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2021 Creighton Volleyball Season Recap
1/13/2022 7:24:00 PM | Volleyball
All the info you need from Creighton's winningest season in program history
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2021 Year-End Recap
   Creighton returned to the court in the fall of 2021, putting together one of the best seasons in program history en route to setting a school-record with 31 victories.
   The Bluejays won five different tournaments, including its seventh BIG EAST Championship in the past eight years, as well as an eighth straight BIG EAST regular-season crown.
   Returning all six starters in addition to a top-10 recruiting class and the addition of graduate transfer of All-American libero Abby Bottomley, expectations were sky-high entering the season.
   Creighton showed glimpses of its potential from the outset, sweeping Kansas City, Saint Louis and host Missouri at the Mizzou Invitational to open the season. Freshman setter Kendra Wait was named Tournament MVP following her first weekend as a collegian.
   CU turned heads nationally the following weekend at the Bluegrass Battle in Lexington, Ky. CU won the final five points to post a 15-13 fifth set victory over USC to improve to 4-0 on Sept. 3. The following day Creighton swept defending national champion Kentucky, the nation's third-ranked team. That night the Bluejays improved to 6-0 with a sweep of longtime MVC nemesis Northern Iowa. Jaela Zimmerman was named Tournament MVP.
   Creighton returned home on Sept. 8 for a highly-anticipated match-up with third-ranked Nebraska. A crowd of 11,279 and a national audience on FS1 watched the Cornhuskers and Bluejays battle at CHI Health Center Omaha.
   CU stayed in Omaha to host the Bluejay Invitational that weekend back on campus at D.J. Sokol Arena. Creighton sandwiched sweeps of SMU and Nebraska-Omaha around a 3-1 win vs. Illinois, CU's first victory ever in six matches against the Illini. Zimmerman was once again named Tournament MVP.
   Creighton closed out the non-conference portion of the regular-season with 3-0 wins against Wyoming, South Dakota and Wichita State to dominate the Shocker Volleyball Classic. Zimmerman earned her third consecutive MVP laurel.
   Picked to win the BIG EAST regular-season title in a preseason vote of league coaches, CU opened league play with a 3-1 win at Butler and a 3-0 sweep at Xavier.
   The Bluejays suffered a rare league loss on Oct. 1 at St. John's before sweeping Seton Hall and DePaul leading into a showdown with league-leading Marquette. Creighton held serve on its home court vs. the Golden Eagles, winning in four sets to move back into a tie for first place.
   That tie lasted less than a week, as CU dropped a five-set match in its first trip to UConn to slip to 5-2 in league play.
   The loss only served to motivate the Bluejays, as CU would drop just two sets the rest of the regular-season while closing with an 11-match win streak. That stretch included a 3-1 win at rival Marquette and a 3-0 sweep on Senior Day for Bottomley, Naomi Hickman and Annika Welty vs. St. John's as CU tied for the BIG EAST regular-season title, its league-record eighth consecutive.
   The dominance continued into the postseason, where Creighton swept DePaul and Marquette on back-to-back days at the BIG EAST Tournament to clinch the league's automatic bid once again. Freshman outside hitter Norah Sis brought home MVP honors.
   The 13-match win streak moved Creighton to eighth in the RPI and 20th in the AVCA poll heading into the NCAA Tournament. The Bluejays were awarded the No. 14 national seed and the opportunity to host postseason play at D.J. Sokol Arena once again.
   CU opened the NCAA Tournament with a 3-0 sweep vs. Ole Miss, but it didn't come without a heavy price. Midway through the second set Zimmerman landed awkwardly following an attack and crashed to the floor. She would end up with a torn anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee and would miss the rest of the season. Despite losing the heartbeat of its team, the Bluejays pulled together to finish off the sweep of the Rebels.
   One night later, CU would not be as fortunate. A confident Kansas team, still riding high after an upset sweep over Oregon, raced to a 25-13 win in the first set. The teams were tied at 24-all late in the second set before the Jayhawks eked out a 26-24 victory to take a 2-0 lead in the match. Creighton won the third set before seeing its season come to an abrupt end in the fourth set.
   Creighton would finish its season with a 31-4 record and 10th straight trip to the NCAA Tournament. The 31 wins trailed only Louisville (32), and CU led the nation in opponents hitting percentage (.124).
   The success of the team led to quite the haul when it came to individual accolades. Sis was named an AVCA Third Team All-American, BIG EAST Freshman of the Year, AVCA East Region Freshman of the Year, and VolleyballMag.com National Freshman of the Year. The Papillion product was a six-time BIG EAST Freshman of the Week and had 106 kills more than any other freshman from a top-25 program.
   Zimmerman was named First Team All-BIG EAST and once again named All-East Region and Honorable Mention All-American from the AVCA and VolleyballMag.com.
   Wait landed All-BIG EAST and All-Region honors in addition to being an Honorable Mention All-American from the AVCA and VolleyballMag.com.
   Bottomley finished her career seventh in NCAA history with 2,711 digs. She was named All-Conference for the fifth time in her career, in addition to being a VolleyballMag.com Honorable Mention All-America selection.
Creighton Coaches
Creighton was coached by Kirsten Bernthal Booth (Truman State, 1997), who owned a 414-179 record after her 19th season with the Bluejays. She's led Creighton to eight straight BIG EAST titles (including 2021), and nine league crowns in the last 10 years. Booth led the Bluejays to their first two Sweet 16's (2015, 2016) and first Elite Eight (2016) in program history. In 2016 she was recognized as VolleyballMag.com National Coach of the Year, BIG EAST Coach of the Year and AVCA East Region Coach of the Year. Booth was tabbed BIG EAST Coach of the Year for the third time in 2019.
   The winningest coach in school history, Booth has taken Creighton to its only 11 NCAA Tournament bids in the program's modern history. She's also coached CU into the top-25 each of the last 10 seasons (including 2021), another program first.
   Booth came to Creighton after going 112-41 in three years at Kirkwood Community College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. A native of Lincoln, Neb., Booth played volleyball at Truman State, where she was named conference MVP, an Academic All-American and Missouri's 1997 NCAA Woman of the Year. She ranked third in Division II history with 6,077 assists when she graduated.
   Booth was assisted by Angie Oxley Behrens, Craig Dyer and Justin Dueck.
Creighton's NCAA Tournament History
Creighton made its 11th appearance in the NCAA Tournament in the past 12 years after earning a 10th 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 12-11 in those 11 appearances, and have knocked off the likes of Iowa State (2010 and 2019), Marquette (2012), Arkansas (2013), Coastal Carolina (2015 and 2017), No. 23 North Carolina (2015), Northern Iowa (2016), No. 4 Kansas (2016), No. 17 Michigan (2016), South Dakota (2018) and Ole Miss (2021).
   Creighton is 9-2 in First Round play, 2-7 in the Second Round, 1-1 in the Regional semifinals and 0-1 in the Regional finals. The Bluejays are 3-3 at home, 7-3 in neutral-site matches and 2-5 in true road matches.
   Kirsten Bernthal Booth is 12-11 all-time in the NCAA Tournament and is the only Bluejay head coach to lead the program into the postseason.
NCAA Tourney Streak
The mid-November NCAA Tournament run for Creighton men's soccer, as well as the inclusion of Creighton Volleyball into the 2021 NCAA Tournament, extended an impressive streak for Bluejay athletics.
   This year marks the 35th straight academic calendar year that Creighton has had at least one NCAA Tournament team.
   Only nine schools made the NCAA Tournament in both women's volleyball and men's soccer this fall. That group includes Campbell, Creighton, Kentucky, Louisville, North Carolina, Pittsburgh, UCLA, Washington and West Virginia.
   Of those nine schools above, the only five teams to win at least one match in the NCAA Tournament in both volleyball and men's soccer were Creighton, Kentucky, Pittsburgh, UCLA and Washington.
Against NCAA Tournament Teams
Creighton went 7-2 against teams in the field of 64, including three victories vs. Marquette and one win each vs. Kentucky, Illinois, South Dakota and Ole Miss.
   In nine matches this fall against NCAA Tournament teams, Jaela Zimmerman averaged 4.62 kills and 3.54 digs per set, Norah Sis averaged 4.39 kills and 3.35 digs per set, Abby Bottomley averaged 5.19 digs per set and Kendra Wait averaged 10.68 assists, 4.00 digs, 0.84 blocks and 1.23 kills per set.
Opponent   CU Score  Â
Nebraska        L 0-3
Marquette   W 3-1
Marquette   W 3-1
Marquette   W 3-0
Illinois   W 3-1
South Dakota   W 3-0
Kentucky   W 3-0
Ole Miss   W 3-0
Kansas        L 1-3
History of No. 14 Seeds
The 2021 NCAA Tournament marked the 21st postseason of the rally scoring era.
   In that time, the No. 14 national seed (such as Creighton this fall) are 20-0 in the opening round, as last year the No. 14 seed received a bye to the Second Round.
   Since 2001, the No. 14 seed has advanced to the Sweet 16 (or further) 11-of-21 times, including two teams (2004 Wisconsin and 2014 Nebraska) that reached the Regional Final.
   No fewer than 10-of-16 seeds have reached the Sweet 16 in each of the last 20 seasons.
Year   No. 9 Seed   W-L   Seeds to Sweet 16?
2021   Creighton   1-1   14/16
2020   Utah   0-1 (bye to R2)   14/16
2019Â Â Â BYUÂ Â Â 1-1Â Â Â 13/16
2018   Marquette   2-1   12/16
2017   Iowa State   1-1   11/16
2016   Kansas State   1-1   12/16
2015Â Â Â UCLAÂ Â Â 2-1Â Â Â 13/16
2014   Nebraska   3-1   13/16
2013   Kansas   2-1   11/16
2012   Florida   2-1   12/15
2011   Tennessee   1-1   11/16
2010   Dayton   1-1   11/16
2009   Oregon   1-1   12/16
2008Â Â Â UCLAÂ Â Â 2-1Â Â Â 13/16
2007   Colorado State   1-1   10/16
2006   Purdue   2-1   15/16
2005   Purdue   2-1   13/16
2004   Wisconsin   3-1   14/16
2003   Colorado State   2-1   16/16
2002   Wisconsin   1-1   13/16
2001   Florida   2-1   16/16
10 Straight NCAA's
Creighton Volleyball has made the NCAA Tournament in each of the last 10 seasons. They are the first women's team in any sport at Creighton to make 10 straight NCAA Tournament appearances.
   The only other sport in Creighton history to make 10 straight NCAA Tournament appearances is the men's soccer program, which qualified in 17 straight seasons from 1992-2008.
   Creighton is one of nine teams nationally to have appeared in each of the last 10 NCAA Tournaments (2012-20). That group features BYU, Creighton, Florida, Kentucky, Nebraska, Penn State, San Diego, Texas and Washington.
   There are also 13 schools that have appeared in 11 of the last 12 NCAA Tournaments, a group that includes Creighton, Florida State, Hawai'i, Minnesota, Purdue and Stanford.
   Florida, Kentucky, Nebraska, Penn State, San Diego, Texas and Washington have appeared in every NCAA Tournament since at least 2010.
Eleventh Heaven
Kirsten Bernthal Booth is in some select company, as she has directed her team to 11 NCAA Tournaments.
   That puts her in the company of some of the greatest coaches in CU Athletics history, as she's tied former men's soccer coach Bob Warming atop that list.
Name   Sport   NCAA's @CU
Bob Warming   Men's Soccer   11
Kirsten Bernthal Booth   Volleyball   11
Dana Altman   Men's Basketball   7
Brent Vigness   Softball   7
Elmar Bolowich   Men's Soccer   6
Greg McDermott   Men's Basketball   6
Seed Value
Creighton was a national seed in the NCAA Tournament for the fourth time in the past seven seasons.
   Only 13 schools in the country can say that, as seen below:
   Rk.   School   National Seeds Since 2015
   1.   BYU   7
      Minnesota   7
      Nebraska   7
      Texas   7
   5.   Florida   6
      Penn State   6
      Washington   6
      Wisconsin   6
   9.   Kentucky   5
      Stanford   5
   11.   Baylor   4
      Creighton   4
      UCLA   4
Sis Named Top Freshman Nationally
Creighton Volleyball's Norah Sis was named VolleyballMag.com's National Freshman of the Year on Dec. 24. Sis was also named a Third Team All-American by VolleyballMag.com.
