Bremerton’s Keith
Peden beats out nearly 1,000 other contestants to claim top prize
Friday, December 28, 2012
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Recruiting | Bailey Tanner lives with—and learns from—a legend
There’s a spot in Southern California, just south of the San
Clemente pier, and just up the shore from Richard Nixon’s former Western White
House.
Recruiting | Washington recruit Carly DeHoog trades the pitcher’s mound for the volleyball court
6’4 hitter from
Ontario, California is rated one of the nation’s top recruits
Carly DeHoog
figures she got into the game a little late. No one recruited her until halfway
through her sophomore year at Southern California’s Ontario Christian High
School.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
NCAA | What we learned from the 2012 Final Four
We’re back from 12 days in the Midwest, soaking up Sweet 16/Elite 8 volleyball in Omaha, the Final Four in Louisville, with a few days in Chicago in between.
Here’s what we learned:
Labels:
Alaina Bergsma,
Ariana Williams,
Elite 8,
Final Four,
Katherine Fisher,
Lauren Plum,
Liz Brenner,
Michigan,
NCAA,
Nebraska,
Oregon,
Sweet 16,
Texas,
tournament,
volleyball
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
NCAA | Washington ninth in season’s final coaches’ poll
Washington (25-7)
gets the most respect of teams that missed the Elite 8
Sunday, December 9, 2012
NCAA | Bracket busters: Stanford, USC, Nebraska lose
Final Four:
Penn State vs. Oregon
Michigan vs. Texas
Penn State vs. Oregon
Michigan vs. Texas
Saturday, December 8, 2012
NCAA | What we learned from Washington’s Sweet 16 loss to Nebraska
Nebraska 3,
Washington 0 (25-14, 25-21, 25-23)
OMAHA—There was a point, more than halfway through the
second set, when the Washington
Huskies came alive.
Friday, December 7, 2012
NCAA | Nebraskans love their volleyball
Washington vs.
Nebraska @ Omaha | December 7 |4PM (Pacific) | ESPN3
OMAHA—The billboard was our first clue.
It was our inaugural visit to Lincoln, Nebraska, part of a cross-country
summertime journey. Looming next to the freeway was a huge outdoor ad: an image
of a hard-hit volleyball, splintering a gym floor.
The message: Get your Nebraska
Volleyball season tickets before they’re all gone.
Here in Nebraska, volleyball long ago arrived. It ain’t
football, but it’s at least as big-time as any other collegiate sport here. Our
hotel bellman knew the heights and blocking stats of the Huskers’ front row.
We’ve covered NCAA
volleyball tournament matches across the country, and one thing is constant:
Nebraska fans turn out in droves. Folks book their Sweet 16/Elite 8/Final 4 tour packages months in advance, even with
no assurance the Huskers will still be in contention.
In 2010, there were busloads of Nebraska backers at the
Kansas City Final Four, even though their team wasn’t there. The same was true
last season in San Antonio, where the Riverwalk was a sea of red windbreakers
and ballcaps, each sporting a bold “N”.
We saw that same red wave at championships in Tampa and Sacramento,
and should expect to see them again next December at Seattle Center when the
Final Four comes to Key Arena.
So, who are these fans? Mostly, they come in pairs—husbands and
wives—most born before JFK was President.
“Many of us are in agriculture,” one woman told us. “In
December, the fields are frozen. It’s a good time to travel. And many of us
consider volleyball our second-favorite sport.”
“When the football team isn’t so hot,” her husband said, “volleyball
is number one.”
In 2006, Washington
reached its third consecutive Final Four, hosted that year by Omaha. Two other
Pac-12 schools—Stanford and UCLA—also qualified, but it was
Nebraska that won its first title since 2000. As you might guess, it seemed
every seat was filled with someone wearing red (and not Stanford’s cardinal
red.)
But if there were any Nebraska students in the 2006 crowd,
we had to strain to see them. Mostly, they were middle-aged (or older), and
enthusiastic without being raucous. In truth, they weren’t even loud.
Supportive? Yes. Respectful? Absolutely. Intimidating? Not really.
And when the Huskers won the 2006 title, a Seattle
contingent gamely headed for Omaha’s bars and restaurants, expecting a
post-championship celebration. But to our collective surprise, all that red had
simply vanished, leaving Husky purple, Bruin blue and Stanford cardinal at the
barstools and on the dance floors.
“Oh,” a lone Nebraska couple explained, “folks gotta get
home. Many got a long drive. And there’s church in the morning.”
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
NCAA | Does Nebraska have home court advantage?
Washington vs.
Nebraska @ Omaha | December 7 | 4PM | ESPN3
[12.06.12: CLARIFICATION: Nebraska's Bob Devany Center is being renovated to accommodate the volleyball program. The NU Coliseum will no longer be used for home matches.]
The Nebraska Cornhuskers
couldn’t play in their own gym this weekend if they wanted to.
