It’s a regular season rematch with a national championship on the line.
Sports
When Is The 2025 NCAA Track And Field National Championship?
The 2025 track and field season is coming to a close, and the 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships are just around the corner.
The top collegiate athletes from across the country will head to Eugene, Oregon, to compete at Hayward Field—one of the most iconic venues in the sport.
With qualifying now complete, see who advanced from each regional meet and check out the full list of athletes set to compete for a national title.
When Is The NCAA Track And Field Championship?
The Division I Track and Field Championships will begin on Wednesday, June 11 and end on Saturday, June 14.
Where Are The D1 Track And Field Championships?
The NCAA National Championship will be hosted by the University of Oregon and take place at Hayward Field in Eugene.
Who’s Competing?
While the final list of competitors will be announced on June 3, here’s who has accepted their spot so far with their school and qualifying time or score.
Women’s 100 Meter Dash
- Shenese Walker – Florida State – 10.98
- Leah Bertrand – Ohio State – 10.99
- Dajaz Defrand – USC – 11.00
- JaMeesia Ford – South Carolina – 11.00
- Joella Lloyd – Florida State – 11.01
- Anthaya Charlton – Florida – 11.01
- Victoria Cameron – Tarleton State – 11.01
- Samirah Moody – USC – 11.02
- Jasmine Montgomery – Texas A&M – 11.02
- Brianna Selby – USC – 11.03
- Jassani Carter – USC – 11.06
- Jade Brown – Arizona – 11.07
- Cynteria James – South Carolina – 11.07
- Alicia Burnett – Missouri – 11.10
- Tima Godbless – LSU – 11.11
- Aniyah Kitt – Clemson – 11.12
- Iyana Gray – TCU – 11.14
- Kelly Ufodiama – East Carolina – 11.15
- Indya Mayberry – TCU – 11.15
- London Tucker – TCU – 11.17
- Camryn Dickson – Texas A&M – 11.17
- Kaila Jackson – Georgia – 11.17
- Kailei Collins – Howard – 11.21
- Reign Redmond – Georgia – 11.24
Women’s 200 Meter Dash
- Madison Whyte – USC – 22.16
- Jasmine Montgomery – Texas A&M – 22.26
- JaMeesia Ford – South Carolina – 22.27
- Indya Mayberry – TCU – 22.30
- Dajaz Defrand – USC – 22.33
- Jassani Carter – USC – 22.52
- Kelly Ufodiama – East Carolina – 22.54
- Tiriah Kelley – Baylor – 22.58
- Kenondra Davis – Texas – 22.58
- Taylor Snaer – UCLA – 22.64
- Tima Godbless – LSU – 22.68
- Camryn Dickson – Texas A&M – 22.69
- Leah Bertrand – Ohio State – 22.71
- Cynteria James – South Carolina – 22.72
- Jayla Jamison – South Carolina – 22.77
- Fatouma Conde – Ohio State – 22.78
- Kya Epps – Cincinnati – 22.82
- Holly Okuku – Texas – 22.85
- Samirah Moody – USC – 22.86
- Gabrielle Matthews – Florida – 22.87
- Iaunia Pointer – Syracuse – 22.90
- Naomi Johnson – UCLA – 22.94
- Precious Nzeakor – Alabama – 23.03
- Aniyah Bigam – LSU – 23.07
Women’s 400 Meter Run
- Michaela Rose, LSU – 1:58.91
- Meghan Hunter, BYU – 1:58.95
- Gladys Chepngetich, Clemson – 1:59.47
- Makayla Paige, North Carolina – 1:59.73
- Roisin Willis, Stanford – 1:59.81
- Smilla Kolbe, North Florida – 2:00.09
- Lauren Tolbert, Duke – 2:00.27
- Janet Jepkemboi Amimo, Kentucky – 2:00.36
- Sophia Gorriaran, Harvard – 2:00.46
- Veronica Hargrave, Indiana – 2:00.51
- Laura Pellicoro, Portland – 2:01.44
- Alli Bookin-Nosbisch, Iowa – 2:01.70
- Emma Sullivan, Kennesaw State – 2:01.71
- Makayla Clark, Iowa State – 2:01.75
- Victoria Bossong, Harvard – 2:01.83
- Emma Kelley, Wisconsin – 2:01.87
- Kaylie Politza, Oklahoma State – 2:02.04
- Jenna Schwinghamer, Kentucky – 2:02.38
- Tessa Buswell, BYU – 2:02.54
- Fanny Arendt, Texas Tech – 2:02.63
- Aaliyah Moore, Kansas – 2:02.87
- Marie Warneke, UCLA – 2:02.93
- Sanu Jallow, Arkansas – 2:03.16
- Maeve O’Neill, Providence – 2:03.44
Women’s 800 Meter Run
- Michaela Rose – LSU – 1:58.91
- Meghan Hunter – BYU – 1:58.95
- Gladys Chepngetich – Clemson – 1:59.47
- Makayla Paige – North Carolina – 1:59.73
- Roisin Willis – Stanford – 1:59.81
- Smilla Kolbe – North Florida – 2:00.09
- Lauren Tolbert – Duke – 2:00.27
- Janet Jepkemboi Amimo – Kentucky – 2:00.36
- Sophia Gorriaran – Harvard – 2:00.46
- Veronica Hargrave – Indiana – 2:00.51
- Laura Pellicoro – Portland – 2:01.44
- Alli Bookin-Nosbisch – Iowa – 2:01.70
- Emma Sullivan – Kennesaw State – 2:01.71
- Makayla Clark – Iowa State – 2:01.75
- Victoria Bossong – Harvard – 2:01.83
- Emma Kelley – Wisconsin – 2:01.87
- Kaylie Politza – Oklahoma State – 2:02.04
- Jenna Schwinghamer – Kentucky – 2:02.38
- Tessa Buswell – BYU – 2:02.54
- Fanny Arendt – Texas Tech – 2:02.63
- Aaliyah Moore – Kansas – 2:02.87
- Marie Warneke – UCLA – 2:02.93
- Sanu Jallow – Arkansas – 2:03.16
- Maeve O’Neill – Providence – 2:03.44
Women’s 1500 Meter Run
- Shannon Flockhart, Providence – 4:04.97
- Bahiya El Arfaoui, Eastern Kentucky – 4:05.20
- Silvia Jelelgo, Clemson – 4:05.68
- Maggi Congdon, Northern Arizona – 4:05.73
- Kimberley May, Providence – 4:06.31
- Klaudia Kazimierska, Oregon – 4:06.53
- Silan Ayyildiz, Oregon – 4:06.61
- Chloe Foerster, Washington – 4:06.74
- Vera Sjoberg, Boston University – 4:07.39
- Carlee Hansen, BYU – 4:07.64
- Margot Appleton, Virginia – 4:08.04
- Sophie O’Sullivan, Washington – 4:08.21
- Mena Scatchard, Princeton – 4:08.34
- Salma Elbadra, South Carolina – 4:08.35
- Riley Chamberlain, BYU – 4:08.42
- Judy Rono, New Mexico – 4:09.07
- Allie Zealand, Liberty – 4:09.76
- Lindsey Butler, Virginia Tech – 4:10.32
- Amina Maatoug, Washington – 4:10.34
- Taryn Parks, North Carolina – 4:10.77
- Mia Barnett, Oregon – 4:10.88
- Charlotte Tomkinson, Georgetown – 4:10.92
- Berlyn Schutz, Nebraska – 4:11.01
- Kaiya Robertson, Boise State – 4:11.38
Women’s 5000 Meter Run
- Grace Hartman, NC State – 15:23.52
- Margot Appleton, Virginia – 15:25.99
- Florence Caron, Penn State – 15:27.05
- Vera Sjoberg, Boston University – 15:27.51
- Silvia Jelelgo, Clemson – 15:27.68
- Samantha Bush, NC State – 15:28.10
- Chloe Scrimgeour, Georgetown – 15:28.65
- Alex Millard, Providence – 15:28.91
- Rachel Forsyth, Michigan State – 15:30.50
- Edna Chelulei, Eastern Kentucky – 15:30.56
- Brenda Jepchirchir, Auburn – 15:33.50
- Sadie Sigfstead, Villanova – 15:33.68
- Paityn Noe, Arkansas – 15:43.45
- Amina Maatoug, Washington – 15:49.52
- Jenna Hutchins, BYU – 15:49.95
- Sophia Kennedy, Stanford – 15:50.36
- Pamela Kosgei, New Mexico – 15:51.20
- Isca Chelangat, Oklahoma State – 15:51.86
- Marion Jepngetich, New Mexico – 15:52.44
- Julia David-Smith, Washington – 15:54.92
- Maelle Porcher, Iowa State – 15:55.73
- Ava Mitchell, Northern Arizona – 16:00.58
- Zofia Dudek, Stanford – 16:01.80
- Agnes McTighe, Northern Arizona – 16:01.83
Women’s 10000 Meter Run
- Grace Hartman, NC State – 32:32.80
- Florence Caron, Penn State – 32:44.94
- Hilda Olemomoi, Florida – 32:45.45
- Chloe Scrimgeour, Georgetown – 32:45.60
- Brenda Tuwei, Alabama – 32:48.02
- Ruth White, New Hampshire – 32:50.17
- Edna Chelulei, Eastern Kentucky – 32:50.68
- Joy Naukot, West Virginia – 32:51.33
- Jenny Schilling, Virginia – 32:51.43
- Sadie Sigfstead, Villanova – 32:56.98
- Edna Chepkemoi, LSU – 33:11.87
- Brenda Jepchirchir, Auburn – 33:13.61
- Pamela Kosgei, New Mexico – 33:37.04
- Diana Cherotich, Oregon – 33:43.18
- Rosina Machu, Gonzaga – 33:50.76
- Paityn Noe, Arkansas – 33:56.89
- Jadyn Keeler, North Dakota – 34:07.67
- Ali Weimer, Minnesota – 34:09.14
- Mckaylie Caesar, Utah – 34:15.26
- Morgan Jensen, Utah – 34:15.28
- Sydney Thorvaldson, Arkansas – 34:16.03
