Saturday, January 21, 2017

Americans playing volleyball overseas always aware of dangers

Kim Hill

“My lifestyle has definitely changed in comparison to last season. My teammates and I don’t go out anymore, the New Year’s Eve attack leaving us fearful of any nightlife. Last year we tried to avoid big tourist areas, now we avoid ANY area that is known to be populated by Westerners. 

“I even feel apprehensive at times going to my local mall. We think twice about going to big sporting events, like the professional basketball games here. Basically, it’s always in the back of my mind now, should we try this new restaurant even though it’s in a pretty popular/busy area? Better not. 

“I was at a movie this afternoon and the rumble from the next-door theater was really big, and for a moment I thought, hmmm, I wonder if a bomb just went off in this mall.  It seems a little alarmist, but it’s also realistic.”

— USA Olympian Kim Hill

Terrorist attacks occur in Berlin and Istanbul.

You watch it on the news, read about it on the web. But it’s over there.

Unless you’re an American playing volleyball in Berlin. Or in Istanbul. Or anywhere else around the globe where terrorism is a fact of everyday life.

Quite a few former NCAA players make a living continuing in the sport professionally. We reached out to many of them, particularly a few playing in those two aforementioned cities, and believe you will find their responses quite interesting.

Among them, USA Olympian and former Pepperdine star Kim Hill, who plays in Istanbul, to former Louisville player Erin Fairs, who decided not to go back, to Nicole Walch, who was a standout for Florida State and loves playing in Berlin.

“Playing in Istanbul is really strange because I can honestly say it’s one of my favorite cities in the world,” Hill said. “There’s so much to do and see and so much culture, it’s really incredible.

“But then at the same time there’s so much political unrest here between a controversial president gaining more power and terrorist attacks happening on what feels like a regular basis.”

Said Walch, “Some of the other Americans playing in Germany are wondering if it’s safe in Berlin and I always say ‘Yes!’ ”

Former AVP Pro Mike Bruning is the captain of the USA Deaflympics team, currently evaluating the safety of  ing in the 2017 Deaflympics in Samsun, Turkey/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Former AVP Pro Mike Bruning is the captain of the USA men’s Deaflympics team, currently evaluating the safety of playing in the 2017 Deaflympics in Samsun, Turkey/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

But according to Mike Bruning, a former AVP player who is hearing impaired, this summer’s Deaflympics in Samsun, Turkey are in jeopardy.

“Almost all of the American teams have pulled out,” Bruning said, “except men’s and women’s volleyball, and a small portion of the track teams.”

This is by no means a scientific survey, but hopefully it will give you some idea of what it’s like to be an American — and in a couple of cases Europeans — playing in Europe in today’s world.

Matt Anderson passes in World League  /Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Matt Anderson passes in World League play/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

“I think anyone traveling has to be concerned with the terrorist attacks,” said USA Olympian Matt Anderson, the former Penn State star who plays in Kazan, Russia. “In Russia, Putin has claimed he’ll destroy anyone who plots an attack, I believe. So I’m a little less on edge. However, we do travel to Europe for Champions League matches and the thought is in the back of my mind.

“To me, it’s a very unfortunate state of our world now. It’s something that is out of the control of those in power and it creates a lot of fear which leads to immense hate and hostility towards many people and cultures. It’s a reality we must live with at the moment and hope for peace in the near future through open communication and diplomacy.”

So many Americans are overseas. Olympians Jordan Larson and Rachael Adams both also __play in Istanbul, for example. But not everyone is in a country directly hit by terrorism or in a big city.

Anna Bajde, 22, is from Austria and plays in Germany for Vfb Suhl Lotto Thüringen.

“Suhl is located in the eastern part of Germany and it is one of the oldest cities (the average age of people living here is 50 and it is still rising). It is a small city and hardly anyone knows about it,” Bajde offered by email.

“Therefore, I can say that I really feel safe here. I honestly do not think about terrorism when I leave the house, I do not worry about what could happen, I do not waste any thoughts about what might happen when I go to places where a lot of people are.

“It has been shocking years for Europe and affecting the rest of the world too, but people should not be afraid of the threats of terrorism. I have been celebrating New Year’s Eve in the capital, where there has been a terror attack two weeks before.

“Please do not get me wrong, I am not saying that we shouldn’t be careful, I am simply stating the fact that we cannot live in a world being afraid of anything. I really hope you can understand my perspective.”

Tim Kelly, the former UCLA player who runs Bring it Promotions and matches players with professional clubs, just left Europe where he went to Istanbul. He’s currently in China.

“Every time I see another terror attack in Europe on the news I worry about any players or friends I have in the area, but the same goes for the bombs and attacks in the USA as I have friends and ex-players there too,” said Kelly, perhaps the most well-traveled person in volleyball.

“I think its just a part of life that we’re having to deal with right now. I’m just finishing up a trip through Turkey, southern France, Italy, China, and Korea myself, and I just try to remember that bad things can happen anywhere, and you just have to do keep living your life and enjoying what you do.”

Kim Hill
USA star Kim Hill plays in Istanbul, site of several terrorist attacks/Ed Chan

Kim Hill plays for Vakifbank in Istanbul, where among the tragic events was last June when a shootings and a suicide bombing in the airport killed 45 and more than 200 were injured, and 39 were killed in an attack and more than 70 wounded at a nightclub on New Year’s Eve.

“This is my second season here and last season, yes, things were happening, but it didn’t feel like it was happening consistently,” Hill said. “I live on the Asian side of the city, which feels far from all the craziness that happens on the European side. 

“Also the other Americans I know that __play here live in neighborhoods that, while on the European side, still are pretty far from the tourist areas which are the biggest target.”

Hill, from Portland, Oregon, is a 6-foot-4 outside hitter.

“My parents visited last year and saw where I live so they were more comfortable with me coming back for a second season. All this is to say that this year it’s definitely been taken up a notch. After the coup in July, I was much more wary of coming back, but what’s shaken me the most was the recent night club attack on New Year’s Eve. The attack happened at the same club that my team had our end-of-the-season celebration at last year, so we’ve all been there.  A lot of girls on my team have been there many times, we very often go to places just across the street from there. Even that very night I had friends and teammates who left the home we spent the first part of the evening at to go out in that same area, with the thought of maybe going to that club. Fortunately for them, they arrived to find the area blocked off, the tragedy having already occurred.

“All that is to say that this most recent attack really hit close to home.  I even see it in the faces of my Turkish teammates, this attack really getting to them as well, not just the foreigners who are an obvious target.

