CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – No. 9 MIT saw its season come to an end with a 25-18, 25-23, 22-25, 25-19 loss to No. 11 Trinity University (Texas) in the regional final of the NCAA Division III Women's Volleyball Championship on Saturday.
Daphne Gavros and
Kayleigh May represented the Engineers on the Cambridge, Massachusetts Regional All-Tournament Team.
Trinity gradually built a 10-5 lead after an ace from Reagan Whatley in set one. MIT responded with a kill by
Ella Zhou, sparking an 11-6 run. A block by Connelley McWilliams and Lauren McCarthy along with kills from Marissa Drange and Taylor Starr, created some breathing room. However, a serving error and an ace from May brought the Engineers within 19-18. The Tigers countered with six straight points to win the set.
MIT built a 12-5 lead after a kill by
Claire Underwood in set two. However, a kill by Drange kicked of an 11-3 run that put Trinity ahead. Five ties and two lead changes ensued until an ace by May gave the Engineers a 23-22 edge. The Tigers capitalized on a Courtney Pope kill, a Jenna Rodriguez ace, and a hitting error to rally for the victory.
In a tightly played set three, MIT inched out to a 20-16 lead following a kill from Underwood. Trinity responded with a 5-1 burst as an ace by Rodriguez tied the score at 21. The Engineers replied with a kill from
Eileen Sadati and a block by Underwood and
Jessie Trapp to create some breathing room. Whatley cut the deficit in half with a kill, but back-to-back Sadati kills clinched the 25-22 win.
Trailing 10-6 in set four, a kill by
Ali Gibbs ignited a 9-3 run that put MIT in front, 15-13. However, a kill courtesy of Whatley set off a string of seven unanswered points by the Tigers. The Engineers remained within striking distance as they narrowed the gap to three points on three occasions, the last at 22-19 on a kill from Gibbs. This was as close as it would get as Trinity used a hitting error, a Kendall DeRivel ace, and a Pope kill to pull away for the victory.
Gavros amassed 37 digs, setting a program record for digs in a four-set match, which surpassed the mark of 34 that was set by Arlis Reynolds '06 and tied by Katie Spielbauer '13.
Sadati totaled a match-high 21 kills while Zhou produced 16 kills and 17 digs. Gibbs finished with 13 kills as Underwood registered 10 kills and four blocks.
May tallied 50 assists and four aces while
Sophia Song collected 12 digs. Whatley registered 13 kills and 15 digs as Pope contributed 12 kills.
Jozie Dhayer notched 16 assists and 16 digs while DeRivel generated 16 assists, 10 digs, and three aces. Rodriguez had 20 digs and three aces as Annabelle Lanik bolstered the back row with 16 digs.
McCarthy recorded eight blocks, followed by four from McWilliams, Drange, and Taylor Starr.
About the NEWMAC
The NEWMAC is an association of 12 selective academic institutions: Babson College, Clark University, U.S Coast Guard Academy, Emerson College, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Mount Holyoke College, Salve Regina University, Smith College, Springfield College, Wellesley College, Wheaton College, and Worcester Polytechnic Institute, that are committed to providing high quality competitive athletic opportunities for student-athletes within an educational and respectful environment that embodies the NCAA Division III Philosophy. The conference also partners with eight Associate Members: Brandeis University (Women's Lacrosse, 2026-2027), New York University (Men's Volleyball, 2026-2027), Norwich University (Football), Simmons College (Rowing), SUNY Maritime College (Football), SUNY New Paltz (Men's Volleyball, 2026-2027), U.S. Merchant Marine Academy (Football), and Vassar College (Men's Volleyball, 2026-2027), while sponsoring 20 sports.