Saturday, November 5, 2016

Nebraska wins at Penn State, Hawai’i routs Long Beach, big win for Oregon

Shelby Holmes, left, and Jessica Uke put up the big block for Arkansas State in the Redhawks' win over UTA/ASU photo

You might have figured that it would take No. 1 Nebraska five sets to win at No. 11 Penn State.

Given the way this season has gone, you might not have been all that surprised that NC State went to Florida State and beat the No. 10 Seminoles.

Or, if you pay attention to the Ivy League, that Yale gave Princeton its first league loss.

But when No. 20 Oregon went to No. 8 Washington and swept the Huskies — including 25-8 in the second set — to create a  four-way tie atop the Pac-12 because UCLA lost at Arizona and Stanford beat Colorado, you just had to shake your head at the way this NCAA Division I season continues to unfold.

There were plenty of other matches of note on Friday, not the least of which was No. 15 Hawai’i sweeping visiting Long Beach State and all but ensuring the latter will miss the NCAA Tournament for the second straight season.

But first, a look at Saturday’s matches, where there’s no rest for the weary:

In the Big Ten, none of the matches involve ranked teams.

Nebraska goes to Rutgers, Penn State entertains Iowa, Illinois goes to No. 16 Michigan State, No. 22 Ohio State goes to Indiana, Northwestern plays at No. 17 Michigan, and Purdue is at No. 3 Wisconsin. No. 2 Minnesota has the night off but plays at Maryland on Sunday.

In the Pac-12, UCLA hopes for better results on its easterly swing when it goes to Arizona State and Stanford goes to No. 19 Utah.

In the Big 12, No. 4 Kansas goes to Oklahoma and Kansas State goes to TCU.

The ACC and SEC have football Saturday off.

Hawai’i entertains CSUN and the two ranked West Conference teams are in action, No.  7 San Diego at Pacific and No. 14 BYU at St. Mary’s.

No. 21 Western Kentucky, which clinched the Conference USA title Friday by beating Rice, entertains Middle Tennessee, and No. 24 Dayton, which won at Duquesne to extend its nation-best record to 25-1, is off but plays at La Salle on Sunday.

A list of all of Saturday’s matches can be found here, which also enables you to break it down by conference.

Oregon libero Amanda Benson gets one of her 22 digs against Washington/Stephen Burns photo
Oregon libero Amanda Benson gets one of her 22 digs against Washington/Stephen Burns photo

Pac-12: Oregon, Stanford win, UCLA, WSU upset

Young-and-improving Oregon went to Seattle and dismantled Washington 25-21, 25-8, 25-22 to improve to 16-6, 9-4) as sophomore Lindsey Vander Weide had 14 kills and hit .393. Junior Taylor Agost had 11 kills and hit .500 and freshman Jolie Rasmussen had nine kills and three aces. Two other freshmen, Willow Johnson and Ronika Stone, had five kills each.

Washington, which won in a sweep at Oregon earlier, fell to 19-4, 9-4, before a season-best home crowd of 3,434.

Tia Scambray led the Huskies with 11 kills. Courtney Schwan added six.

“Congratulations to the Ducks, they were outstanding in serve and receive, and when they do that they’re one of the most dangerous offensive teams in the country,” UW coach Keegan Cook said. “So a lot of credit to them. I loved our response in the third set, after being at the lowest of lows after the second set, to respond and have a competitive third set says a lot about our kids.”

Arizona is 4-0 against the L.A. teams. The up-and-down Wildcats improved to 16-10, 8-5, on a night when the program honored coach Dave Rubio for his 25 years at the helm. His team rewarded him with a 28-26, 25-21, 25-20 that gave Arizona season sweeps over UCLA and USC.

“Tonight means a lot because of the recognition of my 25th year here at the U of A,” Rubio said. “The players were extra motivated and played well. It was a terrific night, all the way around.”

Senior Kalei Mau had 21 kills, the sixth-most in a three-set match in the Pac-12 this year, on .367 hitting. The senior added a team-high 18 digs.

“I know I should __play like this every night,” Mau said.  “But I definitely had a little extra playing for Dave tonight. I owe so much to him and I wanted this to be an extra special match for him.”

UCLA dropped into a three-way tie for first at 18-5, 9-4, as its six-match winning streak ended. Freshman Torrey Van Winden had eight kills, 14 digs and two aces and junior Reily Buechler had 10 kills and seven digs.

No. 13 Stanford got out of Colorado with a 25-19, 25-16, 14-25, 25-20 victory to improve to 17-1 all-time against the Buffs.

The Cardinal, 15-6, 9-4, got a career-high 20 kills from freshman outside Kathryn Plummer, who also had eight digs, five blocks and an ace.

Another freshman, middle Audriana Fitzmorris, hit .450 with 10 kills on 20 swings with just one error. She also had a match-high eight blocks and a career-best six digs.

Alexa Smith and Gabby Simpson had 10 kills each for the Buffs, now 12-11, 4-9.

No. 23 Washington State did itself no postseason seeding favors by getting upset at home by Oregon State 19-25, 27-25, 25-23, 25-19.

Oregon State’s Mary-Kate Marshall led the Beavs with 18 kills and had two aces, seven digs, and four blocks. Lila Toner had 10 kills and five blocks as their team improved to 10-14, 3-10.

WSU, 17-8, 7-6, got 21 kills from senior Kyra Holt, who had five digs and five blocks. Casey Schoenlein had a career-high 14 kills and two blocks and Taylor Mims had 13 kills, hit .750 and had six blocks.

No. 25 USC swept Arizona State 27-25, 25-14, 25-18, hitting .330.

The Trojans, 16-9, 8-6, got 11 kills, three blocks and 10 digs from freshman outside Khalia Lanier and eight kills and four blocks from senior middle Elise Ruddins. ASU dropped to 9-16, 2-11.

No. 19 Utah swept visiting Cal 25-18, 25-21, 25-20 as sophomore Berkeley Oblad had seven kills, hit .583 and added a career-high nine blocks. Junior Adora Anae led with 15 kills and sophomore Emma Kirst had seven blocks as their team improved to 17-7, 8-5, to sweep Cal for the first time since joining the league and getting the program’s 750th victory.

Cal is 9-14, 3-10.

Michigan State
Michigan State’s Alyssa Garvelink hits through the Northwestern block/MSU photo

Big Ten: Nebraska, Michigan, MSU get victories

Rec Hall was jammed with 5,564 fans and they got their money’s worth as visiting Nebraska held on for a 22-25, 25-17, 25-23, 23-25, 15-11 win. But those same fans saw Penn State fall to 17-7, 9-4 with its fourth consecutive defeat.

Nebraska, 21-1, 12-1, got 19 kills each from Andie Malloy and Mikaela Foecke. Amber Rolfzen tied her career high with 16 kills and hit .615 and added a season-best nine blocks. And libero Justine Wong-Orantes had 23 digs and became Nebraska’s all-time leader, surpassing Olympian Kayla Banwarth.

Penn State, which hit .166, got 23 kills and 13 digs from Simone Lee and 13 kills and three blocks from Haleigh Washington. Freshman Kendall White had a career-high 32 digs.

No. 17 Michigan rallied for a 23-25, 25-23, 25-21, 25-22 win over visiting Illinois as Kelly Murphy led the Wolverines with 15 kills. Her team improved to 19-6, 8-5, while Illinois dropped to 14-10, 7-6.

Michelle Strizak led Illinois with 17 kills, nine blocks and nine digs. Naya Crittenden had 13 kills.

No. 16 Michigan State is 20-5, 9-4 after sweeping visiting Northwestern 23-25, 25-23, 25-21, 25-22. Northwestern is 8-17, 1-12.

This is the earliest that Michigan State has reached 20 victories since 1995, and MSU’s 20-5 record is its best at the 25-game mark since 1998.

Autumn Bailey had 13 kills, 15 digs and five aces and hit .500. Holly Toliver had 10 kills, hit .625 and had 15 digs and an ace and a block.

“I thought that Northwestern got off to the better start tonight, but I was happy to see us settle in and start taking care of our business,” MSU coach Cathy George said. “We got contributions from a lot of players tonight, and this is a big opportunity for us at home over these next two weeks. We’re going to have to continue to be on the attack every day, and our focus will remain on getting better every practice, every set, and every match.”

And Iowa (18-7, 8-5) won at Rutgers (4-22, 0-13) 25-8, 25-19, 25-13 in a match that took 1 hour, 16 minutes. Five Hawkeyes had five kills or more.

Georgia Tech junior outside hitter Ashley Askin leads the celebration/Georgia Tech Athletics photo
Georgia Tech junior outside hitter Ashley Askin leads the celebration/Georgia Tech Athletics photo

ACC: Seminoles fall, UNC, Tech, Duke, ND all win

NC State’s upset of Florida State left North Carolina alone at the top while the Seminoles, Georgia Tech and Duke are in a three-way tied for second, a game up on Notre Dame.

NC State beat a top-10 team for the first time when the Wolfpack beat No. 10 FSU 25-23, 25-21, 17-25, 22-25, 15-8. Florida State dropped to 19-4, 11-2, while NC State is 15-10, 8-5 under first-year coach Linda Hampton-Keith.

“Of course we’re thrilled with this historic program win over a top-10 team but more importantly I’m so very proud of this team and staff for just continuing to push to get better and better,” Hampton-Keith said. “We’re at that point in the season where everyone is pushing through to the finish line of the season and we’re all battling every day, so I just can’t say enough about this team and how they keep working so hard.

“One of the best things about tonight was our resiliency to go up two sets, lose the next two and then to keep our composure going into the fifth and just keep executing when it mattered most.”

Kaitlyn Kearney led NC State with 16 kills while hitting .364 and added seven blocks. Juli Brown had 21 kills and 13 digs and Teni Sopitan had 10 kills.

Katie Horton had 14 kills and 13 digs for FSU, which also got 11 kills and 11 blocks from Mara Green.

No. 12 North Carolina earned its win at Miami 25-18, 25-16, 23-25, 26-24.

