Sports
The Bold Type, with Commissioner Dan Butterly – June 23, 2025
Story Links Good morning! I spent most of last week in Asheville, North Carolina, attending the Division I Collegiate Commissioner’s Association meetings. To say there was tension in the room is an understatement, but the meetings remained professional, and valuable information was shared. There is far too much occurring in NCAA Division I […]

Good morning!
I spent most of last week in Asheville, North Carolina, attending the Division I Collegiate Commissioner’s Association meetings. To say there was tension in the room is an understatement, but the meetings remained professional, and valuable information was shared.
There is far too much occurring in NCAA Division I athletics and The Big West for me to take some time off this summer, but for those at the beach: Friday marked the 50th anniversary of Jaws, which premiered in theaters on June 20, 1975. Please be careful out there! Our song of the day is none other than the Jaws main theme — an appropriately ominous soundtrack for the CFP-4’s efforts to take full governance control over Division I.
Let’s dive in to The Bold Type!
WELCOME TO THE BIG WEST, SACRAMENTO STATE!
We proudly announced last week that Sacramento State will join The Big West as a full member beginning with the 2026–27 academic year — bringing our total membership to 12 institutions as of July 1, 2026. Read more >>>
The Big West staff and institutional athletic administrators have work to do on new regular-season scheduling models, reviewing championship formats and continuing to evaluate the impact of the House-NCAA settlement on budgets and sport programs, but the addition of Sac State is truly a historic moment for The Big West. Welcome to the Hornets!
See some of the initial reactions on social media here and watch the media press conference with Sacramento State President Dr. Luke Wood, Director of Athletics Mark Orr and myself here >>>.
CONGRATULATIONS
- To UC Santa Barbara alumnus and NBA rookie Ajay Mitchell, NBA Champion with the Oklahoma City Thunder! The former Gaucho guard was a three-time All-Big West selection, garnering First Team honors in the final two seasons, and was the league’s Player of the Year and Championship MVP in 2022-23. In 2023-24, the Ans, Liege, Belgium product averaged 20.0 points, on 50.4 percent shooting, 4.0 rebounds and 4.0 assists per game. Mitchell is the sixth Big West alum to hoist the Larry O’Brien trophy.
Drafted 38th overall out of California-Santa Barbara in 2024 and now NBA CHAMPION in Year 1… Ajay Mitchell! pic.twitter.com/NzFf16kGYX
— NBA (@NBA) June 23, 2025
- To the fifty-four student-athletes representing six Big West member-institutions who were honored as members of the College Sports Communicators (CSC) 2025 Academic All-District® Men’s and Women’s At-Large Teams! Read more >>>
- To The Big West student-athletes who took nine slots on the United States Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) All-America First and Second Teams! Read more >>>
- To The Big West track & field individual award winners, announced Friday after votes from our head coaches! Read more >>>
MEET THE WOLVERINES WITH UVU BROADCAST VOICE BRICE LARSON
With Utah Valley University set to join The Big West in July 2026, excitement is already building. Hear from UVU broadcast voice Brice Larson on the transition and momentum surrounding Wolverine athletics. Read more >>>
NEW NCAA GOVERNANCE STRUCTURE
The DI Governance Working Group has submitted its final recommendations to the NCAA DI Board of Directors. The recommendations still include 65% weighted voting in favor of the CFP-4. If this passes the NCAA DI Board of Directors, four conferences will make the major decisions for all of NCAA Division I moving forward.
