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The Bold Type, with Commissioner Dan Butterly – Nov. 24, 2025

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Good morning! 

  

The past week had me traveling from The Big West Men’s Soccer Championship in Santa Barbara to presenting before the University of California Board of Regents Working Group on Athletics at UCLA, and to watch current Big West men’s basketball programs compete against future Big West programs — UC Riverside at Cal Baptist and UC Irvine at Utah Valley. It provided a great opportunity to witness the competitiveness of our new members  and to experience more of our new institutions. I have said to our membership and during media interviews that The Big West may be more nationally competitive moving forward, and watching these games did not diminish that sentiment.  Thank you to CBU and UVU for your tremendous hospitality. 

After a significant amount of travel, presentations and NCAA meetings , I needed a little musical motivation. I give you two options this week: “The Marvel Symphony” or an amazing song from Billy Joel – “Turn the Lights Back On”. The Billy Joel song is described as both a classic love song and a commentary on his return to songwriting after a long break — but to me, the music and video say something even deeper: enjoy the time you have today with the family you have around you, because time is moving too fast, and those you love may not be with you this time next year. Keep that in mind as you sit around the Thanksgiving table in the week ahead. 

  

Let’s get to The Bold Type.     


 

   CONGRATULATIONS   

  • To our latest champions, UC Davis men’s water polo! The Aggies downed top-seeded Long Beach State on Sunday in Irvine to earn the league’s automatic berth to the 2025 National Collegiate Men’s Water Polo Championship. Read more >>

  • To The Big West, whose institutions continue to soar in academic excellence according to latest NCAA Graduation Success Rate Data!  Read more >>> 
  • To Cal State Fullerton softball alumna Kelsie Whitmore who became the first overall pick in the inaugural Women’s Professional Baseball League Draft! Read more >>> 
  • To Cal Poly junior Kelli Gaffney who represented The Big West as an individual qualifier in the 2025 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships, hosted by Missouri at Gans Creek Cross Country Course on Saturday. Read more >>>  
  • To UC Santa Barbara senior Lucca Liu defeated North Carolina’s Niels Ratiu in three sets in the round of 64 to highlight The Big West’s efforts on the first day of the 2025 NCAA Men’s Tennis Singles Championship on Tuesday at USTA’s Main Campus in Orlando, Fla.! Read more >>> 
  • To UC Irvine men’s soccer, who solidly represented the league in the NCAA Division I Men’s Soccer Championship last week, falling at Denver. Read more >>> 
  • To UC Irvine women’s basketball for winning the Great Alaska Shootout in Anchorage, Alaska this weekend!
  • To Cal Poly men’s basketball for their defeat of Utah on the road, 92-85, on Thursday night! 
  • To UC Davis men’s basketball for their defeat of Nevada on the road, 75-71 on Tuesday night! 
  • To Long Beach State who announced that LBS Financial Credit Union signed a 12-year, $8.5M sponsorship agreement that will rename the iconic campus sports and events venue the LBS Financial Credit Union Pyramid! Read more >>> 
  • To our FIVE men’s water polo programs ranked in the latest CWPA poll! 

    • No. 7 Long Beach State 
    • No. 8 UC Davis 
    • No. 12 UC Santa Barbara 
    • No. 13 UC San Diego 
    • No.  15 UC Irvine 

  • To our amazing Players of the Week & Month! 


 

   PLEASE JOIN US AT ONE MORE BIG WEST FALL CHAMPIONSHIP    

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Championship Central >>> 

The Hawaiian Islands Presents the 2025 Outrigger Big West Women’s Volleyball Championship is on tap for this week – Nov. 26, 28 & 29 at Long Beach State! 

With three seeds and the final spot up for grabs down to the final serve of the regular season, the seeds are set with UC Davis claiming the outright regular-season crown, their first in The Big West, followed by a three-way tie between No. 2 seed Cal Poly, No. 3 seed Long Beach State and No. 4 seed UC Santa Barbara. CSUN makes their first Championship appearance as the fifth seed with UC Irvine claiming the final spot in the bracket in tiebreaking fashion.  

If you are in the area, I hope you can reserve part of your Thanksgiving week to join us in the  LBS Financial Credit Union Pyramid! Read more about the bracket and get your tickets here >>> 

   MAILBAG – QUESTION FROM A FOLLOWER OF THE BIG WEST  

 Last week, I received a couple of questions from a follower on “X” (formerly Twitter)known as Mike (@LabDogTrainer).  I responded to Mike directly, but as I like to be transparent, I thought answering the question via The Bold Type might be of-interest.

