Omaha Supernovas
| Sport | Volleyball |
|---|---|
| Founded | 2023 |
| First season | 2024 |
| Last season | 2025 |
| League | Major League Volleyball |
| Based in | Omaha, Nebraska |
| Arena | CHI Health Center Omaha |
| Colors | Pink, light blue, purple, navy blue |
| Owner | Nebraska Pro Volleyball (Danny White & Jason Derulo) |
| President | Diane Mendenhall |
| Head coach | Luka Slabe[1] |
| General manager | John Cook[2] |
| Overall record | (Through 6/16/2025)
Overall: 39-16 Home 19-7 Away 18-8 Postseason 2-1 |
| Championships | 1 (2024) |
| Playoff berths | 2 (2024,2025) |
| Website | supernovas.com |
The Omaha Supernovas are a women's professional indoor volleyball team based in Omaha, Nebraska, that competes in Major League Volleyball (MLV). The team plays its home games at CHI Health Center Omaha. The Supernovas began play as one of the charter franchises of the league, and was its inaugural champion in the 2024 season.
History
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.[3] The Supernovas name, logo and colors were announced on July 20.[4]
The first match, of both the Supernovas’ season and the inaugural Pro Volleyball Federation, was played on January 24, 2024, at home, with the Supernovas losing to the Atlanta Vibe in five sets. 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.[5]
Roster
Current as of February 2, 2026.[6]
| Number | Player | Position | College | Height |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | Setter | Wisconsin | 6'0" | |
| 5 | Outside hitter | Oregon | 5'10" | |
| 6 | Setter | Illinois/Pittsburgh | 6'0" | |
| 7 | Outside hitter | Creighton | 6'1" | |
| 8 | Outside hitter | Texas Tech/Kansas | 6'2" | |
| 9 | Libero | Stanford | 5'9" | |
| 10 | Middle blocker | Creighton | 6'3" | |
| 11 | Outside hitter | Minnesota | 6'2" | |
| 13 | Opposite hitter | Florida/Nebraska | 6'4" | |
| 17 | Middle blocker | Miami (FL) | 6'3" | |
| 20 | Libero | Morehead State/Creighton | 5'7" | |
| 21 | Middle blocker | Iowa/Kansas | 6'1" | |
| 23 | Middle blocker | Kentucky/Creighton | 6'4" | |
| 26 | Middle blocker | San Diego/Nebraska | 6'4" | |
| 27 | Opposite hitter | Ohio State | 6'3" |
2024 season
Before the season began, the Omaha Supernovas announced that head coach Shelton Collier would serve as an advisor to the organization. Assistant coach Laura “Bird” Kuhn was named as the interim head coach, with Jazz Schmidt joining the staff as an assistant coach and operations assistant.[7]
The team broke the record for the highest attendance at a women's professional volleyball match in the United States three different times throughout the season. The current attendance record was set on Saturday, March 16, 2024, when 12,090 spectators watched the Supernovas beat the Valkyries at the CHI Health Center. The team posted the highest attendance in the PVF, with an average home attendance of 9,656, and a total attendance of 134,969 over the entire season.[8]
In the playoffs, the Supernovas beat San Diego and Grand Rapids to become the inaugural champions of the PVF.[8]
| DATE | OPPONENT | FANS |
|---|---|---|
| Wednesday, Jan. 24 | Atlanta | 11,624[10] |
| 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[11] |
| 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[8] |
2025 season
The Omaha Supernovas, Nebraska’s professional volleyball team and first Pro Volleyball Champions, continued to be a trailblazer during the 2025 season, finishing No. 1 in the world in pro volleyball attendance for the second straight year.
Over the course of 14 regular-season home matches at the CHI Health Center, the Supernovas reached a total attendance of 152,949 to mark a staggering 32% increase from the team’s inaugural 2024 season. Omaha also averaged a world-leading 10,925 spectators per match, surpassing last season’s 9,656 average for a 13% year-over-year increase.
