Sports
Volleyball Central: Iowa and Wisconsin
Head coach Steve Aird‘s group is coming off one of the most monumental victories in recent memory. The Hoosiers swept No. 19 Penn State, Aird’s alma mater, in emphatic fashion on Sunday in State College. It was the first win at Rec Hall in program history and just the second all-time victory against the Nittany Lions.
IU’s offense continues to operate at a high level during the 2025 season. The Hoosiers are hitting .294 on the season and have had a team efficiency of at least .220 in six-straight matches. In wins over Northwestern and Maryland, IU hit above .300 in consecutive Big Ten matches for the first time in the Aird era.
Freshman outside hitter Jaidyn Jager has been as impressive as any freshman in the entire conference. Of first-year players in the Big Ten, Jager is the only player averaging at least 3.40 kills per set and 2.25 digs per set. She has 10+ kills in five of her last six matches. In the final set of Sunday’s win over Penn State, Jager provided eight kills to put the match to rest.
Both of this weekend’s matches will be broadcasted on B1G+. Friday’s contest will have a first serve of 6 p.m. at Wilkinson Hall in Bloomington. IU’s attention will shift to Madison and the Wisconsin Field House on Sunday afternoon at 2 p.m. IU hasn’t beaten Wisconsin since 2012.
Gameday Info
vs. Iowa (Friday, November 7th – 6 p.m.)
Live Video: bit.ly/4qHdC3G
Live Stats: bit.ly/3JIylU7
at #11 Wisconsin (Sunday, November 9th – 2 p.m.)
Live Video: bit.ly/4ongOjF
Live Stats: bit.ly/3LIboRu
Stat and Trends
• Before this season, the Indiana volleyball program had been ranked in four AVCA polls all-time. Heading into this weekend, the Hoosiers are ranked for the fifth-straight time in 2025. After a win over Penn State, IU is up to No. 18 in the AVCA poll – its highest ranking in program history.
• IU has won three-straight matches, all of them in straight sets. It’s the first time since 1990 that IU has swept three-straight Big Ten opponents. The Hoosiers have 11 wins by sweep in 2025 with five coming during Big Ten action. If IU wins on Friday, it’ll be the second conference winning streak of at least four games this year.
Notable
HOOSIER HISTORY: Indiana beat No. 19 Penn State in straight sets on Sunday afternoon in State College. It was IU’s first win at Rec Hall in program history and the third ranked road win of the season. Head coach Steve Aird has led IU to six of its 10 road top-25 wins in program history. Five of those have come since 2022.
DYNAMIC DUO: Indiana’s veteran duo of senior outside hitter Candela Alonso-Corcelles and senior opposite Avry Tatum has helped lead the charge on a great season so far. They are the only active Big Ten duo to each record over 1,000 kills during their time in college.
CHASING 20: The Hoosiers will have a chance at a number of records this season. One of those is the search for the seventh 20-win season in program history – and the second under head coach Steve Aird. IU is just two wins away from a 20-win campaign and one win away from a 10-win Big Ten season.
BALANCE ON THE PINS: IU is the only Power Four program who has three different players averaging at least 3.30 kills per set this season. On seven different occasions this year, all three of IU’s pin hitters have gone for 10+ kills each. Senior outside hitter Candela Alonso-Corcelles leads the team with 3.53 kills per set.
CANDE IS A WINNER: Senior outside hitter Candela Alonso-Corcelles has been a big winner during her time in Bloomington. The Hoosiers have 70 overall wins and 37 in conference play since she joined the team in 2022. She’s just two Big Ten wins away from having the most league wins of any player in program history.
SERVING TOUGH: IU has become aggressive and efficient from the end line over the past five matches. In that stretch, in which it is 4-1 overall, IU is averaging 2.41 aces per set. The Hoosiers had 10 aces in matches against Minnesota and Maryland. Graduate student outside hitter Jessica Smith had six aces against the Terrapins.
