(upbeat music) - Volleyball experienced
exponential growth last season and 2024 aims to showcase the
sport even more. It's an exciting time across our
state where volleyball reigns supreme.
Fall camp is in full swing and tonight we preview the
season, digging into several programs across the state, including the perennial national
powers, Creighton and Nebraska. (upbeat music) - Hello and welcome to a
Nebraska Public Media sports special on the state of
volleyball in Nebraska. I'm your host, Ana
Bellinghausen. And coming up later in the show
we visit with Creighton head coach
Kirsten Bernthal Booth, and we'll also be joined by
Matt Buttermore of Omaha, coaches from division two in
Powerhouses, Wayne State and
Nebraska-Kearney, the head coach
of the Omaha Supernovas, but first we're pleased to
be joined in studio by four time national championship
head coach John Cook. John, thanks so much for joining
us. - Thank you, Ana. It's
an honor to be here. - I appreciate it. Well thanks
so much for taking the time. And we have to start
off with the 2023 season and I know you told your team
you have to be the most
motivated team out there. How do you balance looking
back at last year's loss versus trying to keep that
motivation coming into 2024? - Well, we're kind of
using that, you know, how we ended our season wasn't
great, we didn't play great and there's a couple ways
you can end your season. You can win. If you lose,
you want to play your best. And you know, it came up short, but when we played the way
we did, it's just been, hasn't felt good ever since
then. So I think there's a drive and motivation that,
you know, we want to try to have another opportunity
to prove what we can do and play our best match in the
finals. - Well, there's plenty
of opportunities to do that in the Big 10, especially
with the realigned conference. What are your views on that and how that adds so much more
competition to volleyball? - Well, the Big 10 is
gonna be a brutal schedule and it's going to really test
teams and you're gonna have to be very resilient and have a lot of
grit. And I'm just looking at,
you know, people's schedules and it's... adding those four
teams in the West Coast is not easy for them or for us or
the other Big 10 teams. But it's gonna be
the Premier conference and I think it's gonna be
really exciting for fans. And we're playing every night but Mondays, so it's gonna be
like Big 10 volleyball almost every night of the week
and on Sundays. And then now we're
gonna be on NBC, ABC... and so it's really becoming big
time and it doesn't
feel like the old Big 10 or the old Big 12 anymore. This feels like a whole new
adventure. - Okay, well one of the biggest
storylines of the off season, maybe not
has to do with volleyball, but rather your horse Rev. Can you give us an update on
that front? - Rev is living the
country club life in Alta, Wyoming right now. He has a nice big pasture with
beautiful grass out there. Flies aren't very bad up in
Wyoming and there's no mosquitoes
but he's doing great. Of course I haven't... I've
been.. I was up there a few weeks
ago and got to ride him and my son's riding them now and... but yeah, he's a great horse
and he's loving the attention and he loves... 'cause you
know, he was on a ranch, even those ranch horses are
just kind of kicked out there or they're, they don't have
the best lifestyle now he's got the country club life,
so he's, enjoying it. - I love it. Alright, well one of
the other big storylines of the off season, your contract
was extended through 2029. Coach, I'm just curious
though, you could retire and be one of the most
decorated coaches of all time, but you decide to keep coaching.
Why? - First of all, I love this
group. I love our leaders. I love the group. I'm having as much fun
coaching as I've ever had. I'm in this decade of my life
right now, which is in the sixties. You know, we've played for four
national championships in the last seven
years. I've never had a run that good. So I feel like I'm...
as you go to the School of Education, they did
a big research paper, they call it the "Wonder Years". And as you
get to a certain point where you just kind of have
wisdom, you have experience, you know, kind of better
feel what to do and, and when to do it and things
like that. So I'm just, I'm really,
really enjoying it and, I'm mainly I'm gonna
give credit to our team because I've got a really
awesome group of young women who want to be great and
they're working really hard and I've got an awesome
staff and now Jordan's back. And I know Jordan is,
she's just an inspiration to be around every day. - Well, you have to be excited because last season you had zero
seniors and now you go to a team with
so many experienced sophomores with national championship
experience now. And six seniors. How have you seen that
maturity shine through so far? - Yeah, it does feel like
we have a veteran team and what I kind of, what I've
noticed is we just, we know how to take care of
business. They, what I am seeing though is
they, they've got really high
standards, so I see some frustration once
in a while when they're not hitting
'em. But what's really cool is
our two freshmen, Olivia and Skyler, I mean, they are
right there with everybody just playing
great. So you feel like you've
got this very veteran team and those two, it's not like,
oh those guys are freshmen. They're doing really, really
well. So I think that's helped them
to be able to go in there and perform at a high level
and compete really hard. And, but yeah, it does
feel like, you know, Lexi's been there four years...
and so I don't know. They just, yeah, they're just
kind of a, they take care of business now. They kind of know what
to do before we ask them. - Yeah. You mentioned that
Lexi's been there four years. How has she led this team so
well with so much grace and joy? - Well, she loves volleyball and I think she eats
sleeps, dreams volleyball. And she's got a great
personality. She can, she just, she's
somebody you can't say no to or you can't, you know, it's
whatever. She says, okay Lexi, we'll do it and we understand Lexi, let's
go. And so she's just got that a
way about her that she's able to communicate really well with
people and make them, uplift them. And that's why they asked me
in the Big 10 meeting days, who's the funniest person? Of course Lindsay and Kennedy
are there and they think they're the
funniest. But I said, no, Lexi, because every time you have
a conversation with her, whether it's a good
conversation, bad conversation, she's smiling. So she's just a happy kid. - How about the two transfers
you bring in Taylor Landfair and Layla Blackwell? What do you hope they bring to
this team? - Well, Layla is emerging
and getting comfortable and how we do things and she's just blossoming
in front of our eyes. It's been amazing in
just two weeks now where she started and where she
is now. And I, again, I think anytime
you get a athlete like that and you put 'em around
other great athletes, that's the best. They improve the fastest when
they're around these other great
athletes. 'cause they know how they have
to go. And Taylor just does things
that nobody else can do. I mean, she's 6'4", hits really
high. She's really smooth and she's
got a lot of experience. She sees the block really well. She's does everything
really, really well. And of course she's still
trying to figure things out and we train a little bit
differently than she did at Minnesota, but I think
she's really enjoying it. I, the other night she
gave her speech on why she plays volleyball. We asked them for their why
and she pulls out her phone and it's literally like a page
and a half. She said it took her a couple
hours to write it all out. I mean, I was, I was blown away. And I think our team was too.