QUESTION 

“Why doesn’t the Big West support Track and Field with some more ? The conference isn’t paying for Championships rings, they dont even broadcast our championships.  Especially with the LA Olympics on the horizon @DanButterly 

ANSWER 

Good morning, Mike. I appreciate the question related to why we currently are not broadcasting our track and field championships. It is a good question. A few years ago, and for two straight years, we asked our institutions for the resources and were able to broadcast all Big West championships. We loved to be able to showcase all of our championships, and it was a major milestone for a conference that does not have the high-financial resources such as the Big 10 and SEC to broadcast all of our championships. Then, many issues started to happen that significantly impacted Big West and institutional finances. The House-NCAA settlement was negotiated and announced, without involvement by The Big West as we were not a named defendant conference. This settlement will cost The Big West and our institutions $31.47 million over a 10-year period, although it is unlikely that any of our former student-athletes will see any of this money.  The payment of the back damages started immediately in 2024-25. We were forced to cut the operating budget due to its impacts. Due to institutions adding sports, The Big West added three additional sports and six additional championships over the past couple of years, which increased our operating costs. The new benefits each institution is allowed to provide student-athletes has driven up operating costs for all of our institutions, which they are gladly doing for our student-athletes, but again, the financial impacts directly impact the funding our institutions are able to provide to The Big West. As the membership approves our operating budget, financial cuts have had to be made. Our institutions made the decision to have The Big West budget broadcast only certain championships, scaling back from broadcasting all championships. Should a championship not be broadcast via The Big West budget, the host institution has the opportunity to broadcast the championship if they would like, but given the significant number of events, the spread-out nature of the events occurring and the length of the championship, track and field as a championship is a costly championship to produce for broadcast. As we continue to adjust to these new financial paradigms, we are doing all that I can with the financial resources.   

One more element I wanted to mention, Mike.  The Big West is the only conference in the nation to separate our track and field championship into two weekends.  All other conferences conduct their championships over one weekend.  This raises costs a bit, but it allows for the multi athletes to compete the weekend before the individual events the second week, allowing more opportunities for our track and field athletes.  That is one way The Big West better supports track and field. 

IN SUMMARY 

I appreciated the question from Mike and being able to answer him directly. The Big West staff puts a significant focus on continual improvement of the student-athlete experience in The Big West within the resources provided by our member institutions. We are continually evaluating our regular-season competition and championships.  In fact, we survey our student-athletes after each championship to ask their thoughts on potential improvements.  In The Big West, we get better working together.


 

   FROM THE NCAA – UPDATE ON BETTING ON PROFESSIONAL SPORTS   

If you read The Bold Type each week, you are likely aware all three NCAA divisions voted in October to change rules for sports betting that would permit student-athletes and athletics department staff members to engage in legal betting on professional sports only. Friday, Division I’s procedural 30-day rescission period closed on the pending rule change for sports betting rules, and the necessary two-thirds of DI schools have voted to rescind the rule change.   

Because sports betting rules are common legislation, the rule change will not move forward for any NCAA division.   

All forms of betting on any NCAA-sponsored sport — amateur, collegiate and professional — remain strictly prohibited for student-athletes and athletics department staff members.  

While those rules remain in place, legalized sports betting is continuing to grow nationwide, and the national office stands ready to assist schools with educating student-athletes about the harms — beyond potential impacts to their eligibility — associated with gambling behaviors.  

  

 

   FEDERAL LEGISLATION AND THE SCORE ACT   

With the end of the government shutdown last week, the NCAA and commissioners are hearing the SCORE Act could receive a full floor vote as early as the week of December 1. If this bill doesn’t pass through the House, we likely won’t have another opportunity to address legislation until the next Congress so now is the time for schools to make their voices heard! 

Here is a part of my presentation to the UC Board of Regents Working Group on Athletics on this matter: 

Why the SCORE Act protects UC campuses: 

  • Provides limited antitrust protection applicable equally to all conferences which would allow for the NCAA, conferences and institutions to establish enforceable policies and procedures moving forward without the hourly threat of legal action. 

  • Codifies student-athlete benefits — healthcare, mental health, academic support, degree completion  


For public research universities like the UC system, the wrong federal framework will impose unfunded mandates that directly affect student-athlete opportunity. 

