Volleyball Returns Home To Open BIG EAST Play
9/20/2022 10:00:00 AM | Volleyball
Bluejays to host Georgetown and Villanova this weekend
Match #12: Georgetown at #22 Creighton • Friday, Sept. 23 • 6:30 p.m. • Omaha, Neb.
| FLO SPORTS SUBSCRIPTION INFO |Â LIVE VIDEO ($) | LIVE AUDIO | LIVE STATS | CU NOTES (PDF) |
Match #13: Villanova at #22 Creighton • Sunday, Sept. 25 • 1:00 p.m. • Omaha, Neb.
| LIVE VIDEO | LIVE AUDIO | LIVE STATS | CU NOTES (PDF) |
This Week
Eight-time defending BIG EAST regular-season champion and 22nd-ranked Creighton (8-3) opens conference play with four straight home matches, including a pair this weekend.
   The fun starts on Friday, Sept. 23 at 6:30 p.m. when the Jays entertain Georgetown (2-9).
   On Sunday, CU welcomes Villanova (4-8) for a 1 p.m. contest.
   Both matches will take place at D.J. Sokol Arena (2,500) in Omaha, Neb.
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Friday's Broadcast Information
Friday's match will be video webcast on FloSports, a subscription-based service. Jon Schriner and Shannon Smolinski will call the match, which will have the audio simulcast on News Talk 1290 AM (KOIL) in addition to being streamed at http://GoCreighton.com/listen1290.
   More information about discounted subscriptions to FloSports programming can be found at http://GoCreighton.com/FloSports.
Sunday's Broadcast Information
Sunday's match vs. Villanova will be televised statewide by Nebraska Public Media (channel 12 on Cox), with Larry Punteney and Kathi Wieskamp on the call. It'll also be webcast at https://nebraskapublicmedia.org/en/series-media/ncaa-volleyball-video/standalone-video-16492/villanova-vs-creighton-50019406/.
   Sunday's match will also be on radio in Omaha on 1180 The Zone (KZOT), which can be heard at http://GoCreighton.com/listen1180. Jon Schriner and Kate Elman will announce.
Live Stats Information
Both matches will have free live stats at
http://creighton.statbroadcast.com. A link is also on the GoCreighton.com volleyball schedule page.
Scouting #22 Creighton
Ranked 22nd nationally, Creighton finished non-conference play 8-3 this season with the lone losses coming to then-No. 16 Kentucky (3-1 on Sept. 3), to No. 2 Nebraska (3-2 on Sept. 7). and at newly-ranked Rice (3-2 on Sept. 18).
   Creighton owns wins over a boatload of NCAA Tournament regulars, including No. 25 USC, Iowa State, Kansas State, Florida State, Northern Iowa and Wichita State.
   Sophomore OH Norah Sis (3.87 kps., 2.67 dps.) was named Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year after a standout season that saw her pick up National Freshman of the Year accolades from VolleyballMag.com.
   Senior OH Keeley Davis is averaging 2.87 kills, 3.02 digs and 0.39 aces per set, and senior MB Kiana Schmitt owns 2.26 kills per set on .276 hitting.
   Quarterbacking the Bluejay offense is sophomore S Kendra Wait (10.57 aps., 3.65 dps., .364%), while senior L Allison Whitten leads CU with 3.89 digs per set and surpassed 2,000 career digs last Sunday at Rice.
   Creighton returns four starters from last season's 31-4 squad that reached a 10th straight NCAA Tournament and saw the Bluejays win an eighth straight BIG EAST regular-season title. Having added four freshmen and three graduate transfers in the off-season, CU is favored by league coaches to win a ninth straight title in 2022.
   Creighton averages 13.80 kills, 1.28 aces, 17.57 digs and 1.70 blocks per set while hitting .228 as a team.
Scouting Georgetown
Georgetown owns a 2-9 mark, picking up wins over both Binghamton (3-2) and George Washington (3-0) following an 0-7 start before losing consecutive 3-0 decisions at UCSB last weekend.
   Mary Grace Goyena leads the Hoyas with 3.56 kills per set and owns 34 percent of GU's kills and attack attempts this fall. The sophomore also leads the team with 14 aces (0.36 saps.).
   Karis Park (3.97 dps.) handles the libero role, and Lily Costigan (8.03 aps.) directs the offense.
   As a team, Georgetown averages 10.56 kills, 1.49 aces, 13.79 digs and 1.97 blocks per set on .170 hitting.
Scouting Villanova
Villanova is 4-8 this season, and 0-3 in true road matches. The Wildcats own wins over Colgate, Lafayette, New Hampshire and Fordham, and have suffered losses to teams the likes of USC, Dayton and Illinois.
   Rose Crist leads Nova with 2.91 kills per set, and Preseason All-BIG EAST selection Riley Homer (2.65 kps.) leads the Wildcats 130 kills.
   Belle Morgan (6.02 aps.) and Andrea Campos (3.73 aps.) have both seen time at setter, and Elizabeth Feczko (2.92 dps.) and Taryn Whittingham (2.86 dps.) top the club in digs.
   As a team, Villanova averages 10.86 kills, 1.44 aces, 13.16 digs and 2.02 blocks per set on .183 hitting.
Creighton Coaches
Creighton is coached by Kirsten Bernthal Booth (Truman State, 1997), who owns a 422-182 record in her 20th season with the Bluejays. She's led Creighton to eight straight BIG EAST titles (2014-21), 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 11 seasons (including 2022), 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 is assisted by Angie Oxley Behrens, Brian Rosen and Elise Fulcher.
Series History vs. Georgetown
Creighton is 16-0 all-time against Georgetown, dropping just seven sets in those contests.
   In 2015, Creighton lost the first two sets before ultimately saving two match points in a 3-2 road victory. In 2017 Creighton trailed 2-1 in the match before pulling out a 15-13 win in the fifth set after it trailed in the last set by scores of 5-0 and 13-12.
   Kirsten Bernthal Booth is 16-0 against Georgetown and 2-0 against David Heller.
Series History vs. Villanova
Creighton is 16-3 all-time vs. Villanova, including conference tournament wins in 2015, 2017 and 2018. CU is 10-0 in Omaha against the Wildcats, and won the last 14 sets played vs. VU at D.J. Sokol Arena.
   Kirsten Bernthal Booth is 16-3 all-time against Villanova and coach Josh Steinbach.
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 144-10 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 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 Bluejays have had a losing record on five occasions and owns a combined .363 (53-93) winning percentage during league contests.
   In conference home openers, Creighton is 23-5 overall and 17-2 under Booth, with 11 straight wins.
   In league road openers, Creighton is 19-9 overall and 16-3 under Booth, with eight straight wins.
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. All but one 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
Home Sweet Home
Creighton enters its 10th 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 2018, Bluejay fifth-year senior Jaela Zimmerman is 35-1 in home matches against BIG EAST teams, and 105-18 in sets played.
BIG EAST Preseason Poll
Creighton Volleyball has been picked to win the BIG EAST in a preseason poll of league coaches.
   Creighton earned 9-of-11 first place votes and 99 of a possible 100 points. That was just ahead of Marquette's 90 points and the other two votes for first place.
   DePaul (72) was picked third, just ahead of UConn (71) and St. John's (66). Rounding out the bottom half of the poll were Villanova (54), Butler (47), Xavier (42), Georgetown (25), Providence (25) and Seton Hall (14).
   Creighton also had three women among the 12 members on the BIG EAST's preseason all-conference team in Jaela Zimmerman and Kendra Wait as well as unanimous selection Norah Sis. Sis was also tabbed the BIG EAST's Preseason Player of the Year.
   Creighton has finished in the spot predicted of it or better in the preseason poll in 17 of 19 years under Kirsten Bernthal 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   1st   - -
2022   1st   ???   ???
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 (thru 9/19)
           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 235Â Â Â 63
Marquette (8)Â Â Â 120Â Â Â 27Â Â Â 218Â Â Â 70
Xavier   84   64   136   132
Butler   81   69   148   128
Villanova (1)Â Â Â 77Â Â Â 73Â Â Â 148Â Â Â 123
St. John's (1)Â Â Â 71Â Â Â 79Â Â Â 163Â Â Â 127
Seton Hall (1)Â Â Â 66Â Â Â 83Â Â Â 138Â Â Â 143
DePaul   40   110   104   160
Georgetown   33   109   84   170
Providence*Â Â Â 22Â Â Â 112Â Â Â 89Â Â Â 152
Connecticut#Â Â Â 17Â Â Â 9Â Â Â 34Â Â Â 23
*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.