“I’m just so proud of this team to hang in there and to have such a great comeback,” said UNC coach Joe Sagula, whose team was coming off a loss to Pittsburgh. “That’s something we haven’t done since early in the season, and I’m so proud and excited for them to pull out a gritty win like this.”

“To be up and __play so well, and then for Miami to give us a great, great effort—our blocking was phenomenal at the end. So many people made some big plays.”

Carolina, 20-3, 12-1, got 11 kills from Taylor Borup, while  Beth Nordhorn, Taylor Treacy and Taylor Leath had nine each.

“It’s something we’ve been working towards, to have a more balanced approach instead of focusing on one or two players, and that means a lot going forward,” Sagula said. “I think it’s going to help us down the road to know that we can play like that. We were passing well. We got a lot more balls to our middle hitters—32 attempts from our middle, we haven’t had that in quite some time; our setters did a nice job.”

Miami is 11-14, 5-8.

Duke improved to 17-6, 11-2, in a Friday-afternoon victory over visiting Louisville 25-22, 26-24, 25-15. Freshman Samantha Amos had a career-high 15 kills as the right side hit .520. Middle Leah Meyer had 13 kills and hit .522, while middle Jordan Tucker had nine kills and hit .471.

“We’re pretty excited to get the win and to get it in three is even better,” Duke coach Jolene Nagel said. “The first two sets we really had to stay focused. We didn’t go on a lot of runs and had to grind it out. Proud of our team to hang tough during those times and be able to finish.”

Louisville, grinding through its worst season in memory, is 7-16, 2-11.

Georgia Tech kept pace by barely sweeping Virginia Tech 25-14, 26-24, 26-24 to get to 20 victories for the first time since 2009, the last time the Yellow Jackets made it to the NCAA Tournament. The Yellow Jackets are 20-5, 11-2, while VT fell to 8-16, 3-10.

Teegan Van Gunst had a big night with 15 kills and 13 digs, while Sydney Wilson had nine kills and four blocks. Annika Van Gunst had six kills, 13 digs and three blocks.

“I think we are just staying resilient and found ways to execute on some of the things like Annika on that last block, we finally got a block on the outside,” Georgia Tech coach Michelle Collier said. “I think we just kept trying different things and seeing what was going to work for us.

“We definitely needed to play a little more consistent against this team. We kept it way too close.“

Notre Dame won’t go away. The Irish improved to 19-6, 10-3 by winning at Wake Forest 25-22, 25-22, 26-24. Katie Higgins had 11 kills and hit .500 and Jemma Yeadon and Sydney Kuhn had eight kills apiece. ND is 10-1 away from home this season.

Wake, which hit .092, is 9-15, 5-8.

Pittsburgh rolled at Clemson 25-15, 25-20, 25-20 to improve to 18-7, 9-4, as Stephanie Williams and Nika Markovic had 14 kills apiece. Clemson is 6-18, 1-11.

Also, Syracuse (7-17, 6-8) won at Virginia (5-20, 2-11) 26-24, 25-23, 23-25, 25-16.

SEC: Wildcats get tough win at Auburn, Mizzou wins

No. 18 Kentucky had to give at Auburn before coming away with a 23-25, 22-25, 26-24, 30-28, 15-12 victory.

“This game showed our never-die attitude and I think this team is unfazed by situations,” UK coach Craig Skinner said. “We will continue to believe in each other and fight for each other. Tonight was a great match to show that.”

His team improved to 18-5, 11-1 as Leah Edmond keeps making a case for national freshman of the year by leading with 20 kills and 12 digs. Kaz Brown had nine kills and 10 blocks, one solo.

Auburn, 13-12, 7-5, got 18 kills from Brenna McIlroy and 16 from Courtney Crable.

Missouri is 20-4, 11-1 after winning at Tennessee 25-18, 23-25, 25-17, 25-20 to stay tied with UK and Florida, which was off.

Melanie Crow led with 16 kills, an ace, eight digs and a block. Carly Kan added 10 kills and 12 digs to go with two aces and three blocks.

Tennessee is 15-9, 5-5.

Also, Ole Miss (14-10, 3-8) kept LSU (7-16, 2-10) winless at home and South Carolina (16-7, 4-7) won in five at Mississippi State (12-14, 4-8). Mikayla Shields had 23 kills for USC.

Cyclones escape, WKU, Dayton keeping winning

That big whooshing sound you heard from Lubbock was Iowa State exhaling after winning 19-25, 25-20, 25-17, 23-25, 15-12. The Cyclones are 14-9, 6-5, while Texas Tech is 10-17 and still winless in the league at 0-12. Jess Schaben led Iowa State with 16 kills and 13 digs, while Grace Lazard added 14 kills and hit .524.

WKU, the top-ranked team in the VolleyballMag.com Mid-Major Poll, has the second-best record in the country at 25-2, 12-0 in C-USA after routing Rice 25-12, 25-20, 25-18. The Lady Toppers have won 16 in a row and 43 in a row at home and are guaranteed at least a share of the league title.

“Well, I just can’t say enough about this group,” WKU coach Travis Hudson said. “It has been a grind all year with the things that we’ve faced in terms of injuries and lack of depth. But to come out here tonight with a chance to clinch a share of the conference championship and to play like we did against a Rice team that might be favored to win this tournament in two weeks, makes me really, really happy and proud of the way we played tonight.”

Alyssa Cavanaugh and Taylor Dellinger led with 13 kills apiece, Sydney Engle had 12 and eight digs, and setter Jessica Lucas added eight kills and 12 digs.

Dayton had to earn it at Duquesne 28-30, 25-18, 25-11, 25-19, but the Flyers are 25-1, 11-0 in the Atlantic 10 after freshman Jamie Peterson tied her career high with 16 kills. Junior Amber Erhahon added 14 kills, hit .545 and had five blocks. And freshman Kendyll Brown added 11 kills and six blocks.

Big West: It’s all Hawai’i

This one was a no contest as the Rainbow Wahine crushed visiting Long Beach State 25-13, 25-15, 25-16, to take sole-possession of first place in the Big West.

Hawai’i is 17-5, 10-1 and all but guaranteed the league’s automatic NCAA Tournament berth.

LBSU dropped to 16-9, 10-2, and coupled with its NCAA RPI of 55, is in a world of postseason hurt. Long Beach won the earlier meeting in five, 15-13 in the fifth.

Annie Mitchem tied her career-high for Hawai’i with 13 kills and hit .619 to go with four digs and two blocks, while Emily Maglio added 10 kills and had a match-high four blocks. Nikki Taylor had just six kills but five aces, eight digs and a block.

Nele Barber led the 49ers with nine kills, 13 digs and an ace, and Anete Brinke had six kills and two blocks as their team dropped out of first place for the first time all season.

The Bearcats celebrate after sweeping SMU/ N.C. Brown, Cincy Rooted photo
The Bearcats celebrate after sweeping SMU/N.C. Brown, Cincy Rooted photo

AAC tightens up as Cincy beats SMU

SMU was riding high in the American Athletic Conference, but a trip to Cincinnati on Friday changed that as the Bearcats won 25-22, 25-13, 25-23 to put both teams at 11-2 with seven matches left. The league gets an automatic NCAA bid and neither team is in a strong position to get an at-large bid, since Cincinnati is 42nd in the NCAA RPI, SMU is 45th.

Cincinnati, 16-8, had a record home crowd of 2,018 as it hit .323. Jordan Thompson led with 15 kills and Carly Nolan added 13.

SMU, 18-7, lost to Cincinnati for the first time in eight matches since the series began. Brittany Adams led SMU with eight kills.

Temple (17-6, 10-3) stayed a game back by sweeping Houston.

Around the nation:

No. 25 Creighton won its 13th match in a row by sweeping visiting Butler. Creighton is 19-6, 13-0 in the Big East after its 25-12, 25-14, 25-17 victory that saw Jaali Winters get 11 kills and nine digs and Taryn Kloth have 10 kills.

American University clinched the Patriot League regular-season title the home court advantage for the tournament by sweeping Colgate. American, which won 25-19, 25-15, 15-19, is 24-6 overall, 14-0 in the conference. Second-place Colgate dropped to 15-10, 11-3.

Princeton had won 14 in a row, but Yale gave the visiting Tigers their first Ivy League loss by winning in five, 18-25, 25-16, 21-25, 26-24, 15-11. Both teams are 16-4; Princeton is 10-1 and holds a one-game lead over the Bulldogs, who are 9-2.

Yale’s Brittani Steinberg had 18 kills — including the final three in the fourth set extra-point win and four kills on seven swings in the fifth.

“Brittani was great tonight and played like a senior when we needed it,” Yale coach Erin Appleman said.

Cara Mattaliano led Princeton with a career-high 24 kills and had 19 digs, two aces and a block. Maggie O’Connell added 21 kills.

Coastal Carolina, which earlier clinched the Sun Belt East Division title by beating Georgia Southern, beat GSU again to improve to 21-4, 12-2 with its 11th victory in a row. Also in the Sun Belt, Arkansas State won the 1,000th match in program history by beating UTA to improve to 21-7, 13-1. And Texas State took a hit by losing in four at Little Rock to fall to 18-10, 11-2.

In the Missouri Valley, Wichita State kept the pressure on idle Missouri State by sweeping Bradley to improve to 17-7, 10-3. Southern Illinois, 19-9, 10-4, kept pace by winning in five at Illinois State.

In the America East, Albany is 15-7, 9-1 after sweeping Stony Brook … In the A-10, Saint Louis senior Dani Rygelski, featured here this week, had 14 kills and hit .321 as the Billikens swept La Salle to try to keep up with Dayton … 

In the ASUN, Kennesaw State swept Stetson to get to 10-1 in the league and stay a game ahead of Lipscomb, which swept FGCU …

Radford is 20-5, 11-2 in the Big South after beating Campbell in four … Miami stayed unbeaten in the MAC by sweeping Ohio to improve to 21-4, 13-0 … Howard swept Morgan State and is 23-5, 12-0 in the MEAC … SIUE beat Southeast Missouri in four and is 18-6, 11-2 in the Ohio Valley …

SWAC leader Alabama State is 17-8, 14-0 after sweeping Prairie View … South Dakota swept IUPUI and Denver did the same to Oral Roberts as both got to 11-2 in the Summit League.