   This year marks the sixth straight season that Creighton has had at least one All-American from VolleyballMag.com. Creighton's four All-America choices were tied for third-most nationally, trailing only Nebraska and Washington with five each. The Bluejays were also the nation's only school with multiple freshmen to be recognized.
   Sis led Creighton with 3.75 kills per set and her 435 kills were 106 more than any other freshman on a top-25 team. The Papillion product was named to four different All-Tournament Teams and brought home MVP honors at the BIG EAST Tournament. The outside hitter was named AVCA Third Team All-American, AVCA East Region Freshman of the Year, AVCA All-East Region, BIG EAST Freshman of the Year, picked up six BIG EAST Freshman of the Week accolades and also landed on the All-BIG EAST Team. She averaged 4.43 kills per set and 3.36 digs per set on .260 hitting in eight contests against top-50 opponents.
   Sis is CU's first student-athlete to be recognized with a top honor by VolleyballMag.com, though the website did name Kirsten Bernthal Booth its National Coach of the Year in 2016.
   Other past Creighton honorees from VolleyballMag.com include Keeley Davis on the All-Freshman Team in 2019, Jaali Winters as a Third Team All-American in 2016 and 2018, Brittany Witt as a Fourth Team All-American in 2019 and Honorable Mention All-America laurels for Witt in 2017, Lydia Dimke in 2016 and 2017 and Jaela Zimmerman in 2019 and 2020.
   In addition to Sis, Abby Bottomley, Kendra Wait and Jaela Zimmerman were also recognized as Honorable Mention All-Americans by VolleyballMag.com.
Abby's An Academic All-American
Senior libero Abby Bottomley became the first player in Creighton Volleyball history to be named a First Team Academic All-American by the College Sports Information Directors of America.
   Bottomley is the 12th student-athlete across all Bluejay sports to be named a First Team Academic All-American by CoSIDA. Creighton's other past First Team CoSIDA Academic All-Americans include Rick Apke (men's basketball; 1978), Jean Tierney (softball; 1983), Christy Lunceford (softball; 1997), Heidi Geier (softball; 1999), Christine Fukumoto (softball; 2005), Brian Holt (men's soccer; 2011), Fabian Herbers (men's soccer; 2015), Tyler Clement (men's basketball; 2018), Sam Crowley (softball; 2018) and Sven Koenig (men's soccer, 2018) and Nick Monkemeyer (men's cross country, 2019).
   A three-time CoSIDA Academic All-District choice, Bottomley was recognized for the second consecutive season as a CoSIDA Academic All-American, having also been a Second Team selection for 2020-21 while a student-athlete at High Point University. That made her one of nine repeat selections across the three teams that were announced on Dec. 15th.
   A native of Virginia Beach, Va., Bottomley owned a 3.89 as an undergrad while studying Finance & Marketing at High Point, and has a perfect 4.00 GPA in Business Analytics in grad school at Creighton.
   In her lone season as a Bluejay, she ranked second in the BIG EAST and 36th nationally with 4.85 digs per set and was also fourth in the BIG EAST in aces per set. She is a five-time All-Conference selection, including All-BIG EAST acclaim this fall.
   The fifth-year senior finished her career with 2,711 digs, good for seventh in NCAA history.
   Bottomley helped Creighton earn the No. 14 national seed and finish with a 31-4 overall record. The Bluejays finished the fall by winning its seventh BIG EAST Tournament title in the past eight seasons in addition to capturing its eighth consecutive regular-season BIG EAST title.
   The only previous volleyball CoSIDA Academic All-American honorees have been Second Team picks Megan Bober (2012) and Jaali Winters (2018), as well as Third Team selections Emily Greisch (2006), Winters (2017), Taryn Kloth (2018) and Brittany Witt (2019).
   Creighton owns 45 CoSIDA Academic All-Americans in school history, who have combined to earn 56 honors.
Poll Position
The Creighton Volleyball team finished the season ranked 22nd in the year-end American Volleyball Coaches Association poll that was released on December 20th.
   It's the sixth time in the last seven seasons that Creighton has been ranked in the year-end AVCA poll, something only 13 schools (BYU, Creighton, Florida, Kentucky, Minnesota, Nebraska, Penn State, Purdue, Stanford, Texas, UCLA, Washington and Wisconsin) can claim.
   Creighton has now been ranked in the year-end poll on seven occasions. The Bluejays were No. 24 in 2012, No. 19 in 2015, No. 9 in 2016, No. 16 in 2017, No. 13 in 2018 and No. 16 in 2019 before this season's No. 22 ranking.
   Creighton is one of four schools that ended the year in the top-25 despite not being in the preseason poll along with Kansas, Illinois and Miami (Fls.). Over the last 14 seasons, 255-of-350 teams (72.9 percent) have been in both polls.
   Wisconsin ended the season atop the poll after winning its first national title. Runner-up Nebraska was second, with Louisville third and Pitt fourth. Creighton was the lone BIG EAST team to appear in the final poll.
   Creighton, which earned an 10th consecutive trip to the NCAA Tournament this fall, finished the season with a 31-4 record. The Bluejays won their eighth straight regular-season BIG EAST title while also capturing the BIG EAST Tournament title for the seventh time in the past eight seasons.
   Creighton reached as high as No. 16 in the AVCA poll this fall and was ranked 20th entering the NCAA Tournament. The Bluejays have now been ranked each of the last 14 polls and 91 times in program history. That figure ranks 47th-most in history. CU's all-time best ranking in program history is No. 7, which came in the poll released on Aug. 28, 2017. Creighton is 145-35 all-time when playing as a ranked team in the AVCA poll.
   This was the 10th straight season that Creighton has spent at least one week in the top-25, extending another program record.
AVCA Awards Bluejay Trio
Creighton Volleyball's Norah Sis was named a Third Team All-American while Jaela Zimmerman and Kendra Wait were recognized as Honorable Mention All-Americans by the American Volleyball Coaches Association on Dec. 15.
   Only six freshmen nationwide were named All-Americans, and Sis and Wait made Creighton the only team with multiple freshmen recognized.
   This year marks the 10th straight season that Creighton has had at least one All-American, with multiple All-Americans in six of the past seven campaigns.
   Sis is Creighton's fifth player ever, but just the second freshman (joining Jaali Winters in 2015) named Third Team All-American by the AVCA, matching the highest honor in program history. Earlier this fall Sis became CU's third player ever named AVCA East Region Freshman of the Year, joining Winters (2015) and Brittany Witt (2016).
   Wait was named Honorable Mention All-American after a standout freshman campaign that saw her collect a team-high 17 double-doubles and lead the BIG EAST with 10.46 assists per set. Wait also ranked among the BIG EAST leaders in blocks per set (17th) and digs per set (14th) as she brought home All-BIG EAST and BIG EAST All-Freshman honors. The Gardner, Kan., native was a five-time BIG EAST Freshman of the Week, picked up one BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Week recognition and collected four All-Tournament Team honors. After just one freshman was named All-American from 1994-2020 (Winters in 2015), Wait joined Sis as the lone Creighton freshmen to be recognized as an All-American by the AVCA.
   This is the second time (2020, 2021) that Zimmerman has been named an All-American from the AVCA, though she was also named an All-American in the fall of 2019 by VolleyballMag.com. The three-time All-BIG EAST pick averaged 3.69 kills and 3.22 digs was the only player in the league to average at least 3.00 kills and 3.00 digs per set. Zimmerman was named MVP of the Bluegrass Battle, Bluejay Invitational and Shocker Volleyball Classic and also earned All-Tournament Team accolades at the BIG EAST Championship. The Lincoln, Neb,. product averaged 4.52 kills per set in eight matches against top-50 competition.
Get Well, Jaela
Jaela Zimmerman had 10 of Creighton's first 19 kills vs. Ole Miss on Dec. 2 before leaving the match due to a torn anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee with the Bluejays up 10-9 in the second set.
   Despite losing 3-of-5 points immediately after their All-American captain was helped off the court, CU would outscore Ole Miss 40-19 following Zimmerman's departure.
   Zimmerman ranks 15th in Creighton history with 997 career kills. The three-time All-BIG EAST choice is the only player in the BIG EAST to average at least 3.00 kills and 3.00 digs per set this season.
   She was named MVP in each of CU's final three preseason tournaments this fall.
   Zimmerman underwent knee surgery to repair her injury on Jan. 7, 2022.
Crowded House
Creighton averaged 2,158 fans per home match this season, which ranked 14th-most nationally. That attendance average figure ranks second-most in program history, while the No. 14 ranking is tied with 2007 for the second-best finish in CU history.
   Creighton's 30,211 total home fans also ranked 14th-most nationally. That figure ranked second-best in program history.
   Average Attendance Leaders
1.   Nebraska   8,172
2.   Wisconsin   7,107
3.   Minnesota   5,066
4.   Texas   3,626
5.   BYU   3,170
6.   Penn State   2,834
7.   Michigan State   2,755
8.   Ohio State   2,534
9.   Florida   2,486
10.   Washington   2,399
11.   Purdue   2,347
12.   Illinois   2,321
13.   Colorado State   2,299
14.   Creighton   2,158
15.   Iowa State   2,149
Total Home Attendance Leaders
1.   Nebraska   147,104
2.   Wisconsin   135,031
3.   Minnesota   70,924
4.   Texas   65,261
5.   BYU   57,059
6.   Michigan State   44,079
7.   Purdue   39,901
8.   Florida   39,771
9.   Ohio State   38,003
10.   Penn State   36,847
11.   Colorado State   36,778
12.   Washington   33,589
13.   Kentucky   31,904
14.   Creighton   30,211
15.   Illinois   27,848
NCAA Crowds
Creighton attracted 4,740 fans on the opening weekend of the NCAA Tournament. That figure ranked 10th-best among the 16 host sites nationally.
NCAA Round 1/2 Attendance
Rk.   Host   Rd. 1   Rd. 2   Total
1.   Nebraska   7,884   7,955   15,839
2.   Wisconsin   7,540   7,540   15,080
3.   BYU   5,340   4,729   10,069
4.   Minnesota   4,280   4,448   8,728
5.   Texas   3,172   4,322   7,494
6.   Washington   2,973   3,322   6,295
7.   Ohio State   2,787   2,868   5,655
8.   Kentucky   2,878   2,369   5,247
9.   Pittsburgh   2,344   2,593   4,937
10.   Creighton   2,351   2,389   4,740
11.   Purdue   2,235   2,218   4,453
12.   Florida   2,057   2,311   4,368
13.   UCLA   1,375   1,143   2,518
14.   Georgia Tech   1,200   1,200   2,400
15.   Baylor   1,004   1,078   2,082
16.   Louisville   993   1,055   2,048
Wins Records Falls
Creighton finished second in the country with 31 wins in 2021, a school-record, two more than the 29 set in 2012 and matched in both 2016 and 2018.
   Creighton had never entered an NCAA Tournament with more than 28 victories prior to this fall, when it had 30.
Matches Won
      Year   MP   W   L   Pct.
   1.   2021   35   31   4   .886
   2.   2012   33   29   4   .879
      2018   34   29   5   .853
      2016   36   29   7   .806
   5.   2015   36   27   9   .750
Hickman Takes Over Wins Record
Naomi Hickman played in 116 wins as a Bluejay, as the Sept. 18 win vs. Wichita State made her the ninth player in Creighton Volleyball's modern history to reach the century mark.
   Hickman took sole possession of the school-record mark when she appeared in a win at Georgetown on Nov. 12.
Most Wins, Appeared In As A Player
   116   Naomi Hickman   2017-21
   111   Jaali Winters   2015-18
   109   Taryn Kloth   2015-18
   109   Brittany Witt   2016-19
   107   Megan Ballenger   2016-19
   106   Marysa Wilkinson   2014-17
   104   Lauren Smith   2013-16
Booth's Haul
Kirsten Bernthal Booth is one of two volleyball coaches in league history to win seven or more BIG EAST Championship titles when you count this year's title.
   The only other coach with five or more was Notre Dame's Debbie Brown (9).
BIG EAST Tournament Champions
Creighton Volleyball earned the school's eighth different BIG EAST Tournament title won by the school since joining the BIG EAST in the summer of 2013.
   All but one of those titles have been won by the volleyball program.