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
Whitten Honored by BIG EAST
Creighton Volleyball's Allison Whitten has been named BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Week.
   Whitten finished tied for second in the BIG EAST with 5.00 digs per set last week, surpassing a career milestone in the process. The senior had 21 digs in a four-set win over Kansas State on Saturday, adding three assists and a service ace. She followed that with 24 digs and seven assists in a five-set setback at RV Rice on Sunday.
   Both of Whitten's digs totals ranked among the top-five in the BIG EAST last week, with the 21 ranking second in four-set matches and 24 listing fourth in five-set matches.
   Whitten surpassed the 2,000 career dig mark early in the fifth set against the Owls, and leads Creighton with 179 digs this season.
   In addition to Whitten's recognition, sophomore setter Kendra Wait was listed on the league's weekly Honor Roll after averaging 10.78 assists, 4.78 digs, 1.56 kills and 0.22 aces per set while hitting .462 in a pair of matches at the Rice Adidas Invitational II.
Family Matters
Creighton junior Megan Skovsende is a cousin of Georgetown head coach David Heller.
All That Jazz
Jazz Schmidt had just 25 kills in Creighton's first 10 matches of the season before she erupted for a season-high 17 kills on Sept. 18 at Rice.
   Schmidt's 17 kills were the most by a left-handed Bluejay since Megan Bober owned 19 kills at Southern Illinois on Oct. 21, 2011.
Nationally Speaking
Creighton ranks fifth in the nation with 17.57 digs per set and fourth in the country with 38.30 attacks per set. In those same categories last season, Creighton was eighth in digs per set and 22nd in attacks per set.
Wait Making History
Just nine days after she had 59 assists and 36 digs against Florida State, Kendra Wait had 56 assists and 24 digs on Sept. 18 at Rice.
   Wait is the first Bluejay with a match of at least 50 assists and 20 digs in a match since Korie Lebeda in 2006, and first Bluejay since Kailey Reyes (in 1999) to post multiple matches of at least 50 assists and 20 digs in the same season.
   No Creighton player has ever done it three times in the same season.
50 Assists, 20 Digs In A Match
A   D   Name   Opp.   Date
51   21   Melissa Weisensee   at Wichita State (5s)   9/14/96
53   24   Melissa Weisensee   at Indiana State (5s)   10/18/96
65   22   Melissa Weisensee   at Evansville (5s)   11/8/97
55   28   Kailey Reyes   Evansville (5s)   9/11/99
65   24   Kailey Reyes   Illinois State (4s)   9/24/99
64   23   Kailey Reyes   at Evansville (5s)   11/4/00
54   22   Brittany Coleman   at Illinois State (4s)   10/18/03
62   21   Brittany Coleman   at So. Illinois (4s)   10/29/04
71   20   Korie Lebeda   at Evansville (5s)   11/18/06
59   36   Kendra Wait   vs. Florida State (5s)   9/9/22
56   24   Kendra Wait   at Rice (5s)   9/18/22
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).
X Marks The Spot
Creighton owns 21 consecutive wins over Xavier, its best streak over any foe ever. CU's 16-match win streak over Georgetown is tied for fifth-best.
   Three of CU's first four league matches come against Georgetown, Xavier and Butler.
Most Consecutive Match Wins Over One Team
   Wins   Opponent   Dates
   21   Xavier   2013-Present
   19   Southern Illinois   2003-11
   19   DePaul   2013-Present
   17   Butler   2013-Present
   16   Indiana State   2005-Present
   16   Georgetown   2013-Present
Give Me Five
Four of Creighton's last five matches have gone five sets, and the one that didn't went four sets.
   Creighton played three matches that went five sets in a span of four days from Sept. 7-10, losing to No. 2 Nebraska on Sept. 7 before bouncing back to beat Florida State (Sept. 9) and Omaha on Saturday (Sept. 10).
   CU then played five sets against Rice last Sunday (Sept. 18)..
   It was the first time that Creighton has played three consecutive matches to go five sets since January 29-Feb. 5, when CU split back-to-back five set reverse sweeps against South Dakota before topping No. 25 Marquette.
   Creighton's most memorable stretch of five-set matches came during the winter of 2016, when the Jays defeated Northern Iowa, No. 4 Kansas and No. 17 Michigan in succession to reach the program's first Elite Eight. That remains the only time that CU has ever won three straight five set matches.
Sis Swings Away
Norah Sis obliterated Creighton's school-record of 77 attack attempts in a match (held by Jaali Winters) when she had 93 swings in CU's 3-2 win vs. Florida State on Sept. 9.
   Sis' 93 attacks are the most in the nation by a player this season.
More From Sept. 9
Creighton's 129 digs vs. Florida State were two shy of its school record and second-most in the nation this year for a single match. CU's only match with more was 131 vs. Illinois State on Oct. 13, 2000.
   Creighton's 254 attack attempts rank as its second-most in program history. The only match with more came Oct. 14, 2000 vs. Indiana State (296).
   Norah Sis' 28 kills vs. Florida State are tied for fourth-most in program history, and four away from Michelle Prorock's school record set in 1996.
Killing It
Creighton had 78 kills vs. Florida State, then added 70 more kills vs. Omaha a day later.
   It's the first time since November of 2006 that Creighton has had consecutive matches of 70 or more kills, though that occurred when sets were played to 30 points.
   After 55 kills vs. Kansas State on Sept. 17th, the Bluejays added 76 more at Rice on Sept. 18th.
   Creighton has not had 70 or more kills in three straight matches since November of 2003, which was Kirsten Bernthal Booth's first season at CU.
Whitten Surpasses 2,000 Digs
Creighton libero Allison Whitten surpassed 2,000 career digs on Sept. 18 at Rice, as she had 24 digs on the afternoon.
   The grad transfer had 1,823 digs in four seasons at Morehead State and leads CU with 179 digs this season.
   Whitten has 20 or more digs in three of her last four matches and nine or more digs in all 11 contests this fall.
   By comparison, the top two women in digs at Creighton (only) are Brittany Witt (2,079 from 2016-19) and Kate Elman (2,054 from 2012-15).
   Last year's Bluejay libero, Abby Bottomley, finished her career seventh in NCAA history with 2,711 career digs, though the first 2,158 digs came while at High Point from 2017-20.
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Double-Doubles On the Triple
Kendra Wait and Norah Sis both have had a double-double in each of Creighton's last five matches, and Keeley Davis has a double-double in four of those five contests.
   With a team-leading eight double-doubles this season, Wait owns 25 double-doubles in 46 career contests.
   Below is a list of Creighton women to record five or more consecutive double-doubles.
Consecutive Matches, Double-Double
   8   Melissa Walsh, Oct. 24-Nov. 17, 2000
   8   Michelle Sicner, Sept. 21-Oct. 20, 2013
   7   Korie Lebeda, Nov. 4-24, 2006
   7   Kailey Reyes, Oct. 23-Nov. 18, 1999
   7   Megan Bober, Oct. 26-Nov. 16, 2012
   6   Abby Baumann, Oct. 13-Nov. 4, 2006
   6   Korie Lebeda, Sept. 6-Oct. 3, 2008
   6   Megan Bober, Sept. 17-Oct. 7, 2011
   6   Jaali Winters, Nov. 12-Dec. 1, 2017
   6   Norah Sis, Sept. 17-Oct. 1, 2021
   5   Melissa Weisensee, Sept. 17-23, 1995
   5   Melissa Weisensee, Aug. 29-Sept. 5, 1997
   5   Kailey Reyes, Oct. 3-17, 1998
   5   Melissa Walsh, Sept. 4-14, 1999
   5   Melissa Walsh, Oct. 22-Nov. 6, 1999
   5   Melanie Keolanui, Oct. 28-Nov. 11, 2000
   5   Kailey Reyes, Oct. 27-Nov. 10, 2000
   5   Korie Lebeda, Sept. 1-9, 2006
   5   Michelle Sicner, Nov. 22-Dec. 6, 2013
   5   Jaali Winters, Nov. 7-27, 2015
   5   Kendra Wait, Sept. 7, 2022 - Present
   5   Norah Sis, Sept. 7, 2022 - Present
Wait's Defense Recognized By BIG EAST
Kendra Wait was named BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Week on Sept. 12th after posting double-doubles in all three matches in her week.
