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Every Minor League season features its share of pleasant developments.

Dodgers outfielder Mike Sirota is topping the Minors in slugging (.745) and OPS (1.214) in his pro debut. Royals outfielder Asbel Gonzalez is challenging for the Minor League lead in steals (35 in 37 games) in his first extended taste of full-season ball. Cardinals catcher Rainiel Rodriguez homered six times in his first 12 games stateside and is tearing up the Florida Complex League just like he did the Dominican Summer League a year ago.

We explore those stories and more as we highlight encouraging progress made by a prospect in each farm system below…

Blue Jays: Yohendrick Pinango, OF (No. 24)
Toronto acquired Pinango from the Cubs at last year’s Trade Deadline in the Nate Pearson deal, but the left-handed hitter floundered after the move, hitting just .179 with a .518 OPS in 33 games with Double-A New Hampshire. He’s looked like a revelation back with the Fisher Cats this spring, leading Double-A in all three slash line categories (.347/.456/.597) while adding seven homers through his first 36 contests. His killer bat speed should give him at least average power, and a Triple-A test shouldn’t be far off.

Orioles: Nestor German, RHP (No. 11)
German was the pick in last week’s story on a best prospect find for each team and the 2023 11th-round pick continues to impress. After six solid starts for High-A Aberdeen, German tossed 5 2/3 scoreless innings in his Double-A debut on May 16. That gives him a combined 2.93 ERA and 12.6 K/9 rate thanks to a solid four-pitch mix that points to a future as a big league starter.

Rays: Cooper Kinney, 2B/3B (No. 23)
The 2021 No. 34 overall pick has always been a bat-first infielder, but he’s taken his power to a new level in 2025. His eight homers are already only two behind his career high (reached in both 2023 and 2024), and his .536 slugging percentage through 33 games represents a new best. Kinney has cooled off in May after an extremely hot April, but even then, it’s still noteworthy that he continues to be an everyday option for Double-A Montgomery after shoulder issues have limited him for much of his early career.

Red Sox: Brandon Clarke, LHP (No. 29)
The Red Sox knew Clarke could reach the upper 90s with his fastball when they drafted him in the fifth round out of the State JC of Florida (Manatee-Sarasota) last July, but he also had missed most of 2022 and 2023 and didn’t have much track record of throwing strikes. He has proven more advanced than expected in his pro debut while sitting at 96-97 mph with his heater and unveiling an upper-80s slider and improved control. He has posted a 2.29 ERA with just five hits allowed and 33 strikeouts in 19 2/3 innings between two Class A stops.

Yankees: Carlos Lagrange, RHP (No. 17)
Lagrange led the Rookie-level Florida Complex League with 63 strikeouts in 41 2/3 innings during his U.S. debut in 2023, but he missed more of last year with back inflammation and couldn’t throw strikes in the Arizona Fall League. He’s doing a better job of harnessing his power arsenal (upper-90s fastball, mid-80s sweeper, upper-80s cutter) while compiling a 3.45 ERA, .202 average-against, 50/7 K/BB ratio and High-A South Atlantic League-leading 41 percent strikeout rate.

Guardians: Josh Hartle, LHP (No. 22)
Hartle entered the 2024 college season as a likely first-round pick and exited it as a Pirates third-rounder following a disappointing performance at Wake Forest. Sent to the Guardians as part of a trade for Spencer Horwitz in December, he has regained some velocity on his low-90s fastball and feel for his secondary pitches. He has logged a 2.55 ERA with a 36/11 K/BB ratio in 35 1/3 innings at High-A.

Royals: Asbel Gonzalez, OF (No. 23)
After turning 19 in January, Gonzalez joined Single-A Columbia with a reputation as a plus runner and exceptional defender in center field. As mentioned above, he’s put those wheels to good use already with 35 steals, second-most in the Minors. But he’s able to steal so many bags because he’s on base at a .443 clip by taking his walks, putting balls in play and taking advantage of those wheels to post a high BABIP. He’s become an up-the-middle talent worth following.