Nebraska at Penn State tops busy slate after big night in the Mountain West, Big Sky

Mallory Moran (13) leads the celebration as the Texas A&M Corpus Christi Islanders clinch the Southland Conference title Thursday night/TAMUCC photo

This is a big weekend in NCAA volleyball.

Many of the mid-major seasons are close to wrapping up, with conference tournaments and the NCAA Tournament bids that go to the winners looming large. Everyone wants to finish strong and jockey for position.

Speaking of jockeying for position, that’s happening all over the power-five conferences, with seeding, hosting and RPIs all at stake.

It follows a light Thursday where the big match of the night was Colorado State’s thrilling five-set victory over visiting UNLV. Since Boise State won at Utah State, it left the Broncos 11-2 and a half game ahead of Colorado State (10-2) and game up on UNLV (10-3).

The two ranked West Coast Conference teams both won, No. 7 San Diego sweeping St. Mary’s and No. 14 BYU doing the same to Pacific.

In the only power-five match of the night, Texas A&M beat Alabama.

First, a look at Friday’s slate:

Start with the Big Ten, where No. 1 Nebraska (20-1, 11-1) goes to No. 11 Penn State (17-6, 9-3) in what you know will be quite a battle. Penn State is coming off a tough road trip in which it lost in back-to-back nights at Wisconsin and Minnesota.

Also in the league, Illinois (14-9, 7-5), which fell out of the rankings, goes to No. 17 Michigan (18-6, 7-5), Northwestern (8-16, 1-11) plays at No. 16 Michigan State (19-5, 8-4) and Iowa (17-7, 7-5) goes to Rutgers (4-21, 0-12).

The Pac-12 has everyone in action, starting with No. 20 Oregon (15-6, 8-4) at No. 8 Washington (19-3, 9-3) in the only match with two ranked teams. No. 13 Stanford (14-6, 8-4) goes to Colorado (12-10, 4-8) , No. 9 UCLA (18-4, 9-3) is at Arizona (15-10, 7-5), No. 25 USC (15-9, 7-6) goes to Arizona State (9-15, 2-10), Cal (9-13, 3-9) is at No. 19 Utah (16-7, 7-5) and Oregon State (9-14, 2-10) plays at No. 23 Washington State (17-7, 7-5).

Everyone in the ACC is in action, including No. 12 North Carolina (19-3, 11-1) at Miami (11-13, 5-7) and No. 10 Florida State (18-3, 11-1) at home against NC State (14-10, 7-5). Duke (16-6, 10-2) and getting healthy, plays host to Louisville (7-15, 2-10). Georgia Tech (19-5, 10-2) entertains Virginia Tech (8-15, 3-9), while the other team in the chase, Notre Dame (18-6, 9-3),  goes to Wake Forest (9-14, 5-7).

Also, Syracuse (6-17, 5-8) is at Virginia (5-19, 2-10) and Pittsburgh (17-7, 8-4), coming off that big upset of North Carolina and trying to stay in the NCAA mix, goes to Clemson (6-18, 1-11). Pitt is No. 30 in the RPI.

One of the SEC’s two ranked teams, No. 18 Kentucky (17-5, 10-1), plays at Auburn (13-11, 7-4). Missouri (19-4, 10-1) tries to keep pace with Kentucky and league-leader No 6 Florida (21-2, 11-1) when it goes to Tennessee (15-8, 5-5). Ole Miss (13-10, 2-8) plays at LSU (7-15, 2-9) and South Carolina (15-7, 3-7) goes to Mississippi State (12-13, 4-7).

There is only one match in the Big 12 as Iowa State (13-9, 5-5) goes to Texas Tech (10-16, 0-11).

There’s a big one in Honolulu when No. 15 Hawai’i (16-5, 9-1 Big West) plays host to Long Beach State (16-8, 10-1) in a win-or-else situation for the visitors. Long Beach, left out of last year’s NCAA field, is currently ranked No. 55 in the RPI, so clearly the 49ers have to win at Hawai’i and win the Big West to get a bid.

No. 21 Western Kentucky (24-2, 11-0 Conference USA)  plays host to Rice (17-9, 2-9).

No. 24 Dayton (24-1, 10-0 Atlantic 10) goes to Duquesne (17-9, 7-4). And No. 25 Creighton (18-6, 12-0 Big East) opens a six-match homestand against Butler (16-12, 5-7).

For a complete look at Friday’s matches — there are 104 are the schedule — you can click here to look at the overall list or break it down by conferences. We will have a complete roundup on Saturday plus the usual preview.

West Coast Conference: USD, BYU both sweep

Junior opposite Jayden Kennedy led with 14 kills as the Toreros improved to 20-3, 11-1 WCC, by routing St. Mary’s 25-15, 25-23, 25-18. Lauren Schad had 13 kills and hit .611 for USD.

BYU blasted Pacific 25-15, 25-20, 25-1 and is 21-3, 10-2. Whitney Young Howard led the Cougars with a career-high tying 12 kills while hitting .600.

Colorado State puts up the double block against UNLV
Colorado State puts up the double block of Olivia Nicholson (left) and Alexandra Poletto against UNLV’s Ayssa Wing/CSU photo

Mountain West: Colorado State wins, but Boise moves into first

The Rams (16-7, 10-3) are usual looking down at the rest of the Mountain West field, but this year they’re grinding all the way. In their 20-25, 25-18, 25-21, 17-25, 15-11 win over visiting UNLV (21-4, 10-3) they got a career-high 18 kills from Kirstie Hillyer, who hit .533, and a career-high 15 more from Alexandra Poletto. Hillyer also had four block assists and a solo.

“It was a really good match for our team as competitors,” CSU coach Tom Hilbert said. “We had some good moments and some not so good moments, but we won a fifth set playing extremely well for the entire fifth set. That is something we needed and I am glad it happened and now we beat UNLV and we move on.”

Bree Hammel led UNLV with 23 kills and had 12 digs.

“I am going to start off by giving some props to Bree Hammel,“ Hilbert said, “because last time we played them, we were in the same match-up we were in the first four sets, and we did a pretty good job with her. We had no answer and it is puzzling and you think, maybe she just has momentum or whatever, but she was killing everything she touched and we should be a better blocking team than that.”

“This one stings,” UNLV coach Cindy Fredrick said. “We played a great match and really just lost it when Colorado State got to 12 in the fifth. Alexis (Patterson) had a great match offensively and setting. Bree (Hammel) and Alyssa (Wing) hit well tonight, and our three defensive specialists played good defense. We just didn’t finish the fifth set, we gave away three points at the end.”

Boise State (20-6, 11-2) meanwhile was beating Utah State 25-21, 25-10, 25-18  for its ninth win in a row to take the league lead.

“I’m excited that we won the match tonight, Utah State is a good team,” Boise State coach Shawn Garus said. “I was worried about this match coming down here, they battled us hard in Boise. We swept them in three but each set was decided by two points. It was an overall team victory tonight and its goes back to how hard we practiced, how everyone is buying in and giving their all everyday. Now we will take sometime off this weekend to rest and heal before we focus on the final stretch with four of our last five at home.”

Sierra Nobley continued to lead the Broncos. She had 14 kills, 10 digs, an assist and two blocks. Sabryn Roberts added 13 kills and had four blocks.

Big Sky: NAU, Sacramento State, UND, UNC all keep pace

Northern Arizona, which leads the South Division, improved to 21-5, 11-2 by sweeping Weber State, while Sacramento State (16-11, 10-3) stayed a game back by beating Montana State in four.

In the North, North Dakota swept Eastern Washington to improve to 20-9, 11-2, while Northern Colorado (16-9, 10-3) also stayed a game back by beating Idaho.

Also, Texas A&M Corpus Christi won the Southland conference title for the second straight season by improving to 18-7, 13-0 after sweeping McNeese State.

“It’s a really good feeling,” first-year coach Steve Greene said. “We’ve been working really hard and plugging away over the past few weeks. To go 13-0 and clinch the conference with three matches left is a testament to the resiliency of the team and their competitive fire to get the first of our three major goals.”

Brittany Gilpin led the Islanders with 11 kills and hit .321.

Friday, November 4, 2016

Volleyball outlasted 3-2 by Martin Methodist on Friday evening

News Photo

Wolf Pack close out the regular season tomorrow at Bethel University.

  

Coming off a three-match home stand, the Loyola University New Orleans volleyball team hit the road on Friday night to take on Martin Methodist College in a key Southern States Athletic Conference (SSAC) matchup inside the Curry Christian Life Center.

The Wolf Pack pushed the Redhawks to the brink, but the visitors would ultimately fall 2-3 (19-25,25-21,14-25,25-15,15-5) in five sets.

The loss puts Loyola (14-20, 8-11 SSAC) one game behind Martin Methodist (12-17, 9-10 SSAC) for the fifth spot in the SSAC standings heading into tomorrow's regular season finale against Bethel University in Mckenzie.

Down 3-5 to start the opening set, the Wolf Pack used a 7-2 run to grab the 10-7 advantage in the first frame. Loyola was able to maintain the cushion throughout the set and four-straight kills from Allison Hartmann (SO/Slidell, La.) sealed the opening set for the Wolf Pack 25-19.

Following a 21-25 defeat in the second set, the Wolf Pack responded by running out to a comfortable 8-2 advantage to start set three. With Loyola up 21-13 late, the set ended with both teams sharing six errors en route to the 25-14 set victory for the visitors.

The Redhawks claimed set four 25-15 to force a fifth and deciding set.

