Kansas
Oregon loses volleyball coach Matt Ulmer to Kansas, begins national search for new leader

Oregon is on the market for a new volleyball coach.
Matt Ulmer was named the new coach at Kansas on Friday, ending his successful eight-year run as a Duck.
“My staff and I are ready to give our all for the future success of Jayhawk volleyball,” Ulmer was quoted as saying in press release from Kansas. “I’m beyond excited to get to Lawrence and meet the team, start practice and get better every day.
“The past 11 seasons in Eugene have given us memories and relationships that will last forever.”
Oregon volleyball begins search to replace head coach Matt Ulmer
Oregon assistant Erika Dillard will serve as interim head coach as the athletic department conducts a national search for a new head coach, said Oregon athletic director Rob Mullens in a statement released by the school Friday.
“We look forward to finding a new coach who will build upon the strong foundation in place for our program and provide a world-class student-athlete experience,” Mullens said.
Ulmer guided Oregon volleyball to 7 NCAA Tournament appearances
During his eight seasons as head coach, Ulmer’s teams went 166-77 with seven NCAA Tournament appearances, including three trips to the Elite Eight and five Sweet 16s.
Oregon won at least 22 matches in each of the last four seasons, including in 2024 when the Ducks went 24-8 overall, 14-6 in their first season of Big Ten Conference play, and made the Sweet 16. Kansas was 25-5 in 2024 and reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
“We want to thank Matt for all of his efforts and successful seasons with the Oregon volleyball program,” Mullens said. “We extend our best wishes to him and his family in this next phase of their journey.”
Ulmer accused of pressuring injured player to transfer or medically retire
Ulmer’s time at Oregon also wasn’t without controversy.
He was named head coach in 2017 after the contentious departure of former coach Jim Moore — the program’s all-time leader with 246 wins — who resigned after complaints about his coaching style and despite nearly two dozen former players publicly voicing support for Moore.
Ulmer, who had been on Moore’s staff for three seasons as an assistant coach or associate head coach, was quickly named Moore’s replacement.
In 2022, former player Taylor Williams made allegations that she was played when she wasn’t healthy, misled by Oregon on the severity of her injury, then was pressured and harassed by Ulmer to either transfer or medically retire. Those allegations led to an independent investigation.
Ducks saw success in 2022, 2023 under Ulmer
On the court in 2022, Ulmer guided the Ducks to a 26-6 record and a 17-3 mark in Pac-12 play to set a program record for conference wins in a season.
Oregon’s postseason run came to an end in a five-set thriller against Louisville in the Elite Eight and the Ducks ended the season ranked No. 7 in the final AVCA poll.
In 2023 the Ducks also finished ranked No. 7 after going 29-6 and making the Elite Eight.
Chris Hansen covers University of Oregon football, men’s basketball, track and field, cross country and softball for The Register-Guard. You can reach him at chansen@registerguard.com and you can follow him on X @chansen_RG

Kansas
This Kansas photographer’s view of the Flint Hills tells of ‘fire and death and rebirth’
When photographer Jim Richardson first pitched National Geographic Magazine on a story about his home state of Kansas, his editors at the time were focused on covering some of the most dramatic scenery in America.
“The biggies were getting all the attention,” Richardson remembers, almost two decades later. “The Grand Canyon, Zion National Park, and all the rest of those places that get inundated every summer with tourists.”
“I thought, why not propose something on the Flint Hills?” he says.
National Geographic is best known for photography, in-depth articles, and coverage of science, geography, history and global culture. At its peak, the magazine had a global circulation of more than 10 million copies per issue.
“You really had to be on your game for the pictures to rise to the level that they would make it into the pages of National Geographic,” Richardson says. “You were looking for great weather, great drama.”
His assignment in the Flint Hills was a high-profile chance to spotlight one of the last remaining tallgrass prairie ecosystems in the world — a 4.5 million acre grassland spanning eastern Kansas and into north-central Oklahoma — and it was practically in Richardson’s backyard.
After more than five decades making pictures all over the world, Richardson’s been looking back at his Flint Hills project as he painstakingly digitizes his work.
His images from the Flint Hills gives Kansans a chance to experience an annual ritual that most will never have a chance to experience up close.
“When you put a painting on the gallery wall behind the red velvet ropes, you figuratively tell people to look at this — ‘Isn’t this something?’” Richardson says. “That was what we did with the National Geographic story, was to get it to the place that we could say to people both inside and outside of Kansas, you know, ‘This is something.’”