Tigers: Dylan Smith, RHP (not ranked)
The 2021 third-rounder was a starter for the first three seasons of his career but never managed more than 88 1/3 innings in a campaign due to injuries, most recently a strained subscapularis in 2024. He transitioned into the Double-A Erie bullpen this season with great success (1.80 ERA, 27 strikeouts in 20 innings) before a move to Triple-A this week. With a fastball that can touch the upper 90s and a diving slider, Smith could put himself in a spot to help the MLB relief corps in ‘25.

Twins: Gabriel Gonzalez, OF (No. 17)
The Twins were hoping they were getting a prospect on the rise when they acquired Gonzalez from the Mariners in return for Jorge Polanco ahead of the 2024 season. But in his first season with the organization, he posted just a .707 OPS. A return to High-A Cedar Rapids has seemingly been a smart developmental move for the outfielder as he hit .319/.378/.529 with 18 extra-base hits through his first 34 games to earn his first bump up to Double-A.

White Sox: Christian Oppor, LHP (No. 18)
Extremely raw when the White Sox selected him in 2023’s fifth round out of Gulf Coast State (Fla.) JC, Oppor has impressed with his arsenal and improved polish while putting together a 3.46 ERA, .180 average-against and 37 strikeouts in 26 innings between two Class A levels. He’s working at 93-95 mph and touching 98 with his fastball while also missing bats with a sweeping 78-82 mph slider and tumbling upper-70s changeup.

Angels: George Klassen, RHP (No. 3)
Klassen is unfortunately on the concussion injured list after taking a line drive to the head on May 11. And in many ways, the right-hander was a surprise development last year when he jumped on the scene with the Phillies before being sent to the Angels near the Trade Deadline, finishing with a 3.10 ERA, 13.1 K/9 rate and .195 BAA. What’s been fun to see this year as he was starting to settle in at Double-A is how often he’s found the strike zone. Klassen walked 8.5 per nine in college, 4.5/9 in 2024 and is down to 2.2 this year while still missing plenty of bats.

Astros: Bryce Mayer, RHP (No. 27)
Mayer opened eyes in his brief pro debut after the Astros drafted him in the 16th round last July, and he has continued to do so this spring with an explosive mid-90s fastball with carry and a pair of quality breaking pitches (upper-70s curveball, sweeping 82-85 mph slider). The Missouri product has recorded a 3.82 ERA with a 43/11 K/BB ratio in 30 2/3 innings at two Class A stops.

A’s: Daniel Susac, C (No. 11)
Since being taken in the first round of the 2022 Draft, Susac had put up relatively pedestrian numbers at the plate, and while he did homer 12 times last year for Double-A Midland, he finished with a .734 OPS as his approach regressed overall. This year, he’s still chasing too much (41 percent), but he’s drawing more walks and getting to his power more, with a .926 OPS and 124 wRC+ over his first 27 games.

Mariners: Brock Rodden, 2B (No. 27)
A fifth-round senior sign in 2023 who joined the Mariners for an under-slot $200,000, Rodden had a solid first full season in 2024, splitting the year between High-A Everett and Double-A Arkansas. He slashed just .208/.261/.342 in 64 games up a level and was sent back to Arkansas this year. The M’s might have to move him again soon as the undersized switch-hitter is batting .329/.384/.539 over his first 19 games after missing the first couple weeks of the season.

Rangers: Caden Scarborough, RHP (No. 27)
Though Scarborough was more of a basketball player as a Florida high schooler, the Rangers liked his athleticism, projectability and delivery metrics enough to take him in 2023’s sixth round and sign him for an over-slot $515,000. After a lat strain delayed his pro debut until last July and he worked just 10 1/3 innings in 2024, he has been healthy and showed more polish than expected so far this year. Armed with a 92-97 mph fastball with carry and a low-80s slider, he has posted a deceptively high 4.85 ERA that belies his .221 average-against and 34/9 K/BB ratio in 26 Single-A frames.

Braves: Ian Mejia, RHP (No. 23)
An 11th-round pick who signed for $100K in 2022, Mejia keeps trending in the right direction. He went from a 4.69 ERA and .260 BAA in 2023 to 3.80 and .239 last year. Starting the year at Double-A, the 25-year-old right-hander has been lights-out, leading the Southern League with an 0.98 ERA and sitting fourth with a .190 BAA through his first seven appearances.