Down 0-1 to start the first-to-15 set, Hartmann logged one of her team-high 15 kills to knot the set at 1-1. Martin Methodist managed to find another gear in the fifth set and scored 11 of the next 12 points to snatch the commanding 12-2 advantage. Loyola was never able to recover and the Redhawks took the final set in dominating fashion (15-5) to earn the vital conference victory.

Loyola accumulated a .139 (51-28-165) hitting percentage with 49 assists, 71 digs and eight blocks in the loss.

Hartmann's 15 kills were a match high, while Maddie Huekels (SO/Dyer, Ind.) notched a team-high 26 assists to go along with 10 digs and six kills on Friday night. Katie Philippi (SR/Metairie, La.) scooped a career-high 22 digs to pace the Wolf Pack defense and Malea Howie (FR/Greenwood, Ind.) chipped in 12 kills, seven digs and two blocks off the bench.

Chakia Hinkle led the Redhawks with 14 kills and Sydney Arnold was responsible for 42 of the teams 47 assists in the victory.

Loyola wraps up the regular season tomorrow, Nov. 5, at Bethel University. First serve from Crisp Arena is set for noon.

St. Louis OH Danielle Rygelski: “The entire gym knows who it’s going to”

Saint Louis senior Danielle Rygelski is second in the nation in kills/SLU photo

When La Salle plays host to Saint Louis on Friday night, it will be facing the second-leading attacker in NCAA Division I.

They know her in the Atlantic 10, but outside that league Danielle Rygelski might be the best-kept secret in the country.

“She had carried an incredible load for us,” SLU coach Kent Miller said. “An incredible load. The entire gym knows who it’s going to.”

The 5-foot-11 senior outside (535 kills, 5.94/set) is second only to Alabama’s Krystal Rivers (535 kills, 5.99/set) and has been the A-10 player of the week five times.

What’s more, her team is on an upswing.

The Billikens had won four in a row and five of six before losing at league leader Dayton (at 24-1 sporting the best record in the nation) last Friday.

Saint Louis is the healthiest it’s been this season and its 12-13 overall record might be deceiving. The Billikens are 7-3 in the A-10 and would be considered the favorites in their four remaining matches before being the host for the league’s championship tournament November 18-20.

Danielle Rygelski
Danielle Rygelski

“We’re learning things we can improve on quickly,” Rygelski said. “I think consistency is a big one that we need to improve but our energy and how close we are sets us apart from other teams.”

In 2013 the product of St. Charles, Mo., a St. Louis suburb, was the A-10 rookie of the year. She led the team with 33 aces and averaged 3.78 kills per set.

As a sophomore, Rygelski led the team with 3.62 kills per set, 2.34 digs, and 33 more aces. And last year, she made the A-10 first team and led the league with 492 kills and 59 aces.

Rygelski cited two things for her improvement: “Consistency and not making a lot of errors, keeping balls in __play and not making radical errors — I did that a lot my freshman year — I’ve learned when to put balls to good spots and that even if it’s not a kill it puts the other team out of system. And the other thing is the amount of strength I’ve gained. Being in the gym all the time and working out.”

Rygelski said she really enjoys weightlifting and her opponents would attest to the results.

She is second on the all-time SLU kills list with 1,820 (second among all active NCAA DI players) and needs 15 kills to have most kills at SLU in the rally-scoring era. That’s likely to happen on Friday.

“I never really expected this,” Rygelski said. “I had a good season last year and obviously wanted to have a good season this year and make an impact and leave an impact, so I’m doing everything I can. But I never would have thought I would have been at the top of the list for kills and kills per set.

“It’s pretty cool.”

Rygelski is also second on the SLU list in aces with 165. She’s second in the NCAA in aces this season with 40 and it’s not all about offense: She needs three digs to get to 1,000 kills and 1,000 digs in her career.

“Danielle is an extraordinary outside hitter playing even beyond our expectations,” Miller said. “She’s been described as a fearless attacker by coaches of top programs we’ve played. And I think this has been her strongest attribute.”

Rygelski has the top kills performance (31 against George Mason), second-best (29 against Davidson), fifth-best (26 against Illinois State) and 10th-best (24 against GW) three-set kill totals in the NCAA this season.

Only 10 players in the nation have had more than 1,200 swings this season. Rygelski is sixth with 1,250. Her arm, she said is fine. But there’s that knee that had ACL surgery her senior year in high school.

“My shoulder’s fine,” she said with a laugh. “My knee is what hurts the most. It’s always hurting a little big. Knock on wood, I’ve never had shoulder problems.

When it came down to it, as a senior at Francis Howell High School, Rygelski whittled her college choices to SLU, Valparaiso and Miami, Ohio.

“I’m very close to my family and I wanted them to be able to see everything they could,” she said.

Her family will have plenty of opportunities, as SLU has two more home matches before the A-10 tourney.

“The rest of the season looks pretty good and I’m really excited,” she said. “The A-10 tournament is at SLU and that’s really good.

“It should be a good atmosphere.”

Thursday, November 3, 2016

NCAA: No. 4 KU survives, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Texas, Florida all win

Austin Peay's Logan Carger had a big night against Murray State with 14 kills and six blocks/Austin Peay photo

There was yet another indication Wednesday night of just how tough the NCAA Tournament might be when No. 4 Kansas had to go five to win at unranked Kansas State.

The 25-18, 26-28, 25-22, 21-25, 15-11 victory by the No. 16 team in the NCAA RPI over the No. 14 was all that and more on a relatively light night on the schedule.

There was one upset of a ranked team as Arizona beat visiting No. 25 USC in five.

Winners included No. 2 Minnesota, No. 3 Wisconsin, No. 5 Texas and No. 6 Florida.

And Murray State won a big match in the Ohio Valley.

It was also a big night in the Sandbothe family as Taylor became Ohio State’s all-time blocks leader and Elle had a big match for K-State.

But first, Thursday’s key matches.

The only one involving power-five conference teams Thursday has Alabama of the SEC at Texas A&M. The Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12,  ACC are all idle.

But the two ranked West Coast Conference teams are in action, as No. 7 San Diego is at St. Mary’s and No. 14 BYU goes to Pacific.

The other ranked teams, No. 21 Western Kentucky, No. 24 Dayton and No. 25 Creighton are also off.

The Big Sky has a full slate, including South leader Northern Arizona at Weber State, and Sacramento State, a game behind in the standings, at Montana State. In the North, North Dakota tries to protect its one-game lead when it entertains Eastern Washington, while Northern Colorado, a game back, plays host to Idaho.

There are key matches in the Mountain West but none bigger than league leader UNLV (21-3, 10-2) going to perennial winner Colorado State (15-7, 9-2).

“This is no ordinary match,” CSU coach Tom Hilbert said. “This has huge implications.”

Boise State (19-6, 10-2), tied for the lead, goes to Utah State.

And in the Southland, Texas A&M Corpus Christi (17-7, 12-0) plays host to McNeese State as it tries to clinch its second straight league title.

Brooke Sassin of Kansas State attacks against visiting Kansas/KSU photo
Brooke Sassin of Kansas State gets one of her 18 kills against visiting Kansas/KSU photo

Big 12: Kansas, Texas, Baylor victorious

The KU-Kansas State was a fun one to watch, especially if you’re a fan of Kelsie Payne. The Jayhawks junior right side had 23 kills and 11 digs and came up big time after time.

“There was a lot of ebb-and-flow in this match, but Kelsie got enough kills at the right time,” Kansas coach Ray Bechard said.

“That’s the best match we have had in a long time just from a competitive standpoint. It was good, competitive volleyball. They played well. We played well. We had enough in the end to make it happen.”

Kansas natives and seniors Cassie Wait and Tayler Souci made sure that they remained undefeated in Manhattan during their four-year careers (4-0). Wait finished with 33 digs and dominated a countless number of rallies for her third 30-dig outing of the season. Soucie had 11 kills and seven blocks.

Junior outside hitter Madison Rigdon remained consistent with 14 kills and 11 digs.

VBM’s Greg Echlin caught up with both Wait and Souci after the victory.

Kansas improved to 21-2, 10-1 to keep pace with Texas atop the standings.

Kansas State (17-7, 6-5) got 55 assists from setter Katie Brand as the senior moved into second place on the school’s all-time list. Brooke Sassin had 18 kills and 14 digs, and Kylee Zumach had 14 kills, while Sandbothe, a freshman, had 10 kills in 15 swings, hit .467 and had four block assists and one solo.

“I thought we outplayed them at certain points in the match,” K-State coach Suzie Fritz said. “I don’t want to take anything away from them, they are a talented team. There was a lot of good volleyball that was played tonight.”

Kansas dominated the fifth set.

“They found a different level,” Fritz said. “I thought we got a little high error and we got a little tentative at the service line. In the end, in the fifth, it came down to serve and pass. They were a little better at it than we were.”

“K-State is going to be a postseason team,” Bechard insisted after the match. “They have had a great season so far. I was proud of the way our players competed, and I’m sure coach (Suzie) Fritz is proud of the way her team competed too.”

TCu
TCU’s Ashley Smith hits against Texas blockers Chloe Collins and Yaasmeen Bedart-Ghani/Sharon Ellman photo

Texas, coming off its lost at Kansas last weekend, won at TCU 20-25, 25-17, 25-13, 27-25 as junior Ebony Nwanebu had 19 kills and hit .405.

Texas improved to 18-3, 10-1 as senior Paulina Prieto Cerame and freshman Micaya White had 13 kills apiece. White also had 12 digs, while Prieto Cerame added three blocks.

Sophomore Morgan Johnson added eight kills on 12 swings and only one error for a .583 hitting percentage.

TCU, 10-11, 3-8, got 15 kills and 16 digs from Ashley Smith. Natalie Gower had nine kills and hit .500, while Regan McGuire had eight blocks.

“I just got done talking to our team and the biggest things that we were talking about is how they really put it all out there. We fought really hard and it is the best volleyball we have played in a long time as a team and as a group,” TCU director of volleyball Jill Kramer said.

We moved from point-to-point really well and played the way you want to be playing this time of year and really fought. We will get back at it tomorrow but more than anything, I am really proud of their fight.”

