Victory goes to those who serve
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Barry Faulkner
The Newport Harbor High girls volleyball team wastes little time
getting to the point. The Sailors are, in fact, as dangerous at the
service line as they are swinging away at a hovering set.
A survey of Sailor serves in Saturday’s CIF State Division I quarterfinal
victory over visiting Mater Dei revealed Coach Dan Glenn’s reigning
Southern Section and state champions produced 21 points directly from
what volleyball aficionados refer to as “serving tough.” That’s nearly
46% of the Sailors’ 46 points in a 15-7, 16-14, 15-6 triumph, which
propelled toward the opportunity to defend their state crown Saturday
against Lincoln High of Stockton.
Senior April Ross is the most obvious serving ace. The 6-foot-1,
USC-bound star’s jump-serve technique transforms the often harmless rally
starter into a rocket blast which must be dug, not simply passed.
Ross served a team-high nine points, seven of which were earned by either
a service winner or a resulting overpass (an errant pass back over the
net, which is pounded for an easy kill by a Harbor attacker). She ended
the match by bombing a service winner.
But while Ross is the lone jump server, hard-hit floaters, which often
dive rapidly after clearing the net, or well-placed drives, which found
holes in the Monarchs’ service-receive formation, allowed the Tars to
dominate from a distance.
Sophomore setter Katie King earned five points directly from serves and
served eight points in all.
Seniors Krista Dill and Brenda Waterman, as well as junior Heather
Cullen, served seven points apiece, with Cullen posting the only true ace
(the ball hits the floor without being touched).
Senior starter Lisa Addeo served three points, while senior Andrea Schutz
came off the bench to produce five points from the service line.
Remarkably, Newport missed only five serves and only one of those hit the
net, the most unforgivable serving miscue.
Glenn said hard work -- or, more specifically, 20 minutes of serving
drills during each practice, in which misses result in extra running for
the offender -- is the key to his team’s service success.
“As a coach, there are very few things you can control in volleyball and
serving is one of them,” Glenn said. “It allows us to not only score
points, but to dictate where play starts. Serving to the right spot can
help you lower the number of sets the other team’s best hitters get.”
Glenn pushes his players to be aggressive with their serves, which often
leads to more errors than simply putting the ball in play. But, by
putting constant pressure on the defense, the tactic has paid off in the
long run, especially during the postseason. Serving is obviously a big
reason why the Sailors have been unbeatable in the playoffs since a 1997
state tournament loss.
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Corona del Mar High’s Paul Orris is in his 30th season of coaching high
school boys basketball. But he’s anything but set in his ways.
One of Orris’ new wrinkles this season, his 14th as the Sea Kings’
varsity coach after 16 years guiding the CdM freshmen, is playing senior
Elliott Patterson, a 6-foot-3, 235-pound veteran of the football
trenches, at a guard spot.
“It came to me at 3 a.m., which is often my best time for brainstorming,”
Orris said. “A guard doesn’t have to be small. We want to have (6-3
senior returner) Brooks Morris on a wing, where he can get more shots. If
you’re guarding (Morris), would you rather have a 5-10 guy setting
screens on you or a guy 6-3, 235? (The latter) sure presents an
interesting mental image.”
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Estancia High boys basketball coach Rich Boyce has long been an Orris
admirer. Boyce has regularly scheduled CdM in nonleague action in
previous years, but will now meet CdM twice a year, since the Sea Kings
have been moved to the Pacific Coast League.
Boyce, while breaking down the PCL competition during conversation for
the preseason preview, had this to say about the Sea Kings:
“You could give Paul four rocks and a hedge and he’d make them into a
competitive team.”
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Corona del Mar High boys water polo coach John Vargas commands respect
worthy of a former Olympian who now guides the men’s U.S. national team.
A no-nonsense leader for whom frivolity will never be an adjective,
Vargas somehow managed to avoid the traditional post-victory dip after
the Sea Kings defeated Servite, 8-6, to win the CIF Southern Section
Division II title Nov. 24 at Belmont Plaza.
But, it wasn’t Vargas’ stern poolside demeanor which precluded his
fully-clothed submersion -- an inconvenience which has universally
befallen any coach I’ve ever seen win a CIF crown.
“I think the team was just too involved in celebrating among ourselves,”
CdM co-captain Garrett Gentry said of the oversight.
Perhaps Vargas should step cautiously around the CdM pool in the
off-season, just in case his players decide to finish their business.
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