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University of San Diego Volleyball

An inside look

Welcome to San Diego

Welcome to the University of San Diego

On the hills overlooking the Pacific Ocean, scholar-athletes achieve greatness in the classroom, on the court, and in the community.

The Arena

Inside the 5,000 seat arena of the Jenny Craig Pavilion, the USD Volleyball program competes in the West Coast Conference, often earning a spot in the NCAA Tournament.

JCP FACILITY UPGRADES

Brand New Custom Teraflex floor installed Fall 2025
Brand New Locker Room
Brand New Film Room

USD Volleyball representing team usa!

We are thrilled that we were given an incredible opportunity to represent Team USA at the World University Games in Berlin this past summer! This was truly a once-in-a-lifetime experience, and we are filled with gratitude for everyone who made the trip possible. Competing against some of the most elite teams in the world was such an incredible opportunity for our athletes and we are all stronger for it!

The Volleyball Program

Meet our incoming freshmen and transfers!

2025 Season Accolades

18-0 in WCC Play gave us a regional ranking in the NCAA Tourney!
For the 8th time in her career, Coach Petrie is named the WCC "Coach of the Year"! Jen is one of very few coaches with such an impressive history and we are so lucky to have her at the helm.

All-American Girls!

Racking up the WCC Honors!

Nemo dominated our conference, earning her second major WCC Honor! In 2023 she was named WCC Freshman of the Year.
Back-to-Back "Setter of the Year" award for Kylie, as a freshman and a sophomore!
Nothing would have been possible without our fearless captain leading the charge!
The most "All-WCC First Team" selections of any team in the conference!
Not only was Ava selected for the "All-WCC Freshman Team", but she was also awarded "All-WCC Honorable"!

Getting it done in the classroom!

Proud of our girls for managing school and volleyball so efficiently!

TOREROS IN SAAC!

Junior MB Eloise McGibben serves as SAAC Co-President for the 2025-26 School Year!
Nemo Beach: Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, Belonging Chair | Reese Bates: Secretary

NCAA Tournament Tradition

USD has cemented its legacy in the NCAA tournament by earning 27 post-season appearances in the last 32 years.

COACHING STAFF

JENNIFER PETRIE

Head Coach

Jennifer Petrie, a proven winner who has cemented her status as not only one of the premier volleyball minds in the country but as one of the most successful, decorated, and respected leaders in San Diego sports history, will enter her 28th season as San Diego volleyball’s head coach in 2026. JENNIFER PETRIE'S ACCOLADES AT A GLANCE

  • 2022 AVCA National Coach of the Year
  • Unanimous 2022 VolleyballMag.com National Coach of the Year
  • Three-time AVCA Pacific South Region Coach of the Year
  • Eight-time West Coast Conference Coach of the Year
  • 22 NCAA Tournament appearances
  • Led USD to the 2022 NCAA National Semifinal
  • 10 WCC Championships
  • Developed 27 All-Americans and 11 WCC Players of the Year

San Diego has advanced to the NCAA Tournament in 23 of the past 27 seasons, and 22 of those postseason berths have come under Petrie. Her career record is 538-189 with a .740 winning percentage and she is a remarkable 337-81 (.806) all-time in West Coast Conference play. Under Petrie, USD has advanced to the Final Four once (2022) and the Sweet 16 five times, including 2018 and 2022. San Diego has climbed into a top-five national ranking in three different seasons, including a program-best No. 2 in both 2013 and 2022. In 2022, Petrie was named both the AVCA National Coach of the Year and earned VolleyballMag.com's unanimous selection as its National Coach of the Year.   Eight times Petrie has been named the West Coast Conference Coach of the Year (2004, 2008, 2010, 2013, 2017, 2019, 2022, and 2025) and has been named the AVCA Pacific South Region Coach of the Year on three occasions (2013, 2017, and 2022).   Petrie has helped develop 27 All-Americans in her 27 years heading the program, including two First Team All-America selections.   And her tenure in San Diego has seen the Toreros dominate the West Coast Conference postseason awards, as in:

  • 11 Players of the Year
  • Four Defenders of the Year
  • Four Setters of the Year
  • 11 Freshmen of the Year
  • Two Libero of the Year
  • And 69 All-WCC First Team selections

