
Photo by: Alex DeBuhr
2025 Creighton Volleyball Season Recap
12/31/2025 2:16:00 PM | Volleyball
2025 Year-End Recap
• Download as a PDF
  What began as a season with significant change saw the Creighton Volleyball program end up in a familiar place...the Elite Eight.
  The Bluejays entered the 2025 season with plenty of question marks after the departure of four All-Americans and a legendary head coach.Â
  First Team All-American and two-time BIG EAST Player of the Year Kendra Wait graduated, as did Second Team All-American and 2023 BIG EAST Player of the Year Norah Sis. Also gone were middle blocker Elise Goetzinger and libero Maddy Bilinovic, both of whom earned Honorable Mention All-America honors in their lone season with the Bluejays. Kirsten Bernthal Booth, who transformed Creighton Volleyball over the previous 22 years and was the architect behind building a national powerhouse, also resigned in the spring of 2025 to take a job with League One Volleyball.
  Despite all the changes, Creighton domination the competition en route to winning a 12th straight BIG EAST regular-season title in Brian Rosen's first season taking over the program.
  Creighton opened the season ranked 12th nationally and faced defending national champion and second-ranked Penn State at the AVCA First Serve in Lincoln to open the season, falling in three sets in Rosen's debut.
  The following weekend CU headed to Madison for the Opening Spike Classic to meet No. 5 Texas and No. 14 Kansas. The Jays were swept by the Longhorns in a rematch of CU's Sweet 16 win over UT in the 2024 NCAA Tournament before breaking through with a 3-2 win over KU..
  The Jays then headed west to the Trojan Invitational, beating San Diego and UC Santa Barbara before an undermanned Bluejay squad lost to host USC to close the weekend.
  Creighton debuted a new floor the weekend of Sept. 12-14 when it hosted a loaded field in the Bluejay Invitational that included No. 4 Louisville as well as eventual league champions Rice and Northern Iowa. CU lost to the Cardinals, then swept the Owls and Panthers.
  A midweek match against No. 1 Nebraska on Sept. 16th attracted the largest regular-season volleyball-only indoor crowd in NCAA history, as 17,675 fans descended upon CHI Health Center Omaha for the in-state tussle. Creighton won the second and fourth sets but would fall to the Cornhuskers 15-9 in the fifth set. Nebraska would open the season 33-0 before losing in the Elite Eight.
  The Jays closed out non-conference action with 3-0 sweeps over South Florida and No. 17 Kansas at the Creighton Classic, giving CU a 7-5 record against a gauntlet in advance of BIG EAST play.
  Creighton dominated the BIG EAST, going 16-0 while dropping just four sets in league play. The biggest test came at home on Nov. 1, where rival Marquette won the second and third sets to take a 2-1 lead inside D.J. Sokol Arena. The Bluejays would regroup, taking the final two sets 25-17 and 15-10.
  Creighton also won its sixth straight BIG EAST Tournament title the weekend of Nov. 22-23 in Milwaukee. CU swept host and fourth-seeded Marquette before crushing second-seeded Xavier in the final.
  Armed with a 20-match win streak, Creighton earned a No. 3 seed in the Lexington Region (No. 10 overall) and opened NCAA Tournament play at home for the fifth straight season.
  CU faced a major challenge in the First Round when it faced Big Sky Conference champion Northern Colorado. The Bears won the second and third sets -- both by 25-23 scores -- putting CU in a hole it hadn't faced since five weeks earlier against Marquette. The experience paid off, as the Jays bounced back to win the final two sets to avoid a historic upset.
  One night later, Creighton secured its third straight trip to the Sweet 16 with a 3-1 victory over Northern Iowa in front of a sold out crowd of 2,554 at D.J. Sokol Arena.
  CU would next trek to Lexington, Ky., for an NCAA Regional Semifinal battle against No. 8 Arizona State. Creighton dropped the second set against the Sun Devils before finishing off a 3-1 win to clinch a second straight Elite Eight berth.
  Creighton's dreams of playing in the Final Four in Kansas City fell just short, as host Kentucky proved why it was the nation's No. 2 team with a 25-19, 25-13, 25-18 sweep over the Bluejays.
  Three seniors carried Creighton in 2025. Ava Martin (4.48 kps., .324%, 0.40 saps.) and Kiara Reinhardt (2.53 kps., .447%, 1.03 bps.) were both named Second Team All-Americans by the AVCA, were both named College Sports Communicators Academic All-Americans and were both First Round Draft picks in the Major League Volleyball Draft. Martin was named BIG EAST Player of the Year as well as BIG EAST Tournament MVP while firmly establishing her place in Bluejay lore as one of the program greats.
  Annalea Maeder (10.75 aps., 2.67 dps., 0.40 saps.), a Cal transfer, earned Third Team All-America accolades in addition to BIG EAST Setter of the Year recognition.
  In addition to the three seniors, sophomore Jaya Johnson (2.40 kps., 0.81 bps., .270%) earned All-BIG EAST acclaim and Abbey Hayes (1.88 kps.) was named to the BIG EAST's All-Freshman Team.
  Other key contributors included Eloise Brandewie (1.40 ksp., 1.02 bps., .297%), defensive specialists/liberos Sydney Breissinger (3.10 dps., 0.36 saps.) and Saige Damrow (2.56 dps.) and serving specialist Nora Wurtz (0.60 saps.). Wurtz broke Creighton's single-match (9) and single-season (60) records for aces during her redshirt freshman campaign.
  Destiny Ndam-Simpson (1.47 kps.) started strong before an injury in September cut her season short, Alivia Hausmann was used to serve and play defense, and Ivy Leuck, Sky McCune and Ashlyn Paymal all proved vaulable in a reserve role.
  Creighton finished the year with a 28-6 record, including a 14-2 mark at home (14-1 at D.J. Sokol Arena). The Bluejays also set program records for total home attendance (52,716) and average home attendance (3,295).
Creighton Coaches
Brian Rosen was named the fourth head coach in modern Creighton Volleyball history on April 6, 2025, as he was promoted following the departure of 22-year head coach Kirsten Bernthal Booth. He went 28-6 in his initial season as Creighton head coach, defeating No. 14 Kansas on Aug. 31 for his first win on the Bluejay sideline. He became the BIG EAST's first rookie head coach since 2014 to win 20+ matches in his first year in the league, the only rookie head coach in league history to win multiple NCAA Tournament matches, and the first new coach to win 28+ matches in his first season.
  Named the 2024 AVCA National Assistant Coach of the Year, Rosen served as a Creighton assistant from 2022-24, during which time CU went 88-13, swept the BIG EAST regular-season and tournament tiles each fall, and defeated 10 Top 25 opponents.
  Rosen led Creighton to the BIG EAST regular-season and Tournament titles in 2025 and a return to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament.
  The 2008 South Carolina grad went 45-17 as head coach at Division II Nova Southeastern from 2019-21, though the 2020 season was cancelled due to COVID-19 without playing a match.
  Rosen was assisted by Angie Oxley Behrens, Adam Kessenich and Izzy Ashburn.
Creighton's NCAA Tournament History
Creighton made its 15th appearance in the NCAA Tournament in the past 16 years after earning a 14th straight bid to the Big Dance. The Bluejays made their NCAA debut in 2010 and have been in every tournament since then with the exception of 2011.
  The Bluejays are 20-15 in those 15 appearances, going 12-3 in First Round play, 5-7 in the Second Round, 3-2 in the Regional Semifinals and 0-3 in the Regional Finals. The Bluejays are 9-4 at home, 9-4 in neutral-site matches and 2-7 in true road matches.Â
  Brian Rosen was in the NCAA Tournament for the first time as Creighton head coach, going 3-1 in the postseason.
NCAA Tourney Streak
The inclusion of Creighton Volleyball into the 2025 NCAA Tournament extends an impressive streak for Bluejay athletics.
  This year marks the 39th straight academic calendar year that Creighton has had at least one NCAA Tournament team.
14 Straight NCAA's
Creighton Volleyball has made the NCAA Tournament in each of the last 14 seasons. They are the first women's team in any sport at Creighton to make 14 straight NCAA Tournament appearances.
  The only other sport in Creighton history to make even 10 straight NCAA Tournament appearances is the men's soccer program, which qualified in 17 straight seasons from 1992-2008.
   Creighton is one of seven teams nationally to have appeared in each of the last 14 NCAA Tournaments (2012-25). That group features BYU, Creighton, Florida, Kentucky, Nebraska, Penn State and Texas.
  There are also nine schools that have appeared in 15 of the last 16 NCAA Tournaments, a group that includes Creighton, Minnesota, Purdue and Stanford. Florida, Kentucky, Nebraska, Penn State, and Texas have appeared in every NCAA Tournament since at least 2010.
We're Elite
The Volleyball program joined the Men's Soccer program (in 2002-03, 2011-12 and 2014-15) as the only programs in the history of Creighton Athletics history to make back-to-back Elite Eight's.
  Brian Rosen joined former Men's Soccer coach Elmar Bolowich as the second head coach in the history of Creighton Athletics to take his first team to an Elite Eight, and also joined Bolowich as the second head coach in the history of Creighton Athletics to win his first three NCAA Tournament games/matches.
Against NCAA Tournament Teams
Creighton went 14-6 this fall against teams in the field of 64.
  In 20 matches this fall against NCAA Tournament teams, Ava Martin averaged 4.58 kills per set and hit .311, Kiara Reinhardt averaged 2.51 kills and 1.04 blocks per set while hitting .444, Annalea Maeder averaged 11.06 assists per set and Saige Damrow averaged 3.03 digs per set.
  The Jays hit .262 and averaged 13.92 kills, 1.53 aces, 14.72 digs and 2.32 blocks per set.
vs. NCAA Tournament Teams
Opponent  CU Score  Â
Arizona State  W 3-1
Kansas  W 3-2  Â
  W 3-0  Â
Kentucky  L 0-3
Louisville  L 1-3  Â
Marquette  W 3-0  Â
  W 3-2  Â
  W 3-0  Â
Nebraska  L 2-3  Â
Northern Colorado  W 3-0  Â
Northern Iowa  W 3-0  Â
  W 3-1  Â
Penn State  L 0-3  Â
Rice  W 3-0  Â
San Diego  W 3-1  Â
South Florida  W 3-0  Â
Texas  L 0-3  Â
USCÂ Â L 0-3Â Â Â
Xavier  W 3-0  Â
  W 3-0  Â
AVCA All-Americans
Creighton Volleyball had three seniors earn All-America honors from the American Volleyball Coaches Association. Ava Martin and Kiara Reinhardt picked up Second Team honors, and Annalea Maeder was a Third Team choice.
  Creighton's three honorees were tied for fifth-most in the nation, trailing only the four women chosen from Kentucky, Nebraska, SMU and Texas A&M.
  Creighton and Marquette were the only BIG EAST Conference schools to be represented in the 2025 honors, as MU's Natalie Ring was a Third Team selection and Hattie Bray was an Honorable Mention pick.
  This year marks the 14th straight season that Creighton has had at least one All-American, with multiple All-Americans in 10 of the past 11 campaigns. The only other schools with multiple All-Americans each of the past five years are now Creighton, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Stanford and Wisconsin.Â
  CU's three All-Americans are tied for its second-most ever, something also done in 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2021. Creighton led the country with five All-American selections in 2024.
  A four-time All-BIG EAST selection from Overland Park, Kan., Martin becomes Creighton's fifth different three-time AVCA All-American, joining Kendra Wait (4x), Kelli Browning (3), Jaali Winters (3) and Norah Sis (3). Martin had her best season in a Bluejay uniform, earning BIG EAST Player of the Year honors before taking home BIG EAST Tournament MVP accolades as well.Â
  A sixth-year senior from Cedarburg, Wis., Reinhardt led all players in BIG EAST with a school-record .447 hitting percentage, which ranked sixth nationally. The two-time All-BIG EAST selection finished her career as the winningest player in program history and ranked third in career hitting percentage as well as fourth in career blocks. Reinhardt is the first middle blocker in program history to be named a Second Team All-American or better by the AVCA.
  Maeder made an immediate impact in her lone year as a Bluejay, taking home BIG EAST Setter of the Year honors after averaging 10.75 assists per set. The Ried, Switzerland product ranked 10th nationally with 1,269 assists and ranked second on at Creighton with 2.67 digs per set. Maeder owned a team-leading 16 double-doubles in 2025, becoming the first player in program history with four double-doubles in the same NCAA Tournament. CU has now had an All-American setter in nine of the past 10 seasons.
  Maeder joined 2025 honorees Maddy Bilinovic and Elise Goetzinger as the only players in program history to be named an All-American in their lone year at Creighton.
  Creighton now owns 37 all-time AVCA All-America accolades in program history, which have been earned by 20 different women.
Classroom Champs Too
Creighton had three women earn College Sports Communicators Academic All-District honors, with Sydney Breissinger, Ava Martin and Kiara Reinhardt all recognized.
  Even more impressive, Reinhardt was named a First Team Academic All-American and Martin landed Second Team Academic All-American laurels.
  Reinhardt is just the third different Creighton Volleyball player ever to earn First Team Academic All-America honors from College Sports Communicators, joining Abby Bottomley (2021) and Kendra Wait (2023, 2024). She's one of 16 student-athletes in Creighton history in all sports to earn the prestigious honor.
  Creighton (2) and Stanford (3) were the only schools with multiple Academic All-Americans this year, and the Bluejays remain the only school with multiple Volleyball Academic All-Americas each of the past three seasons.
  This year marks just the fourth occasion that Creighton Volleyball has had multiple Academic All-Americans, joining 2018 (Jaali Winters, Taryn Kloth), 2023 (Kendra Wait and Kiana Schmitt) and 2024 (Kendra Wait and Norah Sis).
Nothing Mid-Major About It
There's nothing mid-major about the Creighton Volleyball program.
  Since 2012, Creighton ranks fourth nationally with 372 victories. The only teams with more wins in those 14 seasons were Western Kentucky (400), Nebraska (394) and Penn State (375). Just behind CU is Texas (369) and Stanford (368).
  In that time, Creighton has made five Sweet 16's and three Elite Eights while leading the country with both 13 regular-season conference titles and 12 league tournament titles,Â
  Creighton is the only Volleyball program in BIG EAST history to ever reach the Elite Eight, and has now done it three times (2016, 2024 and 2025).
How Elite Are We?
Creighton is the nation's only school to reach the Elite Eight in women's volleyball (2024 and 2025), women's basketball (2021), men's basketball (2022) and men's soccer (2022) since the start of the 2021-22 academic year.
Advance In The Dance
Creighton is one of nine schools to appear in the Sweet 16 in each of the last three NCAA Tournaments (2023-25), joining Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Purdue, Stanford, Texas and Wisconsin.Â
  Creighton is one of six schools to be in the Elite Eight in both 2024 and 2025, a list that features Creighton, Kentucky, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Stanford and Wisconsin.    Creighton has won a First Round match in the NCAA Tournament in each of the last three seasons (2023-25). Nationally, only 20 schools have done that: Arizona State, Baylor, Creighton, Florida, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisville, Marquette, Miami (Fla.), Minnesota, Nebraska, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Purdue, SMU, Stanford, TCU, Texas, USC and Wisconsin.
The Gauntlet
Creighton played the nation's second-toughest schedule, and also ranked among the national leaders in Top 50 wins and matches vs. Top 50 opponents in 2025.
  Creighton was 18-0 (including the league tournament) against the BIG EAST Conference (the nation's #5 league).
Most RPI Top 50 Wins in 2025
  Top 50 W's  School
  18  Nebraska
  17  Arizona State
  15  Creighton, Pittsburgh
  14  Wisconsin
Most RPI Top 50 Matches in 2025
  Top 50 MP's  School
  21  Creighton, Arizona State, Kansas
  20  Pittsburgh
  19  Nebraska, Wisconsin, TCU, Utah
Seed History
No fewer than 10-of-16 seeds have reached the Sweet 16 in each of the previous 25 seasons (including 2025).
  On average in that time, 12.92 of the 16 seeds have advanced each year, or roughly 80.8 percent.
  The only times that all 16 seeds advanced to the Sweet 16 was in both 2001 and 2003.
  This year 15 of the 16 seeded teams advanced, as all but USC reached the Sweet 16.
Year  Seeds to Sweet 16?
2025Â Â 15/16
2024Â Â 11/16
2023Â Â 13/16
2022Â Â 15/16
2021Â Â 14/16
2020Â Â 14/16
2019Â Â 13/16
2018Â Â 12/16
2017Â Â 11/16
2016Â Â 12/16
2015Â Â 13/16
2014Â Â 13/16
2013Â Â 11/16
2012Â Â 12/15
2011Â Â 11/16
2010Â Â 11/16
2009Â Â 12/16
2008Â Â 13/16
2007Â Â 10/16
2006Â Â 15/16
2005Â Â 13/16
2004Â Â 14/16
2003Â Â 16/16
2002Â Â 13/16
2001Â Â 16/16
How Sweet It Is
Creighton has made five Sweet 16s, all of which have come in the 11 seasons from 2015-25.
  Creighton is one of 46 schools to have made a Sweet 16 since 2015, but only 16 of those teams have been there five times or more in that span.
  Here's that list:
Most Sweet 16s, Last 11 Seasons (2015-25)
  Sweet 16s  School
  11  Nebraska
  11  Texas
  11  Wisconsin
  9  Minnesota
  9  Penn State
  8  Florida
  8  Kentucky
  8  Stanford
  7  Louisville
  6  BYU
  6  Pittsburgh
  6  Purdue
  6  Washington
  5  Creighton
  5  Ohio State
  5  Oregon
  4  Baylor
  4  Illinois
  4  UCLA
Making History
This is Creighton Volleyball's third straight trip to the Sweet 16. In the history of Creighton Athletics, the only other program to make three consecutive Sweet 16 trips is the men's soccer program, whcih made four straight trips to the Sweet 16 from 2002-05, as well as three in a row from 2014-16.
  Brian Rosen became the second coach in the history of Creighton Athletics to win his first three NCAA Tournament games/matches. He joined former men's soccer coach Elmar Bolowich, who won his first three games in 2011 before a shootout loss in his fourth match at the College Cup.
  And in NCAA Tournaments with 32 teams or more across all sports, Rosen joined Bolowich as the second CU coach to make a Sweet 16 or Elite Eight in his first year as a Creighton head coach.
Seed Value
Creighton was a top 16 national seed in the NCAA Tournament for the eighth time in the past 11 seasons. Only 10 schools in the country can say that, as seen below:
  Rk.  School  Top 16 Seeds Since 2015
  1.  Nebraska  11
    Texas  11
  3.  Wisconsin  10
  4.  Minnesota  9
    Kentucky  9
    Stanford  9
  7.  Creighton  8
    BYU  8
    Florida  8
    Penn State  8
Host With The Most
Creighton hosted the NCAA Tournament for the seventh time in program history, all of which have come since 2017.
  It was also the fifth straight year that the Bluejays have hosted the opening weekend, something only seven schools (Creighton, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Texas and Wisconsin) can claim.
  Creighton is 6-1 in the First Round and 3-3 in the Second Round as host, advancing to the Sweet 16 in 2023, 2024 and 2025.
Piling Up The Wins
Creighton is one three schools to win 27 matches or more each of the last five seasons (2021-25), joining Pittsburgh and Western Kentucky.Â
Winter Hayes
Freshman Abbey Hayes showed no fear in her first NCAA Tournament matches.
  She had nine kills and added 11 digs and three blocks in the First Round win over Northern Colorado.
  One day later she recorded her second double-double of the season with 12 kills and 10 digs while also adding three blocks and two service aces.
  Hayes owned nine kills and five digs vs. Arizona State in the Regional Semifinal before closing her rookie campaign with two kills and nine digs at Kentucky in the Regional Final.
  Hayes averaged 8.3 kills and 7.7 digs in the last six matches of the season, which consists of CU's BIG EAST and NCAA Tournament competitions. Hayes' 18 NCAA Tournament kills are the fourth-most in history by a CU freshman.
  Here's a list of Creighton's NCAA Tournament double-doubles by freshmen:
20k, 10d - Jaali Winters vs. Coastal Carolina  12-04-15
21k, 21d - Jaali Winters at North Carolina  12-05-15
18k, 18d - Keeley Davis at Minnesota  12-07-19
  16k, 10d - Norah Sis vs. Ole Miss  12-02-21
17k, 10d - Norah Sis vs. Kansas  12-03-21
45a, 15d - Kendra Wait vs. Kansas  12-03-21
11a, 14d - Sydney Breissinger vs. Louisville  12-07-23
12k, 10d - Abbey Hayes vs. Northern Iowa  12-05-25
CU's Most NCAA Tournament Kills as a Freshman
  K  Name  Year
  53  Jaali Winters  2015
  33  Norah Sis  2021
  33  Keeley Davis*  2019
  32  Abbey Hayes  2025
* redshirt freshman
Maeder Goes 50/20
Annalea Maeder's finished her NCAA Tournament debut with 53 assists and 21 digs.
  The 21 digs were a career-high and the most by any Bluejay all season.
  She became the eighth different player in CU history to attain at least 20 assists and 20 digs in the same match, but the first to do it in an NCAA Tournament match.
  It was Maeder's team-leading 13th double-double this fall. She would finish with 16.
20 Assists, 20 Digs In A Match
A  D  Name  Opp.  Date
47  22  Melissa Weisensee  Bradley (4s)  9/9/94
51  21  Melissa Weisensee  at Wichita State (5s)  9/14/96
53  24  Melissa Weisensee  at Indiana State (5s)  10/18/96
40  23  Melissa Weisensee  at Drake (5s)  9/13/97
46  38  Melissa Weisensee  Evansville (4s)  10/10/97
46  21  Melissa Weisensee  Missouri State (4s)  10/31/97
65  22  Melissa Weisensee  at Evansville (5s)  11/8/97
55  28  Kailey Reyes  Evansville (5s)  9/11/99
65  24  Kailey Reyes  Illinois State (4s)  9/24/99
40  21  Kailey Reyes  Missouri State (4s)  11/6/99
49  28  Kailey Reyes  at Illinois State (4s)  10/13/00
44  23  Kailey Reyes  Bradley (4s)  10/28/00
64  23  Kailey Reyes  at Evansville (5s)  11/4/00
45  20  Kailey Reyes  vs. Evansville (4g)  11/24/00
54  22  Brittany Coleman  at Illinois State (4s)  10/18/03
62  21  Brittany Coleman  at So. Illinois (4s)  10/29/04
71  20  Korie Lebeda  at Evansville (5s)  11/18/06
27  20  Michelle Sicner  Illinois State (4s)  9/30/11
44  21  Michelle Sicner  Xavier (4s)  11/29/13
41  20  Lydia Dimke  vs. Wichita State (5s)  8/27/16
40  21  Kendra Wait  at Marquette (4s)  10/29/21
59  36  Kendra Wait  vs. Florida State (5s)  9/9/22
56  24  Kendra Wait  at Rice (5s)  9/18/22
60  20  Kendra Wait  #14 Marquette (5s)  11/26/22
43  22  Kendra Wait  Northern Iowa (4s)  9/3/23
42  22  Kendra Wait  at #9 Minnesota (5s)  9/16/23
45  26  Kendra Wait  at Xavier (5s)  9/23/23
53  21  Annalea Maeder  Northern Colorado (5s)  12/4/25
BIG EAST Goes Big Time
The BIG EAST tied a league record as three teams made the NCAA Tournament field. Creighton, Xavier and Marquette all earned a bid.
  Last year the league combined for five NCAA Tournament victories, a single-season high.
  This year the league had four victories, as Creighton had three and Marquette had one.
  The only BIG EAST teams to ever reach the Regional Finals have been the 2016, 2024 and 2025 Creighton teams.
Crowd Report
Creighton attracted crowds of 2,527 and 2,554 fans when hosting the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament, two of the top 11 crowds in the 18-year history of D.J. Sokol Arena.
  That ranked 10th-best of 16 sites that hosted NCAA Tournament play.
Host School  Rd. 1  Rd. 2  Total
Nebraska   8,656  8,601  17,257
Texas A&MÂ Â 5,830Â Â 5,354Â Â 11,184
Wisconsin  4,465  5,371  9,836
Pittsburgh  4,240  4,149  8,389
Kentucky  3,572  4,422  7,994
Texas  3,947  3,918  7,865
Minnesota  4,341  3,517  7,858
Arizona State  2,951  3,424  6,375
Stanford  3,234  2,330  5,564
Creighton  2,527  2,554  5,081
Purdue  2,415  1,808  4,223
SMUÂ Â 2,028Â Â 1,977Â Â 4,005
USCÂ Â 1,830Â Â 2,173Â Â 4,003
Indiana  1,815  1,937  3,752
Kansas  1,607  1,797  3,404
Louisville  1,181  1,098  2,279
Record Watch
Ava Martin, Kiara Reinhardt and Nora Wurtz all finished in the top three of various single-season Creighton records.
Kills
    Name  Sets  No.  Year
  1.  Jaali Winters  134  546  2015
  2.  Ava Martin  118  529  2025
  3.  Leah Ratzlaff  115  516  2003
Kills Per Set
    Name  Sets  No.  Avg.  Year
  1.  Leah Ratzlaff  106  479  4.52  2004
  2.  Leah Ratzlaff  115  516  4.487  2003
  3.  Ava Martin  118  529  4.483  2025
Attack Percentage (Min. 200 kills)
    Name  K  E  Att.  Pct.  Year
  1.  Kiara Reinhardt  293  61  519  .447  2025
  2.  Kiana Schmitt  307  75  612  .379  2023
  3.  Elise Goetzinger  266  73  513  .376  2024
Service Aces
    Name  Sets  No.  Year
  1.  Nora Wurtz  102  61  2025
  2.  Molly Moran  105  59  2000
  3.  Ava Martin  117  56  2024
Service Aces Per Set (Min. 20 SA)
    Name  Sets  No.  Avg.  Year
  1.  Nora Wurtz  95  57  0.600  2025
  2.  Molly Moran  105  59  0.562  2000
  3.  Molly Moran  94  47  0.500  2001
Points, Individual (Category started in 2001)
  Pts.  Name  K  SA  BS  BA  Year
  595.5  Jaali Winters  546  18  4  55  2015
  595.5  Ava Martin  529  47  2  35  2025
  574.0  Leah Ratzlaff  516  28  11  38  2003
Points Per Set, Individual (min. 50 sets played)
  PPS  Name  Pts.  SP  Year
  5.06  Leah Ratzlaff  536.5  106  2004
  5.05  Ava Martin  595.5  118  2025
  4.99  Leah Ratzlaff  574.0  115  2003
12 Straight BIG EAST Regular-Season Titles
Creighton (2014-25) is the first team in BIG EAST volleyball history to win 12 straight regular-season titles.    The previous record had been seven by Notre Dame from 1999-2005.
  The Bluejay volleyball team is also the first Creighton program in any sport to win more than five straight league titles, more than doubling the previous high of five in a row by the men's soccer program (1992-96) in the MVC.
  The only other volleyball team nationally with an active streak of more than six straight regular-season league titles is Kentucky, which won its ninth consecutive SEC crown this year.
  Creighton's 12 straight regular-season titles rank third-longest in NCAA history, trailing only Florida's 18 straight SEC titles from 1991-2008 and Hawaii's 16 consecutive WAC crowns from 1996-2011.
Champions Among Champions
Since the start of the 2012 season, Creighton, and Western Kentucky are the nation's only schools to have won 13 or more conference regular-season titles. All but three of Creighton's 12 crowns were outright titles, whereas WKU has shared six championships..
  Creighton has also won 12 conference tournament titles since 2012, the most in the nation.
Most Conference Titles 2012-2025
Regular-Season  League Tournament
13 (3 shared) Creighton  12 Creighton
13 (6) Western Kentucky  11 Western Kentucky
12 (1) Fairfield  10 Fairfield
11 (1) Texas  Â
Martin Doing Something Special
Ava Martin had 30 kills last Thursday vs. Northern Colorado, one of her most dominating performances in a career full of them.
  Considering the following about the sensational senior...
  Martin's 30 kills tied her career-high, also done vs. Marquette on Nov. 1, 2025.
  It made Martin the only player in CU history with multiple matches of 30+ kills.
  It tied the D.J. Sokol Arena record that she did vs. Marquette on Nov. 1, 2025 and first accomplished by Norah Sis vs. Auburn in a 2022 NCAA Tournament match.
  It tied Sis' match vs. Auburn in the 2022 NCAA Tournament for the most by any Bluejay in an NCAA Tournament contest.
  Martin's 34.5 points in the match were the most by a Bluejay ever in any match since 2001, when points were first tracked nationally. It was also a D.J. Sokol Arena record.
Martin Takes The Fifth
Ava Martin had eight kills in 14 swings during the fifth set against Northern Colorado on Dec. 4. In five matches this season to go five sets, Martin averaged 23.4 kills per match on .323 hitting.
