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Volleyball is Life with Nina Schuberth

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By Chandler Collins

Assistant Director for Strategic Communications

CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. – Junior libero Nina Schuberth has already had a standout career through two seasons as a member of SEMO Volleyball. During her freshman campaign (2023), Nina broke the single-season program record for service aces in a season with 49. Fast-forward a year and Nina became the third-straight Redhawk to garner the Ohio Valley Conference’s ‘Defensive Player of the Year’ award following the 2024 season. 

 

However,  volleyball is more than just a sport for Nina. It’s a way of life. It’s more than just wins and losses on a stat sheet. It’s the values and life lessons that volleyball has taught her that Schuberth carries with her into everyday life.

 

Whether it’s her work ethic, communication, or accountability, Schuberth uses volleyball to be a better person, teammate, and athlete every day.

 

“I love the life lessons that volleyball teaches me,” Schuberth said. “There are so many things that go into being a great volleyball player and a great team. It’s not just about the physical skill, but it’s about the mental aspect of it as well. It’s about being there for your teammates and holding each other accountable. It’s about learning from your mistakes and growing from them. Volleyball has taught me so much, and I’m so grateful for that.”

 

Family Matters

Schuberth first got into volleyball at a young age because of her older sisters. She would often watch her sister, Mary, play club volleyball, and she would be inspired to follow in her footsteps.

 

“My sister, Mary, played club volleyball, and I was always watching her,” she said. “She played at such a high level, and I wanted to be just like her. I would watch her games with my other sister, and we would be in the corner of the convention center playing together. Ever since then, my mom put us both in club volleyball.”

 

To this day, Schuberth’s parents continue to be a big influence in her life. She’s thankful for all the time, energy, and money that they’ve sacrificed to give her the chance to chase her dreams.

 

“My family has been my biggest motivation throughout my entire career, especially my mom,” Schuberth said. “Without both of my parents’ support, I simply would not be playing at a high level. They have pushed me to become a better student-athlete both on and off the court. They will always be my biggest role models, and I can’t thank them enough for everything they’ve done for me.”

Role Models

While Schuberth has had many role models in her life, her teammates have been her biggest influences as well. Playing with and learning from the best has helped her become the player she is today.

 

“Honestly, my own teammates have been big role models in my career,”  said Schuberth. “My freshman year, I got to play and learn from one of the best, Tara Beilsmith, and now I get to keep learning from her as my coach, which is amazing. Another role model is Lucy Arndt. She works so hard and cares so much about the sport that it inspires me to keep working as hard as I can every single day. She’s also one of my best friends, and getting to play with her is so much fun.”

 

Everyone has their favorite athlete growing up, and for Schuberth, it was Lexi Rodriguez. The two played in the same club, and being able to watch her play provided Schuberth a clear example of what an amazing player looks like.

 

“Growing up, my favorite athlete was Lexi Rodriguez. I played in the same club as Lexi basically my whole life, and watching her play all of these years provided a clear example of what an amazing player is.”

 

A Winning Attitude

With a great family, supportive teammates, and role models, Schuberth has been able to accomplish a lot during her volleyball career. One of her favorite moments was winning the regular season championship with her teammates. 

 

“I love my team and coaches so much, so getting to accomplish an amazing goal with them was hands down my favorite moment,” Schuberth said.

 

As the reigning Ohio Valley Conference Defensive Player of the Year, Schuberth is motivated to help her team get back to the NCAA Tournament this season, which means winning the OVC tournament.

 

“I am very honored to have received that award, and it is something I am very proud of,” Schuberth said. “However, my motivation never really changes. I want to win and play the best I can for my team day in and day out. What really motivates me for this upcoming season is to have the chance to help my team get to the NCAA tournament, which means winning the OVC tournament. It has been a few years since SEMO volleyball has been in this tournament, and getting back there with my team is my main focus.”

Off the Court

When she isn’t playing volleyball, Schuberth is involved in the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC), which is focused on bridging the gap between student-athletes and SEMO students. 

 

They plan certain events throughout the year like Hoops for Heroes, DEI week, and fundraising. 

