Texas volleyball has opened the NCAA Tournament by sweeping overmatched Florida A&M and defending champion Penn State, and the top-seeded Longhorns (25-3) will try and stay hot in a Sweet 16 match Friday against Indiana at 11 a.m. at Gregory Gymnasium.
Sports
With runnerup finish, New Trier water polo nabs 5th IHSA trophy in 9 years
In his nine seasons (not counting the COVID-canceled 2020), David Rafferty-Flatter has coached New Trier boys water polo to an extraordinary level of sustained excellence.
Nine seasons, eight sectional championships, five 30-win campaigns and four IHSA championship games.
This year was another for the record books as New Trier amassed a 32-3 record and collected an IHSA second-place trophy following a 7-6 loss to Naperville North in the championship match on Saturday, May 24, at Stevenson High School.
“It’s inspiring and I think as a program we are looking to be competitive year after year,” Rafferty-Flatter said of the Trevians’ consistent success. “… I’m motivated by fear in a way, not to be the leader of a program that is sort of one and done, and the guys don’t want to be one and done. They are motivated to accept that pressure and responsibility. We always want to be part of the conversation.”
The Trevians were a highlight of the conversation the entire season.
New Trier won back-to-back state championships in 2022 and 2023 — the first state titles in program history — before falling short of a trophy with a junior-heavy group in 2024. Armed with motivation and experience this year, the Trevians enjoyed a 30-game winning streak entering the state final eight.
The Trevians topped Lincoln-Way East 14-7 on Friday, May 23, and edged York 8-6 in the semifinal match on Saturday morning, May 24, to set up the powerhouse state-title tilt with 31-4 Naperville North — three of North’s losses coming against the Trevians.
New Trier ran out to a 6-2 lead at halftime as Caden Adrianopoli, Caden Carberry and Holden Hiebeler scored two goals apiece.
But the Huskies switched things up in the second half.
“They made a defensive adjustment that we hadn’t seen all year,” Rafferty-Flatter said. “We had trouble breaking that and diagnosing that.”
He said North put a whole lot of defensive pressure on Trevians star Hank Woodman while also allowing one of their own stars, Mason Hofmann, to defend away from the ball.
The strategy kept the Trevians off the scoreboard the entire half. Rafferty-Flatter said when his team did figure out how to attack the Huskies’ new scheme, the Trevians couldn’t convert their shot attempts.
“It took the guys about a quarter to figure it out and once they did, our shooting went cold,” he said.
North took advantage, erasing the four-goal deficit one by one and emerging with a state championship — the first in Huskies’ history.
The runnerup finish gave New Trier its third state trophy in four years and fifth in nine seasons.
With that, New Trier waves goodbye to a 12-person senior class led by Woodman, an All-State talent who will continue to play for Santa Clara University.
Woodman was the only Trevian to score more than 50 goals this season. He scored 120, including nine in the IHSA quarterfinal win against LW East and five in the semifinal win against York.
Rafferty-Flatter said Woodman set his sights on a state-championship run when he was a middle-schooler. Woodman recruited some friends and went after it, his coach said, manifesting one of the best stretches in New Trier water polo history.
“Hank’s just that guy,” Rafferty-Flatter said. “He said, ‘I want to win a state championship, I can’t do it by myself, I need support and friends to do this with’ and started recruiting. His freshman class was the largest we’ve had. He’s just great. You need leaders like that. He’s a special one.”
The coach later added, “The senior class has stepped up in so many ways. … They’re going to do some special things out there. These guys love water polo and being around each other and are really going to be missed.”
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Sports
Live updates, how to watch

Texas Longhorns libero Ramsey Gary (32) bumps the ball during the third set of the Longhorns’ 3-0 win over the Penn State Nittany Lions in the second round of the DI NCAA Volleyball Tournament, Dec 6, 2025 in the Gregory Gymnasium.
The fourth-seeded Hoosiers (26-7) feature an upstart bunch trying to reach the Elite Eight for the first time in school history. Their 17-player roster includes 11 freshmen and sophomores, and they like to play fast, play defense and play deep into rallies while trying to wear down an opponent. But when Indiana needs a point, they’ll turn to one of their few upperclassmen in Candela Alonso-Corcelles, a senior from Spain who averages 3.54 kills a set.
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The Longhorns can lean on more experience such as junior outside hitter Torrey Stafford (488 kills, 283 digs), junior setter Ella Swindle (898 assists, 187 digs) and senior libero and Indiana native. Emma Halter (387 digs.
Follow along for live scores and updates from a NCAA Tournament first-round match between the Texas Longhorns and the Indiana Hoosiers.
