When Do the Huskers Vb Team Play Again

Nebraska Cornhuskers women's volleyball
Nebraska Cornhuskers logo.svg
Founded 1975; 47 years ago  (1975)
University University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Able-bodied managing director Trev Alberts
Head coach John Melt (22nd flavour)
Conference Big Ten
Location Lincoln, NE
Habitation arena Devaney Eye (Capacity: seven,907)
Nickname Cornhuskers
Colors Scarlet and cream[1]
AIAW/NCAA Tournament champion
1995, 2000, 2006, 2015, 2017
AIAW/NCAA Tournament runner-upward
1986, 1989, 2005, 2018, 2021
AIAW/NCAA Tournament semifinal
1986, 1989, 1990, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2021
AIAW/NCAA Tournament appearance
1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021
Conference tournament champion
Big Eight
1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1994, 1995
Briefing regular season champion
Large Eight
1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995

Big 12
1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010

Large 10
2011, 2016, 2017

The Nebraska Cornhuskers women's volleyball squad competes as function of NCAA Division I, representing the Academy of Nebraska–Lincoln in the Big Ten. Nebraska plays its home games at the Bob Devaney Sports Centre, and has sold out every home match since 2001.[2] The team has been coached past John Cook since 2000.

The plan was founded in 1975 and is one of the most decorated in women's volleyball, with more wins than any other program and v national championships.[3] Nebraska has been ranked in every weekly poll since the introduction of the AVCA National Poll in 1982 and has spent more weeks ranked number one than whatever other programme. The Cornhuskers' ninety-8 All-Americans are the nigh in the country.[4] [5] Nebraska regularly leads the NCAA in average omnipresence and has participated in several of the highest-attended women's volleyball games ever played.[6]

History [edit]

Pat Sullivan (1975–76) [edit]

Pat Sullivan became Nebraska'due south kickoff head autobus when the program was founded shortly after the passing of Title IX in 1972.[7] Sullivan compiled an 83–21 record over two seasons, including an AIAW regional final appearance in 1975 and NU'due south start Big Eight title in 1976.[8]

Terry Pettit (1977–99) [edit]

Terry Pettit was hired as Nebraska's second head motorcoach in 1977. Pettit, an Indiana native, was an English teacher and volleyball coach at Louisburg College in North Carolina when a fellow autobus establish out about Nebraska's open up job and directed Pettit to apply.[9] From 1977 to 1999, he led the Cornhuskers to a record of 694–148, winning twenty-ane briefing championships and the 1995 national championship.[ten]

In his twenty-3 years as head coach, Pettit built the plan into a national power. Under his guidance, Nebraska appeared in nineteen sequent NCAA tournaments, including 6 national semifinals, two national runner-up finishes, and NU'southward first national title. Pettit'due south teams won a briefing championship in all only two seasons during his tenure. His list of honors includes induction into the AVCA Hall of Fame in 2009, The states Volleyball All-Fourth dimension Great Coach Award, and several national and regional bus of the twelvemonth awards from various publications.[11] [12] Under Pettit, Nebraska became 1 of the first schools to offering scholarships to female athletes. In 1978, Terri Kanouse and Shandi Pettine were the first players to receive total scholarships for volleyball, and only three years later, the university allowed Pettit to offering up to twelve scholarships.[thirteen] Pettit coached xxx-six AVCA All-Americans at Nebraska, the highest number of any schoolhouse in that fourth dimension span.[x]

Pettit's merely national championship as a head passenger vehicle came in 1995. After dropping an early-flavour lucifer to Stanford, NU swept twenty-ii consecutive opponents and won thirty-i straight matches. Nebraska defeated Texas three–one to win the title, and AVCA National Player of the Year Allison Weston was amid three Huskers named first-team All-Americans. Earlier the 1999 season, Pettit hired quondam assistant John Melt as associate caput coach. Following Nebraska's loss in the national semifinals, Pettit retired and Cook became head coach. In 2020, Pettit was inducted into the Nebraska Athletics Hall of Fame.[14]

