The Omaha Supernovas are a professional indoor volleyball team based in Omaha, Nebraska. The team competes in the Pro Volleyball Federation (PVF). The Supernovas began play in the league's inaugural 2024 season. The team plays their home games at CHI Health Center Omaha.

Omaha Supernovas
SportVolleyball
Founded2023
First season2024
LeaguePro Volleyball Federation
Based inOmaha, Nebraska
ArenaCHI Health Center Omaha
ColorsPink, light blue, purple, navy blue
       
OwnerNebraska Pro Volleyball (Chris Erickson, Danny White & Jason Derulo)
PresidentDiane Mendenhall
Head coachLaura "Bird" Kuhn
Championships1 (2024)
Playoff berths1 (2024)
Websitesupernovas.com

History

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On April 12, 2023, Omaha was announced as one of the cities to get a Pro Volleyball Federation franchise for the league's inaugural season, led by an ownership group headed by Omaha businessman Danny White and R&B/pop singer Jason Derulo.[1] The Supernovas name, logo and colors were announced on July 20.[2]

The first match of the Supernovas’ season and the inaugural Pro Volleyball Federation game was played on January 24, 2024, at home. In a 5-set match, the Supernovas lost to the Atlanta Vibe by a score of 26–24, 25–23, 25–17, 25–19, 15–13.[3] The attendance mark of 11,624 set a record for both a women's professional volleyball match in the United States, and in the Pro Volleyball Federation.

The previous attendance record for a women's professional volleyball match in the United States was 10,213 fans, at an Olympic qualifier on January 9, 2016. The contest, held at Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln, Nebraska, was a 3–0 U.S. Women's National Team victory over the Dominican Republic. It concluded the NORCECA Olympic Qualification Tournament and earned the United States a berth in the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.[4]

2024 Season

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The Omaha Supernovas have announced head coach Shelton Collier will serve as an Advisor to the Organization and named assistant coach Laura “Bird” Kuhn as the interim Head Coach. Additionally, former Creighton volleyball standout, Jazz Schmidt joins the Supernovas’ coaching staff as an assistant coach and operations assistant.

During its championship run in the inaugural PVF season, the Supernovas became the league's shining star, hosting 134,969 fans across the 15 matches held at the CHI Health Center. That includes a whopping 9,656 average mark for the 12 Supernovas’ home matches, plus the 19,094 spectators who attended the PVF Semifinals and Championship.  

The Supernovas erased any doubt that professional volleyball could happen in the United States with their 9,656 match average the No. 1 mark amongst professional volleyball teams in the world.  

Omaha broke many of its own attendance records across its historic season, starting with 11,624 fans attending the first-ever PVF match on Jan. 24 between Omaha and the Atlanta Vibe. That mark was broken a few weeks later on Sunday, Feb. 18 as 11,918 fans showed up to watch the Supernovas take on the Orlando Valkyries. The newest and most current attendance record was set on Saturday, March 16 with 12,090 spectators packing into the CHI Health Center to see the Supernovas beat the Valkyries in four sets.  

In total, Omaha hosted crowds of 10,000 people or more in seven of the 15 matches hosted at CHI this past season, including five-digit crowds in six of the 12 regular season contests.

The Supernovas took advantage of the partisan crowd, going 9-3 at home during the regular season before winning two-straight at CHI to become the inaugural champions.  [5]

Home Attendance Records[6]
DATE OPPONENT FANS
Wednesday, Jan. 24 Atlanta 11,624[7]
Saturday, Feb. 3 San Diego 11,403
Wednesday, Feb. 7 Vegas 9,076
Sunday, Feb. 18 Orlando 11,918
Thursday, March 14 Atlanta 8,114
Saturday, March 16 Orlando 12,090[8]
Thursday, March 28 Grand Rapids 7,505
Saturday, March 30 Vegas 10,315
Thursday, April 4 Columbus 7,411
Saturday, April 20 San Diego 11,303
Friday, April 26 Grand Rapids 7,107
Thursday, May 9 Columbus 8,009
TOTAL 12 Matches 115,875
Average 9,656
PVF Semifinals San Diego 8,416
PVF Championship Grand Rapids 10,678
TOTAL 15 Matches 134,969[9]