“My lifestyle has definitely changed in comparison to last season:  my teammates and I don’t go out anymore, the New Year’s Eve attack leaving us fearful of any nightlife. Last year we tried to avoid big tourist areas, now we avoid ANY area that is known to be populated by Westerners.  I even feel apprehensive at times going to my local mall.  We think twice about going to big sporting events, like the professional basketball games here.  Basically, it’s always in the back of my mind now, should we try this new restaurant even though it’s in a pretty popular/busy area?  Better not.  I was at a movie this afternoon and the rumble from the next-door theater was really big, and for a moment I thought, hm, I wonder if a bomb just went off in this mall.  It seems a little alarmist, but it’s also realistic. 

“That is to say that I’m not constantly living in fear. My daily routine is the same, going mostly between practice and home and other places in my neighborhood, but Turkey is definitely not the safest place to be right now. I often feel sorry for my family and friends who worry about me, when all they see in newspapers is the latest attack in Istanbul and hurry to send a text to make sure I’m OK. But for now it’s all a part of the job!”

Another European perspective: Mechell Daniel, 21, played at South Alabama. She is from Chelmsford, England, and plays for OrPo in Finland.

“I have no fear of terrorism while living in Europe,” Daniel said. “I am currently in Finland and feel very safe here. I also lived my whole childhood in England and never had any issues. I actually feel safer in Europe than I did while I studied in America. I can assure you Europe is a very safe place and you do not need to be afraid of such issues.”

Former Texas star Khat Bell  s abroad in xxx/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Former Texas star Khat Bell plays abroad in Manisa, Turkey/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

Former Texas star Khat Bell plays in Manisa, a smaller city near the sea about a six-hour drive south of Istanbul.

“But I’m constantly flying in and out of (Istanbul),” Bell said. “So I’m there pretty often.”

Turkey, she said, is “ an amazing place. So far for me, I haven’t had any kind of negative activity. It’s fun, I’m enjoying the people, and the culture and the environment. I love it. I’m really enjoying it.”

Bell played in Korea last year. She got to Turkey in August and went back home twice, in the fall for her sister’s wedding and then for the holidays.

“One thing for me is that there’s stuff going around everywhere and I can’t be afraid. If it’s my time to go, it’s my time to go,” Bell said.

But she admitted that she has had frank conversations with teammates and other players, asking, “What’s it gonna take for us to say ‘We can’t play anymore, we have to go home?’

“We don’t know what that would be.”

Fairs did. She left here Maltepe Yali team in Istanbul in early January and is now in Puerto Rico, and playing for Aibonito, just more than an hour’s drive south of San Juan.

“It’s not safe where I was,” said Fairs, a product of Houston whose bio when she was at Louisville included “Post College Ambition: play Overseas.”

She said she got more information from people back home, like her parents.

“I was really close to everything. I know other girls stayed, but I think their clubs were taking better care of them.” said Fairs, the only American on her team. “My club was not good about that kind of thing. So I just thought it was just better to leave the situation.”

Basketball player Sugar Rodgers left, too: This is from a story by The Associated Press:

The New York Liberty guard traveled to Turkey this past fall after the WNBA season ended to play basketball there. She had spent a few years bouncing around other foreign leagues, then signed with Osmaniye — a team about two hours from the Syrian border.

The former Georgetown player lasted a month in the country town where she was living before returning to Virginia in November.

“I heard about a bombing that killed 17 people about two hours away and right there I was like I don’t want to stay,” Rodgers said. “The government shut off all lines of communication so I couldn’t get on Twitter, Facebook, WhatsApp. It was pretty scary not to be able to communicate with anyone.”

Rodgers was one of about two dozen WNBA players playing this winter in Turkey. For years, the 14-team Turkish league has provided the opportunity for players to supplement their WNBA incomes in the offseason, offering salaries in the hundreds of thousands of dollars — sometimes more than three times what they make in the U.S.-based league.

The story also included Americans who have stayed to play basketball in Turkey, including Shavonte Zellous, another Liberty player who played at Pittsburgh and is from Orlando.

Former Florida State  er Nicole Walch
Former Florida State player Nicole Walch

Speaking of Orlando, Nicole Walch is from Stuart, a little more than two hour’s drive away.

Walch plays in Berlin, where a Christmas-market terrorist attack when a truck was driven into a crowd killed 12 and injured five times more.

“This is my first full season abroad. I played the spring of 2016 in Puerto Rico right after graduating from FSU and I love Berlin,” Walch said. “It is a great city to be in for me because I love how there is so much to do and the German league is fun but still competitive.

“My teammates are great and I even have one of my best friends from home on my team as well.”

That’s former FSU setter Sarah Wickstrom, also from Stuart, Fla., who is in her second year in Berlin. Wickstrom, Walch said, had planned to go to the market the day after the attack.

“It’s nice to have someone that knows the city as well as a good friend,” Walch said.

“Before the Christmas market got attacked and I was coming here, my family and friends were always telling me to be cautious. That the world in general is not safe right now, not specifically Berlin, but just to be cautious. My mom is always texting me and calling saying the same thing, to avoid crowded areas and if you do go to them, just be aware of your surroundings. That is a very hard thing to do.

“It’s not like any of the people in the Christmas market could run away from a huge semi truck coming through the gates. So it’s more about being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Luckily for me, I was in Florida. None of my friends or teammates were there either. I did receive a lot of texts and calls of people wondering if I was OK, because I had just gotten back into the States. Even some of the other Americans from Germany reached out and asked if I was safe, which was very kind.”

In an eerie foreboding, Walch said when one of the first weekends that the market opened, she and some teammates visited to check it out and it wasn’t crowded but a German teammate told her they were afraid of ISIS attacking.

“I was a little concerned and wondering why we were there in that moment if that is what she thought, but she reassured me that these concerns happen all the time and that we couldn’t not come to the markets just because we were afraid. That is how I feel, you can’t live your life being scared of what could happen. So my friend basically called it saying there would be an attack, but before the attack.”

Walch said she and Wickstrom talk about safety.

“We are both on the same page that we don’t want to spend our year in Berlin being passive or scared. Some of the other Americans playing in Germany are wondering if it’s safe in Berlin and I always say yes! I mean there are so many bad things happening in the world, you can’t say that Berlin is unsafe. I mean Orlando, Florida, was attacked and that is an hour from my house. And the shooter was from my hometown. So anything can happen anywhere.”

Tom Black on move from LMU to Georgia: ‘Incredible potential here’

Tom Black coaches during a USA women's national team scrimmage/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

By all accounts, Georgia came up big when it hired Tom Black just before Christmas.

Black, 43, not only had strong runs at UC San Diego and for the past seven seasons at Loyola Marymount in Los Angeles, he was an assistant to Karch Kiraly on the USA national team in the last Olympiad, culminating with the women winning bronze in Rio.

The former star player for UC San Diego is 242-115 in 12 years as a head coach, 127-86 at LMU.

But he takes over a program that went 18-43 the past two years, 1-35 in the Southeastern Conference.