 

With such a strong support system, Schuberth is always looking for ways to give back and make a positive impact.

 

The Campaign

Schuberth is excited for the upcoming season and to play with this group of girls. She believes that their close bond on and off the court will help them overcome any challenges they may face.

 

“I am so excited for this season and to play with this group of girls,” Schuberth said. “Our team is so close on and off the court, which makes playing so much fun. We have a couple of tough games in the preseason, but I have full confidence that our team will pull through and win some matches that people don’t expect us to.”

 

With her work ethic, motivation, and love for the game, Schuberth is ready to make this season one to remember.

 





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Week Ahead: Monday, Jan. 12 to Sunday, Jan. 18

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By Jim Fenton

BRIDGEWATER, Mass. — Here’s a look at the week ahead (Jan. 12-18) for the Bridgewater State University athletics teams:

WEDNESDAY

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL, at Anna Maria College, 5:00 PM: The Bears travel to Paxton, Mass., for a game against the AMCATS.

Anna Maria is a new member of the Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference after moving from the Great Northeast Athletic Conference.

The AMCATS are 4-7 overall and dropped their lone conference game to Salem State, 71-67.

BSU, after a 1-9 start in non-conference games, are 2-0 in the MASCAC with wins over Fitchburg State and Salem State.

MEN’S BASKETBALL, at Anna Maria College, 7:00 PM: BSU takes on a MASCAC newcomer on the road.

The teams played non-conference games the past two seasons with the Bears winning both. They opened the 2023-24 season with a 119-110 overtime win on the road and defeated Anna Maria, 89-64, in a game played at Wheaton College last season.

The AMCATS are 4-8 overall and 1-1 in the conference with a loss to Salem State and a win over the Mass. College of Liberal Arts.

BSU is 3-10 overall and is 1-1 in the MASCAC, defeating Fitchburg State and losing to Salem State.

FRIDAY

MEN’S INDOOR TRACK & FIELD, at the Bates Invitational & Multi, 10:00 AM: Ryker King and Drew Alves will compete in the heptathlon at the two-day meet held at Bates College’s Merrill Gymnasium.

The University of New Hampshire finished first last season while Bates was second in the seven-team field.

SATURDAY

MEN’S INDOOR TRACK & FIELD, at the Branwen Smith-King Invitational, 10:00 AM: The Bears will take part in the meet held at Tufts University.

Last season, BSU was third in the six-team field with Kevin McBirney winning the 1,000-meter run, breaking the school record with a time of 2:29.42.

MEN’S INDOOR TRACK & FIELD, at the Bates Invitational & Multi, 10:00 AM: King and Alves will wrap up their two-day stay at the Bates College meet in Lewiston, Maine.

WOMEN’S INDOOR TRACK & FIELD, at the Branwen Smith-King Invitational, 10:00 AM: The Bears compete in the meet at Tufts University.

Kiara Abrantes led BSU by winning two events last season, setting a school record of 25.26 seconds in the 200 and placing first in the 60.

Serenity Sands was also first for BSU in the high jump, helping the Bears wind up third overall.

WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING, at home, Brandeis and Keene State, Noon: The Bears have their first competition since Dec. 6 when they host a tri-meet against the Judges and the Owls.

BSU lost to both Keene State, 166-133, and Brandeis, 165-121, in a tri-meet in New Hampshire last year.

MEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING, at home, Brandeis and Keene State, Noon: The Bears return to the pool for the first time since hosting the BSU Invitational on Dec. 6.

In a tri-meet a year ago in New Hampshire, BSU split a pair, defeating Keene State, 145-112, and losing to Brandeis, 184-77.

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL, at home, Mass. College of Liberal Arts, Noon: The Bears close out January with four of five games at the Tinsley Center, beginning with a matchup with the Trailblazers.

The teams are meeting for the first time since Feb. 3, 2024.

WRESTLING, at home, Williams College, 12:30 PM: The Bears will host Senior Day at Kelly Gym as part of the final home match of the season.

BSU lost at home to Williams a year ago, 42-9.

Williams was No. 3 in the last New England Wrestling Association rankings.