Creighton's BIG EAST Tournament Titles (8)
Baseball (1): 2019
Volleyball (7): 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2021
All-BIG EAST Quartet
Four members of the Creighton Volleyball program earned All-BIG EAST honors, and Norah Sis was named BIG EAST Freshman of the Year.
   Sis was joined on the All-BIG EAST team by Jaela Zimmerman, Abby Bottomley and Kendra Wait. Wait and Sis were also named to the BIG EAST's All-Freshman Team.
   This year marks the ninth time in as many years as a member of the BIG EAST that Creighton has had multiple all-conference selections, and seventh straight season with three or more First Team selections.
   Sis becomes Creighton's third BIG EAST Freshman of the Year, joining Jaali Winters (2015) and current teammate Keeley Davis (2019).
   Zimmerman picked up her third straight All-BIG EAST recognition and was a unanimous choice for the second season in a row.
   After picking up All-Big South Conference honors each of the previous four seasons while at High Point, Bottomley was named First Team All-BIG EAST to become the rare student-athlete to be named a First Team All-Conference honoree five times.
Stacking Chips
Here's a look at how experienced the current members of the Creighton Volleyball program are, both in Division I regular-season conference titles, conference tournament titles and NCAA Tournament matches played or coached in:
Name   Reg-Season   Tourney   NCAA Matches
Hickman   5   4   9
Bottomley   4   4   6
Welty   4   3   5
Zimmerman   4   3   5
Bressman   3   1   0
Davis   3   3   5
Schmitt   3   2   3
Van Eekeren   3   2   4
Bolton   2   2   3
Maser   2   1   0
Reinhardt   1   1   1
Skovsende   2   2   1
Sis   1   1   2
Wait   1   1   2
Milner   1   0   0
Booth   9   8   23
Behrens   12   8   40
Dyer   5   3   18
Dueck   2   2   3
TOTALSÂ Â Â 67Â Â Â 51Â Â Â 130
Bottoms Up
Abby Bottomley compiled an incredible 2,158 digs in four seasons at High Point University. Those 2,158 digs at High Point are more than Brittany Witt's Creighton record (2,079), and helped her lead the Big South Conference in digs each of the previous four seasons.
   Bottomley finished her career seventh all-time in NCAA history with her 2,711 career digs, and trailed only Valparaiso's Rylee Cookerly's 3,175 among active players in 2021.
   Bottomley became the first BIG EAST player ever to reach 2,500 career digs or more.
   Rk   Player, Team   Years   Digs
   1.   Lara Newberry, Chatanooga   2005-08   3,176
   2.   Rylee Cookerly, Valparaiso   2017-21   3,175
   3.   Paula Gentil, Minnesota   2002-05   2,791
   4.   Kim Diehlmann,Hartford   1989-92   2,780
   5.   Courtney Pence, Illinois St.   2015-18   2,778
   6.   Taylor Root, Valparaiso   2009-12   2,752
   7.   Abby Bottomley, HPU/CU   2017-21   2,711
   8.   Keellie Arneson, Clemson   2012-15   2,707
   9.   Raquel Miotto, UNC Asheville   2006-09   2,694
   10.   Allison Nieters, Iona   2007-10   2,682
What a Senior Class
Creighton honored three seniors following its final home match of the season on Nov. 21 vs. St. John's as Abby Bottomley, Naomi Hickman and Annika Welty were recognized.
   Bottomley led CU with 553 digs and 4.85 digs per set while ranking second on the Bluejay team with 47 service aces. She ranks seventh in NCAA history with 2,711 career digs and was a four-time First Team All-Big South Conference selection at High Point from 2017-20.
   Hickman started most of her five seasons at Creighton and ranks as one of the best blockers in program history. Named MVP of the 2020 BIG EAST Tournament and an AVCA All-East Region First Team honoree last season, the Lawrence, Kan., product appeared in a program-record 116 victories. She's also the only player in program history to start five season-openers and to play in five NCAA Tournaments.
   Welty appeared in 82 matches as a Bluejay, recording 367 kills and 223 blocks. She was named to the All-Tournament Team after helping Creighton to the 2020 BIG EAST Tournament title.
   Since Hickman first enrolled in 2017, Creighton owns a record of 123-26 and won five conference regular-season titles, four BIG EAST Tournament titles and made the NCAA Tournament every year.
8 Straight BIG EAST Regular-Season Titles
With its 2021 title, Creighton became the first team in BIG EAST volleyball history to win eight 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 eight or more straight league titles, surpassing the five in a row by the men's soccer program (1992-96).
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.
   Marquette won the regular-season and tournament title in 2013, while Creighton swept both titles in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2020. CU won the 2019 regular-season crown, while St. John's upset nationally-ranked Creighton and Marquette to bring home the 2019 tournament title. In 2020, Creighton won the Midwest Division regular-season title, while St. John's claimed the East Division crown. In 2021, Creighton and Marquette shared the regular-season title and CU won the tournament title.
   Below is a look at the record of each BIG EAST team since the league's realignment in 2013:
BIG EAST VB Standings Since 2013
           BIG EAST only   All   matches
Team (NCAA Bids)Â Â Â WÂ Â Â LÂ Â Â WÂ Â Â L
Creighton (9)Â Â Â 137Â Â Â 13Â Â Â 227Â Â Â 60
Marquette (8)Â Â Â 120Â Â Â 27Â Â Â 209Â Â Â 69
Xavier   84   64   130   128
Butler   81   69   142   122
Villanova (1)Â Â Â 77Â Â Â 73Â Â Â 145Â Â Â 115
St. John's (1)Â Â Â 71Â Â Â 79Â Â Â 154Â Â Â 123
Seton Hall (1)Â Â Â 66Â Â Â 81Â Â Â 126Â Â Â 139
DePaul   40   110   100   152
Georgetown   33   109   82   161
Providence*Â Â Â 22Â Â Â 112Â Â Â 83Â Â Â 149
Connecticut#Â Â Â 17Â Â Â 9Â Â Â 28Â Â Â 18
*Providence rejoined the league for volleyball in 2014 and
its 2013 overall record (12-20) is not included above.
#Connecticut rejoined the league in 2020 and
its record from 2013-19 (96-121) is not included above.
Champions Among Champions
Since the start of the 2012 season, Creighton, Texas and Western Kentucky are the nation's only schools to have won nine conference regular-season titles. Eight of Creighton's nine crowns were outright titles, whereas Texas shared one title and WKU shared five.
   Creighton has also won eight conference tournament titles since 2012, tied for the most in the nation with Dayton and Western Kentucky.
Most Conference Titles 2012-2021
Regular-Season   League Tournament
9 (1 shared) Creighton   8 Creighton
9 (1) Texas   8 Dayton
9 (5) Western Kentucky   8 Western Kentucky
8 BYUÂ Â Â 7 Fairfield
8 (1) Colorado State   6 LIU
8 Fairfield   6 American
Jae-Z Plays The Hits
Jaela Zimmerman owns 997 kills, good for 15th in Creighton history. She stands just three kills of becoming the 15th Bluejay ever to reach the 1,000 kill milestone. Zimmerman has played in 103 career matches.
Career Kills
      Name   Sets   No.   Years
   1.   Jaali Winters   494   1,843   2015-18
   2.   Leah Ratzlaff   409   1,622   2002-05
   3.   Melissa Walsh   394   1,596   1998-01
   4.   Taryn Kloth   462   1,427   2015-18
   5.   Kelly Goc   394   1,414   2004-07
   6.   Jessica Houts   451   1,385   2005-09
   7.   JoDe Cieloha   398   1,375   1994-97
   8.   Leah McNary   458   1,257   2011-14
   9.   Marysa Wilkinson   499   1,183   2014-17
   10.   Lauren Smith   511   1,160   2013-16
   11.   Allie Oelke   445   1,126   2007-10
   12.   Kelli Browning   424   1,104   2011-14
   13.   Amanda Cvejdlik   343   1,029   2005-08
   14.   Shelly Kapler   388   1,000   1996-99
   15.   Jaela Zimmerman   342   997   2018-Pr.
Creighton's Quickest Players To 1,000 Career Kills
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Melissa Walsh   70   10/15/00   Eastern Illinois
Jaali Winters   73   08/25/17   vs. Saint Mary's
Leah Ratzlaff   76   10/22/04   Missouri State
JoDe Cieloha   83   09/13/97   at Drake
Kelly Goc   87   11/24/06   vs Northern Iowa
Jessica Houts   90   11/08/08   Illinois State
Leah McNary   96   09/12/14   Pepperdine
Amanda Cvejdlik   99   11/15/08   at Evansville
Shelly Kapler   103   11/18/99   vs. Missouri St.
Taryn Kloth   103   08/31/18   vs. NC State
Allie Oelke   107   10/09/10   Wichita State
Kelli Browning   110   10/26/14   DePaul
Lauren Smith   119   10/07/16   at Villanova
Marysa Wilkinson   120   09/30/17   at St. John's
On A Roll
Creighton won 14 straight matches from Oct. 17-Dec. 2, tied for CU's fourth-longest streak ever.
   Consecutive Wins
      Wins   Dates   Snapped By
      23   Sept. 23-Dec. 9, 2016   at #5 Texas, 3-0
      21   Sept. 21 - Nov. 30, 2018   #22 Washington, 3-0
      17   Sept. 29-Nov. 30, 2012   at #11 Minnesota, 3-1
      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
  Â
The Streak
After losing at UConn on October 16th, Creighton reeled off a 14-match win streak in which it dropped just two sets and held the opposition to less than 20 points in 29-of-44 sets.
   In the 14-match win streak, Creighton held foes to 9.93 kills per set and .086 hitting as the Bluejays averaged 3.27 blocks per set.
   Offensively, Creighton hit .261 and averaged 2.00 aces per set. Norah Sis hit .319, Annika Welty hit .310 and Kendra Wait hit .344. Five Bluejays averaged at least 1.67 kills per set, four women averaged at least 3.00 digs per set and three players averaged at least 1.00 blocks per set.
Defense Wins Championships
Creighton's defense rose to the occasion time-and-time again this season. The Bluejays limited opponents to .124 hitting and just 10.88 kills per set. The .124 hitting is the lowest figure for Bluejay opponents over the course of a season, and the 10.88 kills per set is second-fewest (10.82 in 20190.
   Creighton allowed just three opponents (Kansas .302; Marquette,.252; USC, .247; St. John's, .231) to hit .200 or better this season and held 17 foes under .100.
   Creighton ranked first nationally in opponents hitting percentage, eighth nationally in digs per set and fifth nationally in blocks per set. Creighton was the only school ranked in the top 10 of all three categories.
   Spearheading the defense from the back row is Abby Bottomley, who ranked 35th in the country in digs per set.
   Add it all up and that defense is a major reason that Creighton ranked second nationally with 31 victories this fall.
Home Sweet Home
Creighton won 12 straight home matches, and 18 contests in a row inside D.J. Sokol Arena, before losing to Kansas on Dec. 3.
Creighton's Longest Home Win Streaks
   Wins   Dates   Snapped By
   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
   12   Sept. 20-Nov. 28, 2015   #4 Kansas, 3-2
   12   Sept. 19, 2019 - Jan. 29, 2021   South Dakota, 3-2
   12   Sept. 10-Dec. 2, 2021   Kansas, 3-1
   10   Sept. 2-Dec. 1, 2017   #12 Michigan State, 3-1
The Creighton 500
Creighton owns a 507-331 record since reinstating volleyball in 1994, reaching the 500-win mark on Nov. 7 with a win vs. Butler.
   Since 1994, Creighton have had three head coaches and 135 different women have appeared in a match.
   Here's a look at Creighton's record since its 1994 reinstatement at the time of some of the milestone victories:
W-L   Opponent   Date   1-0   vs. Chattanooga   9/2/94
50-91   vs. Southern Illinois   9/10/99
100-160   at Bradley   10/4/03
150-197   Drake   9/22/06
200-224   Texas Tech   8/28/09
250-263   Wichita State   11/4/11
300-278   Georgetown   11/22/13
350-297   Butler   11/15/15
400-310   Seton Hall   10/22/17
450-320   at Seton Hall   10/5/19
500-330   Butler   11/7/21
Wait For It...
Kendra Wait owned 1,213 assists this season and reached the 1,000 assist milestone at the end of the first set of her 29th match (and 95th set) as a Bluejay on Nov. 13 at Villanova.
