Friday, February 24, 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 her 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.”

Triple Crown NIT results, team photos

Munciana 18 Samurai overcame A4 Volley 18-Purple in a 25-16, 18-25, 15-10 final/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

Texas Advantage was the big winner Monday at the Triple Crown Sports NIT in Salt Lake City, taking two of the five age-group crowns, winning both the 17s and 14s Open divisions, as well as finishing third in the 15s Open division.

California’s Sunshine volleyball club finished second in the 16s and 14s Open divisions. Skyline had two top-three finishes with a third in the 18s Open and a second in the 15s Open division.

Munciana won the 18s Open championship, while A5 Mizuno 16-1 Gabe won the 16s and OTVA S. Rox Red won the 15s title.

Full tournament results can be found here.

AV4 18 Volley-Purple came away runner-up in the 18
AV4 18 Volley-Purple finished second in the 18’s Open division/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Skyline 18
Skyline 18’s Purple took third in 18s Open/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
TAV 17 Black is the champion of the 17
TAV 17 Black took the 17’s Open division after a 25-19, 25-13 win over the Idaho Crush/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
The Idaho Crush 17U finished second in the 42 team Open field/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
The Idaho Crush 17U finished second in the 42-team Open field/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
California
California’s Tstreet 17-Naseri finished third in the 17’s Open division/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
A5 Mizuno 16-1 Gabe beat Sunshine 16 Westside 25-16, 26-24 in the championship of the 16 Open division/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
A5 Mizuno 16-1 Gabe beat Sunshine 16 Westside 25-16, 26-24 in the championship of the 16 Open division/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Sunshine 16 Westside, 16
Sunshine 16 Westside went 7-1 in the TCS NIT to finish second/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
OTVA S. Rox Red won the 15
OTVA S. Rox Red won the 15s Open Championship in a 21-25, 25-15, 15-7 finish over Skyline 15 Royal/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Skyline, 15
Skyline 15 Royal battled its way through the 15s championship bracket, as their quarterfinal, semifinal, and final matches all went three sets/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
TAV, 3rd Place 15
TAV 15 Black finished third in the Triple Crown NIT/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Wave, 4th Place 15
Wave 15 Brennan finished fourth in the 15s Open division/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
TAV 14
TAV 14 Black edged Sunshine 14 Westside 25-18, 16-25, 15-11 in the 14s Open championship/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Sunshine 14 Westside, 14
Sunshine 14 Westside finished second in the 20-team competition/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

Catching up with VBM’s COY, Creighton’s Kirsten Bernthal Booth

Kirsten Bernthal Booth will enter her 15th season as Creighton's head coach/ Joe Willman photo

Kirsten Bernthal Booth has had a remarkable run as the head coach at Creighton.

From 2012, Creighton’s last year in the Missouri Valley, through 2015 in the Big East, the Bluejays went 104-31 in four years, 62-8 in conference play. And then this past season the Bluejays finished 29-7 — 18-0 in the Big East — winning their first three NCAA Tournament matches in five sets each before getting swept by Texas in the regional final.

VolleyballMag.com recognized that success this past December by naming her our national coach of the year.

VolleyballMag.com’s Greg Echlin caught up with Booth last Saturday between recruiting trips during a busy weekend that saw quite a few aspiring college players, competing in a club tournament in Omaha, make on-campus visits to Creighton.

Kirsten Bernthal Booth
Kirsten Bernthal Booth

VBM: You’re just a couple of months removed from being named Volleyballmag.com Coach of the Year. Has it sunk in?

KBB: Obviously, it’s the same way you talk to your players. Honors are nice, but we __play a team sport. Any honor that I get is a reflection on the team. If you’re around our team at all, you know that our staff is very collaborative. So any award that has my name behind it is something that’s definitely shared. I think, more than that honor, (it’s) reflecting on really a great season with 15 amazing young women. It’s been really fun to reflect on.

VBM: Largely a team made up of youthful players.

KBB: Yeah, we are pretty young. We’re going to miss some key players next year. (Middle) Lauren Smith is a huge loss. (Outside) Jess Bird has been a key cog for three years. (Defensive specialist) Amanda Foje hit a huge serve against Northern Iowa to help us move past the first round. Each team is different. I think we’ve got great talent next year and incoming recruits in the future. But it takes the players right now as we get into January, February and March and their commitment of wanting to do more. I feel like we’ve got a group that works really, really hard. We’ve challenged them. It’s not about working harder. It’s about working smarter, so that’s been our mantra. Continue to work hard, but maybe think of new ways to be better.

VBM: After this interview is over, you’re going to be heading out. Recruiting?

KBB: I’ve been recruiting all day. I’m actually going to watch my daughter’s basketball game.

VBM: This is a big recruiting weekend.

KBB: A huge weekend. I think President’s Day weekend is the biggest weekend of the year. You’ve got places all over the country that have great volleyball and you have to decide where you’re going to send your coaches.

VBM: It seems, for you, you don’t have to go too far to find good volleyball players.

KBB: There is great talent in the Midwest. For sure and that’s been our recruiting philosophy from the get-go. We start in Nebraska, Iowa, South Dakota, Kansas. Those types of areas and we expand. We definitely have players from all over the country and I like that. I think they bring a different perspective, maybe different ways that they __play and different ideas to life to some degree.

VBM: Since the end of the (NCAA) championship in Columbus, there have been some shocking coaching moves. Those have ripple effects, so I must ask you — given the success you’ve had at Creighton — did you field any calls?

KBB: I’m not going to comment too much on that other than the fact that I love being at Creighton. You approach each year differently, but I’m from Nebraska. My husband has a nice job. We’ve got grandparents 45 minutes away, so I’ll just say that I like to focus on how lucky I am. The grass isn’t necessarily always greener on the other side. This is where I’m excited to be and I have great administrative support. We’ve got some of the best facilities in the country. Our goal is to win a national championship and we feel like we can do it at Creighton.

VBM: It’s interesting that you say the “national championship” because you’re on ground now that the team and the program had never experienced before. After it had all concluded, did you feel like there could have been more?

KBB: When we lost to Texas, I thought they beat us. Do I say that we played our best match? No, but I think they caused some of that. I do feel like we played several of the top teams in the country, not only this year, but the last few years. What we’ve learned is we think we can win or we think we’re really close. Now it’s a matter of taking small steps forward each time we’re on the court if that’s training or year to year. That’s what we want to do. We also fully recognize that we went five in every match of the NCAA tournament. We could have lost in the first round. The good thing with volleyball compared to some other sports is there’s parity. We want more parity. The more parity, the better. That’s going to make our sport more exciting for fans. We’ve got a lot of young, talented athletes playing our sport. As we continue to have a lot of girls playing volleyball, I think the parity will continue to get better.

VBM: Some could argue that in the Big East Conference, with Creighton’s success, there isn’t parity in your own conference. How would you address that?

KBB: I think this year was an anomaly. This year our team just … man, they approached every single game like it was the national championship game. They were up for each match. We did have a lot of success in the Big East this year, but I can tell you the two years prior, when we also won the Big East, it was a dogfight every single night. I think the Big East is really underrated. It is good volleyball night in and night out. We have to be ready to go. That’s why I think this team was so great because they understood that. If they took a night off and weren’t locked in, they were going to lose. A lot of people that don’t think Big East volleyball is as good as some other conference don’t watch very much Big East volleyball because Big East volleyball is a great conference.