  In the fifth set alone this fall, Martin had 18 kills (3.60 kills per set) and just one error in 42 swings, good for a .405 hitting percentage.
  As a team, Creighton hit .400 in the fifth set this year, owning 47 kills and just five errors in 105 swings. CU did not have an attack error in the fifth set during three of those five matches (UCSB, Marquette, Northern Colorado).
All-Tourney Trio
Creighton had three women named to the All-BIG EAST Tournament Team, as Ava Martin, Annalea Maeder and Jaya Johnson were recognized.
  Martin brought home MVP honors as she averaged 6.83 kills and 1.83 digs per set on .438 hitting. It's her fourth career All-BIG EAST Tournament accolade, joining Kendra Wait as the second Bluejay to do so four times.
  Maeder averaged 15.00 assists, 3.00 digs, .50 blocks, .33 kills and .33 aces per set. Creighton hit .369 as a team and averaged 17.67 kills per set en route to the title.
  Johnson hit .562 and averaged 3.33 kills and 1.17 digs per set.Â
Martin Named National Player of the Week
Ava Martin picked up National Player of the Week honors from the American Volleyball Coaches Association on Nov. 25th, the final milestone in a whirlwind week for the senior outside hitter from Overland Park, Kan.
  Martin was named MVP of the BIG EAST Tournament on Nov. 23 after helping Creighton to a sixth straight league tournament title.Â
  Martin averaged 6.83 kills per set on .438 hitting while also contributing 11 digs and three blocks. Martin had 24 kills and hit .432 in three sets in a semifinal win at Marquette, then put down 17 more kills on .444 hitting vs. Xavier in the final. Her 24 kills were Creighton's most ever in a BIG EAST Tournament match and 41 overall kills a CU-best for a single BIG EAST Tournament.
  The Tournament MVP recognition came two days after she was honored as BIG EAST Player of the Year. On Nov. 24th, roughly 12 hours after returning home with her fourth BIG EAST Tournament title and All-Tournament Team recognition, Martin was the second overall pick in the Major League Volleyball Draft by the Atlanta Vibe.
  Martin is the fourth player in program history to earn AVCA National Player of the Week recognition, joining Michelle Sicner (Oct. 15, 2013), Keeley Davis (Oct. 15, 2019) and Kendra Wait (Sept. 22, 2024).
Creighton's The First With Two First Rounders
Two seniors within the Creighton Volleyball program were selected in the Major League Volleyball Draft on Nov. 24th. Ava Martin was the second overall section by the Atlanta Vibe, while Kiara Reinhardt was selected No. 8 overall in the first round by the Omaha Supernovas.
  The selections made Creighton the first school in league history to have two picks in the First Round of the same draft.
  Martin was named 2025 BIG EAST Player of the Year and BIG EAST Tournament MVP after an incredible season that saw her average 4.48 kills per set on .324 hitting this year. She's a four-time All-BIG EAST selection, and four-time honoree on the All-BIG EAST Tournament Team, after helping the Bluejays to a 12th straight BIG EAST regular-season title and sixth consecutive BIG EAST Tournament crown.
  This season Martin ranked 12th in total points, 15th in total kills, 19th in the country in points per set, 22nd in kills per set, 42nd in total aces, 43rd in total attacks, 77th in aces per set and 84th in attacks per set. The 6-foot-1 outside hitter from Overland Park, Kan., ranked third in CU history with 1,638 kills, third with 128 aces and 10th with a .298 hitting percentage. She was an AVCA Second Team All-American in 2025 and a Third Team All-American in 2024 after picking up Honorable Mention All-American honors as a sophomore in 2023.
  Martin was the second pick in the first round, behind only Wisconsin's Mimi Colyer to the Dallas Pulse.
  A 6-foot-3 middle blocker from Cedarburg, Wis., Reinhardt ranked sixth nationally in hitting percentage (.447), which led the BIG EAST. She averaged 2.53 kills per set and topped the team with 1.03 blocks per set this fall. In her career, Reinhardt owned 823 kills and ranked fourth in CU history with 538 blocks. She also owned 59 aces and was a career .338 hitter. Reinhardt played in a school-record 124 wins at Creighton, helping the Bluejays to six BIG EAST regular-season titles as well as six BIG EAST Tournament titles as well.
  Both Martin and Reinhardt were named All-BIG EAST Nov. 21st. It's the fourth consecutive honor for Martin, and second straight recognition for Reinhardt.
  Martin and Reinhardt are Creighton's third and fourth professional draft picks in the past two years, joining Norah Sis and Kendra Wait last year in the Pro Volleyball Federation. Sis was the No. 3 overall pick last year in the first round to the eventual 2025 league champion Orlando Valkyries, while Wait went 37th overall and was a fifth round selection of the defending league champion Omaha Supernovas.
Looking For More
Creighton Volleyball picked up the school's 14th different BIG EAST Tournament title won by the school since joining the BIG EAST in the summer of 2013. All but three of those titles have been won by the volleyball program.
Creighton's BIG EAST Tournament Titles (14)
Volleyball (11): 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025
Baseball (2): 2019, 2025
Men's Soccer (1): 2022
Winners Win
Creighton owns 268 wins over the past 10 seasons, which coincides with the start of the 2016 season.
  That ranks fourth-most nationally, and among some of the most storied programs in all the land. CU is also fifth in win percentage in the last decade.
Last 10 Seasons (2016-25)
   Sorted By Wins                  Sorted By Win Percentage
1.  287  Nebraska  1.  .874  Texas  256-37
2.  283  Pittsburgh  2.  .872  Nebraska  287-42
3.  278  Western Kentucky  3.  .8634  Western Kentucky  278-44
4.  268  Creighton  4.  .8628  Pittsburgh  283-45
5.  261  Wisconsin  5.  .838  Creighton  268-52
6.  256  Texas  6.  .8312  Wisconsin  261-53
7.  255  Stanford  7.  .8311  BYU  251-51
8.  253  Stephen F. Austin  8.  .825  Stanford  255-54
9.  251  BYU  9.  .813  Kentucky  248-57
10.  248  Kentucky  10.  .797  Dayton  244-62
What's The Difference?
While this is Creighton's fourth team to go unbeaten in BIG EAST play, the domination this season was especially noteworthy, as seen in the chart below:
Year  Sets Lost  5 Setters  Pts For-Against  % of Pts.
2016Â Â 5Â Â 1Â Â 1,457-1,088Â Â 57.2
2018Â Â 6Â Â 2Â Â 1,474-1,092Â Â 57.4
2024Â Â 3Â Â 0Â Â 1,418-884Â Â 61.6
2025Â Â 4Â Â 1Â Â 1,281-883Â Â 59.2
Unbeaten in League Play
Creighton was one of eight teams in the country that did not lose a regular-season conference match this fall. Of those teams, Creighton's four league sets lost trailed only Nebraska.
  Brian Rosen was the only one of the eight head coaches who had an undefeated conference slate to not win Coach of the Year honors in his/her league, and Rosen was 3-2 against the other schools on this list.
  Set W-L  Team  League
  60-1  Nebraska  Big Ten
  48-4  Creighton  BIG EAST
  48-8  Northern Iowa  Missouri Valley
  45-9  Kentucky  Southeastern
  54-10*  Dayton  Atlantic 10
  41-13  San Diego  West Coast
  48-12*  South Dakota State  Summit
  54-13  Utah State  Mountain West
*lost in league tournament
Comeback Kids
The First Round NCAA Tournament match vs. Northern Colorado saw Creighton improve to 3-2 on the season in matches in which it has trailed 2-1, having also beaten Marquette and UC Santa Barbara.
  Creighton had not won an NCAA Tournament match when down 2-1 since doing it in a Regional Semifinal victory over Michigan on Dec. 9, 2016 in Austin, Texas.
  It was also Creighton's first NCAA Tournament victory in a five-set match since a 3-2 win over Michigan on Dec. 9, 2016 in Austin, Texas. That year Creighton made history as the first team to ever open an NCAA Tournament run with three straight five-set victories. The streak started with a 3-2 win in Lawrence, Kan., over Northern Iowa (25-16, 25-20, 24-26, 14-25, 15-12).
Tough at Home
Creighton will boast one of the nation's longest home match winning streaks heading into 2025 with 12 straight home victories.
Nation's Longest Active Home Win Streaks
Wins  Team  Next Home Match
  51  Pittsburgh  Next year
  22  Kentucky  Next year
  19  Cal Poly  Next year
  16  Arizona State  Next year
  13  Eastern Illinois  Next year
  13  Northern Arizona  Next year
  12  Creighton  Next year
  12  Northern Iowa  Next year
  12  Long Island  Next year
Road Dubs
Creighton tied a school-record with a nine-match road win streak that was snapped by No. 2 Kentucky in the Regional Final.
  All three of CU's teams to win nine straight road matches went on to reach the Elite Eight.
Creighton's Longest Road Win Streaks
Wins  Dates  Snapped By
  9  Sept. 30 - Dec. 2, 2016  at #5 Texas, 3-0
  9  Sept. 21 - Nov. 24, 2024  at #2 Penn State, 3-2
  9  Oct. 2 - Nov. 22, 2025  at #2 Kentucky, 3-0
  8  Sept. 29 - Nov. 30, 2012  at #11 Minnesota, 3-1
  8  Sept. 28 - Nov. 3, 2018  at #2 Nebraska, 3-1
  8  Oct. 2, 2021-Sept. 10, 2022  at Rice, 3-2
Ava Makes History
Ava Martin joined some rare air in Creighton Athletics history as a four-time First Team All-Conference pick.
  She's just the sixth student-athlete in school history in any sport to be named First Team All-Conference four times, joining Tara Oltman (Softball), Doug McDermott (Men's Basketball), Jaali Winters (Volleyball), Kendra Wait (Volleyball) and Norah Sis (Volleyball).
  Additionally, Martin and Wait are the only Bluejays to be a four-time first team all-conference pick, as well as a four-time all-tournament team selection.
Back For More (Awards)
Ava Martin was named to the All-Tournament Team at the BIG EAST Championships for the fourth straight season.
  The only previous Creighton player in program history to be named a four-time All-BIG EAST Tournament honoree was Kendra Wait (2021-24). Wait earned Tournament MVP accolades as a senior last fall, while Martin earned MVP honors as a senior this fall.
  Martin was joined on the All-Tournament Team by Jaya Johnson and Annalea Maeder.
CU's BIG EAST All-Tournament Team Picks
Maggie Baumert - 2015
Jess Bird - 2015 (MVP)
Kelli Browning - 2013
Lydia Dimke - 2016
Kate Elman - 2015
Naomi Hickman - 2018, '20 (MVP)
Jaya Johnson - 2025
Taryn Kloth - 2017 (MVP), '18
Annalea Maeder - 2025
Ava Martin - 2022, '23, '24, '25 (MVP)
Leah McNary - 2014
Kiara Reinhardt - 2020
Kiana Schmitt - 2023 (MVP)
Norah Sis - 2021 (MVP), '22 (MVP), '24
Lauren Smith - 2013, '14 (MVP), '16
Kendra Wait - 2021, '22, '23, '24 (MVP)
Annika Welty - 2020
Marysa Wilkinson - 2014, '17
Jaali Winters - 2016 (MVP), '18 (MVP)
Brittany Witt - 2017, '19
Jaela Zimmerman - 2021
Streakin'
Ava Martin had a streak of 10 or more kills in 27 straight matches from Sept. 12-Dec. 11, 2025, the second-longest streak in program history.
  She already had owned a 19-match streak that was snapped earlier this season.Â
  Martin is the only player in Bluejay history with multiple streaks 10-kill streaks of 14 or longer.
  Martin led or tied for the Creighton lead in kills in each of her final 27 matches as a Bluejay.
Consecutive Matches, 10 or More Kills
  58  Leah Ratzlaff, Sept. 13, 2003-Sept. 9, 2005
  27  Ava Martin, Sept. 12-Dec. 11, 2025
  21  Jaali Winters, Oct. 6, 2015 - Aug. 28, 2016
  19  JoDe Cieloha, Sept. 26-Nov. 21, 1997
  19  Ava Martin, Oct. 18, 2024-Aug. 23, 2025
  18  Jaela Zimmerman, Nov. 16, 2019 - March 27, 2021
  15  Norah Sis, Oct. 7 - Dec. 2, 2022
  14  Kelly Goc, Sept. 8-Oct. 19, 2007
  13  JoDe Cieloha, Sept. 7-Oct. 18, 1996
  13  Jaali Winters, Nov. 12, 2016-Sept. 1, 2017
The Amazing Ava
Ava Martin had a career-high 30 kills in Creighton's five-set win over Marquette on Nov. 1st, then matched it against Northern Colorado on Dec. 4th in the NCAA Tournament.
  Martin owned 14 matches with 20+ kills in her career, including four times overall against Marquette.
  Martin (against Marquette) also joined Kelly Goc as the second Bluejay to post 20+ kills against the same opponent three times in the same season. Goc did it vs. Illinois State in 2006.
  Just how good was Martin against Marquette? A whopping 174 of her 1,638 career kills (10.6 percent) came against the Golden Eagles, even though only 11 of her 134 career matches (8.2 percent) were against MU.
Ava Martin's 20-Kill Matches
  Kills  Pct.  Opponent  Date
  30  .464  Marquette  11/01/25
  30  .369  Northern Colorado  12/04/25
  24  .286  vs. UC Santa Barbara  09/06/25
  24  .432  at Marquette  11/22/25
  23  .286  Villanova  11/07/25
  23  .388  vs. #8 Arizona State  12/11/25
  22  .333  #14 Marquette  11/26/22
  22  .396  Northern Iowa  09/03/23
  22  .180  at #9 Minnesota  09/16/23
  21  .230  at Xavier  09/23/23
  20  .400  at DePaul  11/22/24
  20  .405  vs. Duke  08/27/23
  20  .472  Rice  09/13/25
  20  .514  at Marquette  10/02/25
30 Kills For Martin
Ava Martin became the fifth different player in Creighton Volleyball history with 30 or more kills in a match when she did it on Nov. 1, 2025 vs. Marquette.
  Of those women, Martin's .464 hitting percentage was the best mark. She was also the fourth Bluejay with a double-double in a match with 30+ kills.
  Martin's 30 kills also tied the D.J. Sokol Arena record, which opened in 2009.
  Martin added 30 more kills against Northern Colorado on Dec. 4, 2025.
Creighton Players With 30+ Kills
  K  Pct.  D  Player, Opponent (Sets)  Date
  32  .406  10  Michelle Prorock, Evansville (4)  11/02/96
  31  .390  7  Keeley Davis, Marquette (5)  10/12/19
  30  .404  22  Melissa Walsh, Indiana St. (5)  10/16/98
  30  .273  13  Norah Sis, Auburn (5)  12/02/22
  30  .464  10  Ava Martin, Marquette (5)  11/01/25
  30  .369  8  Ava Martin, No. Colorado (5)  12/04/25
Most Kills, D.J. Sokol Arena History
  K  Player, Opponent  Date
  30  Wichita St.'s Emily Stockman vs. Missouri St.  11/27/09
  30  Creighton's Norah Sis vs. Auburn  12/02/22
  30  Creighton's Ava Martin vs. Marquette  11/01/25
  30  Creighton's Ava Martin vs. N. Colorado  12/04/25
  29  USD's Kendall Kritenbrink vs. Creghton  09/20/14
  29  UConn's Hanna Tylska vs. Villanova  11/27/24
The 400 Club
Ava Martin is the fourth player in CU history with three different seasons of 400 kills or more, and joined Leah Ratzlaff as just the second woman to do it in three consecutive campaigns.
  It's not a coincidence that Jaali Winters (1,843), Norah Sis (1,664), Martin (1,638) and Ratzlaff (1,622) own the top four spots on Creighton's career kills list.Â
Most 400-Kill Seasons, Creighton History
Name  Year 1  Year 2  Year 3  Year 4
Jaali Winters (3x)Â Â 546Â Â 448Â Â 398Â Â 451
Norah Sis (3x)Â Â 435Â Â 489Â Â 302Â Â 438
Leah Ratzlaff (3x)Â Â 180Â Â 516Â Â 479Â Â 447
Ava Martin (3x)Â Â 264Â Â 417Â Â 428Â Â 529
Miss Consistent
Ava Martin produced 10 or more kills in each of her final 34 matches against BIG EAST competition. Even more impressively, she hit .250 or better in each of those contests, as well.
  Martin led the BIG EAST with 4.52 kills per set and was fourth with a .376 hitting percentage in league play this fall.
  Last year Martin was second with 3.88 kills per set and second with a .408 hitting percentage in league action.
  In 70 career regular-season BIG EAST matches, Martin averaged 3.61 kills per set and hit .348 to help her team go 67-3.
Hitting With A Purpose
Creighton started its Nov. 15 match at Seton Hall with 31 kills in 48 swings before its first attack error on the fourth point of the third set.
  It was just the second time in program history that CU went back-to-back sets in the same match without an attack error, joining the second and third sets at Bradley on Sept. 29, 2000.
  Creighton finished the afternoon hitting a program-record .551 against the Pirates.
Best Attack Percentage, CU History
  Hit. %  Opponent (K-E-TA), sets  Date
  .551  at Seton Hall (41-3-69), 3 sets  11-15-25
  .548  vs. Georgetown (46-6-73), 3 sets  11-17-24
  .536  vs. Tulsa (41-4-69), 3 sets  10-27-95
  .495  vs. Liberty (57-8-99), 3 sets  9-2-05
  .493  at Villanova (41-5-73), 3 sets  10-27-23
Wurtz Serves Up A Record
Two days after serving up five aces in the first set of a Nov. 7 win over Villanova, Nora Wurtz once again dealt five aces during 12-0 serving run to end the first set vs. Georgetown. Wurtz remained behind the serving line to start the second set, opening with back-to-back aces, and eventually broke the school-record with nine aces in the match.
Most Aces, Creighton Match
  9  Nora Wurtz vs. Georgetown (3s)  11-09-25
  8  Carolyn Decker at New Mexico (3s)  09-04-04
  8  Ava Martin vs. Seton Hall (3s)  11-15-24
  7  Molly Moran vs. Drake (3s)  09-22-00
  7  Kelli Koochi at Indiana State (4s)  10-19-01
  7  Nayka Benitez vs. Bradley (4s)  09-25-10
  7  Michelle Sicner vs. McNeese State (3s)  09-17-11
  7  Madelyn Cole at Georgetown (3s)  11-09-19
Best of Wurtz
Nora Wurtz's nine aces were tied for the most in the nation this season in any three-set match.
  Wurtz served 31 times in the Nov. 9 match vs. Georgetown, with Creighton winning the point 27 times. By comparison, Georgetown's entire team served 34 times and won just seven of those points.
  Wurtz (at 6-foot-4) was the nation's only player middle blocker, as well as the only player 6-foot-2 or taller, to average more than 0.51 aces per set.
Who Else Has Been Unbeaten?
At 16-0, Creighton was the 15th team to finish BIG EAST play unbeaten and just the fourth unbeaten team with 16 or more league wins.
  Thirteen of those 15 unbeaten teams went on to win the BIG EAST Tournament.
Finishing Unbeaten in BIG EAST Play
  W-L  Sets Lost  School  Year
  18-0  3  Creighton*  2024
  18-0  6  Creighton*  2018
  18-0  5  Creighton*  2016
  16-0  4  Creighton*  2025
  14-0  8  Notre Dame  2009
  14-0  4  Louisville*  2006
  12-0  3  Notre Dame*  2001
  11-0  4  Notre Dame*  2000
  11-0  4  Notre Dame  1999
  11-0  2  Notre Dame*  1997
  11-0  2  Notre Dame*  1996
  11-0  1  Notre Dame*  1995
  7-0  6  Pittsburgh*  1993
  7-0  1  Pittsburgh*  1991
  7-0  2  Pittsburgh*  1990
*also won league tournament
Best League Starts
Creighton started 16-0 in conference play for the fifth time in the last 10 seasons. The Bluejays, who only played 16 league contests this fall, went 18-0 in 2016, 2018 and 2024.
Most Wins Before First League Loss
  Wins  Year (League)  First League Loss
  18-0  2018 (BIG EAST)  None
  18-0  2016 (BIG EAST)  None
  18-0  2024 (BIG EAST)  None
  17  2022 (BIG EAST)  11/19 at #16 Marquette
  16  2025 (BIG EAST)  None
  12  2019 (BIG EAST)  11/8 at Villanova
  11  2015 (BIG EAST)  10/30 at Villanova
All They Do Is Win
Creighton has won its last 47 BIG EAST regular-season matches to establish a program and league record.
  It breaks the record for the longest streak in BIG EAST history, surpassing the 45 in a row done from Oct. 1, 1999 to Nov. 15, 2002 by Notre Dame.
Creighton's Most Consecutive Regular-Season League Wins
  Wins  Dates  Snapped By  League
  47  Oct. 7, 2023 - Present  ? ? ?  BIG EAST
  31  Nov. 18, 2017 - Nov. 3, 2019   at Villanova, 3-0  BIG EAST
  28  Oct. 31, 2015 - Sept. 30, 2017  at Marquette, 3-0  BIG EAST
  28  Oct. 17, 2021- Nov. 18, 2022  at #16 Marquette, 3-0   BIG EAST
  14  Sept. 29, 2012 - End of 2012  Never (left MVC)  MVC
BIG EAST'S Best
Since the reconfiguration of the BIG EAST in the summer of 2013, Creighton, Marquette and St. John's are the only teams to win any sort of BIG EAST volleyball title.
  Creighton owns 12 regular-season titles (3 shared) in that time, while Marquette owns four regular-season (3 shared) crowns.
  As it relates to BIG EAST Tournament titles, Creighton has won 11, Marquette one and St. John's one since 2013.
  Below is a look at the record of each BIG EAST team since league realignment in 2013:
BIG EAST VB Standings, 2013 - 2025
       BIG EAST only  All   matches
Team (NCAA Bids)Â Â WÂ Â LÂ Â WÂ Â L
Creighton (13)Â Â 204Â Â 16Â Â 343Â Â 79
Marquette (12)Â Â 180Â Â 37Â Â 302Â Â 104
Xavier (1)Â Â 130Â Â 88Â Â 205Â Â 175
Villanova (1)Â Â 111Â Â 109Â Â 208Â Â 171
St. John's (1)Â Â 110Â Â 110Â Â 232Â Â 180
Butler  108  112  190  193
Seton Hall (1)Â Â 86Â Â 133Â Â 173Â Â 207
DePaul  72  148  163  214
Georgetown  51  161  125  236
Connecticut#Â Â 50Â Â 46Â Â 98Â Â 71
Providence*Â Â 33Â Â 171Â Â 124Â Â 226
*Providence rejoined the league for volleyball in 2014 andÂ
its 2013 overall record (12-20) is not included above.
#Connecticut rejoined the league in 2020 andÂ
its record from 2013-19 (96-121) is not included above.
Getting Better and Better
It's scary to see the numbers for Creighton's first 10 matches compared to its last 24 matches. The Bluejay numbers are up across the board on the offensive end.
First 10 Matches vs. Last 24 Matches
When  W-L  KPS  HIT%  SAPS  DPS  BPS
First 10Â Â 5-5Â Â 12.84Â Â .215Â Â 1.63Â Â 14.26Â Â 2.17
Last 24Â Â Â 23-1Â Â 14.56Â Â .324Â Â 2.36Â Â 13.49Â Â 2.23
All They Do Is Win
Creighton won 23 straight matches until falling in the Elite Eight, tied for its second-longest win streak in program history. It was also CU's 13th double-digit win streak ever.
  Consecutive Creighton Wins, Program History
  Wins  Dates  Snapped By
  25  Sept. 20-Dec. 13, 2024  at #2 Penn State, 3-2
  23  Sept. 23-Dec. 9, 2016  at #5 Texas, 3-0
  23  Sept. 19-Dec. 11, 2025  at #2 Kentucky, 3-0
  21  Sept. 21 - Nov. 30, 2018  #22 Washington, 3-0
  17  Sept. 29-Nov. 30, 2012  at #11 Minnesota, 3-1
  17  Sept. 23-Nov. 18, 2022  at #16 Marquette, 3-0
  17  Oct. 7-Dec. 2, 2023  vs. #7 Louisville, 3-2
  14  Sept. 19-Nov. 3, 2019  at Villanova, 3-0
  14  Oct. 17-Dec. 2, 2021  Kansas, 3-1
  12  Sept. 20-Oct. 25, 2015  at Villanova, 3-2
  11  Oct. 11-Nov. 21, 2014  Seton Hall, 3-0
  11  Oct. 6-Nov. 12, 2017  at Villanova, 3-0
  10  Oct. 31-Dec. 5, 2015  vs. #2 USC, 3-1
There Weren't Many
Georgetown managed just 15 kills in Creighton's 3-0 win over the Hoyas on Nov. 9th. That was tied for the second-fewest by a Bluejay opponent in program history.
Fewest Kills by a Creighton Opponent, Match
  14  Villanova  11/21/14
  15  Drake  9/22/06
  15  Montana State  8/25/07
  15  Georgetown  11/09/25
  16  Seton Hall  11/19/21
  17  Providence  10/19/14
  17  South Dakota  12/5/24
  17  Providence  9/27/24
What's Your 20?
Creighton has clinched its fifth straight 20-win season.
  Including 2025, Creighton has won 20 or more matches in 13 of the last 14 years (CU only played 16 times in the spring of 2021, going 12-4), and has 16 different 20-win campaigns to its ledger all-time.
  Brian Rosen is the first volleyball head coach to win 20+ matches in their first year as a head coach at a BIG EAST school since Ryan Theis won 24 matches at Marquette in 2014, and his 28 wins were the most ever by a rookie BIG EAST coach.
  All 16 times that Creighton has won its 19th match, it won its next match as well to reach the 20-victory milestone.
Year  MP to 20 W  Date of 20th Win
2006Â Â 29Â Â 11/18
2007Â Â 29Â Â 11/16
2010Â Â 30Â Â 11/26
2012Â Â 23Â Â 10/27
2013Â Â 27Â Â 11/22
2014Â Â 27Â Â 11/08
2015Â Â 28Â Â 11/07
2016Â Â 26Â Â 11/06
2017Â Â 25Â Â 11/05
2018Â Â 24Â Â 10/27
2019Â Â 24Â Â 11/09
2021Â Â 23Â Â 10/24
2022Â Â 23Â Â 10/30
2023Â Â 24Â Â 11/03
2024Â Â 22Â Â 11/01
2025Â Â 25Â Â 11/07
Special Group of Seniors
Creighton recognized Annalea Maeder, Ava Martin, Sky McCune and Kiara Reinhardt after its Nov. 9 win over Georgetown.
  Maeder is in her first season at Creighton, but fifth overall in college after four years at Cal. In her lone season with the Bluejays, Maeder was a seven-time BIG EAST Setter of the Week and led the league with 10.75 assists per set. Maeder also ranked sixth in the BIG EAST with 0.40 aces per set and directed a Bluejay offense that hit a league-best .288. Maeder was named All-BIG EAST, BIG EAST Setter of the Year and an AVCA Third Team All-American.
  Martin is the BIG EAST's only player on the AVCA National Player of the Year Watch List, and lived up to the Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year hype she was annointed by league coaches before the fall. Martin finished in the top 10 in the BIG EAST in league play in points per set (5.16), kills per set (4.52), aces per set (0.50) and hitting percentage (.376). In her career, she finished third in CU history with 1,638 kills and 128 aces.
  McCune owned 452 career digs and 44 aces as a Bluejay. The Gretna product appeared in 89 matches as a defensive specialist or libero and had a career-high 22 digs vs. No. 2 Nebraska as a freshman in 2022.
  Reinhardt is a sixth-year senior who became the winningest player in program history and set a CU single-season record for hitting percentage. She owned 823 career kills, was fourth in program history with 538 blocks and third with a .338 hitting percentage.
Rosen Sets More History
Brian Rosen was the first volleyball head coach to go unbeaten in BIG EAST play in their first season as head coach at a school since Pitt's Cindy Alvear went 7-0 in 1993.
  Rosen was the first volleyball head coach to win a BIG EAST regular-season title in their first season as head coach at a school since Louisville's Anne Kordes in 2011.
  Rosen was the first volleyball head coach to win 20+ matches in their first year as a head coach at a BIG EAST school since Ryan Theis won 24 matches at Marquette in 2014.
  Rosen's 28 victories were the most ever by a head coach in his/her first season in the BIG EAST.
  Rosen became the first volleyball head coach to win a BIG EAST Tournament title in their first season as head coach at a school since Georgetown's Li Liu in 1999.
  Rosen became the first male head coach to win a BIG EAST Tournament title since Marquette's Bond Shymansky in 2013.
  Rosen became the first volleyball head coach to win an NCAA Tournament match in their first year as a head coach at a BIG EAST school since Louisville's Anne Kordes in 2011, and the only rookie BIG EAST Volleyball coach to win multiple NCAA Tournament matches in the same season.