MEN’S BASKETBALL, at home, Mass. College of Liberal Arts, 2:00 PM: After playing just two home games in the opening two months of the season, the Bears will be playing four of five games at the Tinsley Center to finish January.

BSU and Mass. College split two games last season, each winning at home.

The Trailblazers begin the week 3-8 with three straight losses and are 0-2 in the MASCAC.

SUNDAY

MEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING, at Bentley University, 1:00 PM: The Bears will be in Waltham, Mass., to face the Division II Falcons.

Desmond Ng led BSU last season against the Falcons, winning the 100 breaststroke and placing second in the 200 freestyle. the Bears were defeated at home, 173-50.

WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING, at Bentley University, 1:00 PM: The Bears compete in the first of two straight road meets, traveling to Waltham, Mass., to take on the Division II Falcons.

BSU lost at home to Bentley, 189-99, a year ago.



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VOTE for the 2025 Las Cruces Sun-News Female Athlete of the Year

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Updated Jan. 11, 2026, 1:02 p.m. MT

This post has been updated to correct a duplicate nominee.

Voting is now open for the 2025 Las Cruces Sun-News Female Athlete of the Year award.

100 nominees have been chosen by the Sun-News across Las Cruces-area schools, including Las Cruces, Mayfield, Organ Mountain, Centennial, Mesilla Valley Christian, Gadsden, Santa Teresa, Chaparral and Hatch Valley. They have been chosen from volleyball, basketball, softball, soccer, track and field, cross country, wrestling, golf and tennis teams from all nine of those schools.

The nominees represented themselves, their schools and their communities in the best possible way they could during their respective seasons. They each accomplished something notable and made their friends, family, coaches and loved ones proud. They were All-State players, All-District players, strong performers at state championships, or members of the Sun-News’ Super Teams.



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UNC Bears volleyball’s busy offseason

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The UNC volleyball team’s fall season ended a little more than a month ago, and the Bears are already moving on toward 2026

In a rare occurrence, two freshmen will join UNC this month with the start of the spring semester. The program also said good-bye to associate head coach Pi’i Aiu, who announced his retirement in December.

Freshmen Gillian Walton and Riley Taylor were among six players to sign for 2026, the program announced in November. Walton and Taylor are expected to be on campus for the start of the spring semester Monday with both athletes opting to graduate a semester early from high school.

UNC has since announced the signing of three transfer students in setter Emily Bruss, middle blocker Summer Snead and outside hitter Kylie Cackovic.

Walton was an outside hitter, defensive specialist and opposite hitter at Overland Park High School in Overland Park, Kansas. Taylor was a right-side outside hitter at Green Level High School in Apex, North Carolina.

University of Northern Colorado head volleyball coach Lyndsey Oates, right, and associate head coach Pi'i Aiu walk off the court at Bank of Colorado Arena following a stoppage of play Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025 in Greeley. UNC defeated Montana State 3-0 for its first sweep of the season and to remain in a tie for second place in the conference standings. (Anne Delaney/Staff Reporter).
University of Northern Colorado head volleyball coach Lyndsey Oates, right, and associate head coach Pi’i Aiu walk off the court at Bank of Colorado Arena following a stoppage of play Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025 in Greeley. UNC defeated Montana State 3-0 for its first sweep of the season and to remain in a tie for second place in the conference standings. (Anne Delaney/Staff Reporter).

UNC, 17-16 overall in 2025, turned in one of its most successful seasons under head coach Lyndsey Oates.

After starting their nonconference season with a 3-9 record, the Bears turned things around during the Big Sky Conference season.

UNC won the conference tournament title on its home court, and advanced to the NCAA Tournament. UNC then pushed nationally ranked Creighton to five sets in a first-round match on the Bluejays’ home floor in Omaha, Nebraska.

The match was the final one for Aiu, who’d been with Oates for seven years.

Aiu came to UNC before the 2019 season after 12 years at the University of Colorado in Boulder. He was promoted to associate head coach in January 2020, and was really a right-hand man for Oates.

She said this week the search for a successor will soon begin. Oates was aware of Aiu’s plans to retire long before the end of the season. She said she heard from several people on her coaching connection with Aiu as news of his retirement became public.

