Sunday, December 22, 2013

NCAA | Volleyball fans do Seattle proud

Huge crowds fill Key Arena, even when home team no longer in contention
  • #2 Penn State def. #14 Wisconsin 3-1 (25-19, 26-24, 20-25, 25-23)

Penn State libero Dominique Gonzalez stood on the Key Arena volleyball court and marveled at the noise.
Wisconsin's Lauren Carlini
-Volleyblog Seattle photo by Leslie Hamann

“It was really loud,” she said. “They filled the stands. Even though their home team wasn’t playing here, they still came out to cheer on the national championship game. That is, obviously, great.”

Two days after the Nittany Lions eliminated Washington in the national semifinals, there was trepidation in some circles about whether Seattle fans would show for Penn State vs. Wisconsin. Not only were the seats filled, but players figured fans had picked a favorite.

“There were a couple times I heard boos,” said PSU setter Micha Hancock, voted the championship’s Most Outstanding Player. “It was, like, dang! Tough crowd!”

“I think a lot of people were cheering for Wisconsin, the underdog,” said Gonzalez. “And why not? They play hard. They want to win.”

The loudest explosion came toward the end of the third set, when Wisconsin’s 5-7 Deme Morales stuffed 6-1 All-American Deja McClendon. That gave the Badgers a 23-18 lead, on the way to their only set win of the match.

Penn State players celebrate their championship in front of an appreciative Seattle crowd
-Volleyblog Seattle photo by Brett Hamann
From our perspective at courtside, the roar of the crowd seemed evenly balanced. More than anything, appreciative fans screamed approval for big plays, especially on defense, no matter which team won the point. And the crowd stood and cheered for both squads when Penn State won the final point and the school’s sixth championship.

See also:

NOTES:




NCAA | Penn State defeats Wisconsin 3-1 for fifth volleyball championship in seven years

Left/right weapons prove decisive for Nittany Lions; Badger plays with separated shoulder
  • #2 Penn State def. #14 Wisconsin 3-1 (25-19, 26-24, 20-25, 25-23)
During the NCAA D1 Women's Volleyball Championships, Volleyblog Seattle on assignment for ncaa.com. Please follow our coverage at http://www.ncaa.com/sports/volleyball-women/d1

SEATTLE -- It was a championship bout with a left and right attack. And after the final round of an
exceptionally high-energy match, Penn State emerged with a 3-1 (25-19, 26-24, 20-25, 25-23) victory against Big Ten rival Wisconsin. It was Penn State’s fifth volleyball championship in the past seven seasons, and sixth overall, tying Stanford for the highest total in NCAA women’s Division I volleyball history.
Penn State's Micha Hancock
-Volleyblog Seattle photo by Leslie Hamann

The attack from the left came from Penn State setter Micha Hancock, voted the most outstanding player of the championships. Hancock’s blistering serve—delivered with her left arm—offered the razor-thin difference throughout the match and—in particular—the deciding fourth set.

“She’s one of the elites,” Wisconsin coach Kelly Sheffield said. “We had no offense at all when she was serving.”

“She’s the best-ever in the nation,” Wisconsin libero Annemarie Hickey said.

Penn State’s right side attack ran primarily through Ariel Scott, who pounded a match-high 21 kills on 51 attempts. The 6-4 All-American was matched up against Wisconsin’s 5-7 dynamo, Deme Morales, nine-inch advantage.

“We planned to go over Morales, because she’s shorter,” Hancock said. “[Morales] is a great player, but we’ve got the hammer over there.”

Wisconsin's Lauren Carlini
-Volleyblog Seattle photo by Leslie Hamann
Throughout the match, Wisconsin countered with a right-side attack of its own. Setter Lauren Carlini sent her middles in motion, connecting almost at will on slides to Dominque Thompson, who finished with a team-high 16 kills on 35 swings. “She’s probably one of the most underrated middles in country,” Carlini said. “People look at her height and think, ‘oh, she can’t be good.’”