Black finally has his family — wife Crystal, a former volleyball player herself, and two children, 4-year-old Kylin and 10-month-old Emerson — settled into Athens. He also brought his assistants from LMU with him, Aaron Benning and Felicia Arriola.

We caught up with Black on Thursday morning.

LMU head coach Tom Black watches during 2016 Big West competition/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Tom Black as the coach of Loyola Marymount/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

VBM: What about the job attracted you?

Black: I thought there was incredible potential here for Georgia and in the SEC. Georgia’s got an amazing campus and there’s a lot amount of school pride for Georgia throughout the state and it’s right near Atlanta, which is a real good junior volleyball hotbed. The resources and national recognition added up to a pretty incredible opportunity.

VBM: Obviously there’s been a drought there and you’ve got an uphill battle to begin with.

Black: I think the school’s capable of doing really, really well. I didn’t think the past performance indicated what the potential was at this place or I wouldn’t have left. There’s a lot of potential.

VBM: Speaking of leaving, you got everyone’s attention when you did and went all the way across the country. Things were good at Loyola Marymount and you were involved with the Olympic program. This makes that hard to do, I assume.

Black: Yeah, I had already told Karch the travel was a little too extensive for having two young daughters. I wasn’t planning on doing it this quad. It was the right decision. It was a great experience and I learned a ton, but it eats at you when you’re away from your family for extensive periods. It just felt like the right decision.

VBM: It’s always hard when you leave a place, and you’d done well and I’m sure you were fond of your team and players.

Black: It’s super hard. The day I got hired the day was almost all making phone calls on the Georgia end and the next day was all telling everyone at LMU. That was a brutal day. There’s no way around it, it’s really hard. You’ve got deep relationships and it’s not only that, it’s a huge shock. They don’t see it coming so you have to walk it through and you have to do it 20 times. It’s a real hard process on that end.

VBM: Culturally it’s such a different move to go from southern California to the Deep South. Coaches tend to get typecast, like he’s a West Coast guy or whatever, and volleyball is volleyball, but it is different.

USA Assistant coach Tom Black works with the setters in preparations for the 2016 Olympics/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
USA assistant coach Tom Black works with the setters in preparations for the 2016 Olympics/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

Black: That’s one thing being with USA kind of shattered for me. Maybe before the USA experience that I would have thought this was more of a big deal but after traveling throughout the world this doesn’t have as much of an impact on me in terms of getting to know people and what they’re about. There are definitely cultural differences from Georgia to California but I’m excited to learn those and you always grow from those. I’m excited to learn more about the South. People have been amazing and it’s a good deal.

VBM: Tell me about the Georgia team you inherited and what recruiting looks like.

Black: The coaching staff before put together a really strong class for 2017 with the two kids who are committed, T’ara Ceasar (Panama City, Fla./Mosley HS) and Kendall Glower (Phoenix/Desert Vista HS), and we’re looking for one more. Hopefully we’ll get that wrapped up soon. If we get that together we’ll have a really strong ’17 class. The ’18 class has been our main focus the past couple of weeks. There were Georgia commits and there were commits we had at LMU and there were other kids, so we’re trying to get that all organized. There’s been a high level of interest like we expected. We’re starting to get people on campus. I really think with Georgia it’s about streaming more attention to it. I think everyone knows about Georgia but they haven’t thought about it in terms of volleyball.If you get volleyball players to think about it more they get really excited. It’s an amazing place.

VBM: Timing, of course, is the key to life. I can’t be the only person to think it and/or ask you, but as soon as John Dunning retired I thought, well, Tom’s already gone to Georgia and had he not, he might be in the mix at Stanford.

Black: That’s a game you could __play all the time. The job at Stanford is an incredible opportunity and they’re going to get a great coach. But I’m super fired up to be here. It’s an awesome opportunity and I think we’re going to grow it and make it really special and that’s where we’re focusing.

NCAA men: Penn State, Harvard win, busy NCAA night ahead

Luke Braswell of Penn State, left, and teammates Kevin Gear and Chris Nugent triple block Loyola's Collin Mahan/Craig Houtz photo

The EIVA went 2-0 against the MIVA on Thursday night as Penn State beat visiting Loyola in five, while Harvard kept visiting Fort Wayne winless in NCAA men’s volleyball.

Those recaps ahead, but first a look at Friday’s busy schedule.

MPSF Friday: There are six matches, including the always-fun rivalry between USC and UCLA. In this case, No. 2 UCLA (5-1 overall, 3-1 MPSF) entertains the Trojans (2-4, 1-2), who have have lost back-to-back matches after upsetting Long Beach State on January 11.

No. 3 BYU (5-1, 1-0) goes to No. 14 CSUN (6-2, 2-1).

Tenth-ranked Stanford (3-2) goes to No. 7 Pepperdine (2-1) for the MPSF opener for both teams.

Two days after coming back to win a five-set thriller, No. 4. Long Beach (5-1, 2-1) plays No. 5 Hawai’i (5-1, 0-1) again.

No. 12 UCSB (5-1, 2-1) plays host to Cal Baptist (2-4, 1-2). Cal Baptist upset CSUN on January 11 and has lost both matches since, to Long Beach and UCLA.

And No. 6 UC Irvine (5-1, 2-1) plays at struggling UC San Diego (0-4, 0-3).

Conference Carolinas Friday: There are five matches, one in the league as Barton (2-0, 1-0 ConfCarolinas) goes to North Greenville (0-4), which is playing its conference opener.

King (2-0) steps out of conference to __play at George Mason of the EIVA (3-1).

Belmont Abbey (0-2) entertains Coker. Emmanuel (1-1) goes to McKendree of the MIVA (1-6) and Lees-McRae (1-1) plays at independent Alderson Broaddus (0-2).

EIVA-MIVA Friday: Intriguing EIVA-MIVA matchups continue to dot the schedule as top-ranked Top-ranked Ohio State (5-0) goes to Saint Francis (3-2), Penn State (3-2) plays host to Lewis (3-1), Fort Wayne (0-7) goes to Sacred Heart (2-0) and Ball State (4-1) goes to Harvard (1-2).

Also, NJIT of the EIVA (1-2)  plays host to Kean, while Charleston (1-2) entertains St. Andrews.

As mentioned, Mason has King at home.

There is one MIVA league match as Grand Canyon 1-3) plays host to Lindenwood (0-3) in the conference opener for both teams. And Quincy (0-3) is at home for Missouri Baptist.

Penn State
Penn State’s Matt Callaway goes up against Loyola’s Jeff Jendryk/Craig Houtz photo

Penn State beats Loyola: The 15th-ranked Nittany Lions got to 3-2 as they came away with a 25-17, 15-25, 25-21, 16-25, 15-11 victory.

