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.”