Why the SAFE Act presents serious risks: 

SCORE introduces stability.  

SAFE introduces unpredictability. 

  


   MEDIA REPORTS FOCUSED ON NCAA AND LEGAL MATTERS   

  • Power conferences are pushing back against the NCAA’s recent decision to lift the prohibition on pro sports gambling for college athletes and staff members, according to Ross Dellenger, who for On3 notes that of 148 schools that have thus far voted in favor of rescinding the decision, 54 of them come from Power 4 leagues. That’s almost 80% of the 68 power conference programs that believe college athletes should not be permitted to bet on pro sports. More. (link) 
  • The College Sports Commission and power conferences finalized terms of the participation agreement on Wednesday. The agreement was distributed to schools, as well.
  • Per the agreement, a copy of which was obtained by On3’s Pete Nakos, schools are required to waive their right to sue the CSC. Additionally, schools are to agree to the rules in place following House settlement approval, including roster limits and other NIL compliance rules. The expectation is schools will have two weeks to agree. (LINK) 
  • San Diego State has proposed a 45% increase to the mandatory Instructionally Related Activities (IRA) fee, from $580 to $840 per year. According to The San Diego Union-Tribune’s Mark Zeigler, “The IRA fee primarily flows to the athletic department and represents the highest such student fees in the Mountain West Conference by a wide margin.” The proposed athletic budget for the current academic year projects student fees to account for $16.3M, more than any other line item. The proposed increase to the IRA fee – 95%, or $9.7M, of which would go to athletics – would grow the student contribution to $26M annually on a total budget around $90M. Zeigler: “So can SDSU students vote it down? Actually, no.” Lots more. (link) 
  • Louisiana’s Division I athletic directors united behind a plan to secure new revenue as rising costs and the House settlement squeezed budgets, and The Athletic’s Jason Schwartz details how their coordinated effort helped deliver a statewide funding boost. Former ULM AD John Hartwell proposed modeling North Carolina’s approach of directing sports-betting tax revenue to public university athletic programs, and all 11 of Louisiana’s public DI ADs — including LSU — backed the push. Their support paired neatly with Governor Jeff Landry’s interest in raising the online sports-betting tax rate, allowing lawmakers to frame the bill as a vote for Louisiana’s universities rather than a vote for higher taxes. The final legislation raises the tax rate from 15% to 21.5% and channels 25% of total revenue to athletic departments, resulting in approximately $2.2M per school each year. LSU AD Verge Ausberry underscores the stakes: (link) 
  • JohnCanzano.com’s eponymous purveyor outlines how San Diego State elevated its academic and athletic profile in recent years, including securing approval to offer independent doctoral degrees and hiring Huron Consulting. The coordinated strategy strengthened the university’s positioning, which now includes record enrollment (40,000+) and record freshman admits. (link) 
  • The Mercury News’ Jon Wilner characterizes the pause in the Big Ten’s private equity deal as a polite way of signaling the conference must “decompress, reassess and clean up this mess,” with mounting internal misalignment drawing “clear and distinct Pac-12 vibes.” Wilner draws direct parallels to the Pac-12’s fractured final years, citing the Big Ten’s “lack of alignment,” tension between campuses and commissioner, and disparate institutional priorities. (link) 
  • Texas Tech Board of Regents Chair Cody Campbell joins Tulane Sports Law Director Gabe Feldman to dive into a number of topics. On the subject of private equity: “I think it depends on what context and what the deal is, but I think what the Big Ten is looking at doing right now is absolutely insane. I can’t make sense of it on any level because these are some of the financially strongest institutions in the country. Some of them even have AAA credit ratings or AA-plus. They can go out and borrow money at 4% or less. Why would they take capital that’s going to cost them 15 or 16%? More. (link) 
  • As the Big Ten continues to contemplate its next steps vis-a-vis private equity, Puck’s John Ourand reports the conference’s media partners “CBS and NBC are each paying more than $350M per year for lopsided games, and their executives expected better competition. … Adding to the conference’s chaos at the moment, NBC has been exploring a deal to sublicense next year’s Big Ten Championship game; multiple sources have told me that the network has had talks with Netflix and Amazon. Sources described the Amazon deal as in early stages. Netflix, notably, expressed little interest, which came as a surprise given its previous interest in broadcasting a USC–Notre Dame game this season.” (link) 
  • The Wall Street Journal’s Rachel Bachman reports Michigan Board of Regents Chair Mark Bernstein says Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti even threatened to cut U-M’s revenue share or remove the school from the conference, adding: “It’s clear to us that the Big Ten is considering punishing the University of Michigan.” (link) 
  • University of California System Chief Investment Officer/SVP of Investments Jagdeep Singh Bachher went into some detail with the UC Board of Regents about the Big Ten private equity deal, noting that the “return profile was certainly north of 12-13%. There is no deal on the table thanks to many regental approval processes that need to happen or not. I think college sports is the next attractive opportunity within the whole sports landscape.” (link) 
  • The Atlantic’s Sally Jenkins argues the real crisis in college sports isn’t athlete compensation, but rather runaway institutional spending driven by coaching salaries, facilities excess, and donor-fueled escalation. Consequently, Jenkins calls for Congress to impose financial regulation on athletic departments. She notes FBS schools generated $11.7B in 2024 yet routinely overspend on luxury facilities and soaring coaching contracts — including nearly $1B in severance in just 10 years — because administrators face no structural guardrails and answer largely to wealthy boosters. More from Jenkins. (link) 
  • The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) plans to invest $775M into Sixth Street’s sports and live entertainment strategy, per SBJ’s Chris Smith, who notes that as of early 2025, Sixth Street had already raised around $400M in its new sector-specific fund as it expands into team ownership having already acquired stakes this year in the Boston Celtics, San Francisco Giants and New England Patriots. Sixth Street says its new strategy will make “non-distressed investments in or relating to sports and live entertainment, including interests in sports franchises, sports federations, sports league joint ventures, sports national governing bodies, college sports, stadium debt or similar financings, real estate, strategic arrangements, entertainment, 27 media, licensing, data, merchandising, ticketing, sports agencies, talent agencies, sponsorship and other related or adjacent rights and assets.” More. (link)   