Marlins: Joe Mack, C (No. 9)
The 31st overall pick in the 2021 Draft, Mack finally started putting things together at the plate last year by hunting fastballs early in counts, though he was less consistent at Double-A. He has had fewer ups and downs in 2025, developing into one of the game’s best all-around catching prospects while slashing .297/.397/.477 with five homers in 35 games between Double-A and Triple-A.

Mets: A.J. Ewing, OF/2B (No. 27)
Jacob Reimer — a huge producer after last year’s hamstring injury — would be a good shout here too, but the nod goes to Ewing, who entered Wednesday with a .374/.468/.573 line, 16 extra-base hits and 28 steals in 34 games between Single-A and High-A. He was doing a much better job of making contact in the zone during his return to St. Lucie, and his above-average speed gives him another weapon. He’s a key part of a loaded Brooklyn lineup.

Nationals: Cole Henry, RHP (not ranked)
Washington had high hopes for the former LSU star when it made him a second-round pick in 2020 but injuries throughout his career (including thoracic outlet syndrome) have limited his time on the mound. Until now. He’s been up in the bigs as one of the few bright spots in the Nats bullpen with a 2.76 ERA and 17 strikeouts through 16 1/3 innings (the same amount he threw in the Minors in 2024). Henry has relied primarily on his 93-95 mph four-seamer and 79-82 mph curveball in his early MLB days.

Phillies: Otto Kemp, UTIL (No. 24)
As a non-drafted free agent, Kemp has already far surpassed expectations, but now he’s knocking on the big league door. After a 2024 season in which he reached Triple-A and finished with an OPS of .881, Kemp was one of the most productive hitters in the Arizona Fall League (1.194 OPS, 6 HR, 22 RBI in 15 games). He’s kept it going back with Lehigh Valley this year, at .329/.435/.624 through 44 games while seeing time at third, first, second and left field.

Brewers: Brock Wilken, 3B (No. 17)
The 2023 first-rounder was hit in the face early in his first full season, and even after returning, he struggled with a .199 average and 28.2 percent K rate over 108 Double-A games. (His time in the Arizona Fall League wasn’t much better.) It’s been a big turnaround to this point in ‘25. Back with Biloxi, he sports a .231/.409/.530 line with 11 homers (tops at Double-A) and a 21.6 percent walk rate through 40 contests. Milwaukee seems content to let him dominate the Southern League for a bit longer, but given the third-base issues in the Majors, Wilken could be an MLB option in the second half should these improvements hold.

Cardinals: Rainiel Rodriguez, C (No. 7)
The move stateside can come with its share of bumps, but that hasn’t been the case at all for Rodriguez, who hit 10 homers and tied for the Dominican Summer League lead with 25 extra-base hits in 2024. The 18-year-old backstop continues to show at least plus power with six homers through his first 12 games in the Florida Complex League, most among Rookie-ball hitters. His .944 SLG and 1.475 OPS also rank second at the level in this early juncture. Already considered advanced, Rodriguez is slugging even ahead of schedule.

Cubs: Jaxon Wiggins, RHP (No. 10)
The Cubs have a hitter-heavy farm system and need some pitchers to make strides this year, and Wiggins is doing exactly that. He had a 6.17 ERA in his first two college seasons at Arkansas and missed his third following Tommy John surgery before the Cubs made him a supplemental second-round pick in 2023. After easing back into action last year, he’s missing bats with three pitches (mid-90s fastball, mid-80s slider and changeup) while recording a 1.78 ERA, .151 average-against and 35 strikeouts in 30 1/3 innings between High-A and Double-A.

Pirates: Mitch Jebb, OF/2B (No. 13)
Jebb started off very slowly during his first full season of pro ball in 2024, with a .564 OPS through the end of May. He hit .289 with a .372 OBP from July 1 on, but the question was whether that would carry over to this season with a move up to Double-A Altoona and away from the hitting-friendly environs in High-A Greensboro. So far, he’s answered that query with a resounding yes, hitting .323 with a .417 OBP and 16 steals in 36 games.