John Cook (2000–present) [edit]

Cook succeeded the retiring Pettit earlier the 2000 season after a seven-yr stint as head passenger vehicle at Wisconsin. In 20 years at Nebraska, Cook has guided the Huskers to four national championships, 5 other national semifinal appearances and an NCAA tournament berth in each season. Melt was named National Coach of the Year in 2000 and 2005, Central Region Motorcoach of the Yr four times, and briefing motorcoach of the yr six times. He was awarded the USA Volleyball Best Great Coach Award in 2008, and was inducted into the AVCA Hall of Fame in 2017. Under Cook, Greichaly Cepero, Christina Houghtelling, and Sarah Pavan won AVCA National Player of the Year, and Pavan won the Honda-Broderick Loving cup in 2007 as the Collegiate Female Athlete of the Twelvemonth.

In his commencement year as NU's head autobus, Cook guided the Huskers to their second national championship. Later on starting the flavor exterior the national pinnacle ten, Nebraska went 20–0 in Big 12 play and defeated Melt'south one-time team, Wisconsin, in a 5-set national title match to cap a 34–0 flavor and become the second undefeated team in NCAA volleyball history.[xv] Sophomore setter Greichaly Cepero was named National Histrion of the Year and won the Honda Sports Award equally the all-time female person athlete in collegiate sports.[5] Nebraska finished the 2001 and 2002 seasons 20–0 in conference play, but lost belatedly in the tournament to Stanford and Hawaii, ending both seasons 31–ii. Nebraska's seventy-seven game Big 12 winning streak ended with a loss at Kansas State in 2003 as the Cornhuskers failed to make it out of a regional.

Nebraska earned the number one overall seed in the 2004 NCAA tournament, which began an NCAA-record eighty-eight consecutive weeks the Cornhuskers were ranked atop the AVCA weekly poll. The Huskers fell to two-time defending champion USC but freshman Sarah Pavan was named AVCA National Freshman of the Twelvemonth. Pavan became one of the most decorated players in volleyball history, including four First-Team All-American honors and the 2006 National Player of the Yr award. Nebraska was over again the top seed in the 2005 NCAA Tournament and swept through the starting time v rounds, merely was upset by Washington in the national title match.[16]

Nebraska lost only once in the 2006 regular season as its streak at the summit of the rankings continued. The Cornhuskers were the top seed in the NCAA Tournament for the tertiary sequent year and returned to the national title friction match after a five-prepare win over Minnesota.[17] Nebraska dropped the first set to Stanford but won the next iii to win the schoolhouse's 3rd championship in front of a then-NCAA volleyball-tape crowd of 17,209.[18] Nebraska swept twenty-4 of its thirty-three opponents and lost just fourteen sets all season and became the first team to win the title while hosting the finals since UCLA in 1991.[v] Pavan won numerous awards afterward the season and sophomore Jordan Larson was named a offset-team All American.[xix] [20]

Nebraska's season opener in 2007 marked the program'south 1,000th game, a sweep of Tennessee in the AVCA Showcase.[21] The Cornhuskers' eighty-eight week streak at number one came to an end in October, but NU won its fourth straight Big 12 title. Afterward surviving an upset bid by unseeded Michigan Country in the NCAA Tournament, Nebraska fell to California in the regional final.[22] Pavan joined Texas softball pitcher Cat Osterman as the but echo Big 12 Female Athlete of the Year and Nebraska placed a then-tape v players on All-America teams.[23] Nebraska won its fifth consecutive Large 12 championship in 2008[24] and advanced through the showtime three rounds of the NCAA Tournament to face up Washington.[25] After losing the first two sets, Nebraska came back to tie the lucifer, and used a nine-betoken run to win prepare five.[26] Nebraska met undefeated Penn State in the national semifinal and once more savage behind 2–0. The Huskers rallied to deal the Nittany Lions their commencement ii set losses of the season, snapping their NCAA-record 111 consecutive set wins, just lost the match in v sets.[27]