How much all this means to her. So that validates everything
that this was a good decision. And Layla is just a great fit. It feels like Layla's
been here for four years. I don't know.
It's just that kind of personality as well. Girls love her and that she
gets along with everybody and I was gonna, I actually called Lauren
Stivrins today and said, "Hey Lauren". 'cause Lauren just got back into
Nebraska and she's gonna be training. And I said, "Hey, will you
spend time with Layla?" She goes,
"Coach, I already am". So they've been talking all
summer and hanging out and you know, 'cause I want
Lauren to kind of help her, you know, with the transition to
Nebraska. - How about your young
setter in Bergen Reilly too? I know she spoke yesterday
at the press conference and talking about how she
feels so much more free. How have you seen her evolve as
a setter? - She's just got her
freshman year outta the way. She knows what needs to be done. She had a great experience with
USA, played a really high level and then they hit crazy numbers. I just think she's a year older,
wiser and really confident now. And she's gone to another level. - And the outside hitter
position group I think will have so much competition. How have you seen that just
raise the bar every single day in the gym? - Yeah, it's war. I mean it's, they're battling maybe war's not the best answer, but it is a high level
competition and we're just rotating 'em
right now. And again, the biggest thing to me is Skyler is like
right there with them and she does not back down. So when you think, okay, there's gonna be a drop off
there, there's no drop off. And so these guys are really
battling and I don't know who would
start, if we played a match tomorrow. - You could maybe say that for
the middle position as well with Rebekah and Andi Jackson. How much has Andi grown though,
just in her development and growth? - So Andi last year
was always worried about, am I good enough to play here? She now knows she's
good enough to play here and now you just see her like
taking over. It's been awesome to watch. And I think she played on that
USA team and had a great
USA experience with them and played at a really high
level. So I think she's got a lot
of confidence from that and it's really, she's
brought into the gym. So she's just a
different player. Completely. I mean, like I said, you know,
all year last year. I don't, I'm not sure I'm
good enough to play here, you know, and now I think
she's got big dreams. - What do you think that
is just about the culture of success and what's been laid
here foundationally at Nebraska? I know there's tons of alumni
coming back and I think you even had players
do presentations about alumni. What's just been laid
here that's worked so well for Nebraska and just
continuing that culture? - Well, we have a great
tradition and we want our players to
understand that tradition and what it means to be a
Nebraska Volleyball player. I mean, when you have three
of the 12 Olympians from Nebraska, we've got all these
players around living in Lincoln and
coming back. So we want to tap into that. And that's why we had
'em do that alumni thing. And again they
did PowerPoints it was unreal. I mean, you guys should be
playing that stuff on Nebraska public television and it's was really, really
impressive. They really, really dove into
it. But I, you know, I'll share with
you, we saw the ESPN documentary last
night and I was talking to
the producers afterward and I said, "So why'd you
wanna do Nebraska Volleyball"? And she says, "Because I want to know about Nebraska
Volleyball culture". And I thought that was one of
the greatest compliments we could ever get. And that's not
me, that's not our coaches or this current team. That
is Nebraska Volleyball and the culture of the state and everything we've done from
all the players that have played
here. And one of the other
things that they were fascinated with is Jordan's coaching
here, Kelly's Coaching here, Lindsay Peterson's coaching
here. And so why
do these former players want to come back and be a
part of this program? So they know there's
something special here and again, it all starts with
our culture and it's something we work
really hard at. - Well the show's called
the "State of Volleyball". So coach, where would
you say that is in terms of the entire sport and the growth that we've seen
over the past years? - Nebraska is the epicenter of volleyball in this country. I mean, we're gonna, and this
is what I always like to say, I don't know if you've ever
heard me talk about this, but last year, all three
division one teams made the NCAA tournament. Think of that happening
in men's basketball. People would be losing their
minds thinking, you know what the heck's going
on with the universe? But just think about that. And that was one of my
dreams way back when UNO went division one, you know, we went
up there and played when Kirsten
took over Creighton, you know, it was
not a very strong program. And so we started playing them, just try to help build that up. So to me that was a awesome
moment to see all three teams make it. And then you look at high
school, I think we had five or six teams ranked in the top
100. Omaha Skutt was third
at the end of the year. Look at Wayne State was ranked
number one all year last year. I think Kearney was ranked
five most of the year. NAIA we got top teams in the top 20. So you see that
it's not just Nebraska or Creighton, it's all across
all levels of volleyball in this state. And I don't know if you're gonna
ask me about being the grand marshal at Burwell Rodeo. - That was next. - Okay. So I won't jump the gun on
that for that part of it. But the biggest
thing that surprised me is how many volleyball fans are in
the western part of the state. And I've been doing this cowboy
thing with them and it's been great. They love it. But the people that know about volleyball in
the state, in those small towns, I
mean it just blew me away how big and how
important volleyball is and, and how much pride they have
even in their little high school teams and the
players that are playing and out there and it's just... so I think
volleyball's the epicenter. We have two pro teams now in
Nebraska and we've done things that...