“We’re never out of a match,” Penn State coach Mark Pavlik said.

Chris Nugent led with 15 kills and had two aces to go with six digs and two blocks.

Calvin Mende had 13 kills and .242 with five digs. Aidan Albrecht added 10 kills and Kevin Gear six. Penn State had four aces and 22 service errors.

Penn State finished the fifth set with a 3-1 burst and beat Loyola for the first time in three years.

Ben Plaisted had 12 kills and 10 digs for Loyola, which dropped to 3-3. Will Tischler had 11 kills and seven digs and Jeff Jendryk had 10 kills and five blocks. Loyola, which had three aces and 21 service errors, goes to George Mason on Saturday.

Harvard tops Fort Wayne: In a battle of winless teams, the Mastodons fell to 0-7 in a tough 28-26, 25-17, 23-25, 25-19 loss. Harvard improved to 1-2 as Brad Gretsch had 16 kills and hit .385 and Erik Johnsson 15 kills and hit .323. Casey White had 11 kills and hit .333. He also had a match-high 18 digs.

Pelegrin Vargas led Fort Wayne with 17 kills. Colton Stone had 13 and hit .333. He also had the team’s only ace and five of its 19 errors.

Penn State had two aces and 11 errors, meaning the four teams that played Thursday night combined for 10 aces and 73 errors.

Thursday, January 19, 2017

NCAA: Ohio State, UCLA stay 1-2 in AVCA, the week ahead plus POWs

Jacob Schmiegelt of Lewis is the MIVA POW/Steve Woltmann photo

Ohio State and UCLA remained atop the AVCA Division I-II men’s poll, and, while there was some mild shuffling, no one dropped out of the 15-team ranking.

BYU moved up from fourth to No. 3, trading places with Long Beach State, and Hawai’i is fifth. Pepperdine dropped from No. 5 to No. 7 after splitting its Chicago trip, while UC Irvine moved up from sixth to No. 7.

The MIVA announced it will have a hall of fame, Lincoln Memorial won its first match in program history and the four men’s conferences announced players of the week.

But first a look at the matches ahead this week and pre-conference __play is all but finished.

In the MPSF on Wednesday, second-ranked UCLA, the league leader at 4-1 overall and 2-0 in the conference, plays host to Cal Baptist (2-3, 1-1). No. 5 Hawai’i (the only team in the league still unbeaten at 5-0) makes its first trip of the season and opens MPSF __play at No. 4 Long Beach State (4-1, 1-1). And USC (2-3, 1-1) plays at No. 12 UCSB (4-1, 1-1). There’s a good one on Thursday, too, when No. 3 BYU (3-1) opens MPSF play at No. 14 CSUN (6-1, 1-1).

There are two EIVA-MIVA matches on Thursday, when No. 9 Loyola steps out of conference to go to No. 15 Penn State (2-2), while Fort Wayne (0-6) plays at Harvard (0-2).

Both leagues have full slates on Friday, with more mixing between the conferences, including No. 8 Lewis at Penn State and top-ranked Ohio State at Saint Francis.

Conference Carolinas has two matches on tap for Tuesday, when Barton (1-0) opens league play at Belmont Abbey (0-1) and Mount Olive (1-3) does the same at Pfeiffer, which will be playing its season opener. The league is then idle until Friday.

Lucas Yoder of USC
Lucas Yoder of USC

Players of the week

USC senior outside hitter Lucas Yoder is the MPSF POW. Yoder had 28 kills, hit .404 and had six digs and two blocks in an upset of Long Beach State and then in a loss to CSUN had 19 kills, hit .552 and had a block. He is the first USC player to win the honor since Andy Benesh in May 2015.

Others nominated included Pepperdine’s David Wieczorek, UCLA’s Micah Ma’a, Ben Patch of BYU, Jordan Ewert of Stanford, UC Irvine’s Michael Saeta, TJ DeFalco of Long Beach, Hawai’i’s; Stijn van Tilburg and Dimitar Kalchev of CSUN.

Jon Wheaton of King
Jon Wheaton of King

King University’s Jon Wheaton is the Conference Carolinas POW. The sophomore middle averaged 2.33 kills and 1.5 blocks per set in two sweeps, while hitting .400.

The EIVA POWs are Chris Nugent and Kevin Gear of Penn State.

Nugent, a senior outside, is the offensive player after getting 17 kills against Ball State and 13 more against Fort Wayne.

Gear, a junior middle, had eight blocks in those two matches. He also had three digs and 14 kills and hit .619.

And in the MIVA, POW honors were shared by Ball State’s Connor Gross and Lewis’ Jacob Schmiegelt. Gross is the defensive winner, while Schmiegelt the offensive honoree.

Gross averaged 3.29 digs per set in Ball State’s victories over Saint Francis and Penn State. The senior setter had 11 in Ball State’s sweep of the Red Flash and then 12 digs with three blocks (one solo) against Penn State.

Schmiegelt hit .526 as the Flyers defeated Harvard and Pepperdine. The senior middle hit .737 with 15 kills on 19 swings and had five blocks against Pepperdine. He had 10 kills against Harvard.

MIVA hall of fame: The league will honor its first class May 4-6 at the NCAA Men’s Volleyball National Collegiate Championship at league member Ohio State.

“This is an honor long overdue for the league,” MIVA commissioner Craig Barnett said. “It is something we’ve talked about for a while and I’m excited to see it come to fruition.”

Railsplitters break through: Lincoln Memorial beat visiting Alderson Broaddus in five Saturday for the first victory in program history. The 21-25, 25-18, 25-19, 23-25, 16-14 victory left LMU 1-2 after the match of independents in Harrogate, Tenn.

Montana has a coach, King and Mount Olive win, Gatorade top players list

Montana hired Allison Lawrence as its head coach, Barton and Mount Olive recorded sweeps in the Conference Carolinas, the MPSF has three league matches Wednesday night and Gatorade released its list of the top players in each state.

Start with Lawrence, who has been the interim head coach since Brian Doyon stepped away at the end of a season in which the Grizzlies went 5-21, 2-14 in the Big Sky Conference. Lawrence, who played at Oregon State, has been an assistant at Montana since 2010.

This is from the Montana news release:

Lawrence’s appointment comes after a tumultuous half decade for the Griz volleyball program. Jerry Wagner stepped down after the 2014 season, following the team’s second 6-23 record in three years.
 
Doyon, previously an assistant coach at Utah, was hired in January 2015. Montana went 8-20 in Doyon’s first year, 5-21 last fall. The Grizzlies finished 6-26 in league matches in two years under Doyon.
 
Lawrence, who was hired by Wagner and retained by Doyon, was an assistant coach at Trinity University, a Division III school in San Antonio, Texas, prior to being hired by Wagner in 2010.