Baylor had to go four, but the Bears improved to 19-7, 7-3, with a 25-19, 25-20, 21-25, 25-22 at Texas Tech. it’s the first time Baylor reached seven Big 12 victories since 2012.

Junior Katie Staiger continues to __play big. She had 31 kills, becoming the 14th player in program history to notch 30-plus kills, the first since Tisha Schwartz at Iowa State on Oct. 5, 2002.

And libero Jana Brusek had 32 digs, a Baylor record for the most in a four-set match.

Texas Tech is 10-16, 0-11.

“I was happy to see some good individual performances. Katie gets over 30 kills and Jana did a great job for us defensively,” Baylor coach Ryan McGuyre said. “It’s good to see Nicole (Thomas, seven kills) hitting well and getting more kills.

“Overall, offensively I thought we did some good things. Defensively, we really struggled. For the first time, our offense really carried us at times tonight. Glad we went four sets without an ace. That just helps feed into our offensive numbers.” –Baylor head coach Ryan McGuyre

And Iowa State (13-9, 5-5) swept visiting West Virginia 25-18, 25-20, 25-23 to keep its NCAA hopes alive. The Cyclones are 44th in the RPI.

West Virginia is 12-13, 3-8.

Ohio State
Ohio State’s Taylor Sandbothe is the school’s all-time blocks leader

Big Ten: Gophers, Badgers, Purdue get wins

Wisconsin is 19-3, 11-2 after winning at No. 22 Ohio State 25-19, 26-24, 25-22. It was the fourth win in a row for the Badgers, who are a game off the Big Ten lead. Junior Lauryn Gillis led with 14 kills and senior Romana Kriskova had 12 kills, no errors and hit .545.

“I thought we were pretty good offensively,” UW head coach Kelly Sheffield said. “I thought Lauren (Carlini) did a really good job of setting, she had some ridiculous, really nice sets. Taking blockers up with her, getting attackers really clean looks.”

Ohio State dropped to 15-10, 5-8, but senior middle Taylor Sandbothe got the 518th block of her career to take over first place on the Buckeyes’ all-time list. Dawn McDougall, who played at Ohio State from 1988-91, had 517.

Sandbothe also had five kills. Audra Appold led Ohio State with nine kills.

Second-ranked Minnesota swept Indiana 25-21, 26-24, 25-21 as the Gophers improved to 18-4, 10-3 as Paige Tapp had 11 kills without an error and hit .524. Sarah Wilhite added nine kills and five digs.

Indiana, 15-11, 4-9, got 13 kills from Jazzmine McDonald, who hit .600. Deyshia Lofton had 10 kills and five blocks.

Purdue is 15-9, 5-8, after holding off visiting Maryland 25-23, 25-15, 16-25, 28-26. The Terps are  10-15, 2-11.

Purdue was led by Danielle Cuttino, who 22 kills. Azariah Stahl added 12. Gia Milana led Maryland with 23 kills.

Florida, Arizona, Orange win

The Gators gave coach Mary Wise, the dean of SEC coaches, her 400th league victory with their 25-18, 25-12, 25-20 whipping of host Georgia. It moved Florida (21-2, 11-1) into sole possession of first place, a half game over Kentucky and Missouri, who had the night off.

Juniors Rhamat Alhassan and Carli Snyder had 13 kills apiece for the Gators.

Georgia is 13-11, 1-10.

Arizona earlier this season won at USC and UCLA, the first time in coach Dave Rubio’s 25 years where that happened. Now the Wildcats can go 4-0 in the LA series after beating visiting USC on Wednesday (25-23, 18-25, 22-25, 25-17, 15-7. Next up is No. 9 UCLA on Friday.

Arizona, 15-10, 7-6 Pac-12, got 47 assists and 24 digs from setter Penina Snuka. Kendra Dahlke led with 19 kills.

“Certainly was a little dicey there in the beginning,” Arizona coach Dave Rubio said. “I think we were able to, as the match went on, __play a little bit sharper. But it was touch and go there for a while. I’m really proud on how we hung in there and stayed true to what we were trying to do every day, and that’s to just mentally stay in a match.”

USC dropped to 15-9, 7-6. Khalia Lanier led with 18 kills and Alyse Ford added 15 and eight digs as the Women of Troy lost on the road for the first time in eight outings this season.

In the ACC, Boston College won its second league match of the season by beating Syracuse 26-24, 25-23, 19-25, 25-23. BC is 7-16, 2-11, while Syracuse is 6-17, 5-8.

Racers down Austin Peay, Howard cruises

Murray State kept control of the lead in the Ohio Valley Conference with its 27-25, 25-20, 21-25, 25-17 victory at second-place Austin Peay.

Kristen Besselsen had a career-high 25 kills, hit .345 and added 12 digs. She also had two service aces and three block assists. The Racers, 17-8, 12-1 in the OVC, also got 15 kills an 15 digs from Scottie Ingram.

Austin Peay dropped to 21-9, 10-3. Logan Carger led the Govs with 14 kills and six blocks.

SIUE, which was off, now is in second alone in the OVC at 10-2.

In the MEAC, Howard is 22-5, 11-0 in the league after overpowering Norfolk State. Jessica Young led Howard by hitting .647 with 12 kills. Khalia Donaldson added 15 kills.

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

NCAA: Big battle as KU goes to K-State, Wisconsin plays Ohio State

Kelsie Payne, left, and Taylor Soucie put up a Kansas block against K-State's Kylee Zumach when the Jayhawks won in three on October 12/KU photo

There are only 17 games on the NCAA Division I schedule Wednesday, but the action includes No. 4 Kansas playing a Big 12 match at Kansas State that has huge implications.

Not only are a handful of other ranked schools on the slate, but there are some big mid-major matches.

K-State (17-6, 6-4 Big 12) might not be ranked, but the Wildcats stand at No. 14 in the NCAA RPI, a notch ahead of Kansas (20-2, 9-1) despite the disparity in their records. And there are few more fierce rivals than KU vs. K-State.

Also in the Big 12, No. 5 Texas (17-3, 9-1), coming off that defeat at Kansas, goes to TCU (10-10, 3-7). Also in the Big 12, Baylor (18-7, 6-3) is at Texas Tech 10-15, 0-10) and West Virginia (12-12, 3-7) goes to Iowa State (12-9, 4-5).

The Big Ten has a busy night.

Second-ranked Minnesota  18-3, 10-2) plays host to Indiana (15-10, 4-8). No. 3 Wisconsin (18-3, 10-2) goes to No. 22 Ohio State (15-9, 7-5), and while neither team is ranked, Purdue (14-9, 4-8) desperately needs to beat visiting Maryland (10-14, 2-10).

Three other power-five conferences have one match each.

The SEC’s top-ranked team, No. 6 Florida (20-2, 10-1), goes to Georgia (13-10, 1-9). Florida is in a three-way tie for first with Kentucky and Missouri.

In the Pac-12, No. 25 USC (15-8, 7-5) goes to Arizona (14-10, 6-6) in a critical match for both teams. Washington and UCLA lead the Pac-12 at 9-3, while Oregon and Stanford are 8-4 and Washington State, Utah and USC are all at 7-5.

The ACC has Syracuse (6-16, 5-7) at Boston College (6-16, 1-11).

There’s a huge matchup in the Ohio Valley Conference, as league leader Murray State (16-8, 11-1) plays host to Austin Peay (21-8, 10-2), which is tied for second with SIUE (Southern Illinois Edwardsville).

In the MEAC, Howard (21-5, 10-1) goes to Norfolk State. Howard (6-17, 4-5) has already clinched the MEAC Northern Division title and has won 24 consecutive conference matches.

There were 16 matches on Tuesday, none involving ranked teams. But Long Beach State continued to roll, while Radford took a tough loss.

Long Beach improved to 16-6 overall, 10-1 in the Big West, with a sweep of CSU Fullerton. It sets up the Beach’s big trip to Hawai’i (16-5, 9-1) on Friday with the league’s title on the line.

Radford still holds a two-game lead atop the Big South standings, but the Highlanders (20-5, 11-2) fell in four on Tuesday at HIgh Point. It wasted a second straight 24-kill performance by Maddie Palmer.

Also Tuesday, South Dakota, 21-5, 10-2 in the Summit League, fell in four at North Dakota State, losing the fourth 29-27. It’s quite a battle going on in the Summit, with Denver tied with South Dakota for the league lead.

From Turkey to Philly, Temple’s Asci leads Owls on the court

Temple's Irem Asci ranks in the top 20 in kills per set

One of Temple junior outside hitter Irem Asci’s favorite pastimes is discovering new coffee shops near the Philadelphia school.

“I love the community around the campus and the culture,” she says. “I love the arts and I love nature. I like to take my bike and find new coffee shops.”

During volleyball season, though, that hobby takes a back seat to the high octane the native of Ankara, Turkey, delivers on the court. Her name, by the way, is pronounced “E-rem, Ost-CHEW.”

Asci ranks in the top 20 in the NCAA in kills per set (4.37) and in the top 30 in total kills (376).

“One of the biggest improvements Rem’s made this season is becoming a more versatile hitter,” Owls coach Bakeer Ganesharatnam says. “She’s more of a multi-dimensional hitter now. She has solutions for problems, such as when she faces big blocks.”

That versatility has helped Asci post seven matches of 20 or more kills, including a career high 28 on 66 swings (31 total points) in a match against UConn earlier this season. The 2015 all-AAC first-team selection registered 409 total kills last year in 32 matches to go with 283 digs. She’ll easily surpass those totals and then some this season.

Temple
Temple’s Irem Asci

“I’m playing with more consistency than I had last year,” the 5-foot-11 Asci says. “I’m seeing the other side of the net better with where the block and defense is at.”
Ganesharatnam says that versatility is born out of necessity.

“She’s an undersized hitter,” he says. “She faces some big blockers in our conference and it’s hard to hit at a high percentage being a one-dimensional player. Rem has a really good work ethic and she wants to get better. It makes it easy for us to help her improve. She’s a very coachable player.”

