6 collegiate volleyball players drafted to professional league in the U.S.

See which of your favorite women’s volleyball players went pro with Athletes Unlimited.

The Athletes Unlimited volleyball draft took place on March 20 and six athletes were drafted to the league to participate in Season 3. The volleyball season is set to start in October at Bell Bank Park in Mesa, Arizona.

Prior to the season, the players will go on tour from March 25, 2023 to April 21, 2023 making various stops across the United States to play collegiate programs. Some of these new draftees will play for the first time at their alma maters, in a different jersey.

While the talent is deep in collegiate women’s volleyball, the opportunities for these players to play domestically was slim, until Athletes Unlimited came along. The league has 44 roster spots for professional volleyball players and the league pays these athletes well.

For the five-week season, athletes receive a minimum of $10,000 USD with the possibility to make more the better they play and the higher they rank on the leaderboard.

2023 Volleyball Exhibition Tour might stop at a school near you

Check out where Athletes Unlimited will host volleyball events in 2023.

While college volleyball season doesn’t start until the fall, some college teams have the opportunity to play against professionals in the Athletes Unlimited volleyball exhibition tour.

The tour “features a team of professional volleyball athletes traveling across the U.S. to play a series of exhibition matches against top college programs, while promoting the sport at a grassroots level and previewing the fall championship season.”

Athletes Unlimited was founded by Jon Patricof and Jonathan Soros on March 3, 2020, and has four women’s professional sports under its umbrella: softball, volleyball, basketball, and lacrosse. In 2021, it added volleyball and in 2022, it added basketball.

Season 3 of volleyball is set to start in October at Bell Bank Park in Mesa, Arizona. The league boasts 44 of the world’s top players and the season will include a full 30-match championship season will air live, exclusively on ESPN Platforms.

Prior to the season, the players will go on tour from March 25, 2023 and runs through April 21, 2023 making various stops across the United States to play collegiate programs.

Date Opponent
March 25 Ohio State University
March 27 University of Kentucky
March 31 University of Louisville
Apr. 4 University of Minnesota
Apr. 5 University of Wisconsin
Apr. 12 University of Texas
Apr. 13 Baylor University
Apr. 19 Howard University
Apr. 21 Penn State University

Sydney Hilley is a former Wisconsin Badger who has played overseas since the conclusion of her collegiate career. Hilley is thrilled to be back on her collegiate campus, this time as a professional athlete.

“It’s crazy because I never thought I’d play in the Field House again,” she said. “Honestly, it’s going to be a little weird not wearing a Wisconsin jersey in the Field House, but overall, I’m just really excited to go back. It’s such a fun environment to play in. Even when I was there during spring matches, they would almost sell out. They had so many fans there, even in spring games.”

Athletes Unlimited is providing the opportunity for athletes to stay home and play professionally instead of going overseas.

“The opportunity to play volleyball in the U.S. at a high level was something that drew my attention,” Hilley said. “So when they reached out to me, I was like, ‘Heck, yeah, let’s do it and let’s grow volleyball in the U.S. so that players don’t have to go overseas to play professionally if they don’t want to.”

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Women’s History Month Spotlight: Former Stanford volleyball standout Cassidy Lichtman

In 2020, Lichtman agreed to come back from retirement and play in the inaugural season of Athletes Unlimited volleyball

This Women’s History Month, I will be spotlighting women athletes and their achievements in college, after college, and beyond. Athletes are Humans First and while I want to highlight their athletic ability and achievements, I also want to point a spotlight on what they are doing off their field of play.

Cassidy Lichtman is the Director of Volleyball for Athletes Unlimited where she was previously a professional volleyball player and Chairperson of the Player Executive Committee. Lichtman is a former member of the USA Volleyball Women’s National Team, a two-time All-American, and an Academic All-American at Stanford.

She played professionally in Europe and Asia for five years and was keenly aware of the power imbalances prevalent in sport between the owners and the players. The owners had full control and reign over the lives of the athletes on the court and a huge level of power off the court as well.

“Rule number 1, don’t argue with the owner, because they own you. The decide if you get paid, if you get fired, where you live, how much you play, whether or not you get Christmas off,” Lichtman said in her TEDxBoston presentation entitled The Power in My Voice. She played half of the year in Europe and Asia and half the year on the USA Volleyball Women’s National Team and retired in 2016. However in 2020, when a professional league was founded in the United States, Lichtman agreed to come back from retirement and play in the inaugural season of Athletes Unlimited volleyball. Up until that point, no professional indoor volleyball leagues existed in the United States.

There were no owners, no clubs, and no set teams. This was something entirely different than anything Lichtman had experienced previously in her volleyball career. The balance of power was shifted and players held power with the founders of the league. This was a novel concept that kept the players at the nexus of all decisions made within the league. Lichtman became the Chairperson of the Player Executive Committee (PEC) which is made up of five athletes from the volleyball league. The PEC meets with league staff, co-founders, and other leadership to work together on decision-making that affects the league.

One revolutionary decision the players were allowed to make is what uniforms they wanted to wear. Some players wanted shorts and others wanted long leggings, so each player was able to choose what bottoms they wore. This seemingly small choice, allowed all the players to feel comfortable when they were doing their job, playing volleyball professionally.

Other teams in other professional women’s leagues are starting to allow athletes to make choices about their own bodies. Recently, the Orlando Pride of the National Women’s Soccer League announced, in a press release:

“Orlando Pride has announced an updated look to its Luna Kit, the Club’s secondary jersey. To make players more comfortable and confident when playing during their menstrual cycle, the team will now wear black shorts, replacing the white shorts previously worn throughout the 2022 season and with other secondary kits in prior years.”

Athletes having a voice in their workplace and being able to advocate for themselves is vital to a healthy sports ecosystem. People like Lichtman are making sure athletes are given that opportunity.

Athletes Unlimited volleyball is gearing up for another season. Ahead of their fall season, the league is embarking upon the Athletes Unlimited Volleyball Exhibition Tour. The tour features Athletes Unlimited professional volleyball athletes traveling across the United States playing exhibition matches against top college programs. This tour will promote the sport at a grassroots level and preview what’s to come in season 3 of Athletes Unlimited volleyball.

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