Volleyball: McCutcheon to coach US women’s team

July 6th, 2009

11:56AM Tuesday Dec 16, 2008

COLORADO SPRINGS - Hugh McCutcheon, a New Zealander who guided the US men to Olympic gold at the Beijing Olympics, will guide the US women’s team for the next four years.

Doug Beal, USA Volleyball’s chief executive officer, announced today that McCutcheon will replace Jenny Lang Ping, the Chinese legend who guided the US women to a silver medal at Beijing but did not want to continue through 2012.

“This is a great opportunity for me to further develop professionally,” said McCutcheon.

“I’m excited by the challenges this change presents and optimistic some of the knowledge we’ve acquired with the men’s program can translate to the women.”

Beal said there is no timetable to fill the US men’s vacancy but is confident McCutcheon, 39, can bring success in the wake of Lang Ping, who guided the first US Olympic medal effort since 1992.

“There will be differences in systems and aspects of developing team culture but at the end of the day the fundamental principles of volleyball are not gender-specific,” Beal said.

Ze Roberto showed that this year for Brazil, guiding the women to Beijing gold after coaching Brazil’s men to 1992 gold.

“Successful coaches are successful coaches,” Beal said. “I have every confidence that Hugh can learn the differences that surely exist between genders and apply his philosophy to our women’s team in a positive way.

“Hugh proved throughout the past quadrennial his abilities as a great coach, motivator and program manager. The direction he provided allowed our men to steadily climb into position to be champions.”

Two-time US Olympian Lindsey Berg looks forward to what McCutcheon brings.

“He will be able to help us take a huge step forward,” she said. “This will be a great opportunity for our team to work under a different set of philosophies. Hugh will be able to bring in fresh and new ideas for us to build upon, including how we train and compete on the court.”

- AFP

–Posted by Achieve Volleyball

Penn State Caps Undefeated Season With National Title

July 6th, 2009




Dec. 20, 2008

Omaha, Neb. – The Penn State Nittany Lions became the fourth team in NCAA Division I women’s volleyball history to finish a season undefeated, as the top-ranked Nittany Lions successfully defended their 2007 national title with a 3-0 sweep (25-20, 26-24, 25-23) of second-ranked Stanford in Saturday’s 2008 NCAA final at the Qwest Center in Omaha, Neb.

Penn State finished one of the most impressive seasons in NCAA history with a perfect 38-0 record, joining Long Beach State (36-0 in 1998), Nebraska (34-0 in 2000) and USC (35-0 in 2003) as the only undefeated champions in NCAA history. The Nittany Lions’ 38 wins are the second-most of any Division I champion since the tournament began in 1981 and the most of any of the four undefeated champions. After dropping its only two sets of the season in Thursday’s five-set semifinal win over Nebraska, Penn State finished its year with its 37th sweep in 38 matches.

The Nittany Lions also became only the sixth team to repeat as national champions and the first since USC captured back-to-back titles in 2002 and 2003. After Saturday’s victory, Penn State has now won three national titles in school history – all since 1999 – as the Nittany Lions joined five other programs which rank second in NCAA history with three national championships.

The only program with more NCAA national championships than Penn State is Stanford, which the Nittany Lions defeated for the national title for the second straight year. Despite another terrific season, the six-time national champion Cardinal became the first team in Division I history to finish as the national runner-up in three consecutive NCAA Championships. Stanford, which fell to Penn State in a five-set thriller in 2007, finished the 2008 season with a 31-4 record.

Stanford started the match strong, scoring five of the first six points in set one. The Cardinal rode the strong start to a 15-10 lead at the media timeout, at which point Stanford had 10 kills on only 19 attacks. After the break, it was all Penn State as the Nittany Lions closed the set on a 15-5 run. Penn State scored six of the first seven points after of the break to pull even at 16, then used a 4-0 run to take a three-point lead. The Nittany Lions earned a set point at 24-19 following three straight points and a Megan Hodge block one rally later gave Penn State the first set. After Stanford’s hot start, the Cardinal had just three kills on its final 23 swings, while committing four errors. Stanford hit just .167 in the set, while Penn State came alive late to pound out 14 kills on .257 hitting.