you know, the stadium match and this ESPN E60 and this show right here, I
mean, how many other college
volleyball programs and you guys are doing it on
the state of volleyball. Where else is this happening? But you know what it,
people love it and it's gonna drive good
ratings. - Well coach, not only the
head coach at Nebraska, but also the Grand
Marshall at the Burwell Rodeo. Thank you so much for the time
today. We really appreciate it. And
best of luck in this '24 season. - Thank you. Good to be here. - Joined now by head coach of the Creighton Bluejays,
Kirsten Bernthal Booth. Coach so much for joining me
today. - Oh, my pleasure. - Well, I wanna start first
with your trip to Paris to see Taryn Kloth, one
of your former athletes. How special of a moment was that? - Yeah, it was pretty amazing. Went with my associate
head coach, Angie Behrens and then our former senior
women's administrator and then actually a big
supporter of Taryn's went. So four of us went, you know, and if people didn't
watch it was right next to the Eiffel Tower. All of our games were at
10:00 PM so it was at night. And the Eiffel Tower starts sparkling every hour. So the atmosphere and what they did
atmosphere wise from an energy standpoint
really at any venue that we went to was incredible. And we saw Taryn have three
wins, but really, you know,
you become maternal to these young women, you know. So I gave her mom a hug
and I was like tearing up and I was like, I feel so much
pride so I can only imagine how she feels. So quite a ride. I mean Taryn's story is
remarkable. It's a long story. It would be a great
piece at some point just because you know, how
quickly she's ascended to that level is pretty amazing. - Yeah, I mean her plan wasn't
even to do sand volleyball
whatsoever. How much did you see her growth
throughout her pro career and even throughout college? - Well, I think the
interesting thing is had PVF or LOVE been around,
these professional teams that just have started, I think she'd be playing
indoor volleyball still. But she didn't really wanna
go live abroad long term. She'd been abroad, but she
didn't wanna do that you know, for a year. She is really academically
focused. It was an opportunity to get her
MBA and then Covid hits. So she gets an additional year. And so, you know, she's three
years into playing this sport and by the end she is, you know, on the number one team... her
partner and her are the number
one pair in the country. So really fast. And I don't know beach, I don't wanna act like I
know the game very well, but it was fun watching and even from my eyes be able to say she's gonna get so much
better. I mean her, you know, she's
like, "Every time I play I'm learning
things". I, you know, I understand
the IQ of the game, the execution of the game. So I think it's exciting to
think what her potential is too. - Well let's talk about the
2023 season for your team. I remember speaking to you after you just advanced
to the Sweet 16 in Omaha and there was, you know,
tears in your eyes just because you were so emotional, it hadn't happened since 2016. And to do it in Omaha in
front of all these fans and just get that monkey off the
back. How important of a moment was
that for you in this program? - Yeah, I think it was
important for us to get there. 'cause we'd been hosting
the last few years and so you're supposed to get to the Sweet 16 and we'd lost
some... I think some years we beat
ourselves and other years we got
beat, you know, you're playing great teams at
that point. And you know, for us to come in
and and dominate Minnesota, a
team that was playing really, really well, you know, a big 10
team, all those different things was
huge. And I do think it felt like a
little bit of a monkey off our back. Maybe the players felt it but I can tell you the coaches
felt it, or at least us longtime
coaches, you know, why are we not getting
through this, you know, through this step at home. We've done everything
right from a preparation to get the opportunity to earn
this. We've got incredible fans, so how do we take the pressure off
our players so they can just play? And I thought that's what the
group did is they just played the way they were capable of
playing and good things happen and you know, and then we go and play a great Louisville
team, you know, lose in five, which was a heartbreaker for
sure. And you know, I think that has driven this group
a little bit, you know, that we were so close to
moving on even further and not getting there. - Yeah, you know, what have
been those emotions and vibes around preseason camp and just knowing that
team was so close of advancing even further. - Yeah, I mean I feel like a
little bit of a broken record, but I just love this group. I mean they just really are
they, they've worked really hard since
January. You know, we kind of start in
January, that's when season starts and you know, they've done the
things on and off the court I think
to have a great season. You know, there's always some
luck, you gotta stay healthy. You know, things have to
go your way sometimes. But I think we've done the
preparation to have success. We've spent a lot of
time talking, you know, we really lean into
culture on our team, right? Like of making sure we protect
that but, but how do we create maybe a
little bit, I don't even wanna say it as
anger, but like we're gonna, we're gonna get this done type
of idea. So we've really spent a
lot of time this spring and preseason so far of
like end game situations of we're gonna be great all the
time, but at end game watch out,
we're even gonna be better. - Well I know one player
that'll have a lot of a say in that is Norah Sis and you saw her struggle
through injury last season and missing 11 matches. But then, you know, picking
up right where she left off. How important of a piece
is she to this team, not only on the court, but also off the court
with her leadership? - Yeah, I mean, Norah
is such a great role model for this team. I think, I don't know
if I've coached a kid that loves volleyball
as much as she does. I mean she gets taken out of a
drill and she's like, can I go in? And we've limited
preseason a little bit more. It's our longest preseason ever. We have some preexisting in
injuries. We have a veteran group, so
we've gone to a little more than one practice
a day during preseason, but maybe a little bit less. And she's, you know, texting me what is going on with preseason? I want two a days. Like most
kids don't say those things. So I think, you know, she's just got an infectious
personality with the way that she works and that's in
strength and conditioning. That's what she does off the
court. And then obviously in the gym
she's just gonna set a tone of hard work, but being grateful, you know, you're never gonna have
Nora approach something of, I mean she just likes
everything. I mean I can't even
express how refreshing it is to have someone as a leader
in one of your best players that just finds the
bright side of everything. - It feels like Kendra Wait is
in that same category as well. Another All American returning
and the Big East preseason player of
the, or excuse me, Big East Player
of the Year last year. - Yep. - How big of an advantage is
that just to have two leaders on your team that can really set the tone? - Yeah, I mean Kendra
and Norah are different, but they're both the same in the
sense that they are just wired to love
the game. They want to go as hard as
they can every single day. They show up every day. They're
both incredible teammates. They're fiercely competitive. But it's not just Kendra and
Norah. I mean we've got veterans. I mean Kiara Reinhardt's
played her entire career. She's gonna be a fifth year this
year. You know, Ava Martin, some of
these kids that have played a lot,
we've got some transfers in, I know you're gonna talk
about some of those guys, but it is not just those two. It is a core group that lead the charge every
single day in practice so that the younger players can
hopefully follow and they have been of what is our expectation in the
gym every day to get better that will hopefully reap rewards once we're playing other teams. - And Ava Martin too, I mean
she's not the young player anymore. - Yeah - She is, you know,
into that junior role and a bigger role on this team. How have you seen her grow since the day she stepped in the gym? - Yeah, Ava, you know, wasn't
starting at the beginning of her freshman year, we were
trying to put her on the right side and by middle of her freshman year she
was playing three rotations. And then, you know, what
happened was last year when Norah got injured, we threw her
into the sixth rotation role and man, that kid stepped up and now statistically she's
one of our best passers. You know, her serve had been
erratic early and then she became one
of our best servers. I think the thing that's
impressive about Ava is when given the opportunity, she
has stepped up consistently, you know, after the Louisville
match she was like, she said I wanted to do more, I wanna do more, I wanna do
more. And I love that mentality.
