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The Old Man Column

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The Old Man Column

First thing’s first this week… 

When I started writing this opinion blog every week about a month ago I called it Midweek Musings. Then, one of my Phillies colleagues called it “The Old Man Column.”

I threw that into one of the subsequent posts and people have responded to it, and the messages I get about it refer to it as such, even though that wasn’t its official name. 

While I don’t consider myself an old man, I do understand why it has that moniker. So, I’m leaning into it. This weekly post has been officially renamed. It’s now “The Old Man Column.” 

I’ll try to be as curmudgeonly as possible from here on out.

Onto this week’s column:

When I saw that Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred was going on the broadcast of the Little League Classic on Sunday night, my reaction was pretty much the same as it is every time he’s about to speak publicly. 

“What’s this guy going to say that’s going to tick me off this time?”

Well, in what has become a time honored tradition, he did it again. 

By this point, we all know that he dropped hints about expansion and geographic realignment. 

I have zero problem with expansion. Cities like Nashville and either Salt Lake City or Portland will be great additions for the sport. 

I also get that divisional realignment would be a necessary evil with 32 teams, and trying to keep them geographically convenient to one another certainly makes sense.

So, what did he say that ruffled my aging feathers?

Well, it’s the devil in the details. In other words, the things he didn’t say out loud specifically, but that have leaked out through trusted voices instead. 

The first thing that got me was the idea that MLB could abandon the two league structure that has existed for 125 years and go to a one league, two conference format.

There are those that would argue that it’s basically already set up that way now that the DH is universal and that every team plays each other every season, so why should it matter that the names change. 

Well, because we already have 125 years of statistical history that will get thrown out the window. 

Let me give an example. 

Last year, when Aaron Judge hit his 62nd home run, the sport and everyone associated with it celebrated it as an American League record. 

But it’s not the Major League record. He didn’t come close to Barry Bonds hitting 73 in 2001.

In fact, Sammy Sosa topped 62 three times and Mark McGwire topped it twice – all five instances were in the National League.

And while I’m with those who make the argument that Judge is the first to hit 62 that wasn’t shrouded in performance enhancing drug controversies, the reality is, baseball doesn’t put asterisks on Bonds, McGwire and Sosa, so Judge’s record is still just an American League record. 

But if Manfred and owners have their way, the American League won’t exist anymore. Nor will the National League. They’ll be conferences instead, and everything will be under one league. 

Eradicating the historical tradition of the country’s oldest sport sucks. 

But we can get past that one – maybe – as long as we avoid some of the others. 

Like going to eight four-team divisions. Why? That creates so much more upheaval than necessary. Sure, you can make divisions geographically closer, but if you are still playing every team in the sport, you’re still travelling a lot. Is that extra two hour flight to Miami or Atlanta really going to put the Phillies out? 

Why not just go to four divisions of eight? That really cuts down on the travel and makes for better divisional rivalries. More games against Divisional opponents is a good thing. 

But then there are those who say, “Well, the math doesn’t work with four divisions of eight.”

And to that I say hogwash. 

Yeah, it doesn’t add up cleanly and neatly. But it’s definitely doable. 

For a 162 game-season, you would play 90 games against divisional opponents and 72 against non divisional opponents. 

That means a three-game series against every non-divisional team, of which there would be 24, alternating years when you face a team at home or on the road – like they do now with most interleague games.

As for the 90 in-division games. Easy – you play six teams 13 times, three get the extra home game and the other three your team gets the extra home game, and one team 12 times, and that rotates every year. 

Are Philadelphia and New York fans going to complain that the Phillies and Mets play one fewer game every seven years? No.

All this makes sense, right? 

Except, that’s not what’s part of this new wave of baseball that’s coming. 

I read a story today by the great Jayson Stark of The Athletic that says with expansion could come a slightly shortened schedule. How so? well, again, math. 

Jayson points out that it’s nice and easy to cut to 156 games and make the math work out:

  • Eight divisions of four teams each
  • 12 games each against the other three teams in your division
  • Six games each against the other 12 teams in your league conference
  • three games each against the other 16 teams

Want to know why that sucks? That means only 23% of your season is played in-division. Why should a division race be determined when 77% of your games aren’t even played against one another?