Penn State enjoyed a much better start to set two, as the Nittany Lions jumped out to a quick 6-1 lead. Stanford scored four of the next five points to close the gap to 7-5, and the Cardinal pulled even at 12 on a block by Cynthia Barboza and Foluke Akinradewo. A solo block by Cassidy Lichtman gave Stanford a 14-13 lead, but Penn State regained the lead two rallies later and continued to lead until Hodge closed out the set with a kill. Defense ruled the second set, as Stanford recorded five blocks to hold Penn State to a .102 attack percentage. The Cardinal could not take advantage however, as Stanford hit only .159 and had three serving errors.

Stanford, which rallied from an 0-2 deficit in Thursday’s semifinal win over Texas, was unable to repeat the feat as Penn State never trailed in a set three. The score was tied twice early, but once the Nittany Lions built a 9-5 lead, they led the rest of the way. Stanford came back and pulled within two on seven occasions and finally got as close as one when a 4-0 run made the score 23-22. Hodge answered the run with a kill to set up two consecutive match points. After a Stanford kill, Nicole Fawcett, the 2008 AVCA National Player of the Year, gave the Nittany Lions their second straight national title with a kill off the Cardinal block. Both teams hit below .200 again in set five, but Penn State finished with two more kills and one fewer error.

Hodge, the championship’s Most Outstanding Player, finished with a double-double, recording a match-high 16 kills on .318 hitting and adding 14 digs. Fawcett also had a double-double with 10 kills and 11 digs, as Penn State was victorious despite hitting a season-low .177. The Nittany Lions added 11.5 blocks and five aces, while out-digging the Cardinal, 64-54.

Stanford was led by Klineman, who finished with 15 kills. Barboza ended her career with a double-double, as she tallied 11 kills and 15 digs. The Cardinal hit just .142 in the match, but finished with 11 blocks.

-Posted by Achieve Volleyball

UC Irvine Outlasts USC To Capture NCAA Men’s Volleyball Championship

July 6th, 2009


UC Irvine captured the 2009 national championship on Saturday.

UC Irvine captured the 2009 national championship on Saturday.

May 9, 2009

PROVO, Utah – Jordan DuFault had 14 kills, including the final one in the fifth set and UC Irvine won its second NCAA volleyball title in three years, beating Southern California 3-2 Saturday.

The Anteaters rallied from a 2-1 deficit to reclaim the national title they won two years ago with the five-set win over the Trojans.

Top-seeded UC Irvine (27-5) led the fifth set 14-12 when Ryan Ammerman set up DuFault for the winning kill. Tony Ciarelli got to the ball before it hit the floor, but he bumped it high over the USC bench and Riley McIbbin couldn’t get to it to make the save and the Anteaters rushed onto the floor.

Taylor Wilson led the Anteaters with 21 saves and Ammerman finished with 55 assists.

Murphy Troy had 26 kills for USC (21-11).