I think she's a kid that still has a lot of growth
in her and wants to do more. So that's exciting. She, you
know, made the USA collegiate team,
I think that was really big for her confidence of saying,
okay, I am in this mix. So, you know, I think what makes us hopefully
a difficult challenge and I think we have other
outsides too, but between those two and then you know, you know
we've got Destiny Naadam Simpson,
you know Sophia, Wedndlick is new this year. Some
kids that can go into Ava TeStrake
in that outside slot that can all go six rotations. So you know, one kid goes to the
back row, another kid comes up,
but we still have offense coming from the back row too. - You also bring in
two talented transfers. First one I wanna bring up
Elise Goetzinger out of Kentucky who has experienced not
only in the NCAA tournament but also in national
championship match. How important will that be just
for experience on this team? - Yeah, Elise has been a great
addition. Like you said, she played
at Kentucky four years, had a wonderful experience. There was a starter on that
national championship team. I think the thing that
has been, well first of all she's just a delight. I mean she's a high, you'll
see when you watch her play, she's a high energy kid, but she like pretty early in
the spring grabbed the team and said, you know enough
with this like Sweet 16, like let's win this thing. We are talented. So someone
that has been in the room to say we can do these things, I think gives some credibility that no one else in our gym has. And so that's been great,
you know, she and Kiara Reinhardt were
club teammates so I think that made her transition, you
know, and we've played Kentucky
every year of her career. So she was pretty familiar
with the Creighton program and just has really eased
in nicely to the team. - And then Penn State's
Maddie Bilinovic what do you think she
brings in, especially with that Big 10 experience? - Yeah, you know, Maddie
was down to Creighton and Penn State when she came
through the recruiting process. So another kid that was pretty
familiar with the program. Had a phenomenal career at Penn
State. Sometimes as a DS, sometimes as
a libero. If you watch Maddie in the gym, she's just got a feistiness
about her. You know, she is
that kid that's just like, let's go, you know? But in a good way. Like I think the team has
really responded to her well. So she's brought a nice edge and again, you know last year they were a Sweet 16
team. I think that's as far as she's
been, but a kid that has consistently
been in the NCAA tournament and know what knows what that
feels like. - How about the four
freshmen incoming as well? What have you seen from them
early on? - Well, two of them came early. Emersen Strain and Nora
Wurtz came in January and then Alivia Hausmann and Sophia
Wendlick came this summer. So really great women. Emersen's a setter, Nora's
out of the Omaha area is, a middle blocker, Sophia is a
pin, and then Alivia's a DS/Libero. So you know, we kind
of hit every position. I think each of them have
already shown great strides. It was huge for Nora and Emersen to be able to
get in the weight room in the spring and kind of get that
going. But as far as just fitting in
culturally, they've been great assets to the
program. - Well let's talk that
non-conference schedule, because you do not make it
easy on your team whatsoever. All 11 non-con opponents
were top 61 RPI last season. Why do you do this number one, but how important is that
early test for your team? - Yeah. Well I think it is, you
know, ultimately we want to make a
run in the NCAA tournament. And so everything that we
do, you know, we get to determine our non-con
schedule, right? The Big East, the schedule
is set every year we get determined that non-con and I wanna put together as many as we call 'em resume builders
as we can. So every single team we're
gonna play this fall builds that resume if it goes in front
of the NCAA committee for us to A, get in that large bid to
host, potentially host a regional. And so those are all
things that we're trying to give ourselves an
opportunity to earn. And it's fun, you know,
every kid on this team got recruited with, we're gonna play
one of the toughest schedules in the
country. You know, we recruit against the
Big 10 a lot, the Big 12 a lot. And they're gonna say
our conference is better than the Big East Conference. And numbers wise it
is. Big East is great. We were sixth in
the country last year out of 30 some conferences. So we are a great conference,
but right now the Big 10 and the Big 12, SEC and
the ACC are ahead of us. And so they use that in
the recruiting world. Well, what we'll talk about
is we just flip the script, you know, so our tough,
tough schedule is at the get go and we get after it and then
we get into a very rigorous good Big East league with an
opportunity to potentially win it if we play
well. So, and go into the NCAA
tournament with confidence. So it's just a different order
to a lot of those games, but it'll be
fun. I mean, there's no rest for the
weary. - I mean, in that Big East talk
too, you're always the number one and or number two between
yourself and Marquette. But how is that a point of
emphasis for you when you're talking
to these recruits of, "Hey, you can win a conference
championship here", and there's always going
to be that standard and expectation at Creighton to
be in that one/two conversation? - Well, I think it's, you know,
a lot of times I bring recruits in and
say, "Have you ever won a
championship?". And some have. I won a state
championship or I won a club national
championship. But most haven't. I mean, it's
hard to win a championship and a lot of the teams that
we'll recruit against will say, Hey, if we finish eighth in
the Big 10, we're gonna go to the NCAA tournament. And I'm like, yeah, we have
a chance to win the Big East. And we've been to 12
straight NCAA tournaments. So winning is fun. I mean I'm going through the recruiting process
with my daughter, I'm like, don't underestimate how fun
winning is. So keep that in mind as you
start looking at schools. So, you know, we lean into
the fact that we're gonna, I mean, again, last year we
weren't picked to win the Big East, you know, a
lot of times we haven't been able
to, but we did, you know, we had opportunities and we
won the tournament title and we tied Marquette
for the regular season title. So those are experiences
that not every person gets to experience in their life and
they have that opportunity here. - Well, I also wanna touch
on the growth of volleyball because I know you're very
passionate about that. You're the president of the
AVCA. How much have you seen within
that growth? There's four nationally
televised Creighton matches and maybe even more upcoming.