I remain vocal in opposing this model — it centralizes power inappropriately and undercuts the broader Division I membership. Read more >>>
MEDIA UPDATES THAT MAY BE INTERESTING
- Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger reports that “commissioners received the latest version of the new NCAA governance model on Wednesday. The primary piece of the proposal – 65% weighted voting powers for A4 – remains unchanged. The DI Board of Directors will discuss at their meeting next week but no action is expected yet. The 65% percent voting powers provides the Big Ten, SEC, Big 12 and ACC control over legislation and rule-making in certain aspects – if they all agree. In this model, three of the four voting in the same way fails to reach the 51% threshold – a key point. (link)
- Big West Commissioner Dan Butterly writes in his latest blog post that “by every measure, The Big West – and hundreds of Division I institutions like us — are advancing the mission of higher education through athletic opportunity. And yet, despite this strength, we may have no seat in the future Division I governance system – because of a proposal that would concentrate authority based primarily on financial strength. That cannot be the model for the future of Division I.” Butterly goes on to submit that “having served this past year on the NCAA Council, the Council Coordination Committee, and as Chair of the Men’s Basketball Oversight Committee, I have seen firsthand how robust discussion across conferences results in well-vetted legislation that ultimately benefits the entire Division I membership. … The proof is clear: most Council votes today pass with overwhelming or unanimous support because of the collaborative work that happens in that room. This is why weighted voting is unnecessary. When all conferences are engaged in the legislative process, consensus is achieved through shared understanding, not disproportionate influence. The structure itself produces balanced outcomes without the need to advantage any single group. We have already seen, in complex issues such as the NCAA’s unfortunate recent settlement calculations of institutional liability, how limiting input to a small group can lead to unintended consequences for many conferences and institutions. Broader representation allows for a more thorough evaluation of complex issues that affect every Division I member.” Ultimately, Butterly contends that “this is not simply a debate about football. This is a defining decision about who governs higher education and intercollegiate athletics. The question before you is simple: Will you lead for the full breadth of Division I — or allow governance to serve only those with the largest football revenues?” (link)
- Another House case appeal has hit the docket. USA Today’s Steve Berkowitz: “Another group of female athletes who objected to the House-NCAA settlement has filed notice that they are appealing to the 9th Circuit. This group is represented, in part, by lawyers from a firm called EQUITY IX, LLC, which works on Title IX, gender equity and NIL matters.” (link); Here’s the full filing. (link)
- Big West Commissioner Dan Butterly joins College.town’s Kristen Eargle at the 2025 NACDA Convention for a candid conversation about the House Settlement, President Charlie Baker’s address to the membership and Butterly’s message to his counterparts on the proposed governance model. Regarding the governance proposal, Butterly notes: “You start to look at representation, and how we move forward as Division I, and if we’re not moving forward collaboratively and have diversity of thought in these meeting rooms because there’s a lot of diversity in Division I, I think we’re setting ourselves up for potential failure, potential additional lawsuits and other issues down the line if we try to shrink it too much and don’t have more voices in the room.” Butterly also points out the description of Big West schools as “smaller schools” is a misnomer because “if the Big West were a member of the CFP 5, we would have the second most enrollment within the CFP 5 conferences so if you’re calling them big schools and calling us little schools, the Big West would actually rank second within there. The Big Ten has a larger enrollment on average than the Big West Conference, but we would be the second most-attended or most-enrolled conference. … So, to call us small schools does a significant disservice to the Big West Conference or any conference that has pretty significant enrollments at public universities. Maybe, yes, we have smaller athletic department budgets because we don’t have major college football…but we’re not smaller schools.” Full Q&A. (link)
- Cal Poly will not reinstate its swimming and diving programs. A three-month fundraising campaign led by swimming and diving student-athletes raised nearly $9M, but fell short of the $15M threshold Cal Poly President Jeffrey Armstrong required to save the program. A letter from Armstrong this week: “This is an unfortunate reality given the approved NCAA House settlement, state budget and the tenuous situation moving forward for both the state and the NCAA. I want to reiterate that the significant and unequitable changes in the NCAA and the House settlement (and new organizations resulting from this settlement) had an impact that weighed heavily in this decision.” (link)
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“The best way to predict the future is to create it.” Credited to Peter Drucker
I am motivated and excited this morning as I think about the future of The Big West. In 2026-27, we will have twelve like-minded institutions that are excited about their future in The Big West, believe in our strategic plan, our brand and sport philosophies. I am hopeful our current student-athletes are excited and future student-athletes see the tremendous benefits of competing in a strengthening DI conference that is based in a outstanding footprint in the west. To college sports fans and media, we welcome you to jump on The Big West bus and enjoy what is to be an outstanding ride ahead.
Have a great week ahead.
Be bold!
Dan
Sports
Men’s Volleyball Adds Alex Knight as Assistant Coach
LOS ANGELES – UCLA head men’s volleyball coach John Hawks announced on Thursday that the program has hired Alex Knight as an assistant coach. Knight returns to Westwood after concluding his professional playing career in Germany in 2025 with SWD Powervolleys Düren in the German Bundesliga. He also played for the Bruins and received both […]

Knight returns to Westwood after concluding his professional playing career in Germany in 2025 with SWD Powervolleys Düren in the German Bundesliga. He also played for the Bruins and received both his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from UCLA, where he helped the Bruins win national titles in 2023 and 2024.