   In program history, only five previous women had reached 1,000 career assists in 95 sets or fewer. Only two of those women (Korie Lebeda and Brittany Coleman) did it as true freshmen, as Wait did.
   Wait is the 10th player in Creighton history to reach 1,000 career assists.
Creighton's Quickest Players To 1,000 Assists (Career)
Name   SP   MP   Date   Opponent
Korie Lebeda   77   23   10/29/05   Missouri St.
Brittany Coleman   86   23   11/01/03   Northern Iowa
Lydia Dimke   88   26   11/06/16   Xavier
Madelyn Cole   93   26   11/03/18   at Seton Hall
Kendra Wait   95   29   11/13/21   at Villanova
Kailey Reyes   97   27   09/04/99   Boise State
Maggie Baumert   103   32   11/29/14   vs. Seton Hall
Megan Bober   106   28   11/20/09   at #21 No. Iowa
Melissa Weisensee   119   35   09/20/95   Wichita State
Michelle Sicner   267   72   10/04/13   at Butler
Road Kill
Creighton owned a 12-2 record in true road matches in 2021. The only other teams in the country with that many road wins were No. 1 Louisville (12-0) and No.. 3 Pittsburgh (12-1), both of whom reached the Final Four.
   Excluding the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, Creighton has won nine or more road matches in each of the past six seasons and eight or more road wins in nine campaigns.
   Creighton's 19 wins away from home (12 road, 7 neutral) were the most in the country.
Welty Heats Up
Annika Welty has traditionally been at her best at the end of the season, and this year played out much the same way.
   Welty averaged 2.03 kills and 1.38 blocks per set on .293 hitting this November/December. Taking out the 2020 season that was held in the spring of 2021, Welty has continually upped her game as the stakes increase.
Annika Welty By Month, Career
   KPS   PCT.   BPS   PPS
Aug./Sept.   1.11   .208   .88   1.75
Oct.   1.43   .333   1.05   2.04
Nov./Dec.   1.82   .243   1.07   2.39
Total   1.41   .245   .98   2.02
Defending Home Court
Creighton held Seton Hall to 16 kills and -.045 hitting on Nov. 19, which ranked as CU's best defensive performance of this season.
   The 16 kills ranks as the fourth-fewest ever by a Bluejay opponent, while the -.045 hitting is the seventh-best defensive mark 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
   16   Seton Hall   11/19/21
   17   Providence   10/19/14
   18   at Jacksonville State   9/5/08
   18   vs. Montana State   9/16/16
   18   at DePaul   10/6/17
   18   Seton Hall   11/3/19
   19   UMKC   9/15/96
Lowest Opponent Hitting Percentages vs. Creighton, Match
Pct.   Team   K   E   TA   Date
-.151   Providence   17   31   93   10/19/14
-.112   Jacksonville State   18   27   80   09/05/08
-.108Â Â Â UMKCÂ Â Â 19Â Â Â 27Â Â Â 74Â Â Â 09/15/96
-.086   Drake   15   23   93   09/22/06
-.067   Weber State   19   25   90   09/09/11
-.060   Drake   24   31   117   10/20/12
-.045   Seton Hall   16   20   87   11/19/21
-.044   Montana State   15   19   90   08/25/07
-.040   Villanova   14   18   99   11/21/14
-.024   Indiana State   29   32   125   10/24/09
-.021   Montana State   18   20   95   09/16/16
-.010   Bradley   26   27   104   11/22/08
-.010   Indiana State   21   22   105   10/26/07
-.008Â Â Â UMKCÂ Â Â 29Â Â Â 30Â Â Â 125Â Â Â 10/24/00
-.007   Wichita State   27   28   135   10/21/95
Freshmen On Fire
Even though scouting reports have been adjusted to stop them, freshman Norah Sis has averaged 4.11 kills and 2.97 digs per set on .299 hitting in the last 19 matches and Kendra Wait averaged 10.37 assists, 3.16 digs, 1.13 kills and 0.78 blocks per set on .310 hitting in the same span.
   Here's how their numbers for the entire season compare to the freshmen seasons of some other prominent Bluejays from the past. Also listed are their statistics and how they compare to the nation's other top freshmen on top-25 teams.
Creighton Freshmen - Top Attackers
Name, Year   KPS   HIT%   SAPS   DPS   BPS
Jaali Winters, 2015Â Â Â 4.07Â Â Â .232Â Â Â .13Â Â Â 2.49Â Â Â .44
Melissa Walsh, 1998Â Â Â 3.75Â Â Â .236Â Â Â .07Â Â Â 2.76Â Â Â .88
Norah Sis, 2021Â Â Â 3.75Â Â Â .261Â Â Â .16Â Â Â 2.96Â Â Â .61
JoDe Cieloha, 1994Â Â Â 3.39Â Â Â .233Â Â Â .29Â Â Â 2.00Â Â Â .70
Keeley Davis, 2019Â Â Â 3.35Â Â Â .219Â Â Â .31Â Â Â 1.37Â Â Â .41
Allie Oelke, 2007Â Â Â 3.29Â Â Â .179Â Â Â .36Â Â Â 3.19Â Â Â .56
Amanda Cvejdlik, 2005Â Â Â 2.85Â Â Â .242Â Â Â .00Â Â Â .22Â Â Â .66
Jessica Houts, 2005Â Â Â 2.84Â Â Â .264Â Â Â .16Â Â Â .57Â Â Â 1.27
Kelly Goc, 2004Â Â Â 2.72Â Â Â .244Â Â Â .08Â Â Â .46Â Â Â .77
Carolyn Decker, 2004Â Â Â 2.70Â Â Â .188Â Â Â .36Â Â Â 2.42Â Â Â .36
Melanie Jereb, 2012Â Â Â 2.47Â Â Â .236Â Â Â .13Â Â Â 2.74Â Â Â .65
Top 25 Freshmen With 250+ Kills in 2021
Name, Year   K   KPS   HIT%   DPS   BPS
Norah Sis, Creighton   435   3.75   .261   2.96   .61
Caroline Bien, Kansas   329   2.96   .218   2.47   .30
Julia Orzol, Wisconsin   309   2.83   .196   2.10   .47
Bianca Bertolino, Ga. Tech   286   2.55   .256   2.92   .41
Peyman Yardimci, Miami   268   2.58   .248   1.71   .88
Sami Francis, Stanford   251   2.76   .188   .48   .55
Creighton Freshmen - Top Setters
Name, Year   APS   KPS   SAPS   DPS   BPS
Korie Lebeda, 2005Â Â Â 13.34Â Â Â .59Â Â Â .22Â Â Â 2.54Â Â Â .66
Brittany Coleman, 2003Â Â Â 11.71Â Â Â .41Â Â Â .22Â Â Â 2.53Â Â Â .26
Kendra Wait, 2021Â Â Â 10.46Â Â Â 1.19Â Â Â .18Â Â Â 3.11Â Â Â .85
Kailey Reyes, 1998Â Â Â 10.23Â Â Â .86Â Â Â .27Â Â Â 3.40Â Â Â .42
Megan Bober, 2009Â Â Â 9.63Â Â Â 1.17Â Â Â ..12Â Â Â 1.93Â Â Â .93
Melissa Weisensee, 1994Â Â Â 8.26Â Â Â .90Â Â Â .41Â Â Â 2.71Â Â Â .26
Top 25 Freshmen With 1,000+ Assists in 2021
Name, Year   A   APS   KPS   DPS   BPS
Emma Grome, Kentucky   1,218   11.49   .33   2.25   .50
Kendra Wait, Creighton   1,213   10.46   1.19   3.11   .85
Kami Miner, Stanford   1,197   11.51   .59   2.32   .46
Freshmen Not Phased
Bluejay freshmen Kendra Wait and Norah Sis had double-doubles all three times they have faced Marquette this season.
   In three matches (all wins) vs. Marquette, Sis averaged 4.64 kills, 3.45 digs and 0.64 blocks per set on .315 hitting. Wait averaged 10.73 assists, 4.18 digs, 1.27 kills, 1.00 blocks and 0.45 aces per set on .333 hitting vs. Marquette.
   Creighton went 8-2 in 10 matches against teams who have received Top 25 votes in any AVCA poll this fall. In those contests, Sis averaged 4.28 kills and 3.06 digs per set and hits .260 while Wait averaged 10.44 assists, 3.61 digs, 0.83 blocks and 1.25 kills per set on .336 hitting.
   Sis (6) and Wait (5) combined to win 11-of-13 BIG EAST Freshman of the Week honors this fall.
Aug. 30:Â Â Â Kendra Wait, Creighton
Sept. 6:Â Â Â Norah Sis, Creighton
Sept. 13:Â Â Â Kendra Wait, Creighton
Sept. 20:Â Â Â Kendra Wait, Creighton
Sept. 27:Â Â Â Kendra Wait, Creighton
Oct. 4: Â Â Â Shaliyah Rhoden, Providence
Oct. 11:Â Â Â Norah Sis, Creighton
Oct. 18:Â Â Â Norah Sis, Creighton
Oct. 25:Â Â Â Norah Sis, Creighton
Nov. 1:Â Â Â Kendra Wait, Creighton
Nov. 8:Â Â Â Norah Sis, Creighton
Nov. 15:Â Â Â Norah Sis, Creighton
Nov. 22:Â Â Â Jenna Reitsma, Marquette
This Is 20/20
Kendra Wait etched her name in the Creighton record books when she had 40 assists and 21 digs at Marquette on Oct. 29.
   She is the seventh Bluejay in history to have a match with at least 20 assists and 20 digs, and first to do it since 2016 BIG EAST Player of the Year Lydia Dimke had 41 assists and 20 digs vs. Wichita State.
20 Assists, 20 Digs In A Match
A   D   Name   Opp.   Date
40   21   K. Wait   at Marquette (4s)   10/29/21
41   20   L. Dimke   vs. Wichita State (5s)   08/27/16
44   21   M. Sicner   Xavier (4s)   11/29/13
27   20   M. Sicner   Illinois State (4s)   09/30/11
71   20   K. Lebeda   at Evansville (5s)   11/18/06
62   21   B. Coleman   at So. Illinois (4s)   10/29/04
54   22   B. Coleman   at Illinois State (4s)   10/18/03
45   20   K. Reyes   vs. Evansville (4s)   11/24/00
64   23   K. Reyes   at Evansville (5s)   11/04/00
44   23   K. Reyes   Bradley (4s)   10/28/00
49   28   K. Reyes   at Illinois State (4s)   10/13/00
40   21   K. Reyes   Missouri State (4s)   11/06/99
65   24   K. Reyes   Illinois State (4s)   09/24/99
55   28   K. Reyes   Evansville (5s)   09/11/99
65   22   M. Weisensee   at Evansville (5s)   11/08/97
46   21   M. Weisensee   Missouri State (4s)   10/31/97
46   38   M. Weisensee   Evansville (4s)   10/10/97
40   23   M. Weisensee   at Drake (5s)   09/13/97
53   24   M. Weisensee   at Indiana St. (5s)   10/18/96
51   21   M. Weisensee   at Wichita St. (5s)   09/14/96
47   22   M. Weisensee   Bradley (4s)   09/09/94
The Head-to-Head Difference
Creighton and Marquette have dominated the BIG EAST in recent seasons, but CU has owned the overall edge in the standings due largely to the Bluejays' ability to defeat the Golden Eagles on a regular basis.
   Since the start of the 2014 season, Creighton is 19-2 in head-to-head meetings against Marquette and owns just eight losses against the rest of the BIG EAST (3 to Villanova, 2 each to St. John's and Seton Hall and 1 to UConn).
   Marquette is 2-19 in head-to-head meetings against Creighton and owns 15 losses to the rest of the BIG EAST (4 to Xavier, 3 each to Butler, St. John's and Villanova and 2 to Seton Hall).
   Both MU wins vs. Creighton in the past eight seasons have been 3-0 sweeps, while CU owns six 3-0 sweeps, nine 3-1 wins and four 3-2 victories against MU since 2014.
   Both of Marquette's last two regular-season BIG EAST home losses have come to Creighton, as the Jays snapped an 11-match streak in 2019 and a 10-match home win streak in league play on Oct. 29. Take out two home losses to Creighton and Marquette hasn't lost a regular-season league match at home since falling to Butler on Oct. 21, 2017.