In other words, Montana is 25-87 the past five seasons.

The Division I openings still include Stanford, Loyola Marymount, Texas-Arlington, Stetson and Manhattan. And quite a few assistant-coach spots.

Barton, Mount Olive get men’s victories: Visiting Barton swept Belmont Abbey 25-17, 25-21, 25-17 in its ConfCarolinas opener to improve to 2-0. Belmont Abbey dropped to 0-2, 0-1.

Aleksa Brkovic led Barton with 15 kills. Liam Maxwell, Brennan Beyner and Robert Nixon had six kills apiece for the losers.

Mount Olive broke through after four losses to start the season and win its CC opener 25-15, 25-17, 25-15. Pfeiffer lost its season opener.

Robert Poole had 14 kills and hit .440 for Mount Olive. Evan Blair had 14 for Pfeiffer.

Three MPSF matches Wednesday: No. 5 Hawai’i (5-0 overall) plays its league opener at No. 4 Long Beach State (4-1, 1-1 MPSF, No. 2 UCLA (4-1, 2-0) is home for Cal Baptist (2-3, 1-1) and No. 12 UCSB (4-1) entertains USC (2-3, 1-1).

No. 3 BYU (3-1) plays its MPSF opener at No. 14 CSUN (6-1, 1-1) on Thursday.

There are two EIVA-MIVA matches Thursday, when Fort Wayne (0-6) goes to Harvard (0-2) and No. 9 Loyola (3-2) plays at No. 15 Penn State (2-2).

Gatorade lists state winners: The award was established in 1985 to recognize the nation’s most outstanding high school student-athletes for their athletic excellence, academic achievement and exemplary character. Here’s a look at the 2016 winners in each state.

Italicized players indicate those who earned 2016 Lucky Dog Volleyball/VolleyballMag.com girls’ high school All-American honors. Santa Fe Christian’s Lexi Sun is the 2016 VBM player of the year.

Alabama: Lauren Chastang, 6-0, OH, Sr.,  Bayside Academy (Daphne, Ala.)
Alaska: Brynn Sulte, 6-2, MB, Sr., Dimond (Anchorage, Alaska)
Arizona: Brooke Nuneviller, 5-11, OH, Jr., Corona Del Sol (Tempe, Ariz.)
Arkansas: Ella May Powell, 6-0, S, Jr., Fayetteville (Ark.)
California: Lexi Sun, 6-2, OH, Sr., Santa Fe Christian (Solana Beach, Calif.)
Colorado: Michaela Putnicki, 6-1, OH, Sr., Lewis-Palmer (Monument, Colo.)
Connecticut: Alana Hruska, 6-3, OH-MB, Jr., Rham (Hebron, Conn.)
Delaware: Sydney Fulton, 5-7, S, Sr., Delaware Military (Wilmington, Del.)
D.C.: Rebecca Frye, 5-10, S, Jr., St. John’s College (Washington, D.C.)
Florida: Stephanie Samedy, 6-2, OH, Sr., East Ridge (Clermont, Fla.)
Georgia: Gabby Curry, 5-9, OH-Lib., Sr., Buford (Ga.)
Hawaii: Elena Oglivie, 5-10, OH, Fresh., Iolani School (Honolulu, Hawaii)
Idaho: Dani Nay, 5-10, OH, Jr., Skyview (Nampa, Idaho)
Illinois: Charley Niego, 6-0, OH, Jr., Mother McAuley (Chicago, Ill.)
Indiana: Nia Robinson, 6-2, OH, Sr., Cathedral (Indianapolis, Ind.)
Iowa: Mackenzie May, 6-3, OH, Sr., Wahlert Catholic (Dubuque, Iowa)
Kansas: Madison Lilley, 5-11, S, Sr., Blue Valley West (Overland Park, Kan.)
Kentucky: Paige Hammons, 6-2, OH, Sr., Sacred Heart (Louisville, Ken.)
Louisiana: Ellie Holzman, 6-2, MB, Soph., Mount Carmel (New Orleans, La.)
Maine: Kayley Cimino, 5-9, S-RS, Sr., Greely (Cumberland, Maine)
Maryland: Jenaisya Moore, 5-10, OH, Soph., Northwest (Germantown, Md.)
Massachusetts: Riley James, 5-10, OH, Soph., Barnstable (Hyannis, Mass.)
Michigan: Erin O’Leary, 5-10, S, Jr., Novi (Mich.)
Minnesota: Sydney Hilley, 6-0, OH, Sr., Champlin Park (Champlin, Minn.)
Mississippi: Emma Funk, 5-10, OH-MB, Jr., Our Lady (Bay St. Louis, Miss.)
Missouri: Jenna Otec, 5-10, OH, Sr., St. Pius X (Festus, Mo.)
Montana: Elsa Godwin, 5-10, OH., Jr., Sentinel (Missoula, Mont.)
Nebraska: Brooke Heyne, 5-10, OH, Sr., Skutt (Omaha, Neb.)
Nevada: Sydney Berenyi, 5-11, OH, Jr., Silverado (Las Vegas, Nev.)
New Hampshire: Lauren Hatch, 6-1, MB, Sr. Concord (N.H.)
New Jersey: Elena Montgomery, 6-2, OH, Jr., Ramapo (Franklin Lakes, N.J.)
New Mexico: Cat Kelly, 5-8, OH, Jr., Sandia Prep (Albuquerque, N.M.)
New York: Yvette Burcescu, 6-3, OH, Jr. Walter Panas (Cortlandt Manor, N.Y.)
North Carolina: Taylor Rowland, 6-3, OH, Jr., Cox Mill (Concord, N.C.)
North Dakota: Regan Dennis, 6-0, OH, Sr., Century (Bismarck, N.D.)
Ohio: Shannon Williams, 5-8, S, Jr., Brecksville-Broadview Heights (Ohio)
Oklahoma: Alli Evans, 6-1, OH, Sr., Edmond (Okla.)
Oregon: Kathryn Decker, 6-4, OH-RS, Sr., Jesuit (Portland, Ore.)
Pennsylvania: Sam Graver, 5-10, OH, Sr., Parkland (Allentown, Pa.)
Rhode Island: Maile Somera, 5-9, OH, Soph., Barrington (R.I.)
South Carolina: Thayer Hall, 6-3, OH, Jr., Dorman (Roebuck, S.C.)
South Dakota: Sami Slaughter, 6-1, MB, Sr., Harrisburg (S.D.)
Tennessee: Logan Eggleston, 6-2, OH, Soph., Brentwood (Tenn.)
Texas: Kylee McLaughlin, 5-10, S, Sr., Hebron (Carrollton, Texas)
Utah: Dani Barton, 6-0, OH, Sr., Brighton (Cottonwood Heights, Utah)
Virginia: Abby Bottomley, 5-6, OH-DS, Sr., Princess Anne (Virginia Beach, Va.)
Washington: Kennedy Croft, 5-10, OH, Jr., Tumwater (Wash.)
West Virginia: Tessa Wyner, 5-10, OH, Jr., George Washington (Charleston, W. Va.)
Wisconsin: Mariah Whalen, 6-1, OH, Sr., Newman Catholic (Wausau, Wis.)
Wyoming: Kalina Smith, 5-10, OH-S, Sr., Campbell County (Gillette, Wyo.)