Coming Up Clutch
Creighton hit .370 in its Nov. 1 win over Marquette, easily its best hitting percentage ever in a five-set match.
  CU hit .571 (12-0-21) in the fifth set against the Golden Eagles and .473 in the final two frames (29-3-55) after falling behind 2-1 in the match.
Best Creighton Hitting Percentage, Five Set Match
  Pct.  Opponent (K-E-TA)  Date
  .370  Marquette (72-15-154)  11-01-25
  .333  at Evansville (69-18-153)  10-04-96
  .322  vs. DePaul ((69-21-149)  10-09-15
  .308  at Georgetown (67-18-159)  11-18-17
  .294  at Bradley (77-22-187)  10-15-04
A Perfect Set
Creighton's offense clicked on all cylinders in the third set of its Oct. 25 win at Connecticut, as the Bluejays were credited with 15 kills on 15 swings to hit a perfect 1,000. That means UConn didn't own a single dig or block during the set.
  Jaya Johnson had five kills, Abbey Hayes, Ava Martin and Annalea Maeder each had three kills and Kiara Reinhardt had one kill in the frame.
  It's the best hitting percentage in program history that Creighton has hit better than .818 in any set. Per @Evollve on Twitter, Creighton was the nation's first team to hit 1.000 in a set since Florida A&M did against Mississippi Valley State went 10-for-10 in the first set of a 2022 meeting.
Best Creighton Team Hitting Percentage in a Set
  %  K-E-TA  Opponent (Set #)  Date
  1.000  15-0-15  at Connecticut (3)  10/25/25
  .818  18-0-22  at DePaul (1)  10/6/17
  .737  14-0-19  at Providence (1)  10/21/23
.722Â Â 13-0-18Â Â at Georgetown (5)Â Â 11/20/15
  .714  10-0-14  vs. Northern Iowa (5)  9/5/14
  .714  15-0-21  at DePaul (3)  10/11/19
Setting Them Straight
Creighton's streak of 24 straight set wins was snapped on Nov. 1 by Marquette. The streak was the sixth-longest in program history, all of which have come in the past decade.
Consecutive Sets Won
  Set Wins  Dates  Snapped By
  31  Oct. 1-Nov. 8, 2024  at Marquette
  30  Oct. 7-Nov. 10, 2023  at St. John's
  29  Oct. 16-Nov. 18, 2022  at #16 Marquette
  25  Oct. 22-Nov. 20, 2016  Villanova
  25  Oct. 26-Nov. 23, 2018  #16 Marquette
  24  Oct. 4-Nov. 1, 2025  Marquette
  22  Nov. 7-Dec. 2, 2021  Kansas
  21  Nov. 10-Dec. 2, 2023  vs. #7 Louisville
  19  Oct. 12-Nov. 3, 2019  at Villanova
  18  Nov. 22-Dec. 6, 2024  vs. #13 Texas
  18  Nov. 7-Dec. 4, 2025  Northern Colorado
  16  Sept. 20-Oct. 4, 2025  at DePaul
  15  Oct. 7-21, 2016  at Marquette
  15  Sept. 28-Oct. 13, 2018  at Villanova
  15  Sept. 11-24, 2021  at Butler
League Leaders
Not only did Creighton finish alone atop the BIG EAST standings, but the Bluejays also dominated many of the team and individual statistical categories in league play, as well.
  Individually, Kiara Reinhardt led the BIG EAST with a .438 hitting percentage. Annalea Maeder was tops with 10.79 assists per set, Nora Wurtz was first with 0.88 aces per set and Ava Martin was first with 4.52 kills per set and 5.22 points per set.
  As a team, Creighton was first in hitting percentage (.349), opponent hitting percentage (.150), assists per set (13.19), kills per set (14.56) and aces per set (2.90).
The .500 Club
Senior Kiara Reinhardt hit .447 this fall, a figure that ranked sixth in the nation. She hit .500 or better in 16-of-34 matches this fall.
  Not only did she hit a robust .419 (81-16-155)against Top 25 foes, but she hit an insane .459 (212-45-364) against unranked foes.
Reinhardt's Matches Hitting .500+ This Season
  Pct.  K  E  TA  Opponent  CU Result
  .833  5  0  6  at Seton Hall  W 3-0
  .789  15  0  19  vs. San Diego  W 3-1
  .750  10  1  12  at Villanova  W 3-0
  .722  14  1  18  at DePaul  W 3-1
  .700  7  0  10  RIce  W 3-0
  .667  10  0  15  Seton Hall  W 3-0
  .636  8  1  11  at Georgetown  W 3-0
  .571  5  1  7  at St. John's  W 3-0
  .560  16  2  25  #4 Louisville  L 1-3
  .529  9  0  17  vs. #5 Texas  L 0-3
  .526  11  1  19  #1 Nebraska  L 2-3
  .500  6  1  10  at Marquette  W 3-0
  .500  9  2  14  at Marquette  W 3-0
  .500  8  0  16  vs. Xavier  W 3-0
  .500  10  1  18  Marquette  W 3-1
  .737  15  1  19  vs. #8 Arizona State  W 3-1
Reinhardt's Peers
Kiara Reinhardt's .447 hitting percentage ranked sixth-best nationally, and shattered the Creighton single-season record in that category.
2025 NCAA Leaders in Attack Pct. (min. 3.33 attacks per set)Â
    Name, School  K  E  Att.  Pct.
  1.  Andi Jackson, Nebraska  288  55  499  .467
  2.  Carter Booth, Wisconsin  245  34  453  .466
  3.  Haley Yount, Jacksonville  206  34  379  .454
  4.  Rebekah Allick, Nebraska  259  55  453  .450
  5.  Lizzy Andrew, Stanford  298  48  559  .447
  6.  Kiara Reinhardt, Creighton  293  61  519  .447
  7.  Yasmeen Muhammad, LIU  227  37  427  .445
  8.  Tierney Barlow, Utah State  321  53  603  .444
  9.  Lucie Blazkova, Washington St.  280  45  531  .443
  10.  Mackenzie Parsons, Cornell  246  43  465  .437
Single-Season Creighton Records
Individual Attack Percentage (Min. 200 kills)
    Name  K  E  Att.  Pct.  Year
  1.  Kiara Reinhardt  293  61  519  .447  2025
  2.  Kiana Schmitt  307  75  612  .379  2023
  3.  Elise Goetzinger  266  73  513  .376  2024
  4.  Kelli Browning  350  87  710  .370  2012
  5.  Marysa Wilkinson  340  74  720  .369  2017
Creighton Career Records
Individual Attack Percentage (Min. 250 kills)
    Name  K  E  Att.  Pct.  Years
  1.  Elise Goetzinger  266  73  513  .376  2024
  2.  Kendra Wait  511  78  1,194  .363  2021-24
  3.  Kelli Browning  1,104  325  2,327  .335  2011-14
  4.  Lydia Dimke  297  77  659  .334  2016-17
  5.  Kiara Reinhardt  823  236  1,736  .338  2020-25
  6.  Kiana Schmitt  806  237  1,726  .330  2019-23
  7.  Lauren Smith  1,160  365  2,460  .323  2013-16
  8.  Marysa Wilkinson  1,183  307  2,771  .316  2014-17
  9.  Megan Ballenger  965  317  2,176  .2978  2016-19
  10.  Ava Martin  1,638  451  3,989  .2976  2022-25
Ava Elevates Up The Chart
Ava Martin finished her career with 1,638 career kills, good for third-best in program history.
Career Kills, Creighton History
    Name  Sets  No.  Years
  1.  Jaali Winters  494  1,843  2015-18
  2.  Norah Sis  422  1,664  2021-24
  3.  Ava Martin  457  1,638  2022-25
  4.  Leah Ratzlaff  409  1,622  2002-05
  5.  Melissa Walsh  394  1,596  1998-01
  6.  Taryn Kloth  462  1,427  2015-18
  7.  Kelly Goc  394  1,414  2004-07
  8.  Jessica Houts  451  1,385  2005-09
  9.  JoDe Cieloha  398  1,375  1994-97
  10.  Leah McNary  458  1,257  2011-14
The Reveal
The NCAA Volleyball Selection Committee revealed its Top 16 as of Oct. 19th. The in-season reveal offers fans an early look at potential NCAA tournament seedings ahead of Selection Sunday on Nov. 30. Creighton was 10th in that listing.
  Last year Creighton was sixth in the early reveal, and would enter the NCAA Tournament sixth as well.
1. Nebraska  9. TCU
2. Texas  10. Creighton
3. Pittsburgh  11. Stanford
4. Kentucky  12. Wisconsin
5. SMUÂ Â 13. Texas A&M
6. Louisville  14. Indiana
7. Arizona State  15. Penn State
8. Purdue  16. Minnesota
Syd The Kid
Sydney Breissinger first wore the libero jersey this fall in the fourth set against Nebraska on Sept. 16th. She put it back on to begin the Sept. 21 win over No. 17 Kansas, and didn't relinquished it in 23 matches since then. That means Creighton is 67-12 in sets and outscored teams 1,899-1,441 when she donned the alternate jersey.
  When Breissinger was a freshman in 2023, she played libero in the final 13 matches of the season. Creighton went 12-1 in those contests, winning 38-of-42 sets and outscoring teams 1,031-738.
  Add it all up and Creighton is 34-3 all-time in matches Breissinger serves as libero at any point, losing only to No. 7 Louisville (2023 Regional Semifinal) and to No. 1 Nebraska (2025). CU has won 105-of-121 sets when she's donned the alternate jersey and outscored foes 2,930-2,179 in points, a whopping 57.3 percent of the points played.
  Breissiger ended her season with 12 straight matches of 10 or more digs, including 20 against both Northern Colorado and Arizona State to tie her career-high.
  Her 69 digs put her tied for second-most in CU history for a single NCAA Tournament, 10 shy of Brittany Witt's 79 in 2016. Her 69 digs were also the second-most in the country in the 2025 NCAA Tournament, trailing only Kentucky's Molly Tuozzo (88).
More Than a Decade of Dominance
Thirteen years in the BIG EAST gives Creighton a pretty good set of data to compare its yearly performance in league matches.Â
  Here's how the 2025 campaign compares to previous seasons:
Creighton's Year-By-Year BIG EAST Stats
Year  W-L  KPS  HIT%  SAPS  DPS  BPS
2013Â Â 12-4Â Â 13.75Â Â .213Â Â 1.00Â Â 16.20Â Â 3.13
2014#Â Â 16-2Â Â 14.89Â Â .242Â Â 1.30Â Â 17.09Â Â 2.86
2015#Â Â 17-1Â Â 15.02Â Â .271Â Â 1.33Â Â 16.97Â Â 2.47
2016#Â Â 18-0Â Â 15.37Â Â .317Â Â 1.69Â Â 16.08Â Â 2.41
2017#Â Â 16-2Â Â 14.81Â Â .302Â Â 1.31Â Â 16.62Â Â 2.05
2018#Â Â 18-0Â Â 14.45Â Â .294Â Â 2.13Â Â 15.67Â Â 2.38
2019#Â Â 17-1Â Â 14.61Â Â .269Â Â 2.07Â Â 15.80Â Â 2.25
2020#Â Â 7-1Â Â 12.93Â Â .249Â Â 1.30Â Â 14.17Â Â 2.75
2021#Â Â 16-2Â Â 13.95Â Â .242Â Â 1.82Â Â 18.02Â Â 2.86
2022#Â Â 17-1Â Â 14.80Â Â .299Â Â 1.85Â Â 16.10Â Â 2.33
2023#Â Â 16-2Â Â 14.40Â Â .313Â Â 1.89Â Â 15.91Â Â 2.30
2024#Â Â 18-0Â Â 14.79Â Â .371Â Â 2.32Â Â 14.18Â Â 2.75
2025Â Â 16-0Â Â 14.56Â Â .349Â Â 2.90Â Â 12.42Â Â 2.13
#won league's regular-season title
Down The Stretch They Come
Creighton reached the midpoint of league play with an 8-0 record, and finished 16-0. The Bluejays were unbeaten at the halfway mark of league play for the seventh time since 2015 (2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2024, 2025).
  The Bluejays have suffered one league loss or fewer in the second half of conference play during each of the last 12 seasons (including 2025).
League Record by Year
Year  1st Half  2nd Half  Place
1994Â Â 2-8Â Â 1-9Â Â T-9th MVC
1995Â Â 3-7Â Â 3-7Â Â T-7th MVC
1996Â Â 2-7Â Â 3-6Â Â T-6th MVC
1997Â Â 6-3Â Â 4-5Â Â T-3rd MVC
1998Â Â 2-7Â Â 3-6Â Â 8th MVC
1999Â Â 5-4Â Â 4-5Â Â 5th MVC
2000Â Â 5-4Â Â 5-4Â Â T-4th MVC
2001Â Â 7-2Â Â 5-4Â Â 4th MVC
2002Â Â 1-8Â Â 1-8Â Â T-9th MVC
2003Â Â 5-4Â Â 4-5Â Â T-5th MVC
2004Â Â 5-4Â Â 5-4Â Â 5th MVC
2005Â Â 4-5Â Â 6-3Â Â 5th MVC
2006Â Â 7-2Â Â 5-4Â Â 4th MVC
2007Â Â 7-2Â Â 7-2Â Â T-2nd MVC
2008Â Â 7-2Â Â 8-1Â Â 2nd MVC
2009Â Â 4-5Â Â 6-3Â Â T-4th MVC
2010Â Â 7-2Â Â 6-3Â Â 3rd MVC
2011Â Â 6-3Â Â 6-3Â Â 4th MVC
2012Â Â 8-1Â Â 9-0Â Â 1st MVC
2013Â Â 6-2Â Â 6-2Â Â T-2nd BIG EAST
2014Â Â 8-1Â Â 8-1Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2015Â Â 9-0Â Â 8-1Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2016Â Â 9-0Â Â 9-0Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2017Â Â 8-1Â Â 8-1Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2018Â Â 9-0Â Â 9-0Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2019Â Â 9-0Â Â 8-1Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2020Â Â 3-1Â Â 4-0Â Â 1st BIG EAST (Midwest)
2021Â Â 7-2Â Â 9-0Â Â T-1st BIG EAST
2022Â Â 9-0Â Â 8-1Â Â T-1st BIG EAST
2023Â Â 7-2Â Â Â 9-0Â Â Â T-1st BIG EAST
2024Â Â 9-0Â Â 9-0Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2025Â Â 8-0Â Â 8-0Â Â 1st BIG EAST
Total  194-89  194-89  --
  Â
Reinhardt & Martin Pass Century Mark
Kiara Reinhardt was 124-23 (.844) all-time in matches that she's appeared in. Her 124 victories are five more than Kendra Wait for most in program history. Reinhardt's winning percentage is fifth-best.
  Ava Martin was 115-19 (.858) all-time when appearing in a match, making her fourth in wins and fourth in win percentage.
Most Wins, Appeared In As A Player
  124  Kiara Reinhardt  2020-25
  119  Kendra Wait  2021-24
  116  Naomi Hickman  2017-21
  115  Ava Martin  2022-25
  111  Jaali Winters  2015-18
  110  Kiana Schmitt  2019-23
  109  Taryn Kloth  2015-18
  109  Brittany Witt  2016-19
  109  Norah Sis  2021-24
  107  Megan Ballenger  2016-19
  106  Marysa Wilkinson  2014-17
  104  Lauren Smith  2013-16
  102  Melanie Jereb  2012-15
  101  Ashley Jansen  2012-15
  98  Jaela Zimmerman  2018-22
Best Win Pct. in Matches Appeared In As A Player (min. 100 wins)
  W-L  Pct.  Name  Years
  109-14  .886  Norah Sis  2021-24
  119-16  .881  Kendra Wait  2021-24
  110-16  .873  Kiana Schmitt  2019-23
  115-19  .858  Ava Martin  2022-25
  124-23  .844  Kiara Reinhardt  2020-25
  109-24  .820  Taryn Kloth  2015-18
  116-26  .817  Naomi Hickman  2017-21
  109-25  .813  Brittany Witt  2016-19
  107-25  .811  Megan Ballenger  2016-19
  111-28  .799  Jaali Winters  2015-18
  106-32  .768  Marysa Wilkinson  2014-17
  102-31  .767  Melanie Jereb  2012-15
  101-31  .765  Ashley Jansen  2012-15
  104-34  .754  Lauren Smith  2013-16
Most Wins, Four-Year Span
  W-L  Years
  119-17  2021-24
  116-19  2022-25
  111-28  2015-18
  109-25  2016-19
  107-32  2014-17
  104-31  2012-15
  104-34  2013-16
  99-18  2020-23
  97-19  2018-21
  95-19  2019-22
Nice Work, Ace
Creighton tied a program-record with 15 service aces on Oct. 4 vs. DePaul, with Ava Martin (6), Alivia Hausmann (3), Jaya Johnson (3), Sydney Breissinger (2) and Annalea Maeder (1) all getting in the act.
  It was the fourth time in program history that CU has recorded 15 aces or more, and first time it's done so in a true road match.
  Creighton set a then-school-record with 224 aces in 35 matches last season (6.40 per match) and averaged a league-record 2.32 aces per set in league play. This year's team had a school-record 251 aces in 34 matches (7.38 per match) and averaged 2.90 aces per set in league action.
  Creighton's 2.13 aces per set ranked fourth in the nation.
Most Creighton Service Aces, Match
  15  vs. Northeastern Illinois (3s)  09-23-95
  15  vs. UMKC (4s)  11-12-95
  15  vs. Seton Hall (3s)  11-15-24
  15  at DePaul (4s)  10-04-25
  14  at UMKC (4s)  10-30-94
  14  vs. UNC-Greensboro (4s)  09-02-00
  14  vs. Butler (3s)  10-20-18
  14  vs. DePaul (4s)  11-24-19
  14  vs. UMKC (5s)  09-28-04
  14  at Seton Hall (3s)  11-15-25
A Smashing Success
Kiara Reinhardt had the three best marks in program history for a four-set match this season.
Best Hitting Percentage, Four Sets (min. 12 kills)
  .789  Kiara Reinhardt (15-0-19) vs. San Diego  09-05-25
  .737  Kiara Reinhardt (15-1-19) vs. Arizona State  12-11-25
  .722  Kiara Reinhardt (14-1-18) at DePaul  10-04-25
  .684  Kelli Browning (14-1-19) vs. Southern Illinois  10-27-12
  .640  Naomi Hickman (17-1-25) vs. Kentucky  09-06-19
  .636  Megan Bober (14-0-22) vs. Bradley  10-06-12
  .625  Kelly Goc (26-1-40) vs. Drake  11-16-07
  .615  Alicia Runge (17-1-26) vs. Bradley  09-25-10
  .600  Kelli Browning (16-1-25) vs. Wisconsin  08-25-12
Jaya Does It All
Since moving into a role that has her playing all six rotations on Sept. 20 vs. South Florida, sophomore Jaya Johnson has played like a star.
  Johnson has averaged 2.66 kills, 1.21 digs, 0.76 blocks and 0.09 aces per set while hitting .304. Creighton went 23-1 in that time, dropping just eight sets.
  Before the move, Johnson averaged 1.84 kills, 0.74 digs, 0.92 blocks and 0.00 aces per set while hitting .191. Creighton was 5-5 in those matches (18-18 in sets), though six of them came against top-25 foes.
  Johnson was the only player in the BIG EAST (min. 50% of sets played) to average at least 0.80 blocks and 0.80 digs per set this season.
RPI Update
Creighton finished the season with an RPI of No. 7, easily the best rank in the BIG EAST.
  The Bluejays were one of five BIG EAST teams in the top 75, joining Xavier (27), Marquette (32), Villanova (39) and Connecticut (74).
Against The BIG EAST
Since the BIG EAST was restructured in 2013, Creighton owns a winning percentage better than .800 against each of the other teams currently in the BIG EAST.
  The Bluejays own 227 wins against BIG EAST competition (including BIG EAST Championship play) since 2013, 40 more wins than Marquette for most in the league.
  CU still has not lost to three league foes (DePaul, Georgetown, Providence) since joining the BIG EAST, and Marquette (6), Villanova (3), Seton Hall (3) and St. John's (3) are the only BIG EAST programs to top the Bluejays multiple times since 2013.Â
Opponent  Reg. Season  BE Tourney  Total
Butler  23-1  -  23-1
Connecticut  5-1  1-0  6-1
DePaul  26-0  3-0  29-0
Georgetown  24-0  -  24-0
Marquette  21-5  8-1  29-6
Providence  18-0  -  18-0
Seton Hall  21-3  2-0  23-3
St. John's  22-2  1-1  23-3
Villanova  21-3  3-0  24-3
Xavier  23-1  5-0  28-1
TOTALÂ Â 204-16Â Â 23-2Â Â 227-18
Putting The 0 In October And November
Creighton is 89-6 in the 10th month of the year since Oct. 1, 2016, including 23 straight wins, and victories in 37 of its past 38 such matches.
  Creighton's been awfully good in the month of November too. Since Nov. 1, 2014, CU is 79-4 in the 11th month of the year with 27 straight victories.
  Creighton has won 45 straight October home matches (since 10/15/11) and 48 consecutive home matches in November (since 11/23/14). Incredibly, Creighton is 141-13 in sets in those home November contests.
Streaking In League Play
Add in conference tournament play and Creighton has won 53 straight matches against BIG EAST teams since October 7, 2023, dropping just eight sets to league opponents.
  The only team with a longer active win streak against league competition is Northern Iowa (58).
Best Starts With A New Coach
Brian Rosen is the only coach since Creighton brought back volleyball in 1994 to win at least half of his first 34 matches.
  Rosen went 28-6 in his rookie campaign, well ahead of Howard Wallace (15-19), Kirsten Bernthal Booth (15-19) and Ben Guiliano (9-25) through 34 matches (which includes part of their second season).
  Rosen is also the only coach in program history to win his or her first four (or more) conference matches. He's currently 16-0.
Pink Out Raises $21,496.50
The Creighton Volleyball team hosted its 18th Annual Pink Out match on Oct. 19, using the competition as an opportunity to benefit the American Cancer Society's Hope Lodge Nebraska.
  Last year's Pink Out Jersey auction raised $9,106.23, plus an additional $10,017 on matchday via donations. This year's auction brought in $10,239.50, as well as $11,257 in donations.
  The winning bidders get the opportunity to honor a friend or family member who has battled cancer or is currently battling cancer. The warm-up shirt to be worn could be personalized by the winning bidder.
  Shortly after the match, the family members of the winning bidders had the opportunity to meet the student-athletes of the jersey they bid on.
  The American Cancer Society Hope Lodge Nebraska provides a free home away from home for cancer patients and their caregivers who must travel to Omaha to receive their lifesaving treatment.
  Below is the final numbers for each jersey/item in the auction this year.
#1Â Â $405Â Â #2Â Â $910Â Â #3Â Â $405
#5Â Â $355Â Â #6Â Â $525Â Â #7Â Â $570
#8Â Â $1,167Â Â #9Â Â $350Â Â #10Â Â $365
#11Â Â $405Â Â #12Â Â $200Â Â #13Â Â $365
#17Â Â $395Â Â #18Â Â $345Â Â #19Â Â $710
#22Â Â $455Â Â #24Â Â $800Â Â Â Â
Courtside Seats $237.50  Autographed Balls $435, $840
Sokol Milestone Unlocked
Creighton owns a 209-34 record (.860) all-time inside D.J. Sokol Arena, as CU picked up its 200th home win in the facility on Sept. 26.
  Creighton started 50-17 (.746) in the facility, which means it is 159-17 (.903) since then in its on-campus home.
Milestone Wins at D.J. Sokol Arena
  W-L  Opponent  Date
  1-0  Texas Tech (W 3-0)  8/28/09
  50-17  Villanova (W 3-0)  11/24/13
  100-25  DePaul (W 3-0)  11/5/17
  150-31  #25 USC (W 3-1)  9/2/22
  200-34  Xavier (W 3-0)  9/26/25
Home Sweet Home
Creighton completed its 13th season as a member of the BIG EAST since joining the league in the summer of 2013.
  Since then, the Bluejays are 120-4 in home matches against BIG EAST teams (109-3 in the regular-season, 11-1 in the BIG EAST Tournament).
  Since the start of the 2015 season, Creighton is 104-1 inside D.J. Sokol Arena against BIG EAST teams, which includes a 94-1 mark in league play and a 10-0 mark in the conference tournament. The only setback (on Feb. 6, 2021 vs. Marquette) was played as a non-conference match, only to be flipped to a league contest 19 days later.
  Put another way, since enrolling at Creighton in the fall of 2022, fourth-year Bluejay seniors Ava Martin and Sky McCune went 40-0 in home matches against BIG EAST teams, and 120-10 in sets.
  Creighton has won 54 straight matches against BIG EAST opposition at home.
  Since the start of the 2023 season, Creighton has won 84-of-88 sets at home against BIG EAST teams, dropping only the third set on Oct. 1, 2024 to Marquette, the second and third sets to Marquette on Nov. 1, 2025, and the second set to Villanova on Nov. 7, 2025.
League Opener Histories
Creighton's 3-0 win vs. Xavier on Sept. 26 improved the Jays to 24-8 all-time in conference openers, and 1-0 under Brian Rosen. That includes an 12-1 mark in BIG EAST lid-lifters, with 12 straight wins.
  Including 2025, each of the last 13 times that Creighton won its league opener (2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025), the Bluejays went on to win the regular-season title, going a combined 211-13 in regular-season league action. Creighton also won 12 conference tournament titles during those years, going 24-1 at the league tournament in those seasons.
  In the 23 seasons that Creighton has won its conference opener, it has never finished worse than .500 in league play and it owns a combined .798 (340-86) winning percentage in league matches.
  In the eight years in which Creighton lost its league opener, the Bluejays have had a losing record on five occasions and owns a combined .363 (53-93) winning percentage during league contests.
  In conference home openers, Creighton is 27-5 overall with 15 straight wins.
  In league road openers, Creighton is 23-9 overall with 12 straight wins after this year's 3-0 win at Marquette.
  The last team to win a BIG EAST regular-season or tournament title without winning its regular-season opener in conference play was Cincinnati in the fall of 2008, which will continue beyond 2025.
Wurtz On A Run
Standing at 6-foot-4, Nora Wurtz isn't your typical serving specialist, but that doesn't mean she hasn't been a tremendous weapon behind the service line.
  Earlier this fall Wurtz had a streak of 11 straight matches with an ace, tied for the ffith-longest streak in program history. Wurtz's streak tied Julianne Mandolfo's 11 straight matches with an ace in 2010 for the longest ever by a Bluejay freshman.
  Teammate Annalea Maeder also had an 11-match streak with an ace that ended in November.
Consecutive Matches With An Ace
  15  Amanda Cvejdlik, Sept. 29-Nov. 18, 2006
  12  Madelyn Cole - Oct. 27, 2018-Aug. 30, 2019
  12  Madelyn Cole, Sept. 14-Oct. 25, 2019
  12  Ellie Bolton, Aug. 26-Sept. 23, 2023
  11  Kim Whitman, Sept. 5-Oct. 4, 1998
  11  Molly Moran, Oct. 7-Nov. 10, 2000
  11  Julianne Mandolfo, Oct. 2-Nov. 13, 2010
  11  Nora Wurtz, Sept. 5-27, 2025
  11  Annalea Maeder, Sept. 27 - Nov. 3, 2025
  9  Melissa Weisensee, Sept. 1-20, 1995
  9  Madelyn Cole, Aug. 31 - Sept. 21, 2018
  9  Norah Sis, Sept. 17-Oct. 14, 2022
Don't Fret
The combination of losing four All-Americans off a 32-3 team, plus a grueling schedule featuring seven top-25 opponents in its 12 non-conference matches, helped Creighton start "just" 7-5 through 12 matches.
  Each of the two previous times that Creighton has lost at least five of its first 12 matches, the Bluejays rebounded quite nicely.
  This season Creighton started 5-5 before embarking on a 23-match win streak. The team finished 28-6 and reached the Elite Eight.
  In 2016 Creighton ended non-conference play with a 6-6 mark. That squad rebounded to win its next 23 matches and finished 29-7, reaching the Elite Eight for the first time.Â
  The year before in 2015 Creighton finished the non-conference slate 5-7. That team won 22 of its next 23 matches, including a 17-1 mark in BIG EAST play, and qualified for the program's first Sweet 16 berth.
Attendance Update
Creighton ranked 13th nationally in total home attendance (52,716) and 17th in average fans per home match (3,295).Â
  The number of home fans, as well as home average attendance, are both program records.
  Creighton has led the BIG EAST in average home attendance in all but one non-COVID year since joining the league.
Most Home Fans, Season
  Rk.  Fans  Dates  Year
  1.  52,716  16  2025
  2.  47,632  17  2018
  3.  44,518  19  2024
  4.  41,805  17  2022
  5.  30,211  14  2021
Highest Home Attendance Average, Season
  Average Rk.  Fans  Dates  Year
  1.  3,295  52,716  16  2025
  2.  2,802  47,632  17  2018
  3.  2,459  41,805  17  2022
  4.  2,343  44,518  19  2024
  5.  2,161  28,089  13  2023
Overwhelming The Unranked
Creighton went 25-0 this season against unranked teams, and the serve and pass game was a major reason why.