EXTREMELY EFFICIENT: Indiana is top-10 nationally this season in hitting percentage (.294). IU’s freshman setter Teodora Kričković is one of two players nationally (Averi Carlson, SMU) to rank top-10 in the country in assists per set (10.80) and set her team to a top-10 national ranking in hitting percentage (.294).
ALL-AROUND J: Freshman outside hitter Jaidyn Jager has been asked to do so much since she stepped foot on campus. Not only is she averaging 3.42 kills per set, but she’s become an elite six-rotation passer. In IU’s last three wins, Jager is passing at a 2.47 clip on 51 attempts with a 68.6% good pass rating.
Scouting the Opponent
Iowa (13-11, 4-8 B1G)
• Iowa is starting to play some good ball over the last couple weeks of the season. It has won three of its last four contests including a five-set victory at Illinois on Sunday. The Hawkeyes have played five five-set matches this season. Their past three matches have all gone the distance.
• Setter Claire Ammeraal is as versatile a player as any at the position in the country. She’s averaging 9.54 assists per set but is also providing 1.42 kills per set. The Hawkeyes hit .250 as a team with 12.93 kills per set. Outside hitter Chard’e Vanzandt averages over 3.00 kills per set.
• Blocking has been a strength of Iowa this season. Middle blocker Hannah Whittingstall has been fantastic. She has 105 total blocks (1.14 per set). She also provides 1.86 kills per set at a .353 hitting percentage this year. Opposite hitter Carmel Vares is at 2.59 kills per set.
Wisconsin (16-4, 9-3 B1G)
• The Badgers returned to winning ways with a dominant sweep at last place Ohio State on Sunday. Wisconsin enters the weekend with an identical record in the conference as IU. Wisconsin’s three losses in Big Ten action are at Penn State, vs. USC and vs. Nebraska.
• Outside hitter Mimi Colyer is one of the most dominant players in the conference. She is averaging 5.20 kills per set on a .318 hitting percentage. Without setter Charlie Feurbringer in the lineup, Colyer has been tasked with cleaning up the offense. Outside hitter Una Vajagic provides 2.57 kills per set.
• Per usual, the Wisconsin block is as good as any in the conference. Middle blockers Alicia Andrew and Carter Booth both average 1.20 blocks per set or better. Opposing teams are hitting just .171 on the campaign against the Badgers.
Inside the Series
Iowa
• These two teams have historically been at the bottom of the conference since the NCAA adopted volleyball. IU holds a slight 43-42 advantage and has won three-straight matches at home against the Hawkeyes.
• Since Steve Aird took over in 2018, this series has been as even as any other in the league. Iowa has a 6-5 lead over the past 11 meetings. IU has won three of the last five overall.
Wisconsin
• This series has gone in favor of Wisconsin over the last 10 seasons. Kelly Sheffield has built the Badgers into a powerhouse. He won the 2021 National Title and had Wisconsin in the national semifinals as recently as 2023.
• Indiana has lost 18-straight games in the series. It’s best crack at Wisconsin was a four-set loss in Madison in 2022. The Hoosiers had a late lead in game four to try and force a fifth set but saw it slip away against Wisconsin’s big block. The Hoosiers’ last win in Madison came in 2012.
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Men’s Volleyball vs UBCO on 1/9/2026 – Box Score
Sports
Commodore Success Continues Saturday – Vanderbilt University Athletics – Official Athletics Website
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A 4×400-meter relay win closed out Vanderbilt track and field’s first meet of 2026, during which the Commodores broke two school records and compiled a total of 19 marks ranking in the program’s all-time top 10 over two days at the Rod McCravy Memorial Track and Field Meet.
After clocking the No. 2 mark in Vanderbilt history on Friday, London Jackson-Bray earned a top 5 finish in the 60 meters final with a time of 7.53 seconds.
Falon Spearman, who broke her own 60-meter hurdles record on Day 1, registered a time of 8.24 seconds, good for a second-place finish.
