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Wrestling's royal family? The Rhodes have become a last name of renaissance

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Wrestling's royal family? The Rhodes have become a last name of renaissance

LEANDER – It has been 10 years since the American Dream died.

And yet, if possible, the spirit lives on bigger than ever.

It lives on here at the Rhodes Wrestling Academy, a gym/auditorium wedged into a central Texas warehouse park, where the oldest son of the late wrestler Virgil Runnels, known to everybody as Dusty Rhodes and to most as “The American Dream,” trains a new generation of pro wrestlers a decade after his father passed away at 69 just a week before Father’s Day.

An enormous, larger-than-life banner featuring the likeness of the larger-than-life Dusty, who grew up in Austin famously as “the son of a plumber,” hangs in one corner of the building overlooking the workouts and training matches. It’s almost as if Dusty is still watching.

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The other set of eyes on everything belong to 56-year-old Dustin. They seem weary, maybe from nearly 40 years in a business one WWE Hall of Famer calls “the most dysfunctional family there is.”

Wayne Rhodes gets ready for a wrestling event under a poster of his grandfather Dusty Rhodes...
Wayne Rhodes gets ready for a wrestling event under a poster of his grandfather Dusty Rhodes at the Rhodes Wrestling Academy on Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025, in Leander, Texas.(Smiley N. Pool / Staff Photographer)

Wrestling is a family business and wants to consider itself family entertainment, but there are too many sad stories to consider it a truly harmonious family. Dustin himself went through an estrangement from his dad, a battle with alcohol and substance abuse and still lives in constant pain – an inevitable lasting legacy for every veteran wrestler.

The Oscar-nominated 2008 film “The Wrestler,” was melancholy fiction, but there is a lot of truth in it. “The Iron Claw,” the 2023 movie about Dallas’ Von Erich family, wasn’t as made up, but it’s an even sadder story.

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This is where the Rhodes’ story differs. Maybe this one has a happy ending.

“You know, Dusty used to think of the wrestling business as making movies,” said his widow, Michelle. “Everything was a movie to him. What has happened with the Rhodes family – and to see him revered – is a dream come true.”

The Rhodes family, now three generations into the business, is having a renaissance, blossoming with its own members and touching many more throughout the business.

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Family matters

The family tree of the Rhodes wrestling family.
The family tree of the Rhodes wrestling family.(Michael Hogue)

Dustin has found late-career happiness as a mentor, coach and occasional wrestler. He runs this operation often with a wrench in one hand, a phone in the other and his eyes on the young wrestlers in the ring. His wife, Ta-Rel, mans the office and occasionally plays an elderly interfering character in RWA’s shows. Beast, their champion English Mastiff, is her assistant.

Dustin still wrestles and will make appearances at this weekend’s All Elite Wrestling takeover of Dallas and Arlington, culminating in AEW’s biggest pay-per view of the year, “All In: Texas,” Saturday at Globe Life Field. Dustin’s is a tale of survival.

His brother, Cody, has found fame and fortune now as the rival WWE’s biggest star and recent world champion. Cody is a story of persistence, having left WWE almost a decade ago to remake himself as the star he envisioned only to come back and quarterback the show.

Their nephews, 21-year-old Dalton Ditto and 19-year-old Dylan Ditto, have a story, too. It is one full of promise. By day, they are students at the University of Texas. On the weekends, though, they are Wayne and Wyatt Rhodes, the newest iteration of the Texas Outlaws tag team that Dusty made famous in the 1960s. Their mother, Dustin’s younger sister Kristin Ditto, never wrestled, but did spend a couple of seasons as a Dallas Cowboys cheerleader and now does drop-ins as a ring announcer here.

And Dusty’s spirit lives on throughout the wrestling world. While “All In,” an event Cody helped birth even before the launch of AEW, is taking place, WWE will counter with a weekend full of events in Atlanta that will include a host of talent mentored by Dusty. Many of the company’s top stars such as Seth Rollins, Becky Lynch and Kevin Owens were mentored, coached or had their characters originated by Dusty in his creative role more than a decade ago.

“It was magical to be around Dusty,” said WWE Hall of Famer “Diamond” Dallas Page, who now primarily runs a yoga and wellness program and whose character was also created by Rhodes in the 1980s. “There is a little piece of Dusty in everyone.”

But it wasn’t always like this.

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Rocky road

To quote Dusty’s most famous promo, delivered with his signature Texas twang and accented by a lisp: “They put hard times on Dusty Rhodes and his family.”