VBM: Since Creighton made the transition from the Missouri Valley Conference to the Big East, do you find yourself as a volleyball coach fighting the stigma of a “mid-major?” That some may still …

KBB: Still see the Big East as a mid-major? We’re not in that Power 5 label. I don’t feel that very much because some people call it the Power 6 with Big East basketball. We have proven we can be a national contender, particularly in men’s basketball. I argue — and in men’s and women’s soccer — why can’t we do that in volleyball? Here’s the deal: The Missouri Valley is a great volleyball conference. The Big East lure is the cities. We’ve got great volleyball and you’re going to go to the best cities in the country. A lot of young kids haven’t been to New York City. They haven’t been to Philadelphia. They haven’t been to Washington, D.C. That’s a pretty neat opportunity to do that while playing the sport you love.

VBM: Creighton has had so many good basketball seasons, yet the basketball team has not gotten past the first weekend (of the NCAA tournament). Ever.

KBB: We hope that’s going to be the case for men’s basketball. We’ve been close obviously. We’ve had some years that we’ve been ranked high. But I’m not going to lie. Going to the Sweet 16 last year and the Elite Eight this year was incredible. The interesting thing is I think it has driven our staff more. Instead of feeling, “Omigosh, we did it and we can rest,’”you taste it and you want to go further.

VBM: Creighton was unseeded in the NCAA tournament and you played a tough non-conference schedule. The committee looks at the RPI when it looks at the overall bracket. Where do you think the committee went wrong with Creighton being unseeded?

KBB: I don’t think the committee necessarily went wrong not seeding Creighton. I think you could have made arguments why we could have been seeded, but I think you could make arguments why we didn’t need to be. I didn’t have an issue with that. Where I was surprised is that we were sent to Kansas. If we weren’t seeded, I assumed — and have since been told that this probably wasn’t the case — that we would have been the next four or five seeded (teams) because they seed all 64. They could only release the top 16 and then plug you in. To me, Kansas was a very high seed, but K-State for instance wasn’t quite as high a seed. It would have seemed logical for us to go to Kansas State. My understanding is we didn’t seed out where we thought we probably deserved to be seeded. That’s the committee’s prerogative to make that decision. Ray Bechard, the Kansas coach, and I — before we played — said “This stinks,” because we felt both of our teams should be Sweet 16 teams. I think anyone that saw that match felt both of those teams should have moved on.

VBM: Do you think the committee is short-sighted when looking at teams that try to play that strong non-conference schedule in a conference that may not be as recognized as the Big 12 or the SEC?

KBB: Listen, I’ve met with the committee. I know that they’re doing incredible work. I know that they care a lot about the sport, so it’s not that I doubt that their effort and due diligence is there. Do I think that the Big East sometimes gets slighted? Absolutely. I think sometimes the Big Ten gets the nod or some of these power conferences. On the other hand, you can definitely make the argument that the Big Ten is so strong beating each other up that they shouldn’t be penalized for those losses.

VBM: From the outset, you mentioned that each team is different. Based on the success of—not just last year — the last several years, how excited are you for 2017?

KBB: I’m always excited going into each year and you always try to think ahead of potential issues you can have. Where you could have depth issues or lack of depth is a better way to put it. I think the biggest thing that makes me excited is I like these players, these young women. That’s what drives me to coach. I like their relationships. I like, hopefully, helping them grow into strong, independent women. I like them all as people, so that makes me excited. We’re very process driven, so we want to do things the right way. We want to work hard. We want to take care of things off the court. In the classroom and in the community. Hopefully, winning will be a byproduct of doing those things right. If not, hopefully, we can look back and be proud of the process that we took.

Long Beach, USC men continue to streak, Barton drops Mount Olive

Long Beach setter Josh Tuaniga had 45 assists in the win over Cal Baptist Wednesday/Long Beach photo

A light Wednesday in the land of NCAA Division I-II men’s volleyball saw the nation’s No. 2 team rack up another win, while USC went on the road and came away with a hard-earned five-set victory over a higher-ranked opponent, giving the Trojans three wins in a row over higher nationally ranked competition.

No. 2 Long Beach State upped its winning streak to seven matches in a row with a 3-1 MPSF triumph over Cal Baptist in a contest that saw the 49ers drop the first set (24-26, 25-12, 25-14, 25-19).

Conference-leading Long Beach State improves to 14-2 overall and 10-1 in MPSF play, while Baptist fell to 3-12 and 1-10 in MPSF action.

The first-set loss was the 49ers first since Jan. 28, snapping a span of 18 set wins in a row.

“I thought Cal Baptist played really well in that first set and for us it was a little bit of a struggle,” Long Beach State coach Alan Knipe said. “We had a couple plays not go our way and had a few serves that were barely out. We had a couple situations we could have executed better and we made it much more difficult on ourselves than we needed to and ultimately ended up losing an overtime game. But the best part about it was our ability to settle down and get back into a rhythm and I thought the guys did a nice job of that.”

TJ DeFalco led Long Beach State with 17 kills, while hitting .400. Sophomore opposite Kyle Ensing had 12 kills, while Andrew Whitt had nine kills. Josh Tuaniga, Amir Lugo-Rodriguez and Bryce Yould finished the offensive surge with six kills each.

Tuaniga had 45 assists and hit .857 (6 kills, 0 errors, 7 swings), while posting five blocks and two aces.

“Josh continues to throw the ball around and create balance and stress all along the net and that’s a big thing for us,” Knipe said. “We pride ourselves on not allowing teams to just load up on one thing and that starts with passing; that starts with Josh. Not only did he distribute the ball well, but he stayed fairly offensive as well.”

Philip Schick led Cal Baptist with eight kills and hit .636. Kevin Vaz had eight kills and nine digs.

Long Beach State’s next opponent on the schedule, No. 14 USC, headed to over to No. 11 Cal State Northridge and recorded a 25-22, 25-21, 18-25, 22-25, 15-10 victory in MPSF play.

It was the second match in a row where USC captured the first two sets before winning in five after outlasting Pepperdine last week.

The Trojans won for the third time in a row, all over higher-ranked teams (No. 6 Stanford and No. 9 Pepperdine). It’s the squad’s longest winning streak since the end of the 2015 season.

USC, which lost in three to Northridge at the Galen Center last month, improved to 6-9 overall and 5-7 in conference play. Northridge dropped to 10-6 and 3-6 in MPSF action.

Lucas Lossone had 12 kills and six blocks for USC, while Andy Benesh had seven kills and a match-best 10 blocks. Woody Cook finished with seven kills and 10 digs, while Matt Douglas had 11 digs (match-high).

Arvis Greene led Northridge with a match-high 25 kills, while hitting .383. Dimitar Kalchev had 16 kills, eight digs and six aces. Josiah Byers had eight kills, hit .500 and had five blocks.

One match is on tap in the MPSF today with BYU (12-2, 6-1), which is tied with Long Beach State (10-1)in the loss column with one atop the league standings, travels to Stanford (9-5, 6-3) for the first of a two-set series this weekend. That match will be televised on Pac-12 Networks and BYU TV.

A full slate of league matches is on tap for Friday.

Freshman Angelos Mandilaris led Barton with 16 kills in a four-set win over Mount Olive Wednesday/Brittany Arent
Freshman Angelos Mandilaris led Barton with 16 kills in a four-set win over Mount Olive Wednesday/Brittany Arent

Over in the Conference Carolinas on Wednesday, Barton was a 3-1 winner on the road against Mount Olive at Kornegay Arena.

Barton moved to 9-4 overall and 8-2 in CC __play after hitting .356 as a team and recording 10 total blocks in handing Mount Olive its first CC loss of the season. Mount Olive fell to 9-6 and 8-1.