“We are thrilled to welcome Alex back home to Westwood,” head coach John Hawks said. “Alex brings a winning pedigree both from his time at UCLA where he was an AVCA All-American and a two-time national champion, and from his professional playing days. Alex is a Bruin through and through, and I can’t wait to see the impact he will make on the young men in our program.”
Knight had a successful season in Germany in 2025, helping his club team to the finals of the German Cup, and a sixth-place finish in the league standings at the end of the season. He returns to Westwood having made appearances in 109 matches for the Bruins between 2020 and 2024.
“I am so excited to be coming back home to UCLA,” Knight said. “My time as a student-athlete was a dream come true, but I know that there is unfinished business for me in Westwood. Thank you to Coach Hawks for giving me this opportunity — I can’t wait to step into this new role and help bring more National Championships home for this program.”
While at UCLA as a player, Knight played in a total of 109 matches, playing both at outside hitter and at libero. While playing primarily at outside hitter, Knight totaled 635 kills over five seasons between 2020 and 2024, with a career-high of 257 kills and a .332 hitting percentage as a redshirt junior in 2023. For his efforts, Knight was named a second-team AVCA All-American and a MPSF first-team selection.
Knight played a key role for the Bruins in both the 2023 and 2024 NCAA National Collegiate title runs. In the 2023 NCAA tournament, Knight recorded 21 kills, including 15 in the final, where the Bruins beat Hawai’i in four sets to claim their 20th national championship. After the tournament, Knight was named the most outstanding player of the tournament.
His role was different during the 2024 title run, as he played primarily at libero down the stretch for the Bruins. Knight finished the year with 89 kills, hit .350 on the year, recorded 70 digs, and played every set of the Bruins’ title run in the NCAA tournament as UCLA captured its 21st national championship.
UCLA men’s volleyball enters the 2026 season fresh off another strong season in 2025. The Bruins, under first-year head coach John Hawks, made the NCAA Championship title match for the third consecutive year, won over 20 matches for the third consecutive season, and claimed the MPSF regular season title for the third consecutive year. To conclude the season, outside hitter Cooper Robinson was named the MPSF Player of the Year, while Robinson, Zach Rama, Andrew Rowan, and Cameron Thorne were all named AVCA All-Americans.
Sports
18 Maine South Athletes Earn NISCA Academic All-American Status
Boys and girls swimmers from Maine South accounted for 18 of Illinois’ 83 NISCA academic All-American athletes to help Illinois rank No. 6 in the nation for most selections.A total of 22 boys and girls from the Journal-area were honored.To earn NISCA academic All-American honors, athletes must be a senior with a GPA above a […]

Boys and girls swimmers from Maine South accounted for 18 of Illinois’ 83 NISCA academic All-American athletes to help Illinois rank No. 6 in the nation for most selections.
A total of 22 boys and girls from the Journal-area were honored.
To earn NISCA academic All-American honors, athletes must be a senior with a GPA above a 3.75 and complete an application.
Maine South went all out and accounted for over 1/5th of the Illinois selections.
Only Texas (262), Michigan (210), Ohio (140), Pennsylva…
Sports
Multimillionaire athlete-turned-CEO says he never buys expensive clothes and only flies economy because he’s in constant fear of running out of cash
The U.K.’s football fans might be used to the idea of their favorite athletes taking private jets, suiting up in designer clothes, and spraying champagne after big wins. But former footballer-turned-entrepreneur Tom Beahon still pinches his pennies—that is, despite also cofounding the £950 million pound ($1.29 billion) premium sportswear brand Castore. “I’ve never bought an […]

The U.K.’s football fans might be used to the idea of their favorite athletes taking private jets, suiting up in designer clothes, and spraying champagne after big wins. But former footballer-turned-entrepreneur Tom Beahon still pinches his pennies—that is, despite also cofounding the £950 million pound ($1.29 billion) premium sportswear brand Castore.
“I’ve never bought an expensive watch, I don’t spend lots of money on clothes. I don’t fly business class…even to Australia, I flew economy,” Beahon recently told the Financial Times. “The whole concept of spending also just doesn’t make me happy.”
Beahon used to be a professional youth football player, starting off by playing for the Tranmere Rovers in his late teens, then joining Spanish club Jerez Industrial CF. But his athletic career abruptly came to an end in his early 20’s, as he and his brother Philip ditched the sport to work finance jobs in London, aiming to raise capital for their sportswear venture. Tom joined Lloyds Bank while Philip worked at Deloitte—and by 2015, Castore was up and running. But their pockets were incredibly tight.