And a player Temple’s coaching staff trusts to get the job done. In addition to taking the most swings on the team (911 through mid-week; the next closest Temple player has 589), she also ranks second on the team in digs with 256 and is tops in service aces with 30.

“My serve is something I think I’ve improved the most,” Asci says. “It floats a little more and I do a couple different jump serves. My serving is pretty effective and that helps the team out. Serving is very important. It’s what starts off the match. It’s important to start a __play strong and it helps make our jobs easier when we are serving better.”

Asci played her freshman year at UNC-Charlotte (for former Turkish youth national team coach and Florida State associate head coach Gokhan Yilmaz), but transferred to Temple for a number of reasons.

“The coaching staff fully changed there and they didn’t have the major I wanted,” she says. “I decided to make a change and I’m so happy I did make a change. It’s one of the best decisions I’ve ever made. Temple is a great school with great academics and a great volleyball program. It feels like home here.”

Her actual home is back in Turkey where she started playing the sport in the fifth grade.

“I played on the youth national team there,” she says. “Volleyball is different in Turkey, it’s more of a hobby where here it’s more professional and like a job. The offenses are faster and the libero serves here. We do a lot of conditioning and lifting. It’s more intense.”

Asci comes from a strong family sports lineage in Turkey. Her mom was an accomplished judo athlete, while her dad was a national team handball player and now coaches the Turkey national handball team. Her younger brother plays basketball and handball.

“I have no idea about judo,” she says with a laugh. “I tried to learn some things a couple times.”

Ganesharatnam has seen that family athletic background come to the forefront in the practice gym and in matches.

“Both her parents competed at very high levels in their respective sports so she kind of grew up in a gym,” he says. “She understands the competitiveness and what it takes to be good and to be good at a high level on a consistent basis. That’s helped her become the player she’s become now and the player she will become in the future.”

Asci, who surpassed the 1,000 career kill total earlier this season, says homesickness isn’t bad, but she does miss the Turkish culinary scene, though she is a big fan of the Philly cheesesteak.

“It was easier for me when I was at Charlotte because a friend of mine from Turkey was with me,” she says. “The food is the biggest thing I miss. The food culture is different here. I ran into a couple problems and gained 10 pounds my freshman year. I think I’ve lost them now.”

Asci, who led Charlotte in kills per set her freshman season, says her journey to America revolved around her love for both volleyball and academia. She is a bioengineering/pre-med major at Temple.

“I didn’t want to pick volleyball or my major,” she says. “It’s hard to do both together in Turkey. It’s why I chose to come here. Playing volleyball in Turkey means you are playing professionally with two practices a day. It’s totally separate from school.”

Asci says she hasn’t been home to Turkey since last Christmas but remains in contact with her family through Facetime.

“It’s not that bad because I am surrounded by great people at Temple,” she says. “It’s my second family.”

She closely followed the political unrest (coup attempt) that occurred in her home country earlier this year and made international headlines.

“I was supposed to go home for a week around that time and didn’t go,” she says. “My family is fine. We live in the capital city. My dad had to stay at his work that day until midnight and the rest of my family went to our summer home north of the city.”

Back on the court, Asci likes the way her game has developed this season and likes the direction the Owls are headed with the conference tournament starting to appear on the horizon.

“Our serving and defense are working really well right now,” Asci says. “That makes our setter’s job easier and makes my job easier as a hitter. We’re playing smart volleyball.”

Temple, 16-6 overall and 9-3 in the American Athletic conferences, sit two games  behind conference frontrunner Southern Methodist (11-1) and a game behind Cincinnati (10-2).

This weekend the Owls __play at Houston on Friday and at Tulane on Saturday. Look for Asci to be fully on the forefront in those matches.

“Rem really wants to help the team,” Ganesharatnam says. “She understands in order to do that she has to improve and she needs to get better on a consistent player.

“Rem is a very happy person. She’s optimistic and is a glass-half-full person. That translates onto the court. She’s very emotional but in a way that’s positive for the team. That’s her biggest trademark and her best quality.”

POWs: 8th time for Arkansas State’s Mallory Warrington, SMU sweeps, all 32 leagues listed

UCLA senior libero Taylor Formico is the Pac-12 defensive player of the week/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

Her team is ranked No. 1 in the VolleyballMag.com Mid-Major Poll and now senior Jessica Sloan is the Conference USA setter of the week for a record seventh-time this season.

One better is Mallory Warrington of Arkansas State, who won the same award in the Sun Belt for the eighth time this season.

Micaya White of Texas was named the Big 12 freshman of the week for the sixth time, tying the league record.

SMU took both American Athletic Awards as Katie Hegarty and Janelle Giordano were honored.

That’s just a sampling of another week of big performances around NCAA Division I volleyball.

You can look forward every Tuesday to the VolleyballMag.com roundup of the POWs around the country.

POWs, of course, are players of the week, and we will do our best to list the honorees from all 32 Division I conferences here.

ACC

Player of the week: Pittsburgh junior outside hitter Mariah Bell

Freshman: Pittsburgh right-side Nika Markovic

Worth noting: Bell hit 40 kills, 21 digs, seven blocks, three aces and hit .258 as the Panthers went 2-0, including upsetting No. 8 North Carolina. Markovic, from Slovenia, returned from an injury and had 19 kills against UNC.

The complete ACC release

Kansas right side Kelsie Payne was the Big 12 and AVCA national POW/KU photo
Kansas right side Kelsie Payne was the Big 12 and AVCA national POW/KU photo

Big 12

Offensive: Kansas junior right-side Kelsie Payne

Defensive: Iowa State freshman libero Hali Hillegas

Freshman: Texas outside Micaya White

Worth noting: Payne, also the AVCA national POW, averaged 4.62 kills and hit .356, Hillegas had 27 digs against K-State and White averaged 4.88 kills as she was named the league’s top freshman for the sixth time.

The complete Big 12 release

Big Ten

Player of the week: Iowa sophomore right-side Reghan Coyle

Defensive: Minnesota junior middle Molly Lohman

Setter: Wisconsin senior Lauren Carlini

Freshman: Indiana outside Kendall Beerman

Worth noting: Coyle hit .490 in two Iowa victories, Lohman had 11 blocks in two matches, Carlini won the setter award for the 10th time and had 32 digs in two matches, and Beerman had 21 kills in two matches and hit .356.

The complete Big Ten release

Pac-12

Offensive: Stanford senior middle Inky Ajanaku

Defensive: UCLA senior libero Taylor Formico

Freshman: Stanford outside Kathryn Plummer

Worth noting: Ajanaku averaged 3.50 kills and hit .645, while Formico averaged 5.88 digs and Plummer averaged 4.67 kills and 3.67 digs.

The complete Pac-12 release

Southeastern Conference

Offensive: Arkansas senior outside Danielle Harbin

Defensive: Texas A&M senior libero Victoria Arenas

Setter: Florida sophomore Allie Monserez

Freshman: Tennessee freshman setter Sedona Hansen

Worth noting: Harbin averaged 5.56 kills and 3.33 digs, including a career-high 27 kills and six blocks against Georgia. Monserez leads the nation at 12.28 assists per set, but last week averaged 12.83 for the Gators.

The complete SEC release

America East

Player of the week: New Hampshire senior middle Demi Muses

Defensive specialist: Albany senior middle Amanda Dolan

Setter: Binghamton junior Sarah Ngo

Rookie: Binghamton freshman outside Lauren Kornmann

Worth noting: Muses is a fixture in the weekly awards. She led the league with 4.62 kills per set and hit .319. Ngo went back-to-back as she averaged 10.83 assists and three digs. Dolan averaged 2.0 blocks and Kornmann averaged 4.0 kills.

The complete  America East release

American Athletic

Offensive: SMU junior right-side Katie Hegarty

Defensive: SMU senior middle Janelle Giordano

Worth noting: Hegarty had the first triple-double in rally scoring era in SMU history and first in American Athletic Conference history with 22 kills, 12 digs and 10 blocks in a five-set win against Tulane. Giordano had 19 blocks in two matches.

The complete American Athletic release

Atlantic Sun

Player of the week: Jacksonville freshman outside Mallory Mattingly

Defensive: Lipscomb sophomore outside Carlyle Nusbaum

Freshman: Mattingly

Worth noting: Mattingly had 35 kills and 35 digs in two matches, while Nusbaum averaged 2.50 digs and had 31 kills in two matches.

The complete ASUN release

Atlantic 10

Co-Player of the week: Dayton junior outside Jessica Sloan

Co-Player of the week: Rhode Island senior Audrey Castro

Co-Defensive: Dayton junior middle Amber Erhahon

Co-Rookie: Dayton freshman outside Jamie Peterson

Co-Rookie: VCU freshman Jasmin Sneed

Worth noting: Sloan averaged 5.0 kills per set, while Castro averaged 4.56 and 2.5 blocks. Sneed averaged 1.73 blocks, including 12 against Fordham.

The complete A-10 release

Big East

Player of the week: Villanova junior outside Allie Loitz

Freshman: Creighton right-side Megan Ballenger

Worth noting: Loitz averaged 3.86 kills and 4.0 digs, while Ballenger averaged 2.17 kills, 1.87 blocks and 1.17 digs while hitting a league-best .500.

The complete Big East release

Big South

Player of the week: Winthrop senior opposite Emma Weakland

Defensive: Winthrop freshman middle Kelsey Schroll

Freshman: Liberty outside Leah Clayton

Worth noting: Weakland averaged 4.0 kills. Schroll had 41 digs and 16 blocks in three victories, while Clayton averaged 4.78 kills and 4.0 digs.

The complete Big South release

Big Sky

Offensive: Sacramento State senior right-side Madeline Cannon

Defensive: Sacramento State senior libero Lexie Skalbeck

Worth noting: Cannon averaged 4.83 kills and hit .421, while Skalbeck averaged 7.0 digs.