Five Commodores clocked times ranking top 10 in program history in the 300 meters. Ford led the way with a fourth-place finish and a time of 37.65 seconds, which ranks second in school history. Allyria McBride followed, coming in sixth with the third-ranked time in the Vandy record books, 37.78 seconds. Devyn Parham, Joy Moorer and Spearman’s marks are respectively ranked fifth, seventh and ninth all-time at Vanderbilt. Parham clocked 38.83 seconds for a 16th-place finish. Moorer and Spearman placed 24th and 25th with respective times of 39.24 and 39.36 seconds.
In the shot put, Sarah Marvin placed fourth overall with a 15.39-meter throw.
For the second meet in a row, Pryncess Jackson recorded a personal-best in the triple jump. The sophomore placed third with a 12.56-meter jump, improving her third-ranked mark in the program’s record books. Anaya Webster and Anya Carey registered marks of 12.33 and 11.96 meters, finishing seventh and ninth, respectively.
To end the weekend, Vanderbilt collected a win in the 4×400-meter relay with a squad consisting of Moorer, Faith Franklin, McBride and Madyson Wilson. The Dores turned in a time of 3:34.48, which ranks second in program history.
The Commodores return home to host the Vanderbilt Invitational Friday and Saturday. Fans can follow Vanderbilt track and field on Facebook, Instagram and X at @VandyXCTrack.
Sports
Penn State Men’s Volleyball Beats Mount Olive 3-1 In Season Opener
Penn State men’s volleyball opened its season with a 3-1 win over Mount Olive Friday night. Sean Harvey tallied 13 kills on the night, Miller Trubey added 10, and Owen Rose had six blocks for the Nittany Lions.
How It Happened
Miller Trubey opened up set one with a kill, and Gage Gabriel added one of his own to give the Nittany Lions an early 2-0 lead. Maksim Kazanov swung hard to put Mount Olive on the board. Trubey struck for another kill, followed by a solo block. Carter Dittman got in on the action as well, but a kill-block sequence by Mount Olive tied the set at 6-6.
Harvey and Dittman stayed strong on the attack, the Lions keeping a short lead of 11-9. A Sean Harvey backrow attack and a Mount Olive foot fault gave Penn State the 17-15 edge. The Lions and Trojans traded kills, but back-to-back swings by Gabriel kept Penn State ahead by two.
Christos Savvidis ended the Penn State run, and Matthew Ekberg added a 5-foot line slam. Trubey’s sixth kill and a Schwob-Rose block ended set one and gave the Nittany Lions the 25-20 win.
Harvey started set two with a solo block, and Trubey added a shot down the line, but a net violation and a Mount Olive kill tied it up 2-2. Kory Grant dominated set two for Mount Olive, starting with a strong attack down the line. A kill by Owen Rose and a triple block pushed the Lions ahead 6-4.
Mount Olive’s middle blocker Matthew Ekberg owned the block throughout the match, racking up his second of the set. Another attack by Trubey and Michael Schwob’s save and monstrous block pushed the Lions ahead 10-7. Solid defense and a Trubey kill forced a Mount Olive timeout.
Several attack and service errors by the Trojans gave the Lions an 18-11 lead. Rose tallied a solo block, forcing a Mount Olive timeout at 21-11. Trubey snagged an ace, but Grant began a 7-0 Trojan run with an ace, followed by another Ekberg block.
Grant then tallied another ace, and Lion errors forced Penn State to call a timeout at 23-17. A kill by Olszewski and another Grant service ace forced another Nittany Lion timeout, leading 23-20. Schwob took control with two kills, ending in another 25-20 set, and gave the Lions the 2-0 advantage.
Matthew Luoma opened the scoring with a kill for the Lions’ first point of the set. Kazanov and Harvey then traded kills, giving the Trojans a 7-5 advantage. After a slow start, back-to-back attacks by Rose trimmed the deficit to one.
Consecutive Penn State attack errors, followed by an Ekberg service ace, pushed Mount Olive ahead 14-10. An additional Lions hitting error and an Ekberg kill out of the timeout extended the Trojans’ lead to 16-10.
A service error briefly ended the run, but Mount Olive quickly recovered with swings from Kazanov and Ekberg. Kazanov’s tenth kill of the night stretched the lead to 20-13. Rose answered with consecutive middle attacks, though the Lions still trailed 22-15.