The second-year franchise broke its own U.S. pro volleyball attendance record (12,090) five times in 2025, including a new benchmark of 13,486 set during the season opener against the Atlanta Vibe on January 10. The Supernovas drew more than 10,000 at nine matches this season, including five attendance marks that topped 12,000.
Omaha dominates the U.S. pro volleyball attendance chart, now holding 19 of the top 20. The top five most attended matches in U.S. history were set by the Supernovas in 2025 including six of the top eight overall. Plus, twelve of Omaha’s 2025 home matches rank in the top 20. In just two seasons and 28 match days, the Supernovas have totaled an impressive 287,918 in attendance.
A pillar in women’s sports, the Supernovas’ average attendance ranks among global leaders by surpassing league averages from the WNBA (9,807), PWHL (7,260), and WSL (6,713), while sitting just behind the NWSL (11,250), which is entering its 13th season.
The support from NovasNation fueled the toughest home environment in professional volleyball, as Omaha tied for the PVF lead with a 10–4 home record. Despite returning only two players from last season’s championship-winning campaign and introducing eight rookies, the Supernovas posted league records for most wins and most sweeps (10) en route to claiming the regular season title with a 21–7 record.
Franchise leader Brooke Nuneviller elevated her game in 2025, earning Outside Hitter of the Year honors and her second straight All-League First Team selection after averaging 3.77 kills (4th in PVF) and 3.45 digs per set (5th). Veteran setter Natalia Valentín-Anderson was named to the All-League Second Team, ranking fourth in assists per set (9.57) and leading all setters with 3.11 digs per set. [12]
| Date | Opponent | Attendance |
| Friday, Jan. 10 | Atlanta Vibe | 13,486[13] |
| Sunday, Jan. 19 | San Diego Mojo | 12,723 |
| Friday, Jan. 31 | Columbus Fury | 11,712 |
| Sunday, Feb. 16 | San Diego Mojo | 12,768 |
| Thursday, Feb. 27 | Orlando Valkyries | 8,010 |
| Sunday, March 2 | Indy Ignite | 9,523 |
| Saturday, March 22 | Indy Ignite | 12,929 |
| Friday, March 28 | Vegas Thrill | 10,017 |
| Sunday, March 30 | Grand Rapids Rise | 9,457 |
| Saturday, April 5 | Orlando Valkyries | 10,512 |
| Thursday, April 17 | Grand Rapids Rise | 8,577 |
| Saturday, April 19 | Atlanta Vibe | 12,514 |
| Friday, April 25 | Columbus Fury | 9,517 |
| Sunday, April 27 | Vegas Thrill | 11,204 |
| Date[14] | Team | Home/ Away | Location | Time/ Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1/10/25 | Atlanta Vibe | Home | CHI Health Center | Won in 5 sets[15] |
| 1/12/25 | Grand Rapids Rise | Away | Van Andel Arena | Won in 3 sets[16] |
| 1/17/25 | Vegas Thrill | Away | Lee's Family Forum | Lost in 5 sets[17] |
| 1/19/25 | San Diego Mojo | Home | CHI Health Center | Lost in 4 sets[18] |
| 1/24/25 | Columbus Fury | Away | Nationwide Arena | Won in 3 sets[19] |
| 1/31/25 | Columbus Fury | Home | CHI Health Center | Won in 3 sets[20] |
| 2/2/25 | Orlando Valkyries | Away | Addition Financial Arena | Lost in 3 sets[21] |
