LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Players and coaches who will make history at the NCAA volleyball championship still find it hard to believe that a female coach hasn't already won a title.
After all, a female coach has influenced almost every stage of their volleyball lives. It was assumed that a woman had already reached the summit of college's top achievement as a coach.
That hasn't happened yet -- but it will on Sunday when either Penn State's Katie Schumacher-Cawley or Louisville's Dani Busboom-Kelly become the first female coach to hoist the trophy in the 42-year history of the NCAA volleyball championship.
They both won college titles as players. And they hope it will eventually become commonplace.
''It's hard to really to put that into words,'' said Busboom-Kelly, who will lead the top-seeded Cardinals (30-5) in their second NCAA final in three seasons. ''I think it's more of a feeling and it's more like just being really proud that we can be role models and hopefully blazing a trail and show athletic directors what women can do.
''It's going to be awesome for the sport, I think, to get this monkey off its back and move on from this to where it's not historic that a woman wins, that's it's a regular thing. And that'll be great when in every Final Four, there's a chance for a woman to win it.''
Both coaches have championship pedigrees as players. Busboom-Kelly helped Nebraska win the 2006 NCAA crown among two finals appearances as a player before later serving as a Cornhuskers assistant to John Cook during her coaching journey.
Schumacher-Cawley was a member of Penn State's first national team in 1999 under legendary coach Russ Rose and served as an assistant coach from 2018-21. She took over in 2022 and has the Nittany Lions (34-2) seeking their eighth national title and first since 2014.