In 2025, Petrie led her team back to the postseason for the first time since 2022, and did so in historic fashion, posting a 25-5 overall record and an 18-0 mark in WCC play. After going 7-4 through a formidable non-conference schedule that included four wins over Top-50 teams and clashes with five programs that went on to qualify for the postseason, Petrie’s squad closed the regular season on an 18-match win streak and went undefeated in West Coast Conference play to win the 2025 WCC Championship and become the first team in the country to earn a spot in the 2025 NCAA Tournament. USD clinched the conference title with a memorable 3-0 sweep of rival Pepperdine before a season-high crowd of 1,103 in the Jenny Craig Pavilion on November 20, then completed just the third perfect WCC season in program history when it beat Gonzaga on Senior Day at the JCP nine days later.  USD’s dominant campaign earned it the WCC's automatic qualifier to the postseason and the No. 8 seed in the Nebraska quadrant of the 2025 NCAA Tournament bracket, where it matched up with Kansas State at the renowned Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln. The Toreros took the first set from the Wildcats and rallied for a thrilling 28-26 victory in set three, but eventually suffered a narrow 3-2 loss to conclude a memorable year that vaulted San Diego back to national prominence as it totaled the fourth-most victories in a single season in program history. After the 2025 season ended, Petrie was named the 2025 WCC Coach of the Year, Nemo Beach was named the 2025 WCC Player of the Year, Kylie Munday was named the 2025 WCC Setter of the Year, and Olivia Bennett was named the 2025 WCC Libero of the Year. Four of Petrie’s players earned 2025 All-WCC honors, including four to the First Team, one to the Second Team, two as Honorable Mentions, and one to the Freshman Team. Petrie’s tutelage also helped a Torero dynamic duo receive national recognition. Beach was named a 2025 AVCA All-American Honorable Mention, while Munday was selected as a 2025 AVCA All-Pacific Region Honorable Mention. The excellence of Petrie’s 2025 squad extended to the classroom as well. Bennett was named to the 2025 WCC Volleyball All-Academic Team, while Munday and Tatum Lane received 2025 WCC Volleyball All-Academic Honorable Mentions. July 2025 saw Petrie take her team abroad and participate in international competition for the first time, accepting an invitation to represent the United State at the 2025 FISU World University Games in Berlin. The Toreros were the USA's only women’s volleyball team in the Games, and finished 10th of approximately 20 teams. Petrie’s squad, competing as Team USA instead of USD, earned wins over Team Australia, Team Chile, and Team Mongolia in the event. In 2024, Petrie achieved a remarkable milestone, securing her 500th career win with a dominant 3-0 sweep at Gonzaga. Under her leadership, the Toreros posted a strong 19-9 overall record and a 14-4 finish in WCC play, tying for second place in the conference. The team’s season was highlighted by an undefeated run at the LSU Invitational and statement victories over No. 17 BYU and WCC rival Pepperdine. Several players flourished under Petrie’s guidance, earning conference and academic honors. Isabel Clark was named WCC Freshman of the Year, while Kylie Munday earned WCC Setter of the Year honors. Clark, Kristen Erland, and Haylee Stoner were selected to the All-WCC First Team, Nemo Beach was named to the All-WCC Second Team, and Madi Allen and Kennedy Osunsanmi received All-WCC Honorable Mentions. Stoner was also recognized on the All-WCC Academic Team, with Olivia Bennett earning a WCC Academic Honorable Mention. In 2023, Petrie steered the Toreros to a 16-10 overall record and a 12-4 mark in conference play, which was good for a third-place finish in the West Coast Conference. Outside hitter Nemo Beach was named the WCC Freshman of the Year alongside All-WCC First Team selections for Leyla Blackwell, Kylie Pries, and Amber Stivrins, and an All-WCC Second Team recognition for Haylee Stoner. Additionally, Stoner (First Team) and setter Isadora Tercariol (Honorable Mention) earned WCC academic honors.She elevated both San Diego volleyball and USD Athletics to new, unprecedented heights in 2022, leading the Toreros to a 31-2 overall record that included a perfect 18-0 mark in WCC play for just the second time ever. The Toreros' lone two losses in 2022 came at the hands of the teams that played for that year's national championship — Texas and Louisville — and her team took a set from both the Longhorns and the Cardinals. For her efforts she was recognized as America’s top volleyball coach — both by her peers and by the country’s top volleyball publication — earning both the AVCA National Coach of the Year award and a unanimous selection as the VolleyballMag.com National Coach of the Year. Under Petrie in 2022, San Diego set a school record with 28 consecutive wins, good for the second-best overall winning percentage (.939) and longest win streak (28 matches) in the country. After beginning the season at No. 25 in the AVCA Division I Women's Coaches Poll, her team moved up or maintained position in every AVCA Poll until November 28. The Toreros tied a program-high No. 2 national ranking on October 31 and held strong there for four straight weeks, giving them 12 weeks in the nation's Top 5 through 15 total polls. USD eventually finished at No. 3 in the final AVCA Top 25 Poll (December 19), the highest placement it's ever concluded a season with. With her at the helm San Diego swept 20 of 33 matches in 2022, including 13 of 18 WCC contests, and went 8-2 against the AVCA Top 25 and 3-2 against the AVCA Top 10. The Toreros' excellence under Petrie in 2022 didn't stop in the regular season. After capturing their 12th West Coast Conference Championship and receiving a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament, postseason matches returned to the Jenny Craig Pavilion for just the third time ever, and San Diego beat Northern Colorado and seven-seed No. 24 Washington State in the event's first and second rounds to advance to its fifth-ever Regional Semifinal. San Diego then met three-seed No. 15 Kentucky in Palo Alto, where it swept the Wildcats 3-0 in the Sweet 16, moving USD to the first Elite Eight appearance in program history. Two days later, the Toreros completed a stunning 3-2 win over Stanford, silencing the Maples Pavilion as it punched its ticket to its first-ever Final Four. In addition to the Toreros' team success, Petrie's mentorship in 2022 also helped the Toreros take home a flurry of conference, regional, and national awards. This season saw Petrie mentor an AVCA First Team All-American (Gabby Blossom), an AVCA Second Team All-American (Grace Frohling) an AVCA Third Team All-American (Katie Lukes), the AVCA Pacific South Region Player of the Year (Gabby Blossom), three AVCA Pacific South All-Region Team members (Grace Frohling, Katie Lukes, and Gabby Blossom), an AVCA Pacific South All-Region Honorable Mention (Breana Edwards), the 2022 WCC Player of the Year (Lukes), Setter of the Year (Blossom), and Libero of the Year (Annie Benbow), in addition to four All-WCC First Team selections, two All-WCC Second Team selections, and an All-WCC Honorable mention. After the season, her team took home the 2023 WCC Female Sportsmanship Award, designed to celebrate outstanding sportsmanship exhibited during competition, practice and behind the scenes, and Blossom was named the 2023 WCC Female Mike Gilleran Scholar-Athlete of the Year, which recognizes the finest accomplishments in athletics, academics and community service by individuals who have completed their collegiate eligibility. Petrie steered the Toreros to the program's 25th appearance in the NCAA Tournament in 2021, with San Diego posting a 20-8 (14-4 WCC) record en-route to a first-round matchup with Rice. Highlights included victories over a pair of ranked opponents (No. 16 UCLA and No. 24 Pepperdine), two players being named to the AVCA Pacific South All-Region Team (Grace Frohling and Katie Lukes), and seven earning All-WCC honors, including four to the All-WCC First Team (Frohling, Lukes, Leyla Blackwell, and Annie Benbow). After the fall 2020 season was postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic, Petrie faced the most unique season in her career. The Toreros played a conference-only schedule in the spring of 2021, finishing 12-4 just behind BYU and Pepperdine. USD made its 11th consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance with one of just 16 at-large bids and advanced to the second round for the 11th time in Petrie’s career. Outside hitters Roxie Wiblin and Thana Fayad earned All-Region honors, while Wiblin also received All-America recognition. In 2019, Petrie earned her sixth WCC Coach of the Year nod after the Toreros finished 25-6 and captured their first outright WCC Championship since 2013, going 17-1 in conference play. Petrie celebrated her 400th career win and USD made its tenth straight NCAA Tournament appearance. San Diego’s offense ranked in the top-10 nationally for most of the season and eight Toreros earned All-WCC honors including four first-team selections. To cap off the awards, Anna Newsome and Megan Jacobsen earned All-Region honors, while Grace Frohling was named AVCA Pacific South Freshman of the Year and All-America honorable mention. Petrie turned in one of her best coaching performances in 2018. On a team looking at a transition with a heavily laden freshmen roster, the Toreros closed the regular season 16-12. But after earning an at-large berth in the NCAA playoffs, USD turned hot. The Toreros knocked off No. 13 Cal Poly 3-1, then pulled off the most stunning upset of the postseason, handing No. 17 USC a 3-0 defeat on the Trojans’ home floor. USD matched its best program finish, advancing to the regional semifinals. In 2017, USD went 25-5 and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Kristen Gengenbacher was named WCC Player of the Year and earned All-America honors. The 2016 season saw the Toreros reel off an 18-match winning streak as they rose as high as No. 5 in the national rankings.   