BYU Roundup: Women’s volleyball sweeps No. 13 Kansas, women’s hoops wins
- BYU players celebrate a point during a Big 12 women’s volleyball match against Kansas in the Smith Fieldhouse on Friday, Nov. 21, 2025.
- BYUs Lara Rohkohl goes up for a shot against Weber State in a women’s college basketball game at the Marriott Center on Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025.
Backed by a .416 hitting percentage, its highest in Big 12 play, No. 25 BYU women’s volleyball swept No. 13 Kansas (25-17, 25-18, 25-20) at the Smith Fieldhouse on Friday night.
With the victory, the Cougars (20-8, 8-8 Big 12) went 2-0 in conference play on the week for the first time this season, also picking up their fourth sweep over a Big 12 opponent.
BYU held the Jayhawks to a .276 percentage on the night while hitting its second-highest clip of the year, at .416.
Both teams had 40 kills, but the Cougars’ had eight attack errors to KU’s 16, recorded six more aces (7-1), five less service errors (11-6) and four more blocks (7-3).
Suli Davis took charge with her team-leading eighth double-double of the season, contributing on both sides of the ball with 15 kills, ten digs, and a .462 hitting percentage.
Claire Little Chambers added a 13 kills of her own on a .522 clip. Alex Bower dished out 30 assists, also contributing three kills and three blocks.
Elena Wallace finished with a match-high four blocks. Elli Mortensen and Lulu Uluave both had two aces apiece.
BYU wraps up its home slate on senior night against Utah on Wednesday, Nov. 26 at 6 p.m. MST, with streaming available on ESPN+.
Short-handed women’s basketball takes care of Weber State
Sydney Benally dished nine assists and Lara Rohkohl scored a season-high 18 points as BYU women’s basketball defeated Weber State 79-62 on Saturday to improve to 6-0.
The Cougars shot 46 percent from the field, outscored the Wildcats 29-13 in bench points and held Weber State to 18 percent from three.
After trailing briefly in the first half, BYU settled in behind balanced scoring and interior pressure to take a 38-35 halftime lead. The Cougars took full control in the third quarter as Rohkohl powered a decisive stretch, scoring 13 of her 18 points in the period.
“It was kind of a tale of two halves,” head coach Lee Cummard said. “In the first half, our toughness was in question. They beat us to loose balls and controlled the glass. That flipped in the second half. We played a lot more connected on both sides of the ball and looked more like us. There is still cleanup work to do, but I’m really glad they made that switch at halftime.”
Rohkohl finished with 18 points, five rebounds, two steals and a block, going 7-for-11 from the floor. Benally added nine points and four rebounds to go with her nine assists. Junior Marya Hudgins scored 11 points, going 6-for-6 at the line while also grabbing five rebounds and recording a block. Brinley Cannon contributed 10 points, seven rebounds and three assists.
Arielle Mackey-Williams added 11 points, three rebounds and three assists off the bench and recorded a plus-minus of 30. Braeden Gunlock chipped in five points and four rebounds, including a fourth-quarter three. Senior Hattie Ogden chipped in six points on two triples.
BYU was efficient at the charity stripe, finishing 22-of-27, its highest free-throw percentage of the season.
The Cougars were down to eight healthy players when freshman Olivia Hamlin went down with a foot injury in the first half. BYU is already playing without leading scorer Delaney Gibb, who missed her second straight game due to a foot injury.
BYU will next take the floor at the U.S. Virgin Islands Paradise Jam, opening play against Virginia Tech on Thursday, Nov. 27, at 3:30 p.m. MST. The game will be held at the UVI Arena in St. Thomas and will be streamed on ESPN+.