 

   QUOTE OF THE DAY   

“We share, to a large extent, one another’s fate. We help create those circumstances which favor or challenge us in meeting our objectives and realizing our dreams.” – Credited to Walt Disney 

  

   IN CLOSING   

I want to send each of you my warmest wishes this Thanksgiving!  Good food that fills your table, good health as you work hard, and good times with family and friends. 

  

I am thankful for your friendship. 

I am thankful for the membership in The Big West. 

I am thankful for the experiences we can provide to our amazing student-athletes. 

I am thankful for those that take care of our student-athletes.  

I am thankful for every member of The Big West staff, and the work they do for you and our institutions on a daily basis.  

  

May you have all the best delights in life. Happy Thanksgiving! 

Dan 



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Owens, Zukley Sweep United East Women’s Track & Field Athlete Of The Week Awards

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LATHAM, N.Y. – Juniors Savannah Owens (Frederick, Md./Gov. Thomas Johnson) and Jillian Zukley (Severna Park, Md./Severna Park) of the St. Mary’s College of Maryland women’s indoor track & field team claimed the United East Conference Women’s Indoor Track and Field Athlete of the Week awards as released by the league office Tuesday (Dec. 9).

Owens was named the United East Track Athlete of the Week for the first time in her career while Zukley garnered United East Field Athlete of the Week honors for the fifth time during her indoor career.

St. Mary’s College opened the 2025-26 campaign at the Christopher Newport University Holiday Open on Dec. 6.

Owens broke a school record in her return following a year away from the Seahawks indoor and outdoor track & field teams. The 5-5 sprinter took second in the 600m with a program record of 1:44.22, breaking the previous school record of 1:49.93 set by teammate Avery Arizzi ’27 on Dec. 2, 2023. She also placed third in the 800m in 2:35.81 while leading off the fourth-place 4x400m.

Following her performance, Owens leads the conference in the 800m while ranking 18th in the Mid-Atlantic region.

Zukley qualified for the 2026 All-Atlantic Region Track & Field Conference (AARTFC) Championships (Mar. 6-7) in the weight throw in the first indoor meet of the season. The 6-3 thrower opened her junior campaign with a bang as she captured the shot put with 11.67m. She then came in second in the weight throw with a school record 15.11m, knocking off her own record of 13.79m set on Jan. 31, 2025, at the Marlin Invitational.

Zukley currently leads the league in both events while ranking fourth in the Mid-Atlantic region in weight throw and sixth in shot put.

