Indiana
State finalists & record-setters: Meet Central Indiana’s top sophomore volleyball players
Plainfield’s Audrey Utterback reads letter from her dad
We had our preseason Super Team bring an item of personal significance. Plainfield’s Audrey Utterback brought a letter written to her by her dad.
IndyStar
The Class of 2028 was heavily involved in a number of deep volleyball state tournament runs this fall, including a pair of state finalists.
Let’s meet the top Indy-area sophomores from the 2025 IHSAA high school volleyball season.
FIRST TEAM
Blaine Adams, Cathedral, OH-OPP
The 5-9 attacker led the Irish with 276 kills. She reached double-digit kills in a dozen matches (14 in a five-set win over Roncalli) and tacked 110 digs and 25 blocks onto her season line.
Charlee Groninger, Plainfield, S
Groninger established herself among the area’s best at her position, piling up 1,249 assists — quadruple her total from a season ago — across 117 sets for the Class 4A state runner-up Quakers. She added 98 kills, 34 aces, 38 total blocks and 244 digs.
Caitlyn Gutt, Fishers, S
The 5-10 sophomore worked in tandem with senior Ava Tester, registering 416 assists with only 16 errors on 1,205 attempts. She also picked up 146 digs, 36 aces and 17 kills. Gutt reached 20 assists in five-set decisions vs. Hamilton Heights and Center Grove, and had 19 in three other outings.
Ryelle Koomler, Franklin Central, OH
The 5-10 attacker led the sectional runner-up Flashes with 382 kills on .226 hitting. She added 222 digs, 39 aces, 11 blocks and a couple aces to her season line. Koomler’s campaign was highlighted by a pair of 22-kill performances, and she had 19 terminations in a five-set loss to Center Grove in early September.
Sophie Orlando, Brownsburg, OPP
The right-side hitter shined in her first full varsity season. 36 of her 60 total blocks were solo efforts and she hit .253 en route to her 248 kills. Orlando, who rounded out her line with 51 digs, set a career-high with 20 kills on .293 hitting in a five-set loss to Roncalli.
Maggie Sliwa, Hamilton Southeastern, S
Sliwa split time running the Royals’ offense with senior Jasmine Daniels, recording 378 assists and 94 digs in 96 sets. The 6-2 setter clocked double-digit assists in 20 matches, including 25 against both Westfield and Center Grove.
Rosanna Spearing, Roncalli, OH
One of the state champion Royals’ top attackers, Spearing finished the year with 262 kills, plus 43 aces, 255 digs, 20 total blocks and 13 assists. The 5-8 rising standout cleared double-digit kills in 12 matches, including 17 vs. Brownsburg in October.
Audrey Utterback, Plainfield, OH
A prolific attacker, the 5-9 outside cleared 1,000 career kills, totaling 606 (.280 hit%) in her second varsity season. She also served 52 aces, blocked 42 shots, racked up 349 digs (591 career) and setting a career-high with 22 assists.
Amaya Zander, Lawrence North, OH
Zander enjoyed a record-setting fall, recording 449 kills (single-season record) on .222 hitting, leaving her with 582 for her career. She had 37 terminations (.301 hit%) in a five-set loss to Hamilton Heights in August, one of five matches with 20-plus kills. Zander recorded 17 aces, 18 blocks, 89 digs and 10 assists across 107 sets.
SECOND TEAM
Karis Barnes, Lawrence Central, OH
Barnes shined on the Bears’ attack, racking up 327 kills (3.4 per set) on .230 hitting. She also set career-highs in aces (87) and digs (244), and matched her previous high with 12 kills. Barnes set her season-high with 20 kills on .224 hitting against Warren Central, one of her eight outings with 15-plus kills.
Caroline Brown, Lebanon, S
Brown recorded a career-high 893 assists in her second season running the Tigers’ offense, with only 14 errors on 2,174 attempts. That highlighted a well-rounded line by the sophomore setter, who also registered 58 aces, 145 digs, 19 blocks and 72 kills.
Alaina Darlage, Triton Central, L-DS
The sophomore libero was excellent in her first full varsity season, averaging 10.8 digs per match (336 total). She also served 56 aces and 246 points, and logged 92 assists. Darlage has 361 career digs entering her junior year.
Harper Drzakowski, Danville, L
Drzakowski accumulated 419 digs, 30 aces and 69 assists in her first full varsity season. She was charged with just 31 reception errors on 407 attempts, and set her season-high with 37 digs in a five-set loss to Hamilton Heights in early September.