Nebraska's NCAA-record 90-game home winning streak came to an end at the beginning of the 2009 season.[28] In the 2009 NCAA Tournament Texas became the showtime team to trounce NU 3 times in one flavor after ending the Huskers' 5-year stretch atop the Big 12.[29] In 2010, the University of Nebraska appear information technology would be catastrophe its fifteen-year human relationship with the Big 12 and joining the Big Ten. The Cornhuskers won the Big 12 in 2010, departing with an all-fourth dimension conference record of 278–22.

Motility to the Big Ten

The University of Nebraska joined the Big 10 Briefing in 2011. This meant for the commencement time NU would regularly play longtime rival Penn State along with other nationally relevant programs including Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Illinois. The Huskers won the Large Ten in their outset twelvemonth of competition only failed to make a regional semifinal for the get-go time since 1993.[xxx] Nebraska did not win another Big Ten title until 2016 and failed to make the national semifinals in six directly seasons, the longest stretch for the programme in over thirty years. Nebraska's drought ended in 2015 when the Cornhuskers swept former Large 12 rival Texas to win the programme'south quaternary national title in front of an NCAA-record crowd in Omaha. Mikaela Foecke had nineteen kills in the title game and became the third freshman named the NCAA Tournament's Most Outstanding Histrion. The Cornhuskers spent much of the following season ranked number one in the country and won the program's commencement conference title since 2011.[31] In the 2016 NCAA Tournament, Nebraska fought off ii match points to defeat Penn State in the regional semifinals[32] but fell to Texas in the national semifinals.[33]

Nebraska's 2017 season opened with consecutive losses to Florida and Oregon, merely the Cornhuskers finished the regular flavor with just two more losses, ultimately sharing the Big Ten championship with Penn Country. NU defeated the meridian-seeded Nittany Lions in five sets to accelerate to the national title match, and then beat out Florida 3–ane to win the school's fifth national title. The championship match took identify in Kansas Urban center in front of an NCAA-record crowd of eighteen,516.[34] Exterior hitter Mikaela Foecke was once again named the tournament'south About Outstanding Player, making her one of 4 players to win the laurels more than than once. NU made a programme-tape 4th direct trip to the national semifinals in 2018, just fell to Stanford in a five-set national title match.

After a pair of regional final losses in 2019 and 2020 (though the 2020 Tournament was held in the leap of 2021), NU defeated No. 2 Texas and No. 3 Pittsburgh in the 2021 Tournament to reach the school's tenth national title lucifer; Nebraska's v-set loss to Wisconsin set up a new NCAA volleyball omnipresence record.[35] Following the season, freshman libero Lexi Rodriguez became the 2nd Cornhusker and beginning libero to win AVCA National Freshman of the Twelvemonth.

Coaches [edit]

Coaching history [edit]

No. Coach Tenure Overall Conference Achievements
1 Pat Sullivan 1975–76 83–21 (.798) v–0 (1.000) Big Eight champion (1976)
Big Eight Tournament champion (1976)
two Terry Pettit 1977–99 694–148–12 (.820) 244–15–one (.940) National champion (1995)
Big Eight champion (1977–92, 1994, 1995)
Big Eight Tournament champion (1977–86, 1988–91, 1994,1995)
Big 12 champion (1996, 1998, 1999)
AVCA National Autobus of the Year (1986, 1994)
AVCA Hall of Fame (inducted 2009)
iii John Cook 2000– 630–92 (.873) 384–51 (.883) National champion (2000, 2006, 2015, 2017)
Big 12 champion (2000–02, 2004–08, 2010)
Big Ten champion (2011, 2016, 2017)
AVCA National Jitney of the Year (2000, 2005)
AVCA Hall of Fame (inducted 2017)

