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Wittenberg University men's volleyball team, led by coach Jamie Peterson, is heading to the NCAA Division III Final Four. Despite being eight months pregnant, Peterson will travel by car to support her team in their historic match against Carthage College.
Apr. 22—Jamie Peterson, the head coach of the Wittenberg University men's volleyball team, won't travel with her players from Springfield, Ohio, to Springfield, Mass., this week for the NCAA Division III Final Four, but she will still be there. She wouldn't miss the opportunity to coach the team in the most important match in program history.
Peterson is eight months pregnant, so she can't fly. She'll travel by car 11 hours with her dad James for the match on Thursday, April 23, at Springfield College. Then her husband Zach Sprinkle, who will fly to Massachusetts on Wednesday, will drive her home whenever the season ends.
For Peterson, long car rides are a small price to pay for an unexpected tournament run by an unranked team that had never played in the NCAA tournament before this season.
"There's a little bit of a shock in terms of how we performed this weekend with it being our first NCAA tournament," Peterson told the Springfield News-Sun on Sunday, April 19, "but in terms of our talent level and just showing people that we can play with some of the best teams in the country, I'm not shocked at all. I think this is something that they've been proving to me since August."
Wittenberg (24-5) will play No. 3 Carthage College (24-3), which won national championships in 2021 and 2022, in the national semifinals at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Springfield College. The championship match will take place at 7 p.m. Saturday.
Wittenberg takes a 14-match winning streak into the Final Four.
"We're playing with house money," Peterson said. "Nobody thinks that we have any business being in a Final Four. There's no pressure. We can play free and aggressively, and at the end of the day, we're going to leave the game not having any regrets based on our effort and how we stuck together and had each other's back through it all."
No. 1 Springfield (23-3) will play No. 5 Cal Lutheran University in the other semifinal at 5 p.m. Thursday, April 23.
Springfield has won five national championships since 2012, the first year there was a NCAA tournament in D-III men's volleyball. Cal Lutheran won the championship in 2024.
Joining three national championship programs in the Final Four makes Wittenberg an even bigger underdog than it was last week when it won three matches against top-25 teams in three days in Huntingdon, Pa. The Tigers beat No. 13 Wentworth Institute of Technology 3-1, No. 2 Juniata College 3-2 and No. 8 Messiah University in straight sets.
"They know how good they can be," Peterson said, "and we fought through some moments where maybe we were not as good as we could have been. Physically, we know we're gifted. We knew we had to work on our mentality and staying composed in really big moments. That's the biggest piece. We gained so much confidence over the last weekend to make us pretty dangerous going into next weekend."
Peterson, a West Liberty-Salem High School graduate, was named the NCAA Division III Coach of the Year by the American Volleyball Coaches Association on Tuesday, April 21. She's 30-8 since taking over as interim coach during the 2025 season.
Jamie Peterson is the head coach of the Wittenberg University men's volleyball team, and she is leading the team to its first NCAA Division III Final Four appearance.
Wittenberg will play No. 3 Carthage College in the national semifinals on Thursday, April 23, at 7:30 p.m., with the championship match scheduled for Saturday at 7 p.m.
Wittenberg, an unranked team, achieved an unexpected tournament run, winning matches in their first NCAA tournament appearance this season.
Jamie Peterson is eight months pregnant, which prevents her from flying, so she will travel by car with her father to support the team.
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"I couldn't have asked for a better group to walk into," Peterson said. "Last season when their volleyball world was flipped on its head in the middle of the season, it was definitely rocky at times. But ever since August, we've talked about what this group wanted to accomplish and tried to get on the same page. They all agreed that they wanted to win a conference championship and go to the NCAA tournament for the first time. We knew we had to change in order to achieve those things."
The key individuals for Wittenberg are senior outside hitters Eli Halverson, of Hamilton Badin High School, and Michael Yurk, of Bishop Chatard in Indianapolis, and libero Jake Downs, of Milford High School.
"Those three are the staple of my serve-receive," Peterson said, "and I think that they have kept us in the biggest matches that we've played all season and handled a lot of tough servers. In men's volleyball, if you can handle and be in system, in serve-receive, that's one of the biggest battles, which makes us really dangerous in terms of how many attackers that we have. We have six attackers across the net who — if we're in system — it's really hard to pick between the six of them who you're going to go block."
Among the underclassmen, the top players are junior middle blocker Reese Monnin, of Dayton Carroll High School, sophomore opposite hitter Zach Newton, of Franklin Community High School and Morgantown, Ind., and sophomore middle blocker/outside hitter Harrison Mitchell, of Dublin Scioto.
For Peterson, this NCAA tournament appearance comes more than four years after her last season as a player with the Dayton Flyers. She won the Atlantic 10 Conference Player of the Year award in her last three seasons.
Dayton played in the NCAA tournament in each of those seasons under coach Tim Horsmon but did not make it past the second round.
Horsmon reached out to Peterson after the quarterfinal victory Saturday and told her he was proud of Wittenberg's tournament run.
The foundation for this success was laid in the offseason when Peterson told the players they would "have to train in a way we've never trained before" and that things were "going to have to get really uncomfortable."
They would have to trust her, she said.
"I'm going to raise our standard," she told them. "I'm going to change our culture."
The players let her do that.
"They have done nothing but buy in," Peterson said, "and I think they're finally starting to see the fruits of that labor and seeing all their hard work pay off. Something we talk about a lot in our gym is that practice should be the hardest part of the week. It shouldn't be game day."
"We practice hard. We raise the standard in our gym constantly. We hold each other accountable. We don't always walk out with a smile on our face, but at the end of the day, we can walk into a game day with a lot of confidence, knowing that we put the work in at practice every week. That's probably where most of our confidence comes from."