  In those 25 matches (85 sets), CU served 207 aces (2.44 saps.) compared to 216 service errors. Its opponents had just 63 aces (0.74 saps.) but made 185 serving miscues.
Report Card
Creighton is 204-16 all-time in regular-season BIG EAST matches.
  Here's a report card of how CU has done in 50 match segments in the BIG EAST, which includes a 165-9 mark (.948) in its last 174 matches.
  Matches  W-L  Â
  1-50  43-7
  51-100  48-2
  101-150  46-4
  151-200  47-3
  201-220  20-0
Watch This!
Fourteen of Creighton's 34 matches this fall aired on television (four on FS1, three on ESPN2, three on BTN, three on Nebraska Public Media, one on SNY).Â
  Creighton has also won 57 straight non-televised matches, since an Oct. 6, 2023 loss at Marquette.
Historically Speaking
Here's a look at the top indoor volleyball-only regular-season crowds in NCAA history after Creighton smashed a record on Sept. 16th at CHI Health Center Omaha.
Top Reg.-Season Indoor Volleyball-Only Crowds in NCAA History
  Att.  Opponent    Date  Site
  17,675  Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-2  9/16/25  Omaha, NE
  17,037  Wisconsin def. Marquette, 3-1  9/13/23  Milwaukee, WI
  16,833  Florida def. Wisconsin, 3-2  9/16/22  Madison, WI
  15,797  Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-2  9/7/22  Omaha, NE
  15,734  Florida vs. Pittsburgh, 3-2  8/24/25  Lincoln, NE
  15,734  Nebraska def. Stanford, 3-0  Â
  15,576  Nebraska def. Pittsburgh, 3-1  8/22/25  Lincoln, NE
  15,576  Stanford vs. Florida, 3-1  Â
  15,084  Wisconsin def. Marquette, 3-1  9/17/24  Madison, WI
  14,876  Wisconsin def. Purdue, 3-0  10/26/24  West Lafayette, IN
  14,876  Purdue def. Indiana, 3-0  10/19/24  West Lafayette, IN
  14,126  Nebraska def. Louisville, 3-0  9/22/24  Louisville, KY
  14,035  Texas def. Wisconsin, 3-1  9/1/24  Milwaukee, WI
  14,035  Stanford def. Minnesota, 3-2  Â
  14,022  Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-2  9/6/18  Omaha, NE
  13,870  UCLA def. Nebraska, 3-2  9/13/09  Lincoln, NE
  13,412  Nebraska def. LSU, 3-0  9/12/08  Lincoln, NE
  13,396  Nebraska def. Hawai'i, 3-0  10/21/07  Lincoln, NE
  13,081  Cal Poly def. Creighton, 3-0  9/2/07  Omaha, NE
    Nebraska def. Penn State, 3-0
  13,071  Nebraska def. Maryland, 3-1  11/30/24  College Park, MD
  12,760  Louisville def. Kentucky, 3-0  9/13/23  Louisville, KY
  12,707  Nebraska def. Michigan, 3-0  10/19/25  Ann Arbor, MI
  12,510  Pittsburgh def. Louisville, 3-1  11/27/24  Louisville, KY
  12,504  Nebraska def. Colorado, 3-0  11/4/00  Lincoln, NE
  12,277  Wisconsin def. Florida, 3-1  9/21/25  Madison, WI
  12,112  Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-1  9/24/06  Omaha, NE
Largest Crowds To See The Jays
Sept. 16th marked the fourth time in eight matches at CHI Health Center Omaha that Creighton broke an all-time NCAA attendance record.
  In 2007 CU played in front of 13,081 in a match against Cal Poly that was part of a doubleheader. In 2018 CU met Nebraska before 14,022 fans. In 2022, CU welcomed 15,797 fans against Nebraska. And on Sept. 16 the crowd was 17,675.
  Below is a list of the largest crowds (and home crowds) in Creighton Volleyball history, which includes four crowds of 10,000 or more this fall.
Creighton's Largest Home Crowds All-Time
  Att.  Opponent  Date  CU Result  Facility
  17,675  #1 Nebraska  09/16/25  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  15,797  #2 Nebraska  09/07/22  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  14,022  #7 Nebraska  09/06/18  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  13,081  #18 Cal Poly  09/02/07  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  12,112  #1 Nebraska  09/24/06  L 1-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  11,279  #3 Nebraska  09/08/21  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  10,131  #4 Nebraska  09/15/15  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  8,037  #2 Nebraska  10/05/08  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  2,665  Ole Miss  12/06/24  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,658  #4 Louisville  09/12/25  L 1-3  Sokol
  2,653  Auburn  12/02/22  L 2-3  Sokol
  2,578  #13 Kentucky  09/01/17  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,570  DePaul  10/20/24  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,569  NC State  08/30/24  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,568  Minnesota  12/02/23  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,563  Colgate  12/01/23  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,554  Northern Iowa  12/05/25  W 3-1  Sokol
  2,552  South Dakota  11/30/18  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,527  Northern Colorado  12/04/25  W 3-2  Sokol
  2,517  Coastal Carolina  12/01/17  W 3-1  Sokol
  2,517  South Dakota  12/05/24  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,514  #7 Nebraska  08/31/10  L 0-3  Sokol
  2,509  #22 Washington  12/01/18  L 0-3  Sokol
  2,504  #9 Marquette  11/22/19  W 3-1  Sokol
Creighton Volleyball's Largest Crowds (All Sites)
  Att.  Opponent  Date  CU Result  Facility
  17,675  #1 Nebraska  09/16/25  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  15,797  #2 Nebraska  09.07/22  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  14,022  #6 Nebraska  09/06/18  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  13,081  #18 Cal Poly  09/02/07  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  12,112  #1 Nebraska  09/24/06  L 1-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  11,678  vs. #14 Kansas  08/31/25  W 3-2  Kohl Center
  11,279  #3 Nebraska  09/08/21  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  10,438  vs. #2 Penn St.  08/23/25  L 0-3  Pinn Bank Arena
  10,131  #4 Nebraska  09/15/15  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  10,072  vs. #5 Texas  08/29/25  L 0-3  Kohl Center
  8,924  at #5 Nebraska  09/06/23  L 1-3  Devaney Ctr.
  8,656  at #4 Nebraska  09/10/24  L 2-3  Devaney Ctr.Â
  8,627  at #5 Nebraska  09/29/02  L 0-3  Devaney Ctr.
  8,450  at #2 Nebraska  08/30/19  L 1-3  Devaney Ctr.
  8,277  vs. Montana St.  09/16/16  W 3-0  Devaney Ctr.
  8,249  at #1 Nebraska  09/17/16  L 1-3  Devaney Ctr.
  8,237  vs. #20 Baylor (@NU)  08/31/19  L 0-3  Devaney Ctr.
  8,060  at #9 Nebraska  09/17/14  L 1-3  Devaney Ctr.
The Friendly Confines
Creighton had its first unbeaten home season in program history in 2023, going a perfect 13-0 in matches and 39-3 in sets.
  Last year CU did even better, going 19-0 and losing just two sets at home.
  Though its 32-match win streak was snapped on Sept. 12 against No. 4 Louisville, that still means the Bluejays are 46-1 in its last 47 contests at D.J. Sokol Arena.
  All told, Creighton has won 132 of its last 143 home sets at D.J. Sokol Arena.
Creighton's Longest Home Win Streaks
Wins  Dates  Snapped By
  32  Sept. 1, 2023 - Dec. 6, 2024  #4 Louisville, 3-1
  15  Sept. 7 - Nov. 30, 2018  #22 Washington, 3-0
  13  Sept. 1, 2012 - Sept. 7, 2013  California, 3-0
  13  Sept. 9, 2016-Sept. 1, 2017  #18 USC, 3-0
Creighton Introduces New Taraflex Court
Creighton Volleyball introduced a new Taraflex® court at its 2025 regular-season home debut on Sept. 12 against Louisville.
  The court was designed by GLGR out of Portland, Ore., in working with Specialty Floors out of Parkville, Mo., representatives of Taraflex Sports.
  The new court features a royal blue outline with a feather pattern similar to what is on the Creighton men's basketball court that was unveiled last October at CHI Health Center Omaha. More than 6/10ths of a mile of stencils were used to create the blue feather border that features more than a dozen "Easter eggs" hidden throughout.
  The words Creighton and Bluejays flank the end lines in white lettering. The East sideline features the words D.J. Sokol Arena on one side of the court and a BIG EAST Conference logo on the other, both shaded in light blue. The Northeast side of the court, where the team runs in and out when returning to or from the locker room, features the words "Fly Together", while Creighton's popular C-Bird logo adorns the Northwest and Southeast corners of the court
  The West sideline features 14 smaller Bluejay bird outlines, seven on each side of the court. Inside those logo decals are years to designate NCAA Tournament appearances, with different colors used to highlight the program's previous trips to the first weekend, Sweet 16 and Elite Eight. Room to add future postseason appearances is available, if necessary.
  The middle of the court features a gray outline of a Bluejay bird head. The hue of the two-tone court helps put the focus on the action and will make the players in uniform stand out, in addition to making it easier for officials to discern in/out calls along the sidelines. The matte finish on the court adds to the sharpness.
  The perimeter of the court features no less than 14 hidden messages within the design, ranging from Heritage logos to honor Creighton's history, a map of the state of Nebraska, the year Creighton University was founded (1878), the year the Creighton Volleyball program was restarted (1994), and donor acknowledgements.
  The court is a FIVB-certified playing surface and is up to the same high standards that it used in international competitions such as the Olympics. The design process for one of the most unique and complex designed courts in the world began in January, with the full painting process taking a little over a month in application and curing.
Against Ranked Foes
After a total of three top-25 wins from 1994-2014, Creighton has earned at least one top-25 win each of the last 11 seasons (2015-25).Â
  Creighton is 33-95 all-time against ranked teams, with 30 wins coming under Kirsten Bernthal Booth and three under Brian Rosen.
  The highest ranked teams that Creighton has ever beaten at any site were No. 3 Washington (8/26/17 in Seattle) and No. 3 Kentucky (9/4/21 in Lexington). CU's highest-ranked opponent it has defeated at home was a 3-1 win over then-No. 9 Marquette on Nov. 22, 2019.
  This year is the ninth season that CU owned multiple Top-25 victories. The Jays beat three Top 25 teams in 2017, 2022, 2023 and 2205, and a record four in 2018, 2019 and 2024.
Top 25 Sweeps
Creighton owns 32 top 25 victories in its history, but its Sept. 21 sweep of Kansas was just its ninth sweep of a ranked foe.
  Three of those wins have come against Kansas, another three against Kentucky, two vs. Marquette and one at Purdue.
Creighton's 3-0 Wins vs. Top 25 Teams
Opponent  Date
vs. #10 Kentucky  09/05/15
#13 Kentucky  09/01/17
at #7 Kansas  09/09/17
#21 Marquette  09/23/18
at #3 Kentucky  09/04/21
at #16 Purdue  08/26/23
#25 Marquette  11/05/23
at #10 Kansas  09/21/24
#17 Kansas  09/21/25
Top 25 History
Creighton is 261-54 all-time when playing as a ranked team, and also 28-34 all-time against ranked teams when ranked itself. That mark is 4-4 when both Creighton and its opponent are ranked in the top 10.
  Since the start of the 2012 season, 49 of Creighton's 83 losses have come against ranked teams. In that same period, Creighton is 339-34 against unranked teams. Creighton has won all but three of its past 135 home matches over unranked teams and all but 13 of its last 200 matches at all sites against unranked teams.
Ranked vs. Ranked (CU is 28-34)
Home: 11-11Â Â Away: 8-14Â Â Neutral: 9-9
Date  Winner  Loser  CU Score
11/19/12  #11 Minnesota  #21 Creighton  1-3
08/30/13  #25 Creighton  #13 BYU  3-1
09/14/13  #11 UCLA  #24 Creighton  1-3
09/16/13  #7 Hawaii  #23 Creighton  2-3
08/30/14  #22 Kansas  #23 Creighton  1-3
09/03/16  #23 Kentucky  #22 Creighton  0-3
12/02/16  #21 Creighton  #4 Kansas  3-2
12/09/16  #21 Creighton  #17 Michigan  3-2
12/10/16  #5 Texas  #21 Creighton  0-3
08/26/17  #9 Creighton  #3 Washington  3-1
09/01/17  #7 Creighton  #13 Kentucky  3-0
09/02/17  #18 USC  #7 Creighton  0-3
09/08/17  #17 Purdue  #9 Creighton  1-3
09/09/17  #9 Creighton  #7 Kansas  3-0
09/16/17  #19 Iowa State  #8 Creighton  2-3
12/12/17  #12 Michigan St.  #15 Creighton  1-3
08/24/18  #13 Creighton  #5 Kentucky  3-2
08/25/18  #10 USC  #13 Creighton  2-3
09/06/18  #7 Nebraska  #14 Creighton  2-3
09/15/18  #8 Illinois  #10 Creighton  1-3
09/23/18  #10 Creighton  #21 Marquette  3-0
10/26/18  #10 Creighton  #18 Marquette  3-1
11/24/18  #9 Creighton  #16 Marquette  3-1
12/01/18  #22 Washington  #9 Creighton  0-3
08/30/19  #2 Nebraska  #18 Creighton  1-3
08/31/19  #20 Baylor  #18 Creighton  0-3
09/06/19  #23 Creighton  #12 Kentucky  3-1
09/07/19  #23 Creighton  #15 USC  3-1
09/14/19  #12 Washington  #17 Creighton  1-3
10/12/19  #13 Creighton  #10 Marquette  3-2
11/22/19  #12 Creighton  #9 Marquette  3-1
12/07/19  #7 Minnesota  #15 Creighton  2-3
02/05/21  #19 Creighton  #25 Marquette  3-2
02/06/21  #25 Marquette  #19 Creighton  0-3
09/08/21  #3 Nebraska  #19 Creighton  0-3
09/02/22  #17 Creighton  #25 USC  3-1
09/03/22  #16 Kentucky  #17 Creighton  1-3
09/07/22  #2 Nebraska  #17 Creighton  2-3
10/14/22  #21 Creighton  #16 Marquette  3-2
11/19/22  #16 Marquette  #11 Creighton  0-3
11/26/22  #15 Creighton  #14 Marquette  3-2
08/26/23  #18 Creighton  #16 Purdue  3-0
09/06/23  #4 Nebraska  #16 Creighton  1-3
09/16/23  #14 Creighton  #9 Minnesota  3-2
11/05/23  #17 Creighton  #25 Marquette  3-0
12/07/23  #7 Louisville  #17 Creighton  2-3
09/05/24  #11 Creighton  #20 USC  3-1
09/10/24  #5 Nebraska  #9 Creighton  2-3
09/15/24  #4 Louisville  #9 Creighton  2-3
09/20/24  #9 Creighton  #6 Purdue  3-1
09/21/24  #9 Creighton  #10 Kansas  3-0
12/13/24  #6 Creighton   #13 Texas  3-1
12/15/24  #2 Penn State  #6 Creighton  2-3
08/23/25  #2 Penn State  #12 Creighton  0-3
08/29/25  #5 Texas  #12 Creighton  0-3
08/31/25  #12 Creighton  #14 Kansas  3-2
09/07/25  #22 USC  #13 Creighton  0-3
09/12/25  #4 Louisville  #18 Creighton  1-3
09/16/25  #1 Nebraska  #18 Creighton  2-3
09/21/25  #18 Creighton  #17 Kansas  3-0
12/11/25  #11 Creighton  #8 Arizona State  3-0
12/13/25  #2 Kentucky  #11 Creighton  0-3
The Defense Never Rests
Creighton has led the country in opponents hitting percentage in two of the last five seasons, doing so in both 2021 (.124) and 2024 (.130).
  Creighton held foes to .183 this year (49th-best nationally), a figure that plummeted to .151 in league action.
High FIve
Brian Rosen is Creighton's first volleyball coach since the program's 1994 reinstatement to pick up his first victory in a five set match, as Ben Guiliano, Howard Wallace and Kirsten Bernthal Booth's first wins all came in 3-0 sweeps.
Record in 5-Set Matches
Coach  Years  Set 5 W-L
Ben Guiliano  1994-1996  2-10
Howard Wallace  1997-2002  13-18
Kirsten Bernthal Booth  2003-2024  70-42
Brian Rosen  2025-Pres.  4-1
Twice For Breissinger
Junior defensive specialist Sydney Breissinger helped Creighton erase a 3-0 deficit in the fifth set on Aug. 31 vs. Kansas, serving up a 9-0 run that helped the Bluejays take the lead for good. She also served a 9-0 run in the fourth set vs. San Diego on Sept. 5.
  Breissinger's heroics were eerily similar to the 9-0 serving run she had in the fifth set on Sept. 16, 2023 in a win over No. 9 Minnesota. That win over the Gophers had been CU's last previous five-set win.
  Since enrolling at Creighton in 2023, Breissinger owns 54 service runs of five or longer, easily the most of any Bluejay.
155 Weeks As A Ranked Team
Creighton was ranked 10th in the year-end edition of the AVCA poll, the 155th time in program history it's been ranked and its best mark all season long. That's 37th-most of all programs in NCAA history.
  All 155 rankings have occurred since 2012.
  The Bluejays are one of 10 schools (along with Baylor, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pitt, Purdue, Stanford, Texas and Wisconsin) to have been ranked each of the last 78 polls.
  Creighton's 78 weeks in a row being ranked dates began on Sept. 6, 2021 and sets a program-record, breaking the previous-high of 64 from Oct. 31, 2016 to March 15, 2021.Â
  Creighton is one of eight schools (Creighton, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Purdue, Stanford, Wisconsin) to be in the Top 10 of the year-end poll in both 2024 and 2025.
Preseason Ranking
Creighton was ranked 12th in the AVCA preseason poll on Aug. 7th. It was the 11th time in the past 13 years that the Jays have been ranked in the preseason, and fourth year in a row.
  The No. 12 slotting tied last year's team for the second-best preseason ranking in program history, trailing only the 2017 team that was ranked ninth.
  Over the last 18 seasons, 333-of-450 teams (74.0 percent) of teams have been in both the preseason and final polls, and in the 18 seasons from 2008-2025, 408-of-450 teams (90.7 percent) in the preseason top-25 polls would go on to reach the NCAA Tournament, as all but preseason No. 17 Missouri and No. 24 Dayton reached the 2025 NCAA Tournament.
  This year marks the 14th straight season that CU has been ranked at least one week, extending a program record.
  Year  Preseason Rank  Final W-L  Final Rank
  2013  25th  23-9  NR
  2014  23rd  25-9  NR
  2016  18th  27-9  9th
  2017  9th  26-7  16th
  2018  13th  29-5  13th
  2019  18th  25-6  16th
  2020  16th  12-4  NR
  2022  18th  27-5  21st
  2023  18th  29-5  15th
  2024  12th  32-3  5th
  2025  12th  28-6  10th
Production Returns
Creighton returns 11-of-19 letterwinners to the court from last season, including three starters.
  From last year's team, Norah Sis, Elise Goetzinger, Kendra Wait, Abbey Milner, Maddy Bilinovic, Audrey Clark, Katie Maser and Emma Ziegler are not back.
  All told, of the seven categories listed below, Creighton returns 294.5 of a possible 700% back (42.1 percent), the smallest amount returning since it headed into Howard Wallace's final season in 2002.
  Below is a breakdown of the production that is back:
Stat  Returners  Departures
Assists  119 (7.6%)  1,450 (92.4%)
Aces  115 (51.3%)  109 (48.7%)
Digs  598 (35.7%)  1,076 (64.3%)
Points  1,115.5 (50.2%)  1,107.0 (49.8%)
Kills  843 (50.1%)  841 (49.9%)
Matches Started  104 (49.5%)  106 (50.5%)
Blocks  157.5 (50.1%)  157.0 (49.9%)
One Tough Schedule
Of Creighton's 12 non-conference matches, seven were against ranked teams and three others against programs that received votes in the preseason AVCA Top 25 poll.
  Creighton was the only team in the preseason Top 25 with 10 or more non-conference matches against teams getting votes, as Texas and TCU were next-closest with eight each.
No Losers Here
Creighton has been as good as anyone at avoiding losses in recent seasons.
  Creighton and Pittsburgh are the nation's only teams to lose six times or less in the 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024 and 2025 seasons.
  Creighton is also the only school nationally who have won 25 matches or more in every season between 2014-25 (not counting the 2020 COVID-19 year, when CU only played 16 times).
Survival of the Fittest
Since the move to rally scoring in 2001, Creighton has won 10 matches when surviving a match point and lost four contests when holding a match point of its own.
Surviving Match Points Since 2001
Date  Opponent  MP(s) Faced  Final Set 5
09/27/02  Evansville  13-14, 14-15  19-17
08/30/03  vs. McNeese State  13-14, 15-16  18-16
10/10/03  Wichita State  13-14  16-14
10/13/06  at Wichita State  12-14, 13-14, 14-15  17-15
09/11/07  at Drake  13-14, 14-15  17-15
08/26/11Â Â vs. UTSAÂ Â 12-14, 13-14Â Â 16-14
11/16/12  at Wichita State  13-14  16-14
09/20/15  Kansas State  23-24 (4th set)  15-13
11/20/15  at Georgetown  23-24, 26-27 (4th set)  15-7
08/24/18  vs. #5 Kentucky  16-15, 19-18  22-20
Tournament Tested
Creighton has played multiple matches in 30Â tournaments since the start of the 2021 calendar year, and won 20 of them.Â
  Keep in mind that when Kirsten Bernthal Booth was hired in 2003, Creighton had been 17-33 in 15 regular-season tournaments all-time, with just one tournament title (the 2000 Iowa State Heritage Classic).
CU's Multi-Match Tournaments Since Jan. 1, 2021
Year  Event  CU Record (Place)
2021  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2021  Mizzou Invitational  3-0 (1st)
2021  Bluegrass Battle  3-0 (1st)
2021  Bluejay Invitational  3-0 (1st)
2021  Shocker Volleyball Classic  3-0 (1st)
2021  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2021  NCAA Tournament  1-1 (T-17th)
2022  Rumble in the Rockies  3-0 (1st)
2022  Bluejay Invitational  2-1 (2nd)
2022  Omaha Invitational  2-0 (1st)
2022  Rice adidas Invitational  1-1 (2nd)
2022  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2023  Reamer Club Xtra Special Premier  2-1 (1st)
2023  Bluejay Invitational  3-0 (1st)
2023  MN Hospitality Omaha Challenge  2-0 (1st)
2023  Diet Coke Challenge  2-0 (1st)
2023  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2023  NCAA Tournament  2-1 (T-9th)
2024  Bluejay Invitational  3-0 (1st)
2024  Creighton Classic  2-0 (1st)
2024  Cardinal Classic  2-1 (2nd)
2024  Jayhawk Classic  2-0 (1st)
2024  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2024  NCAA Tournament  3-1 (T-5th)
2025  Opening Spike Classic  1-1 (T-2nd)
2025  Trojan Invitational  2-1 (2nd)
2025  Bluejay Invitational  2-1 (2nd)
2025  Creighton Classic  2-0 (1st)
2025  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2025  NCAA Tournament  3-1 (T-5th)
Jays Earn Tourney Titles
Creighton has won at least one tournament each of the last 14 seasons, a streak that dates to 2012.
   During that span, the Bluejays have won 37 tournament titles, not to mention 12 regular-season league crowns.
  Creighton has also now won at least one home tournament each of the last nine seasons.
Creighton's Tournament Titles Since 2012
Year  Titles Won  Tourney Hosts
2012Â Â 3Â Â USF, UNC, MVC
2013Â Â 1Â Â BGSU
2014Â Â 1Â Â CU, BIG EAST
2015Â Â 1Â Â BIG EAST
2016Â Â 1Â Â BIG EAST
2017Â Â 4Â Â WASH, CU, KU, BIG EAST
2018Â Â 3Â Â SMU, CU, BIG EAST
2019Â Â 2Â Â UNI, CU
2020Â Â 1Â Â BIG EAST
2021Â Â 5Â Â MIZZ, UK, CU, WSU, BIG EAST
2022Â Â 3Â Â WYO, UNO, BIG EAST
2023Â Â 5Â Â Purdue, CU, UNO, MINN, BIG EAST
2024Â Â 4Â Â CU, CU, KU, BIG EAST
2025Â Â 2Â Â CU, BIG EAST
2-0 Better Than 0-2
Creighton is 440-11 (.976) all-time when leading a match 2-0, and 161-1 (.994) all-time at D.J. Sokol Arena when up 2-0 at the break.
  Per RichKern.com, Division I teams that won the first two sets won 94.9 percent of their matches from 2014-23.
  Creighton has won 127 matches in a row when taking a 2-0 lead.
  Conversely, the Jays are 17-212 (.074) all-time when trailing a match 0-2. Those 17 comebacks in program history from down 0-2 are listed below.
Date  Opponent  Sets 3-5 scores  Coach
09/19/97  at Bradley  15-11, 15-13, 15-8  Wallace
10/01/99  at Drake  15-6, 17-15, 15-11  Wallace
09/03/04  vs. Montana  30-20, 30-21, 15-11  Booth
10/15/04  at Bradley  30-22, 30-23, 15-11  Booth
10/15/05  at So. Illinois  30-25, 30-24, 15-8  Booth
09/21/07  at No. Iowa  31-29, 30-26, 15-12  Booth
11/16/12  at Wichita St.  25-16, 25-20, 16-14  Booth
09/05/14  vs. No. Iowa  25-16, 25-22, 15-5  Booth
11/08/14  at Butler  25-16, 25-20, 15-13  Booth
09/20/15  Kansas State  25-23, 26-24, 15-13  Booth
10/09/15  DePaul  25-21, 25-12, 15-11  Booth
11/20/15  at Georgetown  30-28, 26-24, 15-7  Booth
10/13/17  Butler  25-21, 25-23, 15-9  Booth
10/18/18  Xavier  25-17, 25-17, 15-13  Booth
01/31/21  at So. Dakota  25-20, 25-23, 15-7  Booth
10/07/22  at UConn  25-15, 25-12, 15-13  Booth
10/14/22  #16 Marquette  25-19, 25-16, 15-8  Booth
Set 1 Result A Strong Indicator
Creighton has gone 188-6 in its last 194 matches at all sites when winning the first set, compared to an 18-27 record in that same span when dropping the opener.
  Creighton has gone 219-4 (.982) in its last 223 matches against unranked foes when winning the opening set.
  Per RichKern.com, Division I teams that lost the first set won just 20.3 percent of their matches from 2014-23.
  Since Aug. 29, 2010, Creighton has gone 181-6 in its last 187 home matches when taking a 1-0 lead, losing only to Pacific (Sept. 12, 2015), No. 7 Nebraska (Sept. 6, 2018), South Dakota (Jan. 29, 2021), No. 16 Kentucky (Sept. 3, 2022), Auburn (Dec. 2, 2022) and No. 4 Louisville (Sept. 12, 2025).Â
  The Jays have won their last 45 of their last 46 home matches following a first set victory.
Against NCAA Tournament Qualifiers
This year's team has played 15 matches against teams that made the 2024 NCAA Tournament with contests against Marquette (3x), Kansas (2x), Northern Iowa (2x), Louisville, USC, Nebraska, Texas, Penn State, Northern Colorado, Arizona State and Kentucky.
Year  W-L vs. Previous Season NCAA Teams
1994Â Â 0-4
1995Â Â 0-2
1996Â Â 0-2
1997Â Â 0-3
1998Â Â 0-5
1999Â Â 2-4
2000Â Â 0-4
2001Â Â 1-6
2002Â Â 0-5
2003Â Â 0-3
2004Â Â 2-2
2005Â Â 0-6
2006Â Â 4-6
2007Â Â 4-9
2008Â Â 6-8
2009Â Â 1-11
2010Â Â 4-7
2011Â Â 2-6
2012Â Â 8-3
2013Â Â 6-6
2014Â Â 4-5
2015Â Â 11-5
2016Â Â 10-7
2017Â Â 8-6
2018Â Â 8-5
2019Â Â 5-4
2020Â Â 3-1
2021Â Â 3-1
2022Â Â 5-4
2023Â Â 11-3
2024Â Â 9-3
2025Â Â 9-6
TOTALÂ Â 125-151
TOTAL Before Booth  3-35
TOTAL Under Booth  113-110
TOTAL Under Rosen  9-6
• Download as a PDF
  What began as a season with significant change saw the Creighton Volleyball program end up in a familiar place...the Elite Eight.