Josie Hunt, Eastern Hancock, OH
The 5-7 pin scored 25 kills against Shenandoah, 23 vs. Greenfield-Central and 21 vs. Lapel. Those outings highlighted a strong sophomore campaign, wherein she racked up 375 kills, 195 digs, 51 aces and 15 blocks for the 25-win Royals.
Maddison Judge, Greenwood, MH
The 6-foot sophomore led the Woodmen with 320 kills on an impressive .384 hitting. She also blocked 81 shots, served 19 aces and dug out 61 shots. Judge set her season-high with 20 kills (.375 hit%) vs. Perry Meridian in late September, then eclipsed that mark with 22 (.553 hit%) in a four-set win over Southport in early October.
Adria Jump, Sheridan, S
The multi-sport athlete registered 599 assists to move past 1,200 for her career. She was also the sectional champions’ second-leading attacker with 126 kills on .261 hitting. Jump also recorded 95 aces, 26 blocks (15 solo) and a career-high 363 digs.
Lainey Mendenhall, Sheridan, OH-MB
Mendenhall set career-highs in kills (404), aces (46), digs (264) and assists (32), and notched 30 total blocks (18 solo). She matched her season-high in the sectional championship match vs. Lapel, accumulating 26 kills on .258 hitting (she also logged 20 digs).
Brooke Neale, Westfield, DS
The 5-6 defensive specialist averaged 8.4 digs per match, totaling 235 over 94 sets. She scored a kill for the consecutive season and exceeded her previous high for aces (44) and service points (202). Neale had 23 digs in a five-set win over HSE in the sectional semifinals.
Cecilia Prather, Danville, S
Prather totaled 820 assists over 95 sets in her first varsity season. She cleared 20 assists in all but five matches, with 40-plus in four. Prather set her season-high with 51 assists in a five-set win vs. Franklin, and rounded out her season line with 60 kills, 39 aces, 34 blocks and 251 digs.
Larkin Prosser, Mooresville, S
The second-year starter maintained her progression in year two, improving both her assists total (530) and efficiency (seven in 1,606 attempts). Prosser, who has 941 career assists, tallied 262 digs, 18 blocks, 75 aces and 87 kills across 85 sets played.
Krosley Riggs, Lapel, OH
Riggs clocked 208 kills and 304 digs in her second varsity season, leaving her with 400 kills and 567 digs for her career. She also added 72 aces (223 points), five blocks and 10 assists. Riggs had 34 digs and eight kills in the sectional championship match vs. Sheridan.
THIRD TEAM
Chloe Canada, Tri-West, OPP
Canada tallied 197 kills on .226 hitting and 36 blocks in her first varsity season (she played two sets as a freshman). She added 234 digs, two aces and seven assists. Canada recorded 21 digs at semistate vs. Jasper, and 11 kills on .333 hitting against Plainfield in September.
Myra Finnity, Greenwood Christian, MB
The 6-1 sophomore recorded 84 blocks, 35 of which were solo efforts. She reached seven blocks against Perry Meridian and Scecina, and logged five in both matches vs. 3A’s New Palestine. Finnity rounded out her line with 99 kills on .227 hitting, eight aces, 44 digs and 10 assists for the regional champions.
Evaana Galbreath, Lawrence Central, S-OPP
Galbreath accumulated 571 assists, 198 digs, 52 aces and 12 blocks over 92 sets. She had four matches with 30-plus assists, including a career-high 40 in a four-set win over Speedway in August.
Stella Hamood, Avon, L-DS
Hamood scored 466 digs across 88 sets, averaging 16.6 per match. She posted 30 aces and seven kills, as well, plus 69 assists – three more than her total from 2024. Hamood reached a season-high 31 digs in a four-set loss to Bellmont.
Allie Kizzee, Monrovia, OPP-DS
Kizzee recorded 71 aces and 167 service points across 101 sets. She had seven aces in a three-set sweep of Beech Grove, and has 84 for her career. Kizzee picked up 221 digs, as well.
Mckenna Muncy, Danville, MB
The second-year middle reset her career-high with 231 kills on .351 hitting. She also racked up 49 blocks, 26 digs and eight assists. Muncy had nine matches with 10-plus kills, led by 17 on .400 hitting vs. Terre Haute North.
Malia Norfleet, Lawrence North, MB
The 5-9 middle averaged over a block per match, totaling 47 (15 solo) over 106 sets played. She also registered 145 kills, four aces, 12 digs and three assists. Norfleet had seven blocks in a three-set loss to two-time defending Class A state champion Trinity Lutheran in August.
Lillian Pass, Lutheran, OH-OPP
Pass built upon a strong freshman campaign, recording 277 kills on .209 hitting, 55 aces, 134 digs and eight assists — all career-highs. She completed her line with 24 blocks, two off her total from a year ago.