The complete Big Sky release

Nele Barber of Long Beach State is the Big West POW/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Nele Barber of Long Beach State is the Big West POW/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

Big West

Player of the week: Long Beach State senior outside Nele Barber

Defensive: CSUN junior libero Katie Sato

Worth noting: Barber averaged 5.13 kills over two matches, while Sato averaged 4.89 digs.

The complete Big West release

Colonial Athletic Association

Offensive: Elon junior setter Sydel Curry

Offensive: Hofstra freshman right-side Laura Masciullo

Defensive: Hofstra senior libero Sophia Black

Rookie: Towson freshman setter Marrissa Wonders

Worth noting: Masciullo had already won three rookie honors this year. She got her first offensive award for averaging 4.21 kills per set over three matches. Curry averaged 11.1 assists and 3.64 digs in three matches, while Black filled in at libero and averaged 5.29 digs.

The complete Colonial release

Western Kentucky
Western Kentucky’s Jessica Lucas is the C-USA co-setter/Steve Roberts, WKU Athletics

Conference USA

Offensive: WKU sophomore middle Rachel Anderson

Defensive: Rice senior outside Leah Mikesky

Co-Setter: Southern Miss sophomore Sarah Bell

Co-Setter: WKU junior Jessica Lucas

Freshman: Marshall setter Madelyn Cole

Worth noting: Anderson had 29 kills and hit .553 in two wins. Mikesky had 28 digs in seven sets. Cole had to set for the first time and had 55 assists against FAU, second most in a four-set league match this season.

The complete C-USA release

Horizon League

Offensive: Cleveland State junior setter Gina Kilner

Defensive: Cleveland State junior libero Shannon Grega

Worth noting: Kilner averaged 13.17 assists, while Grega averaged 5.83 digs.

The complete Horizon release

Ivy League

Player of the week: Cornell sophomore outside Carla Sganderlia

Rookie: Princeton freshman middle Maggie O’Connell

Worth noting: Sganderlia had back-to-back 20-kill matches, while O’Connell hit .377 in two matches with 32 kills, five digs and three blocks.

The complete Ivy release

Metro Atlantic

Player of the week: Fairfield senior middle Megan O’Sullivan

Libero: Siena senior Kalehua Katagiri

Rookie: Marist freshman Megan Fergus

Worth noting: O’Sullivan hit .600 and averaged 2.83 kills and 1.50 blocks for the Stags, who are unbeaten in league play. Katagiri averaged six digs and Fergus won the honor for the fourth time as she averaged 3.17 kills per set.

The complete MAAC release was not available as we posted. 

Mid-American

MAC East offensive: Bowling Green senior outside Jelena Sunjic

MAC West offensive: Toledo junior middle Rachel Vidourek

MAC East defensive: Bowling Green senior libero Madeline Garda

MAC West defensive: Toledo sophomore libero Maurissa Leonard

Worth noting: Sunjic had 38 kills and hit .368, while Vidourek averaged 3.17 kills and hit .600. Garda averaged 9.50 digs per set, while Leonard averaged 7.67 digs per set.

The complete MAC release

Mid-Eastern

Player of the week: Florida A&M freshman outside Maria Yvette Garcia

Defensive: Howard senior libero Morgan Marlbrough

Setter: Florida A&M freshman Elena Dimitrova

Rookie: Bethune-Cookman freshman outside Alana Handy

Worth noting: Handy had 50 kills in two matches, while Marlbrough averaged 10.0 digs.

The complete MEAC release

Lily Johnson of Missouri State is the Missouri Valley offensive POW/Missouri State photo
Lily Johnson of Missouri State is the Missouri Valley POW/Missouri State photo

Missouri Valley

Player of the week: Missouri State junior outside Lily Johnson

Defensive: Illinois State senior outside Aly Dawson

Freshman: Missouri State freshman Daniele Messa

Worth noting: Johnson averaged 5.86 kills, 3.29 digs and 0.57 blocks and became the sixth player in school history to have 1,000 kills and 1,000 digs. Messa averaged 13.43 assists and 4.0 digs.

The complete Valley release

Mountain West

Offensive: New Mexico outside hitter Devanne Sours

Defensive: Wyoming defensive specialist Madi Fields

Worth noting: Sours averaged 4.88 kills and hit .431, while Fields averaged 3.88 digs per set.

The complete Mountain West release

Northeast Conference

Player of the week: Sacred Heart sophomore outside Makayla Dole

Defensive: Robert Morris senior outside Arden Fisher

Rookie: Sacred Heart freshman outside Lisel Nelis

Worth noting: Dole averaged 4.43 kills, Fisher averaged 5.57 digs and Nelis averaged 4.8 digs and had four aces.

The complete Northeast release

Ohio Valley

Offensive: Austin Peay junior middle Ashley Slay

Co-Defensive: Murray State senior libero Ellie Lorenz

Co-Defensive: Morehead State sophomore outside Merideth Jewell

Setter: Austin Peay sophomore Kristen Stucker

Newcomer: Eastern Kentucky junior outside Nikki Drost

Worth noting: Slay hit better than .400 in all three of her matches, Jewell had 26 digs and 17 blocks, Lorenz averaged 6.83 digs and Drost averaged 4.24 kills and 2.25 digs.

The complete OVC release

Patriot League

Player of the week: Army West Point junior middle Carolyn Bockrath

Rookie: Bucknell freshman middle Bridgette Holland

Worth noting: Bockrath averaged 3.67 kills and hit .543. Holland averaged 3.5 kills and hit .458 to go with 10 blocks.

The complete Patriot release

Southern Conference

Offensive: Samford senior outside Erin Bognar

Defensive: UNCG sophomore libero Christine Gregory

Worth noting: This was Bognar’s third award and second in as many weeks and Gregory’s third in five weeks. Bognar averaged 5.0 kills last week, while Gregory averaged 5.57 digs.

The complete SoCon release

Southland Conference

Offensive: Texas A&M Corpus Christi junior setter Kristyn Nicholson

Defensive: Stephen F. Austin junior libero Lexus Cain

Worth noting: Nicholson had 44 assists in a three-set match, Cain averaged 5.67 digs.

The complete Southland release

Southwestern

Offensive: Prairie View A&M junior outside Taylor Goudeau

Defensive: Alabama State’ senior libero Jamie Coleman

Setter: Alabama State junior Justus Tuiolosega

Worth noting: Coleman was the defensive POW for the fifth time.

The complete SWAC release

Summit

Player of the week: South Dakota senior outside Audrey Reeg

Offensive: South Dakota State senior right-side Ashley Beaner

Defensive: North Dakota State junior outside Mikaela Purnell

Worth noting: Reeg won the award for the third time, averaging 4.67 kills. Beaner had 25 kills against Oral Roberts. Purnell won the defensive honor for the third time as she had back-to-back 28-dig performances.

The complete Summit release

Sun Belt

Offensive: Coastal Carolina junior outside Leah Hardeman

Defensive: Texas State freshman libero Micah Dinwiddle

Setter: Arkansas State senior Mallory Warrington

Freshman: Dinwiddle

Worth noting: Dinwiddle averaged 7.36 digs per set, while Hardeman averaged 4.33 kills and hit .392. Warrington won the setter award for the eighth time this season.

The complete Sun Belt release

West Coast

Player of the week: Pepperdine freshman middle Jasmine Gross

Worth noting: She broke the school’s all-time blocks record with 15 against Pacific and in two matches averaged 3.0 blocks per set, 2.88 kills and 0.75 digs. She hit .383.

The complete WCC release

Western Athletic

Player of the week: CSU Bakersfield senior outside Carol Grasso

Worth noting: The Brazilian won the award for the second time as she averaged 3.75 kills, 3.88 digs, 0.62 aces and 0.62 blocks in two big road victories.

The complete WAC release


WKU new No. 1 in VMB Mid-Major Poll, BYU 2nd, USD No. 3

Western Kentucky is the new No. 1 in the VolleyballMag.com Mid-Major Poll. And it was hardly unanimous.

The Lady Toppers got four of the 10 first-place votes.

No. 2 BYU, which swept visiting San Diego — last week’s No. 1 — got one vote and USD got three votes.

No. 4 Creighton and No. 5 Hawai’i each got a first place vote from our panel of coaches (see list below) from around the country.

WKU has won 15 matches in a row, is 24-2 overall and 11-0 in Conference USA.

“It is tremendous to see our kids receive this recognition for the incredible consistency with which they have played this season,” WKU coach Travis Hudson said. We have only lost one match all season at full strength and that was to Michigan State in five sets (on Sept. 24).

“I’m very proud of our team and the season they have put together at this point.”

WKU’s only other loss was on Sept. 2 when when standout setter Jessica Lucas was out for a four-set defeat to Cal Poly.

Dayton, sporting the nation’s best record at 24-1, moved up a spot to No. 6.

The biggest jump of the week was by UNLV, which went from 22nd to No. 17.

UC Santa Barbara made it back into the poll at No. 25.

Rank School Total Points Adjusted First Place Votes Adjusted Win/Loss Record Previous Rank
1 Western Kentucky 239 4 24-2 2
2 BYU 237 1 20-3 4
3 San Diego 230 3 19-3 1
4 Creighton 224 1 18-6 3
5 Hawai’i 208 1 16-5 5
6 Dayton 201 0 24-1 7
7 Marquette 180 0 20-5 8
8 Missouri State 178 0 19-7 10
9 Long Beach State 173 0 16-8 6
10 Wichita State 157 0 16-7 9
11 Coastal Carolina 148 0 19-4 11
12 Northern Iowa 140 0 18-8 12
13 Arkansas State 132 0 20-7 13
14 Colorado State 91 0 15-7 15
15 Loyola Marymount 88 0 15-9 14
16 Miami, Ohio 87 0 19-4 19
T-17 Southern Illinois 67 0 18-9 16
T-17 UNLV 67 0 21-3 22
T-19 Boise State 66 0 19-6 20
T-19 Lipscomb 66 0 16-7 21
21 SMU 57 0 18-6 24
22 Cal Poly 47 0 13-8 17
23 South Dakota 35 0 21-4 25
24 UT San Antonio 34 0 16-6 18
25 UC Santa Barbara 15 0 14-9 NR

Others receiving votes and listed on two or more ballots: Cincinnati 14, Northern Arizona 14, Northern Illinois 12, UCF 11, Cleveland State 4, Wyoming 4.