In 2013, Petrie guided the Toreros to arguably one the most successful seasons in program history. San Diego received a national ranking of No. 2, the highest for any USD athletic team in the Division I era, and they remained in the top-10 for a majority of the season. USD also captured its ninth WCC title, upended No. 1 ranked USC at the Jenny Craig Pavilion, hosted the first and second rounds of the NCAA Volleyball tournament, winning both matches to advance onto the Sweet 16 for the third time in program history. Petrie was also recognized as the AVCA Pacific South Region Coach of the Year, and under her tutelage, three Toreros took home AVCA All-American accolades. After taking the 2011 season off to spend time with her newborn daughter, Caroline, Petrie returned to the sidelines, and resumed her role as head coach for the 2012 season. In 2012, the Toreros posted a 21-7 overall record, and took a share of the WCC Championship, while advancing onto the NCAA Tournament for the 10th time in Petrie’s career. In 2010, the Toreros captured their fourth WCC championship in the previous five seasons, as USD posted a 13-1 mark in league play. Petrie helped produce five All-WCC performers highlighted by Ali Troost who was tabbed as the WCC Player of the Year, as well as helping guide Chloe Ferrari to the WCC Freshman of the Year honor. The Toreros also reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament after sweeping away Long Beach State, before falling in a hard fought 3-1 loss to USC in the second round. Petrie proved to be one of the country's best young coaches—needing just ten seasons to reach 200 career victories. From 1999 to 2009, the Toreros averaged 21 wins per season with four WCC titles and nine NCAA Tournament appearances. In 2009, Petrie guided the Toreros to a second-place finish in the West Coast Conference, and helped the team post an overall record of 18-7. Ali Troost was tabbed the WCC Player of the Year and went on to become USD's eighth AVCA All-American in program history. The Toreros also had four players earn All-WCC accolades.   In 2008, Petrie orchestrated the Toreros to their third consecutive WCC championship, becoming the first program at USD to achieve such a feat. USD posted a 12-2 mark in the WCC and went 23-5 overall, earning its eighth consecutive trip the NCAA Tournament. Under Petrie's tutelage, Amy Mahinalani DeGroot was tabbed the WCC Player of the Year and went on to become USD's sixth AVCA All-American in program history.   In 2007, Petrie helped guide USD to its second consecutive WCC Championship and third in the previous four years. The Toreros also returned to the NCAA Tournament for the seventh consecutive season.   Petrie took off the fall semester of 2006 on maternity leave and let her top assistant for the previous five seasons, Brent Hilliard take the reins. The 2004 season was a special one in Petrie’s young career, with the Toreros finishing as the undefeated (14-0) WCC Champions, advancing to the NCAA Regional Semifinals, and earning a national ranking as high as No. 11 by the American Volleyball Coaches Association—all new USD school records. The Toreros also had a then-school record three players earn AVCA All-America honors at season's end. Petrie became the third head coach in USD program history in 1999, succeeding three-time WCC Coach of the Year Sue Snyder. The Toreros enjoyed immediate success under Petrie, finishing 23-6 and advancing into the NCAA Tournament's second round during her inaugural season in the fall of 1999.   Her collegiate coaching career began when she joined the volleyball staff at Indiana State University where she served as top assistant from 1992 to 1993. Petrie then took the top assistant position at North Carolina, Chapel Hill from 1994 to 1997, before joining Sue Snyder's staff at the University of San Diego for the 1997 campaign. Petrie helped San Diego win back-to-back WCC Championships as the Toreros' top assistant in 1997 and 1998.   Petrie was a standout volleyball player at the College of William and Mary. She was twice named Colonial Athletic Conference Player of the Year (1990-91) and a two-time All-Southern Region selection (1990-91). She gained national level playing experience in 1990 when she competed on the gold medal-winning U.S. Olympic Festival North Region Team. Petrie was later selected to the College of William and Mary Athletic Hall of Fame. Petrie played for the San Diego Juniors Volleyball Club and graduated from Mt. Carmel High School. In 1992, she graduated from the College of William and Mary with a degree in Art History and completed her Master's Degree in Sports Administration at North Carolina, Chapel Hill in 1997.   Petrie resides in San Diego with her husband, Mark and their three children; son Charlie and daughters Jane and Caroline.

