COLLEGE STATION — It’s time for a rematch.
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The Big West Women’s Soccer Notebook: Opening Whistle Awaits Teams This Week
What 2 Watch 4
– The wait is over…our 2025 Big West women’s soccer season is here! All 11 squads are ready to take the pitch during an action-packed opening week.
2024 regular-season champion and preseason favorite Hawai’i wastes no time diving into a marquee matchup, heading to Southern California to battle rival Long Beach State in a non-conference contest on opening day. The Rainbow Wahine took the last meeting 1-0, with Tatum Porter’s late strike sealing the win in last year’s regular-season finale. From there, UH heads to face (RV) Pepperdine, while the Beach will test themselves against No. 19 Texas at George Allen Field.
The ranked showdowns continue when UC San Diego and Cal State Fullerton will each welcome (RV) California on Aug. 14 and Aug. 17, setting the stage for early-season statements. A new-look Cal Poly program takes on (RV) BYU on Monday, Aug. 18, for a primetime home opener at Mustang Memorial Field.
Defending conference champion UC Santa Barbara kicks off its season at Harder Stadium against LMU.
– A total of 15 matches are set to air live on ESPN+ this week. Please check the listings online below watch your favorite Big West squad in action!
2025 Big West Women’s Soccer Schedule
New Faces of The Big West
– The Big West welcomes a new crop of leaders around the conference during the 2025-26 season. A trio of programs has welcomed new head coaches with Cal State Bakersfield, UC Davis, and UC Riverside, while Cal Poly kept its hire within the league.
The Roadrunners welcome Whitney Pitalo, who most recently served as the First Assistant Coach at Boston College, aiding the Eagles to a 12-5-2 overall record and the team’s best finish in the American Coastal Conference (ACC) since 2018. CSUB earned its first pair of victories in the Big West Championship last season, before being narrowly edged in the Final in penalty kicks.
Kat Mertz joins the Aggies after orchestrating a program-changing run as head coach at NCAA Division II MSU Denver, posting a 39-20-19 overall record and a 28-12-8 mark in Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference (RMAC) action over four seasons. UCD capped off 2024 with the best regular season record in the league at 13-5-2 and earned the No. 2 seed in the Championship behind a 6-2-2 performance in conference play.
Mike Dibbini will now be the new manager of the Highlander. Dibbini brings nearly two decades of collegiate head coaching experience to UC Riverside, boasting a career record of 303-176-52 (.619). Most recently, he built Kansas State University’s women’s soccer program from the ground up, leading the Wildcats since their 2016 debut and steering them to multiple milestones, including a Big 12 Championship appearance in 2022.
Bernardo Silva will now take the reins at Cal Poly, succeeding Alex Crozier, who led the Mustangs since the program’s inception in 1991. After leading CSUB for two seasons, he set multiple Big West program records and guided the Roadrunners to their best conference finish in history. A former Mustang assistant (2013-16), Silva compiled an 11-20-9 overall record and 6-8-6 Big West mark while coaching the ‘Runners.
2025 USCA Division I Players to Watch
– A total of four standout Big West student athletes have been chosen to the United Soccer Coaches NCAA Division I Women’s Players to Watch list.
The listings are compiled and released by the Division I All-America Committees to promote college soccer leading up to the official start date for the regular season later this month. Honorees include United Soccer Coaches All-Americans and All-Region players from 2024 who are scheduled to return for the 2025 season.
| Isabella Cruz | Senior | Midfielder | Cal State Fullerton |
| Nalani Damacion | Sophomore | Midfielder | Hawai’i |
| Genavieve Fontes | R-Senior | Midfielder | UC Davis |
| Kennedy Justin | Sophomore | Goalkeeper | Hawai’i |
Superwoman
– Isabella Cruz of Cal State Fullerton has been selected as one of The Big West’s pair of 2025 NCAA Woman of the Year conference nominees.
Each year, NCAA member schools nominate graduating female student-athletes who have distinguished themselves on and off the field of play. From there, the NCAA Woman of the Year selection process narrows the pool to the Top 30 honorees—10 from each division—before selecting three finalists from each division. The award recipient is chosen by the NCAA Committee on Women’s Athletics and honored at the NCAA Convention.
A second-generation Latina and standout student-athlete, Cruz has exemplified excellence both on and off the field. She completed her bachelor’s degree in communications in just 2.5 years, graduating summa cum laude with a 3.9 GPA, and is currently pursuing a master’s degree in professional communications while competing in her final season of NCAA eligibility. As a team captain for the CSUF women’s soccer program, she has led with integrity, building a team culture centered on inclusivity, support, and growth.
Beyond athletics, she serves as her team’s representative on the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), advocating for the student-athlete experience across campus. Her commitment to service is evident through her volunteer work with Football for Her, campus engagement efforts like promoting voter participation, and community-driven initiatives such as food drives and holiday gift collections.