Barton’s Angelos Mandilaris led all players with 16 kills and hit .414 to go along with eight digs. Vasilis Mandilaris had 13 kills, seven digs, and three aces. Nick Leary had eight kills, while Federico Pagliara had 42 assists and a match-high 14 digs for a double-double. Jonathan Novoa-Miralles had nine digs in his first game as the team’s libero.

In other CC action, Limestone was a 3-2 winner over Lees-McRae. Bruno Kretzschmar and Drew Davis each had 13 kills for Limestone (6-4, 6-3). Logan Riley had a double-double with 40 assists and 11 digs. John Sobel and Wes Rogman each had 10 kills to pace Lees-McRae (4-9, 2-6). Keenan Freitas had 14 digs.

In King’s 3-1 win against North Greenville, Jeff Sprayberry led the way with 16 kills and hit .400. He also had seven digs. Jon Wheaton had nine kills and hit .400. Nick Drooker added 40 assists as King moved to 12-2 overall and 7-1 in CC play. Ben Hamsho had 16 kills and hit .600, while Matthew McManaway had 12 kills for North Greenville (4-19, 4-4).

Only one match is on tap for Thursday in the Conference Carolinas as Belmont Abbey faces Erksine.

After Wednesday, Mount Olive held a half-game lead over King (8-1 to 7-1) for first place in the league, while Barton was right behind at 8-2.

Both the EIVA and MIVA return to action Friday.

Weekly NCAA men’s notebook with POWs, rankings and more

Princeton's George Huhlmann is the EIVA defensive POW/Beverly Schaefer photo

There are no surprises at the top of the AVCA Division I-II rankings, Princeton has the national player of the week, and Loyola has the two MIVA POWs. All that and more in this weekly Tuesday NCAA men’s notebook.

There are no matches Tuesday among the four conferences.

The MPSF has two matches Wednesday, with USC at CSUN and Cal Baptist at No. 2 Long Beach State.

Conference Carolinas has Tuesday off but three matches are scheduled Wednesday.

The EIVA and MIVA are off until Friday.

AVCA Division I-II Poll: Nos. 1-4 stayed the same — Ohio State, Long Beach State, BYU and Hawai’i — but then there was some movement, including George Mason dropping out and USC jumping at No. 14. Lewis moved up from seventh to No. 5 and CSUN went from No. 14 to 11th. The MPSF has 10 of the 15 spots in the poll.

Click here for the full AVCA Division I-II poll

AVCA Division I-II POW: Princeton’s Parker Dixon, a 6-foot-6 freshman outside who averaged 4.38 kills per set and hit .441 in two victories. That included 22 kills against NJIT and 13 more against George Mason.

AVCA Division III Poll: Springfield, which is 13-1, stayed No. 1, but there was plenty of movement after that. UC Santa Cruz moved up a notch to second, SUNY New Paltz went from No. 4 to third, and Stevens dropped from second to fourth. NYU made a big just from ninth to No. 5. MIT jumped in at No.14, just ahead of Marymount, which dropped from 11th to No. 15.

Click here for the full AVCA Division III poll

AVCA Division III National POW: Rivier University senior setter Matt LaSance. He averaged 13.54 assists per set in three victories for the school from Nashua, N.H., that is ranked 13th in Division III.

EIVA

Offensive Player of the Week: Princeton’s Dixon (see AVCA national POW above).

Defensive Player of the Week: Princeton freshman middle blocker George Huhlmann. He was sick and sat out the match with NJIT but then had nine blocks against Mason.

Key matches this week: The EIVA is off until Friday when the slate is full of matches that matter, including Princeton at Harvard and NJIT at Saint Francis. And Penn State goes to Mason with the loser in a world of hurt.

Last week’s key results: Unfortunately for Penn State, the biggest matches were Saint Francis’ five-set upset of the Nittany Lions last Tuesday and then Sacred Heart’s four-set win over them. Princeton’s four-set upset of Mason got everyone’s attention, too.

Worth noting: Not too many observers would have had Sacred Heart and Princeton tied atop the standings at 3-1 four league matches in …  Sacred Heart leads the EIVA in hitting at .309. Next up is Penn State at .286 … Sacred Heart is also holding opponents to the lowest hitting percentage in the conference, .178. Charleston is second at .192 … Christopher DeLucie leads in hitting percentage at .347, just ahead of Mason’s Radaslov Popov at .345. Jabarry Goodridge of NJIT leads in kills average at 4.17 per set, but SFU’s Michael Fisher leads in total kills with 200, one ahead of teammate Jeff Hogan and four ahead of Goodridge.

Click here for the EIVA standings

MIVA

Offensive Player of the Week: Loyola sophomore outside Collin Mahan. Mahan hit .511 for the week and averaged 4.00 kills per in two victories. He had a career-best 19 kills, hitting .630 in a four-set victory over Fort Wayne and then had nine kills in a sweep of Ball State Mahan leads the Ramblers in kills (117) and digs (80) and is hitting .305.

Defensive Player of the Week: Loyola junior middle blocker Jeff Jendryk averaged 2.43 blocks per set including seven blocks against Fort Wayne. Then he had a career-best 10 blocksagainst Ball State.

Key matches this week: Lewis goes to Loyola on Friday with the loser perhaps on the outside looking in. Ohio State plays twice at Grand Canyon.

Last week’s key results: There were two matches on Sunday. Top-ranked Ohio State improved to 15-0 overall and 6-0 in the MIVA with a 25-20, 22-25, 25-21, 25-16 win over visiting last-place Lindenwood (0-12, 0-7). Nicolas Szerszen had 15 kills and three aces to go with seven digs and two blocks as the Buckeyes won their 38th match in a row.

Also Sunday, McKendree beat Quincy 25-23, 25-20, 29-31, 25-23 to improve to 6-11, 2-4. Quincy is 3-10, 1-6.

Among the most important results last week were Ball State’s two losses in the Chicago area, on Friday to Lewis and on Saturday to Loyola.

Worth noting: Ohio State is hitting .383 as a team. Next closest is Lewis at .320. And Ohio State is holding opponents to a .198 attack percentage. Next best is Ball State at .213. Wyatt Patterson of McKendree continues to lead among individuals at .534. Ball State’s Matt Walsh is next at .485. Ohio State’s Miles Johnson leads in kills per set, 4.39, and total kills, 215. Teammate Nicolas Szerszen is second at 4.06 and 207. The aforementioned Jendryk leads in blocking with 1.23 per set, but Jacob Shmiegelt leads in totals blocks with 64, four solo. Jendryk has 59, a league-leading nine solo.

Click here for the MIVA standings

MPSF

Player of the Week: CSUN junior opposite Arvis Greene. Greene had 25 kills in 49 swings with just three errors in a five-set win at UCLA as he hit .449. He also had seven digs, an ace and three blocks.

Key matches this week: No. 3 BYU goes to No. 8 Stanford on Thursday and Friday, No. 6 UCLA plays at No. 7 UC Irvine on Friday and No. 13 UCSC goes to Irvine on Saturday.

Last week’s key results: The spotlight belongs to USC, which cracked the rankings after scoring upsets against Stanford and Pepperdine. Long Beach had sweeps of USCB and UCLA.

Worth noting: USC’s Lucas Yoder still has the season best for kills, 35 against Penn State on January 7 … Bryce Yould leads the league in hitting at .520. Teammate Amir Lugo-Rodriguez remains second at .508. Lugo-Rodriguez leads the MPSF in blocks with 65, six solo … UCI’s Michael Saeta and CSUN’s Dimitar Kalchev each have 54 aces and are averaging .70 aces per set … Yoder leads in kills, 236, and kills per set, 4.92.

