When comparing volleyball statistics across generations, you must do so knowing about the changing scoring formats.
Look at it this way: the NCAA record for career kills was set by George Washington’s Svetlana Vtyurina at 3,043 when she played from 1992-95. Since 2005, Jordan Thompson (2015-16, 18-19) is the only athlete who has even sniffed this record with 2,664 kills — and even this number is about 400 kills off.
So, why does it appear that some DI volleyball records haven’t been broken since the 80s and 90s? It’s simple: the sport has been scored differently through the decades, making it difficult to compare statistics.
Let’s take a peek at the different eras of college volleyball separated by their respective rule changes:
1981-2000: Side-out scoring (15-point format)
Volleyball was one of the 13 women’s sports that held their first NCAA championships in the early 1980s as part of a Title IX initiative. At its 1981 inception, volleyball was scored in a side-out format.
Side out scoring is a scoring method in volleyball in which only the serving team has the opportunity to score points. In turn, the receiving team is attempting to win the rally in order to gain possession of the serve, instead of a point. With this scoring method, matches were scored…