| 2/6/25 | Indy Ignite | Away | Fishers Event Center | Won in 3 sets[22] |
| 2/8/25 | Atlanta Vibe | Away | Gas South Arena | Won in 4 sets[23] |
| 2/16/25 | San Diego Mojo | Home | CHI Health Center | Won in 3 sets[24] |
| 2/20/25 | San Diego Mojo | Away | Viejas Arena | Won in 4 sets[25] |
| 2/27/25 | Orlando Valkyries | Home | CHI Health Center | Lost in 3 sets[26] |
| 3/2/25 | Indy Ignite | Home | CHI Health Center | Won in 3 sets[27] |
| 3/5/25 | Columbus Fury | Away | Nationwide Arena | Won in 3 sets[28] |
| 3/13/25 | Indy Ignite | Away | Fishers Event Center | Won in 5 sets[29] |
| 3/15/25 | Orlando Valkyries | Away | Addition Financial Arena | Won in 4 sets[30] |
| 3/22/25 | Indy Ignite | Home | CHI Health Center | Lost in 3 sets[31] |
| 3/28/25 | Vegas Thrill | Home | CHI Health Center | Won in 3 sets[32] |
| 3/30/25 | Grand Rapids Rise | Home | CHI Health Center | Won in 4 sets[33] |
| 4/5/25 | Orlando Valkyries | Home | CHI Health Center | Won in 4 sets[34] |
| 4/10/25 | Vegas Thrill | Away | Lee's Family Forum | Won in 4 sets[35] |
| 4/12/25 | San Diego Mojo | Away | Viejas Arena | Lost in 4 sets[36] |
| 4/17/25 | Grand Rapids Rise | Home | CHI Health Center | Won in 3 sets[37] |
| 4/19/25 | Atlanta Vibe | Home | CHI Health Center | Lost in 3 sets[38] |
| 4/25/25 | Columbus Fury | Home | CHI Health Center | Won in 5 sets[39] |
| 4/27/25 | Vegas Thrill | Home | CHI Health Center | Won in 3 sets[40] |
| 5/2/25 | Grand Rapids Rise | Away | Van Andel Arena | Won in 4 sets[41] |
| 5/4/25 | Atlanta Vibe | Away | Gas South Arena | Won in 4 sets[42] |
2025 roster
Current as of March 15, 2025.[43]
| Number | Player | Position | Height | College/Club |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Setter | 5'10" | Florida International | |
| 4 | Outside hitter | 6'1" | Pittsburgh | |
| 5 | Outside hitter | 5'10" | Oregon | |
| 6 | Setter | 5'10" | Creighton | |
| 8 | Outside hitter | 6'2" | Texas Tech, Kansas | |
| 9 | Setter | 6'2" | Ohio State, Penn State | |
| 10 | Libero | 5'2" | Miami Dade, Texas A&M | |
| 11 | Opposite Hitter | 6'3" | Kansas | |
| 14 | Outside hitter | 6'5" | Nebraska, USC | |
| 17 | Middle blocker | 6'2" | Georgia, LMU, Minnesota | |
| 20 | Libero | 5'2" | Morehead State, Creighton | |
| 21 | Middle blocker | 6'1" | Iowa, Kansas | |
| 22 | Outside hitter | 6'4" | Nebraska | |
| 23 | Middle Blocker | 6'4" | Penn State, Nebraska | |
| 27 | Opposite hitter | 6'3" | Ohio State | |
| 28 | Middle Blocker | 6'0" | Missouri, Nebraska, Texas |
Coaching staff
| Name | Role |
|---|---|
| Laura 'Bird' Kuhn[44] | Head Coach |
| Thomas Robson[45] | Assistant Coach |
References
- ^ "Omaha Supernovas Name U.S. Olympic Gold Medalist Luka Slabe as Head Coach". Major League Volleyball. Retrieved October 15, 2025.
- ^ "John Cook Joins Omaha Supernovas as Co-Owner and General Manager". Major League Volleyball. Retrieved October 15, 2025.
- ^ "Pro Volleyball Federation Team Coming to Omaha". Pro Volleyball Federation. April 12, 2023. Retrieved January 19, 2024.
- ^ "Nebraska Pro Volleyball Reveals Official Team Name: OMAHA SUPERNOVAS". Pro Volleyball Federation. July 20, 2023. Retrieved January 19, 2024.
