filipino and Hawaiian. Sometimes it’s hard to go somewhere and commit four years of your life when there’s not someone who looks like you or talks like you or understands you.”
Reyes set out to get ahead by identifying young players before they blew up as recruits. Cook didn’t want to travel to watch a ninth-grade club tournament. But Reyes did.
He coached in the Team USA program. He was aggressive with camp invites. When prospects accepted, rules allowed Nebraska coaches to interact with them on campus in Lincoln. The rest took care of itself.
“I think I’m a really good salesperson,” Reyes said. “I would also say, I’m selling the best product.”
Reyes plans to run his own program someday in the way that Cook designed Nebraska to operate. Over their years together, Cook talked often with Reyes about the requirements of a head coach.
Reyes sat on every word.
Cook’s coaching tree includes not just Busboom Kelly and Tamas in the Big Ten but Christy Johnson of Iowa State, Kentucky’s Craig Skinner, Dan Meske of Louisville and Dan Conners of UC Davis. Former collegiate head coaches Hildebrand (Long Beach State), Lee Maes (Virginia), Lizzy Stemke (Georgia) and Kayla Banwarth (Ole Miss) also worked for Cook.
“He would sit with me and say, ‘Jaylen, you coach out there and you do all that stuff really well. But how much of your job is actually in the gym?’” Reyes said. “I’m like, ‘Coach, probably 25 percent.’ And he goes, ‘It’s going to keep getting less and less. So if you want to be a successful head coach, you have to be able to do all the other things.’”
Reyes is chipping away. His experience in the only profitable collegiate volleyball program ought to earn Reyes points with an athletic director in a job interview, he said.
“We all know that he could be a head coach anytime he wanted,” Choboy said. “That’s just how good he is.”
He’s learned from Cook to adopt CEO qualities. And this year, Reyes is watching his new boss, who retained Reyes and fellow assistant Kelly (Hunter) Natter immediately after accepting the job.
“He’s been great for bridging the gap between John and myself,” Busboom Kelly said. “Having somebody that was here who can speak to both experiences, it’s huge. It’s big for me, too, trusting his eye. He’s been here for eight years and really understands everybody’s role.”
As an extension of his work in recruiting, Reyes said he meets players at a place that works for them. For instance, as a freshman two years ago, Choboy struggled to adjust.
“Jaylen was always my backbone,” she said. “We would go to film (sessions), and sometimes we wouldn’t even watch film. He would just ask how I was doing. And I’d sit there and cry in his office.”
Life in Lincoln for Reyes is good.
Reyes has set no deadline to advance in coaching. He’s comfortable at Nebraska but not content with the Huskers’ accomplishments. Neither are they. He’ll patrol the sideline this weekend from the head of the bench, relaying defensive instruction while Busboom Kelly runs the show.
Their push continues next month in the postseason for as long as this ride lasts. Because of what Reyes has helped build, the expectation is nothing short of eight more matches.
Sports
Waded Cruzado headlines Montana State hall of fame class
BOZEMAN — Five legendary athletes and Montana State University’s president during an era of athletics and university-wide success enter the Bobcat Athletics Hall of Fame in January.
President Waded Cruzado, who led Montana State University from 2009-25, headlines a highly distinguished class of inductees. The list features Elvis Akpla (football, 2009-11), Jasmine Hommes Moeakiola (women’s basketball, 2012-16), Dan Johnson (track and field, 2004-08), Cody Kirk (football, 2010-13) and Cristian Soratos (cross country/track and field, 2012-15).
The ceremony is Jan. 16 at the Strand Union Building on the MSU campus. The evening begins with a social at 5:30 p.m., followed by dinner and the inductions. Purchase tickets here.
The 2025-26 inductees:
President Waded Cruzado — Montana State University’s president during a period of historic growth and success … her support and vision drove the reconfiguration of the Bobcat Athletics physical plant, including the Sonny Holland End Zone, the Bobcat Athletic Complex, the Kennedy-Stark Athletic Center and renovations in Brick Breeden Fieldhouse.
Elvis Akpla, football — 2011 third-team All-America and first-team All-Big Sky, second in MSU history in career and single-season receiving yards, third in career touchdown catches, eighth in career receptions.
Jasmine Hommes Moeakiola, women’s basketball — 2016 Big Sky MVP, first-team All-Big Sky … 2015 second-team All-Big Sky … sixth in MSU history in scoring, seventh in blocked shots.
Dan Johnson, track and field — One of the most productive long-sprint athletes in MSU men’s track and field history … he won Big Sky 400-meter championships indoors in 2007 and 2008 and outdoors in 2008 and 2009.
Cody Kirk, football — First-team All-Big Sky in 2011, second-team in 2013 … MSU’s all-time leader in touchdowns with 47 and second with 3,422 career yards … his 666 career rushes are also second in school history.