For the first three years, the cofounders and co-CEOs paid themselves £1,000 ($1,355) a month in order to preserve money for the business. Tom said he moved back in with his parents, while Philip’s soon-to-be wife paid his rent. The ex-footballer noted these were “rough times financially,” but even after his sportswear business neared a £1 billion valuation in 2023, none of his frugal habits changed. In fact, he lives a low-key lifestyle out of concern he’ll hit rock-bottom by overspending—with no safety net to catch him.
“I did go through a period where I thought ‘I should do something nice,’ but I have always just been a saver rather than a spender,” Beahon said. “I don’t know if it’s because of my background or having lived through those three years where I was constantly in fear of running out of money.”
“That fear never leaves you. It’s deeply branded on my soul—that day-to-day focus on cash, that paranoia.”
Fortune reached out to Beahon for comment.
Growing up with a frugal mindset has stuck with him
Beahon may not be splurging on silk pajamas and caviar for himself—but he’s more than happy to shell out on his parents. He said he likes to buy them nice holidays and business-class flights because they’re in the “getting to enjoy it” phase of life. Meanwhile, Beahon believes he’s still in the “building stage” with long hours, so no vacations are on his horizon.
Plus, he said it’s nice to be able to spoil his parents who never had the chance to enjoy such luxuries themselves. Beahon grew up proudly working class, living in northern England without much money. His family didn’t go on holidays, and he was well aware that others were better off than he was growing up. It’s another reason he’s so frugal today—and that perspective has stuck with Beahon in leading his highly lucrative athletic-wear business.
“When we started Castore, I vividly remember meeting other entrepreneurs and thinking, ‘There’s very few people like us,’” Beahon said. “Everyone else had a safety net—their parents had spare cash and, if it didn’t go well, they’d do something else and it would be okay. I didn’t feel like that.”
Unlike some silver-spoon-fed founders, Beahon’s family didn’t have a “spare £40,000 lying around.” With a teacher mom and construction-worker dad, Beahon recalled his parents making a “huge sacrifice” by offering to remortgage their house to give them a loan in launching Castore. Those dire circumstances 10 years ago feel very far away from the success his brand brings in now—but his pivot to entrepreneurism was about financial stability, not ultra-wealth, anyway.
“More than wanting to make a certain amount of money, I was driven by the feeling of security. My dad was always nervous about being made redundant, and it affected the family,” he said. “Being successful to the point of having security was always the goal.”
Other millionaires are still pinching their pennies too
Beahon isn’t the only one to skimp out on holidays and expensive clothes, despite being on the come-up of great financial success. Even the youngest self-made billionaire who knocked Taylor Swift off the top spot, Lucy Guo, still shops at Shein and pulls up to work in a Honda Civic.
Serial investor Mark Cuban also didn’t go on vacation for the first seven years of getting his technology company MicroSolutions off the ground. He said that at the time he was “broke as f-ck” living in a three-bedroom apartment with five other roommates, often sleeping on the floor. While all his other friends were going out on the weekends, he was head-down in growing his business out of fear that the whole thing “could fall into the sh-tter.” He later sold MicroSolutions to H&R Block for $6 million.
Actress Keke Palmer was also a millionaire at the age of 12—but just like Beahon, her humble upbringing guided the way she handled money forever. For the first 15 years of her career, all of her travel was business-related. And she still lives under her means in other ways; Palmer said that even with $1 million in her pocket, she’d still only rent out a $1,500 place and affordable car—no need for a Bentley. She got her penny-pinching habits from her parents, who worked with what they had.
“I learned from my parents very early on because they knew their limitations with money and finances,” Palmer told CNBC Make It earlier this year. “I believe in saving and frugality…I don’t play around with that.”
David’s Bridal CEO Kelly Cook may be leading one of the biggest bridal chains in the country, but her early career looked a lot different. Years ago she was barely scraping by, juggling weekend work as a bartender, her college courses, and caring for her young child. Cook described living off pinto beans and cornbread to make her money stretch, her take-home pay of $882 as a single mom barely covering her car note and rent. Now, the 58-year-old is helming a wedding giant with 200 stores across the U.S. and Canada, leading around 5,000 employees.