Nebraska Public Media will have three matches. How important is that to
you and just your mission? - Oh, I could go on a
little rant here, Ana, for a long time, but you know, volleyball is booming right now, and I think it is awesome
that people are starting to see how much people love this
sport. And we're seeing, last year we just busted attendance
records nationally. That's people's butts in the
seats. That's television eyes. All these things that are
showing. And the unique thing with
volleyball is I mean, pretty much all sports
unfortunately are kind of standing on the back of men,
right? They get that time because
men's sports get it. Volleyball is the only
sport that is standing, that women's volleyball is watched more than men's
volleyball. And we wanna grow men's
volleyball. But given the runway,
given the opportunity, people are watching. I mean
the Big 10 led this, the BTN and I think you guys, you know,
really led the way to say, Hey, we're gonna put this on tv. And people have shown up. I mean, your viewership is, you have a lot of people
watching. And so I think that's the,
the message that we continue to try to, to pound is that
give us the opportunity. Put us on major networks, you
know, our NCAA tournament. We're not getting every
match on. We're not on linear television. We need every match on linear
television. And we need you guys to tell the
story. You know? Human interest
stories. I mean the Olympics just did
this. They tell a two minute
human interest story and all of a sudden you're
invested. Well, given that
opportunity for volleyball, we think our viewership
can even jump more. - Well coach, if you
build it, they'll come. Thank you so much for your
time and best of luck this season. - Thank you so much. (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) - Pleased to be joined by the
head coach of the Omaha Mavericks, Matt
Buttermore. Coach, thanks so much for joining us today. - Good to be here. - Well, I wanna start first on that 2023 season and just reflecting back, it was a tough start in
non-conference, but your team remained
resilient. How do you think back on that
2023 season? - I haven't been thinking about
it a lot lately, to be honest. Let me think. You know, we had a
lot of highlights. We had some pretty, we had highs and lows was really what it was. You know, we went to the
tournament for the first time. We had volleyball day. And we had the losing streak. So, and we learned a lot
through all of that. It was a good process for
our team, for our young team and to go through a lot of
adversity and really in a lot of ways
come out on top at the end. So that's
probably the biggest thing to remember from that season. - Yeah, I think it can
all be encompassed by that five setter in the
championship. How do you think back on
that moment of overcoming all that adversity to win the
first title in program history? - Yeah, I looked bleak
there for a little bit and I was just proud of our
group for hanging tough there at
the end of that third set. And you know, we really, as a staff thought if we could
grab one set that would be, you know, we just needed to win
one set. We hadn't won any in the
last couple, so a lot of close sets, sets we were
ahead in and we just needed to grab the
one set and that I was so happy for that
group. I was happy for the
seniors, I was happy for all of our alumni and just, you
know, like I said, happy for our young group is,
you know, our goal is to get back there and,
and win games this year. - Yeah. And now this group
has a taste of getting to the NCAA tournament. How will that serve this team? So well heading it into this
next year. - I think we understand the
importance of the non-conference even more. And not even just in terms
of kind of getting ready for anything, but in
terms of RPI, in terms of building confidence against
the kinds of teams we'll need to beat in the NCAA tournament
and learning from those and really taking those
lessons, transferring 'em through conference play. And so we're ready
for the postseason of our conference tournament
as well as as potential postseason - Coach, when you look at your roster and talk about those
impact returners, who comes to mind first and those
impact players that will really, I think, make their mark this season in
2024. - Ooh, we got quite a few, you
know, Ivy's back at Setter, she's doing a great job. Ivy Leuck. Kenna's back
for her fifth year. She's doing a lot of good
things. She's playing a lot of
all around volleyball, not just in the middle right
now. So we will look to see how that develops throughout
the rest of the fall. Amanda's doing a nice job on the
outside and you know, Emily had
a setback. Huss had a setback with a shoulder in spring ball, but she should be back here at
some point. And then she was our, you know, down the stretch leading
blocker in the conference. (upbeat music) Oh, Shayla is, you know,
going on year four, feels like year seven. She's been playing just about
every game. Shayla McCormick for us. And we look for her to
have a big impact too. So I'm sure I forgot somebody in
there. Well, Kali. Kali Jurgensmeier.
She missed a lot of last year with the knee
injury. Came back at the end, really
provided a lift for our team and has been healthy all spring and into the fall here. So, you know, one thing, you
know, as a staff we're really working
on figuring out the right lineup 'cause it's not
always apparent with it's a good problem to have 'cause we gotta figure out where
to, where to put everybody. - Well, and now this
team is trying to defend that Summit League title. What is your message heading
into this 2024 season to your squad? - Oh, same as always. You know, our goal here is
always to go a little faster than we
did the year before in terms of curriculum. So how are we doing in the gym? Can we learn faster this year? You know, are we... and the thing that we learned
at, we talked about the '23
season are our values. So today at practice
we're gonna kind of grade how we've been doing our
values and what, and these are the values that
the team has come up with that they think will be really
important to them this semester. And, you know, those, those
are really the messages. We know the goals,
we know what's in front of us. We've talked about kind of a great opportunity. We had Italy, we have a lot of
returners, we have some talented freshmen, so we have a great
opportunity ahead of us, but we gotta make sure we
take advantage of it, right? It doesn't just happen. So we've gotta keep,
you know, accelerating what we're doing, keep learning,
you know, having courage in practice, in big games
no matter where it is. Practicing, going for it.
Practicing making big mistakes and to take advantage
of some of the positives we have
going for us this year. - Well coach, we appreciate the
time. Thanks so much for joining us
and best of luck this season. - Alright, thank you. (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) - Excited to be chatting
with Rick Squiers, who's been at the helm of
Nebraska-Kearney for 26 seasons. Coach, appreciate the time
today. - Well I appreciate you having
me. It's an exciting time of the
year. - Absolutely. Well, thinking
back to last season, how do you reflect on 2023 as a
whole and going to the NCAA
tournament once again? - Yeah, I mean it was kind of
an interesting season in that, you know, we started with the
outdoor game and you know, all the attention
was on the stadium game. So we had a couple
of weird transitions and then we tried to, well
we actually did break the NCAA Division II record with
our first home match. So there was all kinds of things
going on before we even played a Division
II opponent in a real game. So it felt like our team got
a little bit better every week and it felt like for a lot
of the season we were trying to pull a little bit more out of
'em, especially on the defensive
component. But down the stretch, especially
in the NCAA tournament, I thought we played some of
our best volleyball. And so that was satisfying to
see. We were really competitive at
the end, felt like we had a team
that, you know, in a lot of regions we could have come
out, but you know, it takes
some doing to get out of this region, that's for sure. - Yeah, this team just fell
short to Wayne State in five sets. What does that say though,
just about the level of talent for volleyball in Nebraska
at that DII level? - Yeah, I mean it's a
little bit like Coach Cook says it's in our DNA here. And that goes from, you know, the ten and unders all the way
up through the college programs and at every level. I mean NAIA,
junior college, Division II, Division I, you know, the
expectations are always high and volleyball's a major