–Posted by Achieve Volleyball

Final NCAA Rankings: Women, 2008-2009

July 6th, 2009
from NCAA.COM

-posted by Achieve Volleyball

——- Division I Only ——–
Rank Name Conf W-L Road Neut Home Non-Div I
1 Penn St. Big Ten 38-0 12-0 6- 0 20-0 0-0
2 Stanford Pacific-10 31-4 11-2 7- 1 13-1 0-0
3 Nebraska Big 12 31-3 10-2 4- 1 17-0 0-0
4 Texas Big 12 29-4 10-1 2- 2 17-1 0-0
5 Washington Pacific-10 27-5 9-2 3- 0 15-3 0-0
6 Illinois Big Ten 26-8 11-2 2- 3 13-3 0-0
7 Minnesota Big Ten 27-7 7-4 4- 0 16-3 0-0
8 St. Louis Atlantic 10 29-5 10-2 6- 2 13-1 0-0
9 California Pacific-10 26-7 7-5 5- 0 14-2 0-0
10 Hawaii Western Athletic 31-4 9-0 2- 1 20-3 0-0
11 Purdue Big Ten 26-9 9-4 5- 2 12-3 0-0
12 Florida Southeastern 27-4 11-3 0- 1 16-0 0-0
13 Tulane Conference USA 28-6 10-3 7- 3 11-0 0-0
14 Oregon Pacific-10 25-9 6-6 6- 1 13-2 0-0
15 Utah Mountain West 26-6 10-4 4- 1 12-1 0-0
16 Michigan Big Ten 26-9 7-6 5- 1 14-2 0-0
17 San Diego West Coast 23-5 8-4 4- 0 11-1 0-0
18 Southern California Pacific-10 17-12 3-8 2- 1 12-3 0-0
19 Wichita St. Missouri Valley 30-2 12-1 5- 0 13-1 0-0
20 UCLA Pacific-10 22-11 10-6 4- 1 8-4 0-0
21 Colorado St. Mountain West 23-7 7-6 2- 1 14-0 0-0
22 UAB Conference USA 27-8 8-4 7- 2 12-2 0-0
23 Ohio Mid-American 24-8 8-3 7- 3 9-2 0-0
24 Middle Tenn. Sun Belt 27-8 9-4 4- 2 14-2 0-0
25 Long Beach St. Big West 26-6 7-5 5- 0 14-1 0-0
25 Western Mich. Mid-American 28-7 9-4 10- 2 9-1 0-0
27 FIU Sun Belt 28-7 8-2 6- 3 14-2 0-0
28 Duke Atlantic Coast 25-9 7-6 5- 2 13-1 0-0
29 Kansas St. Big 12 24-8 8-4 5- 1 11-3 0-0
30 Yale Ivy 21-6 8-4 4- 1 9-1 0-0
31 Rice Conference USA 23-8 7-3 5- 2 11-3 0-0
32 Iowa St. Big 12 22-13 5-10 6- 0 11-3 0-0
33 New Mexico St. Western Athletic 26-9 10-4 5- 2 11-3 0-0
34 Western Ky. Sun Belt 26-10 8-5 8- 2 10-3 0-0
35 Cincinnati Big East 27-7 7-5 6- 1 14-1 0-0
36 Santa Clara West Coast 18-10 7-7 6- 0 5-3 0-0
37 North Carolina Atlantic Coast 22-11 9-5 1- 4 12-2 0-0
38 Clemson Atlantic Coast 23-10 6-7 4- 0 13-3 0-0
39 Kentucky Southeastern 26-6 9-2 1- 1 16-3 0-0
40 Pepperdine West Coast 20-8 7-4 6- 1 7-3 0-0
41 Miami (Fla.) Atlantic Coast 26-6 9-5 5- 0 12-1 0-0
42 San Francisco West Coast 22-8 5-4 2- 3 15-1 0-0
43 Houston Conference USA 20-12 4-7 5- 4 11-1 0-0
44 St. Mary’s (Cal.) West Coast 20-8 9-2 5- 3 6-3 0-0
45 Dayton Atlantic 10 21-13 5-7 5- 2 11-4 0-0
46 Creighton Missouri Valley 18-9 8-2 1- 3 9-4 0-0
47 Indiana Big Ten 17-15 3-9 3- 1 11-5 0-0
48 UNI Missouri Valley 25-9 7-5 6- 2 12-2 0-0
49 Miami (Ohio) Mid-American 21-12 7-4 6- 5 8-3 0-0
50 Tennessee Southeastern 22-10 9-5 2- 2 11-3 0-0

Final NCAA Rankings: Men’s Volleyball 2008-2009

July 6th, 2009

from NCAA.COM

–posted by Achieve Volleyball

Final AVCA Division I-II Men’s Top 15
(As of 05/11/2009)
Rank School W-L Points Prev
1 UC Irvine (16) 28-5 240 1
2 Southern California 21-11 211 4
3 Pepperdine 22-5 208 2
4 Cal St. Northridge 24-7 187 3
5 Penn St. 27-4 169 5
6 Stanford 21-11 169 6
7 BYU 17-13 145 7
8 Long Beach St. 14-14 127 8
9 UCLA 14-16 111 9
10 Ohio St. 16-12 99 10
11 UC San Diego 13-15 82 11
12 Lewis 21-8 53 12
13 Loyola (Ill.) 17-10 30 13
14 Ball St. 18-10 30 NR
15 Hawaii 9-18 25 14

2008 Olympics: Best Setters

July 6th, 2009

Watch the best setters in the world!

–Posted by Achieve Volleyball

Giba-Brazilian Volleyball Superstar

July 6th, 2009

Check out this video from Youtube! (click on the link)

Giba in Action

NCAA Approves Sand Volleyball as Emerging Sport

July 6th, 2009

USA Volleyball Beach Contact: B.J. Evans
Manager, Media Relations and Publications
Phone:  719-228-6800
E-Mail: bj.evans@usav.org

(April 21, 2009) – The NCAA Division I Legislative Council added sand volleyball to the list of emerging sports for women, it was announced today, clearing the way for schools to use the sport toward minimum sponsorship requirements and minimum financial aid awards.  NCAA Division II had already voted to add sand volleyball to the emerging sports list at the 2009 NCAA Convention in January.