At least in my example, 56% of your games would be in-division. But 23%? That’s absurd. 

And not only that, but long-standing rivalries are sure to be destroyed. So long to the Braves and welcome back… the Pirates? 

Sure, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia were division rivals at one time, and split up when the Central Division was created and the Pirates were shipped out of the N.L. East. But the Cubs and Cardinals were in the East then too. Things had to change with expansion, which is why I called this a necessary evil, but going to four-team divisions instead of five means moving a lot of teams from their current divisions (at least eight) whereas truncating from six divisions of five to four divisions of eight allows for some great rivalries to be maintained, even if you are putting two divisions together. 

I have seen some suggest that you merge American and National League teams together – like a division that would be the Phillies, Mets, Yankees and Red Sox. 

What are we going to call that, the Amtrak Division? 

Not only that, the sport would have a great imbalance. You’d put four teams who are huge spenders at each others throats every season, creating an even greater disparity from the smaller market teams who won’t have to spend nearly as much to compete in their smaller market divisions. 

One example had Atlanta, Tampa Bay, Miami and Nashville together in a division. How would that even be close to equitable?

However, under my realignment, most of what currently exists would stay the same. The East and West Divisions would stay intact and the centrals would be split up amongst them. 

So, slide the Pirates, Reds and the expansion Nashville team into the East and move Milwaukee and the Cubs to the West in the NL. 

And in the AL, move Detroit, Kansas City and Cleveland to the East and Minnesota, the White Sox, and the expansion team in either Salt Lake City or Portland to the West. 

No one has to switch leagues. Most traditional rivalries are saved. More divisional games are played. It’s a win for everyone. 

Meanwhile, Jayson points out that there’s even some debate as to that clean 156-game schedule. Mostly because it would be the third different game total in league history being played and considering baseball records are so sacred, now having to create a third caveat (154-game season, 162 game season and 156-game season) will send stat-heads bonkers.

So, he points out, maybe they just revert back to 154 games, and chalk up the era of 1962-2030ish as the 162-game era. 

I don’t like that either, because now it’s being hypocritical. The number of games only matter as long as they lineup with historical practices, but that historical data doesn’t matter because we want to expand. You can’t have it both ways.  

Owners aren’t sure they want to trim the season – that’s a lot of lost revenue to suddenly wipe out six-eight games on the calendar. But, if they can make up the difference somehow, they will allow for it. 

And the only real way to make up the difference is the most egregious thing of all – expanding the playoffs, again. 

Now, if it’s just a matter of making series a little longer, you won’t get a beef from me. I’m a proponent of making the LDS a best-of-seven and not a best-of-five. Anything that gives an advantage to a team that proved itself to have the best record over a marathon season is deserved. 

But that isn’t the only thing that’s on tap, apparently. Nope, there is a thought to make the playoffs expand to eight teams per league conference, meaning no byes and a best-of-3 series for everyone to start. 

Come on!

There’s so much wrong here. Let’s start with this – making every team play a wild card series renders the entire baseball season useless. 

There’s nothing to play for except to get into the playoffs, and to do that, you only have to be one of the top eight teams in your half of the league.  Division pennant? Doesn’t matter. Win enough games to earn a bye? Nope. Doesn’t exist any more. 

Now, all you have to do is be relatively around .500 and you’re fine. 

Know what that will bring to baseball? 

Load management.

Yep. If every team is equal in the postseason save for the ballpark where the game is being played, there’s no reason for star players to play that much. Play enough to get there, but make sure you’re well-rested, healthy and fresh for the playoffs. 

So you’re basically playing 154, or 156, or 162 games of which most don’t really matter. 

It’s the NBA on steroids  exogenous testosterone.

Never mind the fact that you are now letting middling-to-bad teams into the playoffs and giving them a real chance at an upset – as a Best-of-three series is a crapshoot. There is zero incentive to be the best team in a long season. None. 

But let’s really get to the ridiculous part.

Let’s imagine this season allowed for eight teams in each league to make the playoffs. Right now these would be the two teams in each league to get the final playoff spot, along with their current record:

  • NL – St. Louis (63-65)
  • AL – Cleveland (64-62)

Yep, that’s a sub-500 team in the postseason… in a season with 162 games. 