   Creighton's been equally tough at home in league play, where it is 58-1 in regular-season home league matches since November of 2014. 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.
Against The BIG EAST
Since the BIG EAST was restructured in 2013, Creighton owns a .500 record or better against each of the other teams currently in the BIG EAST.
   The Bluejays own 152 wins against BIG EAST competition (including BIG EAST Championship play) since 2013, 27 more wins than Marquette for most in the league.
   CU still has not lost to four league foes (DePaul, Georgetown, Providence, Xavier) since joining the BIG EAST, and Seton Hall (3), Marquette (4), Villanova (3) and St. John's (3) are the only BIG EAST programs to top the Bluejays multiple times since 2013.
Opponent   Reg. Season   BE Tourney   Total
Butler   17-1   -   17-1
Connecticut   0-1   1-0   1-1
DePaul   18-0   1-0   19-0
Georgetown   16-0   -   16-0
Marquette   15-3   5-1   20-4
Providence   13-0   -   13-0
Seton Hall   13-3   2-0   15-3
St. John's   14-2   0-1   14-3
Villanova   13-3   3-0   16-3
Xavier   18-0   3-0   21-0
Total   137-13   15-2   152-15
Service With A Smile
Keeley Davis led the BIG EAST with 50 aces this season and has been on an absolute tear from the service line since CU's win vs. Nebraska-Omaha on Sept. 11th.
   Davis has owned multiple aces in 13 of her last 26 matches, and had 43 aces and 49 service errors in that span.
   Her 0.44 aces per set ranked third-most in Creighton single-season history. She became the eighth Bluejay with 40 or more aces in a season.
Service Aces
      Name   Sets   No.   Year
   1.   Molly Moran   105   59   2000
   2.   Madelyn Cole   118   51   2018
   3.   Keeley Davis   113   50   2021
   4.   Molly Moran   94   47   2001
      Abby Bottomley   113   47   2021
   6.   Melissa Weisensee   107   45   1995
      Amanda Cvejdlik   116   45   2006
   8.   Nayka Benitez   115   43   2009
   9.   Madelyn Cole   107   42   2019
   10.   Allie Oelke   107   39   2007
      Nayka Benitez   118   39   2010
      Megan Ballenger   109   39   2016
Service Aces Per Set (Min. 20 SA)
      Name   Sets   No.   Avg.   Year
   1.   Molly Moran   105   59   0.562   2000
   2.   Molly Moran   94   47   0.500   2001
   3.   Keeley Davis   113   50   0.442   2021
   4.   Madelyn Cole   118   51   0.432   2018
   5.   Melissa Weisensee   107   45   0.421   1995
   6.   Abby Bottomley   114   47   0.412   2021
   7.   Melissa Weisensee   86   35   0.407   1994
   8.   Madelyn Cole   107   42   0.393   2019
   9.   Amanda Cvejdlik   116   45   0.3879   2006
   10.   Erica Kostelac   80   31   0.3878   2019
20 Wins, Again
Creighton went 31-4 this year, with the Oct. 24 win vs. Villanova marking the 12th time in the program's modern history the Bluejays have won 20 matches or more.
   It's also the ninth time in the past 10 seasons that CU has reached that milestone. The only exception came during the 2020 season, when a limited schedule greatly affected by COVID-19 limited the Jays to 16 total matches.
   Prior to Kirsten Bernthal Booth's arrival at Creighton, the Bluejays had never won more than 16 times in any season since the program's 1994 reinstatement.
   Prior to last season, Creighton, BYU and Florida were the nation's only programs with 25 or more wins in every season from 2014-19.
BIG EAST Up To Sixth
After ranking as the 11th-best conference in 2019, the BIG EAST surged to become the No. 6 league this fall.
   One reason for the rapid rise is the enormous improvement by four teams, as well as the return of UConn to the league.
   Here's each league school with their 2019 year-end RPI, as well as their RPI entering this week
   If you were to go back even further, since 2018 only one BIG EAST school has seen their RPI drop by more than two spots from the end of 2018 to now.
Name   2019 RPI   2021 RPI   Change
Creighton   23   8   +15
Marquette   16   16   0
St. John's   64   101   -37
DePaul   182   61   +121
UConn             200 (in AAC)   80   +120
Villanova   60   115   -55
Xavier   180   193   -13
Seton Hall   287   185   +102
Butler   159   161   -2
Providence   298   228   +70
Georgetown   224   258   -34
League Rank   11th   6th
On The Run
Creighton had a ton of weapons behind the serving line, with 74 different serving runs of five or longer this season.
   Here's who's authored those serving runs:
Abby Bottomley   19
Keeley Davis   18
Jaela Zimmerman   11
Kendra Wait   10
Norah Sis   8
Megan Skovsende   4
Ellie Bolton   3
Naomi Hickman   1
Emily Bressman   1
Booth Earns 400th Win at CU
Kirsten Bernthal Booth ended the season with a 414-179 record on the Creighton sideline, reaching the 400-win milestone on Oct. 10 with a win over Marquette. Booth has beaten 91 different schools while at Creighton.
   Coaching alongside Booth for each of those wins is assistant coach Angie Oxley Behrens, who is also in her 19th year at CU.
   Here's a look at Booth's record at the time of some of her milestone victories at Creighton:
W-L   Opponent   Date   1-1   vs. Auburn (in Ames, Iowa)   08/30/03
50-43   Jacksonville State   09/01/06
100-71   at Drake   10/31/08
150-108   Illinois State   09/30/11
200-123   Xavier   10/18/13
250-144   at Xavier   10/17/15
300-157   Villanova   09/24/17
350-167   Nebraska-Omaha   09/13/19
400-178   Marquette   10/10/21
Climbing The List
Kirsten Bernthal Booth became Creighton Volleyball's winningest coach in the program's modern history on August 26, 2007, and hasn't let up. Booth owns 414 victories on the Bluejay sideline to rank fifth in school history across all sports.
Coach, Sport   Victories (as of 12/28/21)
Brent Vigness, Softball   804*
Ed Servais, Baseball   587*
Mary Higgins, Softball   564
Tom Lilly, Men's & Women's Tennis   478*
Kirsten Bernthal Booth, Volleyball   413*
Jim Flanery, Women's Basketball   364*
Ed Hubbs, Men's & Women's Tennis   347
Dana Altman, Men's Basketball   327
*still active coaching at Creighton
Sis-ter Act
Freshman Norah Sis had 20 kills in the fourth match of her career, a 3-2 win vs. USC on Sept. 3rd, and then added 20 more vs. Illinois on Sept. 11th in her ninth match. She had 22 kills on Oct. 10 vs. Marquette and 23 at UConn on Oct. 16.
   She's just the second freshman in program history to have a match with 20 or more kills in one of her first 10 matches, joining Carolyn Decker in 2004. Decker did it in her second match. Sis is the first Bluejay to ever have multiple contests of 20+ kills in her first 10 matches.
   Sis is the 11th Bluejay freshman ever to have a match with 20 or more kills, and first since Keeley Davis in 2019.
   Sis, Jaali Winters and Melissa Walsh are the only Bluejay freshmen with four or more matches of 20+ digs.
Creighton Freshmen With 20+ Kills in a Match
   Times   Name (High)   MP Before 1st Time    Year
   9   Jaali Winters (28)   13    2015
   4   Melissa Walsh (30)   15    1998
   4   Norah Sis (23)   4   2021
   3   JoDe Cieloha (23)       12    1994
   1   Michelle Prorock (23)   21    1994
   1   Shelly Kapler (22)   16    1996
   1   Jodi Bjoin (21)   18    1999
   1   Kelly Goc (20)   11    2004
   1   Carolyn Decker (22)   2    2004
   1   Allie Oelke (23)   14    2007
   1   Keeley Davis (31)    16    2019
Speaking of Sis
While we're on the topic of Norah Sis, the freshman surpassed 100 career kills in her ninth match of the season vs. Illinois. That equals Jaali Winters for second-fastest in program history to that milestone, trailing only JoDe Cieloha (8 in 1994).
   Sis got to 200 career kills on Oct. 8 vs. DePaul in her 18th match, tied for third-fastest in program history, reached 300 kills in her 25th match, which is third-fastest, and the 400 mark in her 33rd match, which is also third-fastest.
Creighton's Quickest Players To 100 Kills (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
JoDe Cieloha   8   09/23/94   at Drake
Jaali Winters   9   09/12/15   Pacific
Norah Sis   9   09/11/21   Illinois
Melissa Walsh   10   09/26/98   at Bradley
Carolyn Decker   10   09/18/04   Illinois State
Keeley Davis   10   09/21/19   Wyoming
Creighton's Quickest Players To 200 Kills (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Jaali Winters   15   09/27/15   Villanova
Melissa Walsh   16   10/16/98   at Indiana State
JoDe Cieloha   18   10/30/94   at UMKC
Allie Oelke   18   10/06/07   at So. Illinois
Keeley Davis   18   10/20/19   Xavier
Norah Sis   18   10/08/21   DePaul
Creighton's Quickest Players To 300 Kills (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Jaali Winters   21   10/16/15   at Butler
Melissa Walsh   23   11/08/98   at UMKC
Norah Sis   25   10/30/21   at DePaul
JoDe Cieloha   26   09/02/95   vs. Green Bay
Allie Oelke   27   11/09/07   at Missouri State
Keeley Davis   27   11/22/19   #9 Marquette
Creighton's Quickest Players To 400 Kills (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Jaali Winters   28   11/7/15   at DePaul
Melissa Walsh   30   09/10/99   Southern Illinois
Norah Sis   33   11/27/21   at Marquette
JoDe Cieloha   34   09/22/95   vs. Rice
Keeley Davis   35   01/31/21   at South Dakota
Top 50 Jays
Speaking of national rankings, here's a complete list of the many categories where Creighton ranked among the top 50 nationally.
Opponent Hitting Percentage   1st   Team
Road Wins   1st   Team
Wins Away From Home   1st   Team
Set Victories   2nd   Team
Match Victories   2nd   Team
Blocks Per Set   5th   Team
Winning Percentage   6th   Team
Total Digs   7th   Team
Total Blocks   8th   Team
Digs Per Set   8th   Team
NCAA RPI   12th   Team
Total Home Attendance   14th   Team
Average Home Attendance   14th   Team
Kills Per Set   16th   Team
Service Aces   19th   Keeley Davis
Total Digs   21st   Abby Bottomley
Attacks Per Set   22nd   Team
AVCA Poll   22nd   Team
Blocks Per Set   24th   Naomi Hickman
Total Kills   25th   Team
Aces Per Set   25th   Keeley Davis
Total Assists   25th   Kendra Wait
Assists Per Set   28th   Team
Total Attacks   28th   Team
Service Aces   28th   Abby Bottomley
Total Assists   30th   Team
Digs Per Set   35th   Abby Bottomley
Total Aces   35th   Team
Total Attacks   44th   Norah Sis
Assists Per Set   46th   Kendra Wait
Aces Per Set   48th   Abby Bottomley
Total Bocks   49th   Naomi Hickman
Hitting Percentage   50th   Team
Hometown Flavor
Creighton's 2021 roster boasted five players from the state of Nebraska, including Omaha-area products Emily Bressman, Norah Sis and Megan Skovsende.
   Grand Island native Katie Maser and Lincoln's Jaela Zimmerman round out the in-state natives.
League Opener Histories
Creighton owns a 20-8 record all-time in conference openers, including a 17-2 record under Kirsten Bernthal Booth. That includes an 8-1 mark in BIG EAST lid-lifters, and eight straight wins.
   Each of the last nine times that Creighton won its league opener (2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021), the Bluejays went on to win the regular-season title, going a combined 142-10 in regular-season league action. Creighton also won eight of the last nine conference tournament titles during those years, going 16-1 in those seasons.
   In the 20 seasons (including 2021) that Creighton has won its conference opener, it has never finished worse than .500 in league play and it owns a combined .767 (273-83) winning percentage in league matches.
   In the eight years in which Creighton lost its league opener, the Jays have had a losing record five times and it owns a combined .363 (53-93) winning percentage during league contests.
   In league road openers, Creighton is now 19-9 overall and 16-3 under Booth, with eight straight wins. In conference home openers Creighton is 23-5 overall and 17-2 under Booth, with 11 straight wins.
Home Sweet Home
Creighton finished its ninth season as a member of the BIG EAST since joining the league in the summer of 2013.
