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Vanderbilt Athletics Dedicates Reimagined South End Zone

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. —Vanderbilt University today dedicated the all-new south end zone at First Bank Stadium, celebrating completion of one of the historic Vandy United campaign’s cornerstone projects. Made possible by thousands of Vandy United donors, and paired with the north end zone enhancements introduced last season, the reimagined south end zone embodies in spirit and substance the university’s commitment to the student-athlete and fan experiences. 

Vanderbilt Chancellor Daniel Diermeier, Vice Chancellor and Athletic Director Candice Storey Lee, Vice Chancellor John Lutz and E. Bronson Ingram Chair in Football Clark Lea addressed a large crowd of National Commodore Club members during the celebration. They were joined in remarks by Vanderbilt Board of Trust member and Vandy United donor Jennifer Frist, BS’93.  

“Today we celebrate a cornerstone of Vandy United,” Diermeier said. “This remarkable facility transforms the game-day experience for our supporters and positions our student-athletes to succeed. When Candice and I announced Vandy United, one of the things we said is we wanted to make this a destination for the best people and create an environment where they can succeed. That is exactly what we have done, and that is exactly what we will do. Clark Lea’s Commodores embody these values on the field, turning Vandy United’s vision into a reality. Our supporters embody that vision from the stands.”

Football’s new locker room in the south end zone facility (Brendan Ross/Vanderbilt)

Following Thursday’s ceremony, guests were invited to be among the first to tour the newly-completed space. Completely replacing the old seating bowl, the south end zone includes a multi-use facility spanning more than 130,000 square feet, a new football locker room, six new premium seating areas and a renovated concourse that fully encloses the stadium. Other amenities include new video and ribbon boards, a team store and fan-specific spaces like mother’s, sensory and guest services rooms.  

e’re celebrating a game-day experience like our fans have never before enjoyed—but certainly deserve,” Lee said. “We’re also celebrating what’s possible. This is what we are capable of, together. That couldn’t be more important as we enter this new era of college athletics. In a more collaborative era than ever before, we control our future.”

Lea spoke just days after his No. 18 Commodores improved to 4-0 with a 70-21 win against Georgia State in front of the second sellout crowd in as many home games this season at FirstBank Stadium. In addition to the team’s most points in a game since 1918, Saturday’s game marked the first time since 1956 that Vanderbilt took the field in September while ranked in the Associated Press Top 25.  

“On behalf of everyone who has been here and lived this and believed in it and was desperate for someone to step up and say we can do this at the highest level, thank you, Chancellor Diermeier, for your leadership and your aggressive vision and how you keep pushing,” Lea said. “And as the chancellor said, this may be the close of one chapter, but it is not the end. The challenge I have for the room is, is this going to be where we stop? Or can we continue to be aggressive and reach for more. Because, honestly, I came here not for one season, not for the energy of 4-0. I came here to win a national championship. And I have belief because I have the leadership ahead of me that is clearing the path for that.”

Frist spoke on behalf of the thousands of donors who made the south end zone project possible and continue to support Vandy United’s ongoing vision, following on Board of Trust member John R. Ingram’s inspirational lead gift that helped launch the campaign more than four years ago. Longtime Vanderbilt supporters, Jennifer and Billy Frist’s transformational Vandy United gift established the Frist Athletics Village, which includes the historic football stadium—known as FirstBank Stadium since Vanderbilt and FirstBank, Nashville neighbors with more than 250 years of Tennessee history between them, entered into a long-term naming rights and campus collaboration agreement.   

To stand here today and see what has already been accomplished by uplifting student-athletes and uniting the community is thrilling,” Frist said. “Now we have an elevated game-day experience that we are proud to show the SEC and a university we are proud to show the world. The response speaks for itself. People now believe in Vanderbilt athletics. Today is a celebration of what happens when we all participate and pay it forward. So I encourage you all to get involved or involved again. Billy and I believe this is a great time to help Vanderbilt be Vanderbilt.”

Since the launch of Vandy United signaled the university’s redoubled commitment to giving student-athletes the facilities and support to succeed, Commodores have matched the collaborative community energy that made projects like the south end zone possible by reaching new heights of competitive excellence.  

  • Bowling won its third NCAA championship, and Commodores Gordon Sargent (men’s golf) and Veronica Fraley (track and field) won individual NCAA championships.  
  • Tim Corbin’s VandyBoys won two more SEC Tournament titles, played for a national title in their fifth College World Series appearance and had four more student-athletes selected in the first round of the MLB Draft.  
  • Restoring Memorial Magic, men’s and women’s basketball returned to the national rankings and competed in the NCAA Tournament in the same season for the first time in more than a decade.  
  • Men’s and women’s golf advanced to multiple NCAA Championships, with Thomas F. Roush, M.D. and Family Men’s Golf Head Coach Scott Limbaugh’s team also winning back-to-back SEC titles.  
  • Soccer reached the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 for the first time in program history, while varsity volleyball returned to campus after 45 years in unforgettable fashion with an outdoor match on Wyatt Lawn.  
  • And former Commodores were part of MLB, NBA, NFL, NWSL and Serie A Femminile championships, competed and medaled in the Olympics and will help lead the United States into action this weekend in the Ryder Cup.  