Kiah Fiers, left, of Pepperdine goes up against Kim Hill of Pepperdine at USA Volleyball’s 2009 Beach Collegiate Challenge in Long Beach, Calif. Photo copyrighted by USA Volleyball.“The opportunity to play sand volleyball in the spring will spur growth in the sport. I wish I had that opportunity when I was at Stanford,” said 2008 Olympic Beach Gold Medalist, Kerri Walsh.  “Additionally, this development will give more women an opportunity for a professional volleyball career in the United States.”

Capitalizing on the recent success of USA Volleyball’s beach teams in the Olympics and the growth in grassroots programs, the NCAA’s Committee on Women’s Athletics made the recommendation to add the sport to the emerging sports list last summer.

“The United States has a proud and successful history in sand volleyball, having won at least one gold medal in every Summer Games since the discipline was added to the Olympic program in 1996,” said USAV CEO Doug Beal. “This move by the NCAA is wonderful, particularly in light of the increased varsity athletic opportunities for young women at the collegiate level and the synergy with already existing USA Volleyball programs.”

“The addition of sand volleyball as an NCAA sport will help us grow the discipline and increase its visibility around the country,” said Ali Wood Lamberson, USA Volleyball’s Director of Beach Programs. “Along with USA Volleyball’s already existing Beach High Performance and Development Programs and the USA Beach Junior Tour, NCAA sand volleyball opportunities will start young athletes looking at beach as an option much earlier in their careers.  This will help the United States sustain our level of competitive excellence.  Further, USAV is poised to support NCAA sand volleyball with various programs including coach and official education programs.”

The NCAA will call the new sport “sand” volleyball, rather than “beach” volleyball, in hopes that the sport will have broad appeal across the country and not be confined to coastal areas.  Already schools including The University of Texas, the University of Nebraska, and the University of Utah are competing in collegiate competitions in the spring.

“The addition of sand volleyball to the list of collegiate options is significant for our sport,” said Kathy DeBoer, Executive Director of the American Volleyball Coaches Association. “With more than 400,000 girls playing high school volleyball, we welcome the addition of collegiate roster spots.”

The group most responsible for spreading the popularity of the sport beyond the California coast is the Association of Volleyball Professionals (AVP) which hosts a series of competitions on man-made courts at in-land locations like Cincinnati, Ohio, Atlanta, Ga., and Las Vegas, Nev.  The AVP also sponsors a series of indoor sand competitions in January and February called “Hot Winter Nights” in cold-weather cities like Omaha, Ne. and Grand Rapids, Mich.

“We are thrilled that the NCAA has voted to make sand volleyball a collegiate sport,” said Jason Hodell, CEO of AVP Pro Beach Volleyball. “The vote confirms the momentum behind the sport of beach volleyball, and we are excited to help grow our sport on the college level and create new beach volleyball stars around the country.”

The NCAA will spend the next year developing the rules that will govern sand volleyball as a collegiate sport, including regulations on financial aid, playing dates and recruiting.  Institutions will be able to sponsor varsity programs starting in the 2010-2011 academic year.

from USA Volleyball April 22, 2009

–posted by Achieve Volleyball

2009 U.S. Men’s World League Roster

July 6th, 2009

2 Sean Rooney (OH, 6-9, Wheaton, Ill., Pepperdine)
3 Evan Patak (Opp, 6-8, Pleasanton, Calif., UC Santa Barbara)
4 David Lee (MB, 6-8, Alpine, Calif., Long Beach State)
5 Rich Lambourne (L, 6-3, Tustin, Calif., BYU)
6 Paul Lotman (OH, 6-7, Lakewood, Calif., Long Beach State)
7 Donald Suxho (S, 6-5, Korce, Albania, USC)
8 Andrew Hein (MB, 6-11, Carol Stream, Ill., Pepperdine)
13 Clay Stanley (Opp, 6-9, Honolulu, Hawai’i, Hawai’i)
14 Kevin Hansen (S, 6-5, Newport Beach, Calif., Stanford)
15 Russell Holmes (MB, 6-8, Fountain Valley, Calif., BYU)
16 Jayson Jablonsky (OH, 6-5, Yorba Linda, Calif., UC Irvine)
18 Scott Touzinsky (OH, 6-6, St. Louis, Mo., Long Beach State)

from USVolleyball.org

posted by Achieve Volleyball

U.S. Men Come Back with Win Against China

July 6th, 2009
7_5_09_wl_team_usa_cheer

Photo: FIVB

From left, Sean Rooney, Andy Hein, David Lee, Kevin Hansen and Evan Patak cheer a great play during its match against China in Nanjing on July 5.