As the Hall of Famer Page puts it, “wrestling is the most dysfunctional family there is,” and it too often leads to a hard life.

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The pop from the crowd is a drug nobody can quit. But it’s a nomadic life. Wrestlers are constantly on the road, which is hard on family life. They are often in pain, which is hard on sobriety. And the money can dry up as quickly as it flows.

Dusty, who separated from his first wife, Sandra, when Dustin and Kristin were just tots, never wanted his boys to go into wrestling. And he was savvy enough in the business not to want them to try to follow his act. There’s a bit of Dusty in everybody, but there was only one Dusty.

Still, the minute a 9-year-old Dustin peeked in his dad’s wardrobe on a summer visit and saw the National Wrestling Alliance championship belt hanging there, he was hooked. Dusty didn’t want it for his son, but, for Dustin, it was a way to be closer to the dad he rarely saw. He moved in with Dusty and Michelle as a teen, still rarely saw his dad, got his first apartment in McKinney and talked his way into wrestling. Wanted to be Dusty Rhodes, Jr., which was the one thing Dusty absolutely forbade.

“He told me there’s never been somebody billed as a junior make it in this business and you aren’t going to be the first,” Dustin said on a frosty morning while students worked through moves ahead of a RWA show later that evening. “He wanted something better for us. Maybe deep down, he didn’t want it for us because he wasn’t there for us.”

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Still, like his dad, he bleached his hair blond, became “The Natural” and entered the business. Five years in, Dusty cut a promo with him that was all too real, leaving Dustin in tears mid-ring. In it, Dusty, in front of a capacity arena crowd, speaks of how he neglected his son, how he went off “to seek his fame and fortune and neglected you.” It ends with the father pleading to wrestle alongside his son.

“The Rhodes are blood,” he pleads. “I don’t need a handshake. What I need from you is a hug and a kiss to seal the deal.”

“It’s hard to watch that promo,” Dustin said. “But I do with the first session I have with the class. It’s true life.”

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If he can make it to the end of the six-year deal he signed with AEW over the winter, in which he consults, coaches, occasionally wrestles and acts as an ambassador for the promotion, he’ll have six decades in the business. He’s endured 14 surgeries, still needs both knees replaced and his shoulders are a wreck. Still he shows up to run the school and his satellite wrestling operation, still paints his face, a tradition that started when Vince McMahon handed him a bizarre androgynous character named Goldust that was doomed to go nowhere. Dustin, with wrestling chops and comedic instincts, saw it as a way out from the shadow of his dad’s persona and made it work.

Still, he lost two marriages to divorce, fell into a spiral of substance abuse and perhaps, most painfully, became estranged from his father for five years. The estrangement ended just as the wrestling promo did, with the two men hugging. And when Dustin finally decided to get clean, Dusty was the call he made. Went outside into a rain storm to get enough reception to make the call. Like a scene from a movie.

“I’m crying,” Dustin said. “I said I want to go to rehab. He probably thought I was in prison or almost dead. They got me there, came to visit me and from that day forward, I didn’t turn back. We spoke every day. He’d say ‘keep stepping.’ It’s become my motto: Keep stepping. Everything came full circle.”

It’s been 17 years since he became sober. No, there hasn’t been the world champion title he always sought, but he’s found happiness and contentment in simply being Dustin Rhodes. Still paints half his face when he wrestles. The painted half looks like a skull. A man once left for dead, who has found rebirth.

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Dustin Rhodes celebrates with The Young Bucks after a victory on AEW Dynamite in Champaign,...
Dustin Rhodes celebrates with The Young Bucks after a victory on AEW Dynamite in Champaign, Illinois.(Courtesy of All Elite Wrestling)

So, he’ll run the wrestling school and maintain the building. He’ll mentor younger wrestlers. He’ll still get in the ring. And, yes, he still would love to win a world championship. But he doesn’t need it.

“He’s made his own path,” Kristin said. “That’s exactly what he’s done and he’s done it brilliantly. You look at him now and he doesn’t have to have all that [swirl] around him to be at peace. He’s done so much in his career. Dustin has seen it all, been through it all and doesn’t need it all anymore. But he’s got the passion for the business. Now it’s his chance to mentor. He loves that. But make no mistake: When he wants to entertain, he still does.”

Said the Hall of Famer Page, who has worked and counseled a number of older at-risk wrestlers and others: “There are not many guys who have stayed as relevant in the kind of role he’s had as long as he has. He’s a legend who has continued to reinvent himself and this cat can still be a main player when he wrestles. What he’s doing is absolutely remarkable.”