Oh, yes, Thompson’s height. Just like her teammate Morales, 5-11 Thompson gave away several inches to her opponent, Penn State’s 6-6 Katie Slay. Yet Wisconsin scored a disproportionate percentage of its points off serve with Morales and Thompson on the front row. Their grit was part of the reason why the Badgers got all the way to set point in the second frame, and reached 23-23 in the fourth. The rest of the story? Lights-out defense.

“That’s what we do,” Sheffield said. “We defend like crazy. It doesn’t always look pretty, but we’ll throw our bodies around with the best of them.”

Throwing bodies around was more than a metaphor; late in the match, Wisconsin libero AnneMarie Hickey landed wrong, popping her shoulder out of its socket. She refused to leave the game.

Wisconsin's AnneMarie Hickey separates her shoulder while diving for a dig
-Volleyblog Seattle photo by Brett Hamann
“It hurt pretty bad,” Hickey admitted. “But we were playing with such high intensity, and we were winning the set. All I wanted to do was win for my teammates.”

Penn State coach Russ Rose talks during a timeout
with setter Micha Hancock
-Volleyblog Seattle photo by Leslie Hamann
And Wisconsin came close. Its second-set late lead evaporated with two service errors and some furious Penn State defense down the stretch. The Badgers seemed in control of the fourth set, but it was Hancock who made the difference.

Because Hancock is a lefty, her powerful jump serve comes at defenders from an angle they rarely see. It’s a high risk/high reward skill that sometimes produced errors instead of aces. After missing a couple of serves, her coach, Russ Rose told Hancock during a timeout to switch to a safer serve.

“Sometimes players swear at the coaches,” Rose said, with a grin. “I can’t repeat how the conversation went.” Hancock, however, insisted she continue using a jump serve. “Then you might want to serve it in,” Rose told her.

So with her team trailing 22-23, she stepped to the line. Her first serve, an ace, forced a Wisconsin timeout. Her second serve, barely handled by the Badgers, was over-passed for a Slay kill, forcing a second timeout. Her third serve? Another ace, setting up the final rally, and a Penn State victory.

“This was a match we had to grind out against a really good opponent,” said Rose. “It was hard to win this championship.”

Friday, December 20, 2013

NCAA | Penn State volleyball overwhelms Washington

A single serve may have set the tone for a decisive defeat
  • #2 Penn State def. #3 Washington 3-0 (25-14, 25-13, 25-16)
  • #12 Wisconsin vs. #1 Texas | December 21 | 6:30 PM (Pacific) |Key Arena, Seattle | ESPN2

Thursday, December 19, 2013

NCAA | Washington vs Penn State played memorable match the last time out

“Courtney Thompson just kicked our butts,” remembers a former Penn State star
  • #12 Wisconsin vs. #1 Texas | December 19 | 4:30 PM (Pacific) |Key Arena, Seattle
  • #2 Penn State vs. #3 Washington | December 19 | 6:30 PM (Pacific) |Key Arena, Seattle

NCAA | Final Four teams all turned losses into winning lessons

Washington, Wisconsin, Texas and Penn State each faced turning points that pointed to this week's Championships
  • #12 Wisconsin vs. #1 Texas | December 19 | 4:30 PM (Pacific) |Key Arena, Seattle | ESPN2
  • #2 Penn State vs. #3 Washington | December 19 | 6:30 PM (Pacific) |Key Arena, Seattle | ESPN2

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

NCAA | Whose serve will scorch in the semis, Washington or Penn State?