Jaidyn Bethel recorded his first career kill, followed by a Harvey kill and a block by Gabriel, prompting a Lions timeout with Mount Olive leading 23–19. Savvidos sealed the set with a kill, securing the 25–20 win for the Trojans.
Jaxon Herr got things started in the fourth set with a service ace, followed by a Harvey kill. Two Mount Olive errors extended the Lions’ early lead before Ekberg answered with a kill. Bethel and Rose added attacks to push Penn State out to a 7-3 lead.
Savvidos stopped the run with a powerful swing, but Harvey responded to make it 9-5. Two more Trojan errors forced a Mount Olive timeout. Out of the break, Rose delivered a service ace. Ekberg scored through the block, and Kazanov followed with an ace, but the Trojans still trailed 12-7.
Ekberg continued his strong showing at the net to make it 14–9. Gabriel and Ekberg traded kills before a Luoma swing landed, and a Rose block prompted another Mount Olive timeout with Penn State ahead 17–10. Bethel added a cross-court kill, Harvey scored on a roll shot, and Gabriel followed with a deep shot to extend the lead to 20–14.
Luoma struck again, and Rose added a kill, putting Penn State at match point. Ekberg and Kazanov kept the pressure on, delivering a collective 25 kills and seven blocks on the night, but a successful challenge overturned the final call, sealing the match win for Penn State.
Takeaways
- Harvey and Trubey opened the season strong with aggressive offensive play, positioning themselves as key offensive leaders moving forward.
- The team recorded 17 service errors on the night, including seven in the third-set loss, allowing Mount Olive to capitalize and force a fourth set. Reducing errors from the service line will create extended runs for the offense.
- The triple block proved to be a force for the Nittany Lions, being used quite often through the matchup and contributing to the 11 blocks on the night.
What’s Next?
Head Coach Mark Pavlik and his Nittany Lions will be back in Rec Hall at 3 p.m. on Saturday against the Manhattan Jaspers on Big Ten Plus.
Sports
South Carolina Dominates in Home Opener – University of South Carolina Athletics
COLUMBIA, S.C. (Jan. 10, 2026) – South Carolina Track & Field opened the calendar year with a convincing showing in the Gamecock Opener, accumulating 16 combined wins in addition to a pair of program records.
South Carolina’s men’s squad captured nine wins in the home opener, including six on the track in addition to three in the field. Tyson Williams was at it again in his second meet with South Carolina, securing yet another program record in the 300m. Williams bested his own record when he ran 32.22 for the second fastest 300m time in collegiate history. Fellow teammates Josiah Wrice (32.36), Jasauna Dennis (32.93) and Andrew Salvodon (33.45) recorded personal best times as they moved into second, sixth and eighth respectively on the all-time program leaderboard.
Lucky Daje was responsible for two wins of his own in the 60m (6.76) and the 200m (21.25), now ranking 11th this season in the 200m sprint. Kaleb Burroughs was successful in picking up a win in the 600m when he crossed the line in 1:19.89 for the fourth best time in Gamecock history. The final individual win on the track belonged to Alexander Chukwukelu, running 7.90 in the 60-meter hurdle finals, fending off fellow teammate David Warmington who clocked 7.93.
In the field, South Carolina men picked up wins in the triple jump, pole vault and the shot put. Khaliq Muhammad recorded a new personal best clearance of 5.10m (16-8.75) for the win in the pole vault. Spencer Eison jumped 14.81m (48-7.25) in the triple jump for a personal best and a win of his own. Logan Montgomery secured his second win in as many meets in the shot put, throwing 18.35m (60-2.5).
The women were responsible for seven wins on the day, including five on the track and two in the field. South Carolina newcomer Jathiyah Muhammad made her Gamecock debut in style with a program record in the women’s pole vault. The Arizona transfer was able to clear 4.35m (14-3.25) in the home opener, ranking second in the NCAA. Fellow pole vaulter Hannah Togami finished runner-up and jumped into sixth all-time in school history after clearing 4.05m (13-3.5). Madison Childress secured the other field event win in the women’s long jump, jumping a personal best 6.05m (19-10.25) to currently rank 13th in the NCAA.