“I don’t know that I took that for granted,” Oates said of Aiu as a coaching colleague. “It is maybe true how much success the two of us had together in the last seven years.”

Oates said she previously had the same camaraderie with assistants Jenny Glenn and Tom Hunter, both of whom spent close to a decade in the program.

Northern Colorado Bears head coach Lyndsey Oates talks to her players on the court during the Big Sky Conference Volleyball Tournament championship match against Idaho State at the Bank of Colorado Arena on the campus of the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley on Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025. (Brice Tucker/Staff Photographer)
UNC Bears volleyball coach Lyndsey Oates talks to her players on the court during the 2025 Big Sky Conference Volleyball Tournament championship match against Idaho State on Nov. 26, 2025 at the Bank of Colorado Arena in Greeley. UNC beat the Bengals in three sets to earn the Big Sky’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. (Brice Tucker/Staff Photographer)

In the last seven years, UNC’s record is 150-64 with four Big Sky Conference Tournament titles leading to four NCAA Tournament appearances. In the same span, UNC also won a Big Sky Conference regular-season championship (2024). Also in 2024, UNC qualified for the National Invitational Volleyball Championship after a runner-up finish at the Big Sky tournament.

“It just shows you how valuable assistant coaches are,” Oates said. “I mean, they are doing a bulk of the recruiting and their training, and they create our culture as much as a head coach does.”



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WSU volleyball signs Audrey Hollis out of the transfer portal – The Daily Evergreen

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Four weeks ago, it was made public that Jackie Carle and Italia Bernal were both hitting the transfer portal. At the time, this left the Cougars with Livia Ward as the only setter on the team.

On Wednesday, the Cougs fixed at least part of the setter shortage by signing setter Audrey Hollis. Hollis will be a true junior in the fall and is a transfer from the University of Hawai’i. Before playing in Hawaii, she played at UC San Diego in 2024.

As a sophomore at Hawai’i, she recorded 125 assists and 49 digs. However, she only played in 16 out of 29 matches and 38 total sets.

At UC San Diego, however, she produced. As a freshman, while playing both setter and opposite, she logged 921 assists, 8.86 assists per set (fifth-most in the Big West Conference in 2024), 188 digs, 48 blocks, 57 kills and 17 service aces. She played in 27 out of 30 matches, starting in 25 of them, and helped the Tritons achieve an overall record of 17–13, which allowed them to qualify for the Big West Championship in the team’s first year of eligibility.

For her freshman-year efforts, she made the Big West All-Freshman team.

Hollis even has championship-level DNA after she helped lead her club volleyball team to win the USA Volleyball 18s National Championship in the National Division in 2022.

Despite her statistically underwhelming season at Hawai’i this past year, head coach Korey Schroeder and company will look to tap into the upside she showed in her freshman year.

“Audrey brings a lot of [experience] and [success] for us at the setter position. Her freshman season she ran a 5-1 for a very successful UC-San Diego team while she was still 17 years old,” Schroeder said about her in a statement posted on the WSU Athletics website upon signing her.





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Lubbock-Cooper Liberty Campbell Beeler is top area volleyball player

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Jan. 12, 2026, 4:05 a.m. CT

WOODROW — Like the rest of the Lubbock-Cooper freshmen three years ago, Campbell Beeler faced one of the first major decisions of her life.

Should she stay at her high school, or enter a new frontier as part of the first contingent to attend Lubbock-Cooper Liberty?

There were plenty of factors to consider, including the athletics landscape. What would sports at a new school look like?



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Here is the 2025 Lubbock Avalanche-Journal volleyball Super Team

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Jan. 12, 2026, 4:09 a.m. CT

Here is the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal’s volleyball Super Team for the 2025 season. Players are listed in alphabetical order in their respective tiers.

Read about our player of the year, Lubbock-Cooper Liberty senior Campbell Beeler.

OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR

Emma Clawson, Sr., OH, Shallowater

Clawson, a New Mexico State signee, notched 511 kills (.303 hitting percentage), 157 digs, 36 aces, 13 blocks and eight assists. She was District 2-3A MVP and Texas Girls Coaches Association all-state.



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