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Carli Lloyd continues to make a name for herself with AU Volleyball

Carli Lloyd prepares to serve during Week 4 of the 2022 Athletes Unlimited season. (Jade Hewitt/Athletes Unlimited)

Carli Lloyd the volleyball player is not Carli Lloyd the soccer player.

They are two of the best to ever do it in their respective sports, and both have won Olympic medals with Team USA, but they have never actually met despite an attempt to get them together at the 2016 Olympics.

That hasn’t stopped the confusion among fans over the years. Lloyd the volleyball player recalls one time a few years back when Lloyd the USWNT forward had a particularly memorable game and she started to receive congratulatory messages.

“I was like, what?” Lloyd tells Just Women’s Sports. “Then I started realizing that they were sending them to Carli Lloyd the soccer player and not me.”

Admittedly, Lloyd does not follow soccer, saying that she’s “terrible” at the sport and doesn’t really understand it. But once she became acquainted with the other Carli Lloyd, a two-time World Cup champion and FIFA Player of the Year award winner, the volleyball setter understood why people wanted to reach out.

“I don’t mind being mixed up with her. I would never take credit for all the things that she’s doing, but like, she’s an amazing athlete,” Lloyd says, adding that she now follows the soccer player on social media.

Another thing the Lloyds have in common is the time they’ve spent traveling the world while at the peak of their sports. Lloyd has made stops in Italy, Brazil, Turkey and Azerbaijan, among other countries, during her 10-year professional volleyball career overseas.

While she personally enjoys going overseas to play, she recognizes that it’s not for everyone. That’s where Athletes Unlimited, the players-led league entering the final week of its second volleyball season, comes in.

“They’re thinking about your mental health, your physical health, your interests outside of the sport,” Lloyd says of AU’s unique approach. “And they’re making it so well-rounded that it allows the athlete to play volleyball, but also pursue other passions at the same time and provide space for you to grow in.”

Lloyd’s activities outside of the sport have included motherhood, after she gave birth to daughter Storm last May. Having her daughter on the sidelines has been a highlight for Lloyd this season, and Athletes Unlimited has made it possible with the progressive pregnancy policy it implemented last year in consultation with the Player Executive Committee.

“I got to play my first match and Storm was there, and it was one of the coolest feelings I’ve ever experienced,” Lloyd says. “Just seeing her there and realizing how far I had come, because I didn’t know for sure if I would play again, and I definitely didn’t know if I’d be playing in the United States.”

Before giving birth, Lloyd knew deep down she wasn’t done with volleyball and continued to train during her pregnancy. Lloyd played beach volleyball until the seven-month mark, and as soon as she was cleared postpartum, she got back to being active.

Now back on the court nine months postpartum, she doesn’t take the opportunity to compete for granted. Entering the final two games of the AU volleyball season, Lloyd is 23rd on the leaderboard with 1,777 points, but third in assists in 344 and 10th in digs with 115.

“Right now, my body feels really good, and I think it’s because of all of the attention I put into it throughout all of those steps — pre-pregnancy, during my pregnancy and postpartum,” says Lloyd, one of many female athletes being more vocal about balancing a professional sports career and motherhood, including Portland Thorns midfielder Crystal Dunn.

“I’m such a huge advocate for women to listen to their bodies and stay active through pregnancy,” Lloyd adds. “It’s motivating, and also I want to tell women that you can do it. It’s totally doable to get back and be even better than before, but it does take a lot of work.”

Emma Hruby is an associate editor at Just Women’s Sports.

Wisconsin Volleyball Attendance Soars as NCAA Sees Growing Demand

Wisconsin volleyball players leap to block a kill from rival Nebraska during a 2024 NCAA match.
Wisconsin currently has the highest NCAA volleyball attendance in the country. (Michael Gomez/Getty Images)

Wisconsin volleyball is off to the attendance races, with the No. 7 college squad averaging 8,620 fans per match this season to become this NCAA's best-attended program — narrowly beating Big Ten rival No. 1 Nebraska's 8,602 current average.

Other than the Badgers and Cornhuskers, no other college volleyball team has surpassed 6,000 fans per match this year, but Wisconsin is well on track to surpass even their own dominant attendance history in the sport.

If they finish the season in the top attendance spot, the Badgers will snap a six season streak logging the second-best average crowds per year.

Even more, Wisconsin is on their way to blasting through their program-best mark, set when 7,761 fans per match filled the bleachers in 2022.

The growing demand for Badger volleyball is also translating into significant revenue boosts for school.

"We're really, really excited; we're going to exceed $2 million in volleyball ticket sales for the first time ever," Wisconsin deputy athletic director Mitchell Pinta told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel earlier this week. "And we're largely sold out for the rest of our matches at the Field House for the remainder of the season."

Should the Badgers reach that $2 million mark, they will see a massive 25% increase over the $1.6 million the team garnered just two seasons ago, and a near 18-fold growth from the $111,809 in volleyball ticket sales that Wisconsin logged in 2013.

Ultimately, the sky's the limit for both Wisconsin volleyball — and the sport at-large.

"If there's a saturation point on the demand for Wisconsin volleyball, we certainly have not seen it yet," said Pinta.