In addition to her academic and service contributions, Cruz has gained hands-on experience in sports marketing as an intern with Orange County Soccer Club, and currently serves as the social media manager for Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA), using digital storytelling to foster connection and purpose.
International Action
– Cal State Bakersfield senior Catalina Roggerone has once again been called up to the Argentina Women’s National Team, making the midfielder’s second appearance in 2025. The Mendoza, Argentina native helped the squad reach the semifinals and secure a podium finish, placing third overall in a major international tournament.
Preseason Prognostics
-Hawai’i has been selected as the preseason favorite to capture the 2025 Big West women’s soccer title, as voted on by the league’s 11 head coaches. Four teams received at least one first-place vote on the preseason poll.
The Rainbow Wahine, who finished 12-8-1 overall with an 8-1-1 record in conference play last season, earned 88 points and six first-place votes to claim the top spot after earning their first-ever Big West regular-season championship.
Defending tournament champion UC Santa Barbara (8-6-9, 4-2-4 BW) ranks second with 84 points and three first-place selections, followed closely by UC Irvine (6-7-6, 4-2-4 BW) with 81 points and one first-place nod. Long Beach State (6-9-3, 3-5-2 BW) collected 74 points and a first-place vote to land in fourth, while Cal State Fullerton sits just behind in fifth at 73 points.
Cal Poly (5-11-3, 3-6-1) finished sixth in the voting at 53 points, followed by UC San Diego (3-12-4, 1-6-3 BQ) in seventh with 42 points, and UC Davis’s (13-5-2, 6-2-2 BW) 37 points placed the Aggies in eighth. Cal State Bakersfield (8-10-5, 4-3-3 BW) and CSUN (5-11-3, 3-4-3 BW) are knotted at No. 9 with 27 points as UC Riverside (2-13-4, 0-6-4 BW) rounds out the 2025 preseason coaches’ poll.
Coaches also voted on an 11-member Preseason All-Big West Team featuring standout student-athletes from across the conference. Cal State Fullerton and Hawai’i led the way with both squads having a pair of representatives on the team.
The Big West unveiled its 11-member Preseason All-Conference Team, as voted on by league head coaches. The list features top returning talent from across the conference, with Cal State Fullerton and Hawai’i leading all programs with two selections each.
Representing the Titans are forward Isabella Cruz and defender Kaylin Raibon, who finished second and third in team scoring last season.
Preseason favorite Hawai’i places midfielder Nalani Damacion, the 2024 Big West Freshman of the Year, and forward Amber Gilbert on the squad. Last season, Damacion notched seven goals, including five game-winners, while Gilbert was a consistent threat up top in 17 starts.
The preseason list also includes Cal State Bakersfield’s standout goalkeeper Kamy Anaya, who helped lead the Roadrunners to their first Big West Final in program history with a .770 save percentage. Long Beach State forward Cherrie Cox returns to the pitch after claiming the 2023 Big West Offensive Player of the Year accolade behind a 13-goal campaign.
UC Davis forward Genavieve Fontes, the league’s top scorer last season with 11 goals, earns a spot alongside UC Santa Barbara’s forward Devin Greer, who tallied 10 goals en route to 2024 Freshman of the Year honors.
Jessie Halladay led the Mustangs as a forward with 11 points in 2024, while Mihaela Perez of UC Irvine helped anchor a defense that recorded five clean sheets in 19 starts. Midfielder Yoshi Rubalcava rounds out the 2025 preseason team as CSUN’s representative after posting career-highs in both goals (5) and points (12) a year ago.
The 2025 Big West Women’s Soccer Championship is set to begin on Sunday, Nov. 2, with first-round matches hosted by the No. 3 and No. 4 seeds, who will face the No. 6 and No. 5 seeds, respectively. From there, our semifinals and the title match will take place at the home venue of the 2025 regular-season champion and No. 1 seed. Semifinal action is slated for Thursday, Nov. 6, with the Championship Final set for Sunday, Nov. 9. The winner will earn the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA Women’s Soccer Championship.
Action across The Big West kicks off this Thursday, Aug. 14, while league play commences Thursday, Sept. 18, with four matches on the docket, kicking off a seven-week slate. Each side will play five home matches and have three bye dates throughout the Thursday-Sunday rotation, which concludes on Oct. 30.
2024 Postseason Rewind
– No. 3 seed UC Santa Barbara opened its postseason run with a 2-1 win over No. 6 seed Cal State Fullerton. Freshman standout Devin Greer led the way with a goal and an assist, including the game-winner in the 73rd minute.
In the later first-round match, No. 5 seed Cal State Bakersfield made history in their Big West Championship debut, upsetting three-time defending champion and No. 4 seed UC Irvine 1-0 behind Kamy Anaya’s eight-save shutout and Isis Salazar-Ortega’s 44th-minute strike.