Tristen Harris picked up her second win of the season and first on the track, capturing the title in the 60m sprint with a time of 7.33 to rank seventh in the NCAA. In the 200m, South Carolina finished 1-2-3 led by Alexis Brown who crossed the line with the ninth fastest time in school history at 23.23. Brown’s time sits atop the NCAA leaderboard as she was followed by teammates Jalee Brown (24.03) and McKenzie Travis (24.08) who now rank ninth and 11th in the NCAA, respectively.
Just like in the 200m, South Carolina’s women finished 1-2-3 in the 300m, led by none other than JaMeesia Ford with a time of 36.52. The final individual win on the track belonged to Ella Zeigler in the women’s 3K, running 10:12.18. Sinead Joyce finished as the top collegiate runner in the 600m, clocking 1:36.84 for the seventh fastest 600m time in school history. Much like Joyce, Joslyn Hamilton also finished as the top collegian in the women’s 60-meter hurdle, running a new personal best time of 8.12 to finish runner-up. Hamilton’s time in the 60mH rank fourth in South Carolina history and currently ranks second in the NCAA.
The Gamecock 4×400 meter squads shut down the meet with a pair of wins. The men were led by Josiah Wrice, Tyson Williams, Andrew Salvodon and Jasauna Dennis who clocked 3:05.91 for the fourth fastest time in school history and fourth fastest time this season in the NCAA. The women’s 4×400 meter title team consisted of Cynteria James, JaMeesia Ford, Cohren Corbin and Joslyn Hamilton with the quartet running 3:40.04 for the sixth fastest time in the NCAA.
The Gamecocks will have next weekend off on the schedule as the Garnet & Black will not return to competition until Jan. 23-24 at the Orange & Purple Invitational hosted by Clemson.
Men’s Individual Results
60 Meters (Prelims)
1. Lucky Daje – 6.86Q
2. Antwan Hughes Jr. – 6.86Q
7. Niles Briggman – 6.97q
60 Meters (Semifinals)
1. Lucky Daje – 6.78Q
2. Antwan Hughes Jr. – 6.80Q
9. Niles Briggman – 7.01
60 Meters (Finals)
1. Lucky Daje – 6.76
2. Antwan Hughes Jr. – 6.86
200 Meters
1. Lucky Daje – 21.25*
6. Niles Briggman – 21.79
7. Antwan Hughes Jr. – 21.84
8. David Warmington – 21.93*
300 Meters
1. Tyson Williams – 32.22*
2. Josiah Wrice – 32.36*
3. Jasauna Dennis – 32.93*
4. Andrew Salvodon – 33.45*
5. Robert Stitts Jr. – 33.94*
600 Meters
1. Kaleb Burroughs – 1:19.89*
3000 Meters
2. Sam Kolowith – 8:25.54*
— Marcellus Mines – DNF
4×400-Meter Relay
1. Wrice, Williams, Salvodon, Dennis – 3:05.91
3. Stitts Jr., Chukwukelu, Burroughs, Mines – 3:28.37
60-Meter Hurdles (Prelims)
1. Alexander Chukwukelu – 7.92Q
2. David Warmington – 7.99Q
60-Meter Hurdles (Semifinals)
1. Alexander Chukwukelu – 7.92Q
2. David Warmington – 7.95Q
60-Meter Hurdles (Finals)
1. Alexander Chukwukelu – 7.90
2. David Warmington – 7.93
Triple Jump
1. Spencer Eison – 14.81m/48-7.25*
Pole Vault
1. Khaliq Muhammad – 5.10m/16-8.75*
2. Parker Samuelson – 4.80m/15-9
Shot Put
1. Logan Montgomery – 18.35m/60-2.5