Know what else? Teams like the Braves (58-69) and Orioles (59-67) would still be in the race – only 4 1/2 and 5 games out respectively.

Know what that means – to hell with a trade deadline. So many teams would still be “in it” that fewer and fewer teams would be sellers. I’m not sure Baltimore, Minnesota, San Francisco or Arizona would have sold at the deadline this season if there were eight spots available for a playoff with the volatility of a three-game series in the first round. 

The Phillies wouldn’t have been able to trade for Jhoan Duran or Harrison Bader. The Mariners wouldn’t have gotten Eugenio Suarez and Josh Naylor. 

It waters everything down. 

Baseball has been all about being forward-thinking and making changes to welcome a new generation of fan. Some have worked. Others haven’t. But the idea that the game needed to change that much is crazy. 

The average attendance league-wide in baseball this year is 29,261. Know where it was before Covid and all the rule changes? 

In 2019 it was 28,203 – when games were, on average, a half-hour longer.

Is an extra 1,058 people per game a sign of a real positive shift in fan interest? Or is it truly statistically insignificant?

Baseball keeps thinking it needs to make all these changes to keep up with the times, when in reality, the game has survived as long as it has because of the game it always has been. Anything else is mere window dressing from owners and a commissioner who only care about the bottom line and not really about what is good for the sport.

Now, get off my lawn.

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Spencer McLachlin Named Head Coach at UC San Diego

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LA JOLLA, Calif. – Third-year USC women’s volleyball associate head coach Spencer McLachlin was hired for his first appointment as a head coach and will lead the UC San Diego women’s volleyball program, UCSD Director of Athletics Andy Fee announced on Tuesday, Dec. 23.
 
McLachlin becomes the eighth head coach in UCSD program history and will coach the Tritons in their final season as members of the Big West (2026) before the program transitions to the West Coast Conference ahead of the 2027 campaign. He joins JJ Van Niel (Arizona State), Tyler Hildebrand (Saint Mary’s College), and Amy Pauly (Orlando Valkyries) as former USC assistants under Brad Keller who have moved into head coaching positions.
 
“This opportunity is no surprise and has been a long time coming for Spencer,” said Keller. “UCSD is getting one of the best coaches in the game. Spencer and I have worked together in many different phases of our careers, and I know USC is in a better place with a brighter future for everything he has done here. Spencer is an innovator, a creator, and most importantly, a dreamer. Our game needs more leaders like him. I couldn’t be prouder of what he has done and for this new opportunity for him and his family.”
 
In his three seasons at USC, McLachlin helped lead the Women of Troy to three straight NCAA tournament appearances. The Trojans advanced to the second round in each of their three postseason berths. Most recently, McLachlin helped USC reach 25 wins and finish in a tie for third place in the Big Ten. Six Trojans received awards on all-conference teams and USC led the league in blocking (2.76 bps). The Trojans also ranked second (12th in the NCAA) in total blocks (322.5) and were second for opponent hitting percentage (.184). OH London Wijay earned AVCA All-America honorable mention.
 
With McLachlin on staff in 2024, USC advanced to the second round of the NCAA tournament for the third straight year and finished 22-10 overall with a 13-7 mark in the Big Ten (tied for sixth). Setter Mia Tuaniga was named to the AVCA All-America third team. In his first season with the Women of Troy, McLachlin helped USC go 19-13 with a 12-8 mark in the Pac-12 for a fifth-place finish. That season, OH Skylar Fields was honored with AVCA All-America first-team recognition.
 
McLachlin is married to former USC volleyball standout opposite hitter Diane Copenhagen (2004-07), a 2004 Pac-10 All-Freshman Team selection. The McLachlins are parents to two daughters, Leila and Malia, and a son named Koa.
 
The 14th-ranked Trojans (25-7, 15-5 Big Ten) finished the regular season tied for third in the Big Ten and were awarded one of 33 at-large berths—and a hosting bid—into the 2025 NCAA tournament. USC made its fourth straight appearance in the tourney under sixth-year head coach Brad Keller (41st all-time) and moved into the second round for the fourth consecutive year with a 3-0 sweep of Princeton. The Women of Troy were eliminated from postseason play in a hard-fought five-set loss to Cal Poly in the second round.
 