The semifinals at Waipi’o Peninsula Soccer Stadium in O’ahu, brought more drama. UCSB edged No. 2 seed UC Davis 3-2 in double overtime thanks to Greer’s penalty kick to reach the title match for the first time since 2018, while CSUB stunned top-seeded and regular-season champion Hawai’i, 3-0, to reach their first-ever Big West Championship final in any sport, still without allowing a postseason goal.
In the Championship final, UCSB and CSUB battled to a stalemate before the Gauchos prevailed 8-7 in a penalty shootout to claim their third Big West title, all won via PKs. The victory sent UCSB to its 10th NCAA Division I Women’s Soccer Championship appearance.
From The Big West to the Big Leagues
– In January 2022, Long Beach State forward Lena Silano was selected 34th overall by the Washington Spirit in the third round of the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) Draft.
Silano was the second straight player from the Beach to be drafted and is the fourth overall Big West student-athlete to hear their name called in the NWSL Draft. Former teammate, Kaitlin Fregulia, and 2x Big West Defensive Player of the Year (2017, 2021) was selected 12th overall to the North Carolina Courage as the highest draft pick in Big West Women’s Soccer history.
Silano won the 2022 Big West Offensive Player of the Year Award and has been an All-Big West selection twice (2021, 2022). The forward was also a member of the 2022 United Soccer Coaches All-West Region First Team.
Two months later, another alum of the Big West would have an opportunity to play in the NWSL as UC Irvine alum Scarlett Camberos was signed by Angel City FC (LA), marking her return to Southern California after spending time at Club América Femenil. The former Anteater scored 13 goals and notched seven assists during her senior season.
Another monumental moment for the conference occurred during the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup, while Quinley Quezada represented UC Riverside and the Big West on the biggest stage while playing for the Philippines. The squad suffered a 2-0 defeat versus Switzerland in the first group stage before winning its first-ever World Cup match against New Zealand, 1-0 on July 25, 2023. However, the Philippines fell in its final group match to Norway, 6-0.
Sports
Louisville volleyball score, UofL vs Marquette NCAA Tournament bracket
Updated Dec. 6, 2025, 11:07 p.m. ET
No. 2 seed Louisville volleyball defeated Marquette in five sets Saturday night at L&N Arena to advance to the regional round of the NCAA Tournament.
Chloe Chicoine led the Cardinals in kills with a career-high 28. She and Payton Petersen combined for 47 of Louisville’s 77 kills. Nayelis Cabello led UofL with 62 assists.
“I feel so fortunate as a coach to have such great competitors and great people,” head coach Dan Meske said after the match. “To watch them keep getting better and keep battling together, it was really cool. I kept looking Chloe in the eye, (and) I kept saying, ‘Good things are about to happen, because we got you on the court.'”
UofL will battle No. 3 seed Texas A&M next week in Lincoln, Nebraska, for a spot in the Elite Eight.
Here’s everything you need to know.
Coverage during the match:
The Cardinals are headed to their seventh straight regional and first with Dan Meske as head coach after taking the fifth set 15-12.
First one to 15, winning by a margin of two, advances to the Sweet 16.
Kalyssa Blackshear ends a 3-0 scoring run by Marquette for the third time this set to clinch it for Louisville. Winner takes all in the fifth.
Chloe Chicoine is one kill away from tying her career high. She has 26 after four sets and a hitting percentage of 42. Nayelis Cabello leads all players with 55 assists.
UofL jumps to an early lead, responding to a loss in the third set much like it did to a loss in the first. The Cards went on a 3-0 scoring run, prompting a Golden Eagles timeout.
The Golden Eagles take a hard-fought victory and are one set away from upsetting the Cardinals. Louisville took its first lead at 23-22 courtesy of a Cara Cresse kill, but then Marquette closed out the frame.
The Purdue transfer has 21 kills and counting, surpassing her season-best 17 set in UofL’s ACC finale against Stanford on Nov. 29. Her career high is 27 from when the Boilermakers played the Penn State Nittany Lions in 2023.
After a lopsided second set, Marquette opened the third on an 8-1 run. Since then, the Cards have started clawing back and snatched away momentum from the Golden Eagles, thanks in large part to Chloe Chicoine’s three kills.
The Cards came out aggressive in the second set, notching 21 kills, after dropping the first with 16. Chloe Chicoine had seven of those 21 kills, bringing her total to 14. She is responsible for 14.5 points, which leads all players.
After dropping the first set, UofL jumps to a 9-4 lead. The Cards have seven kills in this set alone compared with Marquette’s two. Chloe Chicoine has nine kills so far tonight.
The Golden Eagles take the first frame. Both teams had 16 kills, but Louisville’s five service errors and three attack errors to Marquette’s two and one make the difference.
Chloe Chicoine for UofL and Natalie Ring for Marquette lead all players with seven kills apiece.