sport on everybody's campus and in everybody's school. And so it's also really satisfying when you can
have some homegrown talent on your roster, which most
of our programs do. But we're also seeing a little
bit of an expansion with some of the bordering states
trying to follow suit. And I think that now it's
more, a little bit more of a Midwest thing than
just in Nebraska thing. So there's great volleyball
everywhere. - Of course there's always
a high standard at UNK, but with your culture that you've instilled at the
university, where would you say that is right now and just where
you want that culture to continue to
grow? - Yeah, I think it
starts with, you know, high expectations and continuing to recruit
the kind of people who wanna be challenged and who are comfortable
being uncomfortable because you know, you're
gonna play a lot of matches where the expectation is
winning. And so it really starts
with continuing to try to recruit the right kind
of people who aren't afraid of that kind of challenge. And so we're fortunate
that we've been able to do that for a long time. I like the fact that this year's
team has some upperclassmen who have really decided to take
on some of those leadership roles. And so I think we'll
enter the season with all of the same lofty goals
that we usually have as far as competing for an MIAA
championship and trying to be back
in the NCAA tournament and making a run at a
national championship. So, you know, it's
one thing to say that, but you have to come in the gym
every day and, you know, put in behaviors
that give you a chance to make those things happen. I think our team is willing to
do that. - Yeah, there's plenty
of experience on this team. Of your returners, who are some of those faces that
you look to make a big impact this year? - Yeah, I mean it's gonna be a, I think a balanced team but you know, probably
starts with the fact that you have a returning All
American setter in Peyton Neff who's continued to get
better every season. She'll be a third year starter. Now she's already a college
graduate, so she's in graduate school, so she's a mature individual
anyway, but I think she's really
gained confidence. She played well down
the stretch last year. Asher Regier, who will be
a senior this year for us, had a really good postseason and we'll look to her to kind of carry a heavy load
offensively and maybe even play some
back row for us this year. And then we have a fifth year
player, Lauren Taubenheim, who we asked to play Libero last
year because we got a grad
transfer who came in and played in what was her
position as a right side. And so she played a great
Libero for us last year and she'll kind of be back in
the mix this year competing for a right side position. Either way she's gonna do
something important for us as far as being an all around
player and you know, especially the
ball control and service receive and things
like that. So it's a little bit more of a veteran feel on this
year's team than maybe we've had for a couple of years, maybe
just because we have more
upperclassmen. We've got a grad transfer who was an All American libero
coming to us from Hillsdale and so I think it's
gonna be a little bit of an older team and that
always makes you feel a little bit better as a coach. - Well coach, lastly, what's
your message to your squad in heading
into this 2024 season? What do you tell 'em? - I think we say, you
know, embrace the challenge. The league is already tough but we were dealt
maybe a little bit of a tougher break than usual because we have a new schedule
this year, so some teams play home seven
times and away nine times and yeah, the rest of the league it's nine
at home and seven in away. So we've got a little of a weird
schedule. We play two more road conference
matches than we'd like. So there's a handful
of things like that. The league is good, we've
got a new team from Arkansas, of course we gotta go there this
year. So there's gonna be a lot of
those types of things that maybe don't set up as
favorably as you would like. So we're gonna ask him to say
bring it and we'll face all comers, all
challenges and we wanna play the best and we wanna be one of the teams that's fighting down the
stretch. - Well coach thanks so much for
the time and we look forward to watching
your squad here in 2024. - Appreciate you having me. Go
Lopers, (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) - We're pleased to be
joined by Scott Kneifl, the head coach at Wayne State. Coach, thanks so much for
spending some time with us. - Absolutely. Thanks for having
me. - Well let's start with the '23
season. Your team makes it to the Elite
Eight. How proud are you of that group and how do you reflect
back on what year was. - Extremely proud. It was a great, great season. Winning the Northern
Sun without, you know, without a loss was a huge feat. Making the Elite Eight
was another one as well. Ultimately our goal is to win
a national championship here and we really feel like
our team was, you know, three points away last
year, which is unfortunate. But very proud of, of the steps they took
and the way they did it. - Well we have to give
some props to you as well. You won National Coach of the Year at the Division II
level. What did it mean to receive that
honor? - It was a great honor. Obviously we really know
those individual honors, I mean, they're a team award. We really feel that way
here at Wayne State. I mean I have
two great assistants in Kim DePew and Katie Morris. They're phenomenal and it makes it really easy
when you're coaching great players and a great team. So those awards, they mean a
lot, but at the same time the
team awards mean a lot more. - Well I know the standard
is so high at Wayne State and the culture is a huge part
of that. How would you say that culture
leads to success at your school? - I mean, I think it's
everything. We try to run everything
here like a family. It is a big family and you know, we have
a lot of players that are really good volleyball
players, but they're great people, you
know, they're great in the community, they're great in the classroom and it carries over to the
court. They're obviously, you have to
be a great volleyball player to play here, but you know,
they're just great people and you know we don't do drama here at Wayne
State and you know, they just
carry that over to the court and it's just,
they're pleasure to coach. - Well, speaking of great
volleyball players, who are some of those impact returners you
look to in this 2024 season? - I mean we have Taya Beller and Maggie Brahmer, both two
time first team All Americans back, which is in the middle,
which is super exciting. Two of the best players in the
country and they're very, very
physical at the net. They do great things. They
do it in different ways, but we're excited about
having both of those two back. We also have Channatee
Robles on the outside who played a key role in last
year's team and she's, you know, looking
to expand her role this year as a six rotation player. So we do have some depth back
from last year's team along with some transfers and, and some very talented freshmen that are fighting for a job
right now. And right now we're just trying
to put this team together and see how far we can make it. - Well coach for the 2024
season, I know the expectations are
always there to be great for this team, but what kind of message do you give
your squad heading into those first few matches? - You know, I mean we just
wanna get better every day and we wanna get better every
match and you know, in the last two
years I believe, you know, we've lost six times. I mean, I think for something
like 60, 61 and six over the last two years and this team, we know
we could lose, you know, six times in the first three or four weeks, you know,
hopefully not, but it could happen now. We just want to continue to get
better and peak at the end of the year. We have a lot of newcomers
like we talked about, so, you know, we're just
hoping that we can come out, you know, obviously we
wanna play well early but it's just about
getting better every day. - Well coach thank you
so much for the time. We appreciate you hopping on
this show and best of luck in 2024. - Thanks so much. We appreciate
it. (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) - We're joined now by the head
coach of the Omaha Supernovas. Coach, thank you so much for being with us today. How are you
doing? - Yeah, I'm great. It's good to
be back. I feel like we're starting
to get almost live again and - You're wearing the
championship shirt so we have to start there. - Yes, yes. - How amazing was
that championship run? - It was so fun. I think just
for our sport of volleyball to be a part of that inaugural
season and with this group of Supernovas,