- ^ "SMASHED! First Pro Volleyball Federation Match Sets Attendance Record". Pro Volleyball Federation. January 25, 2024. Retrieved November 15, 2024.
- ^ "Omaha Supernovas Roster". Major League Volleyball. Retrieved February 2, 2026.
- ^ "Supernovas Announce Coaching Staff Promotions". Pro Volleyball Federation. February 6, 2024. Retrieved November 13, 2024.
- ^ a b c "Supernovas Welcome Over 134,000 Fans in Championship-Winning Inaugural Season". Pro Volleyball Federation. June 4, 2024. Retrieved June 6, 2024.
- ^ Omaha Supernovas. "Omaha Supernovas Match Notes" (PDF).
- ^ Sjuts, Kevin (January 25, 2024). "Record crowd welcomes Pro Volleyball Federation's inaugural season". www.1011now.com. Retrieved May 24, 2024.
- ^ Parsons, McKenzy (March 17, 2024). "Omaha Supernovas, defeat Orlando Valkyries, break another attendance record". KETV. Retrieved May 24, 2024.
- ^ "Supernovas Welcome Over 152,000 Fans in 2025, Boost Average Attendance to Nearly 11,000". Pro Volleyball Federation. May 14, 2025. Retrieved June 16, 2025.
- ^ "Omaha Supernovas Make History Again with New U.S. Pro Volleyball Attendance Record". Pro Volleyball Federation. January 11, 2025. Retrieved June 16, 2025.
- ^ "2025 Omaha Supernovas Schedule". provolleyball.com. Omaha, Nebraska. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ Boyles, Grace (January 10, 2025). "Nuneviller's 22 kills power the Supernovas to five-set win over the Vibe, while setting another attendance record". wowt.com. Omaha, Nebraska: WOWT. Retrieved January 10, 2025.
- ^ Nothaft, Patrick (January 12, 2025). "Grand Rapid Rise fall short in volleyball home opener amid record-setting crowd". mlive.com. Grand Rapids, Michigan: MLive. Retrieved January 16, 2025.
- ^ "Nuneviller Tallies 18 Kills as Supernovas Fall to Thrill in Reverse Sweep". provolleyball.com. Henderson, Nevada. January 18, 2025. Retrieved January 18, 2025.
- ^ Keeler, Drake (January 19, 2025). "Omaha Supernovas fall to San Diego Mojo at home". omaha.com. San Diego, California. Retrieved January 19, 2025.
- ^ "Columbus Fury lose to Omaha Supernovas, fall to 0-4". dispatch.com. Columbus, Ohio: The Columbus Dispatch. January 25, 2025. Retrieved January 25, 2025.
- ^ "Supernovas Shine in Second Straight Sweep of Fury, Now Hold All Top Ten Most-attended U.S. Pro Volleyball Matches". provolleyball.com. Omaha, Nebraska. February 1, 2025. Retrieved February 1, 2025.
- ^ "Valkyries Blank Supernovas 3–0". provolleyball.com. Orlando, Florida. February 2, 2025. Retrieved February 2, 2025.
- ^ Vasquez, Tony (February 7, 2025). "Ignite battled against Omaha now shift focus to the next challenge in PVF journey". nuvo.net. NUVO. Retrieved February 8, 2025.
- ^ Parsons, McKenzy (February 8, 2025). "'That's two road wins in a row': Omaha Supernovas defeat Atlanta Vibe in four sets". ketv.com. Omaha, Nebraska: KETV. Retrieved February 8, 2025.
- ^ "Supernova Sweep Mojo for Third Straight Win, Draw 12,768 Fans for Second-largest Crowd in US Pro Volleyball History". provolleyball.com. Omaha, Nebraska. February 16, 2025. Retrieved March 3, 2025.
- ^ "League-leading Supernovas Extend Win Streak to Four Behind Londot's Career Night". provolleyball.com. San Diego, California. February 21, 2025. Retrieved March 3, 2025.