MORE: Texas volleyball: Jerritt Elliott excited about new arena, says it may open for 2029 season
Once again, the Hoosiers make a late spurt. But is it too late to overcome a big Longhorn lead? Jerritt Elliott calls his first timeout of the match to try and solve IU server Charlotte Vinson. Texas leads 1-0.
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Just like the first set, a midset surge has given Texas a comfortable lead. Whitney Lauenstein has again come in and given the net defense a boost with her fourth block. Texas leads 1-0.
The Hoosiers are hitting just .167 for the match against a scrappy Texas defense that has gotten better blocking as the season wears on. Torrey Stafford has four total blocks and the Longhorns have six as a team. Texas leads 1-0.
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Front court or back, Texas setter Ella Swindle keeps finding Torrey Stafford. And she’s delivering with 10 kills on 12 swings and no errors. Texas leads 1-0.
The Hoosiers showed some grit, but Texas leads wire to wire while winning the first set. Torrey Stafford, the Longhorns’ kills leader for the season, powers Texas with six kills on eight swings without an error. A model of efficiency, Stafford. Nya Bunton had a big set for Texas with three blocks.
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Indiana closed to within 20-18, but a big block from Whitney Lauenstein and Nya Bunton give Texas a crucial point. Lauenstein, the fifth-year senior, had a nice rotation for the Longhorns.
Indiana did indeed win that challenge, and the Hoosiers have rallied behind outside Candela Alonso-Corcelles. Indiana is challenging yet another block violation but they don’t get a second UT point reversed.
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Torrey Stafford has taken over this set, and Indiana calls a timeout to try and slow things down. Stafford has the last five points of the match with three kills and two blocks. Indiana is challenging a net call, hoping for a little momentum.
So far, so good for a Texas offense without a hitting error.
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A quick kill from Texas middle Ayden Ames, and we’re off in a Sweet 16 match.
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The winner of the round-of-16 match between fourth-seeded Indiana and No. 1 Texas will face either No. 3 Wisconsin or No. 2 Stanford Sunday afternoon at a time not yet announced by the NCAA. Wisconsin and Stanford will play at Gregory Gymnasium Friday approximately 30 minutes after the conclusion of the Longhorns’ match against Indiana.
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Where: Gregory Gymnasium in Austin
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Sports
Purdue volleyball beats SMU to advance to Elite Eight
Dec. 12, 2025, 8:21 a.m. ET
As Purdue volleyball marched through the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament, Bianka Lulić watched from the sideline.
Needing more size at the net to slow down SMU’s fast-paced offensive attack, Boilermaker coach Dave Shondell inserted the redshirt sophomore middle blocker during a pivotal moment of Thursday’s Sweet 16 match.
It was a coaching move that maybe saved Purdue’s season.
Lulić immediately recorded three blocks during a five-point stretch of the third set, giving the Boilermakers control. They rode that momentum to a 16-25, 25-19, 25-22, 29-27 victory over the No. 2 seed Mustangs to reach the Elite Eight for the third time in the past five seasons.
“There’s no team I love more than this team,” Lulić said. “The thought of us ending (our season) tonight, if I was called up, I didn’t have time to be nervous. I just wanted to do my best for my teammates and my coaches.”
Lulić finished with five blocks and a kill on her only swing, tying the fourth set at 14.
After spending two years at Miami, Lulić was one of three middle blockers to transfer to Purdue this season, including junior Dior Charles and fifth-year senior Lindsey Miller, who earned the nod for playing time over Lulić due to experience.
“She’s been on the outside looking in the last few matches, which is hard if you’re a selfish individual,” Shondell said of Lulić. “But if you’re the opposite of that, which she is, she’s ready when it’s her time.”
A Purdue team that lost essentially all of its offense outside of one player from a Sweet 16 run a season ago was picked to finish seventh in the Big Ten during the preseason. Now the Boilermakers are among the final eight teams remaining.
“Dave Shondell is coach of the year nationally in my book,” said SMU coach Sam Erger, whose 27-6 record this season included two, four-set losses to the Boilermakers.

Purdue (27-6) will face top-seeded Pitt (29-4) at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, the same program that eliminated Purdue in its most recent Elite Eight appearance at Fitzgerald Field House, the same site as Saturday’s match.
While Lulić was the spark that got the Boilermakers over the top, Purdue also offset SMU’s attack with an inspired defensive effort from its top offensive player.
In addition to her match high 23 kills on .457 hitting, outside hitter Kenna Wollard provided 10 digs and tied a career-high with five blocks. And her offense helped Purdue overcome a first set rut where it fell behind 18-5.
