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Amy Veenhof

Amy Veenhof

Amy Veenhof holds the all-time volleyball program history victories at Dakota State after collecting 197 victories after another record-breaking 2021 season.  She is entering her 14th season at helm, the longest-tenured coach in DSU women’s volleyball program history.  She guided her squads to double-digit victories 11 times in the last 12 seasons.

Veenhof guided her 2021 squad to another record season, recording its’ best winning percentage during her coaching era at Dakota State.  The Trojans finished with an astounding 21-9 overall record (.700 winning percentage) and a third-place finish in the North Star Athletic Association with a 9-5 record.  It marked the fourth consecutive season that DSU produced a winning season.

The 2021 Trojan volleyball season highlighted with a pair of victories over NAIA’s nationally ranked teams, including a road victory at No. 14 Dakota Wesleyan and a home victory over No. 8 ranked Bellevue (Neb.).  As a result, Dakota State received its an at-large invitation to the NAIA Women’s Volleyball National Tournament Opening Round for the second time in a span of three years.

Two Trojans were named to NAIA Women’s Volleyball All-America athletes after the 2021-22 season.  Maddie Polzin was named to the Third Team for the second consecutive year, the first volleyball athletes to be named to the All-America Third Team for two straight seasons in the same year (COVID season in 2020-21).  Hannah Viet was also named to All-America Honorable Mention.

Three athletes were named to 2021 NSAA Volleyball All-Conference First Team, while another athlete were named to All-Conference Second Team.

Veenhof collected her 200th career collegiate victory in their home opener at DSU Fieldhouse on Oct. 2, 2021.

The Trojans finished their 2020-21 season with 14-10 overall record during the COVID season, where volleyball was played during the fall and spring seasons.  The Trojans advanced to the North Star Athletic Association postseason semifinals round.

Veenhof guided the 2019 squad to one of the historic seasons in Trojan volleyball history.  The Trojans finished second in the North Star Athletic Association standings and advanced to the conference postseason’s championship match for the second consecutive year.

The Trojans also cracked in the NAIA’s Top 25 national poll for the first time in program history at No. 22.  Dakota State earned its first-ever bid to the 2019 NAIA Volleyball National Tournament Opening Round in school history and finished the season with an overall record of 19-13.

Veenhof and her squad had one of the most memorable 2018 season, which included a shocking victory over nationally ranked Viterbo (Wis.).  The Trojans ended the V-Hawks’ historic 53-match North Star Athletic Association conference winning streak with a 3-1 home victory in the regular-season finale.  The Trojans finished the 2018 season with an impressive 21-11 overall record.

The NSAA volleyball head coaches’ selected Veenhof as its conference’s Coach-of-the-Year award in 2018.  DSU also earned its first-ever NAIA Volleyball All-America recipient (Barbara Briceno - Honorable Mention in 2018 and Third Team in 2019) in program history.  She coached two NSAA Volleyball First-Team recipients in back-to-back seasons in 2018 and 2019 (Barbara Briceno and Samantha Zell).

Her Trojan squad completed a successful season in 2015, recording back-to-back 20-win seasons for the first time in two decades.  DSU also finished third overall in the North Star Athletic Association (NSAA) conference standings with 10-3 record in 2015, recording its most conference victories since 2004.  Two athletes were selected to the NSAA Volleyball All-Conference teams.

Veenhof coached four NSAA All-Conference selections in 2014 after finishing the NSAA conference with a second place in the standings with a 7-3 record.  In addition, she coached a NSAA Freshman-of-the-Year athlete (Carly Rozell) and two-time NSAA Defensive Player-of-the-Year athlete (Katherine Gonzalez).

Veenhof also guided her 2011 DSU Volleyball team to their independent qualifying conference tournament – the Association of Independent Institution (A.I.I.) Conference Post-season Tournament in Phoenix, Ariz.

During her coaching tenure at Dakota State, Veenhof had coached six spikers that surpassed 1,000 career kills and four defensive specialists that amassed over 1,000 digs.  She guided a setter (Stacey Schuller) that had set an all-time school record for most career set assists and a hitter (Carly Rozell) that became an all-time kills leader at DSU.

Veenhof had coached a total of nineteen (19) All-Conference athletes, including the first-ever four-time North Star Athletic Association Volleyball All-Conference recipient (Rozell).

Veenhof’s volleyball teams have also excelled in the classroom, where in her twelve years, twenty (25) players earned Daktronics-NAIA Scholar Athlete honor.  Her teams also consistently ranked at or above 3.0 cumulative grade point average, earning NAIA Scholar-Team award ten times.  Her 2015-16, 2016-17, and 2021-22 squads were selected to American Volleyball Coaches Association Team Academic award.

Veenhof coached at Si Tanka-Huron University for one season before taking the job at Northern State (S.D.).  She also served as the head coach of the Northeast South Dakota (NESD) Junior Olympic volleyball club in Aberdeen for four years.

Veenhof was a two-year starter, two-time All-Conference and All-Region selection in both volleyball and softball at Bethany Lutheran College in Mankato, Minn.  She also received All-American in volleyball.  She will be inducted into the Bethany Lutheran College Athletic Hall of Fame in October 2021.

Veenhof then transferred to Si Tanka University in Huron, S.D. where she was a two-year starter in both volleyball and softball.  She received Academic All-American honors while at Si Tanka.

Veenhof is a native of Henderson, Minn.  She earned her associate degree from Bethany Lutheran College, her bachelor’s degree from Si Tanka University and her master’s degree from Northern State University.  Veenhof is also teaching for the College of Education at Dakota State University.

Amy and her husband, Casey, have three sons – Shane, Henry, and Frank.