   Since then, the Bluejays are 80-4 in home matches against BIG EAST teams (73-3 in the regular-season, 7-1 in the BIG EAST Tournament).
   Since November of 2014, Creighton is 64-1 inside D.J. Sokol Arena against BIG EAST teams, which includes a 58-1 league mark and a 6-0 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 2017, Bluejay fifth-year senior Naomi Hickman went 43-1 in home matches against BIG EAST teams, winning 129-of-152 sets played.
Championship Season
Creighton has saved some of its best work for the months of October and November in recent seasons.
   Since the start of the 2012 season, Creighton is 70-7 in October and 70-7 in the month of November.
   Narrowing that to the start of the 2014 season, Creighton is a combined 111-9 in the months of October (57-5) and November (54-4).
   Creighton has won 35 straight home matches played in the month of October, a streak that is more than 10 years old since losing to No. 12 Northern Iowa on Oct. 15, 2011. CU has also won 27 home matches in a row in the month of November since losing to Seton Hall on Nov. 23, 2014.
Long Live September
Creighton won 11 matches in September, its most successful month ever.
Most Wins, Month
      W-L   Month, Year
      11-1   September, 2021
      10-1   October 2015
      10-3   September 2006
      9-0   November, 2012
      9-0   October, 2016
      9-0   November, 2018
      9-1   September, 2019
      9-2   September, 2018
      9-3   September, 2012
      9-4   September, 2004
Lucky Number 4
Creighton won a tournament title each of the first four weekends of the fall, setting a school record.
   Previously, only the 2017 team had won three straight events when that club won the Husky Invitational, Bluejay Invitational and Kansas Invitational to open the year.
   That being said, the 2017 team lost matches at both the Bluejay Invitational as well as the Kansas Invitational, only to win both events via tiebreaker. This year's team went 3-0 in all four events, winning 36-of-39 sets played.
BIG EAST Preseason Poll
Creighton Volleyball was picked to win the BIG EAST in a preseason poll of league coaches.
   Last season CU was picked to win the Midwest Division and went 7-1 in league play en route to a seventh straight regular-season title.
   This spring, a preseason poll of BIG EAST coaches tabbed Creighton as the favorite with 8-of-11 first place votes and 97 of a possible 100 points. That was just ahead of Marquette's 93 points and the other three votes for first place.
   St. John's (83) was picked third, just ahead of Xavier (68) and Villanova (56). Rounding out the bottom half of the poll were UConn (48), DePaul (48), Providence (44), Butler (31), Seton Hall (27) and Georgetown (10).
   Creighton also had two women among the 12 members on the BIG EAST's preseason all-conference team in Naomi Hickman and unanimous selection Jaela Zimmerman.
   Including 2021, Creighton has finished in the spot predicted of it or better in the preseason poll in 17 of 19 years under Booth, including nine years where it's finished exactly where it was picked.
Year   Preseason Pick   Finish   Move
1994   11th   9th   #2
1995   9th   7th   #2
1996   9th   6th   #3
1997   8th   3rd   #5
1998   6th   8th   i2
1999   T-7th   5th   #2
2000   4th   T-4th   - -
2001   2nd   4th   i2
2002   7th   9th   i2
2003   9th   T-5th   #4
2004   5th   5th   - -
2005   5th   5th   - -
2006   4th   4th   - -
2007   3rd   T-2nd   #1
2008   3rd   2nd   #1
2009   4th   T-4th   - -
2010   4th   3rd   #1
2011   3rd   4th   i1
2012   4th   1st   #3
2013   1st   T-2nd   i1
2014   1st   1st   - -
2015   1st   1st   - -
2016   1st   1st   - -
2017   1st   1st   - -
2018   2nd   1st   #1
2019   2nd   1st   #1
2020Â Â Â 1st (MW)Â Â Â 1st (MW)Â Â Â - -
2021   1st   T-1st   - -
Set 1 Result A Strong Indicator
Creighton is 350-32 (.916) overall under Kirsten Bernthal Booth when it wins set one. In that same time span, CU is just 64-147 (.303) under Booth when it drops the first set.
   Per RichKern.com, Division I teams that lost the first set in 2018 won just 20.7 percent of their matches that season, and 20.2 percent of their matches from 2009-18.
   Since Aug. 29, 2010, Creighton has gone 124-3 in its last 127 home matches when taking a 1-0 lead, losing only on Sept. 12, 2015 to Pacific, on Sept. 6, 2018 to No. 7 Nebraska and on Jan. 29, 2021 to South Dakota.
   Creighton has gone 82-2 in its last 84 matches at all sites when winning the first set, compared to a 7-13 record in that same span when dropping the opener.
   Creighton has gone 124-2 in its last 126 matches against unranked foes when winning the opening set.
Zimmerman Playing At An MVP Level
Jaela Zimmerman was named Most Valuable Player at the Bluegrass Battle, the Bluejay Invitational and the Shocker Volleyball Classic over the last three weekends of non-conference play.
   It gives her four career MVP honors, having also won the 2019 Creighton Classic MVP accolade in an event that featured Wyoming and Wichita State.
   Zimmerman became Creighton's first player to be named MVP of a tournament on back-to-back weekends in Kirsten Bernthal Booth's 19 years at Creighton, and then did it three weeks in a row.
   Creighton's only other player under Booth with multiple MVP honors in non-conference play of the same season had been Korie Lebeda in 2006, who took home MVP honors in the 12th Annual Holiday Inn Classic to start the season as well as the Blue Raider Bash in the third week of the fall.
Top 25 History
Creighton is 145-35 all-time when playing as a ranked team, and also 15-20 all-time against ranked teams when ranked itself. That mark improves to 2-1 when both Creighton and its opponent are ranked in the top 10.
   Since the start of the 2012 season, 35 of Creighton's 64 losses have come against ranked teams. In that same period, Creighton is 238-29 against unranked teams. Creighton has won all but two of its past 82 home matches over unranked teams and all but eight of its last 95 matches at all sites against unranked teams.
   After a total of three total top-25 wins from 1994-2014, Creighton has earned at least one top-25 win each of the last seven seasons (2015-21). That includes a record-tying four top-25 victories in 2019.
   Creighton was ranked No. 22 in the year-end AVCA poll.
Ranked vs. Ranked (CU is 15-20)
Home: 5-7Â Â Â Away: 5-7 Â Â Â Neutral: 5-6
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
Diaper Dandies
Creighton freshmen Kendra Wait and Norah Sis were both named to the Mizzou Invitational All-Tournament Teams, with Wait bringing home MVP honors after averaging 10.22 assists, 3.56 digs, 1.33 kills and 1.11 blocks per set on .440 hitting.
   Wait is the first freshman in CU history to be named MVP of an event to start the season.
   Wait and Sis were just the second and third true freshmen in Creighton history to be named All-Tournament following their first event, joining JoDe Cieloha in 1994 at the Tulane Invitational.
   One week later, Sis was also named to the All-Tournament Team at the Bluegrass Battle, becoming the first freshman in program history to be All-Tourney after each of her first two events.
   Sis is the first Bluejay (of any class) to be named to an All-Tourney Team in each of CU's first three tournaments of a season since Lydia Dimke in 2017. That streak was snapped in week four at the Shocker Volleyball Classic. Creighton's last player to be named to an All-Tournament Team in four straight weeks was Lauren Smith in the fall of 2015.
   Both Sis and Wait were also named to the Bluejay Invitational All-Tournament Team in CU's third week of the year.
   In week four, Wait garnered her third All-Tournament Team accolade at the Shocker Volleyball Classic.
Believe The Hype
Creighton's recruiting class of freshmen Eve Magill, Abbey Milner, Norah Sis and Kendra Wait was recognized as the nation's No. 5 class last fall by PrepVolleyball.
   Wait was tabbed the nation's No. 7 freshman recruit, making her the program's most-decorated recruit since 2004. Sis, at No. 28, is the program's third-highest recruit (behind Wait and No. 18 in 2015's Taryn Kloth), with No. 31 Eve Magill not far behind.
   In the summer, Volleyball Magazine recognized CU's group of newcomers (which included the four freshmen and Abby Bottomley) as the No. 8 incoming class in the nation.
Top-100 PrepVolleyball.com Senior Aces
(list started in 2004)
Rank   Year   Player
68Â Â Â 2004Â Â Â Carolyn Decker
55Â Â Â 2008Â Â Â Laurel Sanford
60Â Â Â 2011Â Â Â Michelle Sicner
73Â Â Â 2013Â Â Â Jess Bird
50Â Â Â 2014Â Â Â Lydia Dimke*
18Â Â Â 2015Â Â Â Taryn Kloth
41Â Â Â 2015Â Â Â Jaali Winters
77Â Â Â 2016Â Â Â Erica Kostelac#
98Â Â Â 2017Â Â Â Naomi Hickman
99Â Â Â 2017Â Â Â Steph Gaston
49Â Â Â 2018Â Â Â Jaela Zimmerman
42Â Â Â 2018Â Â Â Keeley Davis
46Â Â Â 2020Â Â Â Kiara Reinhardt
97Â Â Â 2020Â Â Â Ellie Bolton
7Â Â Â 2021Â Â Â Kendra Wait
28Â Â Â 2021Â Â Â Norah Sis
31Â Â Â 2021Â Â Â Eve Magill
47Â Â Â 2022Â Â Â Ava Martin
52Â Â Â 2022Â Â Â Skylar McCune
* signed with Purdue and later transferred to Creighton
# signed with Cincinnati and later transferred to Creighton
PrepVolleyball.com Recruiting Rankings
 (list started in 2004)
Year   Rank   Freshman Recruits
2004   Best of the Rest   (Baumann, Decker, Goc, Lahm, Mehal)
2005   Honorable-Mention   (Cvejdlik, Houts, Lebeda)
2006   None   (Bloemke, Schulze, Workman)
2007   None   (Feldman, Oelke, Vrbicky)
2008   Highest Honorable-Mention   (Almgren, Bober, Sanford)
2009Â Â Â Highest HMÂ Â Â Boggs, Greisch, Moon, Templeton, Thorson)
2010Â Â Â High HMÂ Â Â (Fliss, Hackbarth, Malm, Mandolfo, S. Smith)
2011Â Â Â Highest HMÂ Â Â (Browning, McNary, Neisler, Sicner, Stivers)
2012   High Honorable-Mention   (Elman, Jansen, Jereb, L. Smith)
2013   None   (Bird, Crawford, Foje)
2014   Highest Honorable-Mention   (Lawrence, Tupper, Wilkinson)
2015   11th   (Ballenger, Bohnet, Kloth, O'Connell, Winters)
2016   High Honorable-Mention   (Conlon, Taylor, Witt)
2017   25th   (Gaston, Hickman, Roumeliotis)
2018   10th   (Davis, Welty, Zimmerman, Zumach)
2019Â Â Â Highest HMÂ Â Â (Bressman, Krause, Schmitt, Van Eekeren)
2020   27th   (Bolton, Maser, Reinhardt, Skovsende)
2021   5th   (Magill, Milner, Sis, Wait)
2022   24th   (Martin, McCune, Remmes)
Largest Crowds To See The Jays
Creighton hosted 11,279 fans on Sept. 8 for its match vs. No. 3 Nebraska at CHI Health Center Omaha.
   In addition to being the largest crowd in the nation this season, it was the fourth-biggest home crowd in Creighton history and the 10th-largest volleyball-only regular-season crowd in NCAA history.
   In six all-time volleyball matches at CHI Health Center Omaha, Creighton has played before an average of 11,444 fans. That includes 14,022 fans in 2018 for a match vs. Nebraska, a figure that remains the largest regular-season volleyball-only crowd in NCAA history.
   Creighton has also hosted the third-largest NCAA Soccer crowd of 2021, having welcomed 6,577 fans to Morrison Stadium on Sept. 18 for a men's soccer game vs. Georgetown.
   Below is a list of the largest crowds (and home crowds) in Creighton Volleyball history:
Creighton's Largest Home Crowds
   Att.   Opponent   Date   CU W-L   Facility
   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.
   11,279   #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.
   2,578   #13 Kentucky   09/01/17   W 3-0   Sokol Arena
   2,552   South Dakota   11/30/18   W 3-0   Sokol Arena
   2,517   Coastal Carolina   12/01/17   W 3-1   Sokol Arena
   2,514   #7 Nebraska   08/31/10   L 0-3   Sokol Arena
Creighton's Largest Crowds (All Sites)
   Att.   Opponent   Date   CU Result   Facility
   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.