- Ruth Kimeli, Baylor – 34:21.49
- Logan Hofstee, Gonzaga – 34:30.82
- Josphine Mwaura, Oklahoma State – 34:31.93
Women’s 100 Meter Hurdles
- Aaliyah McCormick – Oregon – 12.74
- Habiba Harris – Florida – 12.80
- Ana-Liese Torian – Auburn – 12.81
- Yanla Ndjip-Nyemeck – UCLA – 12.82
- Jaiya Covington – Texas A&M – 12.87
- Myreanna Bebe – Tennessee – 12.89
- Marissa Simpson – UTEP – 12.90
- Emmi Scales – Kentucky – 12.93
- Janela Spencer – Ohio State – 12.94
- Kiara Smith – Tennessee – 12.94
- Adaobi Tabugbo – UCF – 12.95
- Akala Garrett – Texas – 12.98
- Marcia Sey – Howard – 12.99
- Destiny Smith – Texas Tech – 13.01
- Oneka Wilson – Clemson – 13.04
- Rachel Mehringer – Indiana State – 13.08
- Celeste Polzonetti – UCLA – 13.08
- Amari Kiluvia – TCU – 13.09
- Tonie-Ann Forbes – Texas Tech – 13.11
- Falon Spearman – Vanderbilt – 13.13
- Simone Ballard – Arkansas – 13.14
- Sky Hagan – San Jose State – 13.14
- Camden Bentley – Kentucky – 13.14
- Shania Myers – Arkansas – 13.15
Women’s 400 Meter Hurdles
- Savannah Sutherland – Michigan – 54.39
- Akala Garrett – Texas – 54.72
- Michelle Smith – Georgia – 55.25
- Sanaa Hebron – Miami (Fla.) – 55.47
- Tyra Wilson – Florida State – 55.63
- Allyria McBride – Vanderbilt – 55.65
- Calisha Taylor – Baylor – 55.94
- Amelliah Birdow – TCU – 55.96
- Aniya Woodruff – Howard – 56.12
- Safhia Hinds – Kansas State – 56.34
- Aliya Garozzo – Duke – 56.46
- Jessicka Woods – Mississippi State – 56.48
- Braelyn Baker – Duke – 56.48
- Chloe Fair – Harvard – 56.49
- LiNay Perry – Northern Arizona – 56.70
- Jenna James – Oklahoma – 56.71
- Jourdin Edwards – Kansas State – 56.73
- Tia Williams – TCU – 56.74
- Loubna Benhadja – UTEP – 56.77
- Dyandra Gray – Minnesota – 56.86
- Natalie Block – Milwaukee – 56.95
- Yasmeen Tinsley – Monmouth – 56.97
- Mackenzie Collins – Texas – 57.14
- Macaela Walker – Cincinnati – 57.16
Women’s 3000 Meter Steeplechase
- Doris Lemngole – Alabama – 9:13.12
- Lexy Halladay-Lowry – BYU – 9:23.03
- Angelina Napoleon – NC State – 9:37.42
- Karrie Baloga – Northern Arizona – 9:40.13
- Sarah Tait – West Virginia – 9:42.14
- Debora Cherono – Texas A&M – 9:42.55
- Taylor Lovell – BYU – 9:42.83
- Katelyn Stewart-Barnett – Michigan State – 9:47.15
- Sydney Masciarelli – North Carolina – 9:48.12
- Layla Roebke – Louisville – 9:49.08
- Maggie Liebich – Washington – 9:53.74
- Emily Paupore – Central Michigan – 9:53.89
- Hanna Ackermann – Boise State – 9:54.40
- Madaline Ullom – Penn State – 9:54.42
- Molly Malague – Harvard – 9:56.92
- Sophia McDonnell – New Mexico – 9:57.14
- Kennady Fontenot – Texas A&M – 9:58.13
- Leah Jeruto – Oklahoma – 9:58.74
- Nelly Jemeli – Mississippi State – 9:59.39
- Shelby Jensen – Utah State – 10:00.46
- Gwenno Goode – La Salle – 10:01.65
- Ebba Cronholm – Kansas – 10:01.90
- Katja Pattis – Idaho – 10:02.04
- Brooke Mullins – Florida State – 10:05.48
Women’s High Jump
- Alyssa Jones – Stanford – 1.84m
- Temitope Adeshina – Texas Tech – 1.84m
- Maria Arboleda – Iowa – 1.84m
- Rose Yeboah – Illinois – 1.84m
- Kristi Perez-Snyman – Missouri – 1.84m
- Jenna Rogers – Nebraska – 1.84m
- Sharie Enoe – Kansas State – 1.84m
- Claudina Diaz – Missouri – 1.84m
- Cheyla Scott – South Carolina – 1.82m
- Celia Rifaterra – Virginia – 1.82m
- Elena Kulichenko – Georgia – 1.82m
- Spirit Morgan – North Carolina A&T – 1.82m
- Miracle Ailes – Alabama – 1.82m
- Eva Baldursdottir – Pittsburgh – 1.82m
- Amaya Ugarte – Ohio State – 1.82m
- Valentina Fakrogha – UCLA – 1.81m
- Alice Taylor – Rice – 1.81m
- Ajia Hughes – Southern Utah – 1.81m
- Zharia Taylor – UC Irvine – 1.81m
- Kendall Ward – Georgia Tech – 1.79m
- Svenia DeConinck – Kent State – 1.79m
- Zahra Amos – Buffalo – 1.79m
- Carly Tarentino – Virginia – 1.79m
- Diamonasia Taylor – Murray State – 1.79m
Women’s Pole Vault
- Anna Willis – South Dakota – 4.42m
- Ka’Leila Abrille – UCLA – 4.42m
- Gennifer Hirata – South Dakota – 4.42m
- Amanda Moll – Washington – 4.42m
- Hana Moll – Washington – 4.42m
- Katerina Adamiec – UCLA – 4.42m
- Carly Pujol – Arkansas State – 4.42m
- Mia Morello – Illinois – 4.42m
- Molly Haywood – Baylor – 4.42m
- Erica Ellis – Kansas – 4.42m
- Emily Fitzsimmons – Oregon – 4.42m
- Tenly Kuhn – Baylor – 4.32m
- Chloe Timberg – Rutgers – 4.24m
- Sarah Schmitt – Tennessee – 4.24m
- Johanna Duplantis – LSU – 4.24m
- Lyndsey Reed – Virginia Tech – 4.24m
- Chiara Sistermann – Virginia Tech – 4.24m
- Julia Fixsen – Virginia Tech – 4.24m
- Alyssa Quinones-Mixon – Auburn – 4.24m
- Gemma Tutton – Duke – 4.24m
- Lilly Nichols – Appalachian State – 4.24m
- Ashley Callahan – Louisville – 4.24m
- Sydney Horn – High Point – 4.24m
- Payton Phillips – Kentucky – 4.09m
Women’s Long Jump
- Alexis Brown – Baylor – 6.94m
- Prestina Ochonogor – Tarleton State – 6.66m
- Alyssa Jones – Stanford – 6.65m
- Synclair Savage – Louisville – 6.64m
- Tacoria Humphrey – Illinois – 6.63m
- Janae De Gannes – Baylor – 6.58m
- Sophia Beckmon – Illinois – 6.56m
- Imani Moore – Georgia Southern – 6.54m
- Anthaya Charlton – Florida – 6.52m
- Aaliyah Foster – Texas – 6.44m
- Hailey Coey – Montana State – 6.44m
- Shalom Olotu – Kansas State – 6.44m
- Mariia Horielova – Alabama – 6.43m
- Jenica Bosko – Arizona – 6.42m
- Alyssa Banales – Florida – 6.41m
- Sydney Johnson – UCLA – 6.38m
- Funminiyi Olajide – Arkansas – 6.36m
- Georgina Scoot – Princeton – 6.32m
- Marta Amani – Harvard – 6.30m
- Paige Floriea – Rutgers – 6.22m
- Molly Wise – Richmond – 6.18m
- Ella Scally – Miami (Ohio) – 6.17m
- Julia Sue-Kam-Ling – Jacksonville – 6.15m
- Mariama Hunt – NC State – 6.11m
Women’s Triple Jump
- Shantae Foreman – Clemson – 14.01m
- Winny Bii – Texas A&M – 14.00m
- Victoria Gorlova – Texas Tech – 13.99m
- Daniela Wamokpego – Iowa – 13.67m
- Agur Dwol – Oklahoma – 13.65m
- Simone Johnson – San Jose State – 13.63m
- Tamiah Washington – Texas Tech – 13.54m
- Katharina Graman – San Jose State – 13.50m
- Emilia Sjostrand – San Jose State – 13.49m
- Skylynn Townsend – Georgia – 13.48m
- Ashley Moore – Oklahoma – 13.48m
- Rachela Pace – UTSA – 13.46m
- Shalom Olotu – Kansas State – 13.45m
- Ryann Porter – Oregon – 13.42m
- Asia Phillips – Florida – 13.29m
- Machaeda Linton – LSU – 13.25m
- Olivia Dowd – North Carolina A&T – 13.22m
- Sophie Galloway – Kentucky – 13.08m
- Cameran Gist – South Carolina – 13.07m
- Georgina Scoot – Princeton – 13.04m
- Jada Joseph – Brown – 13.01m
- Kayla Pinkard – Florida State – 13.01m
- Sharvari Parulekar – Louisville – 12.93m
- Christina Warren – Miami (Fla.) – 12.93m
Women’s Shot Put
- Mya Lesnar – Colorado State – 18.50m
- Gracelyn Leiseth – Florida – 18.31m
- Akaoma Odeluga – Ole Miss – 18.24m
- Jayden Ulrich – Louisville – 17.97m
- Kalynn Meyer – Nebraska – 17.96m
- Abria Smith – Illinois – 17.69m
- Ashley Erasmus – USC – 17.58m
- Chrystal Herpin – Texas – 17.55m
- Elizabeth Tapper – Michigan – 17.28m
- MyeJoi Williams – Alabama – 17.18m
- Kelsie Murrell-Ross – Georgia – 17.17m
- Nina Ndubuisi – Texas – 17.15m
- Lucija Leko – California – 17.10m
- Alida Van Daalen – Florida – 17.08m
- Megan Hague – Auburn – 17.00m
- Abigail Russell – Michigan – 16.95m
- Treneese Hamilton – Alabama – 16.92m
- Gretchen Hoekstre – BYU – 16.87m
- Amanda Ngandu-Ntumba – Cincinnati – 16.85m
- Makayla Hunter – Indiana – 16.83m
- Melanie Duron – Texas State – 16.75m
- Kellyn Kortemeyer – Nebraska – 16.71m
- Cierra Jackson – Fresno State – 16.71m
- Tapenisa Havea – Arizona – 16.25m