- ^ "Cooper Shines as Supernovas Fall to Valkyries". provolleyball.com. Omaha, Nebraska. February 28, 2025. Retrieved March 3, 2025.
- ^ "Nuneviller Powers Supernovas Past Ignite in League-leading Sixth Sweep". provolleyball.com. Omaha, Nebraska. March 2, 2025. Retrieved March 3, 2025.
- ^ "Omaha Supernovas top Columbus Fury 3-0 in pro volleyball". dispatch.com. Columbus, Ohio: The Columbus Dispatch. March 6, 2025. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ Parsons, McKenzy (March 13, 2025). "Omaha Supernovas claim reverse sweep to take down Indy Ignite Thursday". ketv.com. Omaha, Nebraska: KETV. Retrieved March 15, 2025.
- ^ Parsons, McKenzy (March 15, 2025). "'Going all out in O-town': Supernovas defeat Valkyries in four sets Saturday". ketv.com. Omaha, Nebraska: KETV. Retrieved March 16, 2025.
- ^ Patterson, Mike (March 22, 2025). "Omaha Supernovas swept at home by Indy Ignite". omaha.com. Omaha, Nebraska. Retrieved March 23, 2025.
- ^ Parsons, McKenzy (March 28, 2025). "Supernovas sweep Thrill in Friday night showdown at CHI Health Center". ketv.com. Omaha, Nebraska: KETV. Retrieved April 27, 2025.
- ^ Patterson, Mike (March 30, 2025). "Omaha Supernovas strengthens hold on first place, defeats Grand Rapids in four sets". omaha.com. Omaha, Nebraska. Retrieved April 27, 2025.
- ^ Parsons, McKenzy (April 5, 2025). "Omaha Supernovas defeat Orlando Valkyries in four sets as CHI Health Center turned pink". ketv.com. Omaha, Nebraska: KETV. Retrieved April 27, 2025.
- ^ "Payne Pushes Supernovas Past Thrill and into the Postseason". provolleyball.com. Henderson, Nevada. April 11, 2025. Retrieved April 27, 2025.
- ^ "Hord Makes History as Supernovas Fall Short in San Diego". provolleyball.com. Henderson, Nevada. April 13, 2025. Retrieved April 27, 2025.
- ^ "Supernovas Shut Down Rise for League-leading Ninth Sweep". provolleyball.com. Omaha, Nebraska. April 18, 2025. Retrieved April 27, 2025.
- ^ Kern, Mason (April 19, 2025). "Supernovas draw another huge crowd, swept by Vibe". wowt.com. Omaha, Nebraska: WOWT. Retrieved April 27, 2025.
- ^ "Supernovas Survive Fury in Epic Five-set Clash to Stay Atop League Standings". provolleyball.com. Omaha, Nebraska. April 26, 2025. Retrieved April 27, 2025.
- ^ Kern, Mason (April 27, 2025). "Batenhorst's record outing powers Supernovas to sweep of Thrill". wowt.com. Omaha, Nebraska: WOWT. Retrieved April 29, 2025.
- ^ Tegler, Zach (May 2, 2025). "Omaha Supernovas clinch regular season title with win over Grand Rapids". omaha.com. Omaha, Nebraska. Retrieved May 2, 2025.
- ^ "Supernovas End Vibe's Record Winning Streak, Capture PVF Regular Season Title". provolleyball.com. Duluth, Georgia. May 4, 2025. Retrieved May 5, 2025.
- ^ "Omaha Supernovas Roster". Pro Volleyball Federation.
- ^ "Supernovas Officially Hire Laura "Bird" Kuhn as Head Coach, Drops Interim Title". Pro Volleyball Federation. July 1, 2024. Retrieved November 8, 2024.
- ^ "Supernovas Re-Sign Thomas Robson as Assistant Coach". Pro Volleyball Federation. July 15, 2024. Retrieved November 8, 2024.