Cristian Soratos, track and field/cross country — Two-time All-America (2015 mile, 2015 1,500) … 2015 Big Sky Championships outstanding performer indoor and outdoor … four-time Big Sky indoor champion (2015 800, mile; 2014/2015 distance medley relay), three-time Big Sky outdoor champion (2015 800 and 1,500; 2014 1,500)
MSU director of athletics Leon Costello also announced that Ben and Sue Schmitt, long-time supporters and volunteers with deep family ties to Bobcat Athletics, will be presented the second Torleif Aasheim Service Award. Both MSU grads, the Schmitts not only support Bobcat teams but have long aided individual staff members, coaches and student-athletes.
Sports
2025 All-Tribune volleyball teams: Ubly leads honors

The Ubly Bearcats made their first appearance at Kellogg Arena since 2007.
Here are the All-Tribune teams:
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All-Tribune Volleyball Teams
Player of the Year
With a second-place finish for All-Thumb Player of the Year, and helping the Bearcats advance to Kellogg Arena for the first time since 2007, Ubly’s Waverly Hagen is named All-Tribune Player of the Year.
Coach of the Year
Leading the Ubly Bearcats to their first Kellogg Arena appearance since 2007, along with an undefeated record in the Big Thumb Black Division and selection as All-Thumb Coach of the Year, Ubly’s Rachel Sorenson is named All-Tribune Coach of the Year.
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Team of the Year
With their first Kellogg Arena appearance since 2007, the Ubly Bearcats are named All-Tribune Team of the Year.
All-Tribune First Team
Waverly Hagen, Ubly – Player of the Year
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Skylar Ignash, Cass City
Suzanne Smigielski, Ubly
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Jessica Bowers, Owendale-Gagetown
Karsyn Ignash, Cass City
Courtney Copeland, Bad Axe
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All-Tribune Second Team
Maylee Tank, Deckerville
Aubrey Hellebuyck, Owen-Gage
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Jentry Zimmerman, North Huron
All-Tribune Honorable Mentions
Raylynn Platzer, Cass City
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Reese Booms, Harbor Beach
Payton McIlhargie, Caseville
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Aspen Jimkoski, North Huron
Brooklynn Bailey, Caseville
Kiley Klinesmith, Caseville
Ayriona Maikrzek, Owendale-Gagetown
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Faith Morrish, Owendale-Gagetown
Madalyn Rumble, Deckerville
Jeneil Keinath, Deckerville
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Amelia Capling, Harbor Beach
Lexi Roggenbuck, Harbor Beach
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Jenna Schornack, North Huron
McKenzie Baker, Owendale-Gagetown
Sports
ADM’s Coghlan Shares Advice For Younger Girls Taking Over Volleyball Program | Raccoon Valley Radio

Adel-DeSoto-Minburn senior Elise Coghlan recently played in her final volleyball season of her high school career, hitting many achievements, but is leaving an encouraging message for the younger girls who will be carrying the program from here on out.
Coghlan is leaving a legacy behind for Tigers volleyball, as she is now sixth all-time in school history with 601 Assists in a season, and has a total of 1,273 assists over her four-year career. In addition, Coghlan concluded the season with 57 kills, 181 digs, and 32 blocks. As she’ll be graduating in the spring, Coghlan wants to remind the girls to never forget who they are.
“Just being yourself and showing your actual personality, and just being friends with everyone honestly.”
ADM finished the season with a 23-9 overall record (7-1; 2nd inside the Raccoon River Conference) and fell to Dallas Center-Grimes in the Class 4A Region 4 Championship on October 28th.
Sports
Onaway’s Boughner, Janusky, Pellston’s Irwin earn volleyball all-state
Updated Dec. 26, 2025, 11:45 a.m. ET
The Cheboygan area saw several volleyball players earn nods on the Michigan Interscholastic Volleyball Coaches Association teams, including three all-state honorable mentions.
Leading the way were Onaway’s Amya Janusky and Brooklyn Boughner, who secured spots on the MIVCA Division 4 all-state team as honorable mentions. Joining the two Onaway stars was Pellston’s Lanie Irwin, who earned honorable mention accolades.
Sports
Wyoming Valley Sanitary Authority uses new technology to restore interceptor beneath levee
The Wyoming Valley Sanitary Authority faced a challenge rehabilitating a major interceptor line in Wilkes-Barre because it is beneath the Wyoming Valley Levee.
This aging reinforced concrete line, known as the authority’s East Side Interceptor, had to be addressed because it was installed in the 1960s and had reached the end of its service life. It carries wastewater from approximately 100,000 residents in 19 municipalities to the authority’s treatment plant in Hanover Township.
The traditional approach — excavating to remove and replace the line — would have cost an estimated $75 million or more and required extensive permitting and protective measures to ensure the flood control system along the Susquehanna River was not compromised, authority officials said.
Instead, the authority recently deployed a new engineering technology to restore the one-mile line for $14 million.
Authority Chief Technical Officer Samantha Albert said the solution involved steel-reinforced PVC that interlocks as it is fed through manholes into the pipe, creating a new standalone pipe within the existing line.
