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UIL approves water polo, rejects proposal for a shot clock | Sports

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Jun. 11—Water polo is now a fully sanctioned high school sport in the state of Texas.

The University Interscholastic League legislative council voted to remove the “pilot program” label from the organization’s newest sport, which held its first season in 2022 and has continued to see sustained success and growth since then.

Water polo has been particularly fruitful for Houston-area schools. Since its inception, the Foster girls (2022, 2023), the Brazoswood girls (2024), the Brazoswood boys (2022) and the Clear Creek boys (2024) have won five of the six state titles handed out. More than 150 schools across the state compete in water polo, which was first approved as a pilot program in 2019. The last sport added under the UIL umbrella before that was wrestling, which became sanctioned in 1998-99.

Wednesday was a busy day for the UIL athletics committee. The group worked its way through 28 agenda items, most of which were proposals from the public. The proposal to remove water polo as a pilot program came from UIL staff.

The other notable passed item was the expansion of the pilot program that requires three-game series throughout the baseball playoffs leading up to the state championships — unless otherwise agreed on by both teams — to Class 4A and Class 3A. The current pilot program, which was implemented by the legislative council in October 2022, includes only 6A and 5A.

The UIL also passed an amendment to Section 1204 of the constitution, a language reconstruction aimed at clarifying rules regarding scratches and payment to officials to better support schools.

The UIL also passed an amendment that allows its staff to make rules changes to stay in compliance with state law.

THSCA addresses legislation

Texas High School Coaches Association executive director Joe Martin was the first public speaker of the day and addressed some of the challenges that could arise for public education and extracurricular activities across the state of Texas due to the school voucher bill that passed and was signed into law by Gov. Greg Abbott on May 3 during the 89th legislative session.

“We were handed some new obstacles to overcome by our governor and our legislators, and we’re going to do what we always do,” said Martin, whose organization had been publicly opposed to the bill. “We’re going to learn how to mitigate those damages, and we’re going to keep UIL activities and athletics the best they are in the United States, and we’ll overcome some of those consequences that were handed down. We walk away from the 89th legislative session without looking like Florida and California and those other states that aspire to be like Texas.”

Martin said that despite the voucher bill passing — along with Senate Bill 401, which allows homeschooled students to participate in UIL activities at the schools they are zoned to — the THSCA was pleased that other legislation did not come to fruition. On that front, he alluded to House Bill 619, which would have allowed students a one-time transfer for athletic purposes. He also alluded to House Bill 126, which passed and will allow Texas colleges to enter into direct “name, image and likeness” (NIL) deals with athletes. The bill did not, however, change the fact that high school students in Texas cannot receive payment from NIL deals. While high school students can enter into NIL agreements after they turn 17 years old, payments cannot be received until after college enrollment.

Flag football still waiting

Despite its surge in popularity, girls flag football remains on the outside looking in for UIL sanctioning.

For the second consecutive legislative session, representatives from the Houston Texans and Dallas Cowboys came to the podium during Wednesday’s forum, petitioning for the UIL to consider the future of the sport in Texas. During the past three sessions, the UIL athletics committee lobbed girls flag football proposals into the “denied, rejected or took no action” bucket. This time around, the committee changed their tone and labeled the sport’s growth as something it will monitor and study.

According to the National Federation of State High School Associations, 14 states have already sanctioned girls flag football (Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Mississippi, Nevada, New York, Pennsylvania), and Louisiana has entered into a two-year pilot program for the sport.

Flag football has certainly seen growth in Houston with school districts like Houston ISD, Fort Bend ISD and Alief ISD all participating in the Texans’ league. The championship games were held last month at the Houston Methodist Training Center.

Not time for shot clock

The addition of a shot clock in Texas high school basketball has spurred plenty of discussion in recent years. But on Wednesday, despite support from the Texas Association of Basketball Coaches, it still remains just that — a discussion.

The UIL athletics committee agreed to continue studying the issue, which has long been deterred primarily by its potential costs. The NFHS made a recommendation for states to adopt a shot clock in 2021, and 31 are already using it or plan to use it by the 2026-27 season. Oklahoma is the most recent state to implement the change, voting on its approval in April.