   Wait averaged 10.87 assists, 4.40 digs, 0.80 blocks and 0.47 kills per set in a 2-1 week that featured three different five set matches.
    Wait opened her week with 45 assists, 18 digs and an ace in a 3-2 loss to No. 2 Nebraska. It was the first two sets lost by the Cornhuskers all season, and CU hit .202 against an NU team that led the team in defensive hitting percentage.
    In Friday's 3-2 win over a 7-1 Florida State team, Wait's career-highs with 59 assists and 36 digs made her the first Bluejay in history with at least 50 assists and 30 digs in the same match. The 36 digs were two shy of CU's school-record and are tied for the most by any player in the BIG EAST this season.
    In Saturday's 3-2 win vs. Omaha, Wait had 58 assists, 12 digs and six blocks as Creighton hit .293.
    Behind the setting efforts of Wait, Creighton posted back-to-back matches with 70 or more kills for the first time since November of 2006, when sets were played to 30 points.
   It was the second time that Wait has been named BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Week, having previously been honored on Nov. 1, 2021.
Attendance Update
Creighton enters the week ranked eighth nationally in total home attendance (20,803) and fourth in fans per home match (5,201).
   Creighton has led the BIG EAST in average home attendance in every non-COVID year since joining the league.
Historically Speaking
No. 17 Creighton hosted 15,797 fans on Sept. 7 against No. 2 Nebraska, setting a record for the largest regular-season volleyball-only crowd in NCAA history. The mark stood for all of nine days before Wisconsin hosted 16,833 fans for a match vs. Florida.
   Here's a look at the top volleyball-only regular-season crowds in NCAA history. Of note, 13 of the top 14 figures of 11,000 or more have been in the state of Nebraska.
Largest Regular-Season Volleyball-Only Crowds in NCAA History
   Att.   Opponent, Result   Date   Site
   16,833   Florida def. Wisconsin   9/16/22   Madison, WI
   15,797   Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-2   9/7/22   Omaha, NE
   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   09/08/21   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
   10,576   Penn St. def. Hawai'i, 3-0   8/27/05   Omaha, NE
      Nebraska def. Stanford, 3-0
   10,570   Purdue def. Wisconsin, 3-2   10/17/08   W. Lafayette, IN
Sis Races Past 500
Sophomore Norah Sis reached 500 career kills in the Sept. 3 match vs. #16 Kentucky. It came in her 40th career match, and 132nd career set.
   The only other players in CU history to reach 500 kills in fewer matches are Jaali Winters and Melissa Walsh, both of whom graduated with the CU career record for kills. Winters reached 500 kills in 124 sets, while Walsh did so in 133 sets.
Creighton's Quickest Players To 500 Kills (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Jaali Winters   34   12/04/15   vs. Coastal Carolina
Melissa Walsh   37   09/25/99   Indiana State
Norah Sis   40   09/03/22   #16 Kentucky
JoDe Cieloha   43   10/15/95   at Indiana State
Keeley Davis   43   03/28/21   Xavier
Amanda Cvejdlik   44   10/13/06   at Wichita State
Sis Passes 600, too
Norah Sis raced past 600 career kills when she did so in her 45th career match (and 157th set) on Sept. 17 vs. Kansas State.
   The sensational sophomore became the third-fastest Bluejay in program history to reach the milestone, trailing only Jaali Winters and Melissa Walsh.
   The three other women that currently lead that list, Winters, Walsh and Leah Ratzlaff, are the top three women who rank atop on Creighton's all-time career kills list. Winters got there in 150 sets and Walsh needed 153 sets.
Creighton's Quickest Players To 600 Kills (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Jaali Winters   41   09/03/16   at USC
Melissa Walsh   42   10/09/99   at Wichita State
Norah Sis   45   09/17/22   vs. Kansas State
Leah Ratzlaff   52   11/14/03   Illinois State
JoDe Cieloha   53   08/30/96   Murray State
Amanda Cvejdlik   53   11/17/06   at Southern Illinois
Top 25 History
Creighton is 153-38 all-time when playing as a ranked team, and also 16-22 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, 37 of Creighton's 67 losses have come against ranked teams. In that same period, Creighton is 245-30 against unranked teams. Creighton has won all but two of its past 83 home matches over unranked teams and all but nine of its last 103 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 eight seasons (2015-22). That includes a record-tying four top-25 victories in 2019.
   Eleven of Creighton's top 25 wins all-time have come against either Marquette (6) or Kentucky (5).
   The highest ranked teams that Creighton has ever beaten at any site were No. 3 Washington (8/26/17 in Seattle) and No. 3 Kentucky (9/4/21 in Lexington). CU's highest-ranked opponent it has defeated at home was a 3-1 win over then-No. 9 Marquette on Nov. 22, 2019.
MVP Sis Also Picks Up BIG EAST Honor
In addition to being named MVP of the Rumble in the Rockies, Norah Sis also brought home BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Week accolades on Aug. 29th.
   The Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year averaged 5.23 points, 4.91 kills, 2.27 digs and 0.36 blocks per set on .250 hitting.
   The Papillion, Neb., product started her season with near-identical double-doubles on Friday in wins over Iowa State (17 kills, 10 digs, 1 assist) and Wichita State (15 kills, 10 digs, 1 block). The reigning VolleyballMag.com National Freshman of the Year then slammed 22 kills while adding five digs, three blocks and an ace in a 3-1 win at Wyoming to clinch the tournament title. Her 25.0 points against the Cowgirls were a career-best effort and helped her earned Tournament MVP honors for the second time in her young career.
   Sis was honored as BIG EAST Freshman of the Week six times last season, when she was named BIG EAST Freshman of the Year, but this is her first BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Week accolade.
Hall Call
Megan (Bober) Varasteh has been announced as part of the 2022 class for the Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame, McCormick Endowed Athletic Director Marcus Blossom announced on Friday, August 26th.
   Varasteh is part of the 54th class of inductees (along with Renae Sinkler-O'Gorman and Carol Ketcham) and will give the Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame 94 inductees, plus the 1991 Creighton Baseball Team. The Athletics Hall of Fame started in 1968 with the induction of Bluejay great Bob Gibson.
   Varasteh starred as a member of the Creighton Volleyball program from 2008-12, becoming the program's first player in earn AVCA All-America honors multiple times. She became the volleyball program's first woman named Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year as well as MVC Tournament MVP, helping the Bluejays to their first regular-season and conference tournament titles and a then-record 29 victories. She closed her career with a school-record 15 triple-doubles (second in MVC history) and as the only player in league history with at least 4,000 assists, 1,000 digs, 800 kills and 400 blocks.
   In addition to being named Creighton's Female Athlete of the Year, she was also recognized as the Carl M. Reinert, S.J., Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year, repeated her spot on the MVC Scholar-Athlete First Team and was named a CoSIDA Academic All-American Second Team selection as a senior.
    The 2022 Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame banquet will be held on Saturday, October 15 at Hilton Omaha.
Poll Road Ahead
Creighton has been ranked in each of the last 19 AVCA Top 25 polls. With little movement from week-to-week, however, CU is one of 19 teams to be ranked each of those polls, a group that includes Baylor, BYU, Creighton, Florida, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Louisville, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio State, Oregon, Penn State, Pitt, Purdue, Stanford, Texas, Washington, Western Kentucky and Wisconsin.
   Creighton has been ranked in all but six of the past 88 weeks the AVCA has put out a Top 25 poll.
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 8-12 against ranked non-conference foes over the last five seasons after going 2-43 all-time vs. ranked teams in regular-season non-conference matches.
   Creighton owned 12 non-conference wins last 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
2022Â Â Â 8-3Â Â Â 1-2Â Â Â TBD
Schmitt A Ki Player
Kiana Schmitt entered the 2022 season with three career matches (of 60 played) with 10 or more kills, but the senior already has six matches in double-figures this fall.