  The Bluejays entered the 2025 season with plenty of question marks after the departure of four All-Americans and a legendary head coach.Â
  First Team All-American and two-time BIG EAST Player of the Year Kendra Wait graduated, as did Second Team All-American and 2023 BIG EAST Player of the Year Norah Sis. Also gone were middle blocker Elise Goetzinger and libero Maddy Bilinovic, both of whom earned Honorable Mention All-America honors in their lone season with the Bluejays. Kirsten Bernthal Booth, who transformed Creighton Volleyball over the previous 22 years and was the architect behind building a national powerhouse, also resigned in the spring of 2025 to take a job with League One Volleyball.
  Despite all the changes, Creighton domination the competition en route to winning a 12th straight BIG EAST regular-season title in Brian Rosen's first season taking over the program.
  Creighton opened the season ranked 12th nationally and faced defending national champion and second-ranked Penn State at the AVCA First Serve in Lincoln to open the season, falling in three sets in Rosen's debut.
  The following weekend CU headed to Madison for the Opening Spike Classic to meet No. 5 Texas and No. 14 Kansas. The Jays were swept by the Longhorns in a rematch of CU's Sweet 16 win over UT in the 2024 NCAA Tournament before breaking through with a 3-2 win over KU..
  The Jays then headed west to the Trojan Invitational, beating San Diego and UC Santa Barbara before an undermanned Bluejay squad lost to host USC to close the weekend.
  Creighton debuted a new floor the weekend of Sept. 12-14 when it hosted a loaded field in the Bluejay Invitational that included No. 4 Louisville as well as eventual league champions Rice and Northern Iowa. CU lost to the Cardinals, then swept the Owls and Panthers.
  A midweek match against No. 1 Nebraska on Sept. 16th attracted the largest regular-season volleyball-only indoor crowd in NCAA history, as 17,675 fans descended upon CHI Health Center Omaha for the in-state tussle. Creighton won the second and fourth sets but would fall to the Cornhuskers 15-9 in the fifth set. Nebraska would open the season 33-0 before losing in the Elite Eight.
  The Jays closed out non-conference action with 3-0 sweeps over South Florida and No. 17 Kansas at the Creighton Classic, giving CU a 7-5 record against a gauntlet in advance of BIG EAST play.
  Creighton dominated the BIG EAST, going 16-0 while dropping just four sets in league play. The biggest test came at home on Nov. 1, where rival Marquette won the second and third sets to take a 2-1 lead inside D.J. Sokol Arena. The Bluejays would regroup, taking the final two sets 25-17 and 15-10.
  Creighton also won its sixth straight BIG EAST Tournament title the weekend of Nov. 22-23 in Milwaukee. CU swept host and fourth-seeded Marquette before crushing second-seeded Xavier in the final.
  Armed with a 20-match win streak, Creighton earned a No. 3 seed in the Lexington Region (No. 10 overall) and opened NCAA Tournament play at home for the fifth straight season.
  CU faced a major challenge in the First Round when it faced Big Sky Conference champion Northern Colorado. The Bears won the second and third sets -- both by 25-23 scores -- putting CU in a hole it hadn't faced since five weeks earlier against Marquette. The experience paid off, as the Jays bounced back to win the final two sets to avoid a historic upset.
  One night later, Creighton secured its third straight trip to the Sweet 16 with a 3-1 victory over Northern Iowa in front of a sold out crowd of 2,554 at D.J. Sokol Arena.
  CU would next trek to Lexington, Ky., for an NCAA Regional Semifinal battle against No. 8 Arizona State. Creighton dropped the second set against the Sun Devils before finishing off a 3-1 win to clinch a second straight Elite Eight berth.
  Creighton's dreams of playing in the Final Four in Kansas City fell just short, as host Kentucky proved why it was the nation's No. 2 team with a 25-19, 25-13, 25-18 sweep over the Bluejays.
  Three seniors carried Creighton in 2025. Ava Martin (4.48 kps., .324%, 0.40 saps.) and Kiara Reinhardt (2.53 kps., .447%, 1.03 bps.) were both named Second Team All-Americans by the AVCA, were both named College Sports Communicators Academic All-Americans and were both First Round Draft picks in the Major League Volleyball Draft. Martin was named BIG EAST Player of the Year as well as BIG EAST Tournament MVP while firmly establishing her place in Bluejay lore as one of the program greats.
  Annalea Maeder (10.75 aps., 2.67 dps., 0.40 saps.), a Cal transfer, earned Third Team All-America accolades in addition to BIG EAST Setter of the Year recognition.
  In addition to the three seniors, sophomore Jaya Johnson (2.40 kps., 0.81 bps., .270%) earned All-BIG EAST acclaim and Abbey Hayes (1.88 kps.) was named to the BIG EAST's All-Freshman Team.
  Other key contributors included Eloise Brandewie (1.40 ksp., 1.02 bps., .297%), defensive specialists/liberos Sydney Breissinger (3.10 dps., 0.36 saps.) and Saige Damrow (2.56 dps.) and serving specialist Nora Wurtz (0.60 saps.). Wurtz broke Creighton's single-match (9) and single-season (60) records for aces during her redshirt freshman campaign.
  Destiny Ndam-Simpson (1.47 kps.) started strong before an injury in September cut her season short, Alivia Hausmann was used to serve and play defense, and Ivy Leuck, Sky McCune and Ashlyn Paymal all proved vaulable in a reserve role.
  Creighton finished the year with a 28-6 record, including a 14-2 mark at home (14-1 at D.J. Sokol Arena). The Bluejays also set program records for total home attendance (52,716) and average home attendance (3,295).
Creighton Coaches
Brian Rosen was named the fourth head coach in modern Creighton Volleyball history on April 6, 2025, as he was promoted following the departure of 22-year head coach Kirsten Bernthal Booth. He went 28-6 in his initial season as Creighton head coach, defeating No. 14 Kansas on Aug. 31 for his first win on the Bluejay sideline. He became the BIG EAST's first rookie head coach since 2014 to win 20+ matches in his first year in the league, the only rookie head coach in league history to win multiple NCAA Tournament matches, and the first new coach to win 28+ matches in his first season.
  Named the 2024 AVCA National Assistant Coach of the Year, Rosen served as a Creighton assistant from 2022-24, during which time CU went 88-13, swept the BIG EAST regular-season and tournament tiles each fall, and defeated 10 Top 25 opponents.
  Rosen led Creighton to the BIG EAST regular-season and Tournament titles in 2025 and a return to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament.
  The 2008 South Carolina grad went 45-17 as head coach at Division II Nova Southeastern from 2019-21, though the 2020 season was cancelled due to COVID-19 without playing a match.
  Rosen was assisted by Angie Oxley Behrens, Adam Kessenich and Izzy Ashburn.
Creighton's NCAA Tournament History
Creighton made its 15th appearance in the NCAA Tournament in the past 16 years after earning a 14th straight bid to the Big Dance. The Bluejays made their NCAA debut in 2010 and have been in every tournament since then with the exception of 2011.
  The Bluejays are 20-15 in those 15 appearances, going 12-3 in First Round play, 5-7 in the Second Round, 3-2 in the Regional Semifinals and 0-3 in the Regional Finals. The Bluejays are 9-4 at home, 9-4 in neutral-site matches and 2-7 in true road matches.Â
  Brian Rosen was in the NCAA Tournament for the first time as Creighton head coach, going 3-1 in the postseason.
NCAA Tourney Streak
The inclusion of Creighton Volleyball into the 2025 NCAA Tournament extends an impressive streak for Bluejay athletics.
  This year marks the 39th straight academic calendar year that Creighton has had at least one NCAA Tournament team.
14 Straight NCAA's
Creighton Volleyball has made the NCAA Tournament in each of the last 14 seasons. They are the first women's team in any sport at Creighton to make 14 straight NCAA Tournament appearances.
  The only other sport in Creighton history to make even 10 straight NCAA Tournament appearances is the men's soccer program, which qualified in 17 straight seasons from 1992-2008.
   Creighton is one of seven teams nationally to have appeared in each of the last 14 NCAA Tournaments (2012-25). That group features BYU, Creighton, Florida, Kentucky, Nebraska, Penn State and Texas.
  There are also nine schools that have appeared in 15 of the last 16 NCAA Tournaments, a group that includes Creighton, Minnesota, Purdue and Stanford. Florida, Kentucky, Nebraska, Penn State, and Texas have appeared in every NCAA Tournament since at least 2010.
We're Elite
The Volleyball program joined the Men's Soccer program (in 2002-03, 2011-12 and 2014-15) as the only programs in the history of Creighton Athletics history to make back-to-back Elite Eight's.
  Brian Rosen joined former Men's Soccer coach Elmar Bolowich as the second head coach in the history of Creighton Athletics to take his first team to an Elite Eight, and also joined Bolowich as the second head coach in the history of Creighton Athletics to win his first three NCAA Tournament games/matches.
Against NCAA Tournament Teams
Creighton went 14-6 this fall against teams in the field of 64.
  In 20 matches this fall against NCAA Tournament teams, Ava Martin averaged 4.58 kills per set and hit .311, Kiara Reinhardt averaged 2.51 kills and 1.04 blocks per set while hitting .444, Annalea Maeder averaged 11.06 assists per set and Saige Damrow averaged 3.03 digs per set.
  The Jays hit .262 and averaged 13.92 kills, 1.53 aces, 14.72 digs and 2.32 blocks per set.
vs. NCAA Tournament Teams
Opponent  CU Score  Â
Arizona State  W 3-1
Kansas  W 3-2  Â
  W 3-0  Â
Kentucky  L 0-3
Louisville  L 1-3  Â
Marquette  W 3-0  Â
  W 3-2  Â
  W 3-0  Â
Nebraska  L 2-3  Â
Northern Colorado  W 3-0  Â
Northern Iowa  W 3-0  Â
  W 3-1  Â
Penn State  L 0-3  Â
Rice  W 3-0  Â
San Diego  W 3-1  Â
South Florida  W 3-0  Â
Texas  L 0-3  Â
USCÂ Â L 0-3Â Â Â
Xavier  W 3-0  Â
  W 3-0  Â
AVCA All-Americans
Creighton Volleyball had three seniors earn All-America honors from the American Volleyball Coaches Association. Ava Martin and Kiara Reinhardt picked up Second Team honors, and Annalea Maeder was a Third Team choice.
  Creighton's three honorees were tied for fifth-most in the nation, trailing only the four women chosen from Kentucky, Nebraska, SMU and Texas A&M.
  Creighton and Marquette were the only BIG EAST Conference schools to be represented in the 2025 honors, as MU's Natalie Ring was a Third Team selection and Hattie Bray was an Honorable Mention pick.
  This year marks the 14th straight season that Creighton has had at least one All-American, with multiple All-Americans in 10 of the past 11 campaigns. The only other schools with multiple All-Americans each of the past five years are now Creighton, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Stanford and Wisconsin.Â
  CU's three All-Americans are tied for its second-most ever, something also done in 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2021. Creighton led the country with five All-American selections in 2024.
  A four-time All-BIG EAST selection from Overland Park, Kan., Martin becomes Creighton's fifth different three-time AVCA All-American, joining Kendra Wait (4x), Kelli Browning (3), Jaali Winters (3) and Norah Sis (3). Martin had her best season in a Bluejay uniform, earning BIG EAST Player of the Year honors before taking home BIG EAST Tournament MVP accolades as well.Â
  A sixth-year senior from Cedarburg, Wis., Reinhardt led all players in BIG EAST with a school-record .447 hitting percentage, which ranked sixth nationally. The two-time All-BIG EAST selection finished her career as the winningest player in program history and ranked third in career hitting percentage as well as fourth in career blocks. Reinhardt is the first middle blocker in program history to be named a Second Team All-American or better by the AVCA.
  Maeder made an immediate impact in her lone year as a Bluejay, taking home BIG EAST Setter of the Year honors after averaging 10.75 assists per set. The Ried, Switzerland product ranked 10th nationally with 1,269 assists and ranked second on at Creighton with 2.67 digs per set. Maeder owned a team-leading 16 double-doubles in 2025, becoming the first player in program history with four double-doubles in the same NCAA Tournament. CU has now had an All-American setter in nine of the past 10 seasons.
  Maeder joined 2025 honorees Maddy Bilinovic and Elise Goetzinger as the only players in program history to be named an All-American in their lone year at Creighton.
  Creighton now owns 37 all-time AVCA All-America accolades in program history, which have been earned by 20 different women.
Classroom Champs Too
Creighton had three women earn College Sports Communicators Academic All-District honors, with Sydney Breissinger, Ava Martin and Kiara Reinhardt all recognized.
  Even more impressive, Reinhardt was named a First Team Academic All-American and Martin landed Second Team Academic All-American laurels.
  Reinhardt is just the third different Creighton Volleyball player ever to earn First Team Academic All-America honors from College Sports Communicators, joining Abby Bottomley (2021) and Kendra Wait (2023, 2024). She's one of 16 student-athletes in Creighton history in all sports to earn the prestigious honor.
  Creighton (2) and Stanford (3) were the only schools with multiple Academic All-Americans this year, and the Bluejays remain the only school with multiple Volleyball Academic All-Americas each of the past three seasons.
  This year marks just the fourth occasion that Creighton Volleyball has had multiple Academic All-Americans, joining 2018 (Jaali Winters, Taryn Kloth), 2023 (Kendra Wait and Kiana Schmitt) and 2024 (Kendra Wait and Norah Sis).
Nothing Mid-Major About It
There's nothing mid-major about the Creighton Volleyball program.
  Since 2012, Creighton ranks fourth nationally with 372 victories. The only teams with more wins in those 14 seasons were Western Kentucky (400), Nebraska (394) and Penn State (375). Just behind CU is Texas (369) and Stanford (368).
  In that time, Creighton has made five Sweet 16's and three Elite Eights while leading the country with both 13 regular-season conference titles and 12 league tournament titles,Â
  Creighton is the only Volleyball program in BIG EAST history to ever reach the Elite Eight, and has now done it three times (2016, 2024 and 2025).
How Elite Are We?
Creighton is the nation's only school to reach the Elite Eight in women's volleyball (2024 and 2025), women's basketball (2021), men's basketball (2022) and men's soccer (2022) since the start of the 2021-22 academic year.
Advance In The Dance
Creighton is one of nine schools to appear in the Sweet 16 in each of the last three NCAA Tournaments (2023-25), joining Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Purdue, Stanford, Texas and Wisconsin.Â
  Creighton is one of six schools to be in the Elite Eight in both 2024 and 2025, a list that features Creighton, Kentucky, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Stanford and Wisconsin.    Creighton has won a First Round match in the NCAA Tournament in each of the last three seasons (2023-25). Nationally, only 20 schools have done that: Arizona State, Baylor, Creighton, Florida, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisville, Marquette, Miami (Fla.), Minnesota, Nebraska, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Purdue, SMU, Stanford, TCU, Texas, USC and Wisconsin.
The Gauntlet
Creighton played the nation's second-toughest schedule, and also ranked among the national leaders in Top 50 wins and matches vs. Top 50 opponents in 2025.
  Creighton was 18-0 (including the league tournament) against the BIG EAST Conference (the nation's #5 league).
Most RPI Top 50 Wins in 2025
  Top 50 W's  School
  18  Nebraska
  17  Arizona State
  15  Creighton, Pittsburgh
  14  Wisconsin
Most RPI Top 50 Matches in 2025
  Top 50 MP's  School
  21  Creighton, Arizona State, Kansas
  20  Pittsburgh
  19  Nebraska, Wisconsin, TCU, Utah
Seed History
No fewer than 10-of-16 seeds have reached the Sweet 16 in each of the previous 25 seasons (including 2025).
  On average in that time, 12.92 of the 16 seeds have advanced each year, or roughly 80.8 percent.
  The only times that all 16 seeds advanced to the Sweet 16 was in both 2001 and 2003.
  This year 15 of the 16 seeded teams advanced, as all but USC reached the Sweet 16.
Year  Seeds to Sweet 16?
2025Â Â 15/16
2024Â Â 11/16
2023Â Â 13/16
2022Â Â 15/16
2021Â Â 14/16
2020Â Â 14/16
2019Â Â 13/16
2018Â Â 12/16
2017Â Â 11/16
2016Â Â 12/16
2015Â Â 13/16
2014Â Â 13/16
2013Â Â 11/16
2012Â Â 12/15
2011Â Â 11/16
2010Â Â 11/16
2009Â Â 12/16
2008Â Â 13/16
2007Â Â 10/16
2006Â Â 15/16
2005Â Â 13/16
2004Â Â 14/16
2003Â Â 16/16
2002Â Â 13/16
2001Â Â 16/16
How Sweet It Is
Creighton has made five Sweet 16s, all of which have come in the 11 seasons from 2015-25.
  Creighton is one of 46 schools to have made a Sweet 16 since 2015, but only 16 of those teams have been there five times or more in that span.
  Here's that list:
Most Sweet 16s, Last 11 Seasons (2015-25)
  Sweet 16s  School
  11  Nebraska
  11  Texas
  11  Wisconsin
  9  Minnesota
  9  Penn State
  8  Florida
  8  Kentucky
  8  Stanford
  7  Louisville
  6  BYU
  6  Pittsburgh
  6  Purdue
  6  Washington
  5  Creighton
  5  Ohio State
  5  Oregon
  4  Baylor
  4  Illinois
  4  UCLA
Making History
This is Creighton Volleyball's third straight trip to the Sweet 16. In the history of Creighton Athletics, the only other program to make three consecutive Sweet 16 trips is the men's soccer program, whcih made four straight trips to the Sweet 16 from 2002-05, as well as three in a row from 2014-16.
  Brian Rosen became the second coach in the history of Creighton Athletics to win his first three NCAA Tournament games/matches. He joined former men's soccer coach Elmar Bolowich, who won his first three games in 2011 before a shootout loss in his fourth match at the College Cup.
  And in NCAA Tournaments with 32 teams or more across all sports, Rosen joined Bolowich as the second CU coach to make a Sweet 16 or Elite Eight in his first year as a Creighton head coach.
Seed Value
Creighton was a top 16 national seed in the NCAA Tournament for the eighth time in the past 11 seasons. Only 10 schools in the country can say that, as seen below:
  Rk.  School  Top 16 Seeds Since 2015
  1.  Nebraska  11
    Texas  11
  3.  Wisconsin  10
  4.  Minnesota  9
    Kentucky  9
    Stanford  9
  7.  Creighton  8
    BYU  8
    Florida  8
    Penn State  8
Host With The Most
Creighton hosted the NCAA Tournament for the seventh time in program history, all of which have come since 2017.
  It was also the fifth straight year that the Bluejays have hosted the opening weekend, something only seven schools (Creighton, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Texas and Wisconsin) can claim.
  Creighton is 6-1 in the First Round and 3-3 in the Second Round as host, advancing to the Sweet 16 in 2023, 2024 and 2025.
Piling Up The Wins
Creighton is one three schools to win 27 matches or more each of the last five seasons (2021-25), joining Pittsburgh and Western Kentucky.Â
Winter Hayes
Freshman Abbey Hayes showed no fear in her first NCAA Tournament matches.
  She had nine kills and added 11 digs and three blocks in the First Round win over Northern Colorado.
  One day later she recorded her second double-double of the season with 12 kills and 10 digs while also adding three blocks and two service aces.
  Hayes owned nine kills and five digs vs. Arizona State in the Regional Semifinal before closing her rookie campaign with two kills and nine digs at Kentucky in the Regional Final.
  Hayes averaged 8.3 kills and 7.7 digs in the last six matches of the season, which consists of CU's BIG EAST and NCAA Tournament competitions. Hayes' 18 NCAA Tournament kills are the fourth-most in history by a CU freshman.
  Here's a list of Creighton's NCAA Tournament double-doubles by freshmen:
20k, 10d - Jaali Winters vs. Coastal Carolina  12-04-15
21k, 21d - Jaali Winters at North Carolina  12-05-15
18k, 18d - Keeley Davis at Minnesota  12-07-19
  16k, 10d - Norah Sis vs. Ole Miss  12-02-21
17k, 10d - Norah Sis vs. Kansas  12-03-21
45a, 15d - Kendra Wait vs. Kansas  12-03-21
11a, 14d - Sydney Breissinger vs. Louisville  12-07-23
12k, 10d - Abbey Hayes vs. Northern Iowa  12-05-25
CU's Most NCAA Tournament Kills as a Freshman
  K  Name  Year
  53  Jaali Winters  2015
  33  Norah Sis  2021
  33  Keeley Davis*  2019
  32  Abbey Hayes  2025
* redshirt freshman
Maeder Goes 50/20
Annalea Maeder's finished her NCAA Tournament debut with 53 assists and 21 digs.
  The 21 digs were a career-high and the most by any Bluejay all season.
  She became the eighth different player in CU history to attain at least 20 assists and 20 digs in the same match, but the first to do it in an NCAA Tournament match.
  It was Maeder's team-leading 13th double-double this fall. She would finish with 16.
20 Assists, 20 Digs In A Match
A  D  Name  Opp.  Date
47  22  Melissa Weisensee  Bradley (4s)  9/9/94
51  21  Melissa Weisensee  at Wichita State (5s)  9/14/96
53  24  Melissa Weisensee  at Indiana State (5s)  10/18/96
40  23  Melissa Weisensee  at Drake (5s)  9/13/97
46  38  Melissa Weisensee  Evansville (4s)  10/10/97
46  21  Melissa Weisensee  Missouri State (4s)  10/31/97
65  22  Melissa Weisensee  at Evansville (5s)  11/8/97
55  28  Kailey Reyes  Evansville (5s)  9/11/99
65  24  Kailey Reyes  Illinois State (4s)  9/24/99
40  21  Kailey Reyes  Missouri State (4s)  11/6/99
49  28  Kailey Reyes  at Illinois State (4s)  10/13/00
44  23  Kailey Reyes  Bradley (4s)  10/28/00
64  23  Kailey Reyes  at Evansville (5s)  11/4/00
45  20  Kailey Reyes  vs. Evansville (4g)  11/24/00
54  22  Brittany Coleman  at Illinois State (4s)  10/18/03
62  21  Brittany Coleman  at So. Illinois (4s)  10/29/04
71  20  Korie Lebeda  at Evansville (5s)  11/18/06
27  20  Michelle Sicner  Illinois State (4s)  9/30/11
44  21  Michelle Sicner  Xavier (4s)  11/29/13
41  20  Lydia Dimke  vs. Wichita State (5s)  8/27/16
40  21  Kendra Wait  at Marquette (4s)  10/29/21
59  36  Kendra Wait  vs. Florida State (5s)  9/9/22
56  24  Kendra Wait  at Rice (5s)  9/18/22
60  20  Kendra Wait  #14 Marquette (5s)  11/26/22
43  22  Kendra Wait  Northern Iowa (4s)  9/3/23
42  22  Kendra Wait  at #9 Minnesota (5s)  9/16/23
45  26  Kendra Wait  at Xavier (5s)  9/23/23
53  21  Annalea Maeder  Northern Colorado (5s)  12/4/25
BIG EAST Goes Big Time
The BIG EAST tied a league record as three teams made the NCAA Tournament field. Creighton, Xavier and Marquette all earned a bid.
  Last year the league combined for five NCAA Tournament victories, a single-season high.
  This year the league had four victories, as Creighton had three and Marquette had one.
  The only BIG EAST teams to ever reach the Regional Finals have been the 2016, 2024 and 2025 Creighton teams.
Crowd Report
Creighton attracted crowds of 2,527 and 2,554 fans when hosting the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament, two of the top 11 crowds in the 18-year history of D.J. Sokol Arena.
  That ranked 10th-best of 16 sites that hosted NCAA Tournament play.
Host School  Rd. 1  Rd. 2  Total
Nebraska   8,656  8,601  17,257
Texas A&MÂ Â 5,830Â Â 5,354Â Â 11,184
Wisconsin  4,465  5,371  9,836
Pittsburgh  4,240  4,149  8,389
Kentucky  3,572  4,422  7,994
Texas  3,947  3,918  7,865
Minnesota  4,341  3,517  7,858
Arizona State  2,951  3,424  6,375
Stanford  3,234  2,330  5,564
Creighton  2,527  2,554  5,081
Purdue  2,415  1,808  4,223
SMUÂ Â 2,028Â Â 1,977Â Â 4,005
USCÂ Â 1,830Â Â 2,173Â Â 4,003
Indiana  1,815  1,937  3,752
Kansas  1,607  1,797  3,404
Louisville  1,181  1,098  2,279
Record Watch
Ava Martin, Kiara Reinhardt and Nora Wurtz all finished in the top three of various single-season Creighton records.
Kills
    Name  Sets  No.  Year
  1.  Jaali Winters  134  546  2015
  2.  Ava Martin  118  529  2025
  3.  Leah Ratzlaff  115  516  2003
Kills Per Set
    Name  Sets  No.  Avg.  Year
  1.  Leah Ratzlaff  106  479  4.52  2004
  2.  Leah Ratzlaff  115  516  4.487  2003
  3.  Ava Martin  118  529  4.483  2025
Attack Percentage (Min. 200 kills)
    Name  K  E  Att.  Pct.  Year
  1.  Kiara Reinhardt  293  61  519  .447  2025
  2.  Kiana Schmitt  307  75  612  .379  2023
  3.  Elise Goetzinger  266  73  513  .376  2024
Service Aces
    Name  Sets  No.  Year
  1.  Nora Wurtz  102  61  2025
  2.  Molly Moran  105  59  2000
  3.  Ava Martin  117  56  2024
Service Aces Per Set (Min. 20 SA)
    Name  Sets  No.  Avg.  Year
  1.  Nora Wurtz  95  57  0.600  2025
  2.  Molly Moran  105  59  0.562  2000
  3.  Molly Moran  94  47  0.500  2001
Points, Individual (Category started in 2001)
  Pts.  Name  K  SA  BS  BA  Year
  595.5  Jaali Winters  546  18  4  55  2015
  595.5  Ava Martin  529  47  2  35  2025
  574.0  Leah Ratzlaff  516  28  11  38  2003
Points Per Set, Individual (min. 50 sets played)
  PPS  Name  Pts.  SP  Year
  5.06  Leah Ratzlaff  536.5  106  2004
  5.05  Ava Martin  595.5  118  2025
  4.99  Leah Ratzlaff  574.0  115  2003
12 Straight BIG EAST Regular-Season Titles
Creighton (2014-25) is the first team in BIG EAST volleyball history to win 12 straight regular-season titles.    The previous record had been seven by Notre Dame from 1999-2005.
  The Bluejay volleyball team is also the first Creighton program in any sport to win more than five straight league titles, more than doubling the previous high of five in a row by the men's soccer program (1992-96) in the MVC.
  The only other volleyball team nationally with an active streak of more than six straight regular-season league titles is Kentucky, which won its ninth consecutive SEC crown this year.
  Creighton's 12 straight regular-season titles rank third-longest in NCAA history, trailing only Florida's 18 straight SEC titles from 1991-2008 and Hawaii's 16 consecutive WAC crowns from 1996-2011.
Champions Among Champions
Since the start of the 2012 season, Creighton, and Western Kentucky are the nation's only schools to have won 13 or more conference regular-season titles. All but three of Creighton's 12 crowns were outright titles, whereas WKU has shared six championships..
  Creighton has also won 12 conference tournament titles since 2012, the most in the nation.
Most Conference Titles 2012-2025
Regular-Season  League Tournament
13 (3 shared) Creighton  12 Creighton
13 (6) Western Kentucky  11 Western Kentucky
12 (1) Fairfield  10 Fairfield
11 (1) Texas  Â
Martin Doing Something Special
Ava Martin had 30 kills last Thursday vs. Northern Colorado, one of her most dominating performances in a career full of them.
  Considering the following about the sensational senior...
  Martin's 30 kills tied her career-high, also done vs. Marquette on Nov. 1, 2025.
  It made Martin the only player in CU history with multiple matches of 30+ kills.
  It tied the D.J. Sokol Arena record that she did vs. Marquette on Nov. 1, 2025 and first accomplished by Norah Sis vs. Auburn in a 2022 NCAA Tournament match.
  It tied Sis' match vs. Auburn in the 2022 NCAA Tournament for the most by any Bluejay in an NCAA Tournament contest.
  Martin's 34.5 points in the match were the most by a Bluejay ever in any match since 2001, when points were first tracked nationally. It was also a D.J. Sokol Arena record.
Martin Takes The Fifth
Ava Martin had eight kills in 14 swings during the fifth set against Northern Colorado on Dec. 4. In five matches this season to go five sets, Martin averaged 23.4 kills per match on .323 hitting.
  In the fifth set alone this fall, Martin had 18 kills (3.60 kills per set) and just one error in 42 swings, good for a .405 hitting percentage.
  As a team, Creighton hit .400 in the fifth set this year, owning 47 kills and just five errors in 105 swings. CU did not have an attack error in the fifth set during three of those five matches (UCSB, Marquette, Northern Colorado).
All-Tourney Trio
Creighton had three women named to the All-BIG EAST Tournament Team, as Ava Martin, Annalea Maeder and Jaya Johnson were recognized.