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In the blood

In hindsight, Kristin now believes it was inevitable that her boys would end up giving wrestling a try. Didn’t matter that neither she nor husband Don ever really got into the business.

When it’s in the blood, it’s in the blood.

“There was a part of me inside, I guess, that always felt like ‘it’s coming, it’s coming’,” she said as the boys prepared for their tag-team match at Rhodes Wrestling in January. “There’s always been an interest there for them, seeing their grandfather and both of their uncles. They’ve kind of grown up around it. I could dig my heels in, but it was always coming.”

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They had been to various wrestling events to see their uncles wrestle. When uncle Dustin showed up at the house, he’d lock up with them in a wrestling stance just to play and occasionally give them a chop at the dinner table. They’d had a relationship with their grandfather, though he never talked about the business with them. Always thought it was “cool,” but, in their own words, went on about their lives.

The urge came during Dylan’s senior year in high school in Lago Vista. The more gregarious of the brothers, he opted to stop playing baseball and started bugging his older brother, already at UT, about the possibility. But, he told Dalton, he wasn’t going to pursue it without him. So, you know, no pressure or anything.

Under a poster of his father Dusty Rhodes, Dustin Rhodes (from left) poses for a photo with...
Under a poster of his father Dusty Rhodes, Dustin Rhodes (from left) poses for a photo with nephews Wayne Rhodes and Wyatt Rhodes and his sister Kristin Ditto at the Rhodes Wrestling Academy on Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025, in Leander, Texas.(Smiley N. Pool / Staff Photographer)

They consulted Dustin, who told them there would be no nepo babies at his school. But there are still some family privileges. Last winter, they spent a day with Cody on his bus around a show and watched him do appearances, promos, engage with fans and a Make-a-Wish patient. Earlier this summer, they spent a week at Cody’s school outside Atlanta.

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Both kids are athletic. Dylan is a bit thicker and more barrel-chested. And, yes, last winter he went with the full-on Rhodes family blonde dye job, giving him a striking resemblance to a young Dusty. Especially when he and Dalton as Wayne and Wyatt Rhodes, put on their cowboy-themed wrestling boots, cowboy hats and become the Texas Outlaws. It’s the same name of the tag team with which Dusty and the late Dick Murdoch burst into the wrestling world in the 1960s.

It is clear that the boys have chemistry together in the ring and have a flair. Their wrestling careers are in infancy, but the boys expect to give it a chance to mature. As much as Kristin hoped this wouldn’t be the path, even she can’t deny what’s in their blood. As long as they finish school first.

And the boys definitely intend to give the Rhodes name a third generation in the business.

“Right now, we don’t want the spotlight, per se,” said Dylan who will be doing a meet-and-greet with his brother Saturday at Starrcast in Arlington.

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“We want as much training as possible. But the family, as a whole, is maybe the most popular it’s ever been. When Dusty got in, it was just him. When Dustin got in, Dusty was kind of fading out of the spotlight. Well, now with both [Cody and Dustin] on top, it’s like all of them with some little additives around. The family is definitely moving in a good direction.”

“Cody winning the belt now being the champion, and Dustin continuing to wrestle at his age and just getting better, it puts a lot on us to want to get to their level,” Dalton said. “They’ve made a huge impact on the business and I hope, if we continue to do this, that me and my brother can both live up to the Rhodes name and make our own legacy.”

Brotherly rivals

Teil Rhodes, Dusty’s youngest daughter and Cody’s older sister, is in charge of protecting Dusty’s legacy. And she has a unique take on her father’s presence.

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“He didn’t cast a shadow,” she said recently from her home in Atlanta where she and her mother, Michelle, help run the Dusty Rhodes Family Foundation, which helps underserved youth athletics. “He shined a light.”

In the case of Cody, the light pointed a way out of the shadows of both his father and brother. It’s been a long journey, one that started with his father training him leading up to his WWE Raw debut at age 22. That was merely the first step. He was at one point part of “The Legacy,” a stable of second-generation wrestlers, then was “Dashing” Cody Rhodes before teaming with his brother as Stardust, as part of a tag team. The character went nowhere and left Cody frustrated enough that he bet on himself, leaving WWE, going the independent route and then through a run of other companies. Hard times, indeed.

But he ended up as a founding member of AEW, which allowed him the freedom to create his own identity. Along the way, he wrestled his brother in an epic and bloody match that helped the company establish itself. They’ve not wrestled each other since. Didn’t need to. You don’t make sequels to the classics.