Women’s Discus Throw
- Jayden Ulrich – Louisville – 64.81m
- Cierra Jackson – Fresno State – 61.27m
- Shelby Frank – Texas Tech – 61.23m
- Alida Van Daalen – Florida – 59.78m
- Amanda Ngandu-Ntumba – Cincinnati – 59.43m
- Caisa-Marie Lindfors – California – 59.03m
- Sofia Sluchaninova – Kansas – 58.22m
- Taylor Kesner – Wisconsin – 57.83m
- Jade Whitfield – Louisville – 57.05m
- Angeludi Asaah – Penn – 56.32m
- Tamaiah Koonce – Kansas State – 55.99m
- Krishna Jayasankar Menon – UNLV – 55.61m
- Zoe Burleson – Texas Tech – 55.47m
- Princesse Hyman – LSU – 55.11m
- Adrienne Adams – Auburn – 55.09m
- Estel Valeanu – Virginia – 55.06m
- Paige Low – Oklahoma – 54.82m
- Michaelle Valentin – FIU – 54.73m
- Gretchen Hoekstre – BYU – 54.58m
- Donna Douglas – Tennessee – 54.56m
- Milina Wepiwe – Harvard – 54.54m
- Ines Lopez – Arizona State – 54.39m
- Klaire Kovatch – Colorado State – 54.32m
- Jamora Alves – St. John’s – 54.16m
Women’s Hammer Throw
- Gudrun Hallgrimsdottir – VCU – 69.53m
- Valentina Savva – California – 67.75m
- Stephanie Ratcliffe – Georgia – 67.13m
- Kali Terza – Kennesaw State – 66.75m
- Emma Robbins – Oklahoma State – 66.47m
- Emily Fink – Army – 66.46m
- Shelby Frank – Texas Tech – 66.17m
- Paola Bueno – Liberty – 65.73m
- Lara Roberts – Texas State – 65.61m
- Chioma Njoku – Maryland – 65.60m
- Marie Rougetet – Mississippi State – 65.23m
- Audrey Jacobs – California – 64.94m
- Annika Kelly – Virginia – 64.94m
- Chloe Lindeman – Wisconsin – 64.62m
- Giavonna Meeks – California – 64.55m
- Kennedy Clarke – Oklahoma – 64.11m
- Kassidy Gallagher – Oklahoma – 64.08m
- Kate Powers – Kentucky – 63.91m
- Emilia Kolokotroni – Harvard – 63.63m
- Mariana Pestana – Virginia Tech – 63.52m
- Kenna Curry – North Dakota – 63.44m
- Skylar Soli – Ole Miss – 63.44m
- Monique Hardy – Kansas State – 62.99m
- Kajsa Borrman – Colorado State – 62.93m
Women’s Javelin Throw
- Irene Jepkemboi – TCU – 58.36m
- Kelsi Oldroyd – Utah Valley – 57.72m
- McKyla Van Der Westhuizen – Rice – 57.17m
- Evelyn Bliss – Bucknell – 57.06m
- Shea Greene – Princeton – 56.91m
- Maddie Harris – Nebraska – 56.82m
- Valentina Barrios Bornacelli – Missouri – 56.71m
- Manuela Rotundo – Georgia – 55.88m
- Elizabeth Korczak – Iowa – 55.28m
- Arndis Oskarsdottir – FIU – 54.99m
- Eniko Sara – Nebraska – 54.73m
- Lilly Urban – Nevada – 53.49m
- Lianna Davidson – Georgia – 53.37m
- Jana van Schalkwyk – UCLA – 53.27m
- Erin McMeniman – Georgia – 53.14m
- Emma Yungeberg – Michigan – 52.97m
- Megan Albamonti – Alabama – 52.94m
- Deisiane Teixeira – Miami (Fla.) – 52.72m
- Maria Bienvenu – TCU – 52.68m
- Kate Joyce – North Carolina – 52.43m
- Taylor Kesner – Wisconsin – 52.39m
- Sara Sanders – Oregon State – 52.17m
- Trinity Spooner – LSU – 51.03m
- Beatriz Mora Herencia – UAlbany – 49.42m
Women’s Heptathlon
- Sofia Iakushina – Texas A&M – 6260 pts
- Pippi Lotta Enok – Oklahoma – 6258 pts
- Jadin O’Brien – Notre Dame – 6231 pts
- Annika Williams – Oregon – 5914 pts
- Lucie Kienast – Illinois – 5851 pts
- Sydney Johnson – UCLA – 5820 pts
- Sofia Cosculluela – Washington – 5817 pts
- Izzy Goudros – Harvard – 5807 pts
- Alaina Brady – Notre Dame – 5751 pts
- Melissa Wullschleger – Illinois – 5749 pts
- Mia Lien – UTSA – 5741 pts
- Maresa Hense – Connecticut – 5733 pts
- Annie Molenhouse – Oklahoma State – 5729 pts
- Pauline Bikembo – Iowa – 5722 pts
- Destiny Masters – Wichita State – 5715 pts
- Juliette Laracuente-Huebner – Cincinnati – 5698 pts
- Claudine Raud-Gumiel – Long Beach State – 5698 pts
- Clare McNamara – Michigan – 5698 pts
- Maddie Pitts – Penn State – 5677 pts
- Kenli Nettles – Ball State – 5655 pts
- Lucy Fellows – Louisville – 5625 pts
- Katelyn Adel – Alabama – 5619 pts
- Shelby Grover – Kent State – 5555 pts
- Ella Spaulding – Fresno State – 5551 pts
Men’s 100 Meter Dash
- Jordan Anthony – Arkansas – 9.75
- Abdul-Rasheed Saminu – South Florida – 9.86
- Taylor Banks – USC – 9.91
- Kalen Walker – Iowa – 9.94
- Kanyinsola Ajayi – Auburn – 9.95
- Mason Lawyer – Washington State – 9.95
- Jelani Watkins – LSU – 10.01
- Ernest Campbell – Texas A&M – 10.02
- Max Thomas – USC – 10.03
- Eddie Nketia – USC – 10.03
- T’Mars McCallum – Tennessee – 10.04
- Malachi Snow – Texas Tech – 10.04
- Tristyn Flores – Long Beach State – 10.05
- Jaiden Reid – LSU – 10.05
- Davonte Howell – Tennessee – 10.05
- Connor Washington – Arkansas – 10.05
- Chrstyn John (Jc) Stevenson – USC – 10.06
- Jehlani Gordon – Georgia – 10.07
- Jaleel Croal – South Florida – 10.08
- Neo Mosebi – Florida State – 10.08
- Chance Cross – Kennesaw State – 10.09
- Jamarion Stubbs – Alabama State – 10.11
- Israel Okon – Auburn – 10.13
- Travis Williams – USC – 10.15
Men’s 200 Meter Dash
- Makanakaishe Charamba – Auburn – 19.79
- T’Mars McCallum – Tennessee – 19.83
- Garrett Kaalund – USC – 19.85
- Carli Makarawu – Kentucky – 19.92
- Abdul-Rasheed Saminu – South Florida – 19.95
- Jaleel Croal – South Florida – 19.95
- Jaiden Reid – LSU – 19.97
- Xavier Butler – Texas – 20.02
- Max Thomas – USC – 20.05
- Jamarion Stubbs – Alabama State – 20.11
- Cameron Miller – Purdue – 20.17
- Dario Matau – Auburn – 20.19
- Jordan Anthony – Arkansas – 20.20
- Jelani Watkins – LSU – 20.24
- Eddie Nketia – USC – 20.24
- Jalen Johnson – Clemson – 20.29
- Mikey McClain – Iowa State – 20.30
- De’montray Callis – Baylor – 20.32
- Kashie Crockett – TCU – 20.32
- Brody Buffington – Georgia – 20.32
- Tory Lanham – Kansas City – 20.33
- Mason Lawyer – Washington State – 20.34
- Tristyn Flores – Long Beach State – 20.46
- Cameron Tarver – San Jose State – 20.55
Men’s 400 Meter Dash
- Samuel Ogazi – Alabama – 44.43
- Gabriel Moronta – South Florida – 45.01
- Joseph Taylor – Duke – 45.05
- Nathan Kent – Navy – 45.23
- Micahi Danzy – Florida State – 45.26
- Edidiong Udo – Ohio State – 45.27
- Jenoah McKiver – Florida – 45.29
- William Jones – USC – 45.32
- Jayden Davis – Arizona State – 45.35
- Shemar Chambers – Georgia – 45.39
- Ervin Pearson – Georgia – 45.43
- DeSean Boyce – Texas Tech – 45.54
- Auhmad Robinson – Texas A&M – 45.57
- Shaemar Uter – Texas Tech – 45.61
- Malik Ricketts – Pittsburgh – 45.63
- Kelsey Singleton – So. Miss – 45.66
- Will Floyd – Georgia – 45.68
- Jordan Pierre – AR-Pine Bluff – 45.75
- Gabriel Clement II – UCLA – 45.75
- Jalen Williams – Wisconsin – 45.78
- Anthony East III – Houston – 45.84
- Johnny Goode – California – 45.84
- Hossam Hatib – Texas A&M – 45.85
- Cutler Zamzow – Texas A&M – 45.93
Men’s 800 Meter Run
- Christian Jackson – Virginia Tech – 1:45.31
- Tinoda Matsatsa – Georgetown – 1:45.36
- Rynard Swanepoel – Wake Forest – 1:45.42
- Handal Roban – Penn State – 1:45.47
- Abdullahi Hassan – Miss State – 1:45.64
- Nicholas Plant – Virginia Tech – 1:45.90
- Samuel Navarro – Mississippi State – 1:46.47
- Patrick Tuohy – NC State – 1:46.60
- Kirk Dawkins – Florida A&M – 1:46.62
- Tyrice Taylor – Arkansas – 1:46.64
- Sam Whitmarsh – Texas A&M – 1:46.68
- Kyle Reinheimer – Washington – 1:46.82
- Rivaldo Marshall – Arkansas – 1:46.97
- Aidan McCarthy – Cal Poly – 1:47.01
- Matthew Erickson – Oregon – 1:47.07
- Dugion Blackman – Iowa State – 1:47.13
- Lloyd Frilot – TCU – 1:47.15
- Koitatoi Kidali – Oregon – 1:47.17
- Samuel Rodman – Princeton – 1:47.24
- Brian Kweyei – Clemson – 1:47.28
- Allon Clay – Penn State – 1:47.29
- Andrew Casey – Wisconsin – 1:47.30
- Patrick Hilby – Wisconsin – 1:47.30
- Yared Kidane – Wichita State – 1:47.35