  Martin brought home MVP honors as she averaged 6.83 kills and 1.83 digs per set on .438 hitting. It's her fourth career All-BIG EAST Tournament accolade, joining Kendra Wait as the second Bluejay to do so four times.
  Maeder averaged 15.00 assists, 3.00 digs, .50 blocks, .33 kills and .33 aces per set. Creighton hit .369 as a team and averaged 17.67 kills per set en route to the title.
  Johnson hit .562 and averaged 3.33 kills and 1.17 digs per set.Â
Martin Named National Player of the Week
Ava Martin picked up National Player of the Week honors from the American Volleyball Coaches Association on Nov. 25th, the final milestone in a whirlwind week for the senior outside hitter from Overland Park, Kan.
  Martin was named MVP of the BIG EAST Tournament on Nov. 23 after helping Creighton to a sixth straight league tournament title.Â
  Martin averaged 6.83 kills per set on .438 hitting while also contributing 11 digs and three blocks. Martin had 24 kills and hit .432 in three sets in a semifinal win at Marquette, then put down 17 more kills on .444 hitting vs. Xavier in the final. Her 24 kills were Creighton's most ever in a BIG EAST Tournament match and 41 overall kills a CU-best for a single BIG EAST Tournament.
  The Tournament MVP recognition came two days after she was honored as BIG EAST Player of the Year. On Nov. 24th, roughly 12 hours after returning home with her fourth BIG EAST Tournament title and All-Tournament Team recognition, Martin was the second overall pick in the Major League Volleyball Draft by the Atlanta Vibe.
  Martin is the fourth player in program history to earn AVCA National Player of the Week recognition, joining Michelle Sicner (Oct. 15, 2013), Keeley Davis (Oct. 15, 2019) and Kendra Wait (Sept. 22, 2024).
Creighton's The First With Two First Rounders
Two seniors within the Creighton Volleyball program were selected in the Major League Volleyball Draft on Nov. 24th. Ava Martin was the second overall section by the Atlanta Vibe, while Kiara Reinhardt was selected No. 8 overall in the first round by the Omaha Supernovas.
  The selections made Creighton the first school in league history to have two picks in the First Round of the same draft.
  Martin was named 2025 BIG EAST Player of the Year and BIG EAST Tournament MVP after an incredible season that saw her average 4.48 kills per set on .324 hitting this year. She's a four-time All-BIG EAST selection, and four-time honoree on the All-BIG EAST Tournament Team, after helping the Bluejays to a 12th straight BIG EAST regular-season title and sixth consecutive BIG EAST Tournament crown.
  This season Martin ranked 12th in total points, 15th in total kills, 19th in the country in points per set, 22nd in kills per set, 42nd in total aces, 43rd in total attacks, 77th in aces per set and 84th in attacks per set. The 6-foot-1 outside hitter from Overland Park, Kan., ranked third in CU history with 1,638 kills, third with 128 aces and 10th with a .298 hitting percentage. She was an AVCA Second Team All-American in 2025 and a Third Team All-American in 2024 after picking up Honorable Mention All-American honors as a sophomore in 2023.
  Martin was the second pick in the first round, behind only Wisconsin's Mimi Colyer to the Dallas Pulse.
  A 6-foot-3 middle blocker from Cedarburg, Wis., Reinhardt ranked sixth nationally in hitting percentage (.447), which led the BIG EAST. She averaged 2.53 kills per set and topped the team with 1.03 blocks per set this fall. In her career, Reinhardt owned 823 kills and ranked fourth in CU history with 538 blocks. She also owned 59 aces and was a career .338 hitter. Reinhardt played in a school-record 124 wins at Creighton, helping the Bluejays to six BIG EAST regular-season titles as well as six BIG EAST Tournament titles as well.
  Both Martin and Reinhardt were named All-BIG EAST Nov. 21st. It's the fourth consecutive honor for Martin, and second straight recognition for Reinhardt.
  Martin and Reinhardt are Creighton's third and fourth professional draft picks in the past two years, joining Norah Sis and Kendra Wait last year in the Pro Volleyball Federation. Sis was the No. 3 overall pick last year in the first round to the eventual 2025 league champion Orlando Valkyries, while Wait went 37th overall and was a fifth round selection of the defending league champion Omaha Supernovas.
Looking For More
Creighton Volleyball picked up the school's 14th different BIG EAST Tournament title won by the school since joining the BIG EAST in the summer of 2013. All but three of those titles have been won by the volleyball program.
Creighton's BIG EAST Tournament Titles (14)
Volleyball (11): 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025
Baseball (2): 2019, 2025
Men's Soccer (1): 2022
Winners Win
Creighton owns 268 wins over the past 10 seasons, which coincides with the start of the 2016 season.
  That ranks fourth-most nationally, and among some of the most storied programs in all the land. CU is also fifth in win percentage in the last decade.
Last 10 Seasons (2016-25)
   Sorted By Wins                  Sorted By Win Percentage
1.  287  Nebraska  1.  .874  Texas  256-37
2.  283  Pittsburgh  2.  .872  Nebraska  287-42
3.  278  Western Kentucky  3.  .8634  Western Kentucky  278-44
4.  268  Creighton  4.  .8628  Pittsburgh  283-45
5.  261  Wisconsin  5.  .838  Creighton  268-52
6.  256  Texas  6.  .8312  Wisconsin  261-53
7.  255  Stanford  7.  .8311  BYU  251-51
8.  253  Stephen F. Austin  8.  .825  Stanford  255-54
9.  251  BYU  9.  .813  Kentucky  248-57
10.  248  Kentucky  10.  .797  Dayton  244-62
What's The Difference?
While this is Creighton's fourth team to go unbeaten in BIG EAST play, the domination this season was especially noteworthy, as seen in the chart below:
Year  Sets Lost  5 Setters  Pts For-Against  % of Pts.
2016Â Â 5Â Â 1Â Â 1,457-1,088Â Â 57.2
2018Â Â 6Â Â 2Â Â 1,474-1,092Â Â 57.4
2024Â Â 3Â Â 0Â Â 1,418-884Â Â 61.6
2025Â Â 4Â Â 1Â Â 1,281-883Â Â 59.2
Unbeaten in League Play
Creighton was one of eight teams in the country that did not lose a regular-season conference match this fall. Of those teams, Creighton's four league sets lost trailed only Nebraska.
  Brian Rosen was the only one of the eight head coaches who had an undefeated conference slate to not win Coach of the Year honors in his/her league, and Rosen was 3-2 against the other schools on this list.
  Set W-L  Team  League
  60-1  Nebraska  Big Ten
  48-4  Creighton  BIG EAST
  48-8  Northern Iowa  Missouri Valley
  45-9  Kentucky  Southeastern
  54-10*  Dayton  Atlantic 10
  41-13  San Diego  West Coast
  48-12*  South Dakota State  Summit
  54-13  Utah State  Mountain West
*lost in league tournament
Comeback Kids
The First Round NCAA Tournament match vs. Northern Colorado saw Creighton improve to 3-2 on the season in matches in which it has trailed 2-1, having also beaten Marquette and UC Santa Barbara.
  Creighton had not won an NCAA Tournament match when down 2-1 since doing it in a Regional Semifinal victory over Michigan on Dec. 9, 2016 in Austin, Texas.
  It was also Creighton's first NCAA Tournament victory in a five-set match since a 3-2 win over Michigan on Dec. 9, 2016 in Austin, Texas. That year Creighton made history as the first team to ever open an NCAA Tournament run with three straight five-set victories. The streak started with a 3-2 win in Lawrence, Kan., over Northern Iowa (25-16, 25-20, 24-26, 14-25, 15-12).
Tough at Home
Creighton will boast one of the nation's longest home match winning streaks heading into 2025 with 12 straight home victories.
Nation's Longest Active Home Win Streaks
Wins  Team  Next Home Match
  51  Pittsburgh  Next year
  22  Kentucky  Next year
  19  Cal Poly  Next year
  16  Arizona State  Next year
  13  Eastern Illinois  Next year
  13  Northern Arizona  Next year
  12  Creighton  Next year
  12  Northern Iowa  Next year
  12  Long Island  Next year
Road Dubs
Creighton tied a school-record with a nine-match road win streak that was snapped by No. 2 Kentucky in the Regional Final.
  All three of CU's teams to win nine straight road matches went on to reach the Elite Eight.
Creighton's Longest Road Win Streaks
Wins  Dates  Snapped By
  9  Sept. 30 - Dec. 2, 2016  at #5 Texas, 3-0
  9  Sept. 21 - Nov. 24, 2024  at #2 Penn State, 3-2
  9  Oct. 2 - Nov. 22, 2025  at #2 Kentucky, 3-0
  8  Sept. 29 - Nov. 30, 2012  at #11 Minnesota, 3-1
  8  Sept. 28 - Nov. 3, 2018  at #2 Nebraska, 3-1
  8  Oct. 2, 2021-Sept. 10, 2022  at Rice, 3-2
Ava Makes History
Ava Martin joined some rare air in Creighton Athletics history as a four-time First Team All-Conference pick.
  She's just the sixth student-athlete in school history in any sport to be named First Team All-Conference four times, joining Tara Oltman (Softball), Doug McDermott (Men's Basketball), Jaali Winters (Volleyball), Kendra Wait (Volleyball) and Norah Sis (Volleyball).
  Additionally, Martin and Wait are the only Bluejays to be a four-time first team all-conference pick, as well as a four-time all-tournament team selection.
Back For More (Awards)
Ava Martin was named to the All-Tournament Team at the BIG EAST Championships for the fourth straight season.
  The only previous Creighton player in program history to be named a four-time All-BIG EAST Tournament honoree was Kendra Wait (2021-24). Wait earned Tournament MVP accolades as a senior last fall, while Martin earned MVP honors as a senior this fall.
  Martin was joined on the All-Tournament Team by Jaya Johnson and Annalea Maeder.
CU's BIG EAST All-Tournament Team Picks
Maggie Baumert - 2015
Jess Bird - 2015 (MVP)
Kelli Browning - 2013
Lydia Dimke - 2016
Kate Elman - 2015
Naomi Hickman - 2018, '20 (MVP)
Jaya Johnson - 2025
Taryn Kloth - 2017 (MVP), '18
Annalea Maeder - 2025
Ava Martin - 2022, '23, '24, '25 (MVP)
Leah McNary - 2014
Kiara Reinhardt - 2020
Kiana Schmitt - 2023 (MVP)
Norah Sis - 2021 (MVP), '22 (MVP), '24
Lauren Smith - 2013, '14 (MVP), '16
Kendra Wait - 2021, '22, '23, '24 (MVP)
Annika Welty - 2020
Marysa Wilkinson - 2014, '17
Jaali Winters - 2016 (MVP), '18 (MVP)
Brittany Witt - 2017, '19
Jaela Zimmerman - 2021
Streakin'
Ava Martin had a streak of 10 or more kills in 27 straight matches from Sept. 12-Dec. 11, 2025, the second-longest streak in program history.
  She already had owned a 19-match streak that was snapped earlier this season.Â
  Martin is the only player in Bluejay history with multiple streaks 10-kill streaks of 14 or longer.
  Martin led or tied for the Creighton lead in kills in each of her final 27 matches as a Bluejay.
Consecutive Matches, 10 or More Kills
  58  Leah Ratzlaff, Sept. 13, 2003-Sept. 9, 2005
  27  Ava Martin, Sept. 12-Dec. 11, 2025
  21  Jaali Winters, Oct. 6, 2015 - Aug. 28, 2016
  19  JoDe Cieloha, Sept. 26-Nov. 21, 1997
  19  Ava Martin, Oct. 18, 2024-Aug. 23, 2025
  18  Jaela Zimmerman, Nov. 16, 2019 - March 27, 2021
  15  Norah Sis, Oct. 7 - Dec. 2, 2022
  14  Kelly Goc, Sept. 8-Oct. 19, 2007
  13  JoDe Cieloha, Sept. 7-Oct. 18, 1996
  13  Jaali Winters, Nov. 12, 2016-Sept. 1, 2017
The Amazing Ava
Ava Martin had a career-high 30 kills in Creighton's five-set win over Marquette on Nov. 1st, then matched it against Northern Colorado on Dec. 4th in the NCAA Tournament.
  Martin owned 14 matches with 20+ kills in her career, including four times overall against Marquette.
  Martin (against Marquette) also joined Kelly Goc as the second Bluejay to post 20+ kills against the same opponent three times in the same season. Goc did it vs. Illinois State in 2006.
  Just how good was Martin against Marquette? A whopping 174 of her 1,638 career kills (10.6 percent) came against the Golden Eagles, even though only 11 of her 134 career matches (8.2 percent) were against MU.
Ava Martin's 20-Kill Matches
  Kills  Pct.  Opponent  Date
  30  .464  Marquette  11/01/25
  30  .369  Northern Colorado  12/04/25
  24  .286  vs. UC Santa Barbara  09/06/25
  24  .432  at Marquette  11/22/25
  23  .286  Villanova  11/07/25
  23  .388  vs. #8 Arizona State  12/11/25
  22  .333  #14 Marquette  11/26/22
  22  .396  Northern Iowa  09/03/23
  22  .180  at #9 Minnesota  09/16/23
  21  .230  at Xavier  09/23/23
  20  .400  at DePaul  11/22/24
  20  .405  vs. Duke  08/27/23
  20  .472  Rice  09/13/25
  20  .514  at Marquette  10/02/25
30 Kills For Martin
Ava Martin became the fifth different player in Creighton Volleyball history with 30 or more kills in a match when she did it on Nov. 1, 2025 vs. Marquette.
  Of those women, Martin's .464 hitting percentage was the best mark. She was also the fourth Bluejay with a double-double in a match with 30+ kills.
  Martin's 30 kills also tied the D.J. Sokol Arena record, which opened in 2009.
  Martin added 30 more kills against Northern Colorado on Dec. 4, 2025.
Creighton Players With 30+ Kills
  K  Pct.  D  Player, Opponent (Sets)  Date
  32  .406  10  Michelle Prorock, Evansville (4)  11/02/96
  31  .390  7  Keeley Davis, Marquette (5)  10/12/19
  30  .404  22  Melissa Walsh, Indiana St. (5)  10/16/98
  30  .273  13  Norah Sis, Auburn (5)  12/02/22
  30  .464  10  Ava Martin, Marquette (5)  11/01/25
  30  .369  8  Ava Martin, No. Colorado (5)  12/04/25
Most Kills, D.J. Sokol Arena History
  K  Player, Opponent  Date
  30  Wichita St.'s Emily Stockman vs. Missouri St.  11/27/09
  30  Creighton's Norah Sis vs. Auburn  12/02/22
  30  Creighton's Ava Martin vs. Marquette  11/01/25
  30  Creighton's Ava Martin vs. N. Colorado  12/04/25
  29  USD's Kendall Kritenbrink vs. Creghton  09/20/14
  29  UConn's Hanna Tylska vs. Villanova  11/27/24
The 400 Club
Ava Martin is the fourth player in CU history with three different seasons of 400 kills or more, and joined Leah Ratzlaff as just the second woman to do it in three consecutive campaigns.
  It's not a coincidence that Jaali Winters (1,843), Norah Sis (1,664), Martin (1,638) and Ratzlaff (1,622) own the top four spots on Creighton's career kills list.Â
Most 400-Kill Seasons, Creighton History
Name  Year 1  Year 2  Year 3  Year 4
Jaali Winters (3x)Â Â 546Â Â 448Â Â 398Â Â 451
Norah Sis (3x)Â Â 435Â Â 489Â Â 302Â Â 438
Leah Ratzlaff (3x)Â Â 180Â Â 516Â Â 479Â Â 447
Ava Martin (3x)Â Â 264Â Â 417Â Â 428Â Â 529
Miss Consistent
Ava Martin produced 10 or more kills in each of her final 34 matches against BIG EAST competition. Even more impressively, she hit .250 or better in each of those contests, as well.
  Martin led the BIG EAST with 4.52 kills per set and was fourth with a .376 hitting percentage in league play this fall.
  Last year Martin was second with 3.88 kills per set and second with a .408 hitting percentage in league action.
  In 70 career regular-season BIG EAST matches, Martin averaged 3.61 kills per set and hit .348 to help her team go 67-3.
Hitting With A Purpose
Creighton started its Nov. 15 match at Seton Hall with 31 kills in 48 swings before its first attack error on the fourth point of the third set.
  It was just the second time in program history that CU went back-to-back sets in the same match without an attack error, joining the second and third sets at Bradley on Sept. 29, 2000.
  Creighton finished the afternoon hitting a program-record .551 against the Pirates.
Best Attack Percentage, CU History
  Hit. %  Opponent (K-E-TA), sets  Date
  .551  at Seton Hall (41-3-69), 3 sets  11-15-25
  .548  vs. Georgetown (46-6-73), 3 sets  11-17-24
  .536  vs. Tulsa (41-4-69), 3 sets  10-27-95
  .495  vs. Liberty (57-8-99), 3 sets  9-2-05
  .493  at Villanova (41-5-73), 3 sets  10-27-23
Wurtz Serves Up A Record
Two days after serving up five aces in the first set of a Nov. 7 win over Villanova, Nora Wurtz once again dealt five aces during 12-0 serving run to end the first set vs. Georgetown. Wurtz remained behind the serving line to start the second set, opening with back-to-back aces, and eventually broke the school-record with nine aces in the match.
Most Aces, Creighton Match
  9  Nora Wurtz vs. Georgetown (3s)  11-09-25
  8  Carolyn Decker at New Mexico (3s)  09-04-04
  8  Ava Martin vs. Seton Hall (3s)  11-15-24
  7  Molly Moran vs. Drake (3s)  09-22-00
  7  Kelli Koochi at Indiana State (4s)  10-19-01
  7  Nayka Benitez vs. Bradley (4s)  09-25-10
  7  Michelle Sicner vs. McNeese State (3s)  09-17-11
  7  Madelyn Cole at Georgetown (3s)  11-09-19
Best of Wurtz
Nora Wurtz's nine aces were tied for the most in the nation this season in any three-set match.
  Wurtz served 31 times in the Nov. 9 match vs. Georgetown, with Creighton winning the point 27 times. By comparison, Georgetown's entire team served 34 times and won just seven of those points.
  Wurtz (at 6-foot-4) was the nation's only player middle blocker, as well as the only player 6-foot-2 or taller, to average more than 0.51 aces per set.
Who Else Has Been Unbeaten?
At 16-0, Creighton was the 15th team to finish BIG EAST play unbeaten and just the fourth unbeaten team with 16 or more league wins.
  Thirteen of those 15 unbeaten teams went on to win the BIG EAST Tournament.
Finishing Unbeaten in BIG EAST Play
  W-L  Sets Lost  School  Year
  18-0  3  Creighton*  2024
  18-0  6  Creighton*  2018
  18-0  5  Creighton*  2016
  16-0  4  Creighton*  2025
  14-0  8  Notre Dame  2009
  14-0  4  Louisville*  2006
  12-0  3  Notre Dame*  2001
  11-0  4  Notre Dame*  2000
  11-0  4  Notre Dame  1999
  11-0  2  Notre Dame*  1997
  11-0  2  Notre Dame*  1996
  11-0  1  Notre Dame*  1995
  7-0  6  Pittsburgh*  1993
  7-0  1  Pittsburgh*  1991
  7-0  2  Pittsburgh*  1990
*also won league tournament
Best League Starts
Creighton started 16-0 in conference play for the fifth time in the last 10 seasons. The Bluejays, who only played 16 league contests this fall, went 18-0 in 2016, 2018 and 2024.
Most Wins Before First League Loss
  Wins  Year (League)  First League Loss
  18-0  2018 (BIG EAST)  None
  18-0  2016 (BIG EAST)  None
  18-0  2024 (BIG EAST)  None
  17  2022 (BIG EAST)  11/19 at #16 Marquette
  16  2025 (BIG EAST)  None
  12  2019 (BIG EAST)  11/8 at Villanova
  11  2015 (BIG EAST)  10/30 at Villanova
All They Do Is Win
Creighton has won its last 47 BIG EAST regular-season matches to establish a program and league record.
  It breaks the record for the longest streak in BIG EAST history, surpassing the 45 in a row done from Oct. 1, 1999 to Nov. 15, 2002 by Notre Dame.
Creighton's Most Consecutive Regular-Season League Wins
  Wins  Dates  Snapped By  League
  47  Oct. 7, 2023 - Present  ? ? ?  BIG EAST
  31  Nov. 18, 2017 - Nov. 3, 2019   at Villanova, 3-0  BIG EAST
  28  Oct. 31, 2015 - Sept. 30, 2017  at Marquette, 3-0  BIG EAST
  28  Oct. 17, 2021- Nov. 18, 2022  at #16 Marquette, 3-0   BIG EAST
  14  Sept. 29, 2012 - End of 2012  Never (left MVC)  MVC
BIG EAST'S Best
Since the reconfiguration of the BIG EAST in the summer of 2013, Creighton, Marquette and St. John's are the only teams to win any sort of BIG EAST volleyball title.
  Creighton owns 12 regular-season titles (3 shared) in that time, while Marquette owns four regular-season (3 shared) crowns.
  As it relates to BIG EAST Tournament titles, Creighton has won 11, Marquette one and St. John's one since 2013.
  Below is a look at the record of each BIG EAST team since league realignment in 2013:
BIG EAST VB Standings, 2013 - 2025
       BIG EAST only  All   matches
Team (NCAA Bids)Â Â WÂ Â LÂ Â WÂ Â L
Creighton (13)Â Â 204Â Â 16Â Â 343Â Â 79
Marquette (12)Â Â 180Â Â 37Â Â 302Â Â 104
Xavier (1)Â Â 130Â Â 88Â Â 205Â Â 175
Villanova (1)Â Â 111Â Â 109Â Â 208Â Â 171
St. John's (1)Â Â 110Â Â 110Â Â 232Â Â 180
Butler  108  112  190  193
Seton Hall (1)Â Â 86Â Â 133Â Â 173Â Â 207
DePaul  72  148  163  214
Georgetown  51  161  125  236
Connecticut#Â Â 50Â Â 46Â Â 98Â Â 71
Providence*Â Â 33Â Â 171Â Â 124Â Â 226
*Providence rejoined the league for volleyball in 2014 andÂ
its 2013 overall record (12-20) is not included above.
#Connecticut rejoined the league in 2020 andÂ
its record from 2013-19 (96-121) is not included above.
Getting Better and Better
It's scary to see the numbers for Creighton's first 10 matches compared to its last 24 matches. The Bluejay numbers are up across the board on the offensive end.
First 10 Matches vs. Last 24 Matches
When  W-L  KPS  HIT%  SAPS  DPS  BPS
First 10Â Â 5-5Â Â 12.84Â Â .215Â Â 1.63Â Â 14.26Â Â 2.17
Last 24Â Â Â 23-1Â Â 14.56Â Â .324Â Â 2.36Â Â 13.49Â Â 2.23
All They Do Is Win
Creighton won 23 straight matches until falling in the Elite Eight, tied for its second-longest win streak in program history. It was also CU's 13th double-digit win streak ever.
  Consecutive Creighton Wins, Program History
  Wins  Dates  Snapped By
  25  Sept. 20-Dec. 13, 2024  at #2 Penn State, 3-2
  23  Sept. 23-Dec. 9, 2016  at #5 Texas, 3-0
  23  Sept. 19-Dec. 11, 2025  at #2 Kentucky, 3-0
  21  Sept. 21 - Nov. 30, 2018  #22 Washington, 3-0
  17  Sept. 29-Nov. 30, 2012  at #11 Minnesota, 3-1
  17  Sept. 23-Nov. 18, 2022  at #16 Marquette, 3-0
  17  Oct. 7-Dec. 2, 2023  vs. #7 Louisville, 3-2
  14  Sept. 19-Nov. 3, 2019  at Villanova, 3-0
  14  Oct. 17-Dec. 2, 2021  Kansas, 3-1
  12  Sept. 20-Oct. 25, 2015  at Villanova, 3-2
  11  Oct. 11-Nov. 21, 2014  Seton Hall, 3-0
  11  Oct. 6-Nov. 12, 2017  at Villanova, 3-0
  10  Oct. 31-Dec. 5, 2015  vs. #2 USC, 3-1
There Weren't Many
Georgetown managed just 15 kills in Creighton's 3-0 win over the Hoyas on Nov. 9th. That was tied for the second-fewest by a Bluejay opponent in program history.
Fewest Kills by a Creighton Opponent, Match
  14  Villanova  11/21/14
  15  Drake  9/22/06
  15  Montana State  8/25/07
  15  Georgetown  11/09/25
  16  Seton Hall  11/19/21
  17  Providence  10/19/14
  17  South Dakota  12/5/24
  17  Providence  9/27/24
What's Your 20?
Creighton has clinched its fifth straight 20-win season.
  Including 2025, Creighton has won 20 or more matches in 13 of the last 14 years (CU only played 16 times in the spring of 2021, going 12-4), and has 16 different 20-win campaigns to its ledger all-time.
  Brian Rosen is the first volleyball head coach to win 20+ matches in their first year as a head coach at a BIG EAST school since Ryan Theis won 24 matches at Marquette in 2014, and his 28 wins were the most ever by a rookie BIG EAST coach.
  All 16 times that Creighton has won its 19th match, it won its next match as well to reach the 20-victory milestone.
Year  MP to 20 W  Date of 20th Win
2006Â Â 29Â Â 11/18
2007Â Â 29Â Â 11/16
2010Â Â 30Â Â 11/26
2012Â Â 23Â Â 10/27
2013Â Â 27Â Â 11/22
2014Â Â 27Â Â 11/08
2015Â Â 28Â Â 11/07
2016Â Â 26Â Â 11/06
2017Â Â 25Â Â 11/05
2018Â Â 24Â Â 10/27
2019Â Â 24Â Â 11/09
2021Â Â 23Â Â 10/24
2022Â Â 23Â Â 10/30
2023Â Â 24Â Â 11/03
2024Â Â 22Â Â 11/01
2025Â Â 25Â Â 11/07
Special Group of Seniors
Creighton recognized Annalea Maeder, Ava Martin, Sky McCune and Kiara Reinhardt after its Nov. 9 win over Georgetown.
  Maeder is in her first season at Creighton, but fifth overall in college after four years at Cal. In her lone season with the Bluejays, Maeder was a seven-time BIG EAST Setter of the Week and led the league with 10.75 assists per set. Maeder also ranked sixth in the BIG EAST with 0.40 aces per set and directed a Bluejay offense that hit a league-best .288. Maeder was named All-BIG EAST, BIG EAST Setter of the Year and an AVCA Third Team All-American.
  Martin is the BIG EAST's only player on the AVCA National Player of the Year Watch List, and lived up to the Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year hype she was annointed by league coaches before the fall. Martin finished in the top 10 in the BIG EAST in league play in points per set (5.16), kills per set (4.52), aces per set (0.50) and hitting percentage (.376). In her career, she finished third in CU history with 1,638 kills and 128 aces.
  McCune owned 452 career digs and 44 aces as a Bluejay. The Gretna product appeared in 89 matches as a defensive specialist or libero and had a career-high 22 digs vs. No. 2 Nebraska as a freshman in 2022.
  Reinhardt is a sixth-year senior who became the winningest player in program history and set a CU single-season record for hitting percentage. She owned 823 career kills, was fourth in program history with 538 blocks and third with a .338 hitting percentage.
Rosen Sets More History
Brian Rosen was the first volleyball head coach to go unbeaten in BIG EAST play in their first season as head coach at a school since Pitt's Cindy Alvear went 7-0 in 1993.
  Rosen was the first volleyball head coach to win a BIG EAST regular-season title in their first season as head coach at a school since Louisville's Anne Kordes in 2011.
  Rosen was the first volleyball head coach to win 20+ matches in their first year as a head coach at a BIG EAST school since Ryan Theis won 24 matches at Marquette in 2014.
  Rosen's 28 victories were the most ever by a head coach in his/her first season in the BIG EAST.
  Rosen became the first volleyball head coach to win a BIG EAST Tournament title in their first season as head coach at a school since Georgetown's Li Liu in 1999.
  Rosen became the first male head coach to win a BIG EAST Tournament title since Marquette's Bond Shymansky in 2013.
  Rosen became the first volleyball head coach to win an NCAA Tournament match in their first year as a head coach at a BIG EAST school since Louisville's Anne Kordes in 2011, and the only rookie BIG EAST Volleyball coach to win multiple NCAA Tournament matches in the same season.
Coming Up Clutch
Creighton hit .370 in its Nov. 1 win over Marquette, easily its best hitting percentage ever in a five-set match.
  CU hit .571 (12-0-21) in the fifth set against the Golden Eagles and .473 in the final two frames (29-3-55) after falling behind 2-1 in the match.