“It was a great display of old school vs. new school,” Page said. “It had great moments, great energy. It had everything you could want.”

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And then Cody went back to WWE to, as he has often said, finish his story. He returned in 2022 as The American Nightmare, an homage to his father’s legacy, but with a twist that made it his own. He has a neck tattoo of the American Nightmare insignia, which he’s said his father would not approve of. But he also has one over his heart. It reads simply: “Dream.”

Within a year of his return, he was in the main event at WrestleMania. He’s been in every once since, winning the undisputed WWE championship in 2024 before dropping it to John Cena, as part of the latter’s retirement tour in April. As champ or the top contender, he’s essentially the quarterback of the company, involved in multiple storylines, promoted heavily and counted on to produce ticket and merchandise sales.

FILE - Cody Rhodes celebrates after winning the Undisputed WWE universal championship match...
FILE – Cody Rhodes celebrates after winning the Undisputed WWE universal championship match during WrestleMania 40 at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, on Sunday, April 7, 2024. (Monica Herndon / AP)

Dustin was happy for his brother, but, at this stage, he’s also not going to lie. He was a little bit jealous, too. Cody had achieved what Dustin has sought for nearly 50 years: The championship belt.

“I hate to admit that, but I really was jealous,” Dustin said. “I was happy for him. I was super proud of him. But I was like: ‘Where’s mine?’ I felt like the lowly son in the middle. I know that’s not true, but that’s how it felt.

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“I’m still proud of him and I love it for him, but hopefully, I’ll still get one. That’s still my dream.”

Keeping The Dream

It’s a lot just being Cody Rhodes these days. The WWE did not make Rhodes available for this story. Over the weekend, he will be in his hometown of Atlanta, where WWE has its own slew of events.

With both companies holding signature events, it may be as big a weekend in the pro wrestling world as any, save, perhaps for WrestleMania. And the Rhodes family will be well-represented.

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“Dusty would be proud, but he wouldn’t be surprised,” Teil said. “Because he believed anything was possible. The legend of Dusty has only grown, but so has the ache in our hearts. It’s a comfort to know that his legacy is a lasting one. Ten years seems like a long time, but his presence is still felt.”

The Dream lives on.

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Women’s Track & Field Turns in Multiple High Marks to Begin Season at Cornell

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RESULTS

ITHACA, N.Y. –

The Ithaca College women’s track & field team opened its 2025-26 season over the weekend as the Bombers made the short trip across town to compete in the Greg Page Relays hosted by Cornell University on December 5-6.

Lola Gitlin posted a time of 10:25.57 in the 3000-meter run to finish third overall.

Rachel Larson was a fourth place finisher with a time of 8.58 seconds in the 60-meter hurdles. That time is currently No. 1 in Division III after the opening weekend of the season.

Aynisha McQuillar took fifth in the 200-meter dash in a time of 26.61 seconds. McQuillar also ran in the 60-meter dash and posted the 11th fastest time in DIII during the prelim with a performance of 7.78 seconds.

Lyla Powers was fifth in the 500-meter dash with a time of 1:21.75.

Lily Seyfert claimed fifth in the shot put with a heave of 12.78 meters, which is currently ninth in the nation.

Bree Boyle and Erin Eastwood each cleared 3.54 meters in the pole vault, which is tied for 11th on the Division III performance list.

Alexis Brown turned in a leap of 11.02 meters in the triple jump for the 17th best mark in the country.

Ithaca is off for the remainder of 2025 and will return to Cornell on January 10 for the Southern Tier Invitational.

 



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Men’s Track & Field Opens Indoor Season at Cornell Greg Page Relays

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RESULTS

ITHACA, N.Y. –

The Ithaca College men’s track & field team opened its 2025-26 season over the weekend as the Bombers made the short trip across town to compete in the Greg Page Relays hosted by Cornell University on December 5-6.

Anik Vossschulte claimed third in the 200-meter dash in a time of 23.32 seconds, while Jacob Antilety was seventh at 23.71 seconds.

Matt Lokshin posted a time of 8.65 seconds in the 60-meter hurdles to place third in the event. Aidan Irwin took fourth in the high jump with a mark of 1.70 meters.

Quinten Lewis posted a mark of 13.73 meters in the triple jump to place fourth and Sebastien-Oliver Lacrete was sixth at 12.68 meters, while Evan Cherry secured fifth in the long jump with a leap of 6.84 meters.

IC’s 4×400-meter relay team of Damian Simmonds, Griffin Lupes, Noah McKibben and George Nilson placed sixth in 3:34.49.