A renowned server faces a team that serves tough

  • #12 Wisconsin vs. #1 Texas | December 19 | 4:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)
  • #2 Penn State vs. #3 Washington | December 19 | 6:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

NCAA | Final Four at Key Arena on brink of a sellout

Less than 200 seats remain; still a few suites available
  • #12 Wisconsin vs. #1 Texas | December 19 | 4:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)
  • #2 Penn State vs. #3 Washington | December 19 | 6:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)

Monday, December 16, 2013

NCAA | A coach who should know makes his Final Four volleyball picks

Kevin Hambly’s Illinois team played all four of this year’s finalists. So who does he think will win this week in Seattle?
  • #12 Wisconsin vs. #1 Texas | December 19 | 4:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)
  • #2 Penn State vs. #3 Washington | December 19 | 6:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)

NCAA | Familiar two at Final Four

Washington among decade’s best as Penn State and Texas continue a habit
  • #12 Wisconsin vs. #1 Texas | December 19 | 4:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)
  • #2 Penn State vs. #3 Washington | December 19 | 6:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)

Sunday, December 15, 2013

NCAA | Still looking for NCAA Volleyball Championship tickets? Better hurry

How to see the Huskies, Badgers, Nittany Lions, and Longhorns in person
  • #12 Wisconsin vs. #1 Texas | December 19 | 4:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)
  • #2 Penn State vs. #3 Washington | December 19 | 6:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)

NCAA | Replay of Washington volleyball’s electrifying Elite 8 win available online

In case you missed it, ESPN has—for now—the link available in its entirety
  • #12 Wisconsin vs. #1 Texas | December 19 | 4:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)
  • #2 Penn State vs. #3 Washington | December 19 | 6:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)

NCAA | Washington volleyball reaches Final Four with heart-stopping victory over USC

Huskies’ Krista Vansant has just what UW needed:  the match of a lifetime
#3 Washington def. #6 USC 3-2 (26-228, 23-25, 25-22, 25-18, 17-15)
  • #12 Wisconsin vs. #1 Texas | December 19 | 4:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)
  • #2 Penn State vs. #3 Washington | December 19 | 6:30 PM |Key Arena (NCAA Semifinal)

Thursday, December 12, 2013

NCAA | As Washington volleyball travels to LA, is home court an advantage for USC?

Trojans not invincible in Los Angeles as many teams lose at home during tournament
  • #3 Washington vs. #14 Kansas | December 13 | 5PM | Galen Center (USC) | ESPN3

Sunday, December 8, 2013

NCAA | What we learned from Washington volleyball’s win against LSU

Huskies’ coach says his team won despite being “tapped out emotionally,” but will learn from the experience
  • #3 Washington def. LSU 3-1 (17-25, 25-18, 25-21, 25-19)
  • next: #3 Washington vs. #14 Kansas | December 13 | 5:00PM

Saturday, December 7, 2013

NCAA | A different view of the volleyball tournament: Alabama State has a blast

Team is overmatched by Washington, but not overwhelmed by the opportunity to enjoy
  • #3 Washington def. Alabama State (25-11, 25-5, 25-16)
  • next: LSU @ #3 Washington | December 7 | 7PM | Alaska Airlines Arena

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

NCAA | Volleyball tournament’s best first-round matchup could be in Seattle

Sure, Washington plays Alabama State. But before that, Michigan vs. LSU looks plenty interesting
  • next: Michigan vs. LSU | December 6 | 5PM | Alaska Airlines Arena
  • Alabama State @ #3 Washington | December 6 | 7PM

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Pac-12 | Washington/Washington State volleyball match packed with meaning

Figuring out postseason possibilities throughout Division 1
  • next: Washington State @ #5 Washington | November 29 | 8PM |Pac-12 Networks
  • NCAA Tournament Selection | December 1 | 6:30PM | ESPNU
[11.30.13 | 1PM | CORRECTION: The Nebraska Regional will be hosted in Lincoln, not Omaha]

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Pac-12 | What we learned from Washington volleyball’s loss to Stanford

Passing, serving and distribution were different in Palo Alto than they were in Seattle
  • #5 Stanford def. #3 Washington 3-0 (25-19, 25-21, 25-22)
  • next: #3 Washington @ #23 California | November 22 | 6PM | Pac 12 Networks