Carlos Moreno

Associate Head Coach

Carlos Moreno joined San Diego volleyball in December of 2022 as the Toreros' associate head coach. He will enter his fourth season with USD in 2026. Moreno’s career record at USD is 53-19 with a .736 winning percentage. With Moreno as associate head coach, USD has won a WCC Championship (2025), secured an NCAA Tournament berth (2025), and developed:

  • Two WCC Setters of the Year
  • Two WCC Freshmen of the Year
  • 10 All-WCC First Team selections
  • Three All-WCC Second Team selections
  • Five All-WCC Honorable Mentions
  • Five All-WCC Freshman Team selections
  • Three WCC All-Academic First Team selections
  • And four WCC All-Academic Honorable Mentions

In 2025, Moreno helped lead USD back to the postseason for the first time since 2022 as San Diego posted a 25-5 overall record and an 18-0 mark in WCC play. After going 7-4 through a formidable non-conference schedule that included four wins over Top-50 teams and clashes with five programs that went on to qualify for the 2025 NCAA Tournament, the Toreros closed the regular season on an 18-match win streak and went undefeated in West Coast Conference play to win the 2025 WCC Championship and become the first team in the country to qualify for the 2025 NCAA Tournament. USD clinched the conference title with a memorable 3-0 sweep of rival Pepperdine before a season-high crowd of 1,103 in the Jenny Craig Pavilion on November 20, then completed just the third perfect WCC season in program history when it beat Gonzaga on Senior Day at the JCP nine days later.  USD’s dominant campaign earned it the WCC's automatic qualifier to the postseason and the No. 8 seed in the Nebraska quadrant of the 2025 NCAA Tournament bracket, where it matched up with Kansas State at the renowned Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln. The Toreros took the first set and rallied for a thrilling 28-26 victory in set three, but eventually suffered a narrow 3-2 loss to conclude a thrilling year that vaulted San Diego back to national prominence as it totaled the fourth-most victories in a single season in program history. After the 2025 season concluded, Nemo Beach was named the 2025 WCC Player of the Year, Kylie Munday was named the 2025 WCC Setter of the Year, and Olivia Bennett was named the 2025 WCC Libero of the Year. Four San Diego players earned 2025 All-WCC honors, including four to the First Team, one to the Second Team, two as Honorable Mentions, and one to the Freshman Team. Moreno's tutelage also helped a Torero dynamic duo receive national recognition. Beach was named a 2025 AVCA All-American Honorable Mention, while Munday was selected as a 2025 AVCA All-Pacific Region Honorable Mention. Additionally, Bennett was named to the 2025 WCC Volleyball All-Academic Team, while Munday and Tatum Lane received 2025 WCC Volleyball All-Academic Honorable Mentions. In 2024, Moreno helped steer the Toreros to a 19-9 overall record and a 14-4 finish in WCC play, tying for second place in the conference. The team’s season was highlighted by an undefeated run at the LSU Invitational and statement victories over No. 17 BYU and WCC rival Pepperdine. Isabel Clark was named WCC Freshman of the Year, while Kylie Munday earned WCC Setter of the Year honors. Clark, Kristen Erland, and Haylee Stoner were selected to the All-WCC First Team, Nemo Beach was named to the All-WCC Second Team, and Madi Allen and Kennedy Osunsanmi received All-WCC Honorable Mentions. Stoner was also recognized on the All-WCC Academic Team, with Olivia Bennett earning a WCC Academic Honorable Mention.  In his first season with the program, the Toreros finished with a 16-10 overall record and a 12-4 mark in conference play, which was good for a third-place finish in the West Coast Conference. Outside hitter Nemo Beach was named the WCC Freshman of the Year alongside All-WCC First Team selections for Leyla Blackwell, Kylie Pries, and Amber Stivrins, and an All-WCC Second Team recognition for Haylee Stoner. Additionally, Stoner (First Team) and setter Isadora Tercariol (Honorable Mention) earned WCC academic honors. Moreno was previously at Arizona State, where he had been the Sun Devils' associate head coach since February of 2017. In March of 2022, he was named an assistant coach for the 2022 U.S. Women's Collegiate National Team (WCNT). He helped steer ASU through a developmental period across his six seasons in Phoenix, assisting the Sun Devils in three Top-15 wins and an AVCA Top 25 ranking in 2018, sweeps over Arizona, Oregon, and Oregon State in 2019, two wins over ranked opponents in the challenging, COVID-19-altered 2020-2021 season, and four wins against ranked Pac-12 teams this year in 2022. That campaign saw him coach setter Ella Snyder to a team-high 1,029 assists, the most by a single Sun Devil since 2014. While with the WCNT in 2022, he was tasked with observing and evaluating NCAA athletes with the highest potential alongside the six other members of the program's coaching staff, which included three Olympic medal winners and two others with Olympic coaching experience. The team included 38 of the country's top collegiate women's volleyball players at the National Team Training Center in Anaheim, California, where they trained among the best collegiate players in the country, watched the WNT training sessions, studied the USA systems, and met with Tokyo 2020 Olympians and were observed by the WNT staff.  Being a part of a Final Four Program is a huge honor, an enormous privilege, and a great responsibility. In addition, what excites me about this, is the tradition that separates USD from other universities, the foundation that has been built perennially, and the chance to work and learn from a great staff. Jennifer has established herself as one of the nation's most successful volleyball coaches and Jimmy is a great volleyball mind. Their drive, vision, moral values and standards align perfectly with mine."  Moreno came to Arizona State from Southern Miss, where during his one-year tenure he operated in a number of facets, including on-court coaching, recruiting, fundraising, and compliance. Moreno most notably worked extensively with the team's offensive systems and setters, including the Golden Eagles' All-Conference honoree Sarah Bell. Prior to his stint at Southern Miss, Moreno garnered coaching experience directing camps and clinics in his native country of Brazil, while also serving as the head coach of the University of Sao Paulo Women's Volleyball Team from 2000 to 2002.   Preceding his coaching career, Moreno compiled a prolific playing career as a setter at Brigham Young University, garnering essentially every national award possible, including AVCA and MPSF Player of the year honors. A three-year starter for the Cougars, Moreno amassed 4,628 career assists, marking the second-most in program history, while adding 78 career aces (4th-most in program history). Spearheading BYU NCAA Championship runs in 2003 and 2004, Moreno earned a plethora of Player of the Year and MVP honors while also being placed on MSPF's and AVCA's respective first-teams.   A two-time All-American and the 2004 AVCA National Player of the Year, Moreno led the Cougars to two NCAA tournament appearances, including the 2004 National Championship, and a pair of MPSF Conference titles.   COLLEGE CAREER ACCOLADES:

