Wisconsin
Northwestern volleyball faces powerhouses amid Nollan rebuild
Northwestern coach Tim Nollan is no stranger to a rebuild. Leading a program that hasn’t made an NCAA tournament appearance since 2010, Nollan stands on the primary steps of a daunting upward climb.
During his tenure at Grand Canyon, the Antelopes picked up just 25 victories from 2016 to 2018. This span included an 8-36 record in WAC play. Then, Nollan ushered a remarkable turnaround in his fourth season at the helm, notching 24 wins and a 13-3 WAC resume in 2019.
Regardless of conference prestige or fanfare, Nollan said sustained progress boils down to execution and focus on the fundamentals.
“The level is the level,” Nollan said. “It is what it is. Whether you’re in a mid-major, you’re in the Big Ten, you have to execute cleanly on both sides of the ball.”
Much like Nollan’s prior purple program out west, the Wildcats (3-7, 1-1 Big Ten) are in the early stages of a multi-year rebuilding process.
On-court success and wins won’t stack easily, Nollan said, especially against perennial powerhouses that have consistently occupied the conference’s upper echelon. It’s a conference in which NU hasn’t escaped with a winning record in 35 years.
“The Big Ten is the best conference in the history of women’s volleyball this year,” Nollan said. “It’s incredible to be a part of the Big Ten right now.”
With No. 7 Wisconsin venturing into Evanston Saturday night, Nollan’s squad faced an especially tall task against a foe it hasn’t beaten since 2012.
Even with the momentum of a 3-2 conference-opening win against Maryland on Sept. 26, the ’Cats were grappling with a machine they hadn’t taken a set from in three seasons. Graduate student setter Alexa Rousseau said the ’Cats have focused on consistent improvement since the season began in August.
“Our group has talked a lot about trying to maintain our good — it doesn’t have to be perfect all the time — but when we’re playing good or great volleyball, just trying to prolong that for as long as we can,” Rousseau said. “We’re progressively trying to play our best volleyball throughout the entire game.”
Before a whiteout Welsh-Ryan Arena crowd, the Badgers (7-4, 1-1 Big Ten) made quick work of the hosts in a 3-0 victory. NU held leads on just two occasions: the first and third set’s opening points.
For Nollan, a powerhouse like Wisconsin shows his team the level of play it should strive to emulate.
“Wisconsin was a bit more polished in some of their stuff they did offensively and defensively,” Nollan said. “As I told the team in the locker room, that’s what we have to do to get into those top four or five spots in the conference. We have to be able to achieve that level of execution.”
After a two-month span without a head coach last year, the 2024 edition of the ’Cats was forged largely through work in the transfer portal. A bevy of players have stepped into elevated roles, including Rousseau, a setting specialist whom NU has leaned on heavily as a hitter.
The graduate student tied for a team-high six kills Saturday night. Junior outside hitter Buse Hazan and sophomore outside hitter Lily Wagner each contributed six kills of their own.
With plenty of newcomers and a new system in place, Nollan said he’s seen significant strides since the ’Cats opened their campaign in Las Vegas.
“We’ve gotten a lot better at understanding our defensive system,” Nollan said. “We’ve gotten ourselves in better positions. Our blockers have made really good strides. … People have grown and flourished in those roles, and (we) obviously want to continue to pour into them and help them grow and thrive even more.”
The grueling conference slate doesn’t relent for NU, which will take on No. 10 Purdue Friday in Welsh-Ryan Arena. The Boilermakers (10-3, 1-1 Big Ten) toppled No. 16 Minnesota 3-2 Saturday night and are one of six Big Ten squads ranked inside the top 25.
“We want to build this program to build and compete for Big Ten championships,” Nollan said. “At the end of the year, I think the Big Ten can send 12 to 13 teams to the NCAA tournament. Our program goal here, certainly we want to be there every single year.”
Email: [email protected]
X: @jakeepste1n
Related Stories:
— Volleyball: Northwestern loses to No. 7 Wisconsin in straight sets
— Volleyball: Northwestern defeats Maryland in Big Ten opener
— Volleyball: Northwestern sweeps Northern Illinois to finish nonconference play
Wisconsin
Slippery roads expected Friday morning across Northeast Wisconsin
(WLUK) – Hazardous weathermaker is expected to impact holiday travel plans Christmas night into Friday morning, with a second round expected on Sunday. The forecast calls for definite icing by Friday morning. A Winter Weather Advisory has been issued for much of Northeast Wisconsin through 9 AM Friday.
Plan for freezing rain (icing) for most locations north and west of the Fox Valley. Areas including the Fox Valley and east can expect to see a mix of freezing rain and rain. Oconto County, Door County, and areas further north will see a mix of snow and sleet at times. Much of the precipitation will clear up by mid-morning Friday when the Winter Weather Advisories expire. However, we cannot rule out the possibility of freezing drizzle Friday afternoon.