Kenleigh Raby, Western Boone, S
Raby ran the Stars’ retooled offense at a high-level, averaging 7.4 assists over 84 sets (620 total). She also notched 192 digs, 22 aces, 26 kills and 14 blocks. Raby tallied 45 assists in a five-set win over Frankfort and 40 in a five-set loss to Cascade.
Olivia Reeves, Greenfield-Central, OH-OPP
Reeves will be the Cougars’ top returning attacker next season. She scored 279 kills, second most on the team, as a sophomore, and rounded out her line with 38 aces, 107 digs, eight blocks and eight assists.
Olivia Schiffli, Hamilton Heights, OH
Schiffli shined alongside Macie Smith on the Huskies’ attack, piling up 279 kills in 95 sets. She also recorded 173 digs, 44 aces, 16 blocks and eight assists for the regional champions, and will be a cornerstone for this program entering next season.
Genevieve Schroeder, Greenwood, OH
Schroeder picked up 149 kills, 43 aces, eight blocks and 129 digs in her first full varsity season. She had four matches with 10-plus terminations, led by 12 in a four-set win over Southport. She also tallied 11 kills on .400 hitting in a three-set loss to New Palestine.
Micah Shanklin, Lawrence North, MB
Shanklin led the Wildcats with her 49 blocks, 14 of which were solo efforts. She set her season-high with six blocks against Warren Central and had four against Trinity Lutheran. Shanklin logged seven kills in three matches, and finished the season with 114 terminations (.303 hitting).
Stella Short, Pendleton Heights, L
The second-year libero averaged 6.5 digs per match and 2.2 per set, with 206 over 95 sets. She was among the team leaders with 61 aces and logged 75 assists. Short had five aces in two matches, and cleared 10 digs on eight occasions.
Tay Walker, Greenfield-Central, OH-OPP
Walker logged 218 terminations, 15 blocks, 13 aces and 118 digs in her first varsity season. She reached double-digit kills in four matches, tallying 15 apiece against Shelbyville (.429 hitting) and Lawrence Central.
Regan Ward, Pike, OH-MB
The 6-foot attacker put together a career year with the Red Devils, notching 229 kills on .251 hitting. She also collected 21 aces, 56 total blocks (19 solo), 98 digs and 14 assists. Ward had 10-plus kills in 10 matches, led by 13 on .500 hitting in a 2-1 loss to Rising Sun. She had a season-high five blocks against Seymour and logged four in three sets vs. Zionsville.
HONORABLE MENTIONS
Brynn Baker, Fishers, MB; Izzy Bigelow, Speedway, S; Jordyn Blair, Westfield, MB; Anna Cope, Covenant Christian, DS; Addison Corn, Beech Grove, MB-DS; Emmi Custer, Pendleton Heights; Brooklyn Deppe, Danville, DS-OPP; Rachel Filimoeulie, Lawrence Central, OH-DS; Reagan Futa, Cathedral, DS; Amelia Hartman, Perry Meridian, RS; DeAsia John, Pike, OH-MB; Landry LePage, Lebanon, DS; Alexa Massingill, Western Boone, OPP-OH; Madelynn Matelic, Speedway, MH-fRS; Reese Morrow, Pendleton Heights; Sydney Reed, Pike, OH; Emily Shepherd, Western Boone, OH; Ava Stone, Roncalli, MB; Molly Tucker, Danville, OH
Follow Brian Haenchen on Twitter at @Brian_Haenchen. Get IndyStar’s high school coverage sent directly to your inbox with the High School Sports newsletter.
Indiana
Indiana mother fatally shot after suspect tries to rob son during Facebook Marketplace meetup
A northern Indiana mother was allegedly shot and killed by a man her son met online through Facebook Marketplace about selling a watch, according to WNDU, the NBC affiliate in South Bend.
Jean Gragg, 40, was shot in the head on Wednesday, June 10, in South Bend, Indiana, and died the following Saturday. Police said prior to the shooting, Gragg’s son arranged to meet with an 18-year-old man he had been communicating with through Facebook Marketplace.
According to authorities, Gragg’s son arranged to sell the individual, identified as John Harrison Ford, a watch.
WNDU reported the son told police that Ford ended up pulling out a gun while he was looking at the watch and tried taking it from him. Gragg then got in between them and chased Ford away from the home.
Police said security camera video captured the 18-year-old shooting at Gragg after she turned around and began heading back toward the house. Gragg was taken to an area hospital, where she died three days later.