“I did not want the season to be over and I knew this was a team that we could beat … ” Wollard said. “I really wanted to go out there and play my best and play like I know how to.”
Wollard and setter Taylor Anderson accounted for all of Purdue’s returning offense this season. Anderson provided 49 assists, three kills, three blocks and five digs. Libero Ryan McAleer pulled up 23 digs to go with two aces and six assists. Grace Heaney, who missed last season after having surgery to repair a torn labrum, added 11 kills, seven digs and five blocks.
Then, holding a match point advantage for the fifth time, senior transfer Akasha Anderson smashed kills 15 and 16 on the night to punch Purdue’s ticket to the next round, a seemingly unfathomable achievement after last season’s departures.
“It’s just nearly miraculous what these guys have done this season, how they’ve come together as a team” Shondell said. “Not just how much they love each other. We talk about that all the time. How they’ve just played with purpose.
“But then you’ve got to go out and beat people. And that’s not easy. You look at the list of top 20 teams we’ve beaten this season and it’s been very, very impressive.”
Sam King covers sports for the Journal & Courier. Email him at sking@jconline.com and follow him on X and Instagram @samueltking.
Sports
Volleyball Announces Signing of Hunter, Johnson and Vanlandingham
BALTIMORE — The defending America East champion UMBC Volleyball has signed Megan Hunter, Dasia Johnson and Elly Vandlingham, head coach Kasey Crider announced on Friday.
“We’re always looking for ways to upgrade after championship seasons – complacency is a reliable villain in stories of sustained success,” said Crider. “One of the easiest ways to upgrade is to add talent that fits your roster. In respect to the incoming class of freshmen, we absolutely feel like we’ve done that. We’ve added talent across the board, but more importantly, we’ve added good character, which is often the main characters in those same stories.”
Megan Hunter
Setter
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Markville Secondary School
Pakmen Volleyball Club
Coach Crider: “Our program has found really good success recruiting internationally. Megan continues that tradition. We believe she’ll be able to step in immediately to fill the sizeable hole left by Serin Maden, a four year starter at setter for us. She has excellent instincts and her experience competing for Canada’s various national team programs suggest she won’t be overwhelmed by the step up in level.”
Dasia Johnson
OH
Coral Springs, FL
North Broward Preparatory School
Wildfire Volleyball Academy
Coach Crider: “Dasia is an outside hitter that we spent quite a long time evaluating and recruiting. We feel like we got a long runway to understand her as a player and at every stage of the process, we felt like she would be a huge value add. She’s an elite athlete with excellent explosiveness as an attacker and blocker, and her history as a true six rotation outside hitter provides a particularly high floor from day one. Add in the Florida state high school championship this year, and we’re getting an elite player with elite pedigree.”
Elly Vanlandingham
L/DS
Gaithersburg, MD
Quince Orchard High School
Metro Volleyball Club of DC
Coach Crider: “Elly is local, which is always a huge plus. But adding her was never about checking a geographic box; it was about adding an extremely accomplished and solid defensive specialist. She comes from a nationally renowned club program and won’t be intimidated by a tough practice environment or challenging schedule.”
The Retrievers are coming off of their fifth America East Championship and NCAA Tournament appearance in the last six seasons.
Sports
Kevin LaSure Joins Track & Field Program as Assistant Coach
LaSure arrives at Columbia following a highly successful decade as Director of Cross Country and Track & Field at Academy of Art University, where he led the program to sustained national prominence at the NCAA Division II level. During his tenure, his teams earned 14 top-10 national finishes, including multiple top-five performances, while producing more than 20 individual national champions and over 300 All-Americans across sprints, hurdles, middle distance, jumps, and relays.
A nationally recognized coach, LaSure has earned 11 NCAA Division II West Region Coach of the Year awards and coached athletes to five NCAA national records, multiple National Track Athlete of the Year honors, and an Olympic bronze medalist at the 2016 Olympic Games.
His impact extended well beyond performance, as his programs consistently posted strong academic results, including multiple USTFCCCA All-Academic Team honors and significant improvements in team GPA.
Prior to his time at Academy of Art, LaSure served as head coach of cross country and track & field at the University of New Haven for eight seasons after beginning his collegiate coaching career there as an assistant. Across both head coaching stops, his teams combined for numerous national qualifiers, conference championships, and regional honors, cementing his reputation as a program builder and elite developer of student-athletes.
In addition to his on-track success, LaSure is a longtime leader within the coaching profession. He has been deeply involved with the USTFCCCA Executive Committee, serving as president (2017–21) and executive council chair (2021–24), and remains a highly respected voice in collegiate track and field nationally.