Monday, November 18, 2013

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Pac-12 | What we learned from Washington volleyball’s win over USC

The game within the game: service risk/reward pays off for just one team
  • #3 Washington def. #4 USC 3-1 (25-15, 21-25, 25-21, 25-17)
  • next: #3 Washington @ #6 Stanford | November 20 | 7:30PM | Pac 12 Networks

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Monday, November 4, 2013

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Pac 12 | What we learned from Washington volleyball’s win over Utah

Red alert: Washington uses right side Nogueras/Nelson connection to great effect
  • #3 Washington def. Utah 3-1 (25-16, 22-25, 26-24, 25-22)
  • next: Colorado @ #3 Washington | November 3 | 3PM | Courtney Thompson jersey retirement

Friday, November 1, 2013

Pac-12 | Two good reasons to see Washington volleyball in person this weekend

Making history and getting out of the house
  • next: Utah @ #3 Washington | November 1 | 7PM | no TV
  • Colorado @ #3 Washington | November 3 | 3PM | Courtney Thompson jersey retirement

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Final Four | Author David Guterson discovers volleyball, thanks to his daughter

As Final Four tickets sell quickly, Bainbridge Island author of “Snow Falling on Cedars” finds volleyball is “far more cerebral” than he imagined
  • NCAA Division 1 Women’s Volleyball Final Four | December 19 & 21 | Key Arena, Seattle

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Pac-12 | What we learned from Washington volleyball’s win against UCLA

Variety make a difference as Huskies win in LA for first time since 2009
  • #3 Washington def. UCLA 3-1 (25-23, 21-25, 25-23, 25-13)
  • next: #3 Washington @ #4 USC | October 27 | 5PM |Pac-12 Networks


It takes more than one hitter to beat the Huskies.

Friday night in Pauley Pavilion, UCLA’s Karsta Lowe was that one hitter. She took 39 swings and connected for 21 kills, dominating all but the final set in a 3-1 Washington victory (25-23, 21-25, 25-23, 25-13).

Washington and UCLA players meet at the Pauley Pavilion net
-Pac-12 Networks
But hitters like Lowe are on the front row for only half the rotations. Eventually they get all the opponent’s defensive attention if a team doesn’t spread the offense to other options. And Lowe couldn’t do it on her own.

Washington’s usually-dominant serve and pass game was erratic on this night, as it suffered strings of too-easy serves and uncharacteristic receiving gaffes. During the first three sets, Bruins’ setter Megan Moenoa found Lowe seemingly at will, and the 6-4 junior pounded the ball over, around and off the block. In crucial runs during the second and third sets, Lowe almost single-handedly kept UCLA in the match.

Washington coach Jim McLaughlin talks with Lianna Sybeldon during a fourth set timeout
-Pac-12 Networks


The key, it seemed, was to let Lowe get her swings, while shutting down the rest of the UCLA attack. Washington’s block was huge, getting 15 stuffs, including 8 block assists from Melanie Wade and 7 from Lianna Sybeldon. Bruin hitters Maddy Klineman (.152) and Kelly Reeves (.138) committed 11 hitting errors between them, many on Huskies’ blocks. UCLA middles Zoe Nightingale and Mariana Aquino were rarely a factor.

Once the Huskies solved their serve/pass problems, their more varied offense allowed them to counterpunch with increasing effectiveness. In each of sets two, three and four, Washington’s hitting percentage and side-out effectiveness rose, while the same stats for UCLA dropped. Krista Vansant finished with 16 kills, Kaleigh Nelson with 13 kills and Sybeldon with 12.

Sybeldon, in particular, proved an effective weapon. Both of her setters—Jenni Nogueras and Katy Beals—called her number in key moments, often stopping UCLA rallies with emphatic quicks. As she has all season, the sophomore plays offense with a contagious enthusiasm, taking pressure off the pins when tall opponents try to bunch the block.