Best Creighton Hitting Percentage, Five Set Match
  Pct.  Opponent (K-E-TA)  Date
  .370  Marquette (72-15-154)  11-01-25
  .333  at Evansville (69-18-153)  10-04-96
  .322  vs. DePaul ((69-21-149)  10-09-15
  .308  at Georgetown (67-18-159)  11-18-17
  .294  at Bradley (77-22-187)  10-15-04
A Perfect Set
Creighton's offense clicked on all cylinders in the third set of its Oct. 25 win at Connecticut, as the Bluejays were credited with 15 kills on 15 swings to hit a perfect 1,000. That means UConn didn't own a single dig or block during the set.
  Jaya Johnson had five kills, Abbey Hayes, Ava Martin and Annalea Maeder each had three kills and Kiara Reinhardt had one kill in the frame.
  It's the best hitting percentage in program history that Creighton has hit better than .818 in any set. Per @Evollve on Twitter, Creighton was the nation's first team to hit 1.000 in a set since Florida A&M did against Mississippi Valley State went 10-for-10 in the first set of a 2022 meeting.
Best Creighton Team Hitting Percentage in a Set
  %  K-E-TA  Opponent (Set #)  Date
  1.000  15-0-15  at Connecticut (3)  10/25/25
  .818  18-0-22  at DePaul (1)  10/6/17
  .737  14-0-19  at Providence (1)  10/21/23
.722Â Â 13-0-18Â Â at Georgetown (5)Â Â 11/20/15
  .714  10-0-14  vs. Northern Iowa (5)  9/5/14
  .714  15-0-21  at DePaul (3)  10/11/19
Setting Them Straight
Creighton's streak of 24 straight set wins was snapped on Nov. 1 by Marquette. The streak was the sixth-longest in program history, all of which have come in the past decade.
Consecutive Sets Won
  Set Wins  Dates  Snapped By
  31  Oct. 1-Nov. 8, 2024  at Marquette
  30  Oct. 7-Nov. 10, 2023  at St. John's
  29  Oct. 16-Nov. 18, 2022  at #16 Marquette
  25  Oct. 22-Nov. 20, 2016  Villanova
  25  Oct. 26-Nov. 23, 2018  #16 Marquette
  24  Oct. 4-Nov. 1, 2025  Marquette
  22  Nov. 7-Dec. 2, 2021  Kansas
  21  Nov. 10-Dec. 2, 2023  vs. #7 Louisville
  19  Oct. 12-Nov. 3, 2019  at Villanova
  18  Nov. 22-Dec. 6, 2024  vs. #13 Texas
  18  Nov. 7-Dec. 4, 2025  Northern Colorado
  16  Sept. 20-Oct. 4, 2025  at DePaul
  15  Oct. 7-21, 2016  at Marquette
  15  Sept. 28-Oct. 13, 2018  at Villanova
  15  Sept. 11-24, 2021  at Butler
League Leaders
Not only did Creighton finish alone atop the BIG EAST standings, but the Bluejays also dominated many of the team and individual statistical categories in league play, as well.
  Individually, Kiara Reinhardt led the BIG EAST with a .438 hitting percentage. Annalea Maeder was tops with 10.79 assists per set, Nora Wurtz was first with 0.88 aces per set and Ava Martin was first with 4.52 kills per set and 5.22 points per set.
  As a team, Creighton was first in hitting percentage (.349), opponent hitting percentage (.150), assists per set (13.19), kills per set (14.56) and aces per set (2.90).
The .500 Club
Senior Kiara Reinhardt hit .447 this fall, a figure that ranked sixth in the nation. She hit .500 or better in 16-of-34 matches this fall.
  Not only did she hit a robust .419 (81-16-155)against Top 25 foes, but she hit an insane .459 (212-45-364) against unranked foes.
Reinhardt's Matches Hitting .500+ This Season
  Pct.  K  E  TA  Opponent  CU Result
  .833  5  0  6  at Seton Hall  W 3-0
  .789  15  0  19  vs. San Diego  W 3-1
  .750  10  1  12  at Villanova  W 3-0
  .722  14  1  18  at DePaul  W 3-1
  .700  7  0  10  RIce  W 3-0
  .667  10  0  15  Seton Hall  W 3-0
  .636  8  1  11  at Georgetown  W 3-0
  .571  5  1  7  at St. John's  W 3-0
  .560  16  2  25  #4 Louisville  L 1-3
  .529  9  0  17  vs. #5 Texas  L 0-3
  .526  11  1  19  #1 Nebraska  L 2-3
  .500  6  1  10  at Marquette  W 3-0
  .500  9  2  14  at Marquette  W 3-0
  .500  8  0  16  vs. Xavier  W 3-0
  .500  10  1  18  Marquette  W 3-1
  .737  15  1  19  vs. #8 Arizona State  W 3-1
Reinhardt's Peers
Kiara Reinhardt's .447 hitting percentage ranked sixth-best nationally, and shattered the Creighton single-season record in that category.
2025 NCAA Leaders in Attack Pct. (min. 3.33 attacks per set)Â
    Name, School  K  E  Att.  Pct.
  1.  Andi Jackson, Nebraska  288  55  499  .467
  2.  Carter Booth, Wisconsin  245  34  453  .466
  3.  Haley Yount, Jacksonville  206  34  379  .454
  4.  Rebekah Allick, Nebraska  259  55  453  .450
  5.  Lizzy Andrew, Stanford  298  48  559  .447
  6.  Kiara Reinhardt, Creighton  293  61  519  .447
  7.  Yasmeen Muhammad, LIU  227  37  427  .445
  8.  Tierney Barlow, Utah State  321  53  603  .444
  9.  Lucie Blazkova, Washington St.  280  45  531  .443
  10.  Mackenzie Parsons, Cornell  246  43  465  .437
Single-Season Creighton Records
Individual Attack Percentage (Min. 200 kills)
    Name  K  E  Att.  Pct.  Year
  1.  Kiara Reinhardt  293  61  519  .447  2025
  2.  Kiana Schmitt  307  75  612  .379  2023
  3.  Elise Goetzinger  266  73  513  .376  2024
  4.  Kelli Browning  350  87  710  .370  2012
  5.  Marysa Wilkinson  340  74  720  .369  2017
Creighton Career Records
Individual Attack Percentage (Min. 250 kills)
    Name  K  E  Att.  Pct.  Years
  1.  Elise Goetzinger  266  73  513  .376  2024
  2.  Kendra Wait  511  78  1,194  .363  2021-24
  3.  Kelli Browning  1,104  325  2,327  .335  2011-14
  4.  Lydia Dimke  297  77  659  .334  2016-17
  5.  Kiara Reinhardt  823  236  1,736  .338  2020-25
  6.  Kiana Schmitt  806  237  1,726  .330  2019-23
  7.  Lauren Smith  1,160  365  2,460  .323  2013-16
  8.  Marysa Wilkinson  1,183  307  2,771  .316  2014-17
  9.  Megan Ballenger  965  317  2,176  .2978  2016-19
  10.  Ava Martin  1,638  451  3,989  .2976  2022-25
Ava Elevates Up The Chart
Ava Martin finished her career with 1,638 career kills, good for third-best in program history.
Career Kills, Creighton History
    Name  Sets  No.  Years
  1.  Jaali Winters  494  1,843  2015-18
  2.  Norah Sis  422  1,664  2021-24
  3.  Ava Martin  457  1,638  2022-25
  4.  Leah Ratzlaff  409  1,622  2002-05
  5.  Melissa Walsh  394  1,596  1998-01
  6.  Taryn Kloth  462  1,427  2015-18
  7.  Kelly Goc  394  1,414  2004-07
  8.  Jessica Houts  451  1,385  2005-09
  9.  JoDe Cieloha  398  1,375  1994-97
  10.  Leah McNary  458  1,257  2011-14
The Reveal
The NCAA Volleyball Selection Committee revealed its Top 16 as of Oct. 19th. The in-season reveal offers fans an early look at potential NCAA tournament seedings ahead of Selection Sunday on Nov. 30. Creighton was 10th in that listing.
  Last year Creighton was sixth in the early reveal, and would enter the NCAA Tournament sixth as well.
1. Nebraska  9. TCU
2. Texas  10. Creighton
3. Pittsburgh  11. Stanford
4. Kentucky  12. Wisconsin
5. SMUÂ Â 13. Texas A&M
6. Louisville  14. Indiana
7. Arizona State  15. Penn State
8. Purdue  16. Minnesota
Syd The Kid
Sydney Breissinger first wore the libero jersey this fall in the fourth set against Nebraska on Sept. 16th. She put it back on to begin the Sept. 21 win over No. 17 Kansas, and didn't relinquished it in 23 matches since then. That means Creighton is 67-12 in sets and outscored teams 1,899-1,441 when she donned the alternate jersey.
  When Breissinger was a freshman in 2023, she played libero in the final 13 matches of the season. Creighton went 12-1 in those contests, winning 38-of-42 sets and outscoring teams 1,031-738.
  Add it all up and Creighton is 34-3 all-time in matches Breissinger serves as libero at any point, losing only to No. 7 Louisville (2023 Regional Semifinal) and to No. 1 Nebraska (2025). CU has won 105-of-121 sets when she's donned the alternate jersey and outscored foes 2,930-2,179 in points, a whopping 57.3 percent of the points played.
  Breissiger ended her season with 12 straight matches of 10 or more digs, including 20 against both Northern Colorado and Arizona State to tie her career-high.
  Her 69 digs put her tied for second-most in CU history for a single NCAA Tournament, 10 shy of Brittany Witt's 79 in 2016. Her 69 digs were also the second-most in the country in the 2025 NCAA Tournament, trailing only Kentucky's Molly Tuozzo (88).
More Than a Decade of Dominance
Thirteen years in the BIG EAST gives Creighton a pretty good set of data to compare its yearly performance in league matches.Â
  Here's how the 2025 campaign compares to previous seasons:
Creighton's Year-By-Year BIG EAST Stats
Year  W-L  KPS  HIT%  SAPS  DPS  BPS
2013Â Â 12-4Â Â 13.75Â Â .213Â Â 1.00Â Â 16.20Â Â 3.13
2014#Â Â 16-2Â Â 14.89Â Â .242Â Â 1.30Â Â 17.09Â Â 2.86
2015#Â Â 17-1Â Â 15.02Â Â .271Â Â 1.33Â Â 16.97Â Â 2.47
2016#Â Â 18-0Â Â 15.37Â Â .317Â Â 1.69Â Â 16.08Â Â 2.41
2017#Â Â 16-2Â Â 14.81Â Â .302Â Â 1.31Â Â 16.62Â Â 2.05
2018#Â Â 18-0Â Â 14.45Â Â .294Â Â 2.13Â Â 15.67Â Â 2.38
2019#Â Â 17-1Â Â 14.61Â Â .269Â Â 2.07Â Â 15.80Â Â 2.25
2020#Â Â 7-1Â Â 12.93Â Â .249Â Â 1.30Â Â 14.17Â Â 2.75
2021#Â Â 16-2Â Â 13.95Â Â .242Â Â 1.82Â Â 18.02Â Â 2.86
2022#Â Â 17-1Â Â 14.80Â Â .299Â Â 1.85Â Â 16.10Â Â 2.33
2023#Â Â 16-2Â Â 14.40Â Â .313Â Â 1.89Â Â 15.91Â Â 2.30
2024#Â Â 18-0Â Â 14.79Â Â .371Â Â 2.32Â Â 14.18Â Â 2.75
2025Â Â 16-0Â Â 14.56Â Â .349Â Â 2.90Â Â 12.42Â Â 2.13
#won league's regular-season title
Down The Stretch They Come
Creighton reached the midpoint of league play with an 8-0 record, and finished 16-0. The Bluejays were unbeaten at the halfway mark of league play for the seventh time since 2015 (2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2024, 2025).
  The Bluejays have suffered one league loss or fewer in the second half of conference play during each of the last 12 seasons (including 2025).
League Record by Year
Year  1st Half  2nd Half  Place
1994Â Â 2-8Â Â 1-9Â Â T-9th MVC
1995Â Â 3-7Â Â 3-7Â Â T-7th MVC
1996Â Â 2-7Â Â 3-6Â Â T-6th MVC
1997Â Â 6-3Â Â 4-5Â Â T-3rd MVC
1998Â Â 2-7Â Â 3-6Â Â 8th MVC
1999Â Â 5-4Â Â 4-5Â Â 5th MVC
2000Â Â 5-4Â Â 5-4Â Â T-4th MVC
2001Â Â 7-2Â Â 5-4Â Â 4th MVC
2002Â Â 1-8Â Â 1-8Â Â T-9th MVC
2003Â Â 5-4Â Â 4-5Â Â T-5th MVC
2004Â Â 5-4Â Â 5-4Â Â 5th MVC
2005Â Â 4-5Â Â 6-3Â Â 5th MVC
2006Â Â 7-2Â Â 5-4Â Â 4th MVC
2007Â Â 7-2Â Â 7-2Â Â T-2nd MVC
2008Â Â 7-2Â Â 8-1Â Â 2nd MVC
2009Â Â 4-5Â Â 6-3Â Â T-4th MVC
2010Â Â 7-2Â Â 6-3Â Â 3rd MVC
2011Â Â 6-3Â Â 6-3Â Â 4th MVC
2012Â Â 8-1Â Â 9-0Â Â 1st MVC
2013Â Â 6-2Â Â 6-2Â Â T-2nd BIG EAST
2014Â Â 8-1Â Â 8-1Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2015Â Â 9-0Â Â 8-1Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2016Â Â 9-0Â Â 9-0Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2017Â Â 8-1Â Â 8-1Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2018Â Â 9-0Â Â 9-0Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2019Â Â 9-0Â Â 8-1Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2020Â Â 3-1Â Â 4-0Â Â 1st BIG EAST (Midwest)
2021Â Â 7-2Â Â 9-0Â Â T-1st BIG EAST
2022Â Â 9-0Â Â 8-1Â Â T-1st BIG EAST
2023Â Â 7-2Â Â Â 9-0Â Â Â T-1st BIG EAST
2024Â Â 9-0Â Â 9-0Â Â 1st BIG EAST
2025Â Â 8-0Â Â 8-0Â Â 1st BIG EAST
Total  194-89  194-89  --
  Â
Reinhardt & Martin Pass Century Mark
Kiara Reinhardt was 124-23 (.844) all-time in matches that she's appeared in. Her 124 victories are five more than Kendra Wait for most in program history. Reinhardt's winning percentage is fifth-best.
  Ava Martin was 115-19 (.858) all-time when appearing in a match, making her fourth in wins and fourth in win percentage.
Most Wins, Appeared In As A Player
  124  Kiara Reinhardt  2020-25
  119  Kendra Wait  2021-24
  116  Naomi Hickman  2017-21
  115  Ava Martin  2022-25
  111  Jaali Winters  2015-18
  110  Kiana Schmitt  2019-23
  109  Taryn Kloth  2015-18
  109  Brittany Witt  2016-19
  109  Norah Sis  2021-24
  107  Megan Ballenger  2016-19
  106  Marysa Wilkinson  2014-17
  104  Lauren Smith  2013-16
  102  Melanie Jereb  2012-15
  101  Ashley Jansen  2012-15
  98  Jaela Zimmerman  2018-22
Best Win Pct. in Matches Appeared In As A Player (min. 100 wins)
  W-L  Pct.  Name  Years
  109-14  .886  Norah Sis  2021-24
  119-16  .881  Kendra Wait  2021-24
  110-16  .873  Kiana Schmitt  2019-23
  115-19  .858  Ava Martin  2022-25
  124-23  .844  Kiara Reinhardt  2020-25
  109-24  .820  Taryn Kloth  2015-18
  116-26  .817  Naomi Hickman  2017-21
  109-25  .813  Brittany Witt  2016-19
  107-25  .811  Megan Ballenger  2016-19
  111-28  .799  Jaali Winters  2015-18
  106-32  .768  Marysa Wilkinson  2014-17
  102-31  .767  Melanie Jereb  2012-15
  101-31  .765  Ashley Jansen  2012-15
  104-34  .754  Lauren Smith  2013-16
Most Wins, Four-Year Span
  W-L  Years
  119-17  2021-24
  116-19  2022-25
  111-28  2015-18
  109-25  2016-19
  107-32  2014-17
  104-31  2012-15
  104-34  2013-16
  99-18  2020-23
  97-19  2018-21
  95-19  2019-22
Nice Work, Ace
Creighton tied a program-record with 15 service aces on Oct. 4 vs. DePaul, with Ava Martin (6), Alivia Hausmann (3), Jaya Johnson (3), Sydney Breissinger (2) and Annalea Maeder (1) all getting in the act.
  It was the fourth time in program history that CU has recorded 15 aces or more, and first time it's done so in a true road match.
  Creighton set a then-school-record with 224 aces in 35 matches last season (6.40 per match) and averaged a league-record 2.32 aces per set in league play. This year's team had a school-record 251 aces in 34 matches (7.38 per match) and averaged 2.90 aces per set in league action.
  Creighton's 2.13 aces per set ranked fourth in the nation.
Most Creighton Service Aces, Match
  15  vs. Northeastern Illinois (3s)  09-23-95
  15  vs. UMKC (4s)  11-12-95
  15  vs. Seton Hall (3s)  11-15-24
  15  at DePaul (4s)  10-04-25
  14  at UMKC (4s)  10-30-94
  14  vs. UNC-Greensboro (4s)  09-02-00
  14  vs. Butler (3s)  10-20-18
  14  vs. DePaul (4s)  11-24-19
  14  vs. UMKC (5s)  09-28-04
  14  at Seton Hall (3s)  11-15-25
A Smashing Success
Kiara Reinhardt had the three best marks in program history for a four-set match this season.
Best Hitting Percentage, Four Sets (min. 12 kills)
  .789  Kiara Reinhardt (15-0-19) vs. San Diego  09-05-25
  .737  Kiara Reinhardt (15-1-19) vs. Arizona State  12-11-25
  .722  Kiara Reinhardt (14-1-18) at DePaul  10-04-25
  .684  Kelli Browning (14-1-19) vs. Southern Illinois  10-27-12
  .640  Naomi Hickman (17-1-25) vs. Kentucky  09-06-19
  .636  Megan Bober (14-0-22) vs. Bradley  10-06-12
  .625  Kelly Goc (26-1-40) vs. Drake  11-16-07
  .615  Alicia Runge (17-1-26) vs. Bradley  09-25-10
  .600  Kelli Browning (16-1-25) vs. Wisconsin  08-25-12
Jaya Does It All
Since moving into a role that has her playing all six rotations on Sept. 20 vs. South Florida, sophomore Jaya Johnson has played like a star.
  Johnson has averaged 2.66 kills, 1.21 digs, 0.76 blocks and 0.09 aces per set while hitting .304. Creighton went 23-1 in that time, dropping just eight sets.
  Before the move, Johnson averaged 1.84 kills, 0.74 digs, 0.92 blocks and 0.00 aces per set while hitting .191. Creighton was 5-5 in those matches (18-18 in sets), though six of them came against top-25 foes.
  Johnson was the only player in the BIG EAST (min. 50% of sets played) to average at least 0.80 blocks and 0.80 digs per set this season.
RPI Update
Creighton finished the season with an RPI of No. 7, easily the best rank in the BIG EAST.
  The Bluejays were one of five BIG EAST teams in the top 75, joining Xavier (27), Marquette (32), Villanova (39) and Connecticut (74).
Against The BIG EAST
Since the BIG EAST was restructured in 2013, Creighton owns a winning percentage better than .800 against each of the other teams currently in the BIG EAST.
  The Bluejays own 227 wins against BIG EAST competition (including BIG EAST Championship play) since 2013, 40 more wins than Marquette for most in the league.
  CU still has not lost to three league foes (DePaul, Georgetown, Providence) since joining the BIG EAST, and Marquette (6), Villanova (3), Seton Hall (3) and St. John's (3) are the only BIG EAST programs to top the Bluejays multiple times since 2013.Â
Opponent  Reg. Season  BE Tourney  Total
Butler  23-1  -  23-1
Connecticut  5-1  1-0  6-1
DePaul  26-0  3-0  29-0
Georgetown  24-0  -  24-0
Marquette  21-5  8-1  29-6
Providence  18-0  -  18-0
Seton Hall  21-3  2-0  23-3
St. John's  22-2  1-1  23-3
Villanova  21-3  3-0  24-3
Xavier  23-1  5-0  28-1
TOTALÂ Â 204-16Â Â 23-2Â Â 227-18
Putting The 0 In October And November
Creighton is 89-6 in the 10th month of the year since Oct. 1, 2016, including 23 straight wins, and victories in 37 of its past 38 such matches.
  Creighton's been awfully good in the month of November too. Since Nov. 1, 2014, CU is 79-4 in the 11th month of the year with 27 straight victories.
  Creighton has won 45 straight October home matches (since 10/15/11) and 48 consecutive home matches in November (since 11/23/14). Incredibly, Creighton is 141-13 in sets in those home November contests.
Streaking In League Play
Add in conference tournament play and Creighton has won 53 straight matches against BIG EAST teams since October 7, 2023, dropping just eight sets to league opponents.
  The only team with a longer active win streak against league competition is Northern Iowa (58).
Best Starts With A New Coach
Brian Rosen is the only coach since Creighton brought back volleyball in 1994 to win at least half of his first 34 matches.
  Rosen went 28-6 in his rookie campaign, well ahead of Howard Wallace (15-19), Kirsten Bernthal Booth (15-19) and Ben Guiliano (9-25) through 34 matches (which includes part of their second season).
  Rosen is also the only coach in program history to win his or her first four (or more) conference matches. He's currently 16-0.
Pink Out Raises $21,496.50
The Creighton Volleyball team hosted its 18th Annual Pink Out match on Oct. 19, using the competition as an opportunity to benefit the American Cancer Society's Hope Lodge Nebraska.
  Last year's Pink Out Jersey auction raised $9,106.23, plus an additional $10,017 on matchday via donations. This year's auction brought in $10,239.50, as well as $11,257 in donations.
  The winning bidders get the opportunity to honor a friend or family member who has battled cancer or is currently battling cancer. The warm-up shirt to be worn could be personalized by the winning bidder.
  Shortly after the match, the family members of the winning bidders had the opportunity to meet the student-athletes of the jersey they bid on.
  The American Cancer Society Hope Lodge Nebraska provides a free home away from home for cancer patients and their caregivers who must travel to Omaha to receive their lifesaving treatment.
  Below is the final numbers for each jersey/item in the auction this year.
#1Â Â $405Â Â #2Â Â $910Â Â #3Â Â $405
#5Â Â $355Â Â #6Â Â $525Â Â #7Â Â $570
#8Â Â $1,167Â Â #9Â Â $350Â Â #10Â Â $365
#11Â Â $405Â Â #12Â Â $200Â Â #13Â Â $365
#17Â Â $395Â Â #18Â Â $345Â Â #19Â Â $710
#22Â Â $455Â Â #24Â Â $800Â Â Â Â
Courtside Seats $237.50  Autographed Balls $435, $840
Sokol Milestone Unlocked
Creighton owns a 209-34 record (.860) all-time inside D.J. Sokol Arena, as CU picked up its 200th home win in the facility on Sept. 26.
  Creighton started 50-17 (.746) in the facility, which means it is 159-17 (.903) since then in its on-campus home.
Milestone Wins at D.J. Sokol Arena
  W-L  Opponent  Date
  1-0  Texas Tech (W 3-0)  8/28/09
  50-17  Villanova (W 3-0)  11/24/13
  100-25  DePaul (W 3-0)  11/5/17
  150-31  #25 USC (W 3-1)  9/2/22
  200-34  Xavier (W 3-0)  9/26/25
Home Sweet Home
Creighton completed its 13th season as a member of the BIG EAST since joining the league in the summer of 2013.
  Since then, the Bluejays are 120-4 in home matches against BIG EAST teams (109-3 in the regular-season, 11-1 in the BIG EAST Tournament).
  Since the start of the 2015 season, Creighton is 104-1 inside D.J. Sokol Arena against BIG EAST teams, which includes a 94-1 mark in league play and a 10-0 mark in the conference tournament. The only setback (on Feb. 6, 2021 vs. Marquette) was played as a non-conference match, only to be flipped to a league contest 19 days later.
  Put another way, since enrolling at Creighton in the fall of 2022, fourth-year Bluejay seniors Ava Martin and Sky McCune went 40-0 in home matches against BIG EAST teams, and 120-10 in sets.
  Creighton has won 54 straight matches against BIG EAST opposition at home.
  Since the start of the 2023 season, Creighton has won 84-of-88 sets at home against BIG EAST teams, dropping only the third set on Oct. 1, 2024 to Marquette, the second and third sets to Marquette on Nov. 1, 2025, and the second set to Villanova on Nov. 7, 2025.
League Opener Histories
Creighton's 3-0 win vs. Xavier on Sept. 26 improved the Jays to 24-8 all-time in conference openers, and 1-0 under Brian Rosen. That includes an 12-1 mark in BIG EAST lid-lifters, with 12 straight wins.
  Including 2025, each of the last 13 times that Creighton won its league opener (2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025), the Bluejays went on to win the regular-season title, going a combined 211-13 in regular-season league action. Creighton also won 12 conference tournament titles during those years, going 24-1 at the league tournament in those seasons.
  In the 23 seasons that Creighton has won its conference opener, it has never finished worse than .500 in league play and it owns a combined .798 (340-86) winning percentage in league matches.
  In the eight years in which Creighton lost its league opener, the Bluejays have had a losing record on five occasions and owns a combined .363 (53-93) winning percentage during league contests.
  In conference home openers, Creighton is 27-5 overall with 15 straight wins.
  In league road openers, Creighton is 23-9 overall with 12 straight wins after this year's 3-0 win at Marquette.
  The last team to win a BIG EAST regular-season or tournament title without winning its regular-season opener in conference play was Cincinnati in the fall of 2008, which will continue beyond 2025.
Wurtz On A Run
Standing at 6-foot-4, Nora Wurtz isn't your typical serving specialist, but that doesn't mean she hasn't been a tremendous weapon behind the service line.
  Earlier this fall Wurtz had a streak of 11 straight matches with an ace, tied for the ffith-longest streak in program history. Wurtz's streak tied Julianne Mandolfo's 11 straight matches with an ace in 2010 for the longest ever by a Bluejay freshman.
  Teammate Annalea Maeder also had an 11-match streak with an ace that ended in November.
Consecutive Matches With An Ace
  15  Amanda Cvejdlik, Sept. 29-Nov. 18, 2006
  12  Madelyn Cole - Oct. 27, 2018-Aug. 30, 2019
  12  Madelyn Cole, Sept. 14-Oct. 25, 2019
  12  Ellie Bolton, Aug. 26-Sept. 23, 2023
  11  Kim Whitman, Sept. 5-Oct. 4, 1998
  11  Molly Moran, Oct. 7-Nov. 10, 2000
  11  Julianne Mandolfo, Oct. 2-Nov. 13, 2010
  11  Nora Wurtz, Sept. 5-27, 2025
  11  Annalea Maeder, Sept. 27 - Nov. 3, 2025
  9  Melissa Weisensee, Sept. 1-20, 1995
  9  Madelyn Cole, Aug. 31 - Sept. 21, 2018
  9  Norah Sis, Sept. 17-Oct. 14, 2022
Don't Fret
The combination of losing four All-Americans off a 32-3 team, plus a grueling schedule featuring seven top-25 opponents in its 12 non-conference matches, helped Creighton start "just" 7-5 through 12 matches.
  Each of the two previous times that Creighton has lost at least five of its first 12 matches, the Bluejays rebounded quite nicely.
  This season Creighton started 5-5 before embarking on a 23-match win streak. The team finished 28-6 and reached the Elite Eight.
  In 2016 Creighton ended non-conference play with a 6-6 mark. That squad rebounded to win its next 23 matches and finished 29-7, reaching the Elite Eight for the first time.Â
  The year before in 2015 Creighton finished the non-conference slate 5-7. That team won 22 of its next 23 matches, including a 17-1 mark in BIG EAST play, and qualified for the program's first Sweet 16 berth.
Attendance Update
Creighton ranked 13th nationally in total home attendance (52,716) and 17th in average fans per home match (3,295).Â
  The number of home fans, as well as home average attendance, are both program records.
  Creighton has led the BIG EAST in average home attendance in all but one non-COVID year since joining the league.
Most Home Fans, Season
  Rk.  Fans  Dates  Year
  1.  52,716  16  2025
  2.  47,632  17  2018
  3.  44,518  19  2024
  4.  41,805  17  2022
  5.  30,211  14  2021
Highest Home Attendance Average, Season
  Average Rk.  Fans  Dates  Year
  1.  3,295  52,716  16  2025
  2.  2,802  47,632  17  2018
  3.  2,459  41,805  17  2022
  4.  2,343  44,518  19  2024
  5.  2,161  28,089  13  2023
Overwhelming The Unranked
Creighton went 25-0 this season against unranked teams, and the serve and pass game was a major reason why.
  In those 25 matches (85 sets), CU served 207 aces (2.44 saps.) compared to 216 service errors. Its opponents had just 63 aces (0.74 saps.) but made 185 serving miscues.