  • NCAA National Champion and MVP (2004)
  • NCAA All Tournament Team (2004)
  • AVCA NCAA player of the year (2004)
  • Conference player of the year and MVP (2004)
  • All American First Team (2003/04)

 Moreno earned a bachelor degree in advertising and marketing at Brigham Young University in 2005.   His playing career extended beyond the collegiate ranks, as the Brazil native competed 11 years professionally, concluding his career as a captain of TLM - Volley in France. Moreno was named to two all-star games and was named as one of the best setters at the 2013 CEV Champions League. He won three league championships, one in Brazil, two in France and another one at the European Championships when playing in Slovenia.   The son of Antonio and Selma Moreno, Moreno is the oldest sibling of six children. Antonio Moreno participated in four Olympics as a member of the Brazilian National volleyball team. Moreno's twin sister Anna Allison was the head coach of Bucknell University volleyball team for seven seasons.   Carlos is joined in San Diego by his wife Maria Eduarda, their son Lucas, and their daughter Liz.

John Dunn

Assistant Coach/Recruiting Coordinator

John Dunn joined San Diego volleyball in May of 2024. He will enter his third season with the Toreros in 2026, serving as assistant coach and recruiting coordinator. With Dunn as an assistant coach, USD has won a WCC Championship (2025), secured an NCAA Tournament berth (2025), and developed:

  • Two WCC Setters of the Year
  • One WCC Freshman of the Year
  • Seven All-WCC First Team selections
  • Two All-WCC Second Team selections
  • Four All-WCC Honorable Mention selections
  • Four All-WCC Freshman Team selections
  • Two WCC All-Academic First Team selections
  • Three WCC All-Academic Honorable Mention selections

In 2025, Dunn helped lead USD back to the postseason for the first time since 2022 as San Diego posted a 25-5 overall record and an 18-0 mark in WCC play. After going 7-4 through a formidable non-conference schedule that included four wins over Top-50 teams and clashes with five programs that went on to qualify for the 2025 NCAA Tournament, the Toreros closed the regular season on an 18-match win streak and went undefeated in West Coast Conference play to win the 2025 WCC Championship and become the first team in the country to qualify for the 2025 NCAA Tournament. USD clinched the conference title with a memorable 3-0 sweep of rival Pepperdine before a season-high crowd of 1,103 in the Jenny Craig Pavilion on November 20, then completed just the third perfect WCC season in program history when it beat Gonzaga on Senior Day at the JCP nine days later.  USD’s dominant campaign earned it the WCC's automatic qualifier to the postseason and the No. 8 seed in the Nebraska quadrant of the 2025 NCAA Tournament bracket, where it matched up with Kansas State at the renowned Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln. The Toreros took the first set and rallied for a thrilling 28-26 victory in set three, but eventually suffered a narrow 3-2 loss to conclude a thrilling year that vaulted San Diego back to national prominence as it totaled the fourth-most victories in a single season in program history. After the 2025 season concluded, Nemo Beach was named the 2025 WCC Player of the Year, Kylie Munday was named the 2025 WCC Setter of the Year, and Olivia Bennett was named the 2025 WCC Libero of the Year. Four San Diego players earned 2025 All-WCC honors, including four to the First Team, one to the Second Team, two as Honorable Mentions, and one to the Freshman Team. Dunn's tutelage also helped a Torero dynamic duo receive national recognition. Beach was named a 2025 AVCA All-American Honorable Mention, while Munday was selected as a 2025 AVCA All-Pacific Region Honorable Mention. Additionally, Bennett was named to the 2025 WCC Volleyball All-Academic Team, while Munday and Tatum Lane received 2025 WCC Volleyball All-Academic Honorable Mentions. With Dunn’s assistance, the Toreros posted a strong 19-9 overall record and a 14-4 finish in WCC play in 2024, tying for second place in the conference. The team’s season was highlighted by an undefeated run at the LSU Invitational and statement victories over No. 17 BYU and WCC rival Pepperdine. Isabel Clark was named WCC Freshman of the Year, while Kylie Munday earned WCC Setter of the Year honors. Clark, Kristen Erland, and Haylee Stoner were selected to the All-WCC First Team, Nemo Beach was named to the All-WCC Second Team, and Madi Allen and Kennedy Osunsanmi received All-WCC Honorable Mentions. Stoner was also recognized on the All-WCC Academic Team, with Olivia Bennett earning a WCC Academic Honorable Mention. Dunn joined USD from Kansas State, where he had served as the Wildcats’ assistant coach since May of 2023.  “I am excited to announce the addition of John Dunn to our volleyball staff,” said Petrie. “John has great experience in high-level training gyms, with Kansas State, Washington, and Arizona all on his resume. His experience both in the gym, in the office, scouting and recruiting provide him with the skills to elevate our program. John is charismatic and enthusiastic, and will make an immediate impact on our staff. Please join me in welcoming John to the Torero family.” He specialized in defensive strategy — particularly floor defense — while in Manhattan, working closely with the program’s liberos and defensive specialists. His guidance helped Kansas State secure a record-breaking five Top 25 victories and its most regular season wins since 2016, including a 3-0 sweep over eventual national champion Texas. Four Wildcats earned All-Big 12 honors with him on the staff, and one was recognized as an AVCA All-American. Dunn’s duties at KSU also included scouting, charting, practice plans, recruiting, overseeing student managers, and liaising with the department’s social media team. “I want to thank Jennifer Petrie and Associate Head Coach Carlos Moreno for this amazing opportunity to join them at the University of San Diego,” Dunn said. “Their resumes and storied careers, both as players and coaches, speak for themselves. It was evident that their passion to compete at the highest level and dedication to develop quality student athletes aligned closely with my own. After visiting the campus, meeting the players and staff, it was an easy choice to want to continue to build upon the amazing foundation already laid that is USD Volleyball. I also cannot express enough the immense gratitude and love I have for Jason Mansfield and the whole program at K-State. It was an honor to contribute to what he is building there and I am excited to continue to watch that program thrive. I’ve been incredibly blessed to work for amazing head coaches like Heather Moore-Martin, David Rubio, Keegan Cook, Leslie Gabriel, and Jason Mansfield, and I couldn’t be more excited to continue to learn and develop as a coach and person under Coach Petrie. I can’t wait to get back out West and get to work!” Prior to Kansas State, Dunn spent time at the University of Washington, earning a Master’s Degree in Education as a graduate assistant before being promoted to volunteer assistant coach. During Dunn’s tenure at UW, the Huskies reached their 21st consecutive NCAA Tournament.  He completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Arizona, where he played for and served as the president of the school’s men’s club volleyball team in addition to being a practice player for the Division I women’s volleyball program. A native of Tucson, Arizona, Dunn played for one season at Belmont Abbey College after attending Salpointe Catholic High School, at which he was a four-year varsity volleyball letterwinner.