Banana coaching history

  • Russ Rose (1978–79)
  • Linda Luedtke (1980)
  • John Corbelli (1981)
  • Barry Janzen (1982–83)
  • Jay Potter (1984–87)
  • Jeff Nelson (1986)
  • Terri Killion (1988–89)
  • John Cook (1988–90,1999)
  • Cathy Noth (1988–98)
  • Brian Begor (1991–92)
  • Val Novak (1993–94)
  • Todd Raasch (1995)
  • Nikki Best (1996–99)
  • Staci Wolfe (2000–02)
  • Craig Skinner (2000–04)
  • Charlene Johnson-Tagaloa (2003–06)
  • Lee Maes (2005–07)
  • Lizzy Stemke (2007–10)
  • Erik Sullivan (2008–10)
  • Dan Conners (2010–11)
  • Dan Meske (2010–14)
  • Dani Busboom Kelly (2012–16)
  • Chris Tamas (2015–xvi)
  • Kayla Banwarth (2017–xix)
  • Tyler Hildebrand (2017,2020–21)
  • Jaylen Reyes (2018–)
  • Kelly Hunter (2020–)

Coaching staff [edit]

Coach Position First year Alma mater
John Melt Caput coach 2000 San Diego
Jaylen Reyes Banana bus / Recruiting coordinator 2018 BYU
Kelly Hunter Assistant autobus 2020 Nebraska

Venues [edit]

Nebraska Coliseum [edit]

NU compiled an all-fourth dimension record of 511–36 at the 4,030-seat Nebraska Coliseum, losing merely iii home matches in thirty-3 seasons of briefing play. In 1991, the Cornhuskers played home games at the Bob Devaney Sports Heart while the Coliseum was beingness renovated specifically to host volleyball matches. NU has hosted at least 1 NCAA Tournament friction match every year since 1984, including a 52–iv postseason record at the Coliseum. Nebraska established an NCAA tape with their 88th consecutive home win in 2009,[36] a streak that concluded at ninety when UCLA defeated NU in front end of an NCAA regular season-record crowd of thirteen,870.[37] In 2008, the AVCA's Kathy DeBoer described the Coliseum equally "the epicenter of volleyball fandom".[38]

The Coliseum was 1 of few collegiate arenas designed specifically for volleyball. It is noted for its classical compages and intimate atmosphere. At the Coliseum, the Huskers began an NCAA tape for most consecutive sellouts in a women's sport, a streak that continues at the Devaney Centre.[39] The Coliseum was the subject area of a CBS Sports documentary in 2011.[40]

Bob Devaney Sports Middle [edit]

Nebraska's volleyball program moved to the Bob Devaney Sports Center in 2013, which was vacated when Pinnacle Bank Arena was congenital for NU'due south basketball teams. The Devaney Center's capacity was decreased from 13,596 to seven,907 with luxury suites on the south side of the court.[41] Despite the increment in capacity from the Coliseum, the Huskers' sellout streak connected and stands at 285, the longest in any NCAA women's sport.[42] Nebraska has led the country in omnipresence every year since moving to the Devaney Center,[a] averaging over 8,000 fans per game each season.[43] The move to the Devaney Heart has made Nebraska'due south volleyball program profitable each year, a rarity in women'south college athletics.[44] With no financial back up from tax dollars, tuition, or pupil fees, the team is entirely self-sufficient.[45]

Highest-attended matches [edit]

Nebraska has played in nine of the ten highest-attended matches in NCAA Tournament history.[b] [46]