   Schmitt had 10 kills on Aug. 26 vs. Wichita State, then tied her career-high with 12 kills one night later win at Wyoming. She then had 10 kills vs. No. 2 Nebraska on Sept. 7, 12 kills vs. Florida State and 11 more against Omaha. Schmitt had exactly a dozen kills for the fifth time in her career on Sept. 18th at Rice.
   Creighton is 27-4 all-time when Schmitt has six or more kills.
Preseason Ranking
Creighton was ranked 18th in the AVCA preseason poll. It's the eighth time in the past 10 years that the Jays have been ranked in the preseason.
   The No. 18 slotting was tied for the fourth-best preseason ranking in program history.
   Over the previous 14 seasons, 255-of-350 teams (72.9 percent) of teams have been in both the preseason and final polls, and since 2008 318-of-350 teams (90.9 percent) in the preseason top-25 polls would go on to reach the NCAA Tournament.
   This year marks the 11th straight season that CU has been ranked at least one week, extending a program record.
   Year   Preseason Rank   Final W-L   Final Rank
   2013   25th   23-9   NR
   2014   23rd   25-9   NR
   2016   18th   27-9   9th
   2017   9th   26-7   16th
   2018   13th   29-5   13th
   2019   18th   25-6   16th
   2020   16th   12-4   NR
   2022   18th   TBD   TBD
Some Fab Freshmen
Including Sky McCune on Aug. 26 vs. Iowa State, Creighton has started 15 different true freshmen in its season opener since 2009, and 19 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), Norah Sis (2021) and Sky McCune (2022), 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 Kostelac (2019) and Mahina Pua'a (2020) in season-openers.
   Ten of those women (Sis, Wait, 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, Davis was BIG EAST Freshman of the Year in 2019 and Sis recognized as BIG EAST Freshman of the Year in 2022.
   Last 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. The 2012 and 2021 teams are the two winningest single-season teams in program history.
Believe The Hype
Creighton's recruiting class of freshmen Morgan Colangelo, Ava Martin, Sky McCune and Ann Marie Remmes was recognized as the nation's No. 24 class by PrepVolleyball.
   Martin was listed as the nation's No. 47 recruit, while McCune was tabbed 52nd-best. Creighton now owns eight players on its 2022 roster who were Top 100 recruits.
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 Sky 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   (Colangelo, Martin, McCune, Remmes)
Production Returns
Creighton returns 11-of-16 letterwinners to the court from last season, including four starters
   From last year's team, only Abby Bottomley, Naomi Hickman, Eve Magill, Ally Van Eekeren, Annika Welty are not back.
   All told, of the seven categories listed below, Creighton returns 511.8 of a possible 700% back (73.1 percent).
   Below is a breakdown of the production that is back:
Stat   Returners   Departures
Assists   1,331 (87.4%)   192 (12.6%)
Kills   1,307 (80.2%)   323 (19.8%)
Points   1,627.0 (75.6%)   526.0 (24.4%)
Matches Started   154 (73.3%)   56 (26.7%)
Digs   1,460 (70.6%)   607 (29.4%)
Aces   128 (66.7%)   64 (33.3%)
Blocks   192 (58.0%)   139.0 (42.0%)
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
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 (2012-21). 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.
Dealing Up Aces
Keeley Davis had six aces on the opening weekend of the season, becoming the eighth player in CU history to reach century mark for her career.
   Davis reached 100 career aces in her 82nd career contest, which ranks third-fastest in Bluejay history.
   It's also worth noting that three of Davis' teammates entered the year having owned more than 100 career aces, though they've done so at other schools. Bethany Clapp owned 103 aces in 97 matches at Incarnate Word, Jazz Schmidt had 103 aces in 96 matches at Division II Palm Beach Atlantic and Allison Whitten had 103 aces in 115 contests at Morehead State.
Service Aces, Career
      Name   Sets   No.   Years
   1.   Molly Moran   341   145   1998-01
   2.   Melissa Weisensee   411   125   1994-97
   3.   Brittany Witt   471   122   2016-19
   4.   Keeley Davis   324   116   2019-Pr.
   5.   JoDe Cieloha   398   113   1994-97
   6.   Kate Elman   464   105   2012-15
   7.   Shelly Kapler   388   104   1996-99
   8.   Jaali Winters   494   101   2015-18
   9.   Madelyn Cole   225   93   2018-19
   10.   Carolyn Decker   300   89   2004-08
Creighton's Quickest Players To 100 Aces (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Molly Moran   73   08/31/01   vs. DePaul
Melissa Weisensee   77   11/01/96   Southern Illinois
Keeley Davis   82   08/26/22   vs. Wichita St.
JoDe Cieloha   85   09/06/97   at UNLV
Shelly Kapler   95   10/15/99   Bradley
Brittany Witt   107   10/05/19   Seton Hall
Kate Elman   120   11/15/15   Butler
Jaali Winters   135   11/17/18   Providence
Set 1 Result A Strong Indicator
Creighton is 356-33 (.915) overall under Kirsten Bernthal Booth when it wins set one. In that same time span, CU is just 66-149 (.307) 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 126-4 in its last 130 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 and on Sept. 3, 2022 to No. 16 Kentucky.
   Creighton has gone 88-3 in its last 91 matches at all sites when winning the first set, compared to a 9-15 record in that same span when dropping the opener.
   Creighton has gone 129-2 in its last 131 matches against unranked foes when winning the opening set.
2-0 Better Than 0-2
Creighton is 350-11 (.970) all-time when leading a match 2-0, including a 293-5 mark (.983) under Kirsten Bernthal Booth. CU is 219-3 when up 2-0 dating to September of 2009, and 111-1 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 15-203 (.069) all-time when trailing a match 0-2, and 13-104 (.111) 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
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 422-3 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
Taking The Fifth
Creighton is 64-35 in five-set matches under Kirsten Bernthal Booth. 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 17 of its last 24 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, at South Dakota in the 2020 campaign and at Omaha in 2022.
   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
2022Â Â Â 2-2Â Â Â 8-3
Total   79-63   515-334
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
Greg McDermott   Men's Basketball   7
Brent Vigness   Softball   7
Elmar Bolowich   Men's Soccer   6
Against NCAA Tournament Qualifiers
Last season Creighton played four matches against 2020 NCAA Tournament qualifiers, going 3-1 against such teams.
   This year's team owns eight matches (Iowa State, Kentucky, Nebraska, Florida State, Kansas State, Rice and Marquette) scheduled against teams that made the 2021 NCAA Tournament, and CU is 3-3 against those foes to date.
   After going 3-35 against teams coming off NCAA Tournament bids prior to Kirsten Bernthal Booth's arrival, the Jays are 92-104 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
2022Â Â Â 3-3 so far
TOTALÂ Â Â 95-139
TOTAL Under Booth   92-104
Marian Pipeline
This is the 20th straight season that Creighton Volleyball had at least one product of Omaha Marian High School on the roster, as senior Emily Bressman keeps the streak alive.
   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.
2022: Emily Bressman
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
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 422 victories on the Bluejay sideline to rank fifth in school history across all sports.
Coach, Sport   Victories (thru 9/22)
Brent Vigness, Softball   819
Ed Servais, Baseball   618*
Mary Higgins, Softball   564
Tom Lilly, Men's & Women's Tennis   498*
Kirsten Bernthal Booth, Volleyball   422*
Jim Flanery, Women's Basketball   387*
Ed Hubbs, Men's & Women's Tennis   347
Dana Altman, Men's Basketball   327
*still active coaching at Creighton
Last Season Summary
Creighton went 31-4 last season, won an eighth straight BIG EAST regular-season title and reached the Second Round while playing in its 10th consecutive NCAA Tournament.
   Norah Sis was named a Third Team All-American by the AVCA and the National Freshman of the Year by VolleyballMag.com. Also named Honorable Mention All-American were Jaela Zimmerman and Kendra Wait.