that team was so special. And to be able to host it
in Omaha, I mean there were so many elements that
made it special for us. - And one key player will return
to Omaha, Brooke Nuneviller. How important and impactful
is that for this team? - Yeah, I mean Brooke
obviously had a huge impact on so many different levels as
a captain, as a player, just as a competitor. And then
just what she brought for the organization and the
team. So we're excited to have her
back. Obviously Naty, she's back as a
setter and Sophie our
young middle, you know. But it's cool to have a core
group that kind of experienced that and started with us. - And one new face to
this team, Reagan Cooper, she was the rookie of
the year last season. How important will that be to add another threat
on the offensive end? - I was excited for multiple
reasons. Reagan and I kind of built a
relationship last year going into the first season 'cause
she was coming out of KU. And so I loved seeing her
succeed and be so successful this first
season. And so to have her in Omaha now,
it's special for her as well as us 'cause her dad obviously
played at Nebraska. So it's cool on that - Everyone somehow has ties to
Nebraska. - Somehow some way. - And so do other players on
this team. Can you take us through some of those Nebraska ties
specifically to the Cornhuskers? - Yes. So Kaitlyn Hord, Kayla
Caffey, those two are huge pieces
in the middle position. They're gonna be impactful but their energy about
coming back is so huge. So we're excited to have that. - And also Allison Whitten
at Creighton University joining. How awesome is that too, to not only have the Nebraska
ties but also the Bluejays. - I mean to be from Omaha and I talked to her multiple
times. Obviously she knows a lot of the
players that were on our team last
season. And so to get her tied back in and her just being in
Omaha, it was a great fit. Obviously Briana
Holman's also coming back and that was fun just because that was kind of during season then I
started talking to her. But it's so nice to feel the
energy of the people that want to come back to Nebraska
because of the sport. I mean our sport is so special and the network in the
community. But to talk to those players
that are so excited about Nebraska and coming back to Omaha,
it makes it special. - Well, I mean you can see
how much this community cares about volleyball, not only
at the collegiate level, but obviously it's
translated to pro as well and just the thousands of
people that would come out to Supernovas' matches. How inspiring is that to you
just to see the success in that inaugural year in terms of
the fans? - I think as coaches and
players, we kind of take it for granted because you're in
the grind and you're doing things, but
the community involvement and the support that we felt
made this special the whole season. And I think working with the
young, the youth but also the parents of those
kids and when they would come out and see us, you could just feel
the energy and that's what makes it
special, especially being in Omaha. - Well, another special part of
this team, Gina Mancuso Prososki just had
her first baby, Charlotte May. How exciting is that for
this team to welcome in a little one for the
organization? - Yeah, talk about, talk
about full circle. Gina like started with our
program. She's been a huge piece of
our organization just even through all of the, you know,
changes throughout the season. And she will continue to be and now Charlotte, I
can't wait to go meet her. I haven't met her yet, but
we're so excited for them and that's such a special time and it was such a special kind
of timing situation for Gina. So it's huge for us to have that
as a kind of momentum going into the
season. - Well coach, we'll leave you on
this expectations for this season. What's your message to your
team in terms of those? - I think this season
there's always the wins and losses that people
wanna measure a season on, but it's really gonna be the
growth again. I mean we're gonna have a really
new group but their a special talented
group and so it's gonna be
building that chemistry and trying to repeat. - Absolutely. Well Supernovas
are trying to go back-to-back. Coach, thank you
so much for your time and best of luck this next
season. - Thank you. It's great to be
back. (upbeat music) - We now welcome in volleyball
beat writer Lincoln Arneal and it's crazy to think
Lincoln the fall season is right underway. Lincoln, just thinking about
these three Division I programs starting with
Nebraska, what are some of the biggest storylines
for that program? - I think it's how Nebraska
rebounds from that loss in national
championship match too. They bring back a lot of
experience. Who is gonna step up and kind of take control of this
team? And really they added a lot more
talent. So the gym's gonna be
a lot more competitive and how they're gonna
deal with that motivation of improving on that. I mean there's only one
spot that they can improve upon. Can they reach it and also
deal with a lot more pressure of expectations because I don't
know if that was there last year. They were a very young team and I think they've
surprised a lot of people by going undefeated as long as
they did so they got a target on their
back. How are they going to really
focus on that and kind of elevate their play and deal with the expectations that comes with being a target. - How about the competition
internally as well? Where do you see the
biggest position battles at? - I think that the two question
marks are also tie into where they got transfers to. I mean I don't think outside
hitter was a big area of need, but then they go add the 2022
Big 10 Player of the Year in Taylor Landfair to
the returning starters. Lindsay Krause who was
playing like All American before she got hurt and Harper
Murray who was an All American as a
freshman. So I'm really gonna be
interested to see how they do that. I mean and then you look
at the other transfer, Leyla Blackwell and Middle
Blocker Nebraska returns two starters in that position. And Rebekah Allick and Andi
Jackson. How does she, how does
she fit into that mix? Are they gonna rotate them
more just to keep them fresh? 'Cause it's a physical grind
to play in the middle and now they have a lot more
bodies and a lot more depth that
they can work with there. - How about someone that might
surprise fans this season? Who would you say that
would be this season? - I think this would be Olivia
Mauch. I mean as a freshman
we talked to John Cook after the spring match out in
Kearney and he said he kind of had
plans to red shirt Olivia and kind of, they have a lot of
depth. They have Lexi Rodriguez, Laney
Choboy, but she forced her way
into that conversation. It's gonna be fun to see how
they use her, whether serving specialist or kind of as an emergency back
row and really kind of figuring out what her role in the team is
too. 'cause she's too good to
sit on the bench all season. She's already proved that in her
short time here at Nebraska. - Well, thinking of Big
10 expansion, who are some of those teams of that four do
you think will be the biggest competition for Nebraska? Or what kind of dates are you circling
if you're a Husker fan? - I think of the
four former Pac-12 teams, the one I think is the most
challenging is gonna be Oregon. They lost a lot. They lost I think seven seniors
who graduated off the team, all signed professional
contracts, but they had a lot of talent in
the wings. (upbeat music) And Mimi Colyer is one of the best players in
the league on day one, when she joins the program at
Oregon. So I think they're gonna do it. But also don't forget about USC. A lot of familiar faces there.
Ally Battenhorst is there. Tyler Hildebrand is a former
assistant coach at Nebraska, so they're gonna be fun
to watch as well too. And then I think as far as the
rest of the Big 10, Wisconsin they're always locked and
loaded. Purdue was one of the, also one of the youngest teams in the Big
10. They return all of their players and Penn State's gonna be fun
to watch too with their kind of mix of returning players in
Jess Mrzuik and more familiar faces and
some transfers to their team. - Well let's move on to the
Creighton Bluejays. A team that made it to the Sweet 16
last season. Where do you feel those biggest storylines lie with the
Bluejays? - I think, can Creighton get
over the hump? They've been knocking on the
door so long. They have, they have the
talent to be a Final four. Norah Sis, Kendra Wait, they're gonna be the
ones leading that charge. And they proved last
year when Norah was out with her injuries, they got a
lot of depth on the roster as well
too. So you hope one of
these years they finally get to break the Hump one
can they beat Nebraska? They've never done that.