   11,279   #3 Nebraska   09/08/21   L 0-3   CHI Health Ctr.
   10,131   #4 Nebraska   09/15/15   L 0-3   CHI Health Ctr.
   8,627   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.
Historically Speaking
Here's a look at the top volleyball-only regular-season crowds in NCAA history. Of note, each of the 12 figures of 11,000 or more have been in the state of Nebraska.
Largest Regular-Season NCAA VB-Only Crowds In History
   Att.   Opponent   Date   CU Result   Facility
   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  Â
   12,504   Nebraska def. Colorado, 3-0   11/4/00   Lincoln, NE
   12,112   Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-1   9/24/06   Omaha, NE
   11,892   Dayton def. W. Michigan, 3-0   9/11/10   Lincoln, NE
      Nebraska def. Illinois, 3-2  Â
   11,529   Nebraska def. Colorado, 3-0   10/22/95   Lincoln, NE
   11,279   Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-0   9/8/21   Omaha, NE
   11,076   Nebraska def. UCLA, 3-1   8/25/07   Omaha, NE
      Tennessee def. Utah, 3-2  Â
   11,032   UCLA def. Nebraska, 3-1   9/14/91   Lincoln, NE
   10,927   Minnesota def. Illinois, 3-1   10/16/04   Minneapolis, MN
   10,645   Purdue def. W. Michigan, 3-1   10/29/85   W. Lafayette, IN
Dear Abby
High Point transfer Abby Bottomley transferred to Creighton this fall and had 10 or more digs in each of her first 16 matches to start this season. She's just the fifth Bluejay ever to start a year that way, and the third to start her Bluejay career in that fashion.
   Bottomley needed just seven matches to surpass 100 digs with the Bluejays, third-fastest in program history. She surpassed 200 digs with the Jays in her 12th match, second-fastest in program history. Bottomley reached 300 digs at CU in her 18th career match, 400 digs in her 25th contest and 500 digs in her 32nd contest.
Consec. Matches, 10 or More Digs, To Start Season
   32#   Kate Elman   2012
   29   Janeen Piller   (every match) 2004
   27#   Bianca Rivera   2007
   18   Brittany Witt   2018
   16#   Abby Bottomley   2021
   9   Nayka Benitez   2010
#streak during first season at CU
Consecutive Matches, 10 or More Digs
   43   Janeen Piller, Oct. 10, 2003-Nov. 26, 2004
   32   Kate Elman, Aug. 24 - Nov. 30, 2012
   30   Kate Elman, Sept. 30, 2013 - Sept. 12, 2014
   27   Bianca Rivera, Aug. 24-Nov. 9, 2007
   23   Julianne Mandolfo, Sept. 9-Nov. 24, 2011
   21   Brittany Witt, Nov. 25, 2017 - Oct. 7, 2018
   19   Bianca Rivera, Sept. 20-Nov. 28, 2008
   18   Allie Oelke, Oct. 10, 2009-Aug. 28, 2010
   16   Abby Bottomley, Aug. 27-Oct. 1, 2021
   15   Abby Baumann, Sept. 15-Nov. 3, 2006
   15   Katie Mehal, Oct. 6-Nov. 24, 2006
   15   Nayka Benitez, Nov. 13, 2009-Sept. 10, 2010
   15   Allie Oelke, Sept. 3-Oct. 16, 2010
Creighton's Quickest Players To 100 Digs (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Bianca Rivera   6   09/02/07   Cal Poly
Brittany Witt   6   09/08/16   #4 Kansas
Abby Bottomley   7   09/08/21   #3 Nebraska
Nayka Benitez   8   09/12/09   Connecticut
Ellie Bolton   8   03/06/21   DePaul
Creighton's Quickest Players To 200 Digs (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Bianca Rivera   11   09/15/07   vs. Charlotte
Abby Bottomley   12   09/18/21   vs. South Dakota
Nayka Benitez   13   09/25/09   at Indiana State
Kate Elman   13   09/22/13   Drake
Brittany Witt   13   09/23/16   Marquette
Creighton's Quickest Players To 300 Digs (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Bianca Rivera   15   09/28/07   Illinois State
Kate Elman   17   10/05/12   Northern Iowa
Nayka Benitez   18   10/16/09   at Evansville
Abby Bottomley   18   10/08/21   DePaul
Julianne Mandolfo   19   10/16/10   at Drake
Creighton's Quickest Players To 400 Digs (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Bianca Rivera   20   10/13/07   Missouri State
Kate Elman   22   10/26/12   Evansville
Julianne Mandolfo   24   11/05/10   at Wichita State
Nayka Benitez   25   11/10/09   #20 Saint Louis
Abby Bottomley   25   10/30/21   at DePaul
Creighton's Quickest Players To 500 Digs (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Bianca Rivera   25   11/02/07   Southern Illinois
Kate Elman   27   11/10/12   Illinois State
Nayka Benitez   30   11/21/09   at Bradley
Julianne Mandolfo   31   11/27/10   at Northern Iowa
Abby Bottomley   32   11/26/21   vs. DePaul
Double-Double x 4
Creighton has had four players finish with a double-double in the same match three times this season, having done it vs. Illinois (Sept. 11), Marquette (Oct. 10) and at UConn (Oct. 16).
   When CU did it in September, it marked the first time since Feb. 5, 2021 that Creighton had four players with a double-double in the same match.
   Prior to Feb. 5, it hadn't happened since Nov. 20, 2015, when Jaali Winters, Samantha Bohnet, Jess Bird and Lauren Smith did it at Georgetown.
Against The Champs
Creighton improved to 1-5 all-time against defending national champions with a 3-0 win at No. 3 Kentucky on Sept. 4, 2021.
   CU was swept by Nebraska (2001 and 2005) and Stanford (2005), lost in four sets to Nebraska (2016) and in five sets to Nebraska (2018) prior to this year's victory in Lexington.
   Creighton also improved to 2-10 all-time against teams the season after a Final Four appearance, and 2-6 on the road. Prior to UK, the lone victory came on Dec. 2, 2016, when CU outlasted Kansas to clinch the program's second Sweet 16 trip in program history.
CU vs. Previous Year Final Four Teams
Date   Result              Previous Year Finish
09/25/01Â Â Â Nebraska 3, CU 0Â Â Â NCAA Champion
09/10/05Â Â Â Stanford 3, CU 0Â Â Â NCAA Champion
09/24/06Â Â Â Nebraska 3, CU 1Â Â Â NCAA Runner-Up
08/31/07Â Â Â Nebraska 3, CU 0Â Â Â NCAA Champion
09/01/09Â Â Â Nebraska 3, CU 0Â Â Â Final Four
09/17/15Â Â Â Nebraska 3, CU 1Â Â Â NCAA Champion
09/08/16Â Â Â Kansas 3, CU 2Â Â Â Final Four
12/02/16Â Â Â CU 3, Kansas 2Â Â Â Final Four
12/10/16Â Â Â Texas 3, CU 0Â Â Â NCAA Runner-Up
09/06/18Â Â Â Nebraska 3, CU 2Â Â Â NCAA Champion
08/30/19Â Â Â Nebraska 3, CU 1Â Â Â NCAA Runner-Up
09.04/21Â Â Â CU 3, Kentucky 1Â Â Â NCAA Champion
Booth Earns 500th Caryueer Win
Creighton head coach Kirsten Bernthal Booth picked up her 500th career victory on Sept. 4 when Creighton defeated No. 3 Kentucky.
   It came in the fifth match of her 22nd season, and improved her to 500-216 as a head coach and 388-175 in 19 years at Creighton.
   Booth's 414 Division I wins rank 53rd-most among active coaches, and tied for the most among coaches who have spent 19 years or less at the Division I level.
Some Fab Freshmen
Including Kendra Wait and Norah Sis on Aug. 27 vs. Kansas City, Creighton has started 14 different true freshmen in its season opener since 2009, and 18 such players since 2000.
   Since 2000, the only true freshmen to start CU's season-opener have been Brittany Coleman (2003), Carolyn Decker (2004), Korie Lebeda (2005), Allie Oelke (2007), Brooke Boggs (2009), Heather Thorson (2009), Julianne Mandolfo (2010), Katie Neisler (2011), Michelle Sicner (2011), Melanie Jereb (2012), Ashley Jansen (2012), Jess Bird (2013), Jaali Winters (2015), Naomi Hickman (2017), Emily Bressman (2019), Kiara Reinhardt (2020), Kendra Wait (2021) and Norah Sis (2021), with Coleman, Lebeda and Wait the only freshmen to start at setter in the season-opener.
   In addition, CU also started redshirt freshmen Lauren Smith (2013) and Brittany Lawrence (2015), as well as transfers Maggie Baumert (2014), Lydia Dimke (2016), Madelyn Cole (2018), Erica Kosetelac (2019) and Mahina Pua'a (2020) in season-openers.
   Eight of those women (Reinhardt, Coleman, Decker, Lebeda, Oelke, Mandolfo, Sicner and Jereb) went on to land a spot on the MVC or BIG EAST's All-Freshman Team (though the BIG EAST had no such team from 2013-19). Winters was named BIG EAST Freshman of the Year in 2015, Dimke was named BIG EAST Player of the Year in 2016 and Davis was BIG EAST Freshman of the Year in 2019.
   This year marked the first time that Creighton started multiple true freshmen in a season-opener since 2012, when Ashley Jansen and Melanie Jereb both earning a starting nod.
Block Around The Clock
Naomi Hickman finished her career in the top-10 of every one of Creighton's career blocking records, coming in fourth with 445 block assists, fourth with 480 total blocks and eighth with 1.03 blocks per set.
Career Records
Block Assists
      Name   Sets   No.   Years
   1.   Kelli Browning   424   547   2011-14
   2.   Jessica Houts   451   536   2005-09
   3.   Lauren Smith   511   499   2013-16
   4.   Naomi Hickman   472   451   2017-21
   5.   Megan Bober   480   380   2009-12
Total Blocks
      Name   Sets   BS   BA   Tot.   Years
   1.   Jessica Houts   451   73   536   609   2005-09
   2.   Kelli Browning   424   55   547   602   2011-14
   3.   Lauren Smith   511   61   499   560   2013-16
   4.   Naomi Hickman   472   38   451   489   2017-21
   5.   Ashley Williams   359   100   347   447   2001-04
Blocks Per Set (Min. 80 Blocks)
      Name   Sets   No.   Avg.   Years
   1.   Kelli Browning   424   602   1.42   2011-14
   2.   Jessica Houts   451   609   1.35   2005-09
   3.   Ashley Williams   359   447   1.25   2001-04
   4.   Taffy Smart   73   88   1.21   1998
   5.   Laurel Sanford   369   419   1.14   2008-11
   6.   JoDe Cieloha   398   437   1.098   1994-97
   7.   Lauren Smith   511   560   1.096   2013-16
   8.   Naomi Hickman   472   489   1.04   2017-21
   9.   Sarah Beulke   299   307   1.03   2001-04
   10.   Annika Welty   236   223   0.94   2018-21
Setting The Table
Kendra Wait started Creighton's season-opener at setter, the eighth different Bluejay to earn that role in the past 10 seasons.
   The Jays started the season with Megan Bober in 2012 vs. UCF before Michelle Sicner took over in the 2013 lid-lifter vs. BYU. In 2014 Maggie Baumert started the opener at setter against Lipscomb, while Kenzie Crawford got the call versus Miami (Ohio) in 2015. Lydia Dimke started the initial contest in both 2016 and 2017, before graduating, while Madelyn Cole started in 2018 and 2019. Last season Mahina Pua'a earned the nod on opening night, while Wait started this season.
   The revolving door at setter hasn't hurt the team in that time, as each of the last 10 seasons ended in the NCAA Tournament (including 2021), and nine of the last 10 saw Creighton win conference titles.
   Creighton won eight of those 10 season-opening matches.
Familiar Face
Senior Naomi Hickman has started Creighton's season opener each of the past five years. She's the 16th player to start four season openers, but the only one to do so five times.