   CU's 31 victories were a school-record and included five tournament titles.
| FLO SPORTS SUBSCRIPTION INFO |Â LIVE VIDEO ($) | LIVE AUDIO | LIVE STATS | CU NOTES (PDF) |
Match #13: Villanova at #22 Creighton • Sunday, Sept. 25 • 1:00 p.m. • Omaha, Neb.
| LIVE VIDEO | LIVE AUDIO | LIVE STATS | CU NOTES (PDF) |
This Week
Eight-time defending BIG EAST regular-season champion and 22nd-ranked Creighton (8-3) opens conference play with four straight home matches, including a pair this weekend.
   The fun starts on Friday, Sept. 23 at 6:30 p.m. when the Jays entertain Georgetown (2-9).
   On Sunday, CU welcomes Villanova (4-8) for a 1 p.m. contest.
   Both matches will take place at D.J. Sokol Arena (2,500) in Omaha, Neb.
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Friday's Broadcast Information
Friday's match will be video webcast on FloSports, a subscription-based service. Jon Schriner and Shannon Smolinski will call the match, which will have the audio simulcast on News Talk 1290 AM (KOIL) in addition to being streamed at http://GoCreighton.com/listen1290.
   More information about discounted subscriptions to FloSports programming can be found at http://GoCreighton.com/FloSports.
Sunday's Broadcast Information
Sunday's match vs. Villanova will be televised statewide by Nebraska Public Media (channel 12 on Cox), with Larry Punteney and Kathi Wieskamp on the call. It'll also be webcast at https://nebraskapublicmedia.org/en/series-media/ncaa-volleyball-video/standalone-video-16492/villanova-vs-creighton-50019406/.
   Sunday's match will also be on radio in Omaha on 1180 The Zone (KZOT), which can be heard at http://GoCreighton.com/listen1180. Jon Schriner and Kate Elman will announce.
Live Stats Information
Both matches will have free live stats at
http://creighton.statbroadcast.com. A link is also on the GoCreighton.com volleyball schedule page.
Scouting #22 Creighton
Ranked 22nd nationally, Creighton finished non-conference play 8-3 this season with the lone losses coming to then-No. 16 Kentucky (3-1 on Sept. 3), to No. 2 Nebraska (3-2 on Sept. 7). and at newly-ranked Rice (3-2 on Sept. 18).
   Creighton owns wins over a boatload of NCAA Tournament regulars, including No. 25 USC, Iowa State, Kansas State, Florida State, Northern Iowa and Wichita State.
   Sophomore OH Norah Sis (3.87 kps., 2.67 dps.) was named Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year after a standout season that saw her pick up National Freshman of the Year accolades from VolleyballMag.com.
   Senior OH Keeley Davis is averaging 2.87 kills, 3.02 digs and 0.39 aces per set, and senior MB Kiana Schmitt owns 2.26 kills per set on .276 hitting.
   Quarterbacking the Bluejay offense is sophomore S Kendra Wait (10.57 aps., 3.65 dps., .364%), while senior L Allison Whitten leads CU with 3.89 digs per set and surpassed 2,000 career digs last Sunday at Rice.
   Creighton returns four starters from last season's 31-4 squad that reached a 10th straight NCAA Tournament and saw the Bluejays win an eighth straight BIG EAST regular-season title. Having added four freshmen and three graduate transfers in the off-season, CU is favored by league coaches to win a ninth straight title in 2022.
   Creighton averages 13.80 kills, 1.28 aces, 17.57 digs and 1.70 blocks per set while hitting .228 as a team.
Scouting Georgetown
Georgetown owns a 2-9 mark, picking up wins over both Binghamton (3-2) and George Washington (3-0) following an 0-7 start before losing consecutive 3-0 decisions at UCSB last weekend.
   Mary Grace Goyena leads the Hoyas with 3.56 kills per set and owns 34 percent of GU's kills and attack attempts this fall. The sophomore also leads the team with 14 aces (0.36 saps.).
   Karis Park (3.97 dps.) handles the libero role, and Lily Costigan (8.03 aps.) directs the offense.
   As a team, Georgetown averages 10.56 kills, 1.49 aces, 13.79 digs and 1.97 blocks per set on .170 hitting.
Scouting Villanova
Villanova is 4-8 this season, and 0-3 in true road matches. The Wildcats own wins over Colgate, Lafayette, New Hampshire and Fordham, and have suffered losses to teams the likes of USC, Dayton and Illinois.
   Rose Crist leads Nova with 2.91 kills per set, and Preseason All-BIG EAST selection Riley Homer (2.65 kps.) leads the Wildcats 130 kills.
   Belle Morgan (6.02 aps.) and Andrea Campos (3.73 aps.) have both seen time at setter, and Elizabeth Feczko (2.92 dps.) and Taryn Whittingham (2.86 dps.) top the club in digs.
   As a team, Villanova averages 10.86 kills, 1.44 aces, 13.16 digs and 2.02 blocks per set on .183 hitting.
Creighton Coaches
Creighton is coached by Kirsten Bernthal Booth (Truman State, 1997), who owns a 422-182 record in her 20th season with the Bluejays. She's led Creighton to eight straight BIG EAST titles (2014-21), 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 11 seasons (including 2022), 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 is assisted by Angie Oxley Behrens, Brian Rosen and Elise Fulcher.
Series History vs. Georgetown
Creighton is 16-0 all-time against Georgetown, dropping just seven sets in those contests.
   In 2015, Creighton lost the first two sets before ultimately saving two match points in a 3-2 road victory. In 2017 Creighton trailed 2-1 in the match before pulling out a 15-13 win in the fifth set after it trailed in the last set by scores of 5-0 and 13-12.
   Kirsten Bernthal Booth is 16-0 against Georgetown and 2-0 against David Heller.
Series History vs. Villanova
Creighton is 16-3 all-time vs. Villanova, including conference tournament wins in 2015, 2017 and 2018. CU is 10-0 in Omaha against the Wildcats, and won the last 14 sets played vs. VU at D.J. Sokol Arena.
   Kirsten Bernthal Booth is 16-3 all-time against Villanova and coach Josh Steinbach.
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 144-10 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 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 Bluejays have had a losing record on five occasions and owns a combined .363 (53-93) winning percentage during league contests.
   In conference home openers, Creighton is 23-5 overall and 17-2 under Booth, with 11 straight wins.
   In league road openers, Creighton is 19-9 overall and 16-3 under Booth, with eight straight wins.
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. All but one 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
Home Sweet Home
Creighton enters its 10th 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 2018, Bluejay fifth-year senior Jaela Zimmerman is 35-1 in home matches against BIG EAST teams, and 105-18 in sets played.
BIG EAST Preseason Poll
Creighton Volleyball has been picked to win the BIG EAST in a preseason poll of league coaches.
   Creighton earned 9-of-11 first place votes and 99 of a possible 100 points. That was just ahead of Marquette's 90 points and the other two votes for first place.
   DePaul (72) was picked third, just ahead of UConn (71) and St. John's (66). Rounding out the bottom half of the poll were Villanova (54), Butler (47), Xavier (42), Georgetown (25), Providence (25) and Seton Hall (14).
   Creighton also had three women among the 12 members on the BIG EAST's preseason all-conference team in Jaela Zimmerman and Kendra Wait as well as unanimous selection Norah Sis. Sis was also tabbed the BIG EAST's Preseason Player of the Year.
   Creighton has finished in the spot predicted of it or better in the preseason poll in 17 of 19 years under Kirsten Bernthal 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   1st   - -
2022   1st   ???   ???
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 (thru 9/19)
           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 235Â Â Â 63
Marquette (8)Â Â Â 120Â Â Â 27Â Â Â 218Â Â Â 70
Xavier   84   64   136   132
Butler   81   69   148   128
Villanova (1)Â Â Â 77Â Â Â 73Â Â Â 148Â Â Â 123
St. John's (1)Â Â Â 71Â Â Â 79Â Â Â 163Â Â Â 127
Seton Hall (1)Â Â Â 66Â Â Â 83Â Â Â 138Â Â Â 143
DePaul   40   110   104   160
Georgetown   33   109   84   170
Providence*Â Â Â 22Â Â Â 112Â Â Â 89Â Â Â 152
Connecticut#Â Â Â 17Â Â Â 9Â Â Â 34Â Â Â 23
*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.
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
Whitten Honored by BIG EAST
Creighton Volleyball's Allison Whitten has been named BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Week.