Luke Ellor finished sixth in the shot put with a mark of 14.40 meters.

Three Bombers finished within the top eight in the 500-meter dash as Brad Kellogg was sixth in 1:09.73, Peter Tysiak followed in seventh with 1:10.74 and Matthew DeJulio was next at 1:11.59.

Kaiden Chandler and Luke Ferrer posted times of 4:41.29 and 4:53.44 in the mile to finish in seventh and eighth.

Raf Campanile was seventh in the pole vault with a clearance of 4.25 meters.

Ithaca is off for the remainder of 2025 and will return to Cornell on January 10 for the Southern Tier Invitational.

 



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Women’s track and field athletes win three events at Utica Holiday Classic

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UTICA, N.Y. – The Hamilton College Continentals competed against 13 teams at the non-team scoring 2025 Utica University Track & Field Holiday Classic inside the Todd & Jenn Hutton Sports and Recreation Center on Saturday, Dec. 6.
 
The meet was the first of the 2025-26 season for the Hamilton women, who will be back at Utica for the Pioneers’ Winter Opener on Friday, Jan. 16 after taking a break for finals and the winter holiday.
 

The Continentals qualified for the 2026 All-Atlantic Region Track & Field Conference Indoor Championships in four different events and finished first in three events.
 
Emily Pogozelski ’26 won the 3,000-meter run by over 20 seconds with a regional-qualifying time of 10:27.93. Mackenzie Loudon ’29, who was competing in her first collegiate meet, took first place and qualified for regionals in the triple jump.
 
Loudon was also part of Hamilton’s winning 4×200-meter relay with Tatiana McCray ’28, Ava Chiappinelli ’29 and Marley Meyers ’28. Their performance was more than five seconds faster than the regional-qualifying time.
 
McCray ran a regional-qualifying 7.96 seconds and finished in second place in the 60-meter dash final. Chiappinelli also qualified for regionals in her first collegiate meet and finished right behind McCray with a time of 7.99 seconds.
 
TOP PERFORMANCES

300-Meter Dash (17 Runners)

4. Marley Meyers ’28, 43.08

7. Hannah Turner ’26, 43.91

 

60-Meter Dash (35 Runners)

2. Tatiana McCray ’28, 7.96 (PR, AARTFC)

3. Ava Chiappinelli ’29, 7.99 (AARTFC)

 

600-Meter Dash (16 Runners)

5. Aisha Kandji ’29, 1:47.31

 

4×200 Meter Relay (9 Teams)

1. McCray ’28, Mackenzie Loudon ’29, Chiappinelli ’29, Meyers ’28 (1:46.42, AARTFC) 

3000-Meter Run (19 Runners)

1. Emily Pogozelski ’26, 10:27.93 (PR, AARTFC) 

Triple Jump (15 Athletes)

1. Loudon, 11.29 meters (37 feet, 0.5 inches; AARTFC)

 



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Volleyball Advances to Program’s First Sweet Sixteen, Sweeps Florida Saturday

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DALLAS (SMU) – For the first time in program history, SMU volleyball is headed to the Sweet Sixteen after sweeping Florida (16-12) in the Round of 32 on Saturday with set scores of 25-11, 25-21, 26-24.    

With the win, SMU won its 27th match of the season, tying the program record for single-season wins. It also gave coach Sam Erger her 100th victory at SMU and in her Division I head coaching career.    

Averi Carlson dished out 38 assists, the most in a three-setter for the senior setter this season. Carlson led the Mustangs to a .370 hitting percentage in the win. Kennedi Rogers went for 14 kills, hitting .440, with four digs and three blocks. Malaya Jones closely trailed Rogers with 13 kills, eight digs and seven blocks, tying her career high.   

SMU out-blocked the Gators 15-4, spearheaded by a career-high nine blocks from freshman Maggie Croft. The Mustangs’ blocking efforts helped hold the Gators to a .156 hitting percentage for the match.  

 

MATCH NOTES        

  • With 13 kills against Florida, Jones (503) is now the second player in SMU Volleyball history to reach 500 kills in a season. She joins Rachel Giubilato, who notched 568 kills in 2006.    
  • Averi Carlson (1,341) moved to third in the rally scoring era and sixth all-time for single-season assists at SMU.    
  • Jones reached the double-digit kill mark for the 26th time this season and for the ninth straight match.   
  • Rogers recorded double-digit kills for the sixth time this season.       
  • It marked Schilling’s 22nd time in double-figures this season and her fifth straight.
  • With six blocks against the Gators, Anyanwu draws within 14 of breaking the program record for most blocks in a season. (188 by Janelle Giordano in 2015)   
  • SMU had double-digit blocks (15) for the 17th time this season and for the second straight match.    
  • SMU has won 20 of its last 21 matches and its 12th straight.       
  • The Mustangs end the 2025 season with 15 wins at Moody Coliseum, tying the program record for most in a season.    
  • The win marks the Mustangs’ 15th sweep, 11th at home this season.  