Four or More Opening Day Starts
Name   Years
JoDe Cieloha   1994-97
Melissa Weisensee   1994-97
Shelly Kapler   1996-99
Erin Swanson   1998-01
Kailey Reyes   1998-01
Melissa Walsh   1998-01
Carolyn Decker   2004-06, 08
Korie Lebeda   2005-08
Jessica Houts   2006-09
Allie Oelke   2007-10
Heather Thorson   2009-12
Megan Bober   2009-12
Jess Bird   2013-16
Lauren Smith   2013-16
Jaali Winters   2015-18
Naomi Hickman   2017-21
Production Returns
Creighton returns 11-of-15 letterwinners to the court from last season, including all six starters, as well as returning libero Ellie Bolton.
   From last year's team, only Grace Nelson, Mahina Pua'a, Erica Kostelac and Makenna Krause are not back.
   Creighton returned 98.4 percent of its blocks, its most since 2007 (99.3).
   Creighton returned 94.3 percent of its kills, most since 2016 (94.7).
   Creighton returned 93.7 percent of its points, most since 2014 (99.1).
   Creighton returned 86.5 percent of its starts, most since 2014 (98.1).
   Creighton returned 81.7 percent of its digs, most since 2017 (95.0).
   All told, of the seven categories listed below, Creighton returned 595.5 of a possible 700% back (85.1 percent), which was its highest since 2014 (99.1).
   Below is a breakdown of the production that is back:
Stat   Returners   Departures
Blocks   153 (98.4%)   2.5 (1.6%)
Kills   763 (94.3%)   46 (5.7%)
Points   987.0 (93.7%)   66.5 (6.3%)
Matches Started   83 (86.5%)   13 (13.5%)
Digs   734 (81.7%)   164 (18.3%)
Aces   71 (79.8%)   18 (20.2%)
Assists   462 (61.5%)   289 (38.5%)
More Tidbits From Kentucky
A few additional leftover notes from the win over Kentucky that will impress your friends and neighbors, but don't fit in elsewhere in these notes.
- Since the start of 2015, Kentucky is 173-40, but just 1-5 against Creighton. No other program has beaten the Wildcats more than three times.
- Kentucky First Team All-American Alli Stumler's six kills vs. Creighton were her least in a match since she had five on Nov. 8, 2019 at Georgia, which was 39 matches ago.
- Creighton's 3-0 win snapped a streak of 59 matches in a row for UK without being swept   .
- Creighton's 3-0 win also snapped Kentucky's nation-leading win streak of 12 matches and was Kentucky's first loss at home in 18 straight matches.
- Creighton's 3-0 win was the first home sweep for Kentucky since Nov. 1, 2017 vs. Florida (49 matches).
Survival of the Fittest
Creighton has won nine matches under Kirsten Bernthal Booth after surviving an opponent's match point, including season-opening wins over No. 5 Kentucky in 2018 and vs. UTSA in 2011. Three of those other comeback wins have come against Wichita State.
   On the other hand, Creighton is 414-3 under Booth when it reaches a match point opportunity, falling only when it wasted two match points on Sept. 4, 2010 to Iowa, two match points on Nov. 1, 2013 in a loss to St. John's, and two match points on Dec. 7, 2019 in an NCAA Tournament loss at No. 7 Minnesota.
Surviving Match Points, Under Booth
Date   Opponent   MP(s) Faced   Final Set 5
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 Â vs. UTSAÂ Â Â 12-14, 13-14Â Â 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
Third Set's A Charm
Since an Oct. 10, 2014 loss at Seton Hall, Creighton is 116-1 against BIG EAST teams (104-1 in the regular-season and 12-0 in league tournament play) when winning the third set.
   Creighton's streak of 104 wins in a row was snapped on Oct. 16 at UConn.
Taking The Fifth
Creighton is 62-33 in five-set matches under Kirsten Bernthal Booth, including a 1-1 mark this season That's impressive since Creighton had never finished a season with a winning record in fifth sets prior to Booth's arrival.
   Creighton has won 16 of its last 22 true road matches to go five sets, including wins in 2012 over league rivals Northern Iowa, Wichita State and Missouri State, wins in 2013 at Denver and at Wichita State, wins in 2014 at Butler and at St. John's, a win at Georgetown in 2015, an NCAA Tournament win at No. 4 Kansas in 2016, 2017 victories at Butler, Georgetown and Marquette, a 2018 win at Butler, wins at UNI and No. 10 Marquette in 2019 and at South Dakota in the 2020 campaign.
   It's also worth noting that Creighton is 15-4 all-time in five-set home matches at D.J. Sokol Arena.
   Below is a list of Creighton's record in five-set matches on a yearly basis:
Year   Set 5 W-L   Total W-L
1994Â Â Â 0-2Â Â Â 5-20
1995Â Â Â 0-2Â Â Â 11-19
1996Â Â Â 2-6Â Â Â 9-19
1997Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 15-13
1998Â Â Â 2-3Â Â Â 7-18
1999Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 13-15
2000Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 16-12
2001Â Â Â 1-1Â Â Â 14-13
2002Â Â Â 1-3Â Â Â 3-23
2003Â Â Â 5-1Â Â Â 12-18
2004Â Â Â 4-0Â Â Â 18-11
2005Â Â Â 3-1Â Â Â 16-14
2006Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 21-10
2007Â Â Â 2-0Â Â Â 21-10
2008Â Â Â 2-3Â Â Â 18-9
2009Â Â Â 1-4Â Â Â 14-17
2010Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 21-12
2011Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 17-14
2012Â Â Â 4-1Â Â Â 29-4
2013Â Â Â 3-2Â Â Â 23-9
2014Â Â Â 3-2Â Â Â 25-9
2015Â Â Â 5-2Â Â Â 27-9
2016Â Â Â 4-3Â Â Â 29-7
2017Â Â Â 4-1Â Â Â 26-7
2018Â Â Â 3-2Â Â Â 29-5
2019Â Â Â 2-1Â Â Â 25-6
2020Â Â Â 4-2Â Â Â 12-4
2021Â Â Â 1-1Â Â Â 31-4
Total   77-61   507-331
2-0 Better Than 0-2
Creighton is 345-11 (.969) all-time when leading a match 2-0, including a 288-5 mark (.983) under Kirsten Bernthal Booth. CU is 214-3 when up 2-0 dating to September of 2009, and 109-1 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 95.0 percent of their matches from 2009-18.
   Conversely, the Jays are 15-202 (.069) all-time when trailing a match 0-2, and 13-103 (.112) under Booth. Those 15 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
Against NCAA Tournament Qualifiers
Last season Creighton played four matches against 2019 NCAA Tournament qualifiers, going 3-1 against such teams.
   This year's team owned four matches (Missouri, Kentucky, Nebraska, South Dakota) scheduled against teams that made the 2020 NCAA Tournament, and they went 3-1 vs. that gauntlet.
   After going 3-35 against teams coming off NCAA Tournament bids prior to Kirsten Bernthal Booth's arrival, the Jays are 89-101 since.
Year   W-L vs. Previous Season NCAA Teams
1994Â Â Â 0-4
1995Â Â Â 0-2
1996Â Â Â 0-2
1997Â Â Â 0-3
1998Â Â Â 0-5
1999Â Â Â 2-4
2000Â Â Â 0-4
2001Â Â Â 1-6
2002Â Â Â 0-5
2003Â Â Â 0-3
2004Â Â Â 2-2
2005Â Â Â 0-6
2006Â Â Â 4-6
2007Â Â Â 4-9
2008Â Â Â 6-8
2009Â Â Â 1-11
2010Â Â Â 4-7
2011Â Â Â 2-6
2012Â Â Â 8-3
2013Â Â Â 6-6
2014Â Â Â 4-5
2015Â Â Â 11-5
2016Â Â Â 10-7
2017Â Â Â 8-6
2018Â Â Â 8-5
2019Â Â Â 5-4
2020Â Â Â 3-1
2021Â Â Â 3-1
TOTALÂ Â Â 92-136
TOTAL Under Booth   89-101
Year-By-Year In Non-Conference Play
Despite annually facing one of the nation's toughest non-conference schedules, Creighton has continued to excel against elite competition.
   Creighton is 7-10 against ranked non-conference foes over the last four seasons after going 2-43 all-time vs. ranked teams in regular-season non-conference matches.
   Creighton owned 12 non-conference wins this season to set a program record for a regular-season. It's actually also the first season with 10 wins prior to league play.
Non-Conference Records, By Year, Under Booth
Year   Non-Con W-L   vs. Ranked Non-Con   Final W-L
2003Â Â Â 3-8Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 12-18
2004Â Â Â 8-2Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 18-11
2005Â Â Â 6-5Â Â Â 0-3Â Â Â 16-14
2006Â Â Â 8-3Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 21-10
2007Â Â Â 6-5Â Â Â 0-3Â Â Â 21-10
2008Â Â Â 3-5Â Â Â 0-3Â Â Â 18-9
2009Â Â Â 3-8Â Â Â 0-3Â Â Â 14-17
2010Â Â Â 5-5Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 21-12
2011Â Â Â 5-7Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 17-14
2012Â Â Â 9-2Â Â Â 0-1Â Â Â 29-4
2013Â Â Â 9-3Â Â Â 1-2Â Â Â 23-9
2014Â Â Â 7-6Â Â Â 0-5Â Â Â 25-9
2015Â Â Â 6-7Â Â Â 1-4Â Â Â 27-9
2016Â Â Â 6-6Â Â Â 0-4Â Â Â 29-7
2017Â Â Â 7-4Â Â Â 3-3Â Â Â 26-7
2018Â Â Â 8-4Â Â Â 1-3Â Â Â 29-5
2019Â Â Â 7-3Â Â Â 2-3Â Â Â 25-6
2020Â Â Â 3-2Â Â Â 0-0Â Â Â 12-4
2021Â Â Â 12-1Â Â Â 1-1Â Â Â 31-4
Marian Pipeline
This is the 19th straight season that Creighton Volleyball had at least one product of Omaha Marian High School on the roster, as junior Emily Bressman keeps the streak alive.
   Last season was the first time since 2010 that Creighton's year-end leader in digs wasn't a player that attended Marian.
   Interestingly, the Bluejays had never had a volleyball player from Marian between 1994-2002. Here's a look at Creighton's pipeline of players from Marian.
2021: Emily Bressman
2020: Emily Bressman
2019: Emily Bressman, Brittany Witt
2018: Kelsey O'Connell, Brittany Witt
2017: Kelsey O'Connell, Brittany Witt
2016: Kelsey O'Connell, Brittany Witt
2015: Kate Elman, Ashley Jansen, Kelsey O'Connell
2014: Kate Elman, Ashley Jansen
2013: Kate Elman, Ashley Jansen
2012: Kate Elman, Ashley Jansen
2011: Julianne Mandolfo
2010: Lisa Greisch, Julianne Mandolfo
2009: Lisa Greisch
2008: Emily Crowley, Korie Lebeda
2007: Korie Lebeda, Katie Mehal
2006: Korie Lebeda, Katie Mehal, Emily Greisch
2005: Korie Lebeda, Katie Mehal
2004: Katie Mehal, Emily Greisch
2003: Emily Greisch
Last Season Summary
Creighton won the BIG EAST regular-season and tournament titles while returning to the NCAA Tournament in a most unusual season. The global COVID-19 pandemic pushed an abbreviated season into the spring, with limited crowds and face coverings required during the regular-season.
   Creighton went 3-1 in non-conference play before opening BIG EAST play by splitting two matches with No. 25 Marquette. The Bluejays won their final six league matches to finish atop the Midwest Division, then defeated UConn and Marquette for their sixth BIG EAST Tournament title in seven seasons.
   The entire NCAA Tournament was held in Omaha, but CU fell in five sets to Ohio Valley Conference champ Morehead State in the First Round.
   Jaela Zimmerman earned East Region Player of the Year honors from the AVCA and joined on the All-Conference Team alongside Keeley Davis and Naomi Hickman. Hickman was named Most Outstanding Player of the BIG EAST Tournament, with Annika Welty and All-Freshman Team honoree Kiara Reinhardt also being named All-Tourney.
Players Mentioned
Creighton Volleyball Media Availability - 9/24/25
Wednesday, September 24
Creighton's Ava Martin Highlights - 9/22/25
Monday, September 22
Creighton Volleyball Postgame Press Conference vs. Kansas - 9/21/25
Monday, September 22
Creighton Volleyball Highlights vs. Kansas, 9/21/25
Monday, September 22