   Whitten finished tied for second in the BIG EAST with 5.00 digs per set last week, surpassing a career milestone in the process. The senior had 21 digs in a four-set win over Kansas State on Saturday, adding three assists and a service ace. She followed that with 24 digs and seven assists in a five-set setback at RV Rice on Sunday.
   Both of Whitten's digs totals ranked among the top-five in the BIG EAST last week, with the 21 ranking second in four-set matches and 24 listing fourth in five-set matches.
   Whitten surpassed the 2,000 career dig mark early in the fifth set against the Owls, and leads Creighton with 179 digs this season.
   In addition to Whitten's recognition, sophomore setter Kendra Wait was listed on the league's weekly Honor Roll after averaging 10.78 assists, 4.78 digs, 1.56 kills and 0.22 aces per set while hitting .462 in a pair of matches at the Rice Adidas Invitational II.
Family Matters
Creighton junior Megan Skovsende is a cousin of Georgetown head coach David Heller.
All That Jazz
Jazz Schmidt had just 25 kills in Creighton's first 10 matches of the season before she erupted for a season-high 17 kills on Sept. 18 at Rice.
   Schmidt's 17 kills were the most by a left-handed Bluejay since Megan Bober owned 19 kills at Southern Illinois on Oct. 21, 2011.
Nationally Speaking
Creighton ranks fifth in the nation with 17.57 digs per set and fourth in the country with 38.30 attacks per set. In those same categories last season, Creighton was eighth in digs per set and 22nd in attacks per set.
Wait Making History
Just nine days after she had 59 assists and 36 digs against Florida State, Kendra Wait had 56 assists and 24 digs on Sept. 18 at Rice.
   Wait is the first Bluejay with a match of at least 50 assists and 20 digs in a match since Korie Lebeda in 2006, and first Bluejay since Kailey Reyes (in 1999) to post multiple matches of at least 50 assists and 20 digs in the same season.
   No Creighton player has ever done it three times in the same season.
50 Assists, 20 Digs In A Match
A   D   Name   Opp.   Date
51   21   Melissa Weisensee   at Wichita State (5s)   9/14/96
53   24   Melissa Weisensee   at Indiana State (5s)   10/18/96
65   22   Melissa Weisensee   at Evansville (5s)   11/8/97
55   28   Kailey Reyes   Evansville (5s)   9/11/99
65   24   Kailey Reyes   Illinois State (4s)   9/24/99
64   23   Kailey Reyes   at Evansville (5s)   11/4/00
54   22   Brittany Coleman   at Illinois State (4s)   10/18/03
62   21   Brittany Coleman   at So. Illinois (4s)   10/29/04
71   20   Korie Lebeda   at Evansville (5s)   11/18/06
59   36   Kendra Wait   vs. Florida State (5s)   9/9/22
56   24   Kendra Wait   at Rice (5s)   9/18/22
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).
X Marks The Spot
Creighton owns 21 consecutive wins over Xavier, its best streak over any foe ever. CU's 16-match win streak over Georgetown is tied for fifth-best.
   Three of CU's first four league matches come against Georgetown, Xavier and Butler.
Most Consecutive Match Wins Over One Team
   Wins   Opponent   Dates
   21   Xavier   2013-Present
   19   Southern Illinois   2003-11
   19   DePaul   2013-Present
   17   Butler   2013-Present
   16   Indiana State   2005-Present
   16   Georgetown   2013-Present
Give Me Five
Four of Creighton's last five matches have gone five sets, and the one that didn't went four sets.
   Creighton played three matches that went five sets in a span of four days from Sept. 7-10, losing to No. 2 Nebraska on Sept. 7 before bouncing back to beat Florida State (Sept. 9) and Omaha on Saturday (Sept. 10).
   CU then played five sets against Rice last Sunday (Sept. 18)..
   It was the first time that Creighton has played three consecutive matches to go five sets since January 29-Feb. 5, when CU split back-to-back five set reverse sweeps against South Dakota before topping No. 25 Marquette.
   Creighton's most memorable stretch of five-set matches came during the winter of 2016, when the Jays defeated Northern Iowa, No. 4 Kansas and No. 17 Michigan in succession to reach the program's first Elite Eight. That remains the only time that CU has ever won three straight five set matches.
Sis Swings Away
Norah Sis obliterated Creighton's school-record of 77 attack attempts in a match (held by Jaali Winters) when she had 93 swings in CU's 3-2 win vs. Florida State on Sept. 9.
   Sis' 93 attacks are the most in the nation by a player this season.
More From Sept. 9
Creighton's 129 digs vs. Florida State were two shy of its school record and second-most in the nation this year for a single match. CU's only match with more was 131 vs. Illinois State on Oct. 13, 2000.
   Creighton's 254 attack attempts rank as its second-most in program history. The only match with more came Oct. 14, 2000 vs. Indiana State (296).
   Norah Sis' 28 kills vs. Florida State are tied for fourth-most in program history, and four away from Michelle Prorock's school record set in 1996.
Killing It
Creighton had 78 kills vs. Florida State, then added 70 more kills vs. Omaha a day later.
   It's the first time since November of 2006 that Creighton has had consecutive matches of 70 or more kills, though that occurred when sets were played to 30 points.
   After 55 kills vs. Kansas State on Sept. 17th, the Bluejays added 76 more at Rice on Sept. 18th.
   Creighton has not had 70 or more kills in three straight matches since November of 2003, which was Kirsten Bernthal Booth's first season at CU.
Whitten Surpasses 2,000 Digs
Creighton libero Allison Whitten surpassed 2,000 career digs on Sept. 18 at Rice, as she had 24 digs on the afternoon.
   The grad transfer had 1,823 digs in four seasons at Morehead State and leads CU with 179 digs this season.
   Whitten has 20 or more digs in three of her last four matches and nine or more digs in all 11 contests this fall.
   By comparison, the top two women in digs at Creighton (only) are Brittany Witt (2,079 from 2016-19) and Kate Elman (2,054 from 2012-15).
   Last year's Bluejay libero, Abby Bottomley, finished her career seventh in NCAA history with 2,711 career digs, though the first 2,158 digs came while at High Point from 2017-20.
  Â
Double-Doubles On the Triple
Kendra Wait and Norah Sis both have had a double-double in each of Creighton's last five matches, and Keeley Davis has a double-double in four of those five contests.
   With a team-leading eight double-doubles this season, Wait owns 25 double-doubles in 46 career contests.
   Below is a list of Creighton women to record five or more consecutive double-doubles.
Consecutive Matches, Double-Double
   8   Melissa Walsh, Oct. 24-Nov. 17, 2000
   8   Michelle Sicner, Sept. 21-Oct. 20, 2013
   7   Korie Lebeda, Nov. 4-24, 2006
   7   Kailey Reyes, Oct. 23-Nov. 18, 1999
   7   Megan Bober, Oct. 26-Nov. 16, 2012
   6   Abby Baumann, Oct. 13-Nov. 4, 2006
   6   Korie Lebeda, Sept. 6-Oct. 3, 2008
   6   Megan Bober, Sept. 17-Oct. 7, 2011
   6   Jaali Winters, Nov. 12-Dec. 1, 2017
   6   Norah Sis, Sept. 17-Oct. 1, 2021
   5   Melissa Weisensee, Sept. 17-23, 1995
   5   Melissa Weisensee, Aug. 29-Sept. 5, 1997
   5   Kailey Reyes, Oct. 3-17, 1998
   5   Melissa Walsh, Sept. 4-14, 1999
   5   Melissa Walsh, Oct. 22-Nov. 6, 1999
   5   Melanie Keolanui, Oct. 28-Nov. 11, 2000
   5   Kailey Reyes, Oct. 27-Nov. 10, 2000
   5   Korie Lebeda, Sept. 1-9, 2006
   5   Michelle Sicner, Nov. 22-Dec. 6, 2013
   5   Jaali Winters, Nov. 7-27, 2015
   5   Kendra Wait, Sept. 7, 2022 - Present
   5   Norah Sis, Sept. 7, 2022 - Present
Wait's Defense Recognized By BIG EAST
Kendra Wait was named BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Week on Sept. 12th after posting double-doubles in all three matches in her week.