Men’s 1500 Meter Run
- Abel Teffra – Georgetown – 3:38.65
- Harrison Witt – Princeton – 3:38.83
- Gary Martin – Virginia – 3:38.94
- Damian Hackett – Cornell – 3:39.67
- Simeon Birnbaum – Oregon – 3:39.79
- Brendan Herger – Michigan – 3:39.81
- Duncan Robinson – Iona – 3:40.04
- Alex Stitt – Oklahoma State – 3:40.11
- Cooper Cawthra – Texas A&M – 3:40.15
- Colin Sahlman – Northern Arizona – 3:40.17
- Leo Young – Stanford – 3:40.35
- Davis Helmerich – Arkansas – 3:40.70
- Reuben Reina – Arkansas – 3:40.92
- Michael Danzi – Notre Dame – 3:41.02
- Ethan Strand – North Carolina – 3:44.23
- Trent McFarland – Michigan – 3:44.48
- Ferenc Kovacs – Harvard – 3:44.54
- Liam Murphy – Villanova – 3:44.83
- Martin Segurola – Indiana – 3:44.96
- Nathan Green – Washington – 3:46.47
- Adam Spencer – Wisconsin – 3:46.78
- Garrett MacQuiddy – California – 3:47.06
- Harvey Cramb – Montana State – 3:47.28
- Jack Crull – Bradley – 3:47.31
Men’s 5000 Meter Run
- Matt Strangio – Portland – 13:25.98
- Valentin Soca – California Baptist – 13:26.58
- Robin Kwemoi Bera – Iowa State – 13:26.71
- Jacob White – Wyoming – 13:27.32
- Ishmael Kipkurui – New Mexico – 13:28.25
- Brian Musau – Oklahoma State – 13:32.05
- Habtom Samuel – New Mexico – 13:32.41
- David Mullarkey – Northern Arizona – 13:33.85
- Fouad Messaoudi – Oklahoma State – 13:34.34
- Drew Bosley – Northern Arizona – 13:34.58
- Luke Grundvig – BYU – 13:34.63
- Ernest Cheruiyot – Texas Tech – 13:34.88
- Rocky Hansen – Wake Forest – 13:36.54
- Luke Tewalt – Wake Forest – 13:39.60
- Will Daley – Virginia – 13:39.97
- JoJo Jourdon – Wake Forest – 13:53.89
- Kidus Misgina – Ole Miss – 13:54.94
- Hunter Christopher – Youngstown State – 13:55.21
- Matthew Forrester – Butler – 14:00.14
- Marco Langon – Villanova – 14:06.40
- Ethan Strand – North Carolina – 14:06.41
- Justin Wachtel – Virginia – 14:07.91
- Toby Gillen – Ole Miss – 14:08.45
- Colton Sands – North Carolina – 14:08.96
Men’s 10,000 Meter Run
- Ishmael Kipkurui – New Mexico – 28:09.32
- Habtom Samuel – New Mexico – 28:09.33
- Ernest Cheruiyot – Texas Tech – 28:12.16
- Denis Kipngetich – Oklahoma State – 28:15.51
- Evans Kurui – Washington State – 28:19.22
- Drew Bosley – Northern Arizona – 28:19.60
- David Mullarkey – Northern Arizona – 28:19.73
- Rodgers Kiplimo – Iowa State – 28:19.84
- Cole Sprout – Stanford – 28:20.82
- Joey Nokes – BYU – 28:21.04
- Creed Thompson – BYU – 28:21.52
- Timothy Chesondin – Arkansas – 28:23.00
- Dylan Schubert – Furman – 29:00.47
- Victor Kiprop – Alabama – 29:00.88
- Dennis Kipruto – Alabama – 29:01.39
- Bernard Cheruiyot – Tulane – 29:02.16
- Ben Rosa – Harvard – 29:02.85
- Dismus Lokira – Alabama – 29:03.27
- Ethan Coleman – Notre Dame – 29:03.36
- Sam Lawler – Syracuse – 29:04.98
- Murphy Smith – Navy – 29:06.20
- Dylan Throop – Penn – 29:07.67
- William Zegarski – Butler – 29:10.03
- Shane Brosnan – Harvard – 29:19.56
Men’s 110 Meter Hurdles
- Kendrick Smallwood – Texas – 13.13
- Ja’Kobe Tharp – Auburn – 13.14
- Ja’Qualon Scott – Texas A&M – 13.16
- Jamar Marshall Jr. – Houston – 13.19
- Jerome Campbell – Northern Colorado – 13.23
- Zachary Extine – Arizona – 13.23
- John Adesola – Houston – 13.26
- Braxton Brann – Ohio State – 13.36
- Darius Brown – DePaul – 13.37
- Demario Prince – Baylor – 13.39
- Johnny Brackins – USC – 13.39
- Oscar Smith – Louisiana Tech – 13.42
- Ethan Exilhomme – Northeastern – 13.45
- Matthew Sophia – LSU – 13.46
- Isaiah Taylor – North Carolina A&T – 13.46
- Bradley Franklin – Samford – 13.46
- Jayden Smith – Davidson – 13.48
- Christopher Serrao – Rutgers – 13.49
- Demaris Waters – Florida – 13.49
- Christian Martin – Minnesota – 13.53
- Tyson Williams – Florida State – 13.54
- Josh Parrish – Wichita State – 13.56
- Jahiem Stern – LSU – 13.56
- Joshua Hornsby – CSU Fullerton – 13.58
Men’s 400 Meter Hurdles
- Kody Blackwood – Texas – 48.83
- Ja’Qualon Scott – Texas A&M – 48.87
- Nathaniel Ezekiel – Baylor – 49.03
- Johnny Brackins – USC – 49.04
- Xzaviah Taylor – North Carolina A&T – 49.18
- Oskar Edlund – Texas Tech – 49.44
- Noah Langford – Howard – 49.50
- Bryce McCray – Texas A&M – 49.56
- Hugo Menin – UTSA – 49.61
- Mario Paul – Texas Tech – 49.66
- Jarrett Gentles – Coppin State – 49.78
- Jason Parrish – Wichita State – 49.80
- Jayden Douglas – TCU – 49.81
- Saad Hinti – Tennessee – 49.83
- Ja-Van Poole – Oakland – 49.87
- Ryan Matulonis – Penn – 49.88
- Marcus Johnson – Binghamton – 49.93
- Bryce Tucker – Rutgers – 50.00
- Tamaal Myers II – UCLA – 50.01
- Cameron Wilmington – Grand Canyon – 50.12
- Harry Barton – Tennessee – 50.13
- Alex Sherman – Virginia – 50.13
- Alex Sadikov – Penn – 50.21
- Isaiah Taylor – North Carolina A&T – 50.25
Men’s 3000 Meter Steeplechase
- Collins Kiprop Kipngok – Kentucky – 8:24.91
- Mathew Kosgei – New Mexico – 8:25.41
- Geoffrey Kirwa – Louisville – 8:26.25
- Silas Kiptanui – Tulane – 8:27.28
- Joash Ruto – Iowa State – 8:28.86
- Rob McManus – Montana State – 8:30.65
- Kristian Imroth – Eastern Kentucky – 8:30.80
- Benjamin Balazs – Oregon – 8:31.13
- Carson Williams – Furman – 8:31.61
- James Corrigan – BYU – 8:31.79
- Kole Mathison – Colorado – 8:32.74
- Victor Kibiego – Texas A&M – 8:32.83
- Ryker Holtzen – Wyoming – 8:34.95
- CJ Singleton – Notre Dame – 8:36.51
- Titus Kimaru – Texas Tech – 8:36.83
- Brett Gardner – NC State – 8:37.63
- Andrew Nolan – Michigan State – 8:37.83
- Nathan Davis – Army West Point – 8:38.72
- Quinton Orr – Iowa State – 8:39.13
- Cody Larson – South Dakota State – 8:39.60
- Peter Visser – Weber State – 8:40.17
- Ezekiel Pitireng – Alabama – 8:40.37
- Declan Rymer – Virginia Tech – 8:41.11
- Bismack Kipchirchir – Akron – 8:42.88
Men’s High Jump Prelims
- Mario Brown – Texas A&M – 2.26m
- Isaac Norris – Florida – 2.25m
- Myles Kiss – North Carolina – 2.24m
- Emmanuel Osei – Oregon – 2.23m
- Kenderick Lee – LSU – 2.22m
- Zachery Brown – Arkansas – 2.21m
- Joseph Pasquale – Oklahoma State – 2.20m
- Nathan Hernandez – Texas Tech – 2.19m
- Liam McGovern – Penn State – 2.18m
- Julian Alcazar – Illinois – 2.17m
- Jermaine Bell – Indiana – 2.16m
- Elijah Shaw – Kentucky – 2.15m
- Thomas Garcia – Auburn – 2.14m
- Keenan Scott – Washington – 2.13m
- Darnell Jones – Colorado – 2.12m
- Eric Donnelly – Wisconsin – 2.11m
- Curtis Fields – Baylor – 2.10m
- Steven Gonzalez – Miami – 2.09m
- Andrew Jensen – Michigan – 2.08m
- Mateo Cruz – Virginia – 2.07m
- Sean Davis – California – 2.06m
- Andre Coleman – Syracuse – 2.05m
- Elijah Robinson – Florida State – 2.04m
- Caleb Turner – Nebraska – 2.03m
Men’s Pole Vault Prelims
- Mason Wolfe – Tennessee – 5.70m
- Ethan Cormier – Oregon – 5.65m
- Ryan Wadleigh – Texas – 5.60m
- Noah Black – LSU – 5.55m
- Matt Mueller – Arkansas – 5.50m
- Julian Strong – Florida State – 5.45m
- Ben Cooper – Auburn – 5.40m
- Alex Harper – Penn State – 5.35m
- Jacob Schneider – Michigan – 5.30m
- Caleb Johnson – Washington – 5.25m
- Isaiah Thompson – Stanford – 5.20m
- Jordan Ellis – Virginia – 5.15m
- Nathan Owens – Texas Tech – 5.10m
- Carter Reynolds – Kentucky – 5.05m
- Lucas White – Oklahoma State – 5.00m
- Blake Sanders – UCLA – 4.95m
- Evan Thomas – Colorado – 4.90m
- Daniel Moore – North Carolina – 4.85m
- Kyle Rodriguez – Syracuse – 4.80m
- Hunter Lee – Georgia – 4.75m
- Trevor Mills – Florida – 4.70m
- Aaron Brooks – Nebraska – 4.65m
- Cameron Davis – Ole Miss – 4.60m
- Mitchell Grant – Wisconsin – 4.55m
Men’s Long Jump
- Johnny Brackins – USC – 8.15m