The Cards and Golden Eagles are trading scores, having tied eight times and exchanged the lead five times. Chloe Chicoine leads UofL with four blocks, while Marquette’s Natalie Ring has five.
Today’s match between No. 2 seed Louisville and Marquette is scheduled for 6 p.m. at L&N Arena.
Buy Louisville volleyball tickets here
The match between the Cardinals (25-6) and the Golden Eagles (18-10) will not air on a traditional TV channel.
It’ll be on ESPN+, which is available exclusively via livestream. Click here to subscribe.
If Louisville wins tonight, it will play the winner of No. 3 seed Texas A&M vs. No. 6 seed TCU next week in Lincoln, Nebraska. Here’s a look at the tournament schedule:
- First and second rounds: Dec. 4-6
- Regionals: Dec. 11-14
- Semifinals: Dec. 18 at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri
- Championship: Dec. 21 at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri
Click here to view the complete bracket.
- Aug. 29: Louisville 3, Auburn 0
- Aug. 31: Louisville 3, Morehead State 0
- Sept. 1: Louisville 3, St. John’s 0
- Sept. 7: Louisville 3, Illinois 1
- Sept. 10: Texas 3, Louisville 2
- Sept. 12: Louisville 3, Creighton 1
- Sept. 13: Louisville 3, UNI 1
- Sept. 14: Louisville 3, Rice 1
- Sept. 18: Kentucky 3, Louisville 2
- Sept. 22: Louisville 3, Western Kentucky 0
- Sept. 26: Louisville 3, Boston College 0
- Sept. 28: Louisville 3, Syracuse 0
- Oct. 3: Louisville 3, California 0
- Oct. 5: Louisville 3, Stanford 1
- Oct. 10: Louisville 3, Virginia Tech 0
- Oct. 12: Louisville 3, Virginia 1
- Oct. 17: SMU 3, Louisville 2
- Oct. 19: Pitt 3, Louisville 2
- Oct. 24: Louisville 3, Duke 0
- Oct. 26: Louisville 3, North Carolina 1
- Oct. 29: Louisville 3, Notre Dame 0
- Nov. 1: Louisville 3, Notre Dame 0
- Nov. 7: Louisville 3, N.C. State 0
- Nov. 9: Louisville 3, Wake Forest 1
- Nov. 13: Louisville 3, Florida State 1
- Nov. 16: Louisville 3, Miami 2
- Nov. 21: Louisville 3, Georgia Tech 1
- Nov. 23: Louisville 3, Clemson 0
- Nov. 26: Pitt 3, Louisville 0
- Nov. 29: Stanford 3, Louisville 2
- Dec. 5: Louisville 3, Loyola Chicago 0 (NCAA Tournament First Round)
- Dec. 6: Louisville 3, Marquette 2 (NCAA Tournament Second Round)
- Dec. 11 or 12: Louisville vs. Texas A&M (NCAA Tournament Regional Round)
Reach college sports enterprise reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com and follow her on X @petitus25. Subscribe to her “Full-court Press” newsletter here for a behind-the-scenes look at how college sports’ biggest stories are impacting Louisville and Kentucky athletics.
Sports
Steve Paul Ties 60m School Record in Season Opener
MIDDLETOWN, CT. – The Wesleyan men’s track and field team opened the 2025-26 season nearly where the team left off in 2025 as Steve Paul ’28 tied the school record for the men’s indoor 60m dash at the Wesleyan Winter Invite as four took home first place.
HIGHLIGHTS:
- Set in 2012 by LaDarius Drew, Paul tied Drew’s 6.93 time and claimed first place in the event, the first of the day for the Cardinals.
- Placing first in the 400m, Jack Park ’29 ran a 51.96 in his first outing with the Cardinals. Alex Hofmann ’29 placed second with a final time of 52.12.
- In the 3,000m, Coleman Love ’28 took first with a top time of 8:56.70. Cullen McCleary ’29 followed in second, finishing with a 9:26.64.
- Hyatt Hicks ’28 finished second in the 600m, crossing the finish line at 1:25.87.
- The 4x400m relay team of Hicks, Hofmann, Reese Connors ’29 and Auren Director ’29 placed second with a combined 3:28.35.
- In the field events, Rami Hayes-Messinger ’26 took first in the weight throw with a final distance of 15.88m. Hayes-Messinger also placed second in the shot put, throwing for 13.25m.
- Taking third in the high jump, Jonah Levine-Fried ’29 finished with a distance of 1.70.
The Cardinals return to action in 2026, beginning the new year on Saturday, Jan. 10, when they host the Wesleyan Indoor Invite.
Sports
Golden Eagles fall in NCAA Second Round to No. 9 Louisville
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The Marquette University women’s volleyball team (18-11, 11-5 BIG EAST) fell to two-seed and No. 9 Louisville (26-6, 16-4 ACC) Saturday evening in the NCAA Tournament Second Round at the L&N Federal Credit Union Arena.
