volleyball-women-d1 flag

Michella Chester | NCAA.com | December 18, 2022

Texas sweeps Louisville to win the 2022 NCAA volleyball national championship

Texas vs. Louisville: 2022 NCAA volleyball championship highlights

OMAHA, Nebraska — Texas' wait is over. The Longhorns are back on top.

The Longhorns won their first national title since 2012, sweeping Louisville (25-22, 25-14, 26-24) to take the 2022 NCAA women's volleyball championship. Texas had come close previously, falling in the final three times since 2015.

Texas (28-1) got a huge match from star Logan Eggleston — the AVCA National Player of the Year — as she recorded 19 kills and hit .341 in the match. But it was a team effort, as Madi Skinner (12 kills, ..407 hitting) and Asjia O'Neal (9 kills, .643 hitting) also hit efficiently. Setter Saige Ka'aha'aina-Torres had 37 assists in the match.

Click or tap here for a set-by-set recap of the Longhorns' crowning moment

Texas women's volleyball celebrates national championship

Louisville (31-3) was trying to win its first-ever national championship and even hit .400 in the first set, but it couldn't match Texas' .533 hitting in that opening set. The Cardinals struggled in the second set, hitting -0.029, before battling in the third set but falling just short. Claire Chaussee had a team-high 12 kills in the match.

2023 NCAA DI women's volleyball tournament bracket announced

The NCAA Division I Women’s Volleyball committee announced the 64-team field that will compete in the 2023 NCAA Division I Women’s Volleyball Championship.
READ MORE

The 2023 DII women's volleyball championship, previewed

The bracket is filled, and 64 teams are in the hunt for the 2023 DII women's volleyball national championship. Here's a region-by-region look at the bracket.
READ MORE

DII volleyball teams with the most NCAA DII national championships

These are the 5 programs with the most DII volleyball national championships.
READ MORE

Subscribe To Email Updates

Enter your information to receive emails about offers, promotions from NCAA.com and our partners