- Malcolm Clemons – Florida – 8.11m
- Jeremiah Davis – Florida State – 8.09m
- Andrei Dumitrescu – Texas Tech – 8.08m
- Samuel Ogazi – Alabama – 8.06m
- Isaac Henderson – Iowa – 8.01m
- Wayne Pinnock – Arkansas – 7.99m
- Cameron Crump – Mississippi State – 7.95m
- Ja’Michael Fox – Texas A&M – 7.94m
- Jamar Marshall Jr. – Houston – 7.92m
- Sean Dixon-Bodie – LSU – 7.90m
- Dylan Owusu – Minnesota – 7.90m
- Reheem Hayles – Rutgers – 7.89m
- Caleb Foster – North Carolina – 7.89m
- Jamarion Stubbs – UCF – 7.87m
- Rojay Smith – Oklahoma – 7.86m
- Jaden Patterson – TCU – 7.85m
- Darius King – Northern Iowa – 7.85m
- Nathaniel Ezekiel – Baylor – 7.83m
- Ryan Brown – UCLA – 7.82m
- Keon Buckley – Clemson – 7.81m
- Joshua Dela Cruz – Cal State Northridge – 7.80m
- Isaiah Holmes – Miami – 7.80m
- Christian Lewis – Purdue – 7.79m
Men’s Triple Jump
- Salif Mane – Fairleigh Dickinson – 17.12m
- Russell Robinson – Miami – 17.09m
- Sean Dixon-Bodie – LSU – 17.08m
- Jaydon Hibbert – Arkansas – 17.07m
- Malik Cunningham – Villanova – 16.95m
- Josiah Thompson – Baylor – 16.85m
- Emmanuel Ihemeje – Oregon – 16.83m
- Kweku Brako – North Carolina A&T – 16.81m
- Clarence Foote-Talley – Tennessee – 16.80m
- Nickolas Scarvelis – USC – 16.78m
- Kwamere Harris – Florida – 16.75m
- Ryan Brown – UCLA – 16.70m
- William Watson – Missouri – 16.69m
- Jaden Patterson – TCU – 16.67m
- Chris Alexander – Texas A&M – 16.66m
- Darius Clark – Coastal Carolina – 16.65m
- Isaiah Griffith – Louisville – 16.64m
- DJ Butler – Houston – 16.63m
- Elijah Parham – Georgia – 16.61m
- CJ Green – UCF – 16.60m
- Reheem Hayles – Rutgers – 16.58m
- Victor Zuluaga – Auburn – 16.57m
- Nathaniel Ezekiel – Baylor – 16.56m
- Devon Washington – Indiana – 16.55m
Men’s Shot Put
- Jordan Geist – Arizona – 21.50m
- Turner Washington – Arizona State – 21.40m
- Jonah Wilson – Nebraska – 21.35m
- John Meyer – LSU – 21.34m
- Patrick Piperi – Texas – 21.30m
- Kole Mathison – Colorado – 21.20m
- Tyler Blomquist – Texas A&M – 21.19m
- Daniel McArthur – North Carolina – 21.15m
- Eric Favors – South Carolina – 21.10m
- Isaiah Rogers – UTEP – 21.09m
- Brett Neelly – Kansas State – 21.07m
- Reese Hoffa – Georgia – 21.06m
- Adam Kuehl – Illinois – 21.05m
- Christian Lincoln – Florida – 21.03m
- Ethan Dabbs – Virginia – 21.01m
- Kyle Moison – Auburn – 21.00m
- Darius King – Northern Iowa – 20.99m
- Jacob Foutz – Tennessee – 20.98m
- Brian Williams – Mississippi – 20.97m
- Jonah Wilson – Nebraska – 20.95m
- Marvin Caffey – Oregon – 20.93m
- Josh Sobota – Kentucky – 20.91m
- Kyle Moison – Auburn – 20.90m
- Sean Dolan – Villanova – 20.88m
Men Discus Throw
- Mykolas Alekna, California, 72.12m
- Ralford Mullings, Oklahoma, 67.21m
- Dimitrios Pavlidis, Kansas, 62.00m
- Seth Allen, Auburn, 60.95m
- Michael Pinckney, UCLA, 60.88m
- Uladzislau Puchko, VA Tech, 60.67m
- Vincent Ugwoke, South Florida, 59.89m
- Oscar Rodriguez, TX Tech, 59.62m
- Maxwell Otterdahl, Nebraska, 59.61m
- Racquil Broderick, USC, 59.54m
- Texas Tanner, Air Force, 59.49m
- Casey Helm, Princeton, 59.19m
- Aron Alvarez Aranda, Tennessee, 59.17m
- Christopher Young, Alabama, 59.10m
- Skylar Coffey, Missouri, 58.93m
- Christopher Crawford, Alabama, 58.91m
- Paden Lewis, SE Missouri, 58.89m
- Youssef Koudssi, Arizona, 58.75m
- Aidan Elbettar, Oregon, 58.25m
- Jacob Lemmon, Florida, 58.05m
- Iosif Papa, UMBC, 58.02m
- Trevor Gunzell, Alabama, 57.71m
- Desmond Coleman, Miami (Fla.), 57.04m
- Tanner Watson, Ohio State, 56.70m
Men Hammer Throw
- Angelos Mantzouranis, Minnesota, 76.10m
- Kostas Zaltos, Minnesota, 75.63m
- Tarik Robinson-O’Hagan, Ole Miss, 74.51m
- Texas Tanner, Air Force, 70.32m
- Bryson Smith, Ole Miss, 68.40m
- Kyle Moison, Auburn, 68.20m
- Daniel Reynolds, Wyoming, 68.10m
- Jake Dalton, Ole Miss, 67.82m
- Travis Martin, Cal Poly, 67.81m
- Igor Olaru, Baylor, 67.08m
- Christian Toro, Duke, 66.86m
- Keyandre Davis, Virginia, 66.71m
- Kyle Brown, Auburn, 66.61m
- Ryan Johnson, Iowa, 66.14m
- Mason Hickel, Ole Miss, 66.05m
- Cole Hooper, Wisconsin, 66.03m
- Noa Isaia, Ark State, 65.97m
- Rory Devaney, Cal Poly, 65.94m
- Orry Willems, Cincinnati, 65.58m
- Alex Bernstein, DePaul, 65.36m
- Sean Mockler, Indiana, 65.36m
- Sean Smith, Iowa, 65.16m
- Kellen Kimes, Liberty, 65.02m
- Alex Kristeller, Manhattan, 64.99m
Men Javelin Throw
- Keyshawn Strachan, Nebraska, 76.97m
- Mike Stein, Iowa, 76.96m
- Moustafa Alsherif, Georgia, 75.02m
- Tuomas Narhi, Miss State, 74.89m
- Arthur Petersen, Nebraska, 74.50m
- Remi Rougetet, Miss State, 74.43m
- Leikel Cabrera Gay, Florida, 73.11m
- Riley Marx, KS State, 72.58m
- Jesse Avina, Arizona, 72.48m
- Dash Sirmon, Nebraska, 72.28m
- Jack Greaves, Rice, 72.17m
- Devoux Deysel, Miami (Fla.), 72.02m
- Sam Roller, ND State, 70.43m
- Roddy Schenk, Tennessee, 69.89m
- James Kotowski, UMass Lowell, 69.88m
- Steven Coponi, Rutgers, 69.87m
- Callan Saldutto, Missouri, 69.17m
- Preston Kuznof, TCU, 68.71m
- Trevor Hook, No. Arizona, 68.62m
- Liam Miksic, UC Irvine, 68.57m
- Colin Winkler, Cen Connecticut, 68.18m
- Ryan Rieckmann, Cincinnati, 67.90m
- Gabriel Koletsi, Memphis, 67.84m
- Kevin Burr, Tennessee, 67.40m
Men Decathlon
- Till Steinforth, Nebraska, 8265
- Peyton Bair, Miss State, 8111
- Brad Thomas, UC Santa Barbara, 8108
- Jaden Roskelley, BYU, 8000
- Paul Kallenberg, Louisville, 7944
- Marcus Weaver, Arkansas, 7940
- Ryan Gregory, LB State, 7898
- Abraham Vogelsang, Iowa, 7874
- Ben Barton, BYU, 7865
- Maxwell Forte, Duke, 7853
- Kenneth Byrd, Louisville, 7849
- Grant Levesque, Houston, 7848
- Joshua Mooney, Connecticut, 7810
- Emil Uhlin, KS State, 7788
- Alexander Jung, Kansas, 7738
- Andreas Hantson, Purdue, 7686
- Colby Eddowes, Ark State, 7681
- Landon Helms, Boise State, 7673
- Brayden Richards, Air Force, 7659
- Diarmuid O’Connor, Connecticut, 7658
- Nick Bianco, Colorado, 7655
- Edgar Campre, Miami (Fla.), 7646
- Tayton Klein, Kansas, 7629
- Cole Wilson, High Point, 7609
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Sports
Street Fighters Club hosts winter health event
Srinagar, Dec 21:Street Fighters Club successfully organised its annual felicitation programme titled “AAMADAY CHILLAI KALAAN” at the Auditorium of Green Valley Educational Institute, Ellahi Bagh, Buchpora. The event witnessed an impressive gathering of athletes, students, health professionals, educators, and community members.
The programme was aimed at spreading awareness about health issues during the harsh winter season while also focusing on reconnecting Gen Z with their cultural roots, especially the rich Kashmiri traditions associated with Chillai Kalaan.
The event commenced with Tilawat-e-Quran, followed by Naat-e-Rasool ﷺ, setting a spiritually enriching tone. In his welcome address, the organisers highlighted the importance of holistic well-being, cultural identity, and community participation.
Renowned medical professionals addressed the gathering, with Dr. Naveed Nazir Shah delivering an informative talk on respiratory issues prevalent during winters, while Dr. Manzoor Ahmad Wani spoke on gut health and healthy food habits, emphasizing lifestyle modifications during extreme cold conditions.
A special address on fitness and healthy living was delivered by Mr. Riyaz Ahmad Kathjoo, Principal, Green Valley Educational Institute, who appreciated the efforts of Street Fighters Club in promoting health awareness and sports culture among youth.