Sports
Ohio Volleyball Announces 2025 Nonconference Schedule
Story Links ATHENS, Ohio – The Ohio volleyball team has released the nonconference portion of its 2025 schedule, as announced by interim head coach Kenzie Brinkman on Thursday, July 10. “We’re excited to unveil this season’s volleyball schedule. It’s a challenging lineup including a Pittsburgh team that made it to […]

ATHENS, Ohio – The Ohio volleyball team has released the nonconference portion of its 2025 schedule, as announced by interim head coach Kenzie Brinkman on Thursday, July 10.
“We’re excited to unveil this season’s volleyball schedule. It’s a challenging lineup including a Pittsburgh team that made it to the final four for the last four years. It will push our team and showcase the incredible talent we’ve been building the last couple years,” Brinkman said. “With some awesome returners and some incredible new faces, fan can expect high-energy matches and unforgettable moments all season long.”
The Mid-American Conference announced the in-league matchups for the 2025 season in the beginning of April; the release is available HERE. The previously announced MAC schedule has one update, Ohio’s home series versus Western Michigan. The series will now be played on Thursday, Nov. 13 and Friday, Nov. 14.
Ohio will kick off the 2025 season in the Convocation Center with a home tournament, the Bobcat Invitational. The Bobcats will host Bucknell, Iowa State and Eastern Illinois on Friday, Aug. 29 to Sunday, Aug. 31. Ohio will play Bucknell on Friday at 7 p.m. ET. On Saturday, the Bobcats will face Iowa State at 5 p.m. ET. Ohio will conclude the tournament with Eastern Illinois on Sunday at 12 p.m. ET.
The Bobcats will start September with the Chattanooga Classic in Chattanooga, Tenn. Ohio will face Cincinnati on Thursday, Sept. 4 at 6 p.m. ET. On Friday, Sept. 5, the Bobcats will face tournament host, UT Chattanooga, at 12 p.m. ET. Ohio will conclude the Chattanooga Classic on Sunday, Sept. 6 against Jacksonville State at 12 p.m. ET.
Ohio will continue nonconference play at the Tru by Hilton Dayton Beavercreek Invitational in Dayton, Ohio. The Bobcats will kick off the tournament against Ohio State on Friday, Sept. 12 at 3 p.m. ET. On Saturday, Sept. 13, Ohio is set to face Pittsburgh at 2 p.m. ET. The Bobcats will conclude the tournament against Wright State on Sunday, Sept. 14 at 2 p.m. ET.
The final weekend of Ohio’s nonconference schedule will be played at the Charlotte Invitational in Charlotte, N.C. The Bobcats will play two matches on Friday, Sept. 19. Ohio will face Maryland Eastern Shore at 10:30 a.m. ET and tournament host, Charlotte, at 6:30 p.m. ET. Ohio is set to conclude the tournament with a match against Furman on Saturday, Sept. 20 at 12 p.m. ET.
2025 Volleyball Season Tickets
Season tickets for the 2025 Ohio volleyball season are now available HERE. There are three seating options: Courtside ($105), Reserved ($75) and General Admission ($45). The sections for the reserved tickets are 1-4 behind the team bench while the rest of the arena is general admission.
#OUohyeah
Sports
2025 Providence Journal Rhode Island All State Boys Volleyball Team
Here’s how high-school athletes are chosen for The Providence Journal All-State awards The Providence Journal has been selecting high school All-State teams for more than 80 years. Here’s what goes into our calculation. Journal Staff The Providence Journal is proud to announce the 2025 All-State Volleyball first and second teams. The Journal Sports staff, with […]

Here’s how high-school athletes are chosen for The Providence Journal All-State awards
The Providence Journal has been selecting high school All-State teams for more than 80 years. Here’s what goes into our calculation.
Journal Staff
The Providence Journal is proud to announce the 2025 All-State Volleyball first and second teams. The Journal Sports staff, with some help from the coaches associations, determine the first- and second-team members. All first-team members were nominees for Player of the Year in that sport, and winners were announced at the All-State Awards show held June 18 at the Providence Performing Arts Center, featuring Rhode Island FC midfielder Clay Holstad.
The 2025 Providence Journal All-State Boys Volleyball
First Team
Ryan Harrington, North Kingstown
Outside hitter, senior
Harrington was a treat to watch over the last three seasons. He earned a spot on the Journal’s first-team All-State squad last season, and this year, he brings home more honors. The undersized outside hitter was a threat to win a point at any time and for that reason, he’s earned the Providence Journal’s Player of the Year award. Harrington also has a wicked serve and led NK to back-to-back runner-up finishes in Division I. North Kingstown will certainly miss Harrington as he competes for Stevenson University’s beach volleyball team next year.