A machine was used to wind the large spools of PVC through the line, she said. The diameter of the line ranges from 4 to 6 feet, allowing crews to get inside during the installation, Albert said.
The authority could not use a different type of liner that requires a “curing” process with heat to dry and harden because the interceptor line would have to be completely dry for that option, Albert said.
The interceptor line could not be deactivated to dry because it handles a high volume of both wastewater and stormwater when it rains, she said.
“That was a huge advantage of the solution we chose because it still has to flow during the installation,” Albert said.
For the safety of crews, the contractor set up a temporary sewage bypass system — a large black pipe on the ground — to reduce the load passing through the line during installation, she said.
The section of line tackled in this project runs from the area of the Luzerne County Courthouse south to Riverside Drive, Albert said.
Albert said the line is “critical infrastructure” that must remain functioning to service residents and also protect the levee.
“We did not want this line to ever become compromised and impact the integrity of the levee,” Albert said. “It’s all about protecting the environment and the public.”
Georgia-based Ruby-Collins Inc. completed the project. The company has a specialized “trenchless division” to rehabilitate underground lines, its site says.
Luzerne County Council allocated $2 million of its federal American Rescue Plan Act funds toward the project. The authority also received a federal STAG Clean Water Community Project Funding Grant and secured a Pennsylvania Infrastructure Investment Authority, or PENNVEST, loan.
Albert said the authority will continue seeking grants to help fund work on other segments of the interceptor.
Christopher Belleman, executive director of the Luzerne County Flood Protection Authority that oversees the Wyoming Valley Levee, said his authority allowed access to land at the site to complete the project.
“They got us involved at the very start. They were a good partner,” Belleman said of the sanitary authority.
Belleman spoke favorably of the sanitary authority’s solution, saying the flood authority has used a lining to address damaged piping — an option available if the original pipe still has structural integrity.
“Fortunately, technology has advanced over the years so this type of work can be done in a way that saves costs without having to excavate,” Belleman said.
Approximately 170 pipes of varying dimensions run through the levee system, officials have said.
Belleman said the flood authority must inspect these pipes every five years in compliance with a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers mandate to keep the levee certified.
Reach Jennifer Learn-Andes at 570-991-6388 or on Twitter @TLJenLearnAndes.
Sports
G-R to host open volleyball camp featuring UNI players | News, Sports, Jobs
REINBECK – The Gladbrook-Reinbeck PTO is partnering with eight current members of the University of Northern Iowa (UNI) Panthers volleyball team in an effort to raise funds for a new, inclusive elementary school playground.
“We were trying to think of (fundraising) ideas. We’re pretty fortunate that [UNI] is so close to us and we knew that there were some girls from the area that play on the team. … We did some virtual meetings and here we are,” G-R elementary principal Shaun Lehmann told the newspaper about the inaugural three-day camp’s origins.
The all-skills camp is open to any girl – no matter the school district – in grades 3-8. Camp will take place on three consecutive Saturdays this coming January, including Jan. 17, Jan. 24, and Jan. 31, at the secondary building located at 600 Blackhawk St. in Reinbeck. Campers may register for a single session or multiple sessions at a discounted rate. Each session will be capped at 48 players. Grade groupings are as follows: grades 3-4 from noon to 1 p.m.; grades 5-6 from 1:30-2:30 p.m; and grades 7-8 from 3-4:30 p.m.
While G-R is hosting the camp, UNI volleyball players are running the show, Lehmann said, including freshman defensive specialist/libero Payton Askelsen; sophomore setter Reese Booth; redshirt freshman middle blocker Maryn Bixby – a Dike-New Hartford alumna; freshman defensive specialist/libero Sophie Buysse; senior opposite hitter Calia Clubb – a Clear Creek Amana alumna; freshman defensive specialist/libero Jadyn Petersen – a Dike-New Hartford alumna; redshirt sophomore middle blocker Kaitlyn Sellner; and redshirt freshman opposite hitter/middle blocker Kamryn Vogt.
The registration deadline for the volleyball camp is Dec. 31, 2025. More information, including cost and registration, can be found by visiting https://tinyurl.com/GRvbcamp. A spring camp for girls in grades K-2 is also in the works.
Profits from the camp will be split between G-R’s playground fund and the UNI volleyball players.
A playground for every child
G-R’s new, inclusive playground will be located on the south side of the elementary building in Reinbeck.
“There’s not really much there right now,” Lehmann said before adding that both the existing zip line and climbing apparatus will be removed to make way for the new equipment which will all be ADA-compliant. While Lehmann declined to disclose how much had been raised so far for the new playground, he did tell the newspaper the district will be contributing some funding and that they have “a ways to go” to meet the fundraising goal. But his hope is to have the new playground ready for the 2026-27 school year.
“Our playgrounds are used throughout the year by the community. We don’t have a fence. [An ADA-compliant] playground will be beneficial to all kids.”
To donate directly to the playground fund, contact Lehmann at 319-345-2822 or email shaun.lehmann@gr-rebels.net.
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