In addition to this season’s early success, the football team won last season’s Birmingham Bowl, rallied the Nashville community around its journey and brought national attention to Vanderbilt as one of the subjects of Netflix’s Any Given Sunday docuseries.  

“We can be the blueprint,” Lee said. “We can sustain competitive excellence and foster deep affinity. And we can do it with our values and identity intact. As long as we’re all in this, together, we’re just getting started. We will be relentless.”

A key initiative in the university’s Dare to Grow campaign, Vandy United has raised more than $350 million. The university continues work on major facilities and operational enhancements, including the Frist Athletics Village and ambitious renovations planned for Hawkins Field. Through the Ingram Center for Student-Athlete Success and other efforts, the campaign has also funded scholarships and support programs to ensure that Vanderbilt student-athletes are poised for success on and off the field. 

This is 130,000 square feet of what I think we can all agree is a fabulous space,” Lutz said. “It’s revolutionary in the context of Vanderbilt and this stadium’s progression as a venue. I’d like to thank our corporate sponsors, FirstBank and SRM Concrete. I’d also like to thank all the members of the National Commodore Club and our other athletics boosters and supporters. And a very special thanks, because they were involved early and very substantially, to the Frist and Ingram families.”

 





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Track & Field Releases 2026 Schedule

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BABSON PARK, Mass.— After a 2025 spring season that was highlighted by four All-East region selections and one athlete competing at the NCAA Championships, Babson College veteran head men’s and women’s track & field coach Russ Brennen officially announced the 2026 schedule on Monday.

For the second year in a row, the Beavers will open the season in Myrtle Beach, S.C., at the Alan Connie Shamrock Invitational on March 19-21. The Green and White come back to New England for the UMass Dartmouth Corsair Invitational on March 28.

Babson starts a busy month of April at the Coast Guard Invitational in New London, Conn., on April 4. The Beavers will be in Medford, Mass. the following weekend, beginning with day one of the Tufts Multi-Meet on April 10 and day two as part of the Tufts Invitational on April 11. The Green and White will wrap up the regular season at MIT’s annual Sean Collier Invitational on April 18.

The post-season begins with the New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference (NEWMAC) Championships at Coast Guard on April 24-25. The Division III New England Championships are slated for May 1-2 in Springfield, Mass.

Top qualifying competitors will go to the Farley Inter Regional Meet at Williams College on May 8-9. Selected Beavers will compete in the Last Chance qualifying meet at MIT on May 14, attempting to qualify for the NCAA national championships, which are at Veteran’s Memorial Field Sports Complex in La Crosse, Wisc. on May 21-24.

 



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Men’s Volleyball No. 2 In Big West Preseason Poll

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IRVINE, Calif. – The University of Hawai’i men’s volleyball team was picked second in the preseason Big West coaches’ poll while a trio of Rainbow Warriors were named to the seven-member preseason team – setter Tread Rosenthal, outside hitter Adrien Roure, and opposite Kristian Titriyski.
 
UH received 22 total points and trailed preseason favorite Long Beach State (24 points, 4 first-place votes). UC Irvine (21 points) was third followed by a three-way tie for fourth between CSUN (9), UC San Diego (9), and UC Santa Barbara (9).
 
Hawai’i returns five starters — Tread Rosenthal, Adrien Roure, Kristian Titriyski, Justin Todd, and Louis Sakanoko — and 12 lettermen from last year’s squad that finished 27-6 and advanced to the NCAA Championship semifinals. Rosenthal and Roure were AVCA first-team All-Americans while Titriyski was named to the second team.
 
LBSU had two players on the preseason team – Alex Kandev and Skyler Varga – while UCSB (George Bruening) and CSUN (Jalen Phillips) both had one.
 
The Rainbow Warriors, who captured their fourth Big West Championship title last season, were picked No. 2 in the AVCA Preseason Top 20 Coaches poll behind UCLA. Hawai’i garnered seven first place votes, two more than Long Beach State, who was third.
 
2026 Big West Preseason Coaches’ Poll
Rk. Team – Points (1st Place Votes)
1. Long Beach State – 24 (4)
2. Hawai’i – 22 (2)
3. UC Irvine – 17
T4. CSUN – 9
T4. UC San Diego – 9
T4. UC Santa Barbara – 9
 
2026 Big West Preseason Coaches’ Team
George Bruening, R-So., Outside Hitter, UC Santa Barbara, Newport Beach, Calif.
Alex Kandev, So., Outside Hitter, Long Beach State, Sofia, Bulgaria
Jalen Phillips, R-Jr., Opposite Hitter, CSUN, Anaheim, Calif.
Tread Rosenthal, Jr., Setter, Hawai’i, Austin, Texas
Adrien Roure, So, Outside Hitter, Hawai’i, Lyon, France
Kristian Titriyski, So., Opposite Hitter, Hawai’i, Sofia, Bulgaria
Skyler Varga, R-Sr., Opposite Hitter, Long Beach State, Muenster, Saskatchewan
 
 

#HawaiiMVB

 
 



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Phillips Named to Preseason Coaches’ Team, CSUN Picked to Tie for Fourth

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IRVINE, Calif. – Redshirt junior Jalen Phillips was named to the Preseason Coaches’ Team, while CSUN Men’s Volleyball earned nine points to tie for fourth as the 2026 Big West Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Poll and preseason awards were announced Monday, Dec. 29.

Phillips earned a nod to the preseason team for the first time, joining George Bruening of UC Santa Barbara, Alex Kandev and Skyler Varga of Long Beach State, along with Tread Rosenthal, Adrien Roure, and Kristian Titriyski of Hawai’i on the Preseason Coaches’ Team.

Phillips, a first-team AVCA All-America and first-team All-Big West selection in 2025, became the first Matador named to the AVCA first-team since Kevin McKniff and Jacek Ratazczak in 2010. He was a three-time Big West Offensive Player of the Week (Jan. 20, Feb. 24, Apr. 14) last season, leading CSUN with a career-high 456 kills, while averaging 4.22 kills per set, which ranked second in the Big West and fourth in the nation. Phillips also finished his sophomore season ranked third in the Big West in points, averaging 4.81 per set, and was 13th in hitting percentage at .293.MVB_Big West Preaseason_26

In the Preseason Poll, the Matadors received nine points from the conference’s head coaches and were predicted to tie for fourth with UC San Diego and UC Santa Barbara, which also received nine points.

Defending national champions Long Beach State earned the top spot in the poll for the second straight season, picking up four first-place votes and 24 total points in the voting. Hawai’i earned the other two first-place votes and 22 total points for second, with UC Irvine earning 17 points for third. With nine points, the trio of the Matadors, Tritons, and Gauchos round out the polling in the vote by the league’s six head coaches.

“I’m sure the Big West will be exactly what we expect it to be; it’s the best volleyball conference in the country,” said head coach Theo Edwards. “All six Big West teams are ranked in the preseason top-20 of the AVCA national poll, so I know the guys on this team will embrace the challenge ahead and are poised to make some noise in the Big West this season.”

As they’ve done 21 times in the last 22 seasons, the Matadors open the season at the annual UCSB Invitational at Robertson Gym. CSUN will meet Maryville University, Harvard, and Kentucky State over the three-day tournament, which runs from Jan. 8-10.

In addition to Phillips, CSUN returns a host of starters in 2026, including outside hitter Joao Avila, middle blockers Joao Favarim and Shane Nhem, and libero Chris Karnezis. The Matadors also welcome a talented group of newcomers in 2026, including redshirt sophomore setter Owen Douphner, who steps in for departed senior All-American Donovan Constable.

 

The Hawaiian Islands presents the 2026 Outrigger Big West Men’s Volleyball Championship at the Bren Events Center on the campus of UC Irvine from April 23-25, 2026. All six conference members will vie for The Big West’s automatic berth into the national postseason bracket. 

#GoMatadors



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Tritons Picked Fourth in Preseason Big West Coaches’ Poll

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LA JOLLA, Calif. — UC San Diego men’s volleyball was picked to finish in a tie for fourth in the 2026 Big West Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Poll, the conference announced today.
 
The loaded Big West also sees all six of the conference’s teams ranked in the national AVCA preseason poll. The Tritons are No. 10 nationally.
 
Long Beach State was picked to win The Big West by the conference’s head coaches after winning the national championship last season. UC San Diego’s projected fourth place finish is the same as the Tritons’ actual finish in 2025 after they went 18-12 overall and 3-7 in Big West play.
 
The 2026 Triton men’s volleyball season begins at home on January 6 against Jessup. The team’s Big West opener will also be at home as the Tritons host CSUN on March 3. Season and single game tickets are both on sale now.
 
The Tritons will face each Big West opponent home and away this season with the exception of Hawai’i, who will play in La Jolla twice. The Hawaiian Islands presents the 2026 Outrigger Big West Men’s Volleyball Championship will be April 23-25 on the campus of UC Irvine.
 