Reds: Ty Floyd, RHP (No. 17)
Taken No. 38 overall in the 2023 Draft out of Louisiana State, Floyd is pitching the first competitive innings of his pro career this season after missing all of 2024 following shoulder surgery last May. He’s understandably being built back up slowly with Single-A Daytona, and his last outing was a clunker, but overall the Reds have to be happy with Floyd’s 3.25 ERA, .147 BAA and 10.1 K/9 rate. The fastball still isn’t quite as crisp as in 2023 (averaging more around 92 mph than 94 at LSU that spring), but he’s missing bats with it as well as with some of his secondaries.

D-backs: Kristian Robinson, OF (not ranked)
A former Top 100 prospect, Robinson didn’t play at all for an affiliate in 2021 or 2022 due to legal and visa issues. He spent all last season with Double-A Amarillo and looked like a player making up for lost time with a 35.8 percent K rate. That’s down to 29.0 percent with the Sod Poodles this season while sporting a .289/.420/.547 slash line with seven homers through his first 37 games. Amarillo is a launching pad, but Robinson’s improved contact has helped his prospect stock in his age-24 season.

Dodgers: Mike Sirota, OF (No. 19)
Projected as a first-rounder entering his junior season at Northeastern last spring, Sirota slumped and fell to the Reds in the third round. Traded to the Dodgers in the Gavin Lux deal in January, he has recaptured his timing at the plate in his pro debut this year and is batting .382/.469/.745 with nine homers in 27 games between two Class A levels. The grand-nephew of Hall of Famer Whitey Ford has the upside of a center fielder with solid tools across the board.

Giants: Walker Martin, SS (No. 22)
Signed for an over-slot $2,997,500 as a 2023 second-rounder from a Colorado high school, Martin had trouble staying healthy and making contact in his pro debut last year, striking out at an overall 41 percent clip and in 46 percent of his Single-A plate appearances. He has made progress this spring with a 30 percent K rate at that level while hitting .226/.308/.491 with a California League-best seven homers in 27 games. He’ll need to keep improving his bat-to-ball skills but does have 20/20 potential.

Padres: Rosman Verdugo, INF (No. 24)
Standing 5-foot-11, Verdugo wasn’t known for his power entering 2025. He’d hit 13 homers over his first two full seasons and hadn’t posted a slugging percentage above .381 in either campaign. It’s been a different story with High-A Fort Wayne to this point; Verdugo has already gone deep eight times in 37 games and sports a .514 SLG. That’s come with a significant jump in strikeout rate (38.0 percent), but with 20 of his 34 hits going for extra bases, Verdugo is showing an interestingly different hitting profile in his age-20 campaign.

Rockies: Kyle Karros, 3B (No. 19)
He had a big first full season of pro ball, earning Northwest League MVP honors, but was it just a hitting-friendly Spokane mirage? Evidently not, and Karros actually hit slightly better on the road than at home last year. While he’s been out since the beginning of this month, he’s proven his bat will play even at a much more equitable ballpark in Double-A Hartford. Over his first 22 games, Karros had a .960 OPS — 1.177 in 13 home games.

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Jackson, Reilly Take Home AVCA Positional Awards – University of Nebraska

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Nebraska volleyball’s Andi Jackson and Bergen Reilly received top positional awards at the AVCA Awards Banquet at the Kansas City Convention Center on Friday. 

Jackson was named the Middle Blocker of the Year, while Reilly was named the Setter of the Year. The AVCA positional awards are new this season.

Pitt junior Olivia Babock was named the AVCA Player of the Year for the second straight season, as well as Opposite of the Year. Wisconsin’s Mimi Colyer took home Outside Hitter of the Year, and Iowa State libero Rachel Van Gorp was Libero of the Year. 

Reilly set the Huskers to a school-record .351 hitting percentage, as the Big Red concluded their season with a 33-1 overall record and 20-0 mark in Big Ten play en route to a third straight conference title. Reilly averaged 10.47 assists per set and 2.70 digs per set. She also totaled 73 kills, 67 blocks and 19 aces. 

Reilly was named a first-team AVCA All-American, Big Ten Player of the Year, Big Ten Setter of the Year, AVCA Region Player of the Year and All-Big Ten First Team. NU’s .351 hitting percentage ranks first nationally and is the best hitting percentage by a Big Ten team since 2009 Penn State.

