HomeVolleyballEvery Back-to-Back Women's NCAA Volleyball Champion of the Last Two Decades

Every Back-to-Back Women’s NCAA Volleyball Champion of the Last Two Decades


Texas A&M superstar Logan Lednicky didn’t even wait for the roar to peak when the ball hit the floor in last season’s NCAA Women’s Volleyball Championship game at the T-Mobile Center. She immediately grabbed teammate Ava Underwood, lifted her clean off the court, and somewhere in the cacophony of maroon and white that’s spilled across the floor in Kansas City, the Aggies’ 128 years of volleyball history without a national championship cease to exist.

Texas A&M’s Maiden Crown

Kentucky never found an answer. Three sets, three clinical statements — 26-24, 25-15, 25-18 — and the Aggies, a No. 3 seed who had just defeated three No. 1 seeds across their tournament run, are national champions for the first time in history. Just reaching the quarterfinals for the first time in a quarter of a century was, in itself, an achievement. Then came a first-ever semifinal, a first-ever final, and ultimately, a maiden championship.

Jamie Morrison stood courtside — “still speechless,” he would tell reporters moments later — becoming only the third coach in NCAA history to win a national volleyball title in his first three years as a head coach. Now, though, the Texas A&M head coach has arguably an even more difficult task ahead of him: Defending the crown. And online betting sites will be acutely aware of the second mountain that lies in wait.

Last season, online crypto betting sites made the Aggies the +450 longshot when it came to the Final Four, but they would upset the odds to claim the crown. Next season, they will likely be unfancied once again. But as these four teams have proven across the last two decades, defending the title isn’t impossible.

Texas: The Sweep Dynasty

Logan Eggleston spent four years grinding for a Texas program that was supposed to win national championships and kept arriving at the doorstep without finishing the job.  In December 2022, she decided to kick the door down herself.

Nineteen kills. AVCA National Player of the Year. Tournament Most Outstanding Player. The Longhorns swept Louisville 25-22, 25-14, 26-24, and Eggleston — with setter Saige Ka’aha’aina-Torres feeding her like they shared a private language and libero Zoe Fleck keeping everything alive behind them — was simply unchallengeable. Jerritt Elliott’s program, dormant since 2012, had finally arrived back at the summit.

One year later, they were even better. Texas returned as a No. 5 seed to face top-ranked Nebraska in Tampa, and what followed in front of thousands of fans — the largest crowd ever to attend an indoor volleyball match — was one of the most jaw-dropping performances in NCAA championship history.

Asjia O’Neal served. And served. And served again. Four consecutive aces in the second set that broke Nebraska’s collective belief before the Huskers could exhale.  Twelve service aces across the entire match, a championship record that underlined something Elliott understood about this program: the depth ran so far down the roster that even with Eggleston gone and a freshman setter in Ella Swindle stepping into the most pressurized position on court, Texas never flinched.  Final scores: 25-22, 25-14, 25-11. The first program in NCAA history to win back-to-back titles via sweep.

Stanford: The Plummer Era

Was the Kathryn Plummer-era Stanford dynasty the most complete of the modern era? Here’s the evidence.

The 2018 final against Nebraska in Minneapolis was five sets of chaos — 28-26, 22-25, 25-16, 15-25, 15-12 — with Stanford claiming the program’s record eighth title on a Meghan McClure backrow kill that sent the Cardinal bench into delirium. Kevin Hambly’s team had survived every momentum swing, every Nebraska run, every moment when it felt like the match could be stolen away. Setter Jenna Gray orchestrated throughout with the composure of someone twice her age, the perfect conductor for an offence built to endure.

Twelve months later, Plummer closed her college career with 22 kills against Wisconsin in a 25-16, 25-17, 25-20 sweep that announced something about how dynasties mature. The chaos of 2018 had been replaced by command. The thriller had given way to dominance. Plummer — a two-time AVCA Player of the Year, arguably the most complete outside hitter in college volleyball history — was everywhere in that final, the kind of performance that makes a sell-out arena feel like it’s watching history in real time. A ninth title for Stanford. Third in four years.

Penn State: Dynasty Within a Dynasty

No. 2 seed Penn State walked into Seattle in 2013 with a program that shouldn’t have had a dynasty — the stars from previous cycles were gone; the core was new — but Micha Hancock made that irrelevant. Forty-eight assists in the championship final against Wisconsin. Read that number the way it deserves to be read: 48 assists across four sets. Ariel Scott led with 21 kills, Megan Courtney added 20, and Dominique Gonzalez added 20 more. Russ Rose’s program won 34 of 36 matches that season. Sixth title in school history claimed with aplomb.

The 2014 run as a No. 5 seed was even more audacious. Penn State beat top-ranked Stanford in the national semifinals — a program beating the machine that had just beaten everyone else — and swept BYU 25-21, 26-24, 25-14 in Oklahoma City for a record seventh national championship. Hancock won the AVCA National Player of the Year. Back-to-back. Rose’s genius wasn’t any single player — it was a culture so deeply encoded into the program’s DNA that it produced identical results with entirely different personnel.

The Gold Standard

109 consecutive match wins. That’s what those same Nittany Lions amassed between 2007 and 2010. No dynasty in the history of NCAA women’s volleyball comes anywhere close to Penn State’s famed four-peat, once again under Rose.

They started their run in Sacramento in 2007 with a five-set thriller over Stanford and then became something the sport had never seen and hasn’t seen since — going 38-0 in 2008, then 38-0 again in 2009. Two consecutive perfect seasons. One hundred and nine straight match wins. One hundred and eleven consecutive set victories. A cumulative four-year record of 142-7.  The very definition of championship culture operating without ego or compromise.

Outside hitter Megan Hodge was the dynasty’s dominant force, but this wasn’t a one-player program. Setter Alisha Glass, a two-time All-American, built the offence from a position of quiet authority; Blair Brown provided relentless firepower. And when those players graduated, Rose reloaded without ever rebuilding — the same culture, the same standard, the same result. How? That’s the question opposing coaches spent four years trying to answer. None of them could.