Olmstead looks back fondly on BYU’s successful 2016 season

Heather Olmstead finished her second season as BYU's head coach in 2016/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

Few teams had a better second half of the 2016 season than BYU.

Second-year coach Heather Olmstead’s team won 13 in a row before falling in five — 16-14 in the fifth — at Texas in the NCAA Tournament regional semifinal.

“The way our team came together, to win the West Coast Conference, to get to __play two matches at home in the (NCAA) tournament, and then have the match we did in the sweet 16, I couldn’t be more proud of the team and the way that they fought the whole year and it was just really remarkable,” Olmstead said.

BYU, which finished 29-4, 16-2 in the WCC, won its first nine matches, including victories over NCAA teams Ohio State, Boise State and Missouri, before losing to rival Utah.

Then, after winning five in a row to start WCC play, the Cougars lost in three at San Diego, one of the nation’s hottest teams early in the season. And after bouncing back with a couple of victories, BYU was upset at Portland in five.

That might have been a catalyst, however, to the stretch run.

Heather Olmstead
Heather Olmstead’s BYU team finished 29-4 in 2016

While the team had a senior leader in energetic 6-4 middle Amy Boswell, a big key was young players, including sophomore outside Veronica Jones-Perry and some freshmen, including libero Mary Lake and outside McKenna Miller, who led the team in kills with 447 and had 52 blocks.

Was Olmstead surprised at how well the two freshmen from California played?

“People have asked me that a lot and I wasn’t because I recruited them,” said Olmstead, an assistant to her brother Shawn for four years — including BYU’s trip to the 2014 NCAA final — before taking over as head coach.

“We knew they were special. I wasn’t surprised how well Mary Lake translated into our game. She’s just the heart and soul of our team. She was the Energizer bunny, the communicator and a really good volleyball player on top of that.

“She reads the game well, she’s quick and she’s a vocal leader, which is what you need out of a libero in the backcourt.

“And then McKenna Miller, she’s got such a great arm, a powerful arm, and from match one, against Utah Valley, she had 13 kills and we knew she was ready for this level. I was really impressed with the way she came in and managed the pressure and did her job and did it fantastic.”

“I think for us we were fortunate that we had two fifth-year senior middles (in Boswell and Whitney Young Howard),” Olmstead said. “ … We had a mix of old and new and that worked for us, but it worked better than we thought. I don’t know that in the beginning of the season we thought we would win 29 matches. So to win 29 matches is just phenomenal.”

Two incoming freshmen should make an immediate impact, 6-2 outside Taylen Ballard from Clovis, Calif., and Sara Hamson from Lindon, Utah, the 6-7 younger sister of Jen Hamson, the star of that 2014 BYU team now in the WNBA.

They enter a program that was oh, so close this past December as BYU’s loss to Texas, of course, was to the team that made it to the NCAA championship match.

BYU fell behind that night 0-2, rallied to win the third and fourth sets, and then took a 5-0 lead in the fifth. The Cougars were up 11-5 when Texas caught fire and tied the set at 12.

BYU went up 14-12, but Texas, awfully tough to beat at home, rallied again.

“It was a great match. Phenomenal volleyball. Anyone who watched that match, you just have to feel good about the way that we played and the way that our kids left everything out on the floor,” said Olmstead, whose team was ranked No. 8 in the final AVCA poll.

“They were so exhausted, mentally and physically — as they should be — and I was so proud of them and their effort. But it just didn’t go our way at the end.”

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

NCAA: Big win for CSUN, Ohio St., UCLA, Lewis, Penn St. get victories

Stanford's Paul Bischoff, left, and Stephen Moye block Ohio State's Reese Devilbiss/Hector Garcia Molina, StanfordPhoto.com

Almost every match played in NCAA men’s volleyball on Saturday was a sweep.

For that matter, among the matches played in and among the four leagues — MPSF, MIVA, EIVA and Conference Carolinas — just three went more than three sets.

Starting with a bit of a surprise, as No. 13 Cal State Northridge went to USC and blasted the Trojans after they were coming off a big victory over third-ranked Long Beach. Top-ranked Ohio State made the most of its trip to Palo Alto, sweeping No. 10 Stanford for the second straight night but with scores that were as close as it can get.

MPSF: Big victory for CSUN

The Matadors beat USC 25-20, 25-21, 25-18 as senior Jakub Ciesla has a team-high 15 kills on .625 hitting and CSUN hit .557 as a team. Ciesla, who also had four blocks, had no errors in 24 swings.

CSUN, 6-1 overalll and 1-1 in the MPSF, got 12 kills from Arvis Greene, who hit .450, while Dimitar Klachev had 10 kills and hit .692 and had four aces. Josh Byers had six kills, hit .714, and had three blocks.

“We played at a really high level tonight; I was really proud of the offense,” CSUN coach Jeff Campbell said. “I can’t remember the last time we hit this well in a conference match. We didn’t __play that well on Wednesday but tonight we really bounced back.”

CSUN had 45 kills while committing just six hitting errors as a team. CJ Suarez had a match-high seven digs.

Lucas Yoder led USC with a match-high 19 kills while hitting .552 and Matt Douglas had six digs. The Trojans had one ace and 12 service errors.

There was one other league match as No. 2 UCLA made short work of UC San Diego 25-15, 25-13, 25-17. It left the Bruins 4-1 and alone atop the league standings at 2-0. Hawai’i, BYU, Pepperdine and Stanford have yet to __play an MPSF match.

UCLA got nine kills apiece from JT Hatch, who no errors in 13 swings, hit .692, and Jake Arnitz, who hit .571. Mitch Stahl had six kills and hit .800 as he had no errors.

UCSD, which dropped to 0-4, 0-3, got six kills apiece from Ian Colbert and Devin Pontigon. Their team hit .031.

MPSF vs. MIVA: Ohio State, Lewis, BYU win

The scores were close in both matches, but on Friday Ohio State went into Stanford and came away with a 25-23, 25-21, 25-19 victory and then Saturday won 25-23, 29-27, 26-24.

It was the 28th victory in a row for the defending NCAA champions, who improved to 5-0 as the Buckeyes hit .379 and had 12 aces.