Natalie Ring led the Golden Eagles with 29 kills and a .324 hitting percentage, also adding six digs. Hattie Bray put up 11 kills and a season-high nine blocks, while Elena Radeff tallied 10 kills and seven digs. Isabela Haggard set a new MU NCAA match record with 55 assists, while Adriana Studer tallied 20 digs.
It was a game of runs to start, with a four-point burst from MU led by four kills from Ring to put the Golden Eagles up early. Louisville responded with a four of their own to take the advantage, but Parks tallied a pair of kills to string three together and lead again, 10-9. Another Cardinal run brought the lead back, and each team traded points with MU holding a 15-14 advantage at the media timeout. MU continued to side out, but another Ring kill forced a Cardinal timeout, up 21-18. A Bray and Radeff block, followed by an ace set up set point for Marquette, and a service error gave MU the 25-21 set one win.
Louisville started the second strong, building a three-point edge, but the big block of Bray and Haggard kept MU within striking distance. A three-point burst from the home team forced a Marquette timeout trailing 9-4, and the Cardinals extended that rally to six to open a 12-4 lead. Despite the fight from Marquette, Louisville continued to side out at a high pace and kept the pressure on the Golden Eagles. The home team took the second set, 25-11, to even the match at one set each.
Marquette held the advantage in the third, starting with a 5-1 run fueled by blocks from Bray, Ring, and Radeff, with a Radeff ace to force a break from Louisville. MU kept the gas pedal down, running a string of five points together to break open a 7-1 lead. Louisville put together a 3-0 stretch to cut the MU lead to three and force a timeout, with Radeff ending the run on a kill. Ring showed her prowess, keeping Marquette ahead by a slim two-point margin, with both teams fighting to take the important third set. Marquette was the first to 20, with Ring going on a solo three-point burst to put the Golden Eagles ahead, 22-19, forcing a Louisville timeout. Out of the timeout, Louisville clawed back to take a 23-22 advantage, but Marquette responded with authority and rallied off three-straight to take the third, 25-25, and a pivotal third set victory.
The Cardinals responded to their setback in the last set, jumping out to a 10-4 advantage early, but the Golden Eagles stayed scrappy, snapping off a 3-0 run to trim the deficit to three. Louisville maintained their steady attack, with another run forcing a Marquette timeout trailing 19-13. With the pressure put on, Louisville secured a 25-19 fourth set win to force a decisive fifth set.
It was a thriller in the fifth, with Louisville taking an early advantage. Marquette kept fighting, keeping it tight, but UL was the first to eight as the Golden Eagles switched to their starting bench in front of the Blue and Gold faithful. The Cardinals were first to double digits, with the Golden Eagles taking a timeout to settle the crowd, down three points. MU fought back with a three-point run powered by a pair of kills from Ring, pulling the Golden Eagles within two. Louisville would then find the match winner with a high kill off the block, winning the match in five sets.
NOTABLES
- Natalie Ring extended her double-digit kills streak to 32 with 29 today, hitting the mark in every match since 11/30/2024.
- Natalie Ring set a new career-best with 29 kills.
- Natalie Ring tallied 20+ kills for the eighth time this season.
- Hattie Bray set a season-high in blocks with nine.
- Isabela Haggard set a new MU NCAA match record with 55 assists.
- Elena Radeff tallied her highest kill total (10) since a 10 kill effort at Creighton on 11/1.
- MU dropped to 2-6 in five-set matches in 2025.
POSTGAME COMMENTS
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Sports
IUP track and field opens indoor season with strong multi-event win, several top-10s at Bucknell
LEWISBURG, Pa. – Indiana University of Pennsylvania opened its indoor track and field season with a series of top-10 performances, highlighted by senior multi-event standout Renee Simmonds, who won the women’s pentathlon at the Bucknell Bison Opener on Friday and Saturday.
Simmonds totaled 3,102 points to take the event, finishing first in the shot put (12.03 meters) and adding top-four marks in the hurdles, high jump and long jump. She also placed 11th in the open shot put with a throw of 10.95 meters.
On the track, freshman Sterlene Scott posted IUP’s top sprint performance of the weekend, running 7.84 seconds in the 60-meter dash prelims to tie for 10th in a field of nearly 50 sprinters. Emma Laughlin finished close behind in 7.95.
In the hurdles, Bryna Kelly advanced to finals with an 8.95 preliminary time before finishing seventh overall.
The Crimson Hawks also earned several solid mid-distance results. Cailey Trosch ran 1:04.08 in the 400, placing 10th, and freshman Alyssa Hoover opened her collegiate career with a 13th-place finish in the 800 (2:30.93). Sarah Pidcoe followed in 1:07.58 in the 400.