SMCM will be idle until the new year when St. Mary’s College travels to the Ocean Breeze Athletic Complex in Staten Island, N.Y. to compete in the Spartan Invitational hosted by St. Thomas Aquinas College. Action is slated to begin at 12 pm on Friday, January 9.

2025-26 United East Conference Women’s Indoor Field Athletes of the Week

2025-26 United East Conference Women’s Indoor Track Athletes of the Week



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Purdue Volleyball Adds ACC All-Freshman Outside Hitter to 2026 Roster

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Purdue has added a young star to its 2026 roster via the transfer portal. The Boilermakers landed a commitment from former Georgia Tech outside hitter Mimi Mambu. She comes to West Lafayette with three years of eligibility remaining.

Mambu spent her freshman season with the Yellow Jackets and was named to the ACC All-Freshman Team. She averaged 2.923 kills per set and hit .155 for the year. The 6-foot outside hitter also totaled 48 blocks and averaged 1.067 digs per set.

“What a wonderful Christmas gift to get the commitment from a smart and dynamic student-athlete,” coach Dave Shondell said in a statement. “We’re excited to have this hard-hitting high-flyer join our team after such a strong first season at Georgia Tech where she helped lead them to an NCAA tournament appearance. We watched Mimi play in high school and knew she would be a special player. Mimi learned so much about our program from Kash [Akasha Anderson] and Isabelle Bardin who are good friends from the D.C. area.”

Shondell saw Mambu up close during the 2025 season. On Sept. 3, the Boilermakers hosted Georgia Tech in the Stacey Clark Classic. The Yellow Jackets won the match 3-1, and the freshman hitter ended the evening with 10 digs and seven kills.

Georgia Tech ended the year with a 16-14 record.

Mambu will likely fill a void left by Purdue senior Akasha Anderson, who proved to be one of the top hitters last season. After transferring in from Michigan State, the senior averaged 2.911 kills per set and had a .282 hitting percentage. She only got better as the season progressed.

Mambu will join a talented and experienced roster in West Lafayette. She joins All-Big Ten selections Kenna Wollard and Grace Heaney at the pin-hitter spots. She will also be playing alongside All-Big Ten setter Taylor Anderson and All-Big Ten honorable mention libero Ryan McAleer.

Purdue closed out the 2025 season with a 27-7 record and a trip to the Regional Final round of the NCAA Tournament.

Mambu had ups and downs

Mackey Arena hosts the NCAA volleyball match between the Washington Huskies at the Purdue Boilermakers

Mackey Arena hosts the NCAA volleyball match between the Washington Huskies at the Purdue Boilermakers | Chad Krockover / For The Journal & Courier / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

As any freshman might, Mambu had some highs and lows throughout her freshman campaign. She reached a double-digit kill total in 13 of Georgia Tech’s 30 matches.

Mambu also had some off days, though. On five occasions, she ended a match with a negative hit percentage. Three of those came against Louisville, Pitt, and Purdue, all of which made deep runs into the NCAA Tournament.

Mambu is a tremendous athlete with high-flying ability and a strong arm. The biggest focus for Shondell and the Boilermakers will be to develop some consistency, but Purdue’s coaching staff has proven it can correct some of those issues.

Plus, with a full year of college volleyball now under her belt, Mambu is likely to show major improvement from her freshman to sophomore season.

Get top Boilermakers stories, expert analysis, and can’t-miss moments straight to your inbox for free by signing up for the Purdue Boilermakers on SI newsletter!

Related stories on Purdue volleyball

PURDUE FRESHMAN HITS TRANSFER PORTAL: One of Purdue’s freshmen from the 2025 recruiting class entered the NCAA transfer portal and has already found a new home. CLICK HERE





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How does a Q-Collar work?

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Cougars come back to win Pop-Tarts Bowl 25-21 over Georgia Tech – BYU Athletics – Official Athletics Website

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Fourth Quarter

On second-and-nine, Bachmeier found Roberts in a tight window for a gain of 18. Damuni added four yards, and on third down, Roberts caught a 7-yard pass to move the chains. Bachmeier and Ryan connected for the seventh time, this time for 13 yards to pin BYU at the Yellow Jacket six-yard line. After Kingston recorded a four-yard carry, Nawahine took the direct snap and plowed into the end zone. Keeping the offense on the field to go for two, Bachmier rushed it into the end zone to cut the deficit to three.

BYU forced the game’s first three-and-out. Kingston returned the punt 34 yards to set BYU up at its 45.