For more information on the USC women’s volleyball team, please visit USCTrojans.com/WVB. Fans of the Women of Troy can follow @USCWomensVolley on X, Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok.
 



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Defending Big West Regular Season And National Champion Long Beach State Chosen As 2026 Preseason Coaches’ Poll Favorite

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IRVINE, Calif. – The Big West released its 2026 Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Poll and Team, and defending Big West regular season and National Champion Long Beach State was selected as the preseason favorite. The Beach garnered 24 total points and four first-place votes from league head coaches, signaling strong expectations for another elite season.

Long Beach State’s status as a national powerhouse was further reinforced in the 2026 AVCA National Collegiate Men’s Volleyball Preseason Poll (Dec. 23), where the Beach were ranked No. 3 nationally behind UCLA and Hawai’i.

The Beach also placed multiple student-athletes on the 2026 Big West Preseason Coaches’ Team, as Skyler Varga and Alex Kandev earned preseason recognition following standout performances during Long Beach State’s championship 2025 season.

Varga returns as one of the nation’s premier attackers. During the 2025 season he played a central role in Long Beach State’s run to the NCAA National Championship, earning NCAA All-Tournament Team honors for his performance in the title match. He finished the year with 270 kills (2.73 per set) on a .368 attack percentage, while adding 33 service aces, 70 total blocks, and 341 points across 99 sets. In addition to his on-court excellence, Varga also received CSC Academic All-America recognition, underscoring his impact as a scholar-athlete.

Kandev, now a sophomore outside hitter, made his mark on the national stage during the 2025 NCAA Championship match. In the title match victory over UCLA, Kandev helped the Beach secure their fourth national title and earned NCAA All-Tournament Team honors in the process. He concluded his freshman season with 210 kills (3.23 per set) while hitting .458, ranking among the team leaders in efficiency, and added 21 aces, 36 blocks, and 250 points in 65 sets.

Following Long Beach State atop the Big West preseason poll, Hawai’i was chosen second with 22 points and two first-place votes, and UC Irvine was tabbed third with 17 points. CSUN, UC San Diego, and UC Santa Barbara rounded out the poll, each earning nine points.

With proven postseason performers and returning national contenders, Long Beach State enters 2026 as both the team to beat in the Big West and one of the top programs in the nation.

2026 Big West Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Poll

  1. Long Beach State – 24 points (4)
  2. Hawai’i – 22 points (2)
  3. UC Irvine – 17 points
  4. T-4. CSUN – 9 points

    T-4. UC San Diego – 9 points

    T-4. UC Santa Barbara – 9 points

    First-place votes in parentheses

2026 Big West Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Team
George Bruening, UC Santa Barbara
Alex Kandev, Long Beach State
Jalen Phillips, CSUN
Tread Rosenthal, Hawai’i
Adrien Roure, Hawai’i
Kristian Titriyski, Hawai’i
Skyler Varga, Long Beach State
 
 



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NSU adds goalkeeper transfer – Northwestern State University Athletics

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NATCHITOCHES—After dipping into the transfer portal for a midfielder and defender, Northwestern State soccer head coach Ian Brophy now picks up a goalkeeper in the form of transfer Saki Tsuchiya.

Tsuchiya, a native of Takasaki, Japan, comes to NSU following a season at Valparaiso.

“We are very excited to add an experienced goalkeeper who really fits our style of play,” Brophy said. “Her ability with the ball at her feet is something that definitely suits us and should help us as a team. She will instantly provide competition in an already very competitive group and certainly makes us better.”

She played in three games for the Crusaders, sporting a save percentage of .708 and goals against average of 3.36 in just under 134 minutes. She recorded 12 saves this past season, seven coming against Drake and then posting five saves against Illinois.

Prior to her season at Valpo, Tsuchiya started her collegiate career at Tyler JC, where she competed for two seasons.

For Tyler JC, she appeared in 30 matches during the two years, where she posted a 1.18 GAA and a .780 save percentage.

She recorded three solo shutouts and five combined shutouts among her 13 wins as a sophomore in 2024. That season also earned her a Second Team All-Region selection, as her team captured the Region XIV championship and played in the NJCAA National Tournament 2023 and 2024.