7 teams mentioned on only one ballot for a total of 24 combined points.

Dropped Out: Northern Arizona 23.

The VolleyballMag.com Mid-Major Poll includes all teams not in the “power-five” conferences, the ACC, SEC, Big Ten, Big 12 and Pac-12.

The pollsters

— Dan Conners, UC Davis

— Brian Doyon, Montana

— Greg Goral, Campbell University

— Kris Grunwald, UConn

— Justin Ingram, Southern Illinois University

— Steve Loeswick, North Florida

— Kent Miller, Saint Louis University

— Coley Pawlikowski, Stony Brook

— Jennifer Petrie, University of San Diego

— Dave Rehr, Arkansas State University

The conferences from which the teams will come:

— America East

— American Athletic

— Atlantic Sun

— Atlantic 10

— Big East

— Big Sky

— Big South

— Big West

— Colonial

— Conference USA

— Horizon League

— Ivy

— Metro Atlantic

— Mid-American

— Mid-Eastern

— Missouri Valley

— Mountain West

— Northeast

— Ohio Valley

— Patriot

— Southern— Southland

— Southwestern

— Summit

— Sun Belt

— West Coast

— Western Athletic

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Ed Chan’s top 10 beach photos from 2016

Co-Publisher Lee Feinswog thought it would be a good idea to choose my 10 best beach photos of the year. For a photographer, that’s a lot like selecting your favorite children.

In the end, I whittled it down to my top 10, but also threw in the five other candidates that I agonized over. Let me know below if you think the bottom five should have been included in the top 10, or if I missed one of your other favorite photos.

These 10 photos are the result of a (very round estimate) of 100,000 photos.

I shoot with the Canon 1DX II (14 frames per second max) and the Canon 1DX (12 frames per second max). At those frame rates, the numbers add up pretty quickly, which explains why I end up backing up 12 terabytes to remote external drives, local external drives, and blu-ray 25GB disks.

My favorite lenses are the Sigma 120-300 f2.8 OS Sport model, the Canon 70-200mm f2.8L IS Mark II, Canon 24-70 f2.8L Mark I, Canon 16-35mm f2.8L Mark II, and the Canon 8-15mm f4L circular fisheye.

If you would like to see more of my shots, please visit my website VBshots.com.

10, Taylor Crabb, AVP Chicago, 9/4/2016010

Taylor Crabb has rapidly become one of the best defensive players on the tour. Here he absorbs the full force of a Billy Allen spike.

I probably waste over 10,000 exposures a year trying to capture this sort of image. As soon as the spiker hits the ball, I’m pre-focused on the defender and fire two or three exposures just in case something happens. Over 99 percent of the time, nothing happens, and I end up spending more time deleting images and depreciating the value of my camera. Every once in a while, I’ll get an interesting image like this, where the defender makes an interesting one handed stab, an overhand dig, whatever. It happens often enough that I’m still convinced that it’s a sound practice.

9, USC, USAV Beach Collegiate Challenge, Hermosa Beach, 4/9/2016

Allie Wheeler, Nicolette Martin, Kelly Claes, Sara Hughes, Abril Bustamante, Jenna Belton, Zoe Nightingale, Sophie Bukovec
Allie Wheeler, Nicolette Martin, Kelly Claes, Sara Hughes, Abril Bustamante, Jenna Belton, Zoe Nightingale, Sophie Bukovec

Nicolette Martin and Allie Wheeler are congratulated by their USC teammates as they clinch the championship match. If you haven’t experienced the drama of women’s college volleyball, you should check it out.

8, Miles Evans, AVP Huntington Beach, 5/7/2016: 8

During most of 2016, the AVP fields were weakened due to the grueling Olympic qualification process. At AVP Huntington Beach, former UCSB Gaucho Miles Evans took full advantage, scoring his first fifth-place finish (previous best of 17th).  If he keeps making digs like this, he will score more fifths and beyond.

7, Maryna Samoday, NVL San Antonio, Sideliners Grill, San Antonio, 6/25/2016:7

Sorry all you blockers out there, but it’s difficult to get a great photo of you. The diggers get great photos of themselves laying out for balls, but all blockers typically get is nice jubilation photos after scoring a block.

This photo is a nice exception. Maryna came down off the block and had to chase down an errant Kim Hildreth dig. This photo is what I call “Jim Wolf style.”  Jim loves the low angle perspective, which gives you a different look than the typical eye level perspective.

For this shot, I set up on an open court to avoid being run over by a player, laid on my belly to get as low as possible, and placed a towel underneath me to separate the sand and my equipment. I was lucky enough to capture the photo with Maryna’s fist inside the ball, my favorite shot of the tournament.

6, Brandon Joyner, NVL Port St. Lucie, Club Med Sandpiper Bay, Florida, 5/21/2016:

6

Frustration and disappointment are as much a part of the athletic experience as celebration and joy. As a photographer I have accepted the fact that it is part of the event and should therefore be documented as well, within limits.

We have all experienced a frustrating loss, and to me, this image offers a view into Brandon’s frustration. Fortunately for him, his season went much better after this, so much so that he was named the NVL’s Most Improved Male Player.

5, Taiana Lima/Brazil, World Series of Beach Volleyball, Marina Green park, Long Beach, 8/25/2016:Taiana Lima/Brazil

Every photographer has a small group of players in mind for a specific photo, for defense, for spiking, for jubilation. I’m sure Taiana Lima is at the top of every photographer’s defense lists because she is the most athletic and acrobatic digger on the women’s side, in my opinion. She’s quick and has extraordinary hustle and timing.

On this play, she was caught out of position on the line, when her opponents went jumbo. She recovered to make a spectacular dig and score the point.

4, Sara Hughes, Merle Norman stadium, USC, Pac-12 beach championships, 4/29/2016: Sara Hughes

Sara Hughes is a baller. She and partner Kelly Claes have won a ridiculous number of consecutive college matches going back to their sophomore year. And more than that, they are both sweet, nice, and down to earth. A pleasure to interview.

I was having a pretty average day of shooting (read: I was frustrated and missing a bunch of shots), so I tried to visualize the shot that I wanted. I visualized one of the Witt twins (Hughes/Claes opponents at the time) hitting a high line shot and Sara diving to retrieve it. This shot usually requires you to pre-focus on a spot because the AI servo autofocus usually isn’t fast enough to give you a tack sharp photo like this one.

Anyway, less than five points later, it all came together. One of the Witt twins (don’t ask me which one, the one that plays left) hit high line, Sara made a great save, and I was pre-focused and got the shot. Better than that, the photo renewed my confidence that day and ended up with some pretty nice captures.

5, Dave Counts, Dinosaur tournament, Kalapaki Beach, Kau’ai, Hawai’i, 3/20/2016:Dave Counts

Let’s lead off with the fact that Dave should have gone for this dig with his left hand, but it is a much more interesting photo using his right hand.

For those of you not familiar with the Dinosaur tournament, it’s a reference to age. The total age of the two players must exceed 80 for the men, and 70 for the women. For every four years that you exceed the age of your opponents, you earn one point, to a maximum of four points.

The tournament is played on an old school 30×30 court, has old school side-out scoring, no net serves, all of those pre-2000 rules. The final wasn’t played due to a medical condition, so Dave Counts/Mike Bruning were co-champions with Jim Nichols/Greg Lyle. Tarin Locascio and Laura Ratto won on the women’s side.

Anyway, for those of you in your 40’s and beyond, you need to come out to this tournament. Beach doubles with a bunch of your friends in Hawaii? Yes, please!

2, Priscilla Piantadosi-Lima and Angela Lewis Akers, NVL Hermosa Beach, 8/12/2016: 2

With an unexpected injury to Kristen Batt-Rohr, Priscilla went deep into the Rolodex to recruit Angela Lewis Akers. The pair had not played together since 2008, but managed to eke out a fifth-place finish despite Angela having played sparingly in the last few years.

I’ve known Angela since she was 14-years-old, so I really enjoyed seeing this team together again.  

1, Mark Burik AVP Chicago, 9/2/2016:1

OK, there are two types of photos that are popular. First, a peak action photo that brings the viewer into the action, and second, a photo that shows something that the viewer hasn’t seen. And that’s hard, because we’re all inundated with photos these days.

This photo is an example of the latter. Sure, technically it’s not a great photo, the light isn’t very good, there’s no ball and not much face in the photo, but yes, it’s different and when I took the time to see it after the tournament, I knew it was a winner.

The almost top-10

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Katie Spieler, AVP Chicago, 9/3/2016: Katie, one of the stalwarts of the Hawaii Wahine beach program, gets sandy at AVP Chicago.

Son Sanay

The younger Sanjay, Mexico Classic volleyball tournament, Rosarito, Mexico, 6/26/2016: I so wanted to be able to sneak in a photo from Mexico into the top 10. This year the dates conflicted with an NVL event, so I jumped off my plane when I landed in San Diego and drove down to Papas and Beer in Rosarito in time for the quarterfinals to keep my streak alive, my 25th consecutive year attending this event! By the way, a father-son duo won the tournament and this is of the 16-year-old son. Sadly, I never got their first names.

Paul Araiza

Paul Araiza, Pacific BeachFest, San Diego, 10/1/2016: Love this wide angle of Paul spiking. It’s rare that you can get the sun in the frame perfectly at the net. The lens flare adds to the shot, and I like how the official, John Rodriguez, is leaning to get an angle on the blocker.

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Jennifer Snyder, NVL Port St. Lucie Player’s Championship, 9/10/2016: Love those Florida clouds, because we don’t get anything like that in Southern California.