Newport Harbor battle tested
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Bryce Alderton
Newport Harbor High boys volleyball coach Dan Glenn was in eager,
even anxious spirits, when discussing the road that lies ahead for
his team that has been snake-bitten with injuries to key players the
last two years.
“We have a good shot against a lot of good opponents. I love our
schedule,” said Glenn, entering his 18th year at the Sailors’ helm.
Newport (3-3 through Sunday) will battle perennial powers
Huntington Beach and Mira Costa in nonleague matches before battling
Woodbridge twice in Sea View League play. The Sailors and Warriors
shared the league championship last year.
Newport, which advanced to the second round of the CIF Southern
Section Division I playoffs, will try to navigate without one of its
main weapons -- 6-foot-8 senior middle blocker Jamie Diefenbach. The
first-team all-league honoree a year ago will miss the entire season
after tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee in a
basketball slam dunk contest during the basketball season at a
December tournament.
Diefenbach, a captain, is coaching Newport’s frosh-soph team along
with senior Emily Turner, a Newport-Mesa Dream Team selection last
fall. Diefenbach missed half the season last year after recovering
from surgery to repair a torn ACL in his right knee.
The loss of Diefenbach is somewhat soothed by the arrival of 6-6
junior opposite Brett Perrine, who missed all of last season after
tearing an ACL while playing in a basketball game in January 2003.
“He blocks well and plays with a flow ,” Glenn said of Perrine.
“It’s one of those things ... his two brothers [Greg and Eric
Perrine] have played and so [Brett] has been around volleyball.
“He is one of our go-to guys, but he will not be able to carry the
load. Our strength is our balance.”
Returning senior captains Adam Schlesinger, a 6-5 setter who has
signed with Long Beach State, along with outside hitter Morgan
Govaars and middle blocker Jon Langford, give Newport added strength
up front.
Newport’s other eight players will all make their varsity debuts
this season.
Senior outside hitters Chase Kelly and Taylor Carver, who both
played on Newport’s boys soccer team that reached the CIF Southern
Section Division II quarterfinals last month, give Glenn added
athleticism.
“[Kelly] didn’t play volleyball last year. He played tennis,”
Glenn said. “His family members are a bunch of winners. I like his
attitude. He is going to get better and better.”
Seniors Gavin Galey and Matt Cheffer, along with junior Brad
Schneider and sophomore Brett Auer, who played on Newport’s water
polo team in the fall, give added hitting options. Junior James Hapke
and sophomore Ted Slater are other options at middle blocker.
While there might be a relative lack of varsity volleyball
experience, this year’s Sailors have gained lessons from other
sports.
“The soccer team had a great run and the basketball kids [Perrine
and Diefenbach] have already been to the CIF playoffs,” Glenn said.
“I don’t care what sport the experience is in, if you compete at a
high level and work on volleyball skills ... it makes it fun coaching
such good athletes.”
“I have a great coach [Bryan Cottriel] at the [junior varsity]
level,” Glenn said. “They are used to working hard down there.”
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