ANAHEIM, Calif. (July 5, 2009) – The U.S. Men’s National Volleyball Team rebounded from Saturday’s five-set loss and defeated China on Sunday, 3-1 (25-18, 20-25, 25-21, 25-12) in an FIVB World League match in Nanjing, China.

With the victory, the U.S. Men improved to 6-2 and held on to their lead in Pool A. China fell to 2-6. Team USA returns to the United States and will play two matches against Italy on July 10-11 at the Sears Centre Arena in Hoffman Estates, Ill.

The U.S. Men showed great improvement on Sunday, scoring on eight aces, as opposed to one on Saturday, and out-blocking China 11-6. Team USA converted 57 percent of its kill attempts while China could only convert 47 percent.

China was also hurt by 29 team errors while the United States had 17.

“We were exceptionally good in serving, defending and blocking,” U.S. Head Coach Alan Knipe (Huntington Beach, Calif.) said. “As a young team, there will be a long way to get better. As I said yesterday, we lost the game and we would fight back today.”

Evan Patak (Pleasanton, Calif.) led all scorers with 17 points on 12 kills, one block and a match-high four aces. Sean Rooney (Wheaton, Ill.) added 12 points on 10 kills and two blocks. David Lee (Alpine, Calif.) scored 11 points on seven kills, two blocks and two aces while Scott Touzinsky (St. Louis, Mo.) tallied 11 points on nine kills and two blocks. Andrew Hein (Carol Stream, Ill.) totaled 10 points on seven kills and a match-high three blocks.

Clay Stanley (Honolulu, Hawai’i) scored two points on two aces. Kevin Hansen (Newport Beach, Calif.) scored two points on a kill and a block. Jayson Jablonsky (Yorba Linda, Calif.) scored one point on one kill.

Ping Chen paced China with 15 points on 12 kills and three aces. Weijun Zhong added 13 points on 11 kills and two aces.

Knipe gave his team a new look on Sunday, starting Hansen at setter and Patak at opposite. He also started Rooney and Touzinsky at outside hitter, Hein and Lee at middle blocker and Rich Lambourne (Tustin, Calif.) at libero.

Stanley, Jablonsky and Russell Holmes (Fountain Valley, Calif.) played as substitutes.

The first set made it look like the match would be a repeat of Saturday, as China took an 8-6 lead at the first technical timeout (TTO), including three kills and two blocks. However the United States used a 5-1 run to take the lead at 11-9. China never tied the score, although it stayed close until the U.S. lead was 14-13. Two straight kills by Lee and Patak gave Team USA a 16-13 edge. China caught up to 16-15, but the United States cored three more straight points on a kill by Patak, an ace by Lee and a Hansen block to secure the set victory.

The U.S. offense got quiet in the second set and China held an 8-5 lead at the first TTO. It increased the lead to 11-6 and Knipe called a timeout. The Chinese attack continued however. With the United States trailing 11-14, China scored four straight points on a U.S. serving error and a block, a kill and an ace to secure the set victory.

China’s momentum continued in the third set and it jumped out to an 8-4 lead at the first TTO. China maintained the lead until it was 17-15. Two China errors tied the score at 17-17. Later, with the score tied at 20-20, the United States put together a four-point run on two kills and an ace by Patak and a block by Touzinsky to reach set point. China scored once more, but a kill from Lee gave Team USA the victory.

The U.S. Men built on their momentum in the fourth set and held an 8-5 lead at the first TTO, including two kills, a block and an ace by Patak. The U.S. lead was still three at 10-7 when Team USA scored four straight points on two kills by Rooney, a block by Hein and a Lee ace. China never recovered and the United States raced to a 25-12 set victory.

B.J. Hoeptner Evans July 05, 2009

Posted by Achieve Volleyball