HOW IT HAPPENED:       

SMU controlled the first set from start to finish in all phases of the game. SMU hit .483 with no errors on 29 swings in the first, while holding Florida to a .000 hitting percentage. Rogers put in five kills to lead the Mustangs, who got point production from six different players to help propel them to a 25-11 set one victory. SMU commanded the net with a 5-0 advantage in blocks.    

Down four (16-12) in the second frame, SMU responded with five straight points on a run that included two aces from Madison Scheer. After trading points, SMU went on a 4-0 run to pull away in the frame. The Mustangs went on to win the frame 25-21.    

Tied 20-20 entering the red zone of the third set, SMU got the first two points on an ace from Carlson and a block from the freshman tandem of Rogers and Croft. Despite a 3-1 run by Florida that put the Gators at set point first, the Mustangs responded with three straight to close the match, ending the frame with their sixth block of the set to win 26-24.    

SMU LEADERS:         

SMU Kills Leader: Kennedi Rogers (14)   

SMU Assists Leader: Averi Carlson (38)     

SMU Digs Leader: Jordyn Schilling (11)   

SMU Blocks Leader: Maggie Croft (9)   

SMU Ace Leader: Madison Scheer (2)   

SMU Points Leader: Malaya Jones (17.5)     

  

Up Next: SMU will get a rematch with No. 3 seed Purdue in the NCAA Regional Semifinal on Thursday evening in Pittsburgh, Pa.  

 



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Trans volleyball player Blaire Fleming hits back at claim about female teammate’s eating disorder

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Transgender college volleyball player Blaire Fleming has hit back at claims that she triggered her teammate’s eating disorder due to emotional distress — and said that she doesn’t “feel bad for her.”

Fleming, 23, was at the center of a scandal last year involving Brooke Slusser, who filed multiple lawsuits against her San Jose State University (SJSU) teammate after discovering that she was transgender.

Slusser alleged that the panic and stress from that period of her life led her to develop an eating disorder, leading to anorexia so severe that her menstrual cycle stopped for nine months.

Transgender volleyball athlete Blaire Fleming. Getty Images

The pair had previously shared hotel rooms and changing spaces for a whole season in 2023 before Slusser said she found out that Fleming, who is biologically male but reportedly started medically transitioning at 14, was trans.

“From the stress and how anxious I was every single day, I just wasn’t eating really at all,” Slusser told Fox News Digital last week.

“I went from around 160 to 128 [lbs] in that one semester. It definitely isn’t healthy for someone of my size to be that weight, and I ended up losing my menstrual cycle for nine months. So it was definitely severe,” she said.

Slusser later dropped her classes in the final semester this past spring, citing constant in-person harassment by students who opposed her stance.

Brooke Slusser filed lawsuits against the NCAA and Mountain West Conference. Getty Images

Fleming has since responded, claiming that Slusser’s eating disorder dated back for as long as she knew her, prior to her learning that she was trans.

“She’s been anorexic and struggled with food since I’ve known her aka since 2023. She literally would weigh herself 2-3x a day and keep track of it on her whiteboard in her room,” Fleming told Fox News Digital on Sunday.

“So I really don’t care or feel bad for her. And she didn’t drop her classes, she failed out, hope that helps!” Fleming said.

Fleming has since responded, claiming that Slusser’s eating disorder dated back for as long as she knew her, prior to her learning that she was trans. AP

Slusser has now come back and disputed Fleming’s allegations.

“These statements are just not true. I have always lived a very healthy lifestyle. Before these events took place I was very disciplined in fueling myself for athletics and [kept] track to make sure I was where I need to be to be the best athlete,” Slusser told Fox News Digital.

“It wasn’t until all the craziness started that my healthy lifestyle turned very unhealthy into not eating the amount I should,” Slusser said.

Slusser has now come back and disputed Fleming’s allegations. Kim Slusser/Facebook

“As for school, I decided to stay home after fall 2024 to better myself and heal. So no, I did not return to San Jose and enroll myself in more courses at an institution that didn’t have my best interest,” she added.