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
NCAA | Washington, Nebraska coaches almost came to blows last time they met
A 2010 confrontation
between Washington’s Jim McLaughlin and Nebraska’s John Cook set the sports
world buzzing. On the eve of a rematch, McLaughlin expresses regret.
by Jack Hamann, Volleyblog
Seattle
Special to the Seattle
Times
Assistant coaches step between Nebraska's John Cook and Washington's Jim McLaughlin on December 10, 2010 in Seattle -Omaha World-Herald photo by Matt Miller |
They should, you would think, be two mellow dudes.
Nebraska coach John Cook grew up playing volleyball on
San Diego beaches. Up the coast in Santa Monica, future Washington coach Jim
McLaughlin was rippin’ waves and setting quicks.
Both married athletes. As acclaimed coaches, both won
multiple championships. Neither has ever been terribly comfortable in the
spotlight.
But on December 10, 2010, the two former beach boys kicked
sand in the face of the volleyball world by doing something totally gnarly.
They nearly came to blows.
Read the rest of the story in the December 5, 2012 Sports section of The Seattle Times, in print or online. Feel free to comment on both the Seattle Times site and/or on Volleyblog Seattle.
NCAA | Is Omaha the toughest regional?
Of the 16 teams still in the hunt, 12 earned seeds from the
NCAA Tournament Committee. The only region where all four seeded teams survived
was Omaha:
WEST LAFAYETTE REGIONAL
|
AUSTIN REGIONAL
|
|||
(1) Penn St vs. (16) Kentucky
|
(3)
Texas vs. (14) Florida
|
|||
Purdue vs. (8) Minnesota
|
Wichita
St vs. (6) Southern Cal
|
|||
OMAHA REGIONAL
|
BERKELEY REGIONAL
|
|||
(5) Oregon vs. (12) BYU
|
Michigan
St vs. Michigan
|
|||
(13) Washington vs. (4) Nebraska
|
(15)
Iowa St vs. (2) Stanford
|
|||
Sunday, December 2, 2012
NCAA | What we learned from Washington’s win over Hawai’i
#5 Washington 3, #8 Hawai’i
2 (25-20, 20-25, 25-19, 27-25, 15-11)
- next: #5 Washington @ #10 Nebraska | December 7 | 4PM (Pacific) | ESPN3
On the court, she’s her team’s shortest player.
Junior Jenna
Orlandini may also be Washington’s
most talkative player, even if fans could be forgiven for not hearing her above
the din of an often frenetic Alaska Airlines crowd.
NCAA | Dave Shoji: the NCAA “disrespected” Hawai’i’s athletes
For most of the week, Hawai’i
coach Dave Shoji stewed in silence.
NCAA | Sweet Sixteen: Teams set for next week’s Regionals
Four seeded teams go down; Big Ten is dominant
And then there was one.
Labels:
Big Ten,
Cassie Strickland,
Florida State,
Hawaii,
Kansas,
Louisville,
NCAA,
Nebraska,
Pac-12,
Sweet 16,
tournament,
UCLA,
volleyball,
Washington
Saturday, December 1, 2012
NCAA | Huskies survive Hawaii, advance to volleyball round of 16 (Terry Wood)
#5 Washington 3, #8 Hawai’i
2 (20-25, 25-20, 19-25, 27-25, 15-11)
From Terry Wood’s
print/online report for the Seattle Times …
NCAA | Figuring out Hawai’i vs. Washington
Washington's Krista Vansant (16) and Katy Beals (7) -Volleyblog Seattle photo by Leslie Hamann |
- #8 Hawai’i 3, Santa Clara 0 (25-20, 25-13, 25-19)
- #5 Washington 3, Central Arkansas 0 (25-13, 25-17, 25-18)
- next: #8 Hawai’i @ #5 Washington | December 1 | 7PM
Mita Uiato had
114 decisions.
The Hawai’i setter,
facing Santa Clara in the NCAA Tournament first round, put up 114
sets. 40 times, she targeted outside hitter Emily Hartong. 43 times, it was outside hitter Jane Croson.
Hartong responded with 17 kills on just 2 errors (.375), and
Croson with 22 kills on 4errors (.419), in a 3-0 sweep of the Broncos.
That means 73% of Uiato’s offense went through just two
players on the left side of the Rainbow Wahine offense.
NCAA | Central Arkansas head coach David McFatrich: a class act
Your Volleyblog
Seattle correspondents have been attending NCAA post-match press conferences for ten years, including eight Final Fours.
NCAA | Tournament Day 2: Louisville loses, Pac-12/Big Ten roll
Arizona State loses;
disastrous day for West Coast Conference
The Big Ten is
smilin’. The West Coast Conference,
not so much.
The Big Ten sent seven teams to the tournament, and all of
them are still dancing. Four are still alive in the West Lafayette Regional,
where we’d consider three of the four (Penn
St, Minnesota and Ohio St) favorites to advance to the Sweet 16, where Nebraska and Michigan
have already landed.
NCAA | Huskies advance to face Hawai’i (Terry Wood)
next: #8 Hawai’i @
#5 Washington | December 1 | 7PM
by Terry Wood, Special to the Seattle Times
The Washington
volleyball team knocked off Central
Arkansas, a newcomer to NCAA
tournament play, 3-0 Friday night in a first-round match before 3,588 at
Alaska Airlines Arena.
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