2. Brandon Dennis – 16.67m/54-8.25
Women’s Individual Results
60 Meters (Prelims)
1. Tristen Harris – 7.38Q
2. Madison Childress – 7.45q*
3. McKenzie Travis – 7.57Q
4. Kymora-Lee Williams – 7.60Q
5. Jalee Brown – 7.61Q
19. Hailey Duncan – 7.98
60 Meters (Semifinals)
1. Tristen Harris – 7.41Q
2. Kymora-Lee Williams – 7.46Q
3. Madison Childress – 7.49q
4. Jalee Brown – 7.51q*
5. McKenzie Travis – 7.57q
60 Meters (Finals)
1. Tristen Harris – 7.33*
2. Kymora-Lee Williams – 7.42*
3. Madison Childress – 7.45*
4. McKenzie Travis – 7.49
5. Jalee Brown – 7.51*
200 Meters
1. Alexis Brown – 23.23
2. Jalee Brown – 24.03*
3. McKenzie Travis – 24.08*
5. Madison Childress – 24.82*
7. Hailey Duncan – 25.04
300 Meters
1. JaMeesia Ford – 36.52
2. Maya Love – 38.16
3. Cohren Corbin – 38.65*
4. Kymora-Lee Williams – 38.83*
5. Cynteria James – 39.52
600 Meters
2. Sinead Joyce – 1:36.84*
3000 Meters
1. Ella Zeigler – 10:12.18
2. Emma Ashley – 10:18.15*
— Sinead Joyce – DNF
4×400-Meter Relay
1. James, Ford, Corbin, Hamilton – 3:40.04
2. Harrington-Spain, Garrett, Love, Chelangat – 3:40.24
60-Meter Hurdles (Prelims)
1. Akala Garrett- 8.28Q
3. Joslyn Hamilton – 8.39Q
4. Kyndall Harrington-Spain- 8.40q
5. Kennedy Flynn – 8.44q*
60-Meter Hurdles (Semifinals)
2. Akala Garrett – 8.28Q
3. Kyndall Harrington-Spain – 8.28q
4. Joslyn Hamilton – 8.29q
5. Kennedy Flynn – 8.50q
60-Meter Hurdles (Finals)
2. Joslyn Hamilton – 8.12*
3. Kyndall Harrington-Spain – 8.27
4. Akala Garrett – 8.29
5. Kennedy Flynn – 8.51
Long Jump
1. Madison Childress – 6.05m/19-10.25*
2. Maliya Kinard – 5.69m/18-8.0
Pole Vault
1. Jathiyah Muhammad – 4.35m/14-3.25
2. Hannah Togami- 4.05m/13-3.5*
3. Bella Leonard – 3.75m/12-3.5*
* – denotes indoor PR
Sports
Weird and funky: No. 8 BYU men’s volleyball sweeps Saint Francis to open season | News, Sports, Jobs
- BYU’s Trent Moser swings against St. Francis in a men’s college volleyball match at the Smith Fieldhouse on Friday, Jan. 9, 2026.
- From left, Tyler Herget, AJ Cottle and Trent Moser rise up for a block against St. Francis in a men’s college volleyball match at the Smith Fieldhouse on Friday, Jan. 9, 2026.
- BYU’s Teilon-Jonathan Tafuga serves the ball against St. Francis in a men’s college volleyball match at the Smith Fieldhouse on Friday, Jan. 9, 2026.
- BYU fans cheer in a men’s college volleyball match against Saint Francis at the Smith Fieldhouse on Friday, Jan. 9, 2026.
- BYU’s Trent Moser hits over the Saint Francis block in a men’s college volleyball match at the Smith Fieldhouse on Friday, Jan. 9, 2026.
- BYU’s Connor Oldani takes a swing against St. Francis in a men’s college volleyball match at the Smith Fieldhouse on Friday, Jan. 9, 2026.
- BYU’s Trent Moser takes a swing against St. Francis in a men’s college volleyball match at the Smith Fieldhouse on Friday, Jan. 9, 2026.
Opening night for any team with a lot of new pieces can be an adventure.
Or as BYU men’s volleyball coach Shawn Olmstead described it, weird and funky.