Click here for the MPSF standings

Conference Carolinas

Offensive Player of the Week: Mount Olive senior setter Jeff Yasalonis. He averaged 10.38 assists and 1.88 digs per set as his team went 2-0 and holds sole possession of first place.

Key matches this week: There’s a big one when Barton tries to close the gap when it plays at Mount Olive on Wednesday. King goes to Limestone on Saturday while Mount Olive has a big non-conference challenge at No. 5 Lewis.

Last week’s key results: The league had one match Monday, when Emmanuel  improved to 3-10, 2-6 by beating visiting Belmont Abbey in as close as a sweep can get 27-25, 26-24, 25-23. It left Belmont Abbey 3-8, 2-5. Mount Olive took over sole possession of first place last week with victories over King and Lees-McRae. Mount Olive is 8-0 with a 1.5-match lead over King at 6-2 and Barton, which is 7-2.

Worth noting: Robert Poole of Mount Olive leads the CC at 3.79 kills per set and in total kills with 159. John Sobel of Lees-McRae and Jeff Sprayberry are tied for second with 152 each … Ackeem West of Emmanuel leads in attack percentage at .321 while Barton leads as a team at .298. King is second at .262.

Click here for the ConfCarolinas standings

Donald Sun talks frankly about AVP in extensive Q&A

Donald Sun/Mpu Dinani, A-Game Photography

When we first were introduced to Donald Sun, we learned he was a beach volleyball player from Southern California who had a future in his father’s business, Kingston Technology. Cool gig to make some money and live the SoCal life.

Beach volleyball beckoned, and so did opportunity. The Association of Volleyball Professionals disbanded operations on the eve of its signature event, the Manhattan Beach Open, in 2010. The AVP had gone away. From the moment it was born with Karch Kiraly, among others, walking the picket line for the players in Redondo Beach in 1984, the AVP produced the best beach volleyball on the planet.

It’s a significant brand to this day, no matter how many trials and tribulations it has endured, and no matter how much money it has gained or lost. Along the way, the AVP produced Olympic medalists and enduring memories and the USA cheered and cherished those heroes, from Kiraly to Holly McPeak and Elaine Youngs to Kerri Walsh Jennings and Misty May-Treanor, Dain Blanton and Eric Fonoimoana, Todd Rogers and Phil Dalhausser.

The Olympics have always had the AVP stamp. Yet in the international game that it has become, that stamp has been overshadowed by the quest for gold from the rest of the world, and we’re not just talking about Brazil. The men’s gold medalists from London 2012 and the women’s gold medalists from Rio de Janeiro 2016 are from Germany.

So America has some catching up to do. It all starts with the proving ground that is the AVP, but as Sun is quick to remind you, the tour is not just a tour that blows through your vicinity once a year.

Nor is it just an American-only entity. In 2015, the AVP hosted the FIVB Grand Slam in St. Petersburg, Fla. In 2016, it ran the FIVB Cincinnati Open, a critical tournament for Olympic hopefuls.

How does the Sun rise with the AVP? There is AVPNext, AVPFirst, and a burgeoning lot of beach volleyball clubs.

Sun, 41, is quick to smile, a favorite among athletes, is a player who can’t stand the trickler ace, and a CEO of an enterprise that doesn’t always make the money it seemingly should — at the moment — and at the same time will consider all options to grow the sport.

Sun was a guest of Beach Majors CEO Hannes Jagerhofer at the Fort Lauderdale Major two weeks ago and he is quite at home discussing the future of worldwide beach volleyball with the world factions. The AVP has listed eight tournaments in 2017, but don’t bet against the odds that coordination with other promoters could add a date for this year and beyond.

The tour begins May 4-7 in Huntington Beach. We caught up with Sun last week for this extensive Q&A.

donald-sun-mug
Donald Sun

VBM: What is the state of the union of the AVP?

Sun: We ran eight events last two years, but technically seven were AVP and one was FIVB. Going into this year and next year at least at a minimum we have eight full AVP events. As you know, looking at the schedule we’ve dropped a couple but gained a couple that look to be along the same lines as all the other ones we’re trying to establish in as a long-term value proposition play, which being Hermosa and Austin. I feel confident Hermosa is going to be great. We haven’t been back since 2010, I believe (editor’s note: Correct, Dalhausser and Rogers won). And Austin, I’m hopeful that will be a big hit and a mainstay on our tour.

As far as the planning is involved at least for the tenure that I’ve owned the brand, operationally we’re light years ahead of where we’ve been the last few years in terms of planning, organizing and getting everything ready.

I feel like the momentum, especially from last year, I felt like we’re on that cusp again of being really great and I feel like this year we’re going to ride off the coattails the entire season of last year.

The momentum’s growing. We’ve got not just the AVP Tour, we’ve expanded our AVPNext, our AVPFirst, the junior side in terms of tournaments, frequency, nationally in terms of people who want to participate and __play compete and try to get on the AVP Tour whether you’re 15 or 18 or 22, you’ve got opportunities everywhere.

Both have well over 70 events people can __play in, not to mention starting our junior academy program. We’ve launched our Orange County academy, we’ve launched one up in Redwood City. Those are our two inaugural locations but we are in serious talks with probably 10-15 other locations across the U.S. which is really exciting.

I feel like now we’re definitely headed in the right direction.

VBM: Why is televised coverage of the AVP Tour so inconsistent?

Sun: First of all, I definitely value the relationship we’ve cultivated with NBC. They’re a great partner. In terms of TV partners, they’re the greatest you can have, of course, because they do own the Olympics for a thousand years. Beach volleyball is pretty important in their portfolio and they definitely see the value of working with us and vice versa.

The challenge – we’re not football or any of the top five or six sports even, so getting time slots for events can be a challenge, but we definitely work hard to fit stuff together. But I understand and acknowledge that is a challenge, especially if you’re trying to watch it on a linear form. But that’s just going to be how it is until otherwise. That’s fine. We’ve already figured out the window. It’s just a matter of us formalizing our agreement with NBC so we can start marketing the times. Now going to which one should we show, men or women, it’s always Saturday afternoon (results). We’ve got to see which one is the best matchup or potentially the better rating.

On linear TV it’s always going to be a toss-up and we have to make our calculated decision Saturday afternoon as the tournament winds down to see which is the best pairing to put on TV. There’s no other way to do it unless you give us additional time to put on both finals, then that’s not a problem. But if we have to choose, that’s what we’ve got to do and that’s our process now.

VBM: You changed a couple of rules for the season-ending AVP Championships in Chicago 2016, the most noteworthy being a re-serve for a trickler ace and freezing the scoring to go to sideout scoring at game point. Will the entire 2017 season be played under those rule adoptions?

We haven’t finalized, we’re still getting input from some of our other partners to see if either they’re OK with and/or they understand it and want to try it out.

The rules come into effect only on match point. Within each match it could potentially happen two times, but at least one time. The trickler rule is only in effect during match point. The rest of the time, if it happens, it happens. That’s from our own observation from Chicago. It was good to test things out. There are quite a few professionals who hit the net when they serve and it does make the game a little bit herky-jerky we have to (re-serve). That’s not to say it’s wrong. We just feel the flow could be a little better but at the same time, the reason we want to implement this is to have more of that compelling ending. We’re not reinventing any kind of rules, we’re just potentially implementing rules from the past that have worked and we take the best of both worlds and if we run it for a whole season, things may change. Who knows – if other groups see that it makes sense and benefits, they may change. Or we’ll see if it doesn’t do anything we can always change back. We’re flexible that way.