So I think that's one of the doors they're knocking
on. But two, can they make a Final
Four? And they have the talent and
experience to be able to do that this year. And so I think can they do that? And it's hopeful that they can, - It's been such a consistent
program for Coach Booth. Why do you think that
is with just the culture that's been set there at
Creighton? - I think it's the standard she
sets. I mean she's very particular
about the athletes. She recruits, the training
they go through and the level of coaching
that she provides. And if she's had a lot
of stability on her staff there as well too that the kind
of, it's easy to teach and preach kind of performing
at a high level when it's the same people preaching that
message every single year of your career. So they get a lot of high
caliber athletes in there, a lot of local products and they're
really coaching them up and to be able to
perform to be one of the, the Big East juggernaut. - Well, let's move on to the
Summit League with the Omaha Mavericks, a team that's fresh off its first ever
NCAA tournament appearance. How impressive, first of
all is has the job been that Matt Buttermore's done at
Omaha and just what he continues
to do with this team? - Yeah, I mean he's got a lot of, there's a lot of
competitions. Not only just in town with
Creighton, but a lot of other, I mean,
Nebraska's also taken up a lot of the air in the conversation, but a lot of the Division
II teams as well too. So he's being able to
figure out what it takes to compete at the Division I
level and done it at a really high, 'cause in their league
there's no margin for error. You need to peak in November, in
December, so you could win their
conference tournament 'cause it's a one bid league and they, they fell short
a couple of the past years. They, they could be on their
second or third straight appearance
too, but they finally broke through
last year. It was really exciting to
see. But Matt Buttermore has done a great job of
building that culture up and kind of following
the culture of Nebraska and really again, done it
with a lot of local products. And that's fun to see when
you see players from Omaha, Skutt, players from the Lincoln
area, players from small towns
really kind of build up and achieve success at Omaha. - Well, beyond the collegiate
level, it's also very evident
in the professional scale as well in Omaha that fans
are here and ready for it. Now there's two teams in Omaha. How big is that just for the
sport of volleyball and its growth? - I think it gives
something for players and fans to stay in
sync with volleyball. Not just from August to
December. December you can go into
hibernation and start thinking about spring
football. No, you can't do that. You gotta follow, there's the
Supernovas and then the League One is also starting to team up next year
too. So it's fun to continue to go to volleyball matches all year
round and make it kind of, make it
more part of the culture even more than it
is too. So I mean, it was fun
going up to the CHI Center and, and seeing those huge crowds, those more than 10,000 people
there to watch volleyball
on a random March evening. So it's fun. It adds more and it's always
great to see the sport continue to
grow. - Yeah. In your time covering
the sport of volleyball, how much have you seen it grow
from your first days to right now? - It's grown a lot. I mean, I've covered
volleyball for 20 years and just kind of from
the days of the Coliseum to even the last six years
when I've done it more on a full-time basis too. I mean, we started a podcast
where we talk about volleyball on a weekly basis during the
fall too. But again, all year round
we're talking about volleyball and it's fun to see
and connect with fans who really enjoy the sport
and enjoy following it. It's, yeah, people out
there can't get enough and that's why they're
watching this program too. - Absolutely. Well, we are
excited for the fall season. Lincoln Arneal, thank you
so much for joining us. - Thank you. - And as the fall
season gets underway, we want to wish all these
programs the best of luck and we look forward to
bringing you exciting matches this fall. A special thanks goes out to
John Cook, Kirsten Bernthal Booth, Matt
Buttermore Rick Squiers, Scott Kneifl, Laura "Bird" Kuhn and Lincoln Arneal for joining
us to discuss the state of
volleyball. I'm Ana Bellinghausen and we'll see you back
here soon on your home for volleyball, Nebraska Public
Media. (upbeat music)
Intro (upbeat music) - [narrator] coming up
on nebraska stories, a defining moment in
women's volleyball, (upbeat music) an outfit for every occasion, (upbeat music) duckpin bowling in potter, (upbeat music) and the ancestral
corn of the pawnee takes root again in nebraska. (upbeat music) (upbeat music)... Read more
>> steve erwin: hello, i'm steve erwin, president of us bank in nebraska. we are proud to join net in sponsoring husker volleyball. us bank has been supporting the program for more than 20 years. the coaches and young women involved in husker volleyball, have represented nebraska as true champions.... Read more
Give us a little jump. -we can see instantly how
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Intro (upbeat music) - [narrator] coming up
on "nebraska stories," the kiewit luminarium sparks
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comes to omaha, (upbeat music) an exiled artist finds
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(people cheering) - [announcer] for sure, here's
mancuso from the back row, - [cheerleaders] c-c-o-n-n - [gina] when i finished in 2012 with the university
of nebraska, lincoln, i had two choices and that's it. the first one was, end my
career, move on with life, then the only other option i
had was... Read more
(gentle music) (gentle music) - [narrator] every
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championship at season's end. (gentle music) even though the 2023
season didn't conclude with a fairytale ending, the journey changed
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of women's... Read more
(upbeat music) -[narrator] inside
nebraska wesleyan's elder theater center, actually, underneath is a
whimsical wardrobe wonderland. (upbeat music) (upbeat music) -[julie] there are about 1000
linear feet of rec space, 1500 linear feet of shoe space. we have items from as
early as maybe the 1880s, all... Read more
(upbeat music) - [narrator] coming up
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>>> this >>> i think this was a really, really hard summer. i asked cory, i said, i don't care, just give me a tough team. that's all i care about. >> competition is everything in our program. so i mean, you could go out there this week and be a one, and look up next week and be a three if you... Read more
Intro (upbeat music) - [narrator] coming up
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(upbeat music) [mike] at an age when most folks retire, betty sayers became a beekeeper. there. it could be that i was
never a good bridge player and never learned to play golf. so who knows? it calms the bees. you know what you can do? -what's that?
-mister. you can just keep puffing that. okay. i'm... Read more
I'm larry punteney, this is "nebraska high school classics." [announcer] kick off to the end zone. that gets by rick, run will score. get ready to relive iconic games, nail-biting finishes and unforgettable stories from nebraska public
media's nsaa championship archive. from late game comebacks and... Read more