Speaking on the occasion, Mr. Sajad Mir, President, Street Fighters Club, said that AAMADAY CHILLAI KALAAN is not merely an event but a movement to promote physical fitness, preventive healthcare, and cultural consciousness during the most challenging winter period. He reiterated the club’s commitment to community health, youth engagement, and environmental responsibility.
Coach Abid Amin, while interacting with participants, stressed the importance of maintaining physical activity even during extreme winters and encouraged young athletes to stay disciplined, resilient, and rooted in traditional values.
The programme concluded with a felicitation ceremony, where adventure enthusiasts, athletes, and contributors were honoured for their dedication and achievements. The organisers expressed gratitude to Green Valley Educational Institute for their support and hospitality, making the event a grand success.
Sports
Texas A&M volleyball vs Kentucky game score: Live updates
No. 3 seed Texas A&M volleyball faces No. 1 Kentucky in the NCAA Tournament finals and it is the first time two SEC teams will meet at the net for the title.
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Texas A&M middle blocker Morgan Perkins (21) celebrates a score during the NCAA Division I volleyball playoff game against TCU at Reed Arena on Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025 in College Station, Texas.
The Aggies have made history in the tournament after upsetting No. 1 seeds (Pitt and Nebraska) and a No. 2 seed (Louisville). The Wildcats narrowly escaped their five set match Thursday against Wisconsin in the semifinal match.
A&M (28-4) lost to Kentucky 3-1 during conference play Oct. 8. (To the Aggies’ credit, they were the first team in SEC play to win a set against Kentucky, in the Wildcats’ fourth conference game.) A&M head coach Jamie Morrison said he was disappointed that the Aggies couldn’t push the eventual SEC champions to five sets, but outside hitter Logan Lednicky said that match showed glimpses of what the Aggies can be.
If Kentucky (30-2) wins, it will be its first national championship since the 2020 season. If A&M wins, it will be the first national title in volleyball for the Aggies.
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MORE: Jamie Morrison named AVCA coach of the year after leading Texas A&M to historic run
MORE: Preview of first all-SEC NCAA Tournament volleyball title game
Follow along for live updates of the national championship match.
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Texas A&M vs Kentucky score: National championship live updates
Set 2: Texas A&M 15, Kentucky 7
Kentucky comes out of the timeout and is called for a back row attack. But the Wildcats get the crosscourt kill and tool the block to go on a 2-0 run. The Wildcats are setting the ball tightly and are making out of system attack errors at the net. Lednicky gets the crosscourt kill. A Wildcat overpass leads to another Cos-Okpalla kill, her fourth so far. Kentucky calls another timeout.
Set 2: Texas A&M 10, Kentucky 5
Kentucky swings through the A&M block. Perkins responds with another monster block to keep the Aggies ahead. An A&M free ball leads to a long kill from Kentucky. Hudson soars out of the back row to make it 8-5 but Kentucky collects its fifth service error of the night. Stowers closes a seam to stuff Kentucky at the net. The Wildcats call a timeout.
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Set 2: Texas A&M 6, Kentucky 3
Waak has a quick throw down that is dug into the stands to open the set for the Aggies, but they give it back with a service error to tie the match 1-1. Lednicky swings high after a long rally to take the 2-1 lead, but Stowers’ service error ties the match again. Waak goes back to Lednicky who is one-on-one along the pin and gets the touch. A Kentucky overpass leads to a Lednicky kill over the net. Cos-Okpalla’s service pressure continues the Aggies run with a heavy arm. Perkins explodes out of the middle for a kill.
Set 1: Texas A&M 26, Kentucky 24
Hellmuth goes offsspeed out of the timeout and DeLeye goes too long on a shot down the line for the third tie of the set. A&M is called in the net to break the tie and give set point for Kentucky. Stowers tools the block to tie the match at 24. Cos-Okpalla blocks a Kentucky tap for its first set point. Kentucky called a timeout but Stowers taps it over for the set win.
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Set 1: Kentucky 23, Texas A&M 21
Hudson goes down the line for a kill coming out of the timeout, but Kentucky serves an error and follows it up with an attack error to get the Aggies within one. Cos-Okpalla’s attack error puts Kentucky in the redzone first. Waak feeds Lednicky for a high swing off the block. Hudson gets stuffed at the net to put the Aggies in the redzone to tie the match for the first time. Carr’s kill breaks the tie but a Hudson error ties it at 21. Kentucky gives the ball to Carr for a tie-breaking kill and the Wildcats follow it with an ace. Texas A&M calls a timeout.
Set 1: Kentucky 18, Texas A&M 16
After Kentucky’s challenge is not overturned, the Aggies side out to get within five but a service error keeps momentum with the Wildcats. Texas A&M goes on a 2-0 run with its best offense but miscommunication on defense gives Kentucky its five-point lead back. But A&M is starting to click and goes on a 4-0 run thanks to Waak’s service pressure that forces a Kentucky timeout.
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Set 1: Kentucky 13, Texas A&M 7
Cos-Okpalla comes out of the timeout with a quick kill from the middle. Kentucky’s middle, Carr, shows off her hot hand at the net, but Wildcat momentum stalls after being called in the net. Kentucky mistakes keep A&M close and Texas A&M is struggling to play cleanly with four attack errors.
Set 1: Kentucky 6, Texas A&M 1
Kentucky starts the match going on a 3-0 run over the Aggies. The Wildcats are have good transition digs and forcing the Aggies to play out of system. Kentucky serves an error to get the Aggies on the board. Lednicky tries to go line but it misses and Cos-Okpalla has a blocking error that misses the other side of the net. Texas A&M calls an early timeout after Hellmuth gets stuffed.
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Texas A&M Aggies players rush the court to celebrate winning a semifinal match between the Texas A&M Aggies and Pittsburgh Panthers in the NCAA Tournament on Dec. 18, 2025 at T-Mobile Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
Texas A&M starting rotation
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Kentucky starting rotation
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Texas A&M volleyball vs Kentucky time, TV info
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Where: T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Mo.
Sports
NCAA title live updates, score, highlights
Updated Dec. 21, 2025, 3:12 p.m. CT
The time is here, and it’s winner‑take‑all for the 2025 NCAA Volleyball Championship. It will be an epic matchup between a red‑hot Texas A&M team and the SEC titan, the Kentucky Wildcats.
A&M plays an energetic and aggressive brand of volleyball. Their roster has few weaknesses, and they stand as the most battle‑tested team remaining. They are led by four All‑Americans and AVCA Coach of the Year Jamie Morrison, who has them on a historic run that has never been seen in Aggieland.
The Aggies will face Kentucky for the second time this season after losing to them 3‑1 for their first and only SEC loss of the season. Both history and revenge are on the line Sunday afternoon in Kansas City when the Aggies take the court to battle for the title of the NCAA’s best.
Follow here for all the live updates, scores, and highlights.
Set 1: Texas A&M 26 | Kentucky 24
After being down six points early, the Aggies battled back to win the first set.
Set point A&M, 24-23
Cos-Okpalla gets a block to give A&M their first lead
Set point for Kentucky after a net foul, 23-24
Aggies get in on the net for a foul
Wildcats are the first to 20, but A&M is fighting back, 20-21
Lednicky is starting to get hot and putting pressure on Kentucky
A&M on a 5-0 run closes the gap, 16-18
Ifenna Cos-Okpalla got things started with a big Kill
Kentucky holds a five-point lead and wins the race to 15, 15-10
Kentucky is staying a few steps ahead and attacking the middle of the court, keeping A&M off balance
The Wildcats are the first to 10 in the first set, 10-4
Kentucky is strong at the point of attack and is getting by all the Aggie blocks
Kentucky jumps out to a 5-1 lead in the first set
A few unforced errors by the Aggies and big blocks from the Wildcats have A&M down early in the first set.
Aggie All-Americans
Why not the Aggies?
What channel is the Texas A&M vs Kentucky game on today? Time, TV schedule
- Date: Sunday, December 21
- Start time: 2:30 p.m. CST
- TV Channel: ABC
- Stream: ESPN APP
Texas A&M vs. Kentucky will be broadcast on ABC for the 2025 NCAA National Championship.
Texas A&M vs Kentucky predictions, picks, odds
Odds courtesy of DraftKings as of Saturday, 12/20
- Spread: Kentucky by 1.5
- Moneyline: A&M -105 / Kentucky +115
Prediction: A&M 2 – Kentucky 3
2025 National Championship
Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes, and opinions. Follow Jarrett Johnson on X: @whosnextsports1.
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Kentucky Volleyball vs. Texas A&M preview, viewing info, and a prediction
Kentucky Volleyball already knows what it looks like to beat Texas A&M. Back in October, the Cats walked into Reed Arena and handed the Aggies a four-set loss when they were ranked No. 9 in the country.
Now the stakes are just a little bit higher. Twenty-seven straight wins, one more banner on the line, and a rematch against one of the most physical teams in America.
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First, a reminder of what happened last time.
Kentucky hit .293 as a team in that win, piling up 63 kills on 157 swings. Eva Hudson exploded for 24 kills on .373 hitting, and Brooklyn DeLeye added 19 kills. Lizzie Carr was almost automatic in the middle, finishing with 11 kills on .588.
The Cats’ sideout numbers told the story. They were at 68% or better in each of the last three sets and closed it out 21–25, 25–22, 25–15, 27–25. Texas A&M hit just .205 and never really found a rhythm once Kentucky’s block settled in.
Can Kentucky’s firepower crack Texas A&M’s huge frontline for a second time?
This time around, Texas A&M is even sharper. The Aggies are 28–4 overall, 14–1 in the SEC (that lone loss is to the Cats), and they do just about everything at a high level. They hit .298 as a team with 14.6 kills per set. Their opponents hit only .187 and average 11.5 kills per set. They control the net with 2.61 blocks per set and are steady in the backcourt with 13.3 digs per set.
Individually, it starts with outside hitter Logan Lednicky and six rotation arm Kyndal Stowers. Lednicky has 456 kills, 4.11 per set, on .312 hitting, and still gives you over 2.6 digs per set with 98 total blocks. Stowers adds 375 kills at 3.5 per set on .281 hitting and 2.26 digs per set, plus 63 blocks. That is a ton of volume and a ton of pressure from the pins.
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In the middle, Ifenna Cos-Okpalla and Morgan Perkins are a nightmare at the net. Cos-Okpalla is hitting .430 with 236 kills and a ridiculous 195 total blocks, about 1.7 per set. Perkins is at .420 with 95 blocks of her own. Setter Maddie Waak runs the show with efficient choices, and A&M’s offense rarely beats itself.