On a 12-week assignment for National Geographic, Richardson would often shoot a thousand rolls of film. Those 36,000 images would be edited down to just a handful of photographs in the magazine. Each image had to be powerful enough to make an impression.
“It was never just sort of random shooting to keep the button going, but always trying to elevate the images,” Richardson says. “Many of those pictures would be redundant, because I went back to the same place over and over again, trying to get it to the place where you found something transcendent, so that eventually those really good images call out to you.”
Richardson’s years working for the magazine spanned a time when a shelf of National Geographic issues in American schools, libraries, and households was a mark of interest in a wider world.
“It was a very clear sign of the era and that you were not just locked into the limits of where you lived, but that you could reach out further and understand things on a grander scale,” he says.
‘Fire and death and rebirth’
Like on any assignment, in the Flint Hills Richardson was looking to capture moments in time that were more than just a bunch of pretty pictures. They had to tell a bigger story.
“I wanted the seasons, but it wouldn’t be the seasons of summer or spring, but seasons like fire and death and rebirth — almost biblical, life-cycle seasons,” he says.
As fire season reaches its apex in late March and early April, billowing clouds of smoke often hang over Chase County, in the heart of the Flint Hills. The fires play a critical role in the life cycle of the prairie ecosystem.
“These grasses have evolved with fire,” Richardson says. “By February, they’re brown, they’re like standing tinder. They are meant to burn, and they burn ferociously well.”
The region plays host to between 400 and 600 different species of plants — mostly grasses but also many broadleaf varieties and wildflowers. Fire suppresses the growth of woody plants and stimulates the growth of native grasses like big bluestem, little bluestem, and Indian grass. The spring blazes also ignite a cycle of renewal, welcoming the return of insects, small mammals, birds and grazers.
“There’s actually a rather dynamic battle going on there and, by burning, they beat back all their enemies,” Richardson says. “You have to understand the trees are the enemy of the prairie and enemy of the grasses.”
What follows close on the heels of fire are brand new shoots of grass that gleam in the sun and feed the bison and cattle that graze there.
“There’s an amazing phenomenon after the burn,” he says. “You can go out sometimes the next morning, look across to the hills that are now blackened, and you see this faint greenish glow on the cusp of the hills.”
“Within five or six weeks, what had been blackened hills is the most verdant, emerald green of any green on the planet,” Richardson says.
Organizing the images of a lifetime
These days, when Richardson isn’t on the speaking circuit lecturing on his long career in photojournalism, he’s perched at a light table poring over a lifetime of images in his neatly-appointed office on North Main Street in the small, central Kansas town of Lindsborg.
“The tedious part is finding all those negatives, finding the right one, and digitizing it, all of which is a huge time suck,” Richardson says. “It just takes huge amounts of time.”
He’s been busy organizing the many thousands of images to ensure his vast photo archive is accessible long after he is gone. It’s important work that will preserve his photographs for future generations.
Richardson has a strong presence on the web and almost all of his work is available online. He also owns Small World Gallery in Lindsborg with his wife, Kathy, and displays his photographs as fine art prints, posters and greeting cards.
“There comes a point in which the organization of all that stuff has an impact on whether or not it is going to live,” he said. “Photographs that don’t get seen are like the tree in the forest that falls and no one’s there to hear it,” he said.
Julie Denesha
/
KCUR 89.3
This article was reported during a weeklong artist-in-residence program hosted by the Raymer Society, which preserves The Red Barn Studio in Lindsborg, Kansas, as a museum and provides cultural programming.
Kansas
Nonprofit awards $60K to Black-owned businesses in the Kansas City metro

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) – A Kansas City nonprofit has awarded tens of thousands of dollars to three Black-owned businesses in the metro area.
Kansas City Generating Income For Tomorrow (G.I.F.T.) says that on Saturday, March 29, leaders awarded three grants at the end of the Pitch Black Business Summit. Over the course of the afternoon, 10 Black-owned businesses pitched their plans and ideas for a chance to win a slice of $60,000.
G.I.F.T. members said the three businesses who were ultimately awarded grants include:
Meanwhile, the organization indicated that the finalist group consisted of The Mutual Musicians Foundation, AimWell Yoga, The Black Pantry, On The Rocks Gourmet Jams, In Good Company, Taylor Made It, and Integrity Martial Arts.