In field events, IUP landed four top-20 finishes in the long jump. Nataiah Robertson led the group with a ninth-place leap of 5.09 meters. Maura Penrod (4.91) and Hannah Yeykal (4.80) also scored top-20 placements. In the pole vault, Jenna Wilt cleared 3.25 meters to tie for eighth.
In the triple jump, sophomore Jahnaya Wimberley placed fourth with a mark of 11.09 meters, while Sara Dewyer (9.82) and Ava Blair (9.56) added depth for the Hawks.
On the men’s side, Alex Amador recorded IUP’s top individual track finish, taking fifth in the 800 meters in 2:00.23. Gabe Pacyna (2:02.07), Gavin McGinn (2:06.42) and Jason Clifford (2:09.16) helped IUP place four runners inside the top 20.
In the sprints, Demitrius Carter ran 7.18 in the 60-meter dash prelims, while Donovan Ellis clocked 7.20. Antonio Harrison placed 26th in the 200 with a time of 23.80.
Hurdler Zach Debose narrowly missed the 60-meter hurdle final after finishing ninth in the prelims in 8.67. Freshman Gabriel Olaniyi followed in 9.66.
The men also produced a trio of 3,000-meter efforts, led by Anthony Solis, who ran 9:56.65, and throwers who contributed multiple entries in the shot and weight fields.
IUP will continue its indoor schedule next weekend as the Crimson Hawks prepare for the full PSAC slate leading into championship season.
Sports
NCAA Volleyball Tournament live recap
Texas A&M volleyball swept Campbell Friday night in the first round of the NCAA Tournament behind 18 kills from Logan Lednicky. Now, in the second round with a trip to Lincoln, Neb. on the line for the Sweet Sixteen, the Aggies (24-4) have to battle their way through TCU, a team that beat them in five sets earlier this season.
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Texas A&M outside hitter Emily Hellmuth (4) is blocked by TCU setter Ella Foti (20) during the NCAA Division I volleyball playoff game at Reed Arena on Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025 in College Station, Texas.
Aaron E. Martinez/Austin American-StatesmanThe Horned Frogs swept Stephen F. Austin Friday night to reach the second round.
MORE: What a conference semifinals exit means for NCAA Tournament
MORE: Jerritt Elliott welcomes challenges as UT a No. 1 seed in NCAA Tournament
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The September match in Fort Worth between the Horned Frogs and Aggies was a close finish. Both teams traded sets until the fifth when unfortunate A&M errors gave way to a 4-1 TCU run to give the Horned Frogs the win. Outside hitter Emily Hellmuth led the Aggies with 20 kills and middle blocker Ifenna Cos-Okpalla had six blocks.
TCU is the sixth seed in the NCAA Tournament after finishing the season 20-10. Despite a few stumbles in the season the Horned Frogs are a scrappy team led by outside hitters Evan Hendrix and Becca Kelly who combine for 837 kills.

Texas Longhorns setter Ella Swindle (1) celebrates a score during the game against Texas A&M at Reed Arena on Friday, Oct. 31, 2025 in College Station, Texas.
Aaron E. Martinez/Austin American-StatesmanHere are updates on Texas A&M’s second round game against TCU:
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Texas A&M vs TCU live updates
FINAL TEXAS A&M 29, TCU 27
Set 4: Texas A&M 29, TCU 27
TCU gets into the redzone first on a hard kill from Hendrix and she follows it up with her fifth kill in the last six TCU points. A&M gets a gift with a bad TCU set and Cos-Okpalla goes to the service line. The Horned Frogs respond by swinging at Stowers. Fitch goes for the kill to put the Aggies in the redzone but a TCU kill finds its way inside the backline. Texas A&M finds Fitch again for the kill. TCU swings and gets set point 24-21. But Stowers cuts the deficit to two and TCU challenges there was a net violation, the call stands and A&M keeps the point. TCU pulls the challenge card again saying there was an Aggies touch on a TCU kill, the call stands there was no Aggies touch. Stowers wins the joust to tie the match. TCU swings for the lead but serves an error to tie it at 25. TCU takes set point again after a long kill but Cos-Okpalla and Lednicky tag-team a block to tie the match at 26. Cos-Okpalla makes it match point for A&M on an offspeed but Finch is blocked to tie the match at 27. The Horned Frogs try to block Lednicky but she tools the block for match point again. Cos-Okpala serves an ace and Fitch makes sure its a kill with a throw down at the net.
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Set 4: TCU 19, Texas 18
Coming out of the timeout, the Horned Frogs tie the match with an offspeed ball. Cos-Okpalla responds with a block point but TCU ties it with a kill. Lednicky’s sharp angle shot gives the Aggies the lead back. A poor TCU set gives A&M a free ball which they take advantage of with a Lednicky kill. A second straight kill form Lednicky swings momentum to A&M. TCU finds Hendrix for three straight kills and the lead.