A junior from Sioux Falls, S.D., Reilly set Nebraska to a .400 or better hitting percentage nine times this season, a school record in the rally-scoring era. Reilly had double-doubles in all six of the Husker matches that went longer than three sets, and she had four double-doubles in sweeps.

A three-time AVCA All-American and one of four finalists for AVCA Player of the Year, Reilly ranks No. 3 in school history in career assists in the rally-scoring era with 3,723. Her career assists per set average of 10.70 ranks No. 4 among active Division I players and No. 2 in school history in the rally-scoring era.

Jackson was chosen to the AVCA All-America First Team for the second straight year, as well as the All-Big Ten First Team. She was also an AVCA Player of the Year Semifinalist and AVCA All-Region Team for the third straight year. 

The junior middle blocker from Brighton, Colo., averaged 2.74 kills per set on .467 hitting with 1.12 blocks per set and 16 aces. Her .467 hitting percentage led the nation and was the No. 3 hitting percentage in school history for a single season. 

In conference-only matches, Jackson hit .559 to break the Big Ten record for hitting percentage in conference-only matches in a season, which was .541 by Arielle Wilson from Penn State in 2008. Jackson ended her junior season with a career hitting percentage of .437, which is the No. 1 mark in school history and the No. 1 mark among active Division I players. 



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YSU Collegiate Invitational Presented by Southwoods Health Meet Information

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2026 Youngstown State University Indoor Track & Field 14th Annual Collegiate Invitational Meet Presented by Southwoods Health will start at 1 pm | Friday, Jan. 16

Entry Registration Opens up on Direct Athletics :

Friday, December 19 at 5pm

Time Schedule of Events

Running Events start at 1pm

All Field Events start at 1pm

Running Events — Rolling Schedule Women first, Men to Follow

1pm Women 5000M 

Men’s 60M Hurdles Qualifying Round

Women’s 60M Hurdles  Qualifying Round

Women’s 60M Dash  Qualifying Round

Men’s 60M Dash  Qualifying Round

Men’s 5000M

Men’s 60M Hurdles PRELIMS

Women’s 60M Hurdles PRELIMS

Women’s 60M Dash PRELIMS

Men’s 60M Dash PRELIMS

Women’s Mile Run 

Men’s Mile Run

Women’s 400M

Men’s 400M

Women’s 60M Hurdles FINALS

Men’s 60M Hurdles FINALS

Women’s 60M Dash FINALS

Men’s 60M Dash FINALS

Women’s 500M Dash FINALS

Men’s 500M Dash FINALS

Women’s 800m

Men’s 800m

Women’s 200M Dash

Men’s 200M Dash

Women’s 3000M Run 

Men’s 3000M Run

Women’s 1600M Relay

Men’s 1600M Relay

Field Events Start at 12noon

Seeded Women’s Pole Vault

Seeded Men’s Pole Vault

Unseeded Women’s Pole Vault

Unseeded Men’s Pole Vault

Women’s High Jump–Men’s High Jump to follow

Women’s Weight Throw–Men’s Weight Throw to follow

Men’s Shot Put–Women’s Shot Put to follow

Men (West Pit) and Women (East Pit)

Long Jump–Triple Jump follow 20 minutes upon completion of Long Jump

**Finals in field events will consist of the top Nine marks from the qualifying rounds.**

Meet : Open NCAA sanctioned Indoor Track & Field Competition.

Timing: Fully automatic FinishLynx system

Location: The Watson and Tressel Training Site (WATTS) on the YSU campus. The WATTS features a full-length Shaw Sportexe Power Blade HP+ synthetic turf system football field, a 300-meter state-of-the-art mondo track surface, two long-jump pits, a high-jump pit, four batting cages, protective netting, training room and locker rooms.

GPS address: 651 Elm St. | Youngstown, OH 44555

Entries: Entries are due by Tuesday, January 13 by 7pm on Direct Athletics, consisting of event entries with best marks from the previous year or realistic projected marks. All entries will be done on-line at www.directathletics.com.

Please visit the Direct Athletics website at your earliest convenience in order to familiarize yourself with how the entry process works.

Also, please limit FIVE athletes per event. If you have an event with more than five quality athletes, please text Brian Gorby at (330) 519-7591 and we’ll help to get more entry’s added, if needed.