“I can tell you the TABC coaches are in favor of it, and we hope that someday it comes to fruition,” TABC executive director Johnnie Carter said. “I think it’s important for me to tell you how our coaches feel. When we did all our surveys, it was probably 75-25 (percent) in favor of it, and I just hope that we’re able to get this done.”

Passing of the torch

Wednesday’s legislative council session was the final one for former UIL executive director Charles Breithaupt, who held the organization’s top role since 2009 and spent 14 years as the UIL athletic director before that. Breithaupt, who is retiring after five decades of service in public education, handed the reins over to new executive director Jamey Harrison on April 1.

“Dr. Breithaupt, you have left your mark, sir,” Harrison said during his opening remarks. “Job well done. The great things that you have done will continue through this organization for many generations to come.”

Breithaupt responded with praise for Harrison, who has served as the deputy executive director since 2011.

“Dr. Harrison’s been hitting the ground running,” he said. “He’s been doing this for year, folks. He’s not new to the table. He knows how to do this job. He’s going to be phenomenal.”

More proposals

The athletics committee will continue to study the following items.

— Proposal to add girls flag football as a sanctioned activity

— Proposal to add a shot clock for basketball

— Proposal to add a mileage cap for playoff game travel

— Proposal to update the P.E. substitute exception list

— Proposal to add an optional spring training period for water polo

— Proposal to allow college students to coach if they are in an approved program

— Proposal to allow pyrotechnics at contests if overseen by professionals

— Proposal to change the scrimmage rules for soccer

— Proposal to add lacrosse as a sanctioned activity

— Proposal to expand exception from the full-time employee requirement

The athletics committee denied, rejected or took no action on the following items.

— Proposal to add boys volleyball as a sanctioned activity

— Proposal to add Class 3A soccer

— Proposal to require schools to participate in both volleyball and basketball

— Proposal to give home-field advantage in the first round of the playoffs to district champions in all sports

— Proposal to allow students participating in off-campus P.E. to still participate in an after-school activity

— Proposal to allow the number of scratches to two

— Proposal to require the use of instant relay in all sports during the playoffs

— Proposal to change the dates of the regional and state tennis tournaments

— Proposal to conduct steroid testing

— Proposal to eliminate the requirement of shirt tails needing to be tucked in during competition

— Proposal to limit coaching disruptions in volleyball

— Proposal to allow varsity eligibility for students who elect programs of choice

— Proposal to add bowling as a sanctioned activity

— Proposal to add gymnastics coaches for the UIL CCP and Concussion Oversight Team

— Proposal to add table tennis as a sanctioned activity





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Emmaus coach Jessica Olang is the Lehigh Valley volleyball coach of year

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Jessica Olang and her sister, Lindsay, fondly remember growing up with the Emmaus girls volleyball program when their mother, Susan Arndt, was the Green Hornets head coach for nine seasons from 1991-99.

“Back then, we were at Eyer Middle School a lot of the time, and I remember my mom yelling at me to get off the court,” Lindsay Olang said. “I would get hit in the head with a lot of volleyballs. But you know what, it was a lot of fun. I wouldn’t exchange my childhood for anything. I love this community and being around this environment. For us to be back here has been amazing … it has come full circle.”

And that circle now includes a league championship.

Thirty years after Arndt’s 1995 Emmaus team won the program’s first and only District 11 championship, Arndt and her two daughters were on the coaching staff that led the Green Hornets to their first and only league championship.

With a thrilling 23-25, 24-26, 25-23, 25-22, 15-13 come-from-behind win over Bethlehem Catholic on Oct. 16 at Liberty, Emmaus became Eastern Pennsylvania Conference champs for the first time.

The team followed it up by reaching the District 11 6A championship match, where it lost to Parkland in four sets, but the Green Hornets rebounded to beat District 2 champ Delaware Valley in the first round of the state tournament.

While the Hornets fell to Spring-Ford in the PIAA quarterfinals, their memorable 21-5 season made Jessica Olang The Morning Call’s girls volleyball coach of the year; an honor she happily shares with her coaching staff, which includes her mother, her sister, and close friends Emily Elek and Kelsey Nilsen.