Washington's Cassie Strickland (8) blocks UCLA's Karsta Lowe during the fourth set
-Pac-12 Networks


In the end, however, it was Vansant who made the difference. Tied at 23 in the third set, the junior slammed a Jenna Orlandini bump for a kill that seemed to shake the Bruins’ defense. In the fourth set, Vansant made the most out of every opportunity, serving tough, digging slams, powering her attack and even shutting down Lowe, who was held to just three kills—and committed three errors—in the final frame. The final set was a rout, and ended a three-year losing streak in Los Angeles (both at UCLA and USC) for Washington.

The Huskies are now 8-1 in the Pac-12 and tied with USC for the conference lead. Washington and Southern Cal will meet in Galen Center Sunday afternoon at 5PM to break that tie.

NOTES:
  • Half of Washington’s roster is from California, so there were big contingents of family and friends wearing purple and gold in Pauley Pavilion.
  • In other Pac-12 play, the biggest result was in Boulder, where Colorado remained undefeated at home by beating Arizona 3-0 (25-17, 25-18, 25-23). Just last Sunday, Arizona handed then-number one USC its first conference loss. In Berkeley, Cal dealt a big blow to the Oregon Ducks with a 3-2 victory (15-13 in the fifth set), while USC swept WSU and Stanford swept Oregon State.



Monday, October 21, 2013

Pac12 | Washington volleyball’s Krista Vansant named Player of the Week yet again

Junior outside hitter named Pac-12’s best defensive player after victories over California and Stanford

NCAA | Washington volleyball moves up in weekly coaches’ rankings

After win against Stanford and losses but other ranked teams, Huskies back up to #3

Every season, there’s a weekend when top teams tumble. This was that week.
  • #1 USC lost to Arizona
  • #2 Florida lost to #18 Missouri
  • #5 Michigan State lost to #10 Minnesota
  • #5 Michigan State lost to #15 Wisconsin
  • #7 Stanford lost to #6 Washington
  • #8 Nebraska lost to #25 Purdue
  • #15 Wisconsin lost to #16 Michigan
  • #16 Michigan lost to #10 Minnesota
  • #17 Ohio State lost to Northwestern
  • #17 Ohio State lost to Illinois
  • #22 Arizona State lost to UCLA
  • #22 Arizona State lost to #1 USC


This week’s big winners were Washington (over California and #7 Stanford) and Minnesota (over #5 Michigan State and #16 Michigan). Missouri is undefeated (23-0) but ranks only 11th, perhaps because it’s win at home over #2 Florida was its first match this season against a ranked team.

This week’s AVCA poll, with Volleyblog Seattle’s ballot in tomorrow’s Volleyball Magazine media poll:

WEEK NINE
AVCA Coaches
School
(First Place votes)
Volleyblog
Seattle
This Week
Last Week
1
3
Texas (44)
3
2
4
Penn St (12)
2
3
6
Washington (4)
1
4
1
Southern Cal
4
5
2
Florida
9
6
7
Stanford
6
7
10
Minnesota
5
8
9
Hawai’i
12
9
11
San Diego
16
10
5
Michigan St
13
11
18
Missouri
7
12
12
Colorado St
10
13
8
Nebraska
14
14
13
North Carolina
8
15
14
Kentucky
17
16
15
Wisconsin
15
17
16
Michigan
NR
18
19
Florida St
18
19
20
BYU
11
20
21
Oregon
NR
21
25
Purdue
NR
22
23
Kansas
NR
23
24
Duke
19
24
17
Ohio St
NR
25
NR
Arizona
NR

22
Arizona St
NR

NR
Central Arkansas
20

Others Receiving Votes and appearing on two or more AVCA ballots: Creighton 63; Arizona State 50; Oklahoma 44; UCLA 26; California 20; Cal State Northridge 10; Illinois 9; Western Kentucky 9; Ohio 8; Miami (FL) 7; Northwestern 7; St. Mary's (CA) 6; Iowa State 4





Photos courtesy Shutter Geeks Photography

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