Miles Johnson’s 15th and final kill was the 1,000th of his career. He hit .407 and had two aces.

Nicolas Szerszen, who had 12 kills and hit .435, had six aces. Ohio State also had 24 service errors.

Driss Guessous added six kills in 10 swings without an error to hit .600 and he had three of the aces. Blake Leeson had six blocks, one solo.

Stanford, which dropped to 3-2, got 11 kills from Jordan Ewert, who also had a match-high eight digs. Kevin Rakestraw had seven kills on eight swings and hit .750.

On Friday night, No. 5 Pepperdine went five to win at Loyola, but Saturday it lost in four at No. 9 Lewis 25-23, 25-22, 24-26, 25-21.

It left Lewis 3-1 and the Waves 2-1.

Jacob Schmiegelt led Lewis with 15 kills. He had just one error in 19 swings and hit .737. The senior middle also had five blocks, one solo. Middle John Hodul had nine kills with no errors in 12 attacks and hit . 750 and had five blocks. And Ryan Coenan had 15 kills, four blocks and two aces. Michael Simmons had 17 digs.

Chicagoan David Wieczorek made the most of his trip home as he led Pepperdine with a career-high 26 kills. He had five errors in 46 swings and hit .457. He and Max States had two aces each.

Another Wave from Illinois, Michael Wexter, had 11 kills and nine digs. The night before, at Loyola, he had 22 kills.

Also, No. 4 BYU beat visiting McKendree 25-23, 25-22, 25-17.

Tim Dobbert led with 14 of his team’s 38 kills kills as BYU improved to 4-1 and dropped McKendree to 1-6.

Price Jarman had seven kills for the Cougars and Storm Fa’agata and Kiril Meretev had six each.

“I was excited to get lots of guys opportunities to play,” BYU coach Shawn Olmstead said. “I like how the guys responded and played. We need to shore things up a little bit, improve in our passing and the typical little things. Overall though, I was pleased with our effort tonight.”

Nolan Rueter and Maalik Walker had 11 kills each for McKendree.

EIVA vs. MIVA: Loyola, Penn State get sweeps

No. 8 Loyola hit .407 and four players had seven or more kills as the Ramblers improved to 30-2 and dropped Harvard to 0-2 with a 26-24, 25-17, 25-14 victory.

Paul Narup led with 10 kills. He had one error in 14 swings and hit .643. Ben Plaisted, who led with eight digs, had nine kills and Jeff Jendryk and Collin Mahan seven each.

Casey White led Harvard with seven kills, while Bred Gretsch and Erik Johnsson had six each.

No. 14 Penn State went to Fort Wayne and beat the Mastodons 25-16, 25-23, 27-25.

The Nittany Lions improved to 2-2 as they hit .376. Chris Nugent led with 13 kills and hit .391. Kevin Gear had eight kills in 10 swings to hit .800 and Calvin Mende had nine kills, hit .375 and had nine digs.

Fort Wayne, 0-6, got 10 kills from Pelegrin Vargas, nine from Alex Dickmann and seven from Colton Stone.

First victory for Charleston

The EIVA’s Golden Eagles went down 2-0 and rallied for their first win 26-28, 17-25, 25-13, 25-22, 15-11 against Lees-McRae of Conference Carolinas.

The West Virginia school is 1-2, while Lees-McRae is 1-1.

Ryan Santos led Charleston with 18 kills. Eugene Stuart and Rajahl Moxey added eight each.

“The team did a great job of battling back from being down 0-2 this afternoon,” coach Ken Murczek said. “Some guys came off the bench and gave us a spark. We look forward to practicing this week.”

Wes Rogman led Lees-McRae with 11 kills and Mark Shayka and Hector Serviat had 10 each.

Also, Sacred Heart of the EIVA improved to 2-0 as it swept North Greenville of the ConfCarolinas and Emmanuel of the CC did the same to East Mennonite.

Sunday, January 15, 2017

NCAA men: Ohio State, Ball State, Pepperdine, Lewis get victories

Freshman Matt Szews had another big night for Ball State, getting 14 kills against Penn State/Domenic Centofanti, Ball State Creative Services

Top-ranked Ohio State went into No. 10 Stanford and swept the Cardinal, while 15th-ranked Ball State beat visiting No. 14 Penn State in four and fifth-ranked Pepperdine came away with a five-set win at No. 8 Loyola on a Friday night punctuated with some outstanding non-conference NCAA men’s volleyball matchups.

There was plenty of conference play, too, but first a look at Saturday’s schedule.

Start with the MPSF, where Stanford goes back-to-back with Ohio State, Pepperdine stays near Chicago and goes to Lewis, and BYU plays McKendree for the second time in three days. There are two conference matches as No. 13 CSUN goes to USC and UC San Diego plays at No. 2 UCLA.

In the MIVA, Harvard of the EIVA, coming off a five-set loss at Lewis, trades places with Pepperdine and goes to Loyola and Fort Wayne plays host to Penn State of the EIVA.

Other matches in the EIVA have Charleston at Lees-McRae of ConfCarolinas and North Greenville of Conference Carolinas at Sacred Heart.

And also in the ConfCarolinas, Emmanuel goes to East Mennonite, which is playing its season opener. East Mennonite is located in Harrisonburg, Va., and its nickname is the Royals.

Big non-conference match-ups: Start with Ohio State, which had 44 kills and hit .403 en route to its 25-23, 25-21, 25-19 win over Stanford.

The Buckeyes, who won for the 27th time in a row, got 13 kills from Miles Johnson, who hit .476, and 12 kills from Nicolas Szerszen, who hit .333. Szerszen also had all four of Ohio State’s aces and had three blocks.

Jordan Ewert led Stanford with 15 kills and hit .323.

Ohio State is 4-0, while Stanford is 3-1.

It was a busy night in and around the Windy City, where Pepperdine won at Loyola 18-25, 25-23, 19-25, 25-21, 15-11 and in nearby Romeoville No. 9 Lewis held off Harvard 25-19, 19-25, 25-13, 23-25, 15-12.

Pepperdine’s Michael Wexter had a super night, getting seven of his match-high 22 kills in the fifth set, including the match-ender. The sophomore outside hit .405, had eight digs and two blocks. Alex Harthaller added 18 kills and Noah Dyer had 16 while hitting .325.

Loyola got 14 kills from Ben Plaisted, 13 from Mahan Collin, who also had 11 digs, and 12 each from Jeff Jendryk and Paul Narup.

Pepperdine is 2-0, while Loyola dropped to 2-2.

Lewis freshman outside Ryan Coenan had 23 kills, 10 digs, two aces and two blocks to lead the Flyers, who improved to 2-1 in the season opener for Harvard.

Sophomore Mitch Perinar added 12 kills and eight digs for Lewis while freshman Kyle Bugee and senior Jacob Schmiegelt had 10 each.