Olang and the staff, affectionately called the Fab 5 by Elek, took Emmaus to great heights in just their second season together.

Making their league title all the more unexpected was that the team lost two of its best players — Maleya Hinds and Andraya Flowers — to season-ending injuries before the playoffs began.

But Olang and the assistants preached a “next girl up” philosophy, made some lineup adjustments, and kept the team motivated through a 14-2 EPC regular season.

“Going back to our open gyms last winter, we talked about our outcomes coming from the work we’re putting in now,” Jessica Olang, a 2003 Catasauqua High graduate, said. “If you want good outcomes, you’ve got to put the work in now. We don’t want to be three, four, or five months from now wishing we had done more. So we kept instilling in them that the process is important. Every touch on the ball matters; everything we do in the gym matters. The outcomes will come from what we do in the gym, and we never talked about becoming league or district champs. We just talked about what we need to do in the gym today to get ourselves prepared to be the best we can be, and the results will come. In that insane moment when we became a league champ, and to see the culmination of everything we’ve worked for over two years was just amazing. There may never be another moment like that again.”

Olang said even before the championship match against an undefeated Bethlehem Catholic team, the focus wasn’t on becoming a champion.

“It wasn’t on my radar,” she said. “I wasn’t thinking ‘tonight, we’re bringing home the first EPC championship in school history.’ We emphasized to the girls that they get to go play volleyball today. That’s a great day. Go out and work hard and have fun, and stay together. Bring everything you can and let the chips fall where they may.”

The chips weren’t falling Emmaus’ way early as the Green Hornets got behind two sets to none.

Emmaus girls volleyball coach Jessica Orlang and her assistant coaches -- Sue Arndt, her mother; Lindsay Orlang, her sister; Emily Elek; and Kelsey Nilsen -- stand Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025, in the Emmaus High School gym. Jessica Orlang is The Morning Call's girls volleyball coach of the year. (Amy Shortell/The Morning Call)
Emmaus girls volleyball coach Jessica Olang and her assistant coaches — Sue Arndt, her mother; Lindsay Olang, her sister; Emily Elek; and Kelsey Nilsen — stand in the Emmaus High School gym. Jessica Olang is The Morning Call’s girls volleyball coach of the year. (Amy Shortell/The Morning Call)

“The third set was really close, and there were like 19 ties, and you got the sense it could go either way,” Olang said. “It was at the end of the third set that Claudia Walls and Rosie Landino had incredible three-stuffed blocks in a row, and that shifted the tide. That’s what’s so fun, it’s a momentum sport. You get a couple of great plays like that, and everything can shift.”

Olang was a talented player in her own high school days.

At Catasauqua, where her mother began the program, she was a four-year varsity setter and a three-year captain. She was named first-team all-District 11 three times and was a two-time all-state honorable mention selection.

She then went on to play for Roberts Wesleyan College near Rochester, New York, where she was a four-year starting setter and an all-conference player. After college, she coached at Dieruff, where she eventually became head coach before marrying and moving to upstate New York, where she and her husband began a family and a business.

But she came back to the Lehigh Valley and settled in Emmaus, where she has four children, ranging in ages from 13 to 6.

“Even when we lived in upstate New York, I was still coaching volleyball with my mom, assisting at Velocity, and Crosscourt, just trying to keep my toes in the water as much as I could,” Olang said. “But when you’re raising a family, you have to step back from leading. When we came back to the area, it was just like the right timing for me to get more involved in coaching again. This position opened, and it was the perfect storm of being ready for it. I am so appreciative of this opportunity, and to have the coaching staff I have is unbelievable. You can have a vision, but if people aren’t there to share that vision, it’s very hard to move that vision along.”

Olang said that the staff is remarkably united.

“We’re of one mind, one focus, one vision, one mentality,” she said. “We’re determined to take this program where we want it to go.”

Arndt, who has had success wherever she has been over the last 35 years in volleyball, is proud of her daughter and says, “She makes sure to keep me in line.”

She was a member of Parkland’s football staff for a few years, working directly as an interpreter with player Alex Ocasio, who was deaf.