No doubt, ice accumulations will take place, especially by Friday morning. Roughly a tenth of an inch of ice accumulations around HWY 29 and north, with a glaze of ice, south. These ice accumulations will likely lead to significant travel delays, including air travel. If you have travel plans Friday, it is best to avoid travel Friday morning. Travel conditions will be better by Friday afternoon, but not completely perfect.
A second weathermaker system is expected Saturday night through Monday. An arctic cold front is expected to sweep through the region Saturday, bringing colder and windy weather conditions, in addition to a wintry mix.
Precipitation will start off with light rain Saturday night, eventually falling as a mix with freezing rain early Sunday morning. Later in the day Sunday, precipitation will start to fall as snow with gusty northwest winds around 30 mph. Even gustier winds are expected by Monday.
The wintry mix Sunday will also lead to poor travel conditions for the region, including icy roadways and blowing and drifting snow.
Stay informed and safe during severe weather. Use our live interactive radar tools with custom overlays and alerts on Fox11online.com and our FOX 11 Weather App. Severe weather notifications on our app can be set to your specific location, even while traveling.
Have a great weather photo or video? We’d love you to share it! Upload it here, via our Chime In page.
Wisconsin
Wisconsin football hires new cornerbacks coach
Wisconsin head coach Luke Fickell made a notable change to his coaching staff this week, hiring Robert Steeples as the new cornerbacks coach and moving Paul Haynes to secondary coach.
Steeples spent the last two seasons as a defensive analyst at Iowa State. He’s been in the coaching ranks since 2016. After a brief NFL career, the former Memphis cornerback took the head coaching role at De Smet Jesuit High School (2016-20). He then jumped to the NFL level in 2021, joining the Minnesota Vikings as an assistant special teams coach. Steeples finally coached cornerbacks at LSU from 2022-23, before the latest move to Iowa State.
The new assistant will look to help improve a Wisconsin secondary corps that ranked No. 63 nationally in pass defense in 2025, allowing 218.3 yards per game. He will likely usher in turnover at his cornerback position, with Geimere Latimer set to enter the transfer portal and Ricardo Hallman likely off to the NFL.
Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes and opinion
Wisconsin
The Athletic predicts who will start for the Badgers at QB in 2026
The Wisconsin Badgers have been seeing quite a few departures into the transfer portal so far, as they head into what will be the most crucial offseason of head coach Luke Fickell’s career.
At the top of the agenda is a quarterback, who will likely start a domino effect on the rest of the additions in the transfer portal. Wisconsin is very likely to take at least one signal-caller in the transfer portal class, and its commitment to an increased financial investment will be tested.
The Badgers need a serious upgrade at the position after sub-standard play derailed the offense for two straight years. But, who will actually want to come to Wisconsin, which has been one of the worst Power 4 offenses under Luke Fickell?
In a recent article, The Athletic’s Manny Navarro predicted the starting quarterback for every Power 4 program in 2026, making transfer portal predictions for all the quarterbacks heading elsewhere.
Who he has starting at Wisconsin is a bit of a surprise: redshirt freshman Carter Smith.
“Smith started the last three games of the season for the Badgers, who went 4-8 in Year 3 under Luke Fickell,” Navarro wrote. “It makes sense that Wisconsin would want an experienced transfer on the roster. But does anyone worth a damn really want to go to Madison right now?”
For what it’s worth, I don’t envision Smith being the team’s starter in 2026, although Wisconsin does want him back to continue furthering his development. But, it does beg the question if the Badgers can actually attract a top transfer in the market.
While Wisconsin says they’ll have more money, there are several other top programs with elite resources that will also need a quarterback. And their offensive infrastructures are much better than what the Badgers have. It would be a disappointment if Wisconsin missed out on a top quarterback, but there is also a reality where that happens because of their issues the last few years.
-
Maine1 week agoElementary-aged student killed in school bus crash in southern Maine
-
Massachusetts1 week agoMIT professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro, a 47-year-old physicist and fusion scientist, shot and killed in his home in Brookline, Mass. | Fortune
-
New Mexico1 week agoFamily clarifies why they believe missing New Mexico man is dead
-
Culture1 week agoTry This Quiz and See How Much You Know About Jane Austen
-
World7 days agoPutin says Russia won’t launch new attacks on other countries ‘if you treat us with respect’
-
Entertainment2 days agoPat Finn, comedy actor known for roles in ‘The Middle’ and ‘Seinfeld,’ dies at 60
-
Minneapolis, MN1 week agoMinneapolis man is third convicted in Coon Rapids triple murder
-
Maine1 week agoFamily in Maine host food pantry for deer | Hand Off