During an interview with law enforcement, Ford reportedly admitted to shooting Gragg. He was later charged with murder, felony murder, attempted murder and attempted armed robbery.
Indiana
US Education Department Oks Indiana Waiver To ‘Streamline’ Education Spending
U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon, left, joins Indiana Gov. Mike Braun and state Education Secretary Katie Jenner for a ceremonial signing of the state’s waiver from provisions of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act on Tuesday, June 16, 2026, at Plainfield High School. Photo by Mackenzi Klemann, Indiana Capital Chronicle.
By Mackenzi Klemann
Indiana Capital Chronicle
PLAINFIELD — Indiana K-12 educators will soon have less paperwork following the U.S. Department of Education’s approval of a waiver exempting the state from provisions of the federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
The state applied for the waiver in December to streamline education spending and align its new A-F accountability measures with federal law.
The waiver consolidates federal funding from portions of Titles I, II, III and IV – grants used to support things like low-income students, teacher training, English language learners and school safety – totaling $50 million over the next four years.
U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon, who visited Plainfield High School Tuesday for a ceremonial signing of the waiver, said the change frees $20 million in state and local funds from “bureaucratic red tape” so schools can reallocate money to the classroom.
The waiver also OKs the use of college and career readiness metrics like work-based learning and credentials toward high school accountability scores, a crucial component of Indiana’s new A-F system.
“President Trump told me I’d be successful in my job when I fired myself or worked myself out of a job,” McMahon said, “but his vision isn’t about me or one position. It’s about breaking up the education bureaucracy in Washington, D.C., a system that too often enriches adults while stifling progress for kids and empowering states to drive a new era of excellence for students across the country.”
She added, “We must breathe innovation into education, not suffocate it with top-down mandates, because we certainly know that one size does not fit all in education.”
Indiana is the third state approved for the waiver, nicknamed “Return Education to the States,” following Iowa and Louisiana.
States already control educational standards, curriculum and assessments. The waivers grant states greater control over how to spend federal K-12 funding too.
Indiana’s waiver consolidates funding for various education programs, which McMahon likened to a block grant, so schools no longer need to meet separate reporting requirements for each grant.
“At the heart of all this there is a simple, urgent belief: We must focus our time and energy on the work that propels us forward,” Indiana Secretary of Education Katie Jenner said. “We work to serve students, not to serve bureaucratic, outdated processes and paperwork.”
Less Paperwork, More Classroom Time
Indiana Education Secretary Katie Jenner leads a discussion about the state’s new federal education waiver. Photo by Mackenzi Klemann, Indiana Capital Chronicle.
Educators in attendance Tuesday praised what they see as a move away from bureaucracy.
“Too often these programs had differing goals and really specific requirements that might have been at odds with one another,” said Betsy Wiley, president and CEO of the Institute for Quality Education.
“There’s just no proof that, that extra bureaucracy is leading to higher standard achievements,” said Keeanna Warren, chief executive officer of Purdue Polytechnic High School.
Plainfield Community Schools Superintendent Andy Allen said he anticipates significant savings as the district will be able to redeploy office staff, many of whom are trained educators, to the classroom due to the reduction in compliance paperwork.
“Just because we have less compliance (paperwork) doesn’t mean we just do less,” he said. “Now we get back out in the buildings, we get back in front of kids, we get back in front of teachers, get connected with our community to make sure we have our best voices leading work for our kids and our community.”
The waiver could also benefit outside programs like the Boys and Girls Club’s summer learning labs.
Duane Wilson, chief executive officer of the Boys and Girls Club for the northern Indiana corridor, said the organization serves 5,800 Hoosier students throughout the state, but with additional funding the club could reach 10,000 Hoosier children next year.
The club is “moving the needle for kids,” Jenner said, but its rapid growth exceeded what the state could provide. “We’re seeing it in the short-term assessments. We’re seeing it in our state assessments.”
Indiana
Indiana Republicans nominate Max Engling for secretary of state at GOP Convention in Fort Wayne
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (WANE) — Republican delegates selected Max Engling as their nominee for Indiana Secretary of State on Saturday, defeating incumbent Diego Morales at the Indiana GOP State Convention in Fort Wayne.
Roughly 1,800 Republican delegates gathered at the Grand Wayne Convention Center to choose the party’s nominee. Engling, a Hamilton County resident and former senior advisor to U.S. Sen. Jim Banks, will now advance to the Nov. 3 general election.
He will face Democratic nominee Beau Bayh and Libertarian nominee Lauri Shillings. Former Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard is also expected to appear on the ballot as an independent candidate after his campaign announced Saturday it had collected more than 52,500 signatures, exceeding the number needed to qualify.