Harvard got 11 kills from Casey White and 10 from Erik Johnson. It was a tough serving night as Harvard had three aces and 11 errors, while Lewis had no aces and six errors.

Brendan Surane had 14 kills and seven digs against Penn State/Domenic Centofanti, Ball State Creative Services
Brendan Surane had 14 kills and seven digs against Penn State/Domenic Centofanti, Ball State Creative Services

Ball State beat Penn State 25-19, 20-25, 25-17, 25-18 to improve to 4-1 as Penn State fell to 1-2.

Ball State was led again by freshman Matt Szews, who had 14 kills and hit .243, to go with an ace and a four blocks. Brenda Surane added 14 kills and seven digs.

“The guys did a good job with defense tonight,” Ball State coach Joel Walton said. “Penn State has a lot of players we haven’t seen and we wanted to keep the pressure on their side of the net. I was pleased to see our guys come back out and __play aggressive in sets three and four.”

Penn State got 17 kills from Chris Nugent, who had seven digs. Calvin Mende added nine kills and four blocks. The Nittany Lions had three aces — two from Jalen Penrose — and 16 service errors.

MPSF: UCSB, Long Beach win league matches

UCSB swept visiting San Diego 25-19, 25-11, 25-20 to improve to 4-1 overall and 1-1 in the MPSF, while UCSD dropped to 0-3, 0-2.

Jacob Delson led the winner with nine kills, Keenan Sanders had six and Corey Chavers five and three blocks.

“It’s always good to get back on the court as soon as possible after a tough five-set loss (Wednesday to UC Irvine), and our guys were ready to go,” UCSB coach Rick McLaughlin said. “We served and passed the ball tonight at a high level, and doing well in those areas usually results in a win.”

Devon Pontigon led the Tritons with eight kills but hit .000. His team hit .015 and had no aces and 16 service errors.

“UC Santa Barbara got the better of us tonight in large part because of what we did on our side of the net,” UCSD coach Kevin Ring said. “We definitely lost the serve-receive battle. We missed 16 serves, and were just not giving ourselves enough chances to score points.

“From the scouting report, our plan was to really side out at a high level, look smooth with the pass, set and hit. We just made things more difficult on ourselves. We didn’t pass well, set well, or hit all that well. We had a few moments here and there, but everything was challenging. We’ve got to find a way to __play through our struggles, and get ourselves back on track during the course of a set and match. Unfortunately, right now, we’re having a hard time pulling ourselves out of our struggles.

“We’re keeping our heads up. The guys are going to continue to work. We talked in the postgame meeting about what we have to do to invoke a change, because we all want a different outcome with our performance level on the court.”

Third-ranked Long Beach came away with a 25-18, 25-14, 19-25, 25-18 victory at Cal Baptist that left the 49ers 4-1 overall, 1-1 in the MPSF. Cal Baptist dropped to 2-3, 1-1.

TJ DeFalco led Long Beach with 12 kills and 12 digs, while Kyle Ensing had eight kills and a career-high seven block assists. Amir Lugo-Rodriquez had nine kills and hit .538.

“I thought TJ was dialed in from the very beginning,” Long Beach State coach Alan Knipe said. “He did a wonderful job from the end-line serving, with all sorts of different serves changing speeds. He did a really good job communicating with serve-receive and running our block on defense. He was real offensive in system and out of system and I thought it was a great response from TJ.

“Kyle just continues to get so good at the net as a blocker. Whether we had him block on the left or the right, he got into a pretty good rhythm tonight. He was getting across the net and blocking a lot of balls, touching them and forcing them to get out. He was a big factor at the net.”

Cal Baptist got seven kills each from Rohit Paul, Luis Palos, Logan Czyzewski and Kevin Vaz. Their team had two aces and 18 errors, while Long Beach had five aces and 21 errors.

Also in the MPSF, BYU swept visiting Concordia 25-23, 25-17, 26-24, and Hawai’i rolled past visiting Grand Canyon 25-16, 25-16, 25-20.

BYU is 3-1 and got 16 kills from Ben Patch, who hit .303, and Jake Langlois added 13 kills to go with two aces and six digs. Concordia, 5-5, got 10 kills from Jonathon Predney.

Hawai’i improved to 5-0 as Stijn Van Tilburg had 17 kills and two blocks. Grand Canyon dropped to 1-3 after going 0-2 on the trip to Hawai’i.

MIVA, EIVA, ConfCarolinas: The visiting Saint Francis Red Flash improved to 3-2 while dropping Fort Wayne to 0-5 with a 25-21, 22-25, 25-22, 21-25, 15-12 victory.

Michael Fisher led Saint Francis with19 kills but also had six of his team’s 23 service errors. The Red Flash had three aces, two by Jeff Hogan, who also had 15 kills and hit .333. Stephen Braswell added 12 kills.

Fort Wayne got 15 kills apiece from Colton Stone and Pelegrin Vargas. Their team had seven aces, three by Stone, and 26 errors.

A match between Grand View and Lindenwood was postponed because of weather.

Other EIVA results included Sacred Heart sweeping North Greenville of the ConfCarolinas, Charleston losing in three at King of ConfCarolinas.

Also in ConfCarolinas, Barton swept Alderson Broaddus, Emmanuel lost at Southern Virginia in four and Lees-McRae swept visiting Lincoln Memorial.

NCAA coaching notes: New Arizona State coach Sanja Tomasevic has added former Sun Devil standout Amanda Burbridge to her staff. Burbridge had 1,597 kills in her career from 1997-2000. She’s been the head coach at Phoenix College …

Longtime Seattle Pacific coach Chris Johnson is retiring. He was at SPU for 13 years, the last 12 as head coach and had a record of 192-136, 129-85 in the Division II Great Northwest Athletic Conference …

There are still Division I openings, including Loyola Marymount, Texas-Arlington, Stetson, and Stanford.

New coach for Brazil: Brazil’s men won the Olympic gold medal and coach Bernardo Rezende stepped down. The federation announced that Renan Dal Zotto will replace him.

Dal Zotto won silver as a player in the 1984 Olympics.

“Before accepting the invitation, I spoke to Bernardo, who is a great professional and a great friend,” Dal Zotto said in an FIVB release. “Volleyball has developed greatly in the last two decades and we have to stay on that route. We will try to stay at the forefront of the sport with great professionals working in a highly professional structure.

“I’m very proud to have the trust of the CBV President. I have been involved in volleyball for 40 years, first as a player in the national team on 13 occasions and in 2001 when Bernardo asked me to help his transition from the women’s to men’s teams.”

Rezende coached the team to gold at Athens 2004 and Rio 2016, the 2002, 2006 and 2010 World Championships and eight FIVB World League titles.