“Coach [Tim] Moncman runs a well-oiled ship, just as we pride ourselves on being here,” Arndt said. “He made me realize that while there are a lot of moving parts, it all comes together as a whole. There are a lot of coaches on a football staff, but it comes down to where we all fit in, where do the puzzle pieces connect. I won a coach of the year award as a boys coach at Northampton, but I am so much happier for Jess. You never want the spotlight to shine on yourself. That’s how she is. You want to give back to others … the other coaches and the kids. This puts a stamp on who she is and what she has created, and what the kids have created.”

Elek, who graduated from Emmaus in 2009 and played Division I college volleyball at Canisius, said, “Being an Emmaus alum, it was an especially awesome season. The girls were super great. It was also so exciting. The past two years we’ve been here, we’ve done a lot with the girls, and we let them know that it’s OK to make mistakes. You just have to learn from them. As a coaching staff, we all do different things, but it all comes together as a well-oiled machine.”

Emmaus will graduate two first-team all-EPC selections in Amanda Rivera and Alyssa Heffner, but has several outstanding players returning.

“Our seniors were phenomenal this year, but I look ahead to what will still be here and what’s coming up, and we’re as excited as we’ve ever been,” Olang said. “We’ve got Fiona Answini back as an outside hitter and Emma Nesfeder back who ended up playing middle for us this year when she’s actually a setter. We’ve got great seniors coming up. The talent pool remains strong and we’re excited to see what they can accomplish.”

 



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A&M middle blocker Ifenna Cos‑Okpalla signs with Valor Sports Agency

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Dec. 26, 2025, 2:07 p.m. CT

It’s finally starting to sink in for several Texas A&M volleyball players that they have actually won a national title and made history.

For the nine seniors on the team, it was a storybook ending to their college careers, and for many of them, it marked the conclusion of their playing journeys. However, in an interview, coach Jamie Morrison alluded to a few of the girls receiving calls about opportunities to play professionally.

While he didn’t mention specific names, the two most obvious candidates would be standout outside hitter Logan Lednicky and dominant middle blocker Ifenna Cos-Okpalla. We got a notable nugget on social media when a fan posted that Cos-Okpalla has signed with former NBA veteran Jermaine O’Neal’s sports agency, Valor Sports Agency (VSA). The official VSA Instagram account appeared to confirm the news with an announcement on their page, which you can see below:

Cos-Okpalla was a crucial contributor throughout the NCAA Tournament run, whether it was delivering blocks, putting down kills, or firing ace serves. It was only fitting that she recorded the final kill of the NCAA championship match to secure the first-ever NCAA title for the Texas A&M volleyball program.





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Bear Lake, Malad each place four on all-state volleyball teams | Sports

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Malad and Bear Lake both reached consecutive state championship games this season.

So it’s no wonder the two programs were well-represented on this year’s all-state teams with four selections apiece.



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I hear Jamie Morrison from Texas Volleyball and appreciate his sentiments… “I care less about mistakes and more about responses” And this is fine and fair…but we also have to care deeply about…

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I hear Jamie Morrison from Texas Volleyball and appreciate his sentiments…

“I care less about mistakes and more about responses”

And this is fine and fair…but we also have to care deeply about mistakes. Quality of action-execution at the adult elite level of sport matters.

I’m being purposefully facetious- I know he knows this and I know he cares about this. I highlight it because I want to suggest a way to show you want to minimise mistakes in your team.

Attention…

It starts with focus of attention.

Attention is arguably the most important mental skill in high performance sport. Actions are heavily mediated by it…in fact they’re constantly mediated by its duration, direction, and strength. Technical actions, tactical actions (decisions), and physical actions constantly mediated by attention.

Coaches should be greedy with relation to attention. They should place high demands on players taking control of their attention, executing with attention, guiding it appropriately and robustly. By doing so players lessen a propensity to make mistakes.

My thesis here is obvious – many (but not all) mistakes are as a result of low attention – a disconnection from the game. High performance sport requires a high attention – focused and connected to the game no matter what.

So…

Whilst it’s understandable to give players leeway for error (especially as such an approach promotes freedom and creativity)…coaches would do well to drive player attention – it’s control…it’s duration and direction.