We’ve talked about a lot of different scenarios; there is something to be said about keeping the pace going but at the same time in certain situations, it’s nice to slow down the pace let’s see what happens. We’ve decided on match point, when it matters.

VBM: How can the AVP integrate with the international organizations, such as FIVB and Beach Majors?

Sun: I don’t have any problem with that and as you’ve seen, we’ve really started to develop a good relationship with FIVB the last few years. There is a certain respect level on both sides. I would love to continue to partner and have deeper commitments with them so it’s easier to integrate AVP with FIVB with all kinds of stuff so it becomes more unified. I wouldn’t have an issue sharing content. It’s volleyball at the end of the day. It’s a sport that I think everyone has a vested in and if something cool that happens with either someone taking it from the Red Bull (Beach Majors) side or some random FIVB event, there no problems to promote that as long as they’re willing to do some cool stuff that we capture, or the methodology we use to capture that content. We can always share ideas on how to do it.

Uniformity across the globe is always best but in the meantime we’ve been talking about over the last few months of how to capture it and what type of content to capture that would just elevate the sport of beach volleyball and the brand to another level.

We’re going to experiment on a lot of stuff digitally and social media-wise too and hopefully that can engage a different demographic and crowd.

VBM: How close are we to another shared FIVB/AVP event or even starting a Beach Majors/AVP event?

In terms of FIVB, we’ve got the go-ahead to run events for them this year and going forward. They’re just waiting on a proposal from us. We talked about it four weeks ago and they gave us the OK because we gave them a proposal on what we would contribute in terms of an FIVB event within their star system. Then in terms of the Red Bull side, I went to Fort Lauderdale and spoke to Hannes at length and had a few conversations and formal meetings just to discuss future involvement. In fact, to be quite honest, we’ve been talking for four years. It’s just everyone’s got their own directions and now it’s kind of culminating a little bit and so I can’t really disclose much right now, but let’s just say there’s been some interesting conversations.

I’m hopeful we’ll be able to do something next year if not the year after. But they’re all very promising and they’re all very friendly. It’s all good. Otherwise he wouldn’t have invited me (laugh).

VBM: So we could have an AVP/Major in the USA next year?

Sun: That’s the idea, or a few of them. I don’t know if it will be tied with FIVB but I made it very clear that if we’re going to do something, it would be AVP and (Jagerhofer) seemed to have no issues with that. Again, these are all preliminary conversations but the hope and goal that we can actually – he has assets and ideas that he can clearly bring to the table that would enhance any event. It doesn’t even matter if it’s volleyball, it could be swimming it could be something. For us, we’re in all the major cities, we have a 30-plus year brand, history, we do have a following, we’re building that following, so that’s what I feel is our give back. The synergy is there, we have to figure out how to basically marry those two together. And if it makes business sense for both sides.

It’ll probably be in a city that we’re currently at. We’re in pretty much all the major cities so it would probably be easier to take one or a few and amp that up. It would be exciting for everybody if that happens.

VBM: How do you market certain tournaments when the top AVP players are playing internationally?

Sun: Because we do have a good relationship with FIVB, we have been working with them from a scheduling standpoint and just to be clear, the AVP did submit our schedule about a month or so before they came out with theirs to give them the head’s up, and we said ‘Can you kindly just review ours, this is what we’re going with for 2017 and beyond, can you try not to schedule major events on the FIVB on top of ours?’ They try and of course I believe they’re not trying to undermine the AVP. I think there have been perceptions in the past, and it’s probably reality, I don’t know, that maybe there was some kind of undermining going on but I truly and firmly believe that’s not happening. I do know it’s extremely challenging for us to work, find a location, talk to the city officials, figure out an NBC date that works, find a date that works for everybody and how that fits in the entire master schedule. We’re controlling that for AVP so I can’t imagine how difficult it is to be sitting in Lausanne (Switzerland, where FIVB headquarters are located) and doing this and speaking with various countries and their promoters and their time frames available.

I think most people don’t understand, not like they should understand, that’s just the reality of it. At the end of the day, I ask them too: “Hey, how did you guys do this or that?” They all have plausible reasons. The best thing we can do is have dialogue going forward. At the same time, their goal is to grow the sport internationally and they have the new star system, 1-5, they’ve got 70-something events, there’s going to be conflict, it’s unavoidable. We have to bank on the fact that our brand is strong enough for our fans. What we provide is obviously the athletes but if certain athletes do not show up, it’s still OK because it’s a great time. Other top athletes are there, and let’s not forget about them. But it’s still a fun time, it’s an experience.

And we’re doing some additional things on site like a participatory aspect, like getting your everyman to go out and enjoy themselves, playing in a fun tournament and then also putting in a junior tournament or other things as part of the overall beach volleyball festival where people can participate and enjoy, not just sit there and watch but also be active.

VBM: Will the AVP have foreign players again? Emanuel Rego, Jose Loiola and Jackie Silva had enormous success on the AVP Tour.

Sun: As long as they’re intent on getting their green card to becoming a citizen, we’ll evaluate their situation and yeah, we’d love to have people like them. It just adds to the international. And not to mention increasing the talent.

I don’t know, to be quite frank, if your casual fan even knows team No. 5 (in the standings) and we’re going to do a better job in promoting. But what they bring, their flair and athleticism and those things, can only enhance the experience.

VBM: The Olympics were the centerpiece of the 2016 beach volleyball experience. This year, Chicago will be the final world event on the world calendar. Is that an advantage for the AVP?

Sun: I didn’t even think of it that way. We are the last, which is cool. What we’re going to do is everything we can do to hype up the experience that is AVP that comes to your town. And not just that, but making sure that anyone who can’t be there, they can feel it, they can understand what the experience can be like. Hopefully we get it to such a fever pitch that even by then it does or does not matter that there was a World Tour Finals. I think most people don’t even know about a World Tour Finals anyway. What we’ll be trying to do is build on the momentum from the previous seven AVP events that culminate in Chicago.

Last year (in Chicago), that was one of the best feelings I’ve gotten at an AVP event in the past few years. It just felt right. I think we’re on that cusp. The crowd felt good, great energy, great weather and we’re just going to bank on the fact the previous seven events leading to Chicago are going to be authentic and real and people are going to go nuts over there. People will spontaneously combust because of the pure excitement! (laugh)

VBM: What is the biggest challenge of running a tour the year after the Olympics?

Personally I don’t have any post-Olympic experience because when I got (the AVP), it was right after London. I had a good four years of a clean slate. Personally In don’t have that potential fear of “Oh no, we’re coming off an Olympic year.”

We had a really good year from an AVP standpoint and we’re going to build off of that. Eventually I would hope that in general, beach volleyball isn’t an every-four-years sport. I can’t change that perception, but I know what we can do and that’s continue to enhance AVP and its followers to make it feel like what’s going to happen next year and the year after that and then you say, “Oh, by the way, the Olympics are here? That’s cool.”

But it’s what’s going to happen with AVP going forward.

Monday, February 20, 2017

TCS NIT: Ultra-competitive first day, plenty of college coaches on hand

TStreet libero Giana Pellizon makes a save/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

The daily double that the Triple Crown Sports Preseason National Invitational Tournament touts lived up to its billing and then some Saturday.