During Friday night’s 3-0 (25-22,25-20,25-18) sweep of Saint Francis at the Smith Fieldhouse to open the 2026 season, an attack from the Red Flash sailed out of bounds toward the Cougar bench. Olmstead — a former BYU libero — attempted to pass the ball but shanked it ten row up into the stands behind him.
He got a sheepish grin on his face and took a good deal of ribbing from his players.
“I told the guys I shanked the ball,” Olmstead said. “I’ve never done that, so just in general, it was a weird night. So I gave the guys a lot of slack because once that happened, I realized, OK, there’s just something funky in the air tonight.”
No. 8 BYU may have been a little bit out-of-sorts in its first match of the season breaking in four new starters but things turned out well anyway, mainly due to solid ball control, responding to adversity and a strong performance from senior Trent Moser in his return in a Cougar uniform.
Moser, one of four former Grand Canyon players who came to Provo after that school cancelled its men’s volleyball program last spring, led BYU with 14 kills, hit .333 and added four block assists to the delight of the 3,334 fans who filled the Fieldhouse.
“It’s amazing,” Moser said. “Playing here and playing at GCU was totally different. At GCU, we got around a thousand people a game. When I got here to warm up, there’s already a thousand people in the stands. It feels so good to have that much support. The first set today, it felt weird. Honestly, I feel like I was totally here just yesterday. It’s been like a year and a half or whatever, but I’m so happy I’m here.”
Moser said he was actually on the phone with BYU libero Jackson Fife when the GCU players were told the program was being cut. Fife immediately contacted the Cougar coaching staff, which led to Olmstead texting Moser. They were on the phone the same day to discuss a return to the fold. A week later Moser and GCU teammates Connor Oldani, Kyle Zediker and Max Phillipe came on a recruiting trip to Provo.
“I think it’s such a cool story because he’s a kid that goes to another school and becomes and All-American a circumstances kind of fall the way they did, and it was a credit to him and I think a credit to the guys and the coaching staff,” Olmstead said.
Moser added: “I said if Shawn wanted to take me back, I’m cool with it. We’ve always had a really good relationship. I talked to him and Devin (Young) and Otavio (Souza) at travel tournaments. There was no hard feelings, really. It’s just so easy to travel from Arizona to Utah for one year. I don’t want to travel across the country, I’ve got to go to Utah. I love this place.”
Moser was terrific in the first set, totaling seven kills on nine swings with just one error (.667). The Cougars hit .462 in Set 1 and led 13-7 when Gavin Chambers scored on a Saint Francis overpass. Later, the score was tied at 16 after three straight aces from Brady Stump rallied the Red Flash. From there, BYU righted itself and Moser got the final kill for the 25-22 victory.
Saint Francis — picked to win the Northeast Conference this season — got on a hot streak in Set 2, hitting .625 early to take a 13-8 lead. BYU came back to tie it up at 15 on a Oldani kill, then took control with a four-point run keyed by back-to-back aces off the bench from freshman Trevor Herget. Teilon-Jonathan Tafuga ruled the end of the set, getting three straight kills for the 25-20 win.
Set 3 was tied at 11 when the Cougars made their move, another four-point run with Moser’s attack giving the home team a 15-11 lead. A combo block between Chambers and Tafuga pushed the BYU lead to 23-16 and the high-flying Herget came off the bench for consecutive back-row kills for the final two points of the match.
“I thought we’d come out a little more aggressive and assertive because I haven’t had a team for quite some time that has done that so consistently in practice,” Olmstead said. “They’ve been doing it every single day. But I’m happy. They needed to get our here and kind of shake the rust off a little. You do it in a win and there were a lot more good things than not. I’m excited for everybody to see this team that we’ve seen over and over, because that’s a part of it, but it’s not even close to the level these guys will be at.”
Tafuga contributed nine kills on 15 swings with just one error (.533) and three aces. Freshman middle AJ Cottle added eight kills (.600) and four block assists and senior setter Tyler Herget dished out 35 assists along with eight digs. Oldani, making his BYU debut on the right side, had six kills and led the team with ten digs.
The Cougars outhit the Red Flashes .310 to .164 and produced 30 digs to the visitors’ 16.
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