As a freshman, she was named to the NJCAA Second Team All-Academic Team for 2023-24.

She played summer soccer in 2024 for TLH Reckoning of the USLW and in 2025 for Peoria City of the WPSL.

In high school at Kaishigakuen JAPAN Soccer College koutoubu, she was a three-year starter in net.

She joins an already impressive goalkeeper room that includes Second Team All-Southland Conference selection Kennedy Rist and rising sophomore Audrey Marfia, who recorded a goals against average of 0.39, surrendering just one goal in 230:32.

Tsuchiya will be the first Japan native to play for the Demons and joins Hosane Soukou, Ravina Sandhu and Anika Sproxton as players on the team not from the United States.



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Lauren Watson Becomes First Player in USD Beach Volleyball History

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SAN DIEGO — Defender Lauren Watson became the first player in USD beach volleyball history on Monday afternoon when she signed a grant-in-aid agreement to play for the Toreros.

Watson, who hails from Phoenix, Arizona, attends Notre Dame Preparatory High School, where she was twice named the Arizona Beach Volleyball Player of the Year by the Arizona Republic. She will join San Diego for its inaugural beach volleyball season in the spring of 2027.

“Lauren is a really good all-around talent,” said USD beach volleyball head coach Derek Olson. “As a defender that can sit in the pocket and run shots down, she has good defensive instincts and covers a lot of sand.”

Her high school career thus far has seen her earn two Arizona Beach Volleyball Pairs State Championships, three All-League First-Team honors, and her league’s Defensive Player of the Year award.

“She also knows how to win and that’s very apparent by her results in tournaments,” Olson added. “But what I appreciate most about Lauren is her ability to play with anyone and make them better. She adds value to the environment that she is in.”
 



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Spencer McLachlin named new women’s volleyball head coach – The UCSD Guardian

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On Tuesday, Dec. 23, UC San Diego Athletics announced that USC associate head coach Spencer McLachlin will be the next head coach of Triton women’s volleyball. He replaces Melanie Greene, who stepped down on Dec. 6 after two seasons as head coach.

The coaching change comes after a tumultuous 6-24 season where a promising Triton team never found its rhythm. The Tritons were eliminated from postseason contention with three games left in the season following a loss to UC Riverside on Nov. 17. Assistant coach Kara Barkdoll Coy was named interim head coach for the final six games of the season after Greene’s departure.

“Spencer brings exactly what we need at this moment,” athletic director Andy Fee said in a press release. “He’s helped build winning programs, developed All-Americans, and knows how to compete at the highest level.”

McLachlin played collegiately at Stanford, winning a national championship with the Cardinal in 2010 and ending his four years in Palo Alto ranked third in career kills. McLachlin then served as an assistant coach at Hawai’i, California, UCLA, and Indiana before joining USC as associate head coach in 2023. This past season, the Trojans went 25-7 but fell in the second round of the NCAA Championship in a five-set upset loss against Cal Poly. McLachlin’s new position at UCSD will be his first head coaching role.

“I am thrilled to join UC San Diego as the Head Coach of the women’s volleyball program,” McLachlin said. “This is an incredible opportunity for my family and me to be part of an historic and beautiful university and build a program with great potential.”



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Volleyball Inks Four Highly Touted Transfers to 2026 Roster

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DALLAS (SMU) – The SMU Volleyball team announced the signings of outside hitter Suli Davis, libero Victoria Harris, opposite hitter Gabi Placide and setter Ava Sarafa to the 2026 roster on Monday. 

 

Arriving for the spring 2026 semester, Placide brings in three years of collegiate playing experience; Harris and Sarafa come to the Hilltop with two and Davis comes to SMU with one year playing at the college level. 

 

Details of the four transfers are below.  