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Spartans Back In MW Action Versus Lopes On Sunday – SJSU Athletics – Official Athletics Website

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BACK TO MOUNTAIN WEST ACTION:  After a brief break for the Christmas holiday, the San José State women’s basketball team returns to action this Sunday with a Mountain West game against Grand Canyon at the Provident Credit Union Event Center. Both teams enter the game looking for their first conference win of the season. The Spartans fell at Wyoming, 83-60, while GCU fell to UNLV, 61-60, in a home game for the Lopes.

San José State enters Sunday’s game looking to extend a winning streak after defeating Sacramento State, 61-56, on December 21. Maya Anderson led all scorers with a career-high 29 points in the win.

Sunday’s game is the first of three SJSU plays this week. The Spartans play at Utah State Wednesday afternoon to end 2025. The team starts 2026 with a home game against New Mexico on January 3 at 2 p.m.

ABOUT GRAND CANYON:  The Lopes enter Sunday’s game with a 1-10 overall record and 0-1 mark in the Mountain West. The Lopes opened conference play by pushing defending champion UNLV to the brink before falling 61-60 in the final minute of the game. The team’s only win of the season came against SMU, 76-60, on November 18. Head coach Winston Gandy is in his first season at the school.

Series Record – First meeting

CAREER DAY FOR M. ANDERSON: Maya Anderson recorded her best scoring game as a Spartan with 29 points in the team’s 61-56 win over Sacramento State on December 21. She was 12-for-21 from the field and 2-for-7 from three-point range. Anderson scored 19 of her 29 points in the first half, including 10 points in the first quarter.

M. ANDERSON LEADING THE SPARTANS: 

Maya Anderson leads San José State in scoring with 152 points, 12.9 per game. She has led the team in points scored in six games including a career-best 29 points in a win over Sacramento State. She has scored in double figures in eight games this season..

Anderson also leads the team with 71 rebounds, 5.9 per game. She has led the team in boards in four games – 8 at BYU, 9 against UC Santa Barbara, 12 versus Cal State Monterey Bay and 7 against Sacramento State.

NATIONAL RANKINGS: Through December 22, the Spartans rank in the top-100 nationally in five categories.

Blocks PG – 51st 4.6 pg

Three-Point Attempts PG – 62nd 24.3 pg

Rebounds – Defensive – 90th 27.0 pg

WHO WANTS TO SCORE TONIGHT? Through 12 games this season, six different Spartans have led the team in scoring. Maya Anderson has led the team in scoring in six games, while Rylei Waugh led the team in three games. Amira Brown scored 12 points in the win at CBU, while Gabriela Pato scored 11 to lead the Spartans at No. 21 Washington. Katarina Anderson came off the bench at California and scored 10 points to lead SJSU. Stella Sgro scored a career-best 12 points off the bench at Wyoming.

UP NEXT: San José State finishes 2025 with a game at Utah State this Wednesday, December 31. Tip time is set for 1 p.m. MT/12 p.m. PT at the Dee Glen Smith Spectrum.

#AllSpartans



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Win Mikasa balls by filling in the 2025-26 Club Survey!

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Give your views by filling in the Volleyball England 2025-26 Club Survey and you could win VW200 Mikasa balls for use during training and matches. 

The survey has been distributed today (27th December) to club administrators, with spot prizes of two balls given out at key milestones. 

The survey takes just 15 to 20 minutes to complete, and, by participating, your club is helping to shape the future direction of the sport in this country. 

To complete the survey, check your club’s admin email inbox for the relevant link. 

“The information gleaned from the Club Survey remains invaluable in shaping Volleyball England’s future planning and delivery,” said Oliver Hudson, Volleyball England’s Project lead for Data and Insights. 

“The more clubs who are able to give their thoughts and opinions, the easier it is for us as the national governing body to respond to the needs of the sport, so we’re always extremely grateful to those clubs that fill out the survey.” 

The survey will remain open until 31st January 2026, after which the data will be anaylsed and key findings communicated across the organisation and its sub-groups before a summary of findings will be released to clubs.  

If you have any questions or need assistance with the Club Survey, please email o.hudson@volleyballengland.org.



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