We always try to help accommodate additional team /individual additional Entry’s.

**Note: Please check YSUsports.com after the entry deadline for changes or adjustments to the meet time schedule!

Internet Entry Lists: Final entry lists will be posted on our website, YSUsports.com on Thursday, January 15. Please check to make sure your athletes are entered correctly. If there are mistakes or scratches, please email bdgorby@ysu.edu & ysutrackmeets@gmail.com .

Entry Fees: $ 500 per each team, men &  women genders are separate, consisting of 10 or more individuals in unlimited events are paid online, when you complete Entry’s on Direct Athletics or $ 25 per individual event entry & paid online at Direct Athletics.

ENTRY FEES

$ 25 per ENTRY (i.e. 2 events entered would be $ 50 )  Entry fees must be paid in advance online when you enter on DirectAthletics (all major credit and debit cards accepted).

Relay only Entry’s $ 7 per runner for a total of $ 28 per relay team. 

REFUND POLICY

Outside of meet cancellation, there is a strict NO REFUND policy on entry fees.

Absolutely no refunds will be processed due to scratches, change of plans, inability to travel, illness, injuries, etc.

Spikes: ONLY 1/4 inch or shorter pyramid spikes will be allowed and all spikes will be checked prior to events. NO pin or needle spikes, spike elements, or any other type of spike will be allowed.

High Jump: All high jump competitions will be conducted on the Mondo surface.

Sections/Heats/Flights: Flights will be seeded by distance with best marks in the latest sections/flights.

Finals in field events will consist of the top nine marks from the qualifying rounds.

There will be prelims and finals in the 60 and 60h. All other races will be run as sections against time with the fastest heats being run first.

Implement Weigh-In: 30 minutes prior to event at the Throws area.



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Texas A&M volleyball advances to national championship with sweep of Pitt

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KBTX) – Texas A&M head coach Jamie Morrison and his squad have fought through the postseason for the ability to practice together one more time, he said.

This edition of Aggies will get the maximum number of practices a team can hold.

Thursday, third-seeded A&M swept No. 1 seed Pitt (29-27, 25-21, 25-20) to punch its first-ever ticket to the NCAA Tournament national title game inside Kansas City’s T-Mobile Center.

The Aggies will face Southeastern Conference-mate Kentucky Sunday at 2:30 p.m. for a shot to hoist a national championship trophy.

“This is crazy,” middle blocker Ifenna Cos-Okpalla said. “This is an absolute crazy experience. We have had faith in ourselves all year, from the first game of the season. We knew that we were capable of this, but now living it, like, ‘Wow.’ This is insane. It’s really cool.”

Outside hitter Kyndal Stowers paced the Aggies with 16 kills, followed by Logan Lednicky’s 14. Pitt’s Olivia Babcock was the match’s leading attacker with 22 kills.

A&M dominated the service line through the match, which included six service aces.

The Aggies went hit-for-hit with Pitt through an opening set that saw 17 ties and eight lead changes. Pitt weathered four Aggie set points, and had two of their own, before A&M finally put Set 1 away with a kill from Stowers.

Pitt put together an 8-0 run through the middle of the second set to take a 15-11 lead, but the Aggies immediately countered with their own 9-2 run to pull the match back in their favor. A 4-0 run ultimately put the set on ice, giving the Aggies a 2-0 lead.

A&M has built upon the experiences of the season and this set is was no different. In the Aggies’ Elite Eight win over Nebraska, the Cornhuskers put together an 8-1 run through the middle of the marathon fourth set that the Aggies ultimately dropped. Thursday, they cut off the skid before it cost them a set.

“We were like, ‘Hey, we’re not doing that again,’” Stowers said. “’They’re going on a run right now. We’re going to recognize that, props to them for what they’re doing, but we are going to go respond and we’re not going to let that keep happening.”

A&M closed out the third set on a 5-1 run to claim the match.

The Aggies hit .382 to Pitt’s .344 in the match.

“I’m proud of our team just because we talk a lot about staying present and enjoying moments and I thought, in all of those moments, we enjoyed every single second of it,” Morrison said. “Every single time we were pushed, we talked a lot about responses, and we had a response and that’s all you can ask for in these moments.”

