OKLAHOMA CITY — It would be difficult to find two schools with more differing pedigrees heading into a championship match than Penn State and Brigham Young.
Penn State earned a chance to repeat with a 25-16, 23-25, 25-22, 25-21 win over top-seeded Stanford on Thursday night. The Nittany Lions (35-3) will seek their seventh title, and their sixth in eight years, on Saturday.
BYU beat Texas 25-23, 25-16, 17-25, 26-24 in the early match Thursday to become just the third unseeded team to reach the finals since the first tournament in 1981. The Cougars (30-4) hadn't been to the semifinals since 1993, and they advanced to the final for the first time.
BYU expected to beat Texas, even though the Longhorns were playing in the national semifinals for the sixth time in seven years.
"I don't think it's an upset," BYU's Alexa Gray said. "Only the numbers in front of the names say it's an upset. We know we're a good team, so I think we have confidence that we can come in play our hardest. We think we can beat anybody here in the tournament."
Penn State coach Russ Rose is impressed with BYU's path to the final.
"To go back to back, beat Nebraska and then Texas — for sure, they have our attention," he said.
In the late match, Megan Courtney had 23 kills, Micha Hancock had 55 set assists and Ali Frantti had 16 kills for the Nittany Lions.