   Wait averaged 10.87 assists, 4.40 digs, 0.80 blocks and 0.47 kills per set in a 2-1 week that featured three different five set matches.
    Wait opened her week with 45 assists, 18 digs and an ace in a 3-2 loss to No. 2 Nebraska. It was the first two sets lost by the Cornhuskers all season, and CU hit .202 against an NU team that led the team in defensive hitting percentage.
    In Friday's 3-2 win over a 7-1 Florida State team, Wait's career-highs with 59 assists and 36 digs made her the first Bluejay in history with at least 50 assists and 30 digs in the same match. The 36 digs were two shy of CU's school-record and are tied for the most by any player in the BIG EAST this season.
    In Saturday's 3-2 win vs. Omaha, Wait had 58 assists, 12 digs and six blocks as Creighton hit .293.
    Behind the setting efforts of Wait, Creighton posted back-to-back matches with 70 or more kills for the first time since November of 2006, when sets were played to 30 points.
   It was the second time that Wait has been named BIG EAST Defensive Player of the Week, having previously been honored on Nov. 1, 2021.
Attendance Update
Creighton enters the week ranked eighth nationally in total home attendance (20,803) and fourth in fans per home match (5,201).
   Creighton has led the BIG EAST in average home attendance in every non-COVID year since joining the league.
Historically Speaking
No. 17 Creighton hosted 15,797 fans on Sept. 7 against No. 2 Nebraska, setting a record for the largest regular-season volleyball-only crowd in NCAA history. The mark stood for all of nine days before Wisconsin hosted 16,833 fans for a match vs. Florida.
   Here's a look at the top volleyball-only regular-season crowds in NCAA history. Of note, 13 of the top 14 figures of 11,000 or more have been in the state of Nebraska.
Largest Regular-Season Volleyball-Only Crowds in NCAA History
   Att.   Opponent, Result   Date   Site
   16,833   Florida def. Wisconsin   9/16/22   Madison, WI
   15,797   Nebraska def. Creighton, 3-2   9/7/22   Omaha, NE
   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   09/08/21   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
   10,576   Penn St. def. Hawai'i, 3-0   8/27/05   Omaha, NE
      Nebraska def. Stanford, 3-0
   10,570   Purdue def. Wisconsin, 3-2   10/17/08   W. Lafayette, IN
Sis Races Past 500
Sophomore Norah Sis reached 500 career kills in the Sept. 3 match vs. #16 Kentucky. It came in her 40th career match, and 132nd career set.
   The only other players in CU history to reach 500 kills in fewer matches are Jaali Winters and Melissa Walsh, both of whom graduated with the CU career record for kills. Winters reached 500 kills in 124 sets, while Walsh did so in 133 sets.
Creighton's Quickest Players To 500 Kills (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Jaali Winters   34   12/04/15   vs. Coastal Carolina
Melissa Walsh   37   09/25/99   Indiana State
Norah Sis   40   09/03/22   #16 Kentucky
JoDe Cieloha   43   10/15/95   at Indiana State
Keeley Davis   43   03/28/21   Xavier
Amanda Cvejdlik   44   10/13/06   at Wichita State
Sis Passes 600, too
Norah Sis raced past 600 career kills when she did so in her 45th career match (and 157th set) on Sept. 17 vs. Kansas State.
   The sensational sophomore became the third-fastest Bluejay in program history to reach the milestone, trailing only Jaali Winters and Melissa Walsh.
   The three other women that currently lead that list, Winters, Walsh and Leah Ratzlaff, are the top three women who rank atop on Creighton's all-time career kills list. Winters got there in 150 sets and Walsh needed 153 sets.
Creighton's Quickest Players To 600 Kills (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Jaali Winters   41   09/03/16   at USC
Melissa Walsh   42   10/09/99   at Wichita State
Norah Sis   45   09/17/22   vs. Kansas State
Leah Ratzlaff   52   11/14/03   Illinois State
JoDe Cieloha   53   08/30/96   Murray State
Amanda Cvejdlik   53   11/17/06   at Southern Illinois
Top 25 History
Creighton is 153-38 all-time when playing as a ranked team, and also 16-22 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, 37 of Creighton's 67 losses have come against ranked teams. In that same period, Creighton is 245-30 against unranked teams. Creighton has won all but two of its past 83 home matches over unranked teams and all but nine of its last 103 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 eight seasons (2015-22). That includes a record-tying four top-25 victories in 2019.
   Eleven of Creighton's top 25 wins all-time have come against either Marquette (6) or Kentucky (5).
   The highest ranked teams that Creighton has ever beaten at any site were No. 3 Washington (8/26/17 in Seattle) and No. 3 Kentucky (9/4/21 in Lexington). CU's highest-ranked opponent it has defeated at home was a 3-1 win over then-No. 9 Marquette on Nov. 22, 2019.
MVP Sis Also Picks Up BIG EAST Honor
In addition to being named MVP of the Rumble in the Rockies, Norah Sis also brought home BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Week accolades on Aug. 29th.
   The Preseason BIG EAST Player of the Year averaged 5.23 points, 4.91 kills, 2.27 digs and 0.36 blocks per set on .250 hitting.
   The Papillion, Neb., product started her season with near-identical double-doubles on Friday in wins over Iowa State (17 kills, 10 digs, 1 assist) and Wichita State (15 kills, 10 digs, 1 block). The reigning VolleyballMag.com National Freshman of the Year then slammed 22 kills while adding five digs, three blocks and an ace in a 3-1 win at Wyoming to clinch the tournament title. Her 25.0 points against the Cowgirls were a career-best effort and helped her earned Tournament MVP honors for the second time in her young career.
   Sis was honored as BIG EAST Freshman of the Week six times last season, when she was named BIG EAST Freshman of the Year, but this is her first BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Week accolade.
Hall Call
Megan (Bober) Varasteh has been announced as part of the 2022 class for the Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame, McCormick Endowed Athletic Director Marcus Blossom announced on Friday, August 26th.
   Varasteh is part of the 54th class of inductees (along with Renae Sinkler-O'Gorman and Carol Ketcham) and will give the Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame 94 inductees, plus the 1991 Creighton Baseball Team. The Athletics Hall of Fame started in 1968 with the induction of Bluejay great Bob Gibson.
   Varasteh starred as a member of the Creighton Volleyball program from 2008-12, becoming the program's first player in earn AVCA All-America honors multiple times. She became the volleyball program's first woman named Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year as well as MVC Tournament MVP, helping the Bluejays to their first regular-season and conference tournament titles and a then-record 29 victories. She closed her career with a school-record 15 triple-doubles (second in MVC history) and as the only player in league history with at least 4,000 assists, 1,000 digs, 800 kills and 400 blocks.
   In addition to being named Creighton's Female Athlete of the Year, she was also recognized as the Carl M. Reinert, S.J., Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year, repeated her spot on the MVC Scholar-Athlete First Team and was named a CoSIDA Academic All-American Second Team selection as a senior.
    The 2022 Creighton Athletics Hall of Fame banquet will be held on Saturday, October 15 at Hilton Omaha.
Poll Road Ahead
Creighton has been ranked in each of the last 19 AVCA Top 25 polls. With little movement from week-to-week, however, CU is one of 19 teams to be ranked each of those polls, a group that includes Baylor, BYU, Creighton, Florida, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Louisville, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio State, Oregon, Penn State, Pitt, Purdue, Stanford, Texas, Washington, Western Kentucky and Wisconsin.
   Creighton has been ranked in all but six of the past 88 weeks the AVCA has put out a Top 25 poll.
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 8-12 against ranked non-conference foes over the last five seasons after going 2-43 all-time vs. ranked teams in regular-season non-conference matches.
   Creighton owned 12 non-conference wins last 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
2022Â Â Â 8-3Â Â Â 1-2Â Â Â TBD
Schmitt A Ki Player
Kiana Schmitt entered the 2022 season with three career matches (of 60 played) with 10 or more kills, but the senior already has six matches in double-figures this fall.
   Schmitt had 10 kills on Aug. 26 vs. Wichita State, then tied her career-high with 12 kills one night later win at Wyoming. She then had 10 kills vs. No. 2 Nebraska on Sept. 7, 12 kills vs. Florida State and 11 more against Omaha. Schmitt had exactly a dozen kills for the fifth time in her career on Sept. 18th at Rice.