Not only was action intense throughout Saturday at the Calvin L. Hampton Salt Palace Convention Center in Salt Lake City, Utah, but as promised hordes of Division I women’s coaches, including a Who’s Who list of decorated head coaches, roamed the center watching recruits or trying to find that next gem.

And as promised, the competitive power-pool format where the top eight teams are sent into an unseeded pool and paired off geographically (to avoid playing area teams) produced plenty of tug-of-wars.

Right out of the gates Saturday morning, COAST 18-1 went the distance with TAV 18 Black, scoring a 15-25, 25-22, 15-12 victory. And COAST played without Lucky Dog Volleyball/VolleyballMag.com girls’ high school player of the year Lexi Sun, who stayed home to rest an injury.

That turned out to be the first of six three-set matches in Pool A of the 18s division, which featured five of the preseason top teams in the country as ranked by our friends over at PrepVolleyball.com.

The 17 power pool had six of the nation’s preseason teams, including the top two in Tstreet and TAV (more on that contest in a second). The 16 power pool had five of the preseason top teams in it (again including Nos. 1 and 2), while the 15 power pool boasted seven of PrepVolleyball.com’s preseason top teams.

Maddie Parmelly goes airborne to dig/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
Maddie Parmelly of LoneStar 16 goes airborne to dig/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

The Reviews: “Every game is competitive,” said COAST 18-1’s Chiara Spain, a Yale recruit.

“This tournament is different,” Spain’s teammate Brynn Chandler said. “Sometimes in tournaments you might __play easier games right away and you might __play down to that level. Here, the tough competition helps.”

TAV 17 Black’s Rachel Woulfe agreed about the difference between early action in qualifiers and the Triple Crown.

“This is a lot different than qualifiers,” she said. “Sometimes at a qualifier you will have a dead day where it’s not as competitive. Here we hit the ground running. The competition is great.”

Tstreet 17s coach Naseri Tumanuvao said teams definitely get their money’s worth at the event.

“We love it because we are playing the best teams in the country,” he said. “Every match is a battle.”

Tstreet standout middle blocker Karson Bacon likes the Triple Crown format for another reason.

“You get the opportunity to play a lot of teams you wouldn’t normally play,” she said. “It’s good to see how you match up against different girls across the country. You get to see where we are as a team and what we need to work on.”

Aspire 17s outside hitter Brooke Nuneviller noted there are no free lunches in Utah this weekend.

“You can’t take a match off here or you will lose,” she said.

LoneStar 16s coach Jacob Hanan said leaving the convention center 0-3 on the first day of power-pool play is a distinct possibility.

“The best teams are going at it here,” he said. “On day one you could lose all your matches because you are playing the best teams, and yet you could still come out of it and win the tournament. Playing these good teams gets you used to the competition right off the bat.”

And OTVA 15s coach Melito Eleutiza said the club will continue to make the trip from Florida if the format continues.

“We love this type of competition,” he said. “We’ll keep coming back. You are playing championship matches on your first day.”

No Sun: COAST 18-1 coach Oz Bahrambeygui noted his team was a bit shorthanded Saturday, especially playing without the highly touted Sun, who is headed to Texas.

“The kids who are out we left at home. We want to make sure they are healthy,” he said. “Lexi is hurt a little so we left her home. She’ll play next week.”

Nonetheless, the veteran coach was pleased with how his group fared against TAV.

“We came to play,” he said. “I liked that we didn’t mail it in. We played tough.”

Spain said the team had to adjust without Sun.

“We had to step up a lot without her,” she said. “We hustled as a team and made a lot of hustle plays.

Chandler added: “We probably all were a little nervous without her here, but we played a well-rounded game (against TAV).”

Heavyweight Bout Part 1: One of the first 17s power-pool matches of the day pitted Tstreet and TAV, with TAV surviving in three sets. The third set featured 12 sideouts and seven lead changes. TAV found itself down 11-8 and 12-10 in the third and came back to win, scoring the final five points on kills from Asjia O’Neal and Katie Clark, a stuff block from Adanna Rollins and a match-winning ace from Grace Klepetka.

“We lost some concentration,” TAV coach Ping Cao said. “We did start blocking better, but we can’t play that slowly against a tall team such as Tstreet. They are a good team. This was good for us. The girls work hard but we still have a long way to go. We need to keep practicing and keep working on some things. Ball control right now is a weakness for us.”

TAV ended up 3-0 in the power pool, setting itself up well in Sunday’s 32-team single-elimination championship bracket.

TAV coach Ping XXX/Ed Chan, VBshots.com
TAV coach Ping Cao/Ed Chan, VBshots.com

Winner of Championships: Speaking of Cao, since he’s been a coach at Dallas-based TAV, his teams have won four national titles in seven seasons. In two of the other seasons they took a second and a third. His 17s teams last year won the USAV 17 Open junior national title.

“It’s intense,” TAV’s Woulfe said of playing for Cao. “He’s amazing. It’s a lot of hard work. It’s a challenge for sure, but you improve as a team and as an individual. You have more discipline and you learn how to work together as a team on and off the court. He’s a great guy. I wouldn’t trade places for anything else in the world having him as a coach.”

Woulfe, a Southern Methodist verbal commit, said there is great anticipation in the club regarding having Cao as a coach.

“The goal growing up in TAV is to want to have Ping when you are in your 17s year,” she said. “He is the man.”

USPV reunion: Defunct United States Professional Volleyball, the last legitimate, and for a short time, successful attempt at a women’s pro indoor league, has produced many post-USPV success stories (Nicole Branagh and Jennifer Kessy on the pro beach circuit for starters), but particularly in the coaching ranks.

TAV’s Cao was part of the original USPV Dream Team touring all-star squad as an assistant coach and later was an assistant for the Grand Rapids Force.

New Stanford coach Kevin Hambly, a former U.S. women’s national team assistant under Toshi Yoshida, was an assistant coach on the 2002 USPV champion Minnesota Chill, which played in Rochester, Minn. That team featured Wiz Bachman, a former star at UCLA, who is married to current Minnesota coach Hugh McCutcheon.

Also seen during the tournament on Saturday were USPV alums Sanja Tomasevic (new Arizona State coach), Alma Kovaci (Army coach) and Akiko Hatakeyama (Temple University assistant).

On the Rebound: After losing to TAV in its opener in the 17 power pool, Tstreet again was taken to the limit, this time by A5 out of Atlanta. Tstreet won after overcoming an 8-4 deficit at the turn in the third set and a 12-10 hole late.

“I like our overall effort,” Tstreet coach Naseri Tumanuvao said. “They really laid out those last couple of points and put their bodies on the floor to win a point. That was awesome to see us work through that and come out on the positive side. These kids have been together since they were 14 so overall there is that continuity and energy. They treat each other well and support each other. It’s a fun group.”

Oregon recruit Bacon said there was no quit in her team against A5.

“We fought the whole time,” she said. “We were down a handful of points and we didn’t get down on ourselves. With anything, adversity happens. You have to deal with it.”

T is for Team: Aspire 17s coach Ryan Tolman saw plenty of good things in his team’s three-set victory over A5 in a power-pool contest. Aspire broke an 11-11 tie in the third and scored the final four points of the contest.

“This was a good team effort where everybody contributed,” he said. “Sometimes we rely on our stars, but when everybody steps up we are better. We have some new girls on the team this year so we’re trying to build up our chemistry.”

Another thing was easy to see when watching Aspire 17s play is its love for the game. “We have a lot of energy when we play and when we play with that energy it’s a lot of fun,” said Aspire’s Lanie Wagner, who has verbally committed to Georgia.