Slusser alleged that she was never told Fleming’s birth sex and said the two regularly shared hotel rooms on away trips, according to her lawsuits filed against the NCAA and Mountain West Conference.

Fleming allegedly requested to be roomed with Slusser, a request she said was granted by team leadership, according to lawsuits.

Slusser said that the 6ft1 Fleming confessed to being transgender during a conversation over ice cream with another teammate in April 2024.

In September 2024, Slusser joined swimmer Riley Gaines’ lawsuit against the NCAA.

At the same time, SJSU’s volleyball team saw a series of forfeits by opposing teams, with police protection regularly assigned.

The US Department of Education is currently investigating SJSU for potential Title IX violations.



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K-State’s Season Ends in Second Round of NCAA Tournament

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LINCOLN, Neb. – K-State volleyball saw its season come to an end Saturday night at Bob Devaney Sports Center, as the Wildcats fell to No. 1 Nebraska in straight sets in the second round of the 2025 NCAA Tournament, 17-25, 21-25, 16-25.
 
Nebraska (32-0, 20-0 Big Ten), the No. 1 overall national seed, carded 43 kills with Andi Jackson and Harper Murray each putting down 10 kills. Jackson hit at a .533 clip with two errors on 15 attempts. Taylor Landfair added eight kills.
 
Six different Wildcats (18-10, 10-8 Big 12) contributed a kill in the match paced by seven from Aniya Clinton. An All-Big 12 Second Team selection, Clinton turned in five digs with three blocks to lead the Cats with nine total points.
 
The Wildcats forced 18 errors from the Cornhuskers – Nebraska’s most since September 16 against Creighton (26) – producing an 8.0-5.0 advantage in total team blocks, led by five from senior Brenna Schmidt.
 
The 18 attack errors marked the Huskers’ fourth-highest total of the season, joining 20-plus error outings against Creighton (26), Kentucky (25) and Pittsburgh (23).The match also marked just the fifth time in which the Cornhuskers were held below the .300 threshold, as the team’s .253 hitting percentage was the team’s fourth lowest output of the year.
 
Of the 52 sets played at the Devaney Center, K-State’s 21 points in Set 2 marked just the 11th set Nebraska allowed 20-plus points at home.
 
LeGrand, who earned All-Big 12 Second Team recognition Tuesday, handed out 19 assists to go along with a team-high nine digs. K-State also got six digs from Symone Sims and Shaylee Myers, who put down six kills.
 
Nebraska will advance to the Regional Semifinals of the 2025 NCAA Tournament and will face No. 16 national seed Kansas (24-10, 13-5 Big 12) on Friday, December 12 in Lincoln.
 
FROM THE CATS
JASON MANSFIELD, K-STATE HEAD COACH
Overall Statement… 
“Congratulations to Nebraska on a really good match. Elite defensive team and their offense was good at times. I’m really proud of our team and just the fight that we had in all three sets. I felt like we battled with them for a while, just couldn’t sustain it. Just really proud of this team and what we accomplished this season.”
 
On the 2025 senior class…
“They’ve been special. We’ve talked about it all the way back in January, I felt like this team was going to take the program to a different place and the seniors were going to lead us in that direction, and they have. All five of them are very unique, very special, they’re different in their own way.  They’ve added so much to our program their whole career, really, but their senior season was special. There’s no substitute for urgency and I think they were really urgent this whole season in trying to get us to this place. I’m really proud of them and they’ll be remembered forever.”
 
AVA LEGRAND, SENIOR SETTER
On setting the standard for the next generation of K-State players…
“We want it to be the standard to make it to the tournament and not only make it to the tournament, but to make it to the next round. And hopefully every year we get past the next hump. That is something we tried instilling in the freshmen and younger girls, and hopefully for the future of this program we will have a standard here and K-State is going to be one to remember.”
 
On ending her career in her hometown state…
“It comes full circle. I had such a great cheering section with so many friends and family members that it was so awesome to see them all out there. But also, just Bob Devaney is a special place. Growing up in Nebraska, it’s a volleyball state, can’t deny that, but hearing the fans cheer for all us Nebraska girls was pretty awesome, but I think full circle comes to mind.”
 
ANIYA CLINTON, SENIOR OUTSIDE HITTER/OPPOSITE
On the senior leadership…
“This is kind of where we want our program to be and we don’t want it to start here. This is a spot that we’ve brought our program, and we don’t want it to stop here. This is a spot that we’ve brought our program, and I think we’ve done a really good job as seniors leading so I hope that the next group of seniors continues to follow in our footsteps.”
 
