Megan Hodge

[1] In 2024, she helped lead the team to the NCAA women's volleyball championship, where it won its eighth national title in program history.

In 1992 when Megan was 3 years old, her family moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina for educational reasons at UNC.

She participated on the USA Youth and Junior National Teams, where she was voted the Most Valuable Player and "Best Attacker" at the 2004 NORCECA Championships in Cataño, Puerto Rico.

She became the first ever player from the Carolina region to be named to the all-Tournament team at the USA Junior Olympic Girls' Volleyball Championships.

Hodge was considered the top high school recruit for the class of 2006 and got over 150 scholarship offers from various universities, such as volleyball powerhouses Stanford, USC, Washington, and Long Beach State.

In addition, Hodge was also named a First Team All-American for the second consecutive year and was a Honda Sports Award nominee for the top volleyball player in the country.

As a junior, Hodge led a team consisting of six All-Americans with 470 total kills on the year on a .349 hitting percentage.

In the NCAA National Semifinals in Omaha, Hodge had a season high 23 kills against Nebraska in the five set win.

[13] Her senior year, Hodge's 560 kills helped to once again lead the Penn State Nittany Lions to an NCAA championship.

In the National Title match against Texas, the Nittany Lions went down two sets to none but under Hodge's leadership Penn State was able to come back and win it.

[16] Hodge played at the 2013 Club World Championship with Guangdong Evergrande winning the bronze medal after defeating 3–1 to Voléro Zürich.

[17] Hodge competed for Team USA in the 2012 Grand Prix winning the gold medal and the Most Valuable Player and Best Scorer awards.