Set 4: Texas A&M 14, TCU 13
Cos-Okpalla’s service pressure ends on a TCU kill from Hendrix and she follows it up with an ace. Perkins responds with an emphatic swing from the middle. Hellmuth tries to snag a kill on an out of system point, but it lands out; she gets the kill back to make it 12-9 TCU. Stowers loses a joust but after a few scramble possessions on both sides of the net Perkins gets the block point for A&M. The Aggies follow with a 4-0 run for the lead and TCU is forced to call a timeout.
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Set 4: TCU 9, Texas A&M 7
After the Aggies call a timeout, the Horned Frogs continue with a 2-0 run but a Hellmuth kill stops Horned Frog momentum. The Aggies go on a 4-0 run of their own and forces TCU to call a timeout.
Set 4: TCU 7, Texas A&M 3
TCU and the Aggies open the set trading points but Cos-Okpalla solo block reinvigorates the Aggies. The Horned Frogs get the point back on a long kill that touches Stowers’ fingers. TCU goes on a 5-0 run and A&M calls a timeout.
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Set 3: Texas A&M 25, TCU 23
Freshman Megan Fitch serves a free ball to TCU and Hellmuth gets the kill to take the set.
Set 3: Texas A&M 24, TCU 23
Out of the timeout, TCU retakes the lead on a line kill but Morrison uses the challenge card and the call is confirmed that the ball landed in. Lednicky responds with a strong kill to make it 23 all. Perkins and Waak combine for a block that lands on TCU’s side of the night. With Aggies on serve for set point, TCU calls timeout.
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Set 3: Texas A&M 22, TCU 22
Lednicky’s backrow kill dances at the top of the net and lands on TCU’s side. The Horned Frogs swing through the block for the two point lead and the redzone. A Stowers’ shot lands in the back corner to cut the defecit but the Horned Frogs tool the block again. Lednicky cuts the defecit to one and puts A&M in the redzone. TCU serve an error to get the Aggies within one and Cos-Okpalla serves a powerful ace that gets TCU out of system and the bad TCU set forces a timeout.
Set 3: TCU 19, Texas A&M 17
Lednicky is hitting .276 in the match and is giving the Aggies important kills to stay alive. Hellmuth swings into the block and TCU’s front line efforts tie the match at 16. Hellmuth serves an error after her kill gave the Aggies the lead back. Stowers’ kill dribbles the top of the net but falls on A&M’s side and a Lednicky kill is blocked, forcing A&M to take a timeout.
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Set 3: TCU 13, Texas A&M 13
Stowers and Cos-Okpalla combine for a block but TCU’s kill finds the back line. A&M catches a break and a TCU kill goes out of bounds to tie the match at 10. Waak serves A&M’s fourth ace but the Horned Frogs take the sharp angle kill to tie the match at 11. TCU takes the lead on an ace that lands to the left of Underwood’s foot. Lednicky’s kill ties it at 12 but TCU retakes the lead on a kill but Cos-Okpalla ties the match at 13.
Set 3: TCU 8, Texas A&M 8
Stowers slams a kill to open the third set. Cos-Okpalla follows it up with a kill after TCU serve receives bumps the ball back to the Aggies. Waak serves an error to put TCU on the board. A&M goes to Cos-Okpalla again for the kill. TCU tools the block and finds open floor to make it 4-3, but Hellmuth cannot be stopped on the cross court shot. Lednicky swings into the block for the kill. A Hellmuth kill extends A&M’s lead but she follows with a service error. TCU ties it with a kill that goes line and takes the lead after blocking Stowers. Lednicky swings for the tie.
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Set 2: Texas A&M 25, TCU 22
TCU gets in the redzone on a kill from the middle. A free ball to A&M creates a chance for Hellmuth to go offspeed and land in the front row. Morrison uses his bigs to get to set point after a Lednicky kill. TCU puts off two set points and forces an A&M timeout, but the Horned Frogs come out of it and serves an error to tie the match.
Set 2: Texas A&M 22, TCU 19
A&M attack errors keep the Horned Frogs close. A free ball to TCU almost ties it but a dig from Applegate finds its way to Stowers for the kill to get in the redzone. The last three points came from Stowers kills and Hellmuth’s kill forces a TCU timeout.
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Set 2: Texas A&M 18, TCU 16
A foot dig from Stowers is successful but TCU takes the point. Morrison thinks about challenging the next play, saying there was a touch on a Lednicky kill but decides against it. Stowers helps the Aggies hold onto its lead and Lednicky goes line for a kill. Stowers cannot seem to find the court after her third service error. Postseason Lednicky is leading the way after second straight point. TCU’s 2-0 run ends after a Hellmuth kill.
Set 2: Texas A&M 13, TCU 10
TCU stops the Aggies run with a kill that finds the back corner but Perkins slams it in the middle to keep the Aggies lead at five. Perkins taps the ball over after a TCU attack error and it’s followed by Hellmuth’s sharp angle kill. TCU goes on a 2-0 run but it’s stopped after Lednicky soars out of the back row for a kill. Hellmuth serves an error. Stowers splits two defenders for a kill. TCU is starting to come alive and Kelly is leading the way.