Charles Pincince, Cranston East
Outside hitter, senior
Pincince was one of the most powerful hitters in the state this past season. His calm demeanor on the court made him the perfect go-to for Cranston East in crunch time and he always delivered. The senior led the Thunderbolts to their first state championship with a five-set win over North Kingstown. Pincince was named to the second team last year, but jumps up to the state’s highest honors for the first time in his career this season.
Cody Tow, North Kingstown
Outside hitter, senior
Tow makes his second consecutive appearance on the Providence Journal All-State first team. His reliable play at the net gave North Kingstown plenty of hitting options over the years. Tow finished with 236 kills this past spring and 24 aces. He also made the Journal’s second team as a sophomore.
Christopher Benell, La Salle
Middle, senior
La Salle wasn’t able to defend its title this season, but that didn’t stop Benell from having a standout spring. The 6-foot-4 middle blocker delivered big hits and was tremendous defensively for the Rams. He finished with 20 solo blocks, and 71 total, with 166 kills. This is his first appearance on the Journal’s All-State team.
Dennis Dixon, Cranston East
Middle, senior
Dixon was probably the most athletic player in the state this past season. His defense helped power Cranston East to the state crown and his hitting ability was a welcome addition. Dixon’s vertical made him a threat, but his best trait was his ability to hang in the air longer than most. The senior could wait until the last second before delivering a hit and it was impossible to defend.
Caleb Xum, Cranston East
Setter, senior
Xum was the best setter in the state this past season. But he made the unselfish move to libero for the state championship. The senior’s defense was more important to Cranston East’s title chances than his ability to direct the offense. Xum was all over the court in the championship match and the Thunderbolts benefited from it as they upset North Kingstown.
Stephen Dufour, North Kingstown
Libero, senior
Dufour lands on the Providence Journal All-State first team for the second straight season. The senior tallied 253 digs this past season with 16 aces in the defensive specialist position. He helped lead NK to a runner-up finish for the second consecutive spring.
The 2025 Providence Journal All-State Boys Volleyball Second Team
OH — Jamilson De Pina Almeida, Central Falls, Senior
OH — Jahmir Evans, La Salle, Senior
OH — Masiah Prak-Preaster, Coventry, Senior
MB — Jackson Colton, Lincoln, Senior
MB — Henry Kenyon, Westerly, Junior
S — Sebastian DeCubellis, Lincoln, Senior
L — Ty Cotta, La Salle, Senior
Sports
Volleyball to Celebrate 50 Years in 2025 – Ole Miss Athletics
OXFORD, Miss. – The Ole Miss volleyball program is set to honor the many who have impacted the program as it celebrates fifty years in advance of the 2025 regular season. Throughout the entirety of the 2025 season, Ole Miss athletics and the volleyball program will honor and recognize many who have contributed to […]

Throughout the entirety of the 2025 season, Ole Miss athletics and the volleyball program will honor and recognize many who have contributed to the success and legacy of the program.
Fans also have the opportunity to ensure success over the next 50 years of Ole Miss volleyball by donating a $50 gift to the Grove Collective in support of the program.
The program has tallied over 800 wins, reached five NCAA Tournaments and won the 2017 NIVC championship. Nineteen student-athletes have earned All-SEC honors, 16 have earned AVCA All-Region and three have been named All-Americans as the program has blossomed over generations of standout student-athletes.
The success of the program has built on the foundation of countless student-athletes who have gone on to earn a degree from the University of Mississippi and take their talents throughout the world.
Be sure to follow OleMissVB on all social platforms and stay tuned for content throughout the season featuring former coaches and players.
Get rewarded for attending events by joining Rebel Rewards powered by Coca-Cola, the official fan loyalty program of the Ole Miss Rebels. Download the Ole Miss Sports mobile app, sign up for a Rebel Rewards account, and start earning points immediately that can be redeemed for exclusive prizes and experiences.
Keep up with all the latest news and information on the Rebels by following Ole Miss Volleyball on X at @OleMissVB, on Instagram at @olemissvb and on Facebook at Ole Miss Volleyball. See exclusive photo and video content from behind the scenes and connect in real time with everything Ole Miss.
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