Report Card
Creighton is 204-16 all-time in regular-season BIG EAST matches.
  Here's a report card of how CU has done in 50 match segments in the BIG EAST, which includes a 165-9 mark (.948) in its last 174 matches.
  Matches  W-L  Â
  1-50  43-7
  51-100  48-2
  101-150  46-4
  151-200  47-3
  201-220  20-0
Watch This!
Fourteen of Creighton's 34 matches this fall aired on television (four on FS1, three on ESPN2, three on BTN, three on Nebraska Public Media, one on SNY).Â
  Creighton has also won 57 straight non-televised matches, since an Oct. 6, 2023 loss at Marquette.
Historically Speaking
Here's a look at the top indoor volleyball-only regular-season crowds in NCAA history after Creighton smashed a record on Sept. 16th at CHI Health Center Omaha.
Top Reg.-Season Indoor Volleyball-Only Crowds in NCAA History
  Att.  Opponent    Date  Site
  17,675  Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-2  9/16/25  Omaha, NE
  17,037  Wisconsin def. Marquette, 3-1  9/13/23  Milwaukee, WI
  16,833  Florida def. Wisconsin, 3-2  9/16/22  Madison, WI
  15,797  Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-2  9/7/22  Omaha, NE
  15,734  Florida vs. Pittsburgh, 3-2  8/24/25  Lincoln, NE
  15,734  Nebraska def. Stanford, 3-0  Â
  15,576  Nebraska def. Pittsburgh, 3-1  8/22/25  Lincoln, NE
  15,576  Stanford vs. Florida, 3-1  Â
  15,084  Wisconsin def. Marquette, 3-1  9/17/24  Madison, WI
  14,876  Wisconsin def. Purdue, 3-0  10/26/24  West Lafayette, IN
  14,876  Purdue def. Indiana, 3-0  10/19/24  West Lafayette, IN
  14,126  Nebraska def. Louisville, 3-0  9/22/24  Louisville, KY
  14,035  Texas def. Wisconsin, 3-1  9/1/24  Milwaukee, WI
  14,035  Stanford def. Minnesota, 3-2  Â
  14,022  Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-2  9/6/18  Omaha, NE
  13,870  UCLA def. Nebraska, 3-2  9/13/09  Lincoln, NE
  13,412  Nebraska def. LSU, 3-0  9/12/08  Lincoln, NE
  13,396  Nebraska def. Hawai'i, 3-0  10/21/07  Lincoln, NE
  13,081  Cal Poly def. Creighton, 3-0  9/2/07  Omaha, NE
    Nebraska def. Penn State, 3-0
  13,071  Nebraska def. Maryland, 3-1  11/30/24  College Park, MD
  12,760  Louisville def. Kentucky, 3-0  9/13/23  Louisville, KY
  12,707  Nebraska def. Michigan, 3-0  10/19/25  Ann Arbor, MI
  12,510  Pittsburgh def. Louisville, 3-1  11/27/24  Louisville, KY
  12,504  Nebraska def. Colorado, 3-0  11/4/00  Lincoln, NE
  12,277  Wisconsin def. Florida, 3-1  9/21/25  Madison, WI
  12,112  Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-1  9/24/06  Omaha, NE
Largest Crowds To See The Jays
Sept. 16th marked the fourth time in eight matches at CHI Health Center Omaha that Creighton broke an all-time NCAA attendance record.
  In 2007 CU played in front of 13,081 in a match against Cal Poly that was part of a doubleheader. In 2018 CU met Nebraska before 14,022 fans. In 2022, CU welcomed 15,797 fans against Nebraska. And on Sept. 16 the crowd was 17,675.
  Below is a list of the largest crowds (and home crowds) in Creighton Volleyball history, which includes four crowds of 10,000 or more this fall.
Creighton's Largest Home Crowds All-Time
  Att.  Opponent  Date  CU Result  Facility
  17,675  #1 Nebraska  09/16/25  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  15,797  #2 Nebraska  09/07/22  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  14,022  #7 Nebraska  09/06/18  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  13,081  #18 Cal Poly  09/02/07  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  12,112  #1 Nebraska  09/24/06  L 1-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  11,279  #3 Nebraska  09/08/21  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  10,131  #4 Nebraska  09/15/15  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  8,037  #2 Nebraska  10/05/08  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  2,665  Ole Miss  12/06/24  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,658  #4 Louisville  09/12/25  L 1-3  Sokol
  2,653  Auburn  12/02/22  L 2-3  Sokol
  2,578  #13 Kentucky  09/01/17  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,570  DePaul  10/20/24  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,569  NC State  08/30/24  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,568  Minnesota  12/02/23  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,563  Colgate  12/01/23  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,554  Northern Iowa  12/05/25  W 3-1  Sokol
  2,552  South Dakota  11/30/18  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,527  Northern Colorado  12/04/25  W 3-2  Sokol
  2,517  Coastal Carolina  12/01/17  W 3-1  Sokol
  2,517  South Dakota  12/05/24  W 3-0  Sokol
  2,514  #7 Nebraska  08/31/10  L 0-3  Sokol
  2,509  #22 Washington  12/01/18  L 0-3  Sokol
  2,504  #9 Marquette  11/22/19  W 3-1  Sokol
Creighton Volleyball's Largest Crowds (All Sites)
  Att.  Opponent  Date  CU Result  Facility
  17,675  #1 Nebraska  09/16/25  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  15,797  #2 Nebraska  09.07/22  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  14,022  #6 Nebraska  09/06/18  L 2-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  13,081  #18 Cal Poly  09/02/07  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  12,112  #1 Nebraska  09/24/06  L 1-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  11,678  vs. #14 Kansas  08/31/25  W 3-2  Kohl Center
  11,279  #3 Nebraska  09/08/21  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  10,438  vs. #2 Penn St.  08/23/25  L 0-3  Pinn Bank Arena
  10,131  #4 Nebraska  09/15/15  L 0-3  CHI Health Ctr.
  10,072  vs. #5 Texas  08/29/25  L 0-3  Kohl Center
  8,924  at #5 Nebraska  09/06/23  L 1-3  Devaney Ctr.
  8,656  at #4 Nebraska  09/10/24  L 2-3  Devaney Ctr.Â
  8,627  at #5 Nebraska  09/29/02  L 0-3  Devaney Ctr.
  8,450  at #2 Nebraska  08/30/19  L 1-3  Devaney Ctr.
  8,277  vs. Montana St.  09/16/16  W 3-0  Devaney Ctr.
  8,249  at #1 Nebraska  09/17/16  L 1-3  Devaney Ctr.
  8,237  vs. #20 Baylor (@NU)  08/31/19  L 0-3  Devaney Ctr.
  8,060  at #9 Nebraska  09/17/14  L 1-3  Devaney Ctr.
The Friendly Confines
Creighton had its first unbeaten home season in program history in 2023, going a perfect 13-0 in matches and 39-3 in sets.
  Last year CU did even better, going 19-0 and losing just two sets at home.
  Though its 32-match win streak was snapped on Sept. 12 against No. 4 Louisville, that still means the Bluejays are 46-1 in its last 47 contests at D.J. Sokol Arena.
  All told, Creighton has won 132 of its last 143 home sets at D.J. Sokol Arena.
Creighton's Longest Home Win Streaks
Wins  Dates  Snapped By
  32  Sept. 1, 2023 - Dec. 6, 2024  #4 Louisville, 3-1
  15  Sept. 7 - Nov. 30, 2018  #22 Washington, 3-0
  13  Sept. 1, 2012 - Sept. 7, 2013  California, 3-0
  13  Sept. 9, 2016-Sept. 1, 2017  #18 USC, 3-0
Creighton Introduces New Taraflex Court
Creighton Volleyball introduced a new Taraflex® court at its 2025 regular-season home debut on Sept. 12 against Louisville.
  The court was designed by GLGR out of Portland, Ore., in working with Specialty Floors out of Parkville, Mo., representatives of Taraflex Sports.
  The new court features a royal blue outline with a feather pattern similar to what is on the Creighton men's basketball court that was unveiled last October at CHI Health Center Omaha. More than 6/10ths of a mile of stencils were used to create the blue feather border that features more than a dozen "Easter eggs" hidden throughout.
  The words Creighton and Bluejays flank the end lines in white lettering. The East sideline features the words D.J. Sokol Arena on one side of the court and a BIG EAST Conference logo on the other, both shaded in light blue. The Northeast side of the court, where the team runs in and out when returning to or from the locker room, features the words "Fly Together", while Creighton's popular C-Bird logo adorns the Northwest and Southeast corners of the court
  The West sideline features 14 smaller Bluejay bird outlines, seven on each side of the court. Inside those logo decals are years to designate NCAA Tournament appearances, with different colors used to highlight the program's previous trips to the first weekend, Sweet 16 and Elite Eight. Room to add future postseason appearances is available, if necessary.
  The middle of the court features a gray outline of a Bluejay bird head. The hue of the two-tone court helps put the focus on the action and will make the players in uniform stand out, in addition to making it easier for officials to discern in/out calls along the sidelines. The matte finish on the court adds to the sharpness.
  The perimeter of the court features no less than 14 hidden messages within the design, ranging from Heritage logos to honor Creighton's history, a map of the state of Nebraska, the year Creighton University was founded (1878), the year the Creighton Volleyball program was restarted (1994), and donor acknowledgements.
  The court is a FIVB-certified playing surface and is up to the same high standards that it used in international competitions such as the Olympics. The design process for one of the most unique and complex designed courts in the world began in January, with the full painting process taking a little over a month in application and curing.
Against Ranked Foes
After a total of three top-25 wins from 1994-2014, Creighton has earned at least one top-25 win each of the last 11 seasons (2015-25).Â
  Creighton is 33-95 all-time against ranked teams, with 30 wins coming under Kirsten Bernthal Booth and three under Brian Rosen.
  The highest ranked teams that Creighton has ever beaten at any site were No. 3 Washington (8/26/17 in Seattle) and No. 3 Kentucky (9/4/21 in Lexington). CU's highest-ranked opponent it has defeated at home was a 3-1 win over then-No. 9 Marquette on Nov. 22, 2019.
  This year is the ninth season that CU owned multiple Top-25 victories. The Jays beat three Top 25 teams in 2017, 2022, 2023 and 2205, and a record four in 2018, 2019 and 2024.
Top 25 Sweeps
Creighton owns 32 top 25 victories in its history, but its Sept. 21 sweep of Kansas was just its ninth sweep of a ranked foe.
  Three of those wins have come against Kansas, another three against Kentucky, two vs. Marquette and one at Purdue.
Creighton's 3-0 Wins vs. Top 25 Teams
Opponent  Date
vs. #10 Kentucky  09/05/15
#13 Kentucky  09/01/17
at #7 Kansas  09/09/17
#21 Marquette  09/23/18
at #3 Kentucky  09/04/21
at #16 Purdue  08/26/23
#25 Marquette  11/05/23
at #10 Kansas  09/21/24
#17 Kansas  09/21/25
Top 25 History
Creighton is 261-54 all-time when playing as a ranked team, and also 28-34 all-time against ranked teams when ranked itself. That mark is 4-4 when both Creighton and its opponent are ranked in the top 10.
  Since the start of the 2012 season, 49 of Creighton's 83 losses have come against ranked teams. In that same period, Creighton is 339-34 against unranked teams. Creighton has won all but three of its past 135 home matches over unranked teams and all but 13 of its last 200 matches at all sites against unranked teams.
Ranked vs. Ranked (CU is 28-34)
Home: 11-11Â Â Away: 8-14Â Â Neutral: 9-9
Date  Winner  Loser  CU Score
11/19/12  #11 Minnesota  #21 Creighton  1-3
08/30/13  #25 Creighton  #13 BYU  3-1
09/14/13  #11 UCLA  #24 Creighton  1-3
09/16/13  #7 Hawaii  #23 Creighton  2-3
08/30/14  #22 Kansas  #23 Creighton  1-3
09/03/16  #23 Kentucky  #22 Creighton  0-3
12/02/16  #21 Creighton  #4 Kansas  3-2
12/09/16  #21 Creighton  #17 Michigan  3-2
12/10/16  #5 Texas  #21 Creighton  0-3
08/26/17  #9 Creighton  #3 Washington  3-1
09/01/17  #7 Creighton  #13 Kentucky  3-0
09/02/17  #18 USC  #7 Creighton  0-3
09/08/17  #17 Purdue  #9 Creighton  1-3
09/09/17  #9 Creighton  #7 Kansas  3-0
09/16/17  #19 Iowa State  #8 Creighton  2-3
12/12/17  #12 Michigan St.  #15 Creighton  1-3
08/24/18  #13 Creighton  #5 Kentucky  3-2
08/25/18  #10 USC  #13 Creighton  2-3
09/06/18  #7 Nebraska  #14 Creighton  2-3
09/15/18  #8 Illinois  #10 Creighton  1-3
09/23/18  #10 Creighton  #21 Marquette  3-0
10/26/18  #10 Creighton  #18 Marquette  3-1
11/24/18  #9 Creighton  #16 Marquette  3-1
12/01/18  #22 Washington  #9 Creighton  0-3
08/30/19  #2 Nebraska  #18 Creighton  1-3
08/31/19  #20 Baylor  #18 Creighton  0-3
09/06/19  #23 Creighton  #12 Kentucky  3-1
09/07/19  #23 Creighton  #15 USC  3-1
09/14/19  #12 Washington  #17 Creighton  1-3
10/12/19  #13 Creighton  #10 Marquette  3-2
11/22/19  #12 Creighton  #9 Marquette  3-1
12/07/19  #7 Minnesota  #15 Creighton  2-3
02/05/21  #19 Creighton  #25 Marquette  3-2
02/06/21  #25 Marquette  #19 Creighton  0-3
09/08/21  #3 Nebraska  #19 Creighton  0-3
09/02/22  #17 Creighton  #25 USC  3-1
09/03/22  #16 Kentucky  #17 Creighton  1-3
09/07/22  #2 Nebraska  #17 Creighton  2-3
10/14/22  #21 Creighton  #16 Marquette  3-2
11/19/22  #16 Marquette  #11 Creighton  0-3
11/26/22  #15 Creighton  #14 Marquette  3-2
08/26/23  #18 Creighton  #16 Purdue  3-0
09/06/23  #4 Nebraska  #16 Creighton  1-3
09/16/23  #14 Creighton  #9 Minnesota  3-2
11/05/23  #17 Creighton  #25 Marquette  3-0
12/07/23  #7 Louisville  #17 Creighton  2-3
09/05/24  #11 Creighton  #20 USC  3-1
09/10/24  #5 Nebraska  #9 Creighton  2-3
09/15/24  #4 Louisville  #9 Creighton  2-3
09/20/24  #9 Creighton  #6 Purdue  3-1
09/21/24  #9 Creighton  #10 Kansas  3-0
12/13/24  #6 Creighton   #13 Texas  3-1
12/15/24  #2 Penn State  #6 Creighton  2-3
08/23/25  #2 Penn State  #12 Creighton  0-3
08/29/25  #5 Texas  #12 Creighton  0-3
08/31/25  #12 Creighton  #14 Kansas  3-2
09/07/25  #22 USC  #13 Creighton  0-3
09/12/25  #4 Louisville  #18 Creighton  1-3
09/16/25  #1 Nebraska  #18 Creighton  2-3
09/21/25  #18 Creighton  #17 Kansas  3-0
12/11/25  #11 Creighton  #8 Arizona State  3-0
12/13/25  #2 Kentucky  #11 Creighton  0-3
The Defense Never Rests
Creighton has led the country in opponents hitting percentage in two of the last five seasons, doing so in both 2021 (.124) and 2024 (.130).
  Creighton held foes to .183 this year (49th-best nationally), a figure that plummeted to .151 in league action.
High FIve
Brian Rosen is Creighton's first volleyball coach since the program's 1994 reinstatement to pick up his first victory in a five set match, as Ben Guiliano, Howard Wallace and Kirsten Bernthal Booth's first wins all came in 3-0 sweeps.
Record in 5-Set Matches
Coach  Years  Set 5 W-L
Ben Guiliano  1994-1996  2-10
Howard Wallace  1997-2002  13-18
Kirsten Bernthal Booth  2003-2024  70-42
Brian Rosen  2025-Pres.  4-1
Twice For Breissinger
Junior defensive specialist Sydney Breissinger helped Creighton erase a 3-0 deficit in the fifth set on Aug. 31 vs. Kansas, serving up a 9-0 run that helped the Bluejays take the lead for good. She also served a 9-0 run in the fourth set vs. San Diego on Sept. 5.
  Breissinger's heroics were eerily similar to the 9-0 serving run she had in the fifth set on Sept. 16, 2023 in a win over No. 9 Minnesota. That win over the Gophers had been CU's last previous five-set win.
  Since enrolling at Creighton in 2023, Breissinger owns 54 service runs of five or longer, easily the most of any Bluejay.
155 Weeks As A Ranked Team
Creighton was ranked 10th in the year-end edition of the AVCA poll, the 155th time in program history it's been ranked and its best mark all season long. That's 37th-most of all programs in NCAA history.
  All 155 rankings have occurred since 2012.
  The Bluejays are one of 10 schools (along with Baylor, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pitt, Purdue, Stanford, Texas and Wisconsin) to have been ranked each of the last 78 polls.
  Creighton's 78 weeks in a row being ranked dates began on Sept. 6, 2021 and sets a program-record, breaking the previous-high of 64 from Oct. 31, 2016 to March 15, 2021.Â
  Creighton is one of eight schools (Creighton, Kentucky, Louisville, Nebraska, Pittsburgh, Purdue, Stanford, Wisconsin) to be in the Top 10 of the year-end poll in both 2024 and 2025.
Preseason Ranking
Creighton was ranked 12th in the AVCA preseason poll on Aug. 7th. It was the 11th time in the past 13 years that the Jays have been ranked in the preseason, and fourth year in a row.
  The No. 12 slotting tied last year's team for the second-best preseason ranking in program history, trailing only the 2017 team that was ranked ninth.
  Over the last 18 seasons, 333-of-450 teams (74.0 percent) of teams have been in both the preseason and final polls, and in the 18 seasons from 2008-2025, 408-of-450 teams (90.7 percent) in the preseason top-25 polls would go on to reach the NCAA Tournament, as all but preseason No. 17 Missouri and No. 24 Dayton reached the 2025 NCAA Tournament.
  This year marks the 14th straight season that CU has been ranked at least one week, extending a program record.
  Year  Preseason Rank  Final W-L  Final Rank
  2013  25th  23-9  NR
  2014  23rd  25-9  NR
  2016  18th  27-9  9th
  2017  9th  26-7  16th
  2018  13th  29-5  13th
  2019  18th  25-6  16th
  2020  16th  12-4  NR
  2022  18th  27-5  21st
  2023  18th  29-5  15th
  2024  12th  32-3  5th
  2025  12th  28-6  10th
Production Returns
Creighton returns 11-of-19 letterwinners to the court from last season, including three starters.
  From last year's team, Norah Sis, Elise Goetzinger, Kendra Wait, Abbey Milner, Maddy Bilinovic, Audrey Clark, Katie Maser and Emma Ziegler are not back.
  All told, of the seven categories listed below, Creighton returns 294.5 of a possible 700% back (42.1 percent), the smallest amount returning since it headed into Howard Wallace's final season in 2002.
  Below is a breakdown of the production that is back:
Stat  Returners  Departures
Assists  119 (7.6%)  1,450 (92.4%)
Aces  115 (51.3%)  109 (48.7%)
Digs  598 (35.7%)  1,076 (64.3%)
Points  1,115.5 (50.2%)  1,107.0 (49.8%)
Kills  843 (50.1%)  841 (49.9%)
Matches Started  104 (49.5%)  106 (50.5%)
Blocks  157.5 (50.1%)  157.0 (49.9%)
One Tough Schedule
Of Creighton's 12 non-conference matches, seven were against ranked teams and three others against programs that received votes in the preseason AVCA Top 25 poll.
  Creighton was the only team in the preseason Top 25 with 10 or more non-conference matches against teams getting votes, as Texas and TCU were next-closest with eight each.
No Losers Here
Creighton has been as good as anyone at avoiding losses in recent seasons.
  Creighton and Pittsburgh are the nation's only teams to lose six times or less in the 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024 and 2025 seasons.
  Creighton is also the only school nationally who have won 25 matches or more in every season between 2014-25 (not counting the 2020 COVID-19 year, when CU only played 16 times).
Survival of the Fittest
Since the move to rally scoring in 2001, Creighton has won 10 matches when surviving a match point and lost four contests when holding a match point of its own.
Surviving Match Points Since 2001
Date  Opponent  MP(s) Faced  Final Set 5
09/27/02  Evansville  13-14, 14-15  19-17
08/30/03  vs. McNeese State  13-14, 15-16  18-16
10/10/03  Wichita State  13-14  16-14
10/13/06  at Wichita State  12-14, 13-14, 14-15  17-15
09/11/07  at Drake  13-14, 14-15  17-15
08/26/11Â Â vs. UTSAÂ Â 12-14, 13-14Â Â 16-14
11/16/12  at Wichita State  13-14  16-14
09/20/15  Kansas State  23-24 (4th set)  15-13
11/20/15  at Georgetown  23-24, 26-27 (4th set)  15-7
08/24/18  vs. #5 Kentucky  16-15, 19-18  22-20
Tournament Tested
Creighton has played multiple matches in 30Â tournaments since the start of the 2021 calendar year, and won 20 of them.Â
  Keep in mind that when Kirsten Bernthal Booth was hired in 2003, Creighton had been 17-33 in 15 regular-season tournaments all-time, with just one tournament title (the 2000 Iowa State Heritage Classic).
CU's Multi-Match Tournaments Since Jan. 1, 2021
Year  Event  CU Record (Place)
2021  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2021  Mizzou Invitational  3-0 (1st)
2021  Bluegrass Battle  3-0 (1st)
2021  Bluejay Invitational  3-0 (1st)
2021  Shocker Volleyball Classic  3-0 (1st)
2021  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2021  NCAA Tournament  1-1 (T-17th)
2022  Rumble in the Rockies  3-0 (1st)
2022  Bluejay Invitational  2-1 (2nd)
2022  Omaha Invitational  2-0 (1st)
2022  Rice adidas Invitational  1-1 (2nd)
2022  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2023  Reamer Club Xtra Special Premier  2-1 (1st)
2023  Bluejay Invitational  3-0 (1st)
2023  MN Hospitality Omaha Challenge  2-0 (1st)
2023  Diet Coke Challenge  2-0 (1st)
2023  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2023  NCAA Tournament  2-1 (T-9th)
2024  Bluejay Invitational  3-0 (1st)
2024  Creighton Classic  2-0 (1st)
2024  Cardinal Classic  2-1 (2nd)
2024  Jayhawk Classic  2-0 (1st)
2024  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2024  NCAA Tournament  3-1 (T-5th)
2025  Opening Spike Classic  1-1 (T-2nd)
2025  Trojan Invitational  2-1 (2nd)
2025  Bluejay Invitational  2-1 (2nd)
2025  Creighton Classic  2-0 (1st)
2025  BIG EAST Tournament  2-0 (1st)
2025  NCAA Tournament  3-1 (T-5th)
Jays Earn Tourney Titles
Creighton has won at least one tournament each of the last 14 seasons, a streak that dates to 2012.
   During that span, the Bluejays have won 37 tournament titles, not to mention 12 regular-season league crowns.
  Creighton has also now won at least one home tournament each of the last nine seasons.
Creighton's Tournament Titles Since 2012
Year  Titles Won  Tourney Hosts
2012Â Â 3Â Â USF, UNC, MVC
2013Â Â 1Â Â BGSU
2014Â Â 1Â Â CU, BIG EAST
2015Â Â 1Â Â BIG EAST
2016Â Â 1Â Â BIG EAST
2017Â Â 4Â Â WASH, CU, KU, BIG EAST
2018Â Â 3Â Â SMU, CU, BIG EAST
2019Â Â 2Â Â UNI, CU
2020Â Â 1Â Â BIG EAST
2021Â Â 5Â Â MIZZ, UK, CU, WSU, BIG EAST
2022Â Â 3Â Â WYO, UNO, BIG EAST
2023Â Â 5Â Â Purdue, CU, UNO, MINN, BIG EAST
2024Â Â 4Â Â CU, CU, KU, BIG EAST
2025Â Â 2Â Â CU, BIG EAST
2-0 Better Than 0-2
Creighton is 440-11 (.976) all-time when leading a match 2-0, and 161-1 (.994) all-time at D.J. Sokol Arena when up 2-0 at the break.
  Per RichKern.com, Division I teams that won the first two sets won 94.9 percent of their matches from 2014-23.
  Creighton has won 127 matches in a row when taking a 2-0 lead.
  Conversely, the Jays are 17-212 (.074) all-time when trailing a match 0-2. Those 17 comebacks in program history from down 0-2 are listed below.
Date  Opponent  Sets 3-5 scores  Coach
09/19/97  at Bradley  15-11, 15-13, 15-8  Wallace
10/01/99  at Drake  15-6, 17-15, 15-11  Wallace
09/03/04  vs. Montana  30-20, 30-21, 15-11  Booth
10/15/04  at Bradley  30-22, 30-23, 15-11  Booth
10/15/05  at So. Illinois  30-25, 30-24, 15-8  Booth
09/21/07  at No. Iowa  31-29, 30-26, 15-12  Booth
11/16/12  at Wichita St.  25-16, 25-20, 16-14  Booth
09/05/14  vs. No. Iowa  25-16, 25-22, 15-5  Booth
11/08/14  at Butler  25-16, 25-20, 15-13  Booth
09/20/15  Kansas State  25-23, 26-24, 15-13  Booth
10/09/15  DePaul  25-21, 25-12, 15-11  Booth
11/20/15  at Georgetown  30-28, 26-24, 15-7  Booth
10/13/17  Butler  25-21, 25-23, 15-9  Booth
10/18/18  Xavier  25-17, 25-17, 15-13  Booth
01/31/21  at So. Dakota  25-20, 25-23, 15-7  Booth
10/07/22  at UConn  25-15, 25-12, 15-13  Booth
10/14/22  #16 Marquette  25-19, 25-16, 15-8  Booth
Set 1 Result A Strong Indicator
Creighton has gone 188-6 in its last 194 matches at all sites when winning the first set, compared to an 18-27 record in that same span when dropping the opener.
  Creighton has gone 219-4 (.982) in its last 223 matches against unranked foes when winning the opening set.
  Per RichKern.com, Division I teams that lost the first set won just 20.3 percent of their matches from 2014-23.
  Since Aug. 29, 2010, Creighton has gone 181-6 in its last 187 home matches when taking a 1-0 lead, losing only to Pacific (Sept. 12, 2015), No. 7 Nebraska (Sept. 6, 2018), South Dakota (Jan. 29, 2021), No. 16 Kentucky (Sept. 3, 2022), Auburn (Dec. 2, 2022) and No. 4 Louisville (Sept. 12, 2025).Â
  The Jays have won their last 45 of their last 46 home matches following a first set victory.
Against NCAA Tournament Qualifiers
This year's team has played 15 matches against teams that made the 2024 NCAA Tournament with contests against Marquette (3x), Kansas (2x), Northern Iowa (2x), Louisville, USC, Nebraska, Texas, Penn State, Northern Colorado, Arizona State and Kentucky.
Year  W-L vs. Previous Season NCAA Teams
1994Â Â 0-4
1995Â Â 0-2
1996Â Â 0-2
1997Â Â 0-3
1998Â Â 0-5
1999Â Â 2-4
2000Â Â 0-4
2001Â Â 1-6
2002Â Â 0-5
2003Â Â 0-3
2004Â Â 2-2
2005Â Â 0-6
2006Â Â 4-6
2007Â Â 4-9
2008Â Â 6-8
2009Â Â 1-11
2010Â Â 4-7
2011Â Â 2-6
2012Â Â 8-3
2013Â Â 6-6
2014Â Â 4-5
2015Â Â 11-5
2016Â Â 10-7
2017Â Â 8-6
2018Â Â 8-5
2019Â Â 5-4
2020Â Â 3-1
2021Â Â 3-1
2022Â Â 5-4
2023Â Â 11-3
2024Â Â 9-3
2025Â Â 9-6
TOTALÂ Â 125-151
TOTAL Before Booth  3-35
TOTAL Under Booth  113-110
TOTAL Under Rosen  9-6
Players Mentioned
Creighton vs. Kentucky Volleyball Press Conference - 12/13/25
Sunday, December 14
Creighton Volleyball NCAA Tournament Highlights vs. Kentucky, 12/13/25
Saturday, December 13
Kentucky Volleyball Media Availability - 12/12/25
Friday, December 12
Arizona State Volleyball Press Conference After Creighton Match - 12/11/25
Thursday, December 11






