 

Suli Davis, So., 6-2, Outside Hitter, Euless, Texas – BYU

AVCA Second Team All-American (2025) 

AVCA West Region Freshman of the Year (2025) 

AVCA All-West Region First Team (2025) 

Big 12 Freshman of the Year (2025) 

All-Big 12 First Team (2025) 

Big 12 All-Rookie Team (2025) 

6x Big 12 Rookie of the Week (Sept. 9, Oct. 7, Oct. 21, Nov. 4, Nov. 25, Dec. 2, 2025) 

 

2025 (Freshman at BYU) 

Broke BYU’s all-time freshman kills record during the Cougars’ five-set win over Utah on Nov. 26 

Broke BYU’s rally-scoring era freshman kills record against Arizona on Nov. 19 

27th player in Big 12 history with 500+ kills in a single season 

30 double-digit kill matches, third-most in the rally-scoring era at BYU 

Team-leading 10 double-doubles 

Led the team in kills in 22 matches, including 13 of the Cougars’ final 14 

Played in all 31 of the Cougars’ matches and 119 sets, starting 29 matches 

Recorded 541 kills, third-most in a rally-scoring era season at BYU, 252 digs, 43 total blocks, including 10 solo stuffs, 31 assists and 25 service aces 

Finished No. 1 in total kills (541), kills per set (4.55) and points per set (4.97) in the Cougars’ all-time freshman record book 

Finished No. 1 in sets played (119), total kills (541), kills per set (4.55), total points (591.5) and points per set (4.97) in the freshman rally-scoring era at BYU 

Is also second in double-doubles (10) and third in solo blocks (10) in the Cougars’ freshman rally-era record book 

Career-high 28 kills in back-to-back matches (at Utah on Nov. 14 and vs. Arizona Nov. 19), the second-most kills by a freshman in the rally-scoring era at BYU 

 

Victoria Harris, Jr., 5-4, DS/Libero, Columbia, S.C. – South Carolina

SEC Community Service Team (2025) 

SEC All-Freshman Team (2024) 

SEC Freshman of the Week (Nov. 18, 2024) 

 

2025 (Sophomore at South Carolina) 

-Appeared in all 26 matches for the Gamecocks in her second season with the program 

-Finished fourth in the SEC with 4.11 digs per set, totaling 399 digs 

-Added 120 assists and 16 aces in her sophomore campaign 

-Had seven matches with 20+ digs and 21 matches with double-digit digs 

-Logged a season-best 27 digs at Missouri on Oct. 24  

-Second in the SEC during conference play, averaging 4.31 digs per set for South Carolina 

-Finished with 795 digs, 223 assists and 35 aces as a Gamecock in two seasons 

 

Gabi Placide, Sr., 6-0, Opposite Hitter, Centennial, Colo. – Ole Miss 

AVCA South Region Honorable Mention (2025) 

SEC Offensive Player of the Week (Sept. 22, 2025) 

AVCA West Region Honorable Mention (2024) 

Big Sky All-Conference First Team (2024) 

2x Big Sky Offensive Player of the Week (Oct. 21, Oct. 28, 2024) 

Big Sky Conference Fall All-Academic Team (2024) 

Big Sky Outstanding Freshman Award (2023) 

Big Sky All-Academic Team (2023) 

 

2025 (Junior at Ole Miss) 

-Started and played in all 29 matches for the Rebels 

-Led the team with 558.5 total points, 5.12 points per set, ranking third in the SEC and 15th in the NCAA 

-Registered 488 kills (31st in the NCAA) on a .213 hitting percentage in her lone season with Ole Miss 

-Logged 34 aces (sixth in the SEC) to lead Ole Miss and added 182 digs, 1.67 digs per set.  

-Had 10 matches with 20+ kills and logged double-digit kills in 25 of 29 matches  

-Registered five double-doubles, including a 19-kill and 14-dig outing against LSU on Nov. 2 

-Had a career-high 28 kills against Alabama on Oct. 31 

-Notched 22 kills, 10 digs and five aces against Texas on Oct. 24 

 

Ava Sarafa, R-Jr., 6-0, Setter, Bloomfield Hills, Mich. – Kentucky 

Fall SEC Academic Honor Roll (2024) 

First-Year SEC Academic Honor Roll (2023-24) 

 

2025 (Redshirt Sophomore at Kentucky) 
Played in 27 matches and 80 sets for a Kentucky program that reached the final four in 2025 
Finished the season with 136 assists, 57 digs and 10 aces 
Logged 43 assists, 10 digs and six blocks against Nebraska on Aug. 31 

 



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