BOYS VOLLEYBALL Dream Team
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Rick Devereux
Turning around a volleyball program from the bottom of the pile to
CIF champions in four years is an accomplishment Estancia High’s Josh
Kornegay can appreciate.
Kornegay, as a freshman in 2001, and the rest of the Eagles
endured a 1-13 season, but he and teammates celebrated a 28-6
campaign with a CIF Southern Section Division III championship this
spring.
“We came from basically nothing to everything,” the 6-foot-4
opposite hitter said. “It’s been a total turnaround. I’ve been
through the good and the bad here and I wouldn’t really expect
anything else from my high school career.”
Senior Kris Hartwell helped Kornegay with the turnaround.
Hartwell, a 6-2 outside hitter, provided an attacking threat that
kept the opponents’ blockers guessing who to cover, which resulted in
more one-on-one situations for all Eagle hitters.
“I’m the luckiest player on the team,” Estancia junior setter
Trevor Holmes said about having Kornegay and Hartwell, the Daily
Pilot All-Newport-Mesa District Dream Team Co-Players of the Year, at
his disposal.
Holmes joins Kornegay and Hartwell as a member of the nine-player
squad. Also on the team are Corona del Mar’s Dominic Rubino, Tom
Welch and Kevin Welch, Newport Harbor’s Morgan Govaars and Adam
Schlesinger, as well as Sage Hill School’s Kevin Joyce.
Kornegay, headed to the University of La Verne to continue his
volleyball career, and Hartwell, who plans to play for Orange Coast
College in the fall, were named Co-Golden West League Players of the
Year after the Eagles won 36 straight league games, including 12
straight matches, to give Estancia its first outright league crown
since 1984.
Hartwell led the Eagles in kills (314) and aces (85) and was
second in digs (188) and third in blocks (31). He is a repeat Dream
Team member and has the jumping ability to attack from any position
on the court.
“He’s a great hitter from anywhere,” Coach Tracey Ingraham said.
“The whole team and the gym erupts when he gets a good kill. He gets
up with hang time and just places it and pounds it.”
Kornegay, a four-year starter, two-year team captain and a repeat
Dream Team selection, was second on Estancia in kills (254) and
assists (46), third in aces (53) and blocks (30.5), and fourth in
digs (133). Yet, it seemed his leadership quality was the major
reason for Estancia’s winning ways.
“He’s my most stable player and you need that in a leader,”
Ingraham said last year. “He knows when to hold his players
accountable and when to leave them alone. He’s a steady player and he
definitely leads by example. He knows the game so well and he’s good
at communicating with the team, the referees and me. The guys on the
team respect him because he leads by example with his attitude on the
court.”
Tom Welch, a 6-foot junior outside hitter, finished with 296
kills, 155 digs, 21 aces and 18 blocks for the Sea Kings. His
leadership helped CdM grab the Pacific Coast League championship
after the program’s second consecutive undefeated league season.
Welch was a first-team All-CIF Division II selection this year, as
well as a first-team all-league honoree.
Kevin, Tom’s 6-1 twin, was a Dream Team selection last year as a
sophomore on both the volleyball and football squads. The outside
hitter is known for his athletic ability. He was voted the PCL Most
Valuable Player by the circuit’s coaches and was a second-team
All-CIF Division II selection.
Kevin Welch led Corona del Mar in kills (319), digs (162) and aces
(38) and was one of the leaders in blocks (29).
Joyce, from Sage Hill, heading to USC as a walk-on for volleyball,
was the major weapon for the Lightning. Joyce, a repeat Dream Team
selection for volleyball who also garnered the same accolade last
winter for his prowess on the basketball court, dominated the CIF
Division V ranks to lead Sage Hill to an 18-2 record and the
program’s first appearance in the playoffs, a semifinal berth no
less.
“Kevin has been our top kills and digs leader for the past four
years,” Sage Hill Coach Merja Connolly-Freund said. “He’s one of the
most natural athletes I’ve ever coached. No one stops him, whether he
hits from the front or the back row. We could give every ball to
Kevin.”
Rubino, a 5-10 setter for the Sea Kings, paced all Newport-Mