Sports
Volleyball Beats Yale in Five-Set Thriller
The Bears were led on offense by 14 kills from Sophia Wolfson, who also hit .344 on the day. Both Ally Panzloff and Fisayo Afonja finished with 13 kills and Mariia Sidorova added 12. Julia Kakkis finished the match with 42 assists.
On defense, the Bears had four players with double-figure digs. Sidorova led the way with 16 digs, followed by Jessie Golden with 15, Eve McLaury with 14 and Kakkis with 12. At the net Brown finished the match with 12 blocks, led by six from Wolfson, five from Sarah Shaw and four from Sidorova.
The match featured 31 ties and 13 lead changes with both teams fighting back-and-forth and only one set being decided by more than four points.
Brown started set one up 7-3 after a kill and ace by Wolfson. Yale came back to take a 14-13 lead before Brown took control with a 5-0 run that ended with kills by Shaw and Panzloff. Brown earned set point after an ace from Sidorova before Yale scored two points to make it 24-21. A service error by the Bulldogs ended the set.
Yale took set two after taking control of the set with a 6-1 run that made the score 18-12 and Brown could not overcome the deficit.
In the third, Brown held a 17-14 lead after a kill by Panzloff but Yale scored five of the next six points to go up 19-18. Brown used a 3-0 run to tie the set 23-23 before Yale scored the final two points.
Down 10-9 in the fourth, Brown scored five-straight points, capped by a block from Shaw to go up 14-10. Yale came back to take an 18-16 lead but another 5-0 run with kills from Sidorova and Flannery and capped by a block from Sidorova and Wolfson put the Bears up 21-18. Brown was up 23-22 before Panzloff and Hannah Flannery collected kills to force a fifth set.
Brown trailed 6-3 early in the deciding before a kill by Afonja made it 7-6. Yale pulled away with three points to jump ahead 10-6. Down 11-8, Brown scored the next four points to take a 12-11 lead. The first match point came as Yale went up 14-13 but Yuna Yang tied the set with a kill. With the set tied at 15, two errors by the Bulldogs sealed the win for Brown.
GAME NOTES
- The win for the Bears broke a 10-match losing streak to the Bulldogs.
- Brown had four players record double-figure kills in a match for the first time since doing so against Dartmouth on Nov. 9, 2024.
- The Bears had four players reach double-digit digs for the first time since a match at Cornell on Nov. 15, 2024.
- Afonja’s 13 kill are a career-high for the sophomore.
- Both Sidorova and Kakkis finished the game with a double-double. It was the first double-double by a Bear since Sidorova earlier this season at Yale (Sept. 27).
UP NEXT
Brown will continue play at home against Penn on Friday (Oct. 31).
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Sports
North Schuylkill’s Luke Miller signs to St. Joseph’s for track – Pottsville Republican Herald
North Schuylkill senior track and field standout Luke Miller signed to St. Joseph’s University to compete in track and field collegiately Monday afternoon.
Miller also held college track offers from Shippensburg, West Chester, East Stroudsburg and Monmouth University before officially deciding on St. Joseph’s University.
“For me St. Joseph’s felt like home and it was the last school I visited so I’m super excited to get there,” said Miller. “I’m super grateful and excited to get to work with them.”
Miller finished this past fall leading the football team with 31 touchdowns and 2,563 rushing yards. He won gold in the 200-meter dash at the Schuylkill League meet.
“For me I enjoy the competitiveness of track and the work that goes into it,” said Miller. “I always went back and forth between football and track and track is more of a hobby for me.”
Miller also earned the Republican Herald ‘Athlete of the Week’ award after winning both the 100- and 200-meter dashes and anchoring the Spartans runner-up 400-meter relay at the Jim Thorpe Olympian Invitational last year.
“I’m going to miss the people and everyone is super kind and treats me like family here,” said Miller. “I really will miss everyone here.”
Miller joins a St. Joseph’s track program led by David Reick who knows longtime North Schuylkill coach Jack Flynn. He recently became the head coach in November of 2024.
“I’m super excited to get to work with coach (David) Reick and Jack Flynn (former North Schuylkill coach) knows him too,” said Miller. “It feels like home for me and I’m so excited.”
Miller will be majoring in physical therapy and is most looking forward to the food and living in Philadelphia.
Sports
2025 was a landmark season of success for women’s volleyball at Bryant
It’s never easy to end a great season with a first-round playoff loss, but decades of experience have taught Bryant women’s volleyball Head Coach Theresa Garlacy how to take the long view.
“We went from not making the tournament to being co-champs,” she says of the team’s recently concluded 2025-26 campaign.
“We went from not making the tournament to being co-champs.”
In just their fourth season in the competitive America East conference, the Bulldogs went 16-12 to tie with the University of Maryland, Baltimore County for the regular season title. The team also went 7-3 in America East play, an all-time best record for Bryant and up from a 4-6 mark in 2023-24.
RELATED ARTICLE: Women’s volleyball clinches co-America East title with sweep over NJIT
To claim its first America East regular season title, the team notched signature wins against Boston College, University of Rhode Island, Providence College, and Fairfield University before falling to the University of Albany in the America East tournament semifinals.

Garlacy said the 2025 season, which included a 50th anniversary celebration of Bryant women’s volleyball, will go down as one of the most memorable in her 30-year career as the Bulldogs’ coach.
“This was definitely a legacy team,” Garlacy says.
A 3-1 win over the University of New Hampshire on the same weekend that current and former players gathered to mark the program reaching the half-century mark was another high point in the season, says Garlacy.
“This year’s athletes really felt the sisterhood with the alumni, and that’s something that we tried to take with us throughout the season,” she says. “It’s not just about the six or seven people on the court, or the 18 people on the roster. You have a whole history of hundreds of women who came before you, and you have that strength from them every time you step on the court.”
“This year’s athletes really felt the sisterhood with the alumni, and that’s something that we tried to take with us throughout the season.”
While Bryant went 18-10 overall last season, their weak conference record denied the team a postseason spot, so 2024-24 was a big step up despite the team’s early exit from the America East tournament, says Garlacy.
“This was such a great team: we’ve never won the American East regular season title before. Every time we jumped a level, such as from NCAA D2 to D1, or from the Northeast Conference to America East, my team has found a way to level up,” Garlacy says.
“For them to go from not making the tournament last year to being co-champs this year, and with our best ever record in the conference, demonstrated the leadership they showed and the respect they had for each other,” she adds. “For me, the biggest win is to see the players in each position supporting each other.”
Looking forward to next season, Bryant will have to adjust to the departure of America East Player of the Year and team leader Arianna Ugolini ‘26, but Garlacy rejects the idea that 2026 will be any kind of rebuilding year.
“We had two first-year students who played significant time on this team, so I’m feeling good about that. We have a solid base of returners and, with the recruiting class we have coming in, will continue to grow the program,” she says. “Last year we graduated four outstanding athletes, three of whom were starters. Well, we got even better.”
Sports
Volleyball Ends Season Ranked 10th in Final AVCA Poll
OMAHA, Neb. — The Creighton Volleyball team was ranked a season-best No. 10 in the year-end poll by the American Volleyball Coaches Association announced on Monday, Dec. 22nd. It’s the 11th appearance in the year-end poll in program history, with the 2024 squad earning the best mark at No. 6.
Creighton is one of eight schools (Creighton, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Purdue, Stanford, Wisconsin) to be in the Top 10 of the year-end poll in both 2024 and 2025.
This is the 11th season that Creighton has been ranked in the year-end poll — all since 2012 — and fifth straight campaign. The only nine programs to be in the year-end AVCA poll each of the past five seasons are Baylor, Creighton, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Purdue, Stanford and Texas.
The Bluejays are one of 10 schools (along with Baylor, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Purdue, Stanford, Texas and Wisconsin) to have been ranked each of the last 78 polls. The streak began on Sept. 6, 2021 and is a program-record. This year also marks the seventh time that Creighton has been ranked in all 16 polls of a season, joining 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2023 and 2024. It is also the 36th week overall the Bluejays have been in the Top 10.
Creighton has been ranked in all but six of the past 147 weeks the AVCA has put out a Top 25 poll and 155 times in program history, which ranks 37th-most all-time. Creighton is 261-54 all-time when playing as a ranked team in the AVCA poll. This was the 14th straight campaign that Creighton has spent at least one week in the Top 25.
The year-end top five in the poll consisted of Texas A&M, Kentucky, Nebraska, Pittsburgh and Wisconsin.
Over the last 18 seasons from 2008-2025, 333-of-450 teams (74.0 percent) of teams have been in both the preseason and final polls. Of the teams ranked in the preseason poll released in August, all but preseason No. 2 Penn State, No. 16 Florida, No. 17 Missouri, No. 18 UCLA, No. 22 Georgia Tech, No. 23 Utah and No. 24 Dayton were also ranked in the final poll. Creighton started the 2025 season ranked 12th in the preseason.
In those same 18 seasons from 2008-2025, 408-of-450 teams (90.7 percent) in the preseason top-25 polls would go on to reach the NCAA Tournament, as all but preseason No. 17 Missouri and No. 24 Dayton reached the 2025 NCAA Tournament.
In the year-end version of the official NCAA RPI, Creighton finished No. 7.
| Ranking | Year |
| 24th | 2012 |
| 19th | 2015 |
| 9th | 2016 |
| 16th | 2017 |
| 13th | 2018 |
| 16th | 2019 |
| 22nd | 2021 |
| 21st | 2022 |
| 15th | 2023 |
| 6th | 2024 |
| 10th | 2025 |
Dec. 22 AVCA/TARAFLEX Division I Final WVB Poll
|
Rank
|
School (First-Place Votes Adjusted)
|
Total Points Adjusted
|
Record
|
Previous Week
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1
|
Texas A&M [61]
|
1,525
|
29-4
|
6
|
|
2
|
Kentucky
|
1,452
|
30-3
|
2
|
|
3
|
Nebraska
|
1,385
|
33-1
|
1
|
|
4
|
Pittsburgh
|
1,338
|
30-5
|
4
|
|
5
|
Wisconsin
|
1,310
|
28-5
|
10
|
|
6
|
Texas
|
1,192
|
26-4
|
3
|
|
7
|
Stanford
|
1,072
|
29-5
|
5
|
|
8
|
Purdue
|
1,052
|
27-7
|
12
|
|
9
|
Louisville
|
1,037
|
26-7
|
9
|
|
10
|
Creighton
|
1,012
|
28-6
|
11
|
|
11
|
SMU
|
904
|
27-6
|
7
|
|
12
|
Arizona State
|
879
|
28-4
|
8
|
|
13
|
Indiana
|
732
|
25-8
|
15
|
|
14
|
Kansas
|
708
|
24-11
|
16
|
|
15
|
Minnesota
|
685
|
24-10
|
17
|
|
16
|
Miami (FL)
|
596
|
27-6
|
13
|
|
17
|
Southern California
|
478
|
25-7
|
14
|
|
18
|
TCU
|
424
|
21-11
|
20
|
|
19
|
North Carolina
|
362
|
22-9
|
19
|
|
20
|
Baylor
|
343
|
18-10
|
21
|
|
21
|
Cal Poly
|
256
|
27-8
|
NR
|
|
T-22
|
Colorado
|
232
|
23-9
|
24
|
|
T-22
|
Iowa State
|
232
|
23-8
|
23
|
|
24
|
Tennessee
|
178
|
20-8
|
18
|
|
25
|
BYU
|
107
|
22-9
|
22
|
Others receiving votes and listed on two or more ballots: Penn State 82; Marquette 43; Utah State 39; Kansas State 36; Michigan 30; Florida 29; Northern Iowa 29; UCLA 23; Western Kentucky 14; San Diego 11; UTEP 3
Sports
Georgia Adds Marin Collins from Penn State
“We’re very excited to add Marin to our program,” Black said. “She has a tremendously high ceiling as a player, and we can’t wait to begin working with her.”
Collins signs with Georgia from Penn State as a redshirt-freshman. She did not play in 2025 due to injury and will have four years of eligibility as a Bulldog.
In 2024, Collins eclipsed 1,750 career kills at Frontier Central High School in the suburbs of Buffalo, New York, and earned JVA Class of 2025 All‑National Team honors. She was invited to the Under Armour NEXT Series Camp Elite, named First Team AA All‑State in New York, selected First Team All-Western New York by The Buffalo News, and garnered All‑ECIC First Team recognition.
In 2023, Collins appeared on the AVCA Phenom Watchlist and the JVA Watch List (OH, Class of 2025). She received Second Team AA All-State honors in New York, was named The Buffalo News All-Western New York First Team, and earned All‑ECIC First Team distinction, along with an invitation to the Under Armour NEXT Series Camp Elite.
Her freshman season in 2022 saw Collins on the AVCA Phenom Watchlist and the JVA All‑National Team, plus the JVA Watch List. She collected Second Team AA All‑State in New York, The Buffalo News All-Western New York First Team, Coach’s All-Western New York First Team, and All‑ECIC First Team. Academically, she was part of the USMC/AVCA Team Academic Award and recognized as a Scholar Athlete at Frontier Central.
Outside of volleyball, Collins competed on Frontier’s bowling team from her freshman through junior years and was involved with the Girls in Sports Organization.
On the club circuit, Collins played for Niagara Frontier Volleyball from 2014–2024.
The Lake View, New York native is the daughter of Kimberly and Ryan Collins.
Collins joins fellow transfer signee Alyssa Worden, an outside hitter from Iowa.
Sports
Volleyball places four on academic all-district team
Four Hamilton College student-athletes have been recognized on the 2025 Academic All-District® Women’s Volleyball Team, which is selected by the College Sports Communicators (CSC).
Academic All-District Women’s Volleyball Team release
The team honors the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the court and in the classroom.
Caitlin Allen ’27, Kathryn Fox ’27, Maggie Nichols ’26 and Ayzlinn Trefren ’28 were each named to the CSC Academic All-District® Team for Division III.
The CSC Academic All-America® program separately recognizes women’s volleyball honorees in four divisions — NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III and NAIA.
Allen appeared in 18 matches with 16 starts, and was first on the team in total blocks with 15 solo blocks and 56 block assists. She was second in the NESCAC with 1.25 blocks per set. Allen also compiled 86 kills and 14 service aces with a .235 hitting percentage.
Fox played in all 19 matches with 11 starts. The junior was one of four players on the team with over 100 kills, registering a career-best 111 on the year. She was also second on the team in blocks with seven solo blocks and 39 block assists.
Nichols played in all 19 matches with 17 starts during her senior season with the Continentals. She produced 54 kills, and was third on the team in blocks with nine solo blocks and 23 block assists.
Trefren appeared in all 19 matches this season with 18 starts. She totaled a team-high 143 kills and a team-high 195 digs. She also contributed 23 service aces, three solo blocks and 13 block assists.
Sports
Volleyball signs standout Auguste | Wisconsin Badgers
Currently a sophomore, Auguste is fresh off of the best season of her career, earning AVCA Third Team All-American, AVCA Southeast Region First Team and First Team All-SEC honors for the Gators.
“I’m extremely excited to announce that Jaela will be joining our team,” said head coach Kelly Sheffield. “She is one of the most dynamic attackers in the country. Her slide is lethal and she is also great off of two feet. J.J. can also eat up passers from behind the service line. I’m looking forward to having her here this spring.”
The 2024 SEC Freshman of the Year averaged 2.69 kills per set on a .344 hitting percentage from the front court in 28 matches in 2025. Auguste recorded 106.0 blocks on the season, in addition to 27 service aces. The 6-foot-2 middle blocker earned 3.50 points per set as well. In total, Auguste tallied double-digit kills in 17 matches this past year, emerging as a strong producer on the offensive end.
The Spring, Texas, native was a member of the 2025 USA Volleyball U-21 National Team Roster with setter Charlie Fuerbringer.
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