SET-BY-SET
Set 1 – #1/(1) Nebraska 25, K-State 17

  • Nebraska jumped out to a quick 7-2 lead behind a pair of kills from Rebekah Allick and aces from Laney Choboy and Virginia Adriano.
  • Four unanswered points for K-State highlighted a 6-1 scoring run that trimmed a seven-point deficit, 15-8, to two. The run included a block by Clinton and Schmidt, along with a service ace from Emerson Van Lannen – her 28th of the season.
  • The Wildcats were held to a .086 hitting percentage (8 kills, 5 errors, 35 swings) in the opening frame against the Cornhuskers’ .250 (16 kills, 7 errors, 36 attempts).
  • K-State out-blocked Nebraska in Set 1, 4.0-2.0.

 
Set 2 – #1/(1) Nebraska 25, K-State 21

  • The Wildcats captured their first lead of the match, 4-1, with a pair of blocks from Schmidt, Clinton and LeGrand.
  • After seven tied scores, Nebraska ran away with a 4-0 scoring run to take the first substantial lead of the set, 13-10, but was answered with kills from Schmidt and Reagan Fox to make it a one-point score.
  • K-State came out of a timeout with a kill from LeGrand to spark a 4-1 run, that included three consecutive kills from LeGrand, Fox and Clinton, bridging the gap to two, 22-20.
  • The run forced a timeout from Nebraska, their first of the match, and was followed by a solo stop by Schmidt.
  • With the score notched at 22-21, Nebraska put together a 3-0 closing run to put the set away.
  • K-State recorded a set-best .171 hitting percentage behind 12 kills on 35 attempts with six errors, while the defense limited Nebraska to a .139 clip (12 kills, 7 errors, 36 swings) with four blocks.

 
Set 3 – #1/(1) Nebraska 25, K-State 16

  • After back-and forth action, the Wildcats pieced together a 4-0 scoring run to take a one-point lead.
  • Tied 8-8, the Cornhuskers rattled off an 8-1 scoring run to overcome the deficit and take control of the set.
  • K-State managed just seven kills in the final set, hitting at a .097 efficiency, while Nebraska turned in a match-high .393 clip (15 kills, 4 errors, 28 errors).

 
INSIDE THE BOX

  • Nebraska defeated K-State in straight sets to advance to the Regional Semifinals – 25-17, 25-21, 25-16.
  • K-State turned in a .118 hitting percentage (27 kills, 15 errors, 118 attempts), while Nebraska finished with a .243 efficiency (43 kills, 18 errors, 99 attempts).
  • The 18 attack errors marked the Huskers’ fourth-highest total of the season.
  • The match also marked just the fifth time the Cornhuskers were held below a .300 hitting percentage.
  • The team’s .253 hitting percentage was the team’s fourth lowest output of the year.
  • Clinton led the Wildcats with seven kills to go with five digs and three blocks.
  • Myers finished with six kills while Fox added five.
  • LeGrand handed out 19 assists and logged a team-leading nine digs.
  • LeGrand and Van Lannen each recorded a service ace.
  • The Cats out-blocked the Cornhuskers, 8-5.
  • Nebraska was led by Jackson’s 10 kills at a .533 clip. Murray also put down 10 kills.
  • Olivia Mauch finished with a match-high 13 digs and Laney Choboy picked up 12.
  • Of 52 sets played at the Devaney Center, K-State’s 21 points in Set 2 marked just the 11th set Nebraska allowed 20-plus points at home.

 
BEYOND THE BOX

  • In its history, K-State has made the NCAA Tournament 19 times, advancing to the Regional Semifinal three times (2000, 2003, 2011).
  • K-State is 16-19 overall in the tournament, that includes a 3-10 record in the second round.
  • The Wildcats advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2016, making the program’s 12th overall appearance in the round.
  • The 2025 postseason run marks K-State’s sixth time being sent to Lincoln for the first-round in school history (2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2021, 2025).  
  • Nebraska leads the all-time series 84-4, that includes a 36-3 record at home.
  • Saturday’s contest marks the third meeting between the Wildcats and Cornhuskers in the postseason and first since 2011.
  • The Cats are 1-2 in the postseason series vs. the Huskers.
  • In 2011, K-State upset third-seeded Nebraska in five sets to advance to the team’s third NCAA Regional Semifinal (Sweet 16).
  • The Wildcats were 9-5 in three-set matches this season.
  • K-State is now 9-9 is three-set matches all-time in the NCAA Tournament.

 



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