Hannah Waters

Graduate Assistant

Hannah Waters joined San Diego volleyball in July 2024 as a graduate assistant. She completed her second season with the Toreros in 2025.  With Waters as a graduate assistant, USD has won a WCC Championship (2025), secured an NCAA Tournament berth (2025), and developed:

  • Two WCC Setters of the Year
  • One WCC Freshman of the Year
  • Seven All-WCC First Team selections
  • Two All-WCC Second Team selections
  • Three All-WCC Honorable Mention selections
  • Four All-WCC Freshman Team selections
  • Two WCC All-Academic First Team selections
  • And three WCC All-Academic Honorable Mention selections

In 2025, Waters helped lead USD back to the postseason for the first time since 2022 as San Diego posted a 25-5 overall record and an 18-0 mark in WCC play. After going 7-4 through a formidable non-conference schedule that included four wins over Top-50 teams and clashes with five programs that went on to qualify for the 2025 NCAA Tournament, the Toreros closed the regular season on an 18-match win streak and went undefeated in West Coast Conference play to win the 2025 WCC Championship and become the first team in the country to qualify for the 2025 NCAA Tournament. USD clinched the conference title with a memorable 3-0 sweep of rival Pepperdine before a season-high crowd of 1,103 in the Jenny Craig Pavilion on November 20, then completed just the third perfect WCC season in program history when it beat Gonzaga on Senior Day at the JCP nine days later.  USD’s dominant campaign earned it the WCC's automatic qualifier to the postseason and the No. 8 seed in the Nebraska quadrant of the 2025 NCAA Tournament bracket, where it matched up with Kansas State at the renowned Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln. The Toreros took the first set and rallied for a thrilling 28-26 victory in set three, but eventually suffered a narrow 3-2 loss to conclude a thrilling year that vaulted San Diego back to national prominence as it totaled the fourth-most victories in a single season in program history. After the 2025 season concluded, Nemo Beach was named the 2025 WCC Player of the Year, Kylie Munday was named the 2025 WCC Setter of the Year, and Olivia Bennett was named the 2025 WCC Libero of the Year. Four San Diego players earned 2025 All-WCC honors, including four to the First Team, one to the Second Team, two as Honorable Mentions, and one to the Freshman Team. Waters' tutelage also helped a Torero dynamic duo receive national recognition. Beach was named a 2025 AVCA All-American Honorable Mention, while Munday was selected as a 2025 AVCA All-Pacific Region Honorable Mention. Additionally, Bennett was named to the 2025 WCC Volleyball All-Academic Team, while Munday and Tatum Lane received 2025 WCC Volleyball All-Academic Honorable Mentions. With Waters’ assistance, the Toreros posted a strong 19-9 overall record and a 14-4 finish in WCC play in 2024, tying for second place in the conference. The team’s season was highlighted by an undefeated run at the LSU Invitational and statement victories over No. 17 BYU and WCC rival Pepperdine. Isabel Clark was named WCC Freshman of the Year, while Kylie Munday earned WCC Setter of the Year honors. Clark, Kristen Erland, and Haylee Stoner were selected to the All-WCC First Team, Nemo Beach was named to the All-WCC Second Team, and Madi Allen and Kennedy Osunsanmi received All-WCC Honorable Mentions. Stoner was also recognized on the All-WCC Academic Team, with Olivia Bennett earning a WCC Academic Honorable Mention.  Waters came to USD after playing four years of Division I volleyball at Lamar University and Fresno State. She played setter during her time as an undergraduate, tallying 1,385 assists, 637 digs, and 32 aces across nearly 100 matches with both the Cardinals and the Bulldogs. In her final year at Fresno State, she helped her team capture the 2023 Mountain West Championship. Waters also held roles as a coach with FMTVA and Valley Volleyball Clubs, in addition to serving as a Strategic Communications Intern with Fresno State Athletics.  As a graduate assistant, Waters assists the USD volleyball staff with day-to-day operations, recruiting, liaising with the department's strategic communications team, and coordinating team travel. A native of Litchfield Park, Arizona, Waters graduated from Fresno State in 2024 with Dean's and President's Honors and a Bachelor's degree in Communications.