How to watch Wisconsin volleyball in action

With conference play kicking off this weekend, No. 7 Wisconsin will host unranked Big Ten foe Rutgers at 8 PM ET on Friday, before paying a visit to also-unranked Iowa at 3 PM ET on Sunday.

Both Big Ten battles will stream live on B1G+.

Liverpool Score Emotional League Cup Win in Tribute to Late Manager Matt Beard

Liverpool players stand and observe a minute of silence in remembrance of former manager Matt Beard before a 2025 League Cup match.
Liverpool earned an emotional League Cup win shortly after the sudden passing of former manager Matt Beard. (Nick Taylor/Liverpool FC/Liverpool FC via Getty Images)

WSL side Liverpool opened their 2025/26 League Cup campaign with an emotional 5-0 win over WSL2 club Sunderland on Wednesday, dedicating the shutout victory to former manager Matt Beard after the 47-year-old's sudden passing last Saturday.

The match marked the Reds' return to the pitch following the postponement of their Sunday regular-season game against Aston Villa due to Beard's passing.

"It's a good win for Matt. We played with a lot of emotion," Liverpool defender Jenna Clark said afterwards, calling Wednesday "a really emotional night and an emotional few days for everyone involved with the club."

"We have pulled through together as a team the best we could and you saw that on the pitch tonight," Clark added.

Beard won back-to-back WSL titles with Liverpool in 2013 and 2014, departing the Reds in 2015 for a two-year stint with the NWSL's Boston Breakers.

He made his return to Liverpool in 2021, lifting the club back into the top-flight WSL by earning promotion his first season back at the helm.

"Matt will leave a huge void in the women's game," USWNT head coach and former Chelsea boss Emma Hayes said in a statement earlier this week. "He was one of a kind, and his loss will be felt by all. My heart goes out to his family, but I want to take the time to acknowledge what a special man he really was."​

How to watch Liverpool this weekend

Liverpool will continue their 2025/26 WSL campaign against Manchester United this Sunday, kicking off live at 7 AM ET on ESPN+.

No. 1 England Battles No. 2 Canada in 2025 Women’s Rugby World Cup Final

England players sing their national anthem before kicking off the 2025 Women's Rugby World Cup.
Host nation England will play for their first Women's Rugby World Cup title in more than a decade on Saturday. (David Rogers/Getty Images)

The 2025 Women's Rugby World Cup culminates on Saturday, when host nation England battles for their first tournament title in more than a decade in a top-tier final against Canada, who are hunting their first-ever world championship trophy.

The Red Roses' long dominance on the Rugby World Cup pitch has led them to eight finals in the competition's nine editions, with England emerging victorious twice — in 1994 and 2014.

On the other hand, Canada will make just their second-ever appearance in the World Cup final this Saturday, as the Maple Leafs aim for a decidedly different outcome from their 21-9 loss to England in the 2014 championship game.

The top-ranked Red Roses will also be looking to avenge their narrow 34-31 loss to New Zealand in the tournament's most recent 2022 edition when they square off against No. 2 Canada in front of an sold-out crowd inside London's Twickenham Stadium — with another women's rugby attendance record on the line.

"You feed off of that energy, especially knowing what this game is going to be," England defense coach Sarah Hunter said. "It's a cliché, but [the crowd] almost becomes the 16th person in those moments where you need them."

How to watch the 2025 Women's Rugby World Cup final

England and Canada will battle in the 2025 Women's Rugby World Cup final at 11 AM ET on Saturday, with live coverage airing on Paramount+.

No. 2 Washington Spirit Fights to Stay Atop the NWSL Table on 9-Game Unbeaten Streak

Washington Spirit forward Trinity Rodman sprints up the pitch during a 2025 NWSL match.
Trinity Rodman and the No. 2 Washington Spirit will look to extend their six-point lead over No. 3 Gotham in the NWSL standings this weekend. (Jamie Sabau/NWSL via Getty Images)

While the No. 1 Kansas City Current have officially run away with the 2025 NWSL Shield, the race for top playoff seeding rages on, as the No. 2 Washington Spirit fights to hold their ground against an unpredictable No. 9 Houston Dash this Sunday.

Bolstered by star Trinity Rodman's return from injury, the Spirit enter the weekend on a nine-game unbeaten streak, going up against a motivated Dash side sitting just two points outside of postseason contention.

"Every game we just need to be a lot more clinical in the final third," Rodman said after last weekend's 2-2 draw with No. 11 Angel City. "We're doing all the hard stuff and then it's [lacking] quality at the end."

Washington isn't without top-table challengers, with No. 3 Gotham FC riding their own five-game unbeaten streak into a Friday night match against the No. 4 Portland Thorns, who sit tied for points with both the Bats and the No. 5 San Diego Wave in the NWSL standings.

"At this stage, almost everyone still has a real chance to make the playoffs, which is great for the league," said Gotham manager Juan Carlos Amorós after the Bats' 1-1 draw with Bay FC last Sunday. "But it also means nothing can be taken for granted."

How to watch the Washington Spirit and Gotham FC this weekend

No. 3 Gotham FC kicks off this weekend's NWSL action when they host the No. 4 Portland Thorns at 8 PM ET on Friday, with live coverage on NWSL+.

Then in Sunday's NWSL action, the No. 9 Houston Dash will visit the No. 2 Washington Spirit at 1 PM ET, airing live on Paramount+.

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