The Aggies will be out for revenge Sunday, as Kentucky is the only squad that downed the Aggies in SEC play this season in a 3-1 Wildcat win in Reed Arena. It will be the first time in the history of the tournament two SEC teams will face each other in the championship game.

“Y’all keep hearing, ‘Why not us?’” Lednicky said. “Like, literally, ‘Why not us?’ I think we are considered the underdog in a lot of moments, just because we haven’t been here before. But we know we have all the right pieces so, ‘Why not us?’”

KBTX reporter Dylan Chryst Watkiss contributed to this report from Kansas City, Mo.



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Two Rams Named to the CSC Academic All-District Team

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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – The 2025-26 Academic All-District® Women’s Volleyball Teams, selected by College Sports Communicators, recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the court and in the classroom. The CSC Academic All-America® program separately recognizes honorees in four divisions — NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III and NAIA.
 
The CSC Academic All-District® teams include the student-athletes listed at the links above.

Academic All-District® honorees were considered for advancement to the CSC Academic All-America® ballot.

For WSSU, Aria Caldwell and Zoe Chesson were named to the team.

Student-athletes selected as CSC Academic All-America® finalists are denoted with an asterisk and will advance to the national ballot to be voted on by CSC members. First-, second- and third-team Academic All-America® honorees will be announced Jan. 13, 2026.

The Division II and III CSC Academic All-America® programs are partially financially supported by the NCAA Division II and III national governance structures to assist CSC with handling the awards fulfillment aspects for the 2025-26 Divisions II and III Academic All-America® programs. The NAIA CSC Academic All-America® program is partially financially supported through the NAIA governance structure.



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Olivia Babcock Named Back-To-Back AVCA National Player of the Year

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KANSAS CITY – The American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) named Olivia Babcock the 2025 AVCA National Player of the Year on Friday. Babcock becomes just the fifth player in the award’s history to earn the honor in back-to-back seasons. Additionally, she was honored as the inaugural AVCA Rightside Hitter of the Year, an award introduced this season.

Babcock once again swept the sport’s top individual accolades in 2025, earning AVCA National Player of the Year, ACC Player of the Year and AVCA East Coast Region Player of the Year honors. She is the only player in Pitt history to be named a three-time AVCA First Team All-American and was recently selected as the Pittsburgh Regional Most Outstanding Player after leading the Panthers to their fifth consecutive National Semifinal.

Earlier this season, Babcock set the program’s single-match kills record with 45 against North Carolina. She is the only player in NCAA volleyball this year to reach that mark and the first since Cincinnati’s Jordan Thompson recorded 50 kills against UConn on Nov. 3, 2019.

Anchoring the Pitt offense, Babcock averaged personal-best marks of 5.17 kills per set and 2.09 digs per set. She earned AVCA National Player of the Week honors earlier this season and was named ACC Offensive Player of the Week five times during the 2025 campaign.



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Men’s Volleyball Individual Match Tickets On Sale

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HONOLULU – Individual match tickets for the 2026 University of Hawai’i men’s volleyball season are currently on sale. Tickets may be purchased at www.etickethawaii.com or at the Bankoh Arena at Stan Sheriff Center box office (Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.). 
 
Season tickets are still on sale starting as low as $150.  Click here to purchase season tickets.
 
In addition, several promotions are also available for individual match tickets.
 
Save & Serve Wednesdays: $5 Tickets available while supplies last
Military: 30% off all matches & 50% off on April 17th match
Hawai’i Hero’s Night: 50% off for First Responders on January 8th match
*All special offers are based on availability and only in select seating areas.
 
Link to purchase individual games online: https://hawaiiathletics.evenue.net/events/MVBI
 
Individual Ticket Prices:
Lower Level (only single seats available)
Lower Level Sideline – $25
Lower Level Baseline 
        Adult – $24
        Senior citizen (65 and over) – $20
        Youth (ages 4-High School) – $15
 
Upper Level Sideline
        Adult – $20
        Senior citizen (65 and over) – $15
        Youth (ages 4-High School) – $10
Upper Level Baseline
        Adult – $17
        Senior citizen (65 and over) – $10
        Youth (ages 4–High School) – $8
 
 

#HawaiiMVB

 
 
 



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