Nuneviller added: “When we were down we were nervous, but we didn’t play like we were nervous. We played like we wanted to win. Our energy made the difference.”

Heavyweight Bout Part 2: The other contest that pitted the top two preseason teams in the country against each other (via PrepVolleyball.com) occurred in the 16s where LoneStar defeated Sunshine.

“We had good composure,” Hanan said. “We’ve been in a lot of big matches already and because of that we have more experience when people start to punch us. We talked to the girls about what’s going on her this weekend with the big tournament and all the big teams and all the big colleges that are here. We told them to stay in the moment and not get distracted.”

Prior to LoneStar, Hanan’s team took first in the gold bracket at a Martin Luther King event and also took first and prequalified at the Tour of Texas.

“We’re doing alright,” he said. “We lost a couple games at our second tour stop (in Dallas). We’re embracing the target we have on us. We’re embracing it instead of running away from it. We’re going to work for it because we know everybody is going to give us their best game. These girls are winners.”

Block This Way: OTVA 15 Rox South Red out of Florida put on an impressive at-the-net display in its victory over KiVA in a 15 power-pool match between two division heavyweights.

“We are a pretty tall team for a 15-and-under group,” OTVA coach Eleutiza said. “This group works hard and they always come to play.”

After winning the first set 25-20, OTVA led by as much as 19-6 and 21-8 late in the second. And during that stretch the combination of Sydney Conley and Marika Virthe combined for a pair of block kills, while Rebekah Rath had two kills down the stretch.

“We passed well and played a lot of good defense,” OTVA’s Leandra Mangual Duran said.

Girls Fab 50 Unveiling Sunday: At 2:30 p.m. Mountain time Sunday, the annual VolleyballMag.com/Triple Crown Sports Girls’ Fab 50 list and 25 underclassmen to watch list will be unveiled live at the Preseason NIT here in Utah.

Those lists, two of the most anticipated and longest-running rankings in the sport, also will debut on here at www.VolleyballMag.com.

NCAA: Hambly announces Stanford staff, CSUN upsets UCLA

Not surprisingly, Denise Corlett will remain on the Stanford coaching staff. New coach Kevin Hambly also announced Wednesday that his assistant from Illinois, Erin Lindsey, will join him in Palo Alto.

In NCAA men’s volleyball on Wednesday, No. 5 UCLA got upset again, this time by No. 14 CSUN, No. 2 Long Beach State beat No. 12 UCSB, and No. 4 Hawai’i crushed another MIVA team.

All that in a bit, but first Thursday’s very light schedule.

There are two MPSF matches as No. 6 Stanford (8-4, 5-2) goes to USC (3-9, 2-7) and No. 9 Pepperdine (5-4, 3-3) plays at Cal Baptist (3-9, 1-7).

In the MIVA, No. 10 Loyola (7-4, 3-1), one of three teams with one league loss behind unbeaten Ohio State, plays host to Fort Wayne (4-11, 1-3) .

The EIVA and Conference Carolinas have the night off.

Stanford staff: Corlett is a fixture on The Farm. The associate head coach to John Dunning, who retired last month, has been there 28 years and is one of most beloved and respected people in the college game and regarded as a top recruiter.

Lindsey, the former head coach at Dartmouth, played at North Carolina. She joined the Illinois staff last year. Hambly also retained long-time director of operations Amy Brown.

“Keeping Denise was a no-brainer,” Hambly said in a news release. “I have known Denise for a long time and she is one of the best in the business in recruiting. She has incredible knowledge of Stanford and all of the inner workings of it, and I am excited that she will remain on staff. I think it is huge for us moving forward.”

Corlett was on Don Shaw’s staff and was retained by Dunning when he took over 16 years ago.

CSUN knocks off Bruins: Arvis Greene had 25 kills for the visiting Matadors in a 20-25, 25-21, 20-25, 25-23, 15-9 victory. It left Northridge 10-5 overall and 3-5 in the MPSF, while UCLA, which lost for the fourth time in five matches, fell to 10-5, 7-4.

Greene, who set a career-high with 26 kills against Stanford on Feb. 3, hit .449 on 49 swings. The junior opposite also added a career-high seven digs to go with three blocks and one ace.

“We came ready to __play tonight, mentally we were very focused,” CSUN coach Jeff Campbell said. “I was really impressed with Arvis again tonight, he wants to win and he ports forth the effort to be successful.”

In his first start of the season at setter, redshirt freshman Schylar Lillethorup recorded the Matadors’ first double-double with 41 assists and 10 digs while also serving a season-high four aces.

“I thought Schylar also had a real nice match both setting and serving,” Campbell said.

Sophomore Dimitar Kalchev added seven kills and three aces to up his season total to 38 while junior Josiah Byers also had seven kills on .545 hitting to go with three blocks.

UCLA got 21 kills from Dylan Missry, who hit .390. He had two of his team’s 12 aces but six of its 18 service errors. He had five digs.

JT Hatch had 12 kills, two aces and seven digs, while Micah Ma’a had eight kills, five aces and four errors, five blocks — two solo — and nine digs.

Long Beach, Hawai’i get victories: Visiting Long Beach improved to 12-2 overall and built its lead to three in the win column at 8-1 in the MPSF. BYU is second at 5-1. The 25-17, 25-23, 25-20 loss dropped Santa Barbara to 6-8, 3-8.

TJ DeFalco led with 14 kills and just one error in 21 swings, hit .619, and had 13 digs and two blocks. Bryce Yould hit .778 with seven kills, no errors on nine swings. He is hitting .513 for the season after his third match in a row without an error.

Kyle Ensing had 12 kills and hit .385 and Amir Lugo-Rodgriguez had seven kills and hit .556 and had seven blocks.

Long Beach State had one ace and 17 errors,

UCSB got nine kills from Hayden Boehle, who had two of his team’s six aces compared to just eight errors. He also had five digs and two blocks.

The Gauchos have lost seven in a row.

Hawai’i swept Lindenwood 25-21, 25-18, 26-2-4, to go 2-0 on its MIVA swing. The night before the Warriors beat McKendree.

Hawai’i, 14-2, won for the ninth time in a row and is off the second-best start in program history and best since 1996, when it was 15-1.

Freshman opposite Rado Parapunov led with 16 kills, hitting .355. Sophomore outside hitter Brett Rosenmeier had a career-high 15 kills while freshman outside hitter Austin Matautia added seven kills. All three hit .333 or better in 75 attempts.

Hawai’i hit .333 while holding Lindenwood to .192.

Lindenwood is 0-11. Jake Duckworth led with eight kills.

NCAA men: Two EIVA upsets, USC wins again, Chicago teams win

Both ranked teams in the EIVA, Penn State and George Mason, were upset on Saturday.

Second-ranked Long Beach State and No. 3 BYU are starting to break away from the MPSF pack, where USC pulled off another upset.

Lewis and Loyola won MIVA matches,

And Mount Olive won for the sixth time in a row to maintain first in the Conference Carolinas.

There NCAA men’s matches Sunday aftenoon, both in the MIVA where top-ranked Ohio State (14-0, 5-0) goes to its 38th in a row when it plays host to last-place Lindenwood (0-11, 0-6) and Quincy (3-9, 1-5) goes to McKendree (5-11, 1-4).

MPSF: USC beats Pepperdine, Beach, BYU, Stanford win

Two days earlier USC upset No. 6 Stanford. Now the up-and-down Trojans have knocked off visiting No. 9 Pepperdine 30-28, 25-12, 22-25, 23-25, 15-10 as Lucas Yoder had 21 kills, 12 digs, five blocks and two aces.