Along with the pitch competition, G.I.F.T. said the summit included a lunch for attendees and breakout sessions with classes to help entrepreneurs elevate their businesses. About 100 business owners attended.
Since 2020, Kansas City G.I.F.T. said it has awarded 77 Black-owned businesses with grants that total more than $1.8 million. For more information about the organization, click HERE.
Copyright 2025 KCTV. All rights reserved.
Kansas
USC shakes off JuJu Watkins’ absence and beats Kansas State 67-61 in March Madness – WTOP News

SPOKANE, Ore. (AP) — Freshman Kennedy Smith stepped into the void left by injured star JuJu Watkins, scoring 19 points…
SPOKANE, Ore. (AP) — Freshman Kennedy Smith stepped into the void left by injured star JuJu Watkins, scoring 19 points to help Southern California hold off Kansas State 67-61 in the Sweet 16 of the women’s NCAA Tournament on Saturday.
The top-seeded Trojans (31-3) were considered title contenders before Watkins tore her right ACL during a second-round victory over Mississippi State. Now they’ll be underdogs in an Elite Eight rematch on Monday with Paige Bueckers and second-seeded UConn. The Huskies knocked the Trojans out of last year’s March Madness in Watkins’ first season.
Avery Howell, another freshman, scored 18 points for USC, which went on a 12-0 run during the third quarter to take a 46-39 lead, matching its biggest advantage of the day.
Kansas State (28-8) kept pushing, though, and tied it at 51-all early in the fourth on a layup by Ayoka Lee. Rayah Marshall responded with two straight buckets for USC.
A layup by Serena Sundell got the Wildcats within 60-59. Smith responded with a pair of free throws, and USC was solid enough at the foul line to close it out.
“We still have the common goal of obviously winning national championships and with JuJu going down there was a bit of adversity to face,” Smith said. “We talked to her before the game, she was rooting us on. So just keeping her in our heart and minds and playing for her as well as for each other.”
USC coach Lindsay Gottlieb said she was proud of her team’s response to adversity.
“We felt going into this game that this was a game we have to attack and prepare for with the intent to win,” Gottlieb said. “We knew it wouldn’t be easy. But I thought when when it got hard out there and Kansas State is a really good team and poses a lot of problems, I thought you (saw) our team really stick together and compete.”
Sundell scored 22 points and Lee had 12 for the fifth-seeded Wildcats (28-8), who fell short of the program’s second Elite Eight appearance and first since 1982. They beat Kentucky 80-79 in overtime to reach their first Sweet 16 since 2002.
“I told the locker room, ‘At some point your tears will be hopefully happy tears. You start to remember the things that you did and the time you spent with your coaches, the wins, the bus trips, the plane trips,’” Wildcats coach Jeff Mittie said.
Smith had 11 points in the opening quarter as the Trojans built 19-9 lead.
The Wildcats pulled ahead 19-16 after Sundell’s layup and free throw. USC answered with a pair of 3-pointers from Howell and Malia Samuels.
Sundell hit a jumper and two free throws down the stretch to help Kansas State to a 30-28 advantage at the half.
Howell also helped pick up the slack for Watkins’ absence on defense.
“I think it’s just finding a balance of the role that she has played for this entire program since she’s been here, but it’s like we have her in our thoughts and we’re supporting her from here, and we’re taking her competitive nature on the court, every single time we step there,” Howell said.
She added: “We know that she’s back home supporting us, having a watch party, doing everything she can to give us that good juju, you could say.”
Honoring JuJu
USC arrived at Spokane Arena wearing Nike T-shirts emblazoned with Watkins’ face. Players also passed around a small Watkins doll, complete with her trademark “JuJu Bun” hairstyle, on the sidelines during the game.
After the win, they celebrated with the injured star on a video call.
“My daughter was blowing kisses to her and said, ‘JuJu’s not hurt?’ I said no, she’s hurt but she’s happy today and with us. So, just trying to keep her her spirit with us,” Gottlieb said. “She’s just such an incredible young person. And I think the way the team has responded says a lot about them, but also a lot about her and the true chemistry they have with each other.”
Watkins was hoping to lead USC to its first national title since it won back to back in 2002 and ’03. Inspired by their star, the Trojans still have a chance to win it all.
___
AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-womens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness. Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here.
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