2026 Big West Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Poll
Rank  Institution  Points 
1.  Long Beach State  24 (4) 
2.  Hawai’i  22 (2) 
3.  UC Irvine  17 
T-4.  UC San Diego 

CSUN 

UC Santa Barbara 

 
About UC San Diego Athletics
After two decades as one of the most successful programs in NCAA Division II, the UC San Diego intercollegiate athletics program has begun a new era as a member of The Big West in NCAA Division I. The 24-sport Tritons earned 30 team and nearly 150 individual national championships during its time in Divisions II and III and helped guide 1,400 scholar-athletes to All-America honors. A total of 83 Tritons have earned Academic All-America honors, while 39 have garnered prestigious NCAA Post Graduate Scholarships. UC San Diego scholar-athletes exemplify the academic ideals of one of the world’s preeminent institutions, graduating at an average rate of 90 percent, the highest rate among public institutions in NCAA Division I or II. For more information on the Tritons, visit UCSDtritons.com or follow UC San Diego Athletics on social media @UCSDtritons.
 



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Bruening Named to Men’s Volleyball Preseason Team

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IRVINE, Calif. – The Big West Conference released its 2026 Men’s Volleyball All-Conference Preseason Team on Monday, with UC Santa Barbara’s George Bruening earning preseason honors. Bruening was named to the team alongside players from No. 2 Hawai’i, No. 3 Long Beach State, and No. 11 CSUN.

Bruening exited the 2025 season with a spot on the All-Freshman team as well as a First Team Honorable Mention. He was also recognized as the SBART Men’s Volleyball Athlete of the Year. He averaged 2.97 kills per set and hit .299, the highest on the team. 

Additionally, UC Santa Barbara was voted to finish fourth in the conference. Their first match of 2026 will take place on Jan. 8 at 2:00 p.m. versus Kentucky State in Rob Gym. 

The Big West Preseason Coaches’ Poll










Rank / Institution Points (First Place Votes)
1. Long Beach State 24 (4)
2. Hawai’i 22 (2)
3. UC Irvine 17
T-4. CSUN 9
T-4. UC San Diego 9
T-4. UC Santa Barbara 9

The Big West Preseason Coaches’ Team











Student-Athlete Institution Position Year Hometown
George Bruening UC Santa Barbara OH R-So. Newport Beach, Calif. 
Alex Kandev Long Beach State OH So. Sofia, Bulgaria
Jalen Phillips CSUN OPP R.-Jr. Anaheim, Calif.
Tread Rosenthal Hawai’i S Jr. Austin, Texas
Adrien Roure Hawai’i OH So. Lyon, France
Kristian Titriyski Hawai’i OPP So. Sofia, Bulgaria
Skyler Varga Long Beach State OPP R.-Sr. Muenster, Saskatchewan


 



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OVC Mourns the Loss of SIUE Academic Advisor, Former UTM Volleyball Player Lindsey Schmidt

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SIUE, UT Martin and the Ohio Valley Conference mourns the loss of Lindsey Schmidt, who passed away on Tuesday, December 23.

Lindsey has served as an Academic Advisor at SIUE since 2008 and graduated from OVC member institution UT Martin, where she was a standout volleyball student-athlete and helped the Skyhawks to two regular season conference championships. She was named the Most Valuable Player of the 2002 OVC tournament.

“This is heartbreaking for all who knew Lindsey,” said Andrew Gavin, Vice Chancellor and Director of Athletics. “She has long been a beloved member of our athletics family, because of her infectious energy, positive attitude, and incredibly helpful and loving heart. She has provided so much support and love to countless current and past Cougar student-athletes.”

Lindsey was a member of the student-athlete success team at SIUE, working hand in hand with Deputy AD Jaci DeClue for nearly two decades. Lindsey’s support and passion helped student-athletes at SIUE achieve incredible results academically, with 39 consecutive semesters posting a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 or higher. In November, SIUE was recognized as having the top Graduation Success Rate nationally among Division I public institutions.

“Lindsey was a source of light and warmth to all who knew her, with the remarkable ability to make everyone feel seen, valued, and special through her kindness, humility, and genuine care for others,” DeClue shared. “During her 17 years at SIUE, she played a vital role in building an academic support program that served thousands of student-athletes, leaving behind a legacy of compassion, excellence, and lasting impact.

“It was truly an honor to work alongside Lindsey for the past 17 years and to witness firsthand the difference she made every single day.  She will be deeply missed by her colleagues, students, and all whose lives were made better by knowing her, and SIUE Athletics will not be the same without her.”

In 2024, she was awarded the Thurston Banks Award by the Ohio Valley Conference, an award that recognizes individuals for their outstanding contributions to OVC student-athletes’ academic success and learning and development.

 









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