The matchup problem is obvious. Texas A&M’s front line will test Kentucky’s ability to terminate in tight windows and stay patient when rallies stretch out. The Aggies are used to winning the block battle and forcing teams into low-efficiency swings.
The good news for Kentucky is that this team is built to hit high-level blocks and has the numbers to prove it. The Cats are hitting .293 on the season with 14.86 kills per set, almost a mirror of A&M’s attack. Opponents are at .188 with 12.35 kills per set.
Kentucky’s firepower is relentless. DeLeye and Hudson are basically co-number one options. DeLeye has 536 kills at 4.62 per set on .284 hitting, plus 2.34 digs per set and 41 total blocks. Hudson has 533 kills at 4.59 per set on .323, 2.38 digs, and 49 blocks. You cannot load up on one without the other punishing you.
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In the middle, Carr is the key. She is hitting .349 with 222 kills and 136 total blocks, 1.23 per set. When Carr is winning quicks and closing out on the edges, Kentucky’s defense goes up a level. Around her, Brooke Bultema and Kennedy Washington both hover around .260 hitting and are capable of stealing seams and putting extra stress on Texas A&M’s middles.
The first contact battle might decide everything.
Kentucky side outs best when libero Molly Tuozzo and the backcourt are in rhythm. Tuozzo is at nearly 4 digs per set with 456 total digs and has been nailing in serve receive most of this run. Molly Berezowitz gives them another steady defender and server. If those two control the ball, setter Kassie O’Brien can run her full menu and keep A&M’s block guessing.
O’Brien has 1,244 assists this season, 11.01 per set, and mixes tempo and angles as well as anyone in the country. When she has all three levels available, Kentucky becomes almost impossible to load up against. If she is stuck living on high balls to the pins, Texas A&M’s block has the size to tilt the match back their way.
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On the flip side, Kentucky’s serve needs to make Waak uncomfortable. The Cats average 1.21 aces per set with 140 total, but the bigger thing is disruptive serving that drags A&M off the net just enough to let Carr, Washington, and company get hands on Lednicky and Stowers. Kentucky has 282.5 total blocks this year, 2.44 per set, and they just held Wisconsin’s high-powered attack in check by turning the fifth set into a wall. This has to look similar.
Texas A&M’s resume says they can win this match in a lot of ways. They have more than enough offense, they defend with discipline, and they do not hand out free points. But Kentucky has already seen its best shot, has already solved them once, and is playing with the swagger that comes from a 27-match win streak and a miracle comeback against Wisconsin that will live in program lore.
If Kentucky passes at even an average level, keeps its serve in play, and forces Texas A&M to hit into a loaded block over and over, the Cats will have every chance to finish the job.
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Win this one, and it is 28 straight, another trophy for the case, and the kind of back-to-back run that redefines what Craig Skinner has built in Lexington.
🗓️ Date: Sunday, Dec. 21
🕐 Time: 3:30 p.m. ET
📺 TV Channel: ABC
📍 Location: T-Mobile Center, Kansas City, Missouri
📱 Online Streaming Through Cable/Satellite: ABC is included in most standard cable and satellite packages. Check your local listings.
Streaming Services: You can stream the game on services that carry local channels, including: Hulu + Live TV, YouTube TV, FuboTV, Sling TV (Orange Plan)
You may also be able to pick up the game over-the-air for free if you are near an ABC affiliate.
Odds: FanDuel has Kentucky favored by 1.5 sets. The Moneyline for Kentucky is -156, and for A&M, it’s +120.
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Prediction: Kentucky rides the double-headed monster of Hudson and DeLeye to title number 2, Kentucky in 4 sets.
What say you, BBN? Send us your game prediction in the comments!
Drew Holbrook has been covering the Cats for over 10 years. In his free time he enjoys downtime with his family and Premier League soccer. You can find him on X here. Micah 7:7. #UptheAlbion. Go CATS!
Sports
How to watch NCAA women’s volleyball finals for free: Channel, time for Texas A&M vs. Kentucky
The two best women’s volleyball teams will square off in the national championship match.
Kentucky takes on Texas A&M in the NCAA Division I finals on Sunday, Dec. 21, at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri.
The NCAA women’s volleyball finals will air on ABC and can be streamed live on DirecTV Stream (free trial), fuboTV, ESPN+ and other live TV streaming services.
Here’s what you need to know:
What: NCAA Division I women’s volleyball finals
When: Sunday, December 21, 2025
Who, when: Kentucky vs. Texas A&M, 3:30 p.m. ET
Where: T-Mobile Center, Kansas City, Missouri
TV: ABC
Where to watch the NCAA women’s volleyball tournament live and on demand for free
Viewers without cable can watch games live and on demand for free by signing up for the trial offer from DIRECTV or Fubo.
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Here is more about the game from the Lexington Herald-Leader, via the Tribune News Service:
Two days out from the NCAA volleyball national championship match, Texas A&M’s Jamie Morrison issued an affecting truth to his players.
“Thirty-five athletes have the right to practice today,” Morrison said. “And … each one of our athletes is one of those.”
For the first time in the history of the sport, the national title match will feature two Southeastern Conference teams. No. 3 Texas A&M, in its first-ever national championship, and No. 1 Kentucky, in pursuit of its second-ever national title, and first since 2020-21.
It’s a picture that, even 10 years ago, not many would believe. But it’s not at all surprising that the only two head coaches in America still allowed to show up to practice this weekend.
Craig Skinner had turned down a few other head coaching jobs before finally deciding to accept one in 2004 at the University of Kentucky.
Skinner had experienced national recognition within the volleyball landscape at the high school and club levels in Muncie, Indiana, before successful tenures as an assistant coach for Wisconsin, Ball State (on the men’s team) and then finally at Nebraska, where he — under the legendary John Cook — won his first NCAA national championship in the year 2000.
By the end of his four seasons with the Cornhuskers, Skinner had played a role in guiding the program to an overall record of 154-11 and four-straight Big 12 championships.
When UK director of athletics Mitch Barnhart came calling to ask Skinner to lead the Wildcats, now 21 years ago, Skinner felt that it was the best choice he could make.
Ahead of Sunday’s national championship match — Kentucky’s second under Skinner and second in program history — the head coach described himself as the kind of guy who “probably operates a little bit more on feel than others.”
“And when I got here, and Mr. Barnhart picked me up at the airport, I just had a two-hour conversation with him,” Skinner said. “And felt like this is where I belonged. And it was, the people of Kentucky are who I am as a person. And I thought that was pretty easy to sell.”
But the Wildcats hadn’t recorded a winning season for half a decade, nor made the NCAA Tournament since 1993.
Kentucky had won five Southeastern Conference Tournament titles since the league championship’s inception in 1979, but the SEC was nowhere near the heavy-hitting volleyball conference that it’s become. The SEC Tournament quite literally ceased to exist following the 2005 edition.
“Material things don’t motivate me,” Skinner said. “But people and feelings do, and so Kentucky was all about that. And I can buy into hard work and effort and earning things.”
Morrison, passionate about international and Olympic-level volleyball, served as an assistant for the United States Men’s National Volleyball Team in the mid-to-late aughts before taking a job as an assitant for the U.S. Women’s National Team.
During his stints with each, he won three Olympic medals — gold in the 2008 Beijing Olympics with the men’s team, silver in the 2012 London Olympics and bronze in the 2016 Rio Olympics with the women’s team. He remains the head coach of the U.S. Women’s U19 team.
Morrison also helped establish League One Volleyball, a professional league established in 2024, and served as the league’s director of sports performance.
Dating back to 1999, beginning at his alma mater UC Santa Barbara, Morrison also made a slew of women’s collegiate assistant coaching stops, continuing to do so amid his immense success at the Olympic and professional levels — most recently at the University of Texas from 2020-21.
Like Skinner, Morrison’s first head collegiate coaching opportunity came in the form of an SEC program with some national success, but nothing like the heights they’ve eclipsed since his hiring.
Morrison was named the head coach at Texas A&M in late 2022.
“When I took this job, whenever I was telling people, they had eyebrows raised a little bit, questioning,” Morrison said.
“And it’s funny because, like, a year in, when all of the changes in college athletics started happening, and they also realized resources were really important, so then it was the first thing that happened. And the other thing that I knew was going to happen was just the conference was going to explode, and I knew it for a few reasons.”
Texas — a perennial power since former head coach Mick Haley broke a barrier (NCAA champs had hailed from California or Hawaii) by defeating Hawaii in the 1988 national championship — joined the SEC in 2024 with fellow newcomer Oklahoma.
But the most monumental shift was Skinner’s breaking through during the COVID-impacted 2020-21 NCAA national championship, during which an SEC team hoisted the trophy for the first time in history.
“I really respect what Craig did out in Kentucky,” Morrison said. “And I said at the time, I had a feeling of, I could do what I believed I could do with this program.”
Belief lies at the heart of the accomplishment of not only reaching the national championship as Texas A&M, or Kentucky, but also of an all-SEC title match. Belief is its root.
“Obviously, I knew that no SEC team had ever won a national championship,” Skinner said. “And in recruiting, it was, ‘Hey, we’re going to be the first team in the SEC to win a national championship. Come join us.’ And sometimes that’s a little … it’s not for everybody. Because to be really good, you’ve got to invest a lot of time.”
In the 20 years between Skinner’s national title as an assistant coach at Nebraska and Kentucky’s national championship, he maintained the commitment to the dream and has not once missed the postseason during his tenure as head boss.
“I’d been a part of a national championship program,” Skinner said. “And just wanted people to feel what that was like. And not just winning it, but the work, and the time and the competitive desire it takes to get to that point. Because that’s the way life is. And so for us to do that, I think, broke down doors that, either Kentucky could do it again, or someone else in the league can do it.”
Like Skinner, Morrison’s team hasn’t missed the NCAA Tournament since his hiring, with the Aggies earning a berth in 2023 after an eighth-place finish in the SEC, and reaching the Sweet 16 in 2024 after finishing fifth in the league.
Suddenly, each coach has led their respective programs to historic success in 2025, regardless of Sunday’s outcome. And their fan bases couldn’t be happier.
For Skinner and Morrison, there’s a certain power to being somewhere that could fall in love with the “special” moments, despite the fact that there may be other programs on campus that take up significant spotlight.
The Wildcats, whose men’s basketball team stands among the most successful in the history of the sport. The Aggies, whose football team will begin its college football playoff journey Saturday in a first-round playoff matchup with Miami (Fla.).