USC improved to 5-9 overall, 4-7 MPSF and marked the first time the Trojans won back-to-back match this season. Earlier this year they lost in five to the Waves (6-5, 4-4).

Lucas Lossone added 16 kills while hitting .323 for USC, while teammate Andy Benesh had 12 kills (hitting .435) and seven blocks, Matt Douglas had 18 digs and Ryan Moss had three aces.

David Wieczorek had 18 kills and 10 blocks for Pepperdine, Colby Harriman had 14 kills, Clay Carr had 11 blocks, Mitchell Penning had eight blocks and Alex Harthaller had seven digs.

USC hit .227 and Pepperdine .155. The Trojans were again without recent junior college transfer Gianluca Grasso, a starting outside hitter who missed his third consecutive match with an ankle sprain.

Long Beach State has won six in a row, all sweeps, the latest at UCLA 25-20, 25-23, 25-22.

Long Beach is 13-2, 9-1 and two games up in the win column over BYU in the league. No. 5 UCLA is 10-6, 7-5.

Sophomore outside hitter TJ DeFalco led with 15 kills and hit .483 to go with five digs, an assist, an ace and a block. Sophomore opposite Kyle Ensing had 11 kills and nine digs to go with three blocks and an ace. The Beach hit .404.

The Bruins were led by Daenan Gyimah, who had 13 kills and hit .800, and Dylan Missry, who added 10 kills and a career-best five block assists while hitting .320. His team hit .366 for the match.

BYU worked hard for a 27-25, 25-21, 25-22 win over visiting UC San Diego. The Cougars improved to 12-2, 6-1, while UCSD dropped to 5-9, 2-7 with its second loss in as many nights in Provo.

Jake Langlois totaled 13 kills and Tim Dobbert had 10 and both hit .333. Dobbert, Miki Jauhiainen and Joseph Grosh led with three blocks each

“It’s good to go through some adversity and stay collected,” BYU coach Shawn Olmstead said. “There were some bumps, but our guys stayed composed and were able to pull out the win. It was a good opportunity to get some guys experience that they’re going to need as we go through the season.”

UCSD, which had one ace and 18 service errors, got 13 kills from Tanner Syftestad, who had five of those errors.

Four BYU players had an ace each and their team had 15 errors, five by Langlois. Saturday’s match did not count in the conference standings.

Visiting Stanford barely shook off the loss to USC by beating Cal Baptist 25-20, 20-25, 17-25, 25-16, 15-11. Stanford improved to 9-5, 6-3, as Jordan Ewert had 16 kills and hit .306 to go with five digs, three aces and three blocks. Gabriel Vega added 15 kills, hit 481, and had seven digs, the last two stats season-highs.

Kevin Vaz led CBU with 25 kills. Luis Palos has 11 kills, six digs and three blocks, while Rohit Paul had nine kills and 10 digs.

MIVA: Lewis, Loyola win to set up big match-up

No. 7 Lewis improved to 11-3, 6-2 as it tries to stay within striking distance of Ohio State with its 22-25, 25-19, 25-20, 25-17 win over visiting Fort Wayne.

Senior middle blocker Jacob Schmiegelt had 11 kills, six blocks and hit .412. Kyle Bugee added seven kills and .455 and had six blocks. John Hodul had five kills and six blocks, one solo.

Fort Wayne is 4-13, 1-5. The Mastodons got 17 kills from Pelegrin Vargas.

No.10 Loyola took care of business against No. 11 Ball State, which 0-for-2 on its Chicago swing. The victory left the Ramblers 9-4 overall and also in the MIVA hunt at 5-1, while Ball State fell to 11-4, 3-3 and all but out of the race for the top. It’s still early, but the Cardinals are going to need some good things to happen to stay in contention for one of the NCAA Tournament’s two at-large bids.

Ben Plaisted led Loyola with 12 kills and hit .409. He had three aces and four errors, five digs and two blocks, one solo. Collin Mahan had nine kills and three blocks and Jeff Jendryk had eight kills and 10 blocks, one solo.

Matt Szews led Ball State with 12 kills and seven digs. Matt Walsh had five kills and his team’s only ace against eight errors.

Lewis plays at Loyola on Friday in a huge match for both teams.

Grand Canyon improved to 9-5 with non-conference sweeps over Benedictine Mesa and Cal Lutheran.

EIVA: Down goes Penn State, Mason

The standings are a quagmire with first-place Sacred Heart two games ahead of sixth-place George Mason.

Sacred Heart moved into the lead with Princeton at 3-1 as it upset No. 13 Penn State and Princeton did the same to No. 15 Mason.

Start with Sacred Heart, which won 21-25, 25-23, 25-23, 25-18 at Penn State. Christopher DeLucie led with 17 kills and nine digs and Michael Comens had 15 kills and hit .344 to go with four blocks. Their team had four aces and 16 errors.

Libero Joshua Ayzenberg had 22 digs and got nothing but praise from Penn State coach Mark Pavlik.

“I think it’s a great example of what a great libero can do for a team. Ayzenberg is the heartbeat of their team, and he averaged over five digs a game on us, he made some amazing on-on-one digs and kept them in rallies,” Pavlik said. “Game one we came out and did what we needed to do, we passed the ball, and we hit .364. Game two and three I don’t know if we expected them to just back off and mosey in and say `I don’t feel like competing,’ but I think at that point they started to out defend us they started to out compete us which is really disappointing.”

Penn State is 9-6 overall, 4-2 in the MIVA, while Sacred Heart is 10-2, 3-1

Aidan Albrecht led Penn State with 14 kills, and added 11 digs and three blocks.

Kevin Gear had seven kills, one assist, four digs and eight blocks

You’ve got to appreciate the witty headline on the Princeton website game story:

Super-Huhmann Performance Sends Princeton Past Reigning EIVA Champ George Mason 3-1

That’s because freshman middle George Huhmann had 10 kills in 10 swings with no errors and nine blocks — four solo — as the Tigers improved to 5-6, 3-1. Mason fell to 5-7, 2-3.

Parker Dixon had 13 kills and hit .346 and Kendall Ratter added 10 kills for Princeton.

Jack Wilson had 16 kills and hit .414 to lead Mason, which also got seven kills from Graham Gresham, who hit .667. Mason had two aces and 19 errors.

Also in the EIVA, Harvard beat Saint Francis 23-25, 25-16, 23-25, 25-16 and 17-15 to improve to 4-5, 2-2, while SFU dropped to 6-9, 3-3.

Freshman setter Matthew Ctvrtlik led Harvard with 13 kills, hitting .379, and 21 digs. Casey White had 11 kills and 11 digs. Trevor Dow and Riley Moore had 10 kills each.

SFU got 17 kills from Jeff Hogan, who hit .133. He had one of his team’s three aces and two of its 17 errors and five blocks, one solo Stephen Braswell had 15 kills, hit .289, an ace, an error, five digs and a block.

Conference Carolinas: Mount Olive wins, Barton loses

Mount Olive improved to 9-4 overall, 8-0 in the CC with its 25-22, 25-19, 25-20 win over Lees-McRae (4-8, 2-5). Robert Poole led the winners with nine kills and three blocks.

Barton saw its five-match win streak end at King 25-18, 17-25, 21-25, 25-23, 17-15. It left the Bulldogs 8-4, 7-2 CC, while King stayed a game back in the loss column at 11-2, 6-1.

Emmanuel lost a non-conference mach to Coker 26-24, 21-25, 26-24, 25-20, 15-8. Emmanuel is 2-10, Coker 8-2.