THE UNIVERSITY

Beauty Everywhere

The Princeton Review has ranked USD as the #1 most beautiful college campus in the nation. USD's 180-acre space rests atop a mesa overlooking San Diego, Mission Bay, and the Pacific Ocean.

Elite Learning

At USD, our focus is to provide students with an outstanding, personalized academic experience. With an undergraduate population of about 5,300, USD fosters an individualized learning environment in which class sizes average only 22 students, which is a remarkable 13-1 student to faculty ratio. Every single course is taught by a member of the faculty.

Education at USD begins on campus, and is strengthened by solid academic preparation and practical experience. The prestigious University produces cultured, global-minded, and sought-after graduates ready to make a real difference in the world.

To ensure the highest level of success, our scholar-athletes have immense support from athlete-specific academic advisors, athlete-only tutors, as well as exclusive resources provided by the scholar-athlete development team.

Global Perspective

Study Abroad

The national rankings are not just on the volleyball court! USD is ranked consistently at the top in the nation for study abroad participation. Academic programs are offered through 135 programs in 44 countries in 76 cities. USD Volleyball athletes are encouraged to take advantage of the study abroad resources and take classes overseas during intersession.

Grace Oliva '26 and Olivia Bennett '26 enjoying their study abroad in Venice, Italy
Haylee Stoner '25 studied German in Salzburg, Austria
Katie Lukes '22 studied Chemistry in Fiji & New Zealand
Allyson Eylers '19 studied Marketing in Florence, Italy
Hannah Patrick '20 studied Spanish in Buenos Aires, Argentina and World Religions in Auckland, New Zealand

Global Perspective

Playing in the pros

Over the last 20 years, USD has prepared numerous athletes to compete in professional leagues all around the world.

The City of San Diego

It's always sunny

San Diego has the most ideal climate with temperatures averaging 70 degrees all year long. With over 70 miles of coastline, it's easy to enjoy the beautiful sunsets everyday.

Balboa Park

Balboa Park is a 1,200 acre urban cultural park in San Diego. In addition to open space areas, natural vegetation zones, green belts, gardens, and walking paths, it contains museums, several theaters, and the world-famous San Diego Zoo.

La Jolla Cove

La Jolla Cove is home to various wildlife and seals. Enjoy kayaking, surfing, and walking along the cove to see the seals.

Sunset Cliffs

Enjoy a sunset overlooking the ocean at this beautiful spot in Point Loma!

Mission Beach

South Mission Beach is a spot in San Diego known for its rows of sand volleyball courts. Mission Beach is also home to the amusement park Belmont Park and other restaurants and coffee shops!

Downtown

The Gaslamp Quarter is a lively downtown neighborhood, known for its nightlife that draws a young crowd, while the Spreckels and Balboa theaters have diverse programs of music, comedy and drama. There is a mix of chain and independent restaurants in the area, with many global options. Horton Plaza Park has grassy lawns, ice cream and coffee vendors, and an interactive fountain.

The legacy continues

The mission of the University of San Diego Volleyball program is not only to produce champions on the court, but also to equip scholar-athletes with the strength and compassion to positively shape society. USD Volleyball develops leaders to confidently impact the workforce, professional teams, and their families.

CREATED BY
University of San Diego Volleyball