While Coach LaSure will work with all track and field and cross country student-athletes, he will directly oversee the men’s and women’s sprints and relays squads.
Stay up to date on all things Columbia track & field and cross country by following the Lions on Twitter (@CULionsXCTF), Instagram (@culionsxctf) and on Facebook (@ColumbiaAthletics).
Sports
Loralai Ketner Of Sheridan HS To Run Track And Field At Augustana University – Sheridan Media
A Sheridan Lady Bronc hurdler will continue her running and jumping ways at the collegiate level.
Loralai Ketner has signed a written offer of athletic aid, to compete at Augustana College, which is a private Lutheran University, in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Last school year, as a junior, she was the state champ in the 4A Girls 300 meter hurdles race.
After quitting soccer, Ketner says she started competing in track in her 7th grade year.
She had also been considering the University of Sioux Falls, but liked the team bonding activities at Augustana College better.
“Comparing the 2, we fell in love with Sioux Falls and just the city itself and then Augustana, the coach is amazing, Emily is great and then the campus was great and we got to meet a lot of their team and we made bracelets, so I think things that build the team together is what pushed me more towards Augustana than USF or any other college that I had toured.”
Ketner adds she is considering majoring in nursing.
The Augustana University Viking and Lady Viking Athletic Program competes at the NCAA Division II level, in the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference.
Sports
Watch Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford in NCAA tournament; time, TV
Dec. 12, 2025, 8:30 a.m. CT
Wisconsin volleyball has a couple important streaks it will look to keep alive when it meets Stanford in an NCAA tournament regional semifinal.
The third-seeded Badgers [26-4] bring an 11-match winning streak into their showdown against the second-seeded Cardinal [29-4] on Friday, Dec. 12. They also have a seven-year streak in which it has advanced into the regional finals on the line.
Which was the last team to knock off Kelly Sheffield’s team in this round? That would be Stanford in 2017.
And one streak the Badgers would like to stop on Friday is a losing streak to the Cardinal. The Badgers have never beaten Stanford, a history that includes three losses to the Cardinal in the NCAA tournament.
The matchup features two storied programs. Wisconsin is playing in the second weekend of the tournament for a 13th straight season, while Stanford has more NCAA championships [9] than any program. It beat the Badgers for its most recent title in 2019.
Wisconsin-Stanford will follow the other semifinal in the region between top-seeded Texas and fourth-seeded Indiana.
Here’s how to watch the Wisconsin-Stanford match:
What channel is Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford? TV, livestream
- TV: ESPN
- Stream: You can stream the match on services that offer ESPN, including Fubo. A free trial is available.
Watch on Fubo
Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford time today
- Date: Friday, Dec. 12
- Time: 1:30 p.m.
Wisconsin plays Stanford in an NCAA tournament regional semifinal match at approximately 1:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 12, at the Gregory Gymnasium in Austin, Texas.
The Badgers swept their first and second round matches – against Eastern Illinois and North Carolina – at the UW Field House. Stanford beat Utah Valley and Arizona by 3-1 scores in its first two rounds.
How can I listen to Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford on the radio?
Wisconsin volleyball score today
The Journal Sentinel will have live coverage from the NCAA tournament match with updates from reporter John Steppe live in Austin, Texas. Follow his live blog at jsonline.com/sports/badgers for the results and highlights.
Wisconsin volleyball bracket
First round
- Texas (1) defeated Florida A&M, 3-0, on Dec. 5
- Penn State (8) defeated South Florida, 3-1, on Dec. 5
- Colorado (5) defeated American, 3-0, on Dec. 4
- Indiana (4) defeated Toledo, 3-0, on Dec. 4
- Wisconsin (3) defeated Eastern Illinois, 3-0, on Dec. 4
- North Carolina defeated UTEP (6), 3-1, on Dec. 4
- Arizona defeated South Dakota State (7), 3-1, on Dec. 5
- Stanford (2) defeated Utah Valley, 3-1, on Dec. 5
Second round
- Texas (1) defeated Penn State (8), 3-0, on Dec. 6
- Indiana (4) defeated Colorado (5), 3-0 on Dec. 5
- Wisconsin (3) defeated North Carolina, 3-0, on Dec. 5
- Stanford (2) defeated Arizona, 3-1, on Dec. 6
Regional semifinals
- Texas (1) vs. Indiana (4), 11 a.m. Friday, Dec. 12
- Stanford (2) vs. Wisconsin (3), 1:30 p.m. or 30 minutes after the Texas/Indiana match
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