   Creighton is 27-4 all-time when Schmitt has six or more kills.
Preseason Ranking
Creighton was ranked 18th in the AVCA preseason poll. It's the eighth time in the past 10 years that the Jays have been ranked in the preseason.
   The No. 18 slotting was tied for the fourth-best preseason ranking in program history.
   Over the previous 14 seasons, 255-of-350 teams (72.9 percent) of teams have been in both the preseason and final polls, and since 2008 318-of-350 teams (90.9 percent) in the preseason top-25 polls would go on to reach the NCAA Tournament.
   This year marks the 11th straight season that CU has been ranked at least one week, extending a program record.
   Year   Preseason Rank   Final W-L   Final Rank
   2013   25th   23-9   NR
   2014   23rd   25-9   NR
   2016   18th   27-9   9th
   2017   9th   26-7   16th
   2018   13th   29-5   13th
   2019   18th   25-6   16th
   2020   16th   12-4   NR
   2022   18th   TBD   TBD
Some Fab Freshmen
Including Sky McCune on Aug. 26 vs. Iowa State, Creighton has started 15 different true freshmen in its season opener since 2009, and 19 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), Norah Sis (2021) and Sky McCune (2022), 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 Kostelac (2019) and Mahina Pua'a (2020) in season-openers.
   Ten of those women (Sis, Wait, 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, Davis was BIG EAST Freshman of the Year in 2019 and Sis recognized as BIG EAST Freshman of the Year in 2022.
   Last 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. The 2012 and 2021 teams are the two winningest single-season teams in program history.
Believe The Hype
Creighton's recruiting class of freshmen Morgan Colangelo, Ava Martin, Sky McCune and Ann Marie Remmes was recognized as the nation's No. 24 class by PrepVolleyball.
   Martin was listed as the nation's No. 47 recruit, while McCune was tabbed 52nd-best. Creighton now owns eight players on its 2022 roster who were Top 100 recruits.
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 Sky 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   (Colangelo, Martin, McCune, Remmes)
Production Returns
Creighton returns 11-of-16 letterwinners to the court from last season, including four starters
   From last year's team, only Abby Bottomley, Naomi Hickman, Eve Magill, Ally Van Eekeren, Annika Welty are not back.
   All told, of the seven categories listed below, Creighton returns 511.8 of a possible 700% back (73.1 percent).
   Below is a breakdown of the production that is back:
Stat   Returners   Departures
Assists   1,331 (87.4%)   192 (12.6%)
Kills   1,307 (80.2%)   323 (19.8%)
Points   1,627.0 (75.6%)   526.0 (24.4%)
Matches Started   154 (73.3%)   56 (26.7%)
Digs   1,460 (70.6%)   607 (29.4%)
Aces   128 (66.7%)   64 (33.3%)
Blocks   192 (58.0%)   139.0 (42.0%)
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
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 (2012-21). 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.
Dealing Up Aces
Keeley Davis had six aces on the opening weekend of the season, becoming the eighth player in CU history to reach century mark for her career.
   Davis reached 100 career aces in her 82nd career contest, which ranks third-fastest in Bluejay history.
   It's also worth noting that three of Davis' teammates entered the year having owned more than 100 career aces, though they've done so at other schools. Bethany Clapp owned 103 aces in 97 matches at Incarnate Word, Jazz Schmidt had 103 aces in 96 matches at Division II Palm Beach Atlantic and Allison Whitten had 103 aces in 115 contests at Morehead State.
Service Aces, Career
      Name   Sets   No.   Years
   1.   Molly Moran   341   145   1998-01
   2.   Melissa Weisensee   411   125   1994-97
   3.   Brittany Witt   471   122   2016-19
   4.   Keeley Davis   324   116   2019-Pr.
   5.   JoDe Cieloha   398   113   1994-97
   6.   Kate Elman   464   105   2012-15
   7.   Shelly Kapler   388   104   1996-99
   8.   Jaali Winters   494   101   2015-18
   9.   Madelyn Cole   225   93   2018-19
   10.   Carolyn Decker   300   89   2004-08
Creighton's Quickest Players To 100 Aces (Career)
Name   MP   Date   Opponent
Molly Moran   73   08/31/01   vs. DePaul
Melissa Weisensee   77   11/01/96   Southern Illinois
Keeley Davis   82   08/26/22   vs. Wichita St.
JoDe Cieloha   85   09/06/97   at UNLV
Shelly Kapler   95   10/15/99   Bradley
Brittany Witt   107   10/05/19   Seton Hall
Kate Elman   120   11/15/15   Butler
Jaali Winters   135   11/17/18   Providence
Set 1 Result A Strong Indicator
Creighton is 356-33 (.915) overall under Kirsten Bernthal Booth when it wins set one. In that same time span, CU is just 66-149 (.307) 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 126-4 in its last 130 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 and on Sept. 3, 2022 to No. 16 Kentucky.
   Creighton has gone 88-3 in its last 91 matches at all sites when winning the first set, compared to a 9-15 record in that same span when dropping the opener.
   Creighton has gone 129-2 in its last 131 matches against unranked foes when winning the opening set.
2-0 Better Than 0-2
Creighton is 350-11 (.970) all-time when leading a match 2-0, including a 293-5 mark (.983) under Kirsten Bernthal Booth. CU is 219-3 when up 2-0 dating to September of 2009, and 111-1 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 15-203 (.069) all-time when trailing a match 0-2, and 13-104 (.111) 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
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 422-3 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
Taking The Fifth
Creighton is 64-35 in five-set matches under Kirsten Bernthal Booth. 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 17 of its last 24 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, at South Dakota in the 2020 campaign and at Omaha in 2022.
   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
2022Â Â Â 2-2Â Â Â 8-3
Total   79-63   515-334
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
Greg McDermott   Men's Basketball   7
Brent Vigness   Softball   7
Elmar Bolowich   Men's Soccer   6
Against NCAA Tournament Qualifiers
Last season Creighton played four matches against 2020 NCAA Tournament qualifiers, going 3-1 against such teams.
   This year's team owns eight matches (Iowa State, Kentucky, Nebraska, Florida State, Kansas State, Rice and Marquette) scheduled against teams that made the 2021 NCAA Tournament, and CU is 3-3 against those foes to date.
   After going 3-35 against teams coming off NCAA Tournament bids prior to Kirsten Bernthal Booth's arrival, the Jays are 92-104 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
2022Â Â Â 3-3 so far
TOTALÂ Â Â 95-139
TOTAL Under Booth   92-104
Marian Pipeline
This is the 20th straight season that Creighton Volleyball had at least one product of Omaha Marian High School on the roster, as senior Emily Bressman keeps the streak alive.
   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.
2022: Emily Bressman
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
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 422 victories on the Bluejay sideline to rank fifth in school history across all sports.
Coach, Sport   Victories (thru 9/22)
Brent Vigness, Softball   819
Ed Servais, Baseball   618*
Mary Higgins, Softball   564
Tom Lilly, Men's & Women's Tennis   498*
Kirsten Bernthal Booth, Volleyball   422*
Jim Flanery, Women's Basketball   387*
Ed Hubbs, Men's & Women's Tennis   347
Dana Altman, Men's Basketball   327
*still active coaching at Creighton
Last Season Summary
Creighton went 31-4 last season, won an eighth straight BIG EAST regular-season title and reached the Second Round while playing in its 10th consecutive NCAA Tournament.
   Norah Sis was named a Third Team All-American by the AVCA and the National Freshman of the Year by VolleyballMag.com. Also named Honorable Mention All-American were Jaela Zimmerman and Kendra Wait.
   CU's 31 victories were a school-record and included five tournament titles.
Players Mentioned
Creighton Media Availability Volleyball Sept. 17
Wednesday, September 17
#18 Creighton Volleyball vs. #1 Nebraska Highlights - 9/16/25
Wednesday, September 17
Creighton Volleyball vs. Nebraska Press Conference - 9/16/25
Monday, September 15
Creighton Volleyball Highlights vs. UNI - 9/14/25
Sunday, September 14