Bachmeier pitched to Damuni for a gain of five on first down. The freshman running back gained one yard on the next play, but the Cougars were unable to convert on third-and-four, and Vander Haar and the punting unit returned to the field, resulting in the second three-and-out of the game.

An illegal snap penalty pushed Georgia Tech back to its four-yard line. On second-and-14, King hit Rutherford for a gain of 12, and then another illegal snap penalty was enforced on the Yellow Jackets to set up third-and-seven. Haynes got just short of the line of gain before Glasker and Tanner Wall tackled him to force a punt. Kingston returned the punt four yards and set BYU up at its own 30 with 5:44 on the clock.

Following two incomplete passes, Bachmeier found Kingston at the BYU 34, and he advanced to the 43-yard line to grab the first down. Phillips secured a 14-yard pass from Bachmeier, and then Kingston caught a 15-yard pass to cap three consecutive first downs. After an eight-yard pass to Ryan to the Georgia Tech 20, the running back room led the way, kick-started by Nawahine picking up nine yards with a hurdle over a defender. Bachmeier passed to Damuni for a gain of seven, and then the Providence, Utah product powered into the end zone for his first career touchdown. Alongside Ferrin’s extra point, the Cougars took the lead, 25-21 with two minutes left.

Ferrin’s kickoff was returned 13 yards to pin Georgia Tech at its 21. Nusi Taumoepeau and Lutui hurried King and his pass fell incomplete on first down. On the next play, King lost the ball on a low snap but recovered his fumble for a loss of five yards. On third-and-15, another pass fell incomplete, forcing fourth-and-15. On the play, King went deep to Rivers for a gain of 66 at the BYU 18 with 52 seconds on the clock. The defense held the Yellow Jackets to three-straight incomplete passes, setting up fourth down with 14 seconds remaining. King attempted to hit Haynes in the end zone but his pass was intercepted by Johnson to seal the Pop Tarts Bowl victory 25-21.



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Kats take care of Biblical Studies 117-57

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HUNTSVILLE — Sam Houston bounced back from a loss in the Conference USA opener to wrap up nonconference action with a 117-57 victory over the College of Biblical Studies at Johnson Coliseum on Sunday.
 
The Bearkats (8-4) controlled the temp on both ends of the court, shooting close to 60 percent while limiting the Ambassadors to 31 percent. Sam Houston used its height advantage to dominate the paint, outscoring Biblical Studies 62-12 and outrebounding the Houston area team 66-29.
 
Isaiah Manning led the Kats with a career-high 27 points to go along with 10 rebounds for his first career double-double. Freshman Jacob Walker also scored a new career high with 24 points, Veljko Illic added 16 points and nine boards, freshman Matt Dann chipped in a career-high 12 points, freshman Jacoby Coleman finished with 11 and Damon Nicholas Jr. had 10.
 
Sam Houston built a huge first-half lead and never looked back.
 
The Kats went on a 10-0 run thanks to back-to-back 3s by Walker and Manning, who added a pair of layups to grab a 23-10 advantage. Dann punched in consecutive dunks after a free throw and a two more layups by Nicholas to cap the run at 19-0 to put the game away early as the Ambassadors went more than seven minutes without scoring.
 
Sam Houston shot a blistering 66 percent from the field in the first half, making 25 of 40 shot attempts. The Bearkats also held Biblical Studies to just 23 percent shooting to build a commanding 59-21 lead at the break.
 
Conference USA action resumes Jan. 2 when Sam Houston heads to Bowling Green, Kentucky to face WKU at 4 p.m. on ESPN+.
 



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Texas A&M star Ifenna Cos‑Okpalla signs with League One Volleyball

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Dec. 28, 2025, 12:20 p.m. CT

At the end of the season, after some of the adrenaline from the Texas A&M championship run had subsided, head coach Jamie Morrison revealed that a few players on his roster would have the opportunity to compete at the next level. While he didn’t name names, we had a pretty strong idea of which standout athletes he was referring to.

On Sunday morning, it was officially announced that senior middle blocker and 2025 NCAAVB Champion Ifenna Cos-Okpalla signed a professional contract to play with League One Volleyball (LOVB) Salt Lake. She joins senior opposite Logan Lednicky in the league, who recently signed with LOVB Houston. Cos-Okpalla was also drafted by MLV but ultimately chose to pursue her career with LOVB. We knew a move was coming soon after the news broke that she had signed with Valor Sports Agency just days before this announcement.





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