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Set 2: Texas A&M 7, TCU 2
Stowers takes a sharp angle for the kill to open set two and is followed by a Cos-Okpalla block. Hellmuth’s kill lands in the far corner to send Cos-Okpalla to the service line to help the Aggies go on a 3-0 run. Perkins has her prints on two points for the Aggies with a block assist and a kill. A Hellmuth kill forces a TCU timeout.
Set 1: TCU 25, Texas A&M 23
Cos-Okpalla service pressure and a Perkins kill ties the match for the Aggies. But the Horned Frogs tool the block for set point and win the set after a few jousts.
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Set 1: TCU 23, Texas A&M 22
Stowers’ kill finds a TCU finger for the kill. The Horned Frogs go line for the kill to get into the redzone and get further after Stowers swings into the block. A&M challenges a block touch on a Cos-Okpalla kill and the call was reversed to be 21-19 TCU. Lednicky gets the Aggies into the redzone by tooling the TCU block but a service error extends TCU’s lead. Aggies find Lednicky for two straight kills to get within one. TCU calls a timeout.
Set 1: TCU 19, Texas A&M 17
A TCU service and attack error gets the Aggies within one. A&M challenges a ruling that the ball was ruled in on a servce error and the call was confirmed, losing the challenge for the Aggies. The Horned Frogs tap the ball over the net to extend the lead to three but the next play TCU was called in the net, giving A&M the ball. A cross court Stowers kill makes it 17-16 TCU. The set is tied at 17 after a TCU kill goes long but an Aggies attack error gives the Horned Frogs the lead back. A&M calls a timeout after a Horned Frogs ace.
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Set 1: TCU 15, Texas A&M 12
Stowers drops a ball to get into double-digits after a TCU dig goes back to A&M’s side of the net. Cos-Okpalla’s ace cuts the deficit but an A&M attack error into the block forces a timeout.
Set 1: TCU 12, Texas A&M 9
TCU goes on a 2-0 run after to gritty points to tie the match 7-7, but a service error from the Horned Frogs gives A&M the lead. TCU ties it by going line on the kill. Stowers tries to go for the cross court shot on a tight angle and along the line but it lands out to give TCU a 10-8 lead. Horned Frogs could not build enough momentum and serves an error to make it 11-9.
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Set 1: Texas A&M 5, TCU 3
Stowers lights it up with a kill from the middle of the net to open the match. After a TCU kill lands in the middle of the court, the Waak finds Stowers again for a the kill and she follows it up with an ace. TCU responds with an offspeed kill. Cos-Okpalla serves
Texas A&M starting lineup
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TCU starting lineup
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Texas A&M vs TCU start time/ TV info
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Sports
Hartford Women’s Track and Field Shine at Yale University Season Opener
NEW HAVEN, Conn. – On Saturday, the University of Hartford women’s indoor track & field team kicked off the season competing at the Yale Season Opener in New Haven, delivering standout performances setting new all-time school records.
Rapid Recap:
- Senior Madison DiPasquale (Wallingford, Conn.) was busy today filling up the stat sheet and breaking all-time records at Hartford. She placed third in the weight throw event tossing a distance of 15.98 meters. Madison has set a new record for furthest weight throw distance in Hartford history, outbeating the previous holder by 0.66 meters. In the shot put event she finished in fifth place launching the shot put a good distance of 12.45 meters. DiPasquale beat her own record set last year at 11.82 to strengthen her position at second-best all-time at Hartford.
- Junior Jordan Murphy (East Hampton, Conn.) as she earned third place overall in the high jump event clearing a height of 1.65m. With this jump she is now added to the top ten list in Hartford’s record books tying for seventh place.
- Sophomore Ella Stephenson (Ledyard, Conn.) had a strong showing in the women’s 800m race earning second place overall with a final time of 2:26.74. Just behind Stephenson was freshman Leah Valentino (Beacon Falls, Conn.) finishing in third place just a few seconds after at 2:28.32.
- Just behind DiPasquale in the shot put event was senior Tommie Barker (Canton, Conn.) finishing in eighth place with a distance of 11.73m. Barker is now tied for third best of all-time.
- Junior Caroline Crocker (Bernardston, Mass.) took eighth place in the women’s 60m hurdles with a time of 9.24 seconds. This time puts her tied for fourth best of all-time in Hartford’s record books.
Post Game Press:
“My intentions coming into this meet were to just go out there, hit the technical cues, and just throw,” said senior Madison DiPasquale (Wallingford, Conn.). “On the throw I just did what I needed to do and it just clicked! I am going to use this as a confidence boost for the remainder of the season and hopefully continue to climb.”
“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.
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