Gators start NCAA Tournament hoping to avoid repeat of last season’s stunning collapse
A year later, they haven’t forgotten the game that got away.
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A year later, they haven’t forgotten the game that got away.
The turmoil is no more. The agony of waiting is a thing of the past. It’s finished.
The Gators volleyball team was awarded the No. 2 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. They will face Alabama State in the first round on Thursday.
The Gators volleyball team was awarded the No. 2 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. They will face Alabama State in the first round on Thursday.
Since being embarrassed by Kentucky on their home floor on Oct. 15, the Gators (25-1, 17-1 SEC) have reeled off 11 consecutive wins, including a revenge victory against the Wildcats in Lexington on Nov. 1.
It didn’t take much for Shainah Joseph to get fired up during the Gators’ final match of the regular season.
Reed Arena fell silent when Rachael Kramer hit the floor with an ankle injury.
Tears, hugs and smiles filled the O’Connell Center during the pregame ceremony as the Gators honored their seniors. Caroline Knop, Lindsey Rogers, Shainah Joseph, Carli Snyder and Rhamat Alhassan were all joined by family members before defeating the Missouri Tigers in four sets, 25-16, 23-25, 26-24, 25-16 .
UF volleyball player Rachael Kramer recorded 16 kills and eight blocks in Florida's 3-1 win against Arkansas on Friday.
Rachael Kramer, 6-foot-8, and Shainah Joseph, 6-foot-1, jumped in unison in front of the net, both hands in the air. Their teammate, freshman Paige Hammons, set her feet in the backcourt, bracing for Pilar Victoria’s attack, should it pass through the outstretched arms of Kramer and Joseph.
In its first home match since Oct. 27, the Florida volleyball team will try to contain an Arkansas offense that had the Gators on their heels for much of their September SEC opener.
In its first home match since Oct. 27, the Florida volleyball team will try to contain an Arkansas offense that had the Gators on their heels for much of their September SEC opener.
Two hours, seventeen minutes and a grueling five sets later, the Gators got the win.
She’s an athlete.
Rhamat Alhassan would not be stopped.
Florida’s volleyball players usually say they take things one match at a time because their only focus is the next opponent.
In UF’s second contest in three days, Florida controlled its match and took home its 18th win of the season on the road against the unranked Mississippi State Bulldogs (9-17, 0-11 SEC), 25-18, 25-10, 25-15.
Shock is all Steve Rogers felt when he heard the news, as he was lying in his hospital bed, recovering from surgery on his ruptured pancreas.
The Gators are beginning to bounce back from their biggest disappointment of the season.
Coach Jim McElwain has been under fire since the beginning of this year’s football season. A 3-3 record for the Gators so far this year, including consecutive home game losses, hasn’t caused the public to look upon McElwain any more favorably. In fact, according to McElwain, he, his family and several Gator football players have been receiving death threats in response to the team’s poor performance lately.