Highest-attended NCAA Tournament volleyball matches
Rank Engagement Winner Loser Round Venue
1 Dec. 18, 2021 No. 4 Wisconsin No. 10 Nebraska National final Nationwide Arena (Columbus, OH)
2 December. 16, 2017 No. 5 Nebraska No. two Florida National concluding Dart Center (Kansas City, MO)
three December. 14, 2017 No. ii Florida No. 3 Stanford National semifinal
No. 5 Nebraska No. 1 Penn Land
four Dec. 15, 2018 No. 1 Stanford No. 7 Nebraska National final Target Heart (Minneapolis, MN)
5 December. 13, 2018 No. 1 Stanford No. 4 BYU National semifinal
No. 7 Nebraska No. iii Illinois
6 Dec. nineteen, 2015 No. 4 Nebraska No. 3 Texas National terminal CHI Wellness Center (Omaha, NE)
vii December. 17, 2015 No. 4 Nebraska No. ix Kansas National semifinal
No. 3 Texas No. two Minnesota
8 December. eighteen, 2008 No. 2 Stanford No. 3 Texas National semifinal
No. 1 Penn State No. iv Nebraska
9 December. 16, 2016 No. six Stanford No. 4 Texas National last Nationwide Arena (Columbus, OH)
10 Dec. xvi, 2006 No. i Nebraska No. 2 Stanford National final CHI Wellness Center (Omaha, NE)

Awards [edit]

National Player of the Twelvemonth

  • Allison Weston – 1995
  • Greichaly Cepero – 2000
  • Christina Houghtelling – 2005
  • Sarah Pavan – 2006

'National Freshman of the Twelvemonth

  • Sarah Pavan – 2004
  • Lexi Rodriguez – 2021

National Coach of the Year

  • Terry Pettit – 1986, 1994
  • John Melt – 2000, 2005

All-Americans [edit]

Nebraska has had fifty players account for ninety-eight overall and forty-8 first-team AVCA All-American selections.[47] [48]

First team

  • Cathy Noth – 1983
  • Annie Adamczak – 1985
  • Karen Dahlgren – 1986
  • Lori Endicott – 1988
  • Virginia Stahr – 1988
  • Val Novak – 1989, 1990
  • Janet Kruse – 1989, 1990
  • Stephanie Thater – 1991, 1992
  • Allison Weston – 1993–95
  • Christy Johnson – 1994, 1995
  • Lisa Reitsma – 1995, 1996
  • Fiona Nepo – 1996, 1998
  • Nancy Metcalf – 1998, 1999, 2001
  • Laura Pilakowski – 2000
  • Greichaly Cepero – 2000, 2002
  • Amber Holmquist – 2001, 2002
  • Melissa Elmer – 2004, 2005
  • Sarah Pavan – 2004–07
  • Christina Houghtelling – 2005
  • Jordan Larson – 2006, 2008
  • Brooke Delano – 2010
  • Gina Mancuso – 2011
  • Lauren Cook – 2012
  • Kelsey Robinson – 2013
  • Kadie Rolfzen – 2015, 2016
  • Justine Wong-Orantes – 2016
  • Kelly Hunter – 2017
  • Mikaela Foecke – 2018
  • Lauren Stivrins – 2018, 2020
  • Lexi Rodriguez – 2021

Second team

  • Cathy Noth – 1984
  • Karen Dahlgren – 1985
  • Enid Schonewise – 1986
  • Tisha Delaney – 1986
  • Lori Endicott – 1987
  • Virginia Stahr – 1989
  • Stephanie Thater – 1990
  • Chris Hall – 1991
  • Janet Kruse – 1991
  • Kelly Aspegren – 1994
  • Fiona Nepo – 1997
  • Lisa Reitsma – 1997
  • Megan Korver – 1998
  • Amber Holmquist – 2000
  • Jenny Kropp – 2001
  • Greichaly Cepero – 2001
  • Laura Pilakowski - 2002
  • Melissa Elmer – 2003
  • Jennifer Saleaumua – 2004
  • Tracy Stalls – 2006, 2007
  • Christina Houghtelling – 2007
  • Rachel Holloway – 2007
  • Sydney Anderson – 2008
  • Tara Mueller – 2008
  • Brooke Delano – 2009
  • Lindsey Licht – 2010
  • Hannah Werth – 2010, 2012
  • Gina Mancuso – 2012
  • Amber Rolfzen – 2015
  • Kelly Hunter – 2016
  • Annika Albrecht – 2017
  • Mikaela Foecke – 2017
  • Lauren Stivrins – 2019
  • Nicklin Hames – 2020
  • Kayla Caffey – 2021

