Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Texas, an NCAA women’s volleyball finalist in three of the past six seasons, opens at No. 1 in the AVCA preseason poll.

Kentucky won crown over Texas in spring

- By Eric Olson

To Texas, the only good thing about the loss to Kentucky in the NCAA women’s volleyball championsh­ip match might be that the Longhorns only had to stew over it for four months instead of eight.

The quick turnaround comes after the pandemic pushed back the national tournament to April. The new season begins this week and will run on its traditiona­l schedule, with the champion crowned in December.

As the No. 1 team in the American Volleyball Coaches Associatio­n preseason poll, Texas is expected to be back in the national final for the fourth time in seven years.

“I think they’re very determined to to try to get back on top and try to win this. They understand what’s ahead of them,” said 21st-year coach Jerritt Elliott, whose only title came in 2012.

The talent across Division I volleyball is deep because the NCAA extended player eligibilit­y an extra year because of the pandemic. Of the nine seniors on the AVCA All-America first team, eight are back this fall.

The Longhorns were comparativ­ely young when they made their run to the title match. The Big 12 played a split season, and Texas was 14-0 in the fall to win all or a share of their 12th conference championsh­ip in 14 years. They won 13 of 15 matches in the spring, including the crushing loss to Kentucky after they had posted an impressive win in the opening set.

“I think we’re always going to look back and say, ‘Look, this is what could have been. We were this close and we just kind of missed it,’ ” outside hitter and Big 12 preseason player of the year Logan Eggleston said. “That just left that bad taste in your mouth, and it’s kind of pushing us.”

Texas brings back its entire lineup of Eggleston and Brionne Butler, both first-team AllAmerica­ns, along with Skylar Fields, Asjia O’Neal and Jhenna Gabriel and liberos Sydney Petersen and Nalani Iosia.

“Going to a national championsh­ip and not winning really hurt,” Fields said. “You don’t want to feel that pain again.”

Texas opens Friday against San Diego and Sunday against UTSA. There’s one top- 10 matchup this weekend, Baylor at Wisconsin. The NCAA semifinals and championsh­ip matches are Dec. 16 and 18 at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio.

Here are six other teams to watch this season:

• Wisconsin (18-1): The preseason No. 2 Badgers were unbeaten until they fell flat in a three-set loss to Texas in the national semifinals.

• Kentucky (24-1): The No. 3 Wildcats, who won the Southeaste­rn Conference’s first women’s volleyball national title, lost more key personnel than any other elite team. Gone are setter Madison Lilley, the national player of the year.

• Washington (20-4): The No. 4 Huskies bring back all but one player from the Final Four team that was the first since the rally scoring era began in 2001 to win three five-set matches in an NCAA tournament.

• Nebraska (16-3): The No. 5 Cornhusker­s bring back five starters and its libero and is a preseason top-five team for the seventh consecutiv­e year.

• Baylor (20-7): The Bears reached the NCAA regional semifinals in consecutiv­e seasons for the first time and, at No. 10, are ranked in the preseason for the fourth year in a row.

• Stanford (2-8): The No. 21 Cardinal were going to be in a rebuild last spring after winning three of the previous four national titles, then COVID-19 made a mess of the whole season. This is one of college volleyball’s blueblood programs.

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