Following his victory, Engling said he was grateful to the delegates and fellow candidates.
“I’m very thankful, very blessed to move forward into the general election,” Engling said. “I’m thankful to the delegates. I’m thankful to the other candidates that ran great races.”
Engling said the campaign will focus heavily on election administration and Republican priorities heading into November.
“We’re going to win when we get there in November,” he said. “The goal is to have common sense solutions where we tighten our security around our elections. I’ve already said it — we’re here to close the primaries, make sure that only citizens are voting in our elections, and to stop the business fraud that we’ve seen in these shell trucking companies that have popped up around the state.”
He said those efforts would begin immediately if elected.
“Priority on day one, we’re going to work with the statehouse to close the primaries,” Engling said. “We already have legislation in the statehouse right now, and we’re pressing on that immediately.”
Engling also addressed the broader political environment, including the possibility of independent candidates on the ballot.
“So, Indiana wants common-sense voting laws,” he said. “They don’t want to move over to a third party; they want to vote for the conservative, Republican option. We’re excited for that.”
He added that Republicans must remain unified heading into the general election.
“Two rounds of voting, understood,” Engling said. “We know that Republicans need to move forward together. That is my mission. So, we are moving forward as a team.”
Engling said the campaign will stay focused on voter turnout and message discipline.
“We’re going to run our race with who we’ve already put forward,” he said. “We’re not looking at what the other folks are doing. We’re going to be energized on our side and say, ‘How do we make sure that our voters are coming out?’ We’re moving forward as a Republican team.”
He closed by emphasizing unity after a competitive convention.
“We are one Republican team,” Engling said. “We know that. We’re going to move forward as a unified team.”
Indiana State Treasurer Daniel Elliott also spoke during the convention, thanking delegates and reflecting on Republican performance heading into November.
“Well, I’m grateful for the Republican Party and their trust in me,” Elliott said. “I worked really hard these last four years to show that we can get good work done. And I think it paid off.”
Elliott said the focus now shifts to the general election.
“November, that is where it really counts, because November is when we’re going to the people of Indiana to say, ‘Here’s what we’ve done,’” he said. “We have good leadership, good Republican leadership. We have good results, our state is one of the top business states in the country. I raised $1.24 billion in two years, which is double what was done in the previous decade. We’ve got a good winning message, so I’m ready for November, and we really want to get everyone’s vote.”
He encouraged voter participation across the state.
“I appreciate your support, I appreciate your support to get here, and now, we need y’all to get out,” Elliott said. “We need to get out, all of us, and vote. This is a sacred responsibility, and it really means something. We need everyone, especially Republicans, to get out and vote.”
Elliott also noted internal confidence within the party following a contested convention process.
“I’ve been very fortunate that the party supports me,” he said. “The reason we didn’t have any opponents is because we’ve worked really hard and people have seen the good work and what we’ve put forth, and they say, ‘Yes, that is who we need.’”
The convention marks only the third time in the last century that the Indiana Republican Party has held its state convention outside Indianapolis.
“This has surpassed the perfection of the 2014 convention,” Allen County Republican Party Chairman Steve Shine said. “I’ve heard nothing but accolades about how great our city is from people who haven’t been here in the last 12 years.”
Shine said the competitive Secretary of State race helped drive enthusiasm among convention attendees.
“There were four great candidates that worked very hard to secure the votes of the delegates,” Shine said. “Today, the winner showed that they were the one with the most perseverance and were able to convince the delegates that they were the right person to face the Democrats in the fall.”
The Secretary of State contest became increasingly contentious in recent weeks after Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita and Banks withdrew their support for Morales, citing concerns about his ability to win in November.
Rokita said he believes Republicans will unite behind Engling despite the contentious nomination battle.
“Oh, it’s going to play out fine,” Rokita said. “We do this a lot better than Democrats, let me tell you that.”
Following Engling’s victory, Rokita predicted Republicans would rally behind the nominee despite the hard-fought contest.
“Republicans, because we’re all individuals at heart, it’s in our DNA to have these discussions and then unify together,” Rokita said. “I’ve been the candidate in four conventions. Most of them contested.”
Rokita, a former Indiana Secretary of State himself, said he expects the party to come together ahead of the general election. The attorney general said he expects the party to rally around Engling ahead of November.
“Our party has always coalesced around me and against the Democrat in the fall,” Rokita said. “I expect the same thing now.”
Indiana voters will decide the state’s next Secretary of State during the Nov. 3 general election, when Engling faces Bayh, Shillings and potentially Ballard on the statewide ballot.
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