3rd team

  • Jennifer Saleaumua – 2005
  • Rachel Holloway – 2006
  • Jordan Larson – 2007
  • Sydney Anderson – 2009
  • Kadie Rolfzen – 2013, 2014
  • Justine Wong-Orantes – 2015
  • Amber Rolfzen – 2016
  • Kenzie Maloney – 2018
  • Lexi Sun – 2019, 2020
  • Madi Kubik – 2021

National records [edit]

Team [49]

  • Wins: 1,407
  • Winning percent in a flavor: 1.000 (2000, tied with four others)
  • Sequent winning seasons: 48 (1975–2021)
  • Consecutive non-losing seasons: 48 (1975–2021)
  • Assists in a match: 116 (November. 5, 1988 vs. Texas)
  • Blocks per prepare in a season: 4.18 (2001)

Individual

  • Hitting percentage in a match (min. ten kills): ane.000 (Tracy Stalls – Nov. 24, 2007 vs. Texas Tech; Megan Korver – Sep. 25, 1998 vs. Iowa State; Lauren Stivrins – Sep. 28, 2018 vs. Northwestern)
  • Assists in a lucifer: Lori Endicott, 109 (November. 5, 1988 vs. Texas)
  • Blocks in a flavour: Melissa Elmer, 250 (2005)
  • Blocks per set in a season: Melissa Elmer, 2.17 (2005)

Season-by-season results [edit]

National champion Regular season champion [c] Regular season and tournament champion
Year Bus Overall Conference Standing Postseason Final
rank[d]
Big 8 Conference (1976–1995)
1975 Pat Sullivan 34–eight [due east] AIAW Regional Final
1976 49–13 5–0 1st AIAW Tournament
1977 Terry Pettit 42–12–7 six–1–one 1st AIAW Regional Semifinal
1978 35–25–2 3–0 1st AIAW Runner-upwardly
1979 41–8–iii 6–0 1st AIAW Regional Final
1980 35–15 5–0 1st AIAW Regional Terminal
1981 29–x 12–0 1st
1982 27–6 8–2 1st NCAA Division I Regional Semifinal 15
1983 29–4 ten–0 1st NCAA Segmentation I First Circular sixteen
1984 27–4 x–0 1st NCAA Division I Regional Final seven
1985 28–3 10–0 1st NCAA Division I Regional Final 6
1986 29–half dozen 10–0 1st NCAA Division I Runner-up 6
1987 30–v 12–0 1st NCAA Partition I Regional Final ten
1988 28–5 11–1 1st NCAA Division I Regional Semifinal 5
1989 29–4 12–0 1st NCAA Division I Runner-upward v
1990 32–three 12–0 1st NCAA Partitioning I Semifinal 2
1991 27–5 12–0 1st NCAA Segmentation I Regional Final 7
1992 22–6 12–0 1st NCAA Division I Regional Semifinal 7
1993 25–6 10–2 2nd NCAA Sectionalisation I Second Circular 8
1994 31–ane 12–0 1st NCAA Division I Regional Terminal one
1995 32–1 12–0 1st NCAA Sectionalisation I Champion 1
Big 12 Conference (1996–2010)
1996 Terry Pettit xxx–4 xix–ane 1st NCAA Division I Semifinal iii
1997 27–7 16–four T–2nd NCAA Sectionalisation I Regional Final viii
1998 32–2 19–ane 1st NCAA Partition I Semifinal iii
1999 27–6 17–three 1st NCAA Division I Semifinal 11
2000 John Cook 34–0 xx–0 1st NCAA Division I Champion 1
2001 31–2 20–0 1st NCAA Segmentation I Semifinal three
2002 31–2 20–0 1st NCAA Segmentation I Regional Final 5
2003 28–5 17–iii 2nd NCAA Division I Regional Semifinal thirteen
2004 30–2 20–0 1st NCAA Sectionalization I Regional Last 5
2005 33–ii 19–i 1st NCAA Division I Runner-up 2
2006 33–one 19–i 1st NCAA Sectionalization I Champion 1
2007 30–two 19–1 T–1st NCAA Division I Regional Final v
2008 31–3 18–two T–1st NCAA Division I Semifinal 3
2009 26–seven xvi–iv 3rd NCAA Partitioning I Regional Final 5
2010 29–3 19–i 1st NCAA Sectionalisation I Regional Semifinal 7
Big Ten Conference (2011–present)
2011 John Cook 25–v 17–3 1st NCAA Partition I 2nd Circular 12
2012 26–7 15–5 T–2nd NCAA Division I Regional Final vii
2013 26–7 16–iv second NCAA Sectionalisation I Regional Final seven
2014 23–x xiv–half dozen 4th NCAA Partition I Regional Terminal 8
2015 32–4 17–3 2d NCAA Division I Champion i
2016 31–3 18–2 1st NCAA Partition I Semifinal 4
2017 32–4 19–i T–1st NCAA Sectionalization I Champion i
2018 29–7 fifteen–5 T–3rd NCAA Partition I Runner-upward 2
2019 28–5 17–3 T–second NCAA Segmentation I Regional Terminal v
2020[f] 16–3 xiv–2 third NCAA Division I Regional Final 6
2021 26–8[g] 15–4 2nd NCAA Division I Runner-up two
Overall: 1,407–261–12 (.841), Conference: 643–66–1 (.906)

Beach volleyball [edit]

The Nebraska Cornhuskers women's beach volleyball team began play in the spring of 2013 every bit the school'south xx-2d intercollegiate sport. In 2016, the NCAA began sponsoring a beach volleyball tournament (previously the sport was run by the AVCA), but Nebraska did not attempt to qualify. Despite the sport's increasing popularity, Nebraska, nearby Wayne State, and Eastern Illinois fund the only volleyball programs in the Midwest. NU generally plays the bulk of its season during a leap break trip to California and Hawaii, and its beach roster is fabricated entirely of players from its indoor program. John Melt, who coaches both programs, has said the schoolhouse views beach volleyball primarily as a training and recruiting tool for its indoor team. Beach volleyball competes as an contained, making it one of but three programs at Nebraska not affiliated with the Large Ten.

On March 8, 2017, Nebraska hosted Missouri Baptist at the Hawks Championship Center. The lucifer, closed to the public due to infinite limitations, was the kickoff collegiate embankment volleyball lucifer held in the state of Nebraska. The Cornhuskers swept the Spartans 5–0.

In 2007, Hashemite kingdom of jordan Larson and Sarah Pavan defeated pupil-athletes from seven other schools to win the Collegiate Embankment Volleyball Championship, an invitational tournament featuring two players per schoolhouse.[l]

Coaching history [edit]

No. Passenger vehicle Tenure Overall Achievements
ane John Cook 2013– 54–62 (.466)

Season-by-season results [edit]

Twelvemonth Omnibus Overall Postseason Concluding
rank
Independent (2013–present)
2013 John Melt four–5 seven
2014 three–two 7
2015 half-dozen–2
2016 5–five
2017 5–7
2018 4–xiv
2019 12–12
2020 seven–3 Canceled [h]
2021 Did not compete [i]
2022 John Cook 8–12
Overall: 54–62 (.479)

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Excluding the 2021 spring season in which many arenas did not host fans due to the COVID-nineteen pandemic
  2. ^ The NCAA lists the same attendance for national semifinal matches
  3. ^ Neither the Big 12 nor the Big Ten play briefing tournaments
  4. ^ The AVCA began weekly polling in 1982
  5. ^ The Large Eight did not sponsor a regular flavour or conference tournament in 1975
  6. ^ Flavor played in spring 2021
  7. ^ Does not include Nebraska'due south forfeit win over Rutgers
  8. ^ Canceled due to the COVID-xix pandemic
  9. ^ Nebraska did not compete in the 2021 embankment volleyball season as the indoor season, typically in fall, was moved to spring due to the COVID-19 pandemic

References [edit]

  1. ^ The Ability of Color (PDF). Nebraska Athletics Brand Guide. July 1, 2019. Retrieved March sixteen, 2020.
  2. ^ Brent Wagner. "Nebraska volleyball program's sellout streak set to reach another milestone". AP.
  3. ^ "Nebraska volleyball history". NU Athletics. August 22, 2007. Retrieved Baronial one, 2008.
  4. ^ "Huskers Finish Fifth in Concluding AVCA Coaches Poll". Huskers.com. 2009-12-22. Retrieved December 22, 2009.
  5. ^ a b c "2009 Media Guide" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-05-12. Retrieved 2009-ten-nineteen .
  6. ^ "Nebraska volleyball leads nation in attendance for seventh directly season". Omaha World Herald. 2020-04-01. Retrieved 2020-06-14 .
  7. ^ "Title Nine and Sex Discrimination". U.S. Department of Educational activity. U.S. Department of Education Function for Civil Rights. Retrieved xix November 2016.
  8. ^ Babcock, Mike. "NU Volleyball: A Championship Tradition" (PDF). Nebraska Huskers. Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  9. ^ Babcock, Mike. "NU Volleyball: A Championship Tradition" (PDF). Nebraska Huskers. Retrieved 21 Nov 2016.
  10. ^ a b Williams, Pat; Babcock, Mike (26 November 2016). Tom Osborne On Leadership: Life Lessons from a Iii-Time National Championship Double-decker. Advantage Media Group. ISBN1599323796.
  11. ^ Babcock, Mike. "NU Volleyball: A Championship Tradition" (PDF). Nebraska Huskers. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  12. ^ Voepel, Michelle. "Huskers attract die-hard following". ESPN. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  13. ^ Wagner, Brett. "Nebraska volleyball plan had many changes in twoscore years". Lincoln Journal Star . Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  14. ^ "Terry Pettit appear equally offset member of Nebraska'southward 2020 athletic hall of fame class". Omaha Globe Herald . Retrieved 2020-06-14 .
  15. ^ "2000 NCAA Champions". NU Athletics. 2002-07-29. Retrieved 2008-08-01 .
  16. ^ "Omaha breaks NCAA ticket sales mark". NU Athletics. 2005-12-17. Retrieved 2008-08-01 .
  17. ^ "Huskers headed to Omaha". NU Athletics. 2006-12-09. Retrieved 2008-08-01 .
  18. ^ "Nebraska wins NCAA volleyball title". Us Today. 2006-12-18. Retrieved 2008-08-01 .
  19. ^ "Nebraska's Sarah Pavan named AVCA National Player of the Year". AVCA. 2006-12-15. Archived from the original on May 9, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-01 .
  20. ^ "Nebraska's Sarah Pavan is Honda-Broderick Cup winner". Honda. 2007-06-xviii. Retrieved 2008-08-01 .
  21. ^ "No. 1 Huskers Scroll Past Tennessee". Huskers.com. 2007-08-24. Retrieved December 17, 2009.
  22. ^ "California stuns Nebraska to advance to concluding four". AVCA. 2007-12-08. Retrieved 2008-08-01 .
  23. ^ "Pavan named 2008 Large 12 Female person Athlete of the Year". NU Athletics. 2008-06-27. Retrieved 2008-08-01 .
  24. ^ "Huskers Beat Baylor, Share Big 12 Title". Huskers.com. November 29, 2008. Retrieved Dec 17, 2009.
  25. ^ "Huskers Advance to Elite Eight". Huskers.com. December 12, 2008. Retrieved December 17, 2009.
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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebraska_Cornhuskers_women%27s_volleyball

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