2025 Season

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Date Team Home/ Away Location Time/ Results
1/10/25 Atlanta Vibe Home CHI Health Center 7pm CT
1/12/25 Grand Rapids Rise Away Van Andel Arena 3pm CT
1/17/25 Vegas Thrill Away Lee's Family Forum 9pm CT
1/19/25 San Diego Mojo Home CHI Health Center 3pm CT
1/24/25 Columbus Fury Away Nationwide Arena 6pm CT
1/31/25 Columbus Fury Home CHI Health Center 7pm CT
2/2/25 Orlando Valkyries Away Addition Financial Arena 2pm CT
2/6/25 Indy Ignite Away Fishers Event Center 6pm CT
2/8/25 Atlanta Vibe Away Gas South Arena 6pm CT
2/16/25 San Diego Mojo Home CHI Health Center 3pm CT
2/20/25 San Diego Mojo Away Viejas Arena 9pm CT
2/27/25 Orlando Valkyries Home CHI Health Center 7pm CT
3/2/25 Indy Ignite Home CHI Health Center 3pm CT
3/5/25 Columbus Fury Away Nationwide Arena 6pm CT
3/13/25 Indy Ignite Away Fishers Event Center 6pm CT
3/15/25 Orlando Valkyries Away Addition Financial Arena 6pm CT
3/22/25 Indy Ignite Home CHI Health Center TBD
3/28/25 Vegas Thrill Home CHI Health Center 7pm CT
3/30/25 Grand Rapids Rise Home CHI Health Center 3pm CT
4/5/25 Orlando Valkyries Home CHI Health Center 6pm CT
4/10/25 Vegas Thrill Away Lee's Family Forum 9pm CT
4/12/25 San Diego Mojo Away Viejas Arena 8pm CT
4/17/25 Grand Rapids Rise Home CHI Health Center 7pm CT
4/19/25 Atlanta Vibe Home CHI Health Center 6pm CT
4/25/25 Columbus Fury Home CHI Health Center TBD
4/27/25 Vegas Thrill Home CHI Health Center 3pm CT
5/2/25 Grand Rapids Rise Away Van Andel Arena 6pm CT
5/4/25 Atlanta Vibe Away Gas South Arena 2pm CT

2025 Roster

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Current as of November 8 2024.[10]

Number Player Position Height College
1   Natalia Valentín-Anderson Setter 5'10" Florida International
3 Reagan Cooper Outside hitter 6'2" Texas Tech, Kansas
5   Brooke Nuneviller Outside hitter 5'10" Oregon
9 Mac Podraza Setter 6'2 Penn State, Ohio State
10 Camila Gómez Libero 5'2 Texas A&M, Miami Dade
11 Kelsie Payne Opposite Hitter 6'3 Kansas
13 Briana Holman Middle Blocker 6'1 Nebraska
14 Jovana Mirosavljević Outside Hitter 6'0 N/A
15   Sophie Davis Middle blocker 6'2" James Madison
20 Allison Whitten Libero 5'2 Morehead, Creighton
23 Kaitlyn Hord Middle Blocker 6'4 Penn State, Nebraska
28 Kayla Caffey Middle Blocker 6'0 Texas, Nebraska, Missouri
Coaching Staff
Name Role
Laura 'Bird' Kuhn[11] Head Coach
Thomas Robson[12] Assistant Coach

References

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  1. ^ "Pro Volleyball Federation Team Coming to Omaha". Pro Volleyball Federation. 2023-04-12. Retrieved 2024-01-19.
  2. ^ "Nebraska Pro Volleyball Reveals Official Team Name: OMAHA SUPERNOVAS". Pro Volleyball Federation. 2023-07-20. Retrieved 2024-01-19.
  3. ^ Collier, Clayton (2024-01-25). "Omaha Supernovas open with 5-set loss to Atlanta Vibe in epic Pro Volleyball Federation debut match". Retrieved 2024-01-26.
  4. ^ "SMASHED! First Pro Volleyball Federation Match Sets Attendance Record". Pro Volleyball Federation. 2024-01-25. Retrieved 2024-02-02.
  5. ^ "Supernovas Welcome Over 134,000 Fans in Championship-Winning Inaugural Season". Pro Volleyball Federation. 2024-06-04. Retrieved 2024-06-06.
  6. ^ Omaha Supernovas. "Omaha Supernovas Match Notes" (PDF).
  7. ^ Sjuts, Kevin (2024-01-25). "Record crowd welcomes Pro Volleyball Federation's inaugural season". www.1011now.com. Retrieved 2024-05-24.
  8. ^ Parsons, McKenzy (2024-03-17). "Omaha Supernovas, defeat Orlando Valkyries, break another attendance record". KETV. Retrieved 2024-05-24.
  9. ^ "Supernovas Welcome Over 134,000 Fans in Championship-Winning Inaugural Season". Pro Volleyball Federation. 2024-06-04. Retrieved 2024-06-06.
  10. ^ "Roster". Omaha Supernovas. {{cite web}}: Check |archive-url= value (help)
  11. ^ "Supernovas Officially Hire Laura "Bird" Kuhn as Head Coach, Drops Interim Title". Pro Volleyball Federation. 2024-07-01. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
  12. ^ "Supernovas Re-Sign Thomas Robson as Assistant Coach". Pro Volleyball Federation. 2024-07-15. Retrieved 2024-11-08.
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