“Kentucky is a flagship institution of the state,” Skinner said. “And there’s no pro sports, and when you do something special, they will get all in, all the time. And we’re feeling that right now.”
Despite the fact that revenue sharing, NIL and the transfer portal have rocked the traditional essence of college sports, two of the college sports’ biggest brands can — as the conference likes to say — “mean more” than just men’s basketball or football.
Morrison said that he was intentional in taking a job at a school that demonstrated a serious investment in women’s athletics, and believes that there is truly room for everybody to succeed.
“There is a balance,” Morrison said. “And I think they do an amazing job of making sure that everyone can be excellent, and giving us the resources within our sports and doing their due diligence on what that’s going to take within each sport to make sure that we can be competitive.”
Morrison’s Aggies have not yet defeated Skinner’s Wildcats, and fell most recently at home, 3-1, in College Station on Oct. 8. Texas A&M, the two-seed in the league tournament, failed to reach the SEC championship match, where the Aggies would’ve had the opportunity to get its revenge.
The return of the SEC Tournament this season just so happened to coincide with the first-ever All-SEC national championship, but its high-powered talent and competitiveness on display earned viewership that would’ve been unthinkable when Skinner first took the Kentucky job, and is more than anything a testament to the elevated floor of Southeastern Conference volleyball.
“The SEC is known for putting on championships,” Skinner said. “And we’re the only sport in the league that didn’t have a championship. And so, there’s a lot of different minds and thoughts going into it, and culminating in what I thought was a spectacle for volleyball. And the league did a tremendous job of putting a spotlight on our athletes.”
In the 2025 SEC Tournament, the Wildcats drew national attention for pulling off a reverse sweep against the Texas Longhorns, who had defeated the Aggies, 3-1, in the semifinals.
Is there room for comparison in the experiences between the resurrected SEC Tournament, and a deep NCAA Tournament run? Outside of the physical and mental energy and effort, Skinner said, or the long haul of difficult competition in quick succession in hopes of a title, only time will tell.
“They had to play tough matches,” Skinner said. “We had to play tough matches. And the more you experience, the more types of matches and feelings you have, the more things you can pull from. So Sunday’s match is going to be completely different in terms of what we feel, but hopefully, at some point during this season, we have been there before, and we can draw from those situations.”
Sports
Kentucky volleyball game time, Texas A&M-UK NCAA Championship channel
Dec. 21, 2025, 5:08 a.m. ET
KANSAS CITY, MO — The NCAA Volleyball Championship match between the top-seeded Kentucky Wildcats and No. 3 Texas A&M is the first all-SEC final in the sport’s history.
UK coach Craig Skinner said after Thursday night’s national semifinal that the 2025 title card spoke to the league’s status as a “volleyball powerhouse.”
“I don’t think it’s a coincidence that two SEC teams are playing for the national championship,” he said. “The coaches in our league have worked incredibly hard to put ourselves on the map.”
Here’s everything you need to know to keep up with the match from home:
No. 1 Kentucky vs. No. 3 Texas A&M will be broadcast live on ABC from the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri. The match is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. ET.
Buy Kentucky volleyball tickets here
Volleyball coaches like UK’s Craig Skinner want more linear TV spots for the NCAA Tournament, specifically the first two rounds, which were broadcast on ESPN+. While folks with the governing body and sports network acknowledge there’s room for improvement, they also warn programming an event with so many matches in a crowded December slate isn’t that simple. Read more here.

Brooklyn DeLeye joined Kentucky volleyball determined to rise to the top. Now, she’s back near her home state and on the brink of an NCAA championship. Read more here.
Read about how UK volleyball coach Craig Skinner’s people-first approach has vaulted the program to sustained national relevance here.
The Wildcats are known for their bench choreography. Read how UK’s sideline antics have helped lead it to the NCAA Volleyball Tournament national semifinal here.

Kentucky and Texas A&M volleyball did play this season. UK won 3-1 in College Station, Texas, on Oct. 8.
Today’s national championship is the first all-SEC volleyball final.
It will be the 28th all-time meeting between UK and Texas A&M. The Wildcats are 17-10 against the Aggies, having won the last four straight.
UK volleyball won the 2020 NCAA Tournament, which was played in April 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Wildcats have played in 27 NCAA Tournaments, including this one (1983, 1987-88, 1990, 1992-93, 2005-2025). Twenty-one of those appearances came under Skinner.
UK has made 15 NCAA Regional Semifinals and now two Final Fours. The program has one national championship from the 2020-21 season.

Wildcats will play the No. 3 Texas A&M Aggies in the NCAA Championship Sunday. Here’s a look at the tournament schedule:
- Championship: Dec. 21 at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri
Click here to view the complete bracket.
- Aug. 23: Kentucky 4, Ohio State 0 (exhibition)
- Aug. 30: Kentucky 3, Lipscomb 0
- Aug. 31: Nebraska 3, Kentucky 2
- Sept. 5: Kentucky 3, Penn State 0
- Sept. 6: Kentucky 3, New Hampshire 0
- Sept. 10: Pitt 3, Kentucky 0
- Sept. 13: Kentucky 3, SMU 1
- Sept. 14: Kentucky 3, Houston 0
- Sept. 18: Kentucky 3, Louisville 2
- Sept. 20: Kentucky 3, Washington 0
- Sept. 24: Kentucky 3, South Carolina 0
- Sept. 26: Kentucky 3, Georgia 0
- Oct. 3: Kentucky 3, Ole Miss 0
- Oct. 8: Kentucky 3, Texas A&M 1
- Oct. 12: Kentucky 3, LSU 0
- Oct, 15: Kentucky 3, Auburn 0
- Oct. 19: Kentucky 3, Florida 2
- Oct. 24: Kentucky 3, Mississippi State 1
- Oct. 26: Kentucky 3, Alabama 0
- Oct. 31: Kentucky 3, Vanderbilt 0
- Nov. 2: Kentucky 3, Texas 0
- Nov. 6: Kentucky 3, Missouri 1
- Nov. 9: Kentucky 3, Tennessee 1
- Nov. 14: Kentucky 3, Oklahoma 2
- Nov. 16: Kentucky 3, Arkansas 0
- Nov. 23: Kentucky 3, Auburn 0 (SEC Tournament Quarterfinals)
- Nov. 24: Kentucky 3, Tennessee 1 (SEC Tournament Semifinals)
- Nov. 25: Kentucky 3, Texas 2 (SEC Tournament Final)
- Dec. 4: Kentucky 3, Wofford 0 (NCAA Tournament First Round)
- Dec. 5: Kentucky 3, UCLA 1 (NCAA Tournament Second Round)
- Dec. 11: Kentucky 3, Cal Poly 0 (NCAA Tournament Regional Round)
- Dec. 13: Kentucky 3, Creighton 0 (NCAA Tournament Regional Final)
- Dec. 18: Kentucky 3, Wisconsin 2 (NCAA Tournament National Semifinal)
- Dec. 21: Kentucky vs. Texas A&M (NCAA Tournament Championship)
Click here to see who the Aggies have faced this season.
Kentucky’s 2025 and 2020-21 teams were both crowned SEC champions.
The 2020-21 team went 24-1, dropping one conference match to Florida (3-2) and never losing on its home court.
The 2025 team is 30-2, riding a 27-match win streak dating back to September and encompassing the whole SEC slate as well as every match at Historic Memorial Coliseum.
The Wildcats have won nine consecutive conference titles, which is a Power Four conference volleyball record.
Kentucky volleyball takes a 27-match win streak into the NCAA Championship match after a perfect run in SEC play and at Historic Memorial Coliseum this season.
Craig Skinner’s contract with Kentucky volleyball runs through June 30, 2029. His base salary is as follows:
- July 1, 2022-June 30, 2023: $450,000
- July 1, 2023-June 30, 2024: $475,000
- July 1, 2024-June 30, 2025: $525,000
- July 1, 2025-June 30, 2026: $525,000
- July 1, 2026-June 30, 2027: $525,000
- July 1, 2027-June 30, 2028: $525,000
- July 1, 2028-June 30, 2029: $525,000
Skinner also receives $5,000 per contract year (payable on July 31 and Jan. 31) for “media and endorsement” obligations.
His incentive-based bonuses are not cumulative and include:
- $50,000 for a Final Four berth;
- $75,000 for an NCAA Championship
Yes, UK is spending its 2025-26 revenue-sharing budget on the following sports: football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, baseball, softball and volleyball. The athletics department declined to provide a sport-by-sport spending breakdown when asked by The Courier Journal earlier this year.
Other schools that confirmed to The Courier Journal that they’re spending revenue-sharing dollars on volleyball are:
- Louisville
- Nebraska
- Ohio State
- Minnesota
- Creighton
- BYU
- TCU
- Texas A&M
Hudson and DeLeye are Kentucky’s star outside hitters. DeLeye is a junior and was named the Lexington Regional’s Most Outstanding Player.
Hudson transferred to Kentucky from Purdue for her senior season. She was named to the Lexington Regional All-Tournament Team. Hudson was also awarded SEC Player of the Year and Newcomer of the Year.
Both players have been critical for UK’s success all season. They proved especially clutch during the Elite Eight match, combining for 32 of the team’s 47 kills.
- Trinity Ward (DS/Libero, Fr., 5-foot-7)
- Ava Sarafa (Setter, R-So., 6 foot)
- Jordyn Dailey (Middle Blocker/Right Side, R-So., 6-foot-2)
- Kassie O’Brien (Setter, Fr., 6-foot-1)
- Eva Hudson (Outside Hitter, Sr., 6-foot-1)
- Brooke Bultema (Middle Blocker, R-So., 6-foot-3)
- Georgia Watson (Outside Hitter, Fr., 6-foot-3)
- Kennedy Washington (Middle Blocker, So., 6 foot)
- Molly Berezowitz (DS/Libero, Jr., 5-foot-5)
- Molly Tuozzo (DS/Libero, Jr., 5-foot-7)
- Hannah Benjamin (Outside Hitter, R-Fr., 6-foot-1)
- Lizzie Carr (Middle Blocker/Right Side, R-Jr., 6-foot-6)
- Brooklyn DeLeye (Outside Hitter, Jr., 6-foot-2)
- Asia Thigpen (Outside Hitter, So., 5-foot-11)
Click here to see who plays for the Aggies.
Reach college sports enterprise reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@gannett.com and follow her on X @petitus25. Subscribe to her “Full-court Press” newsletter here for a behind-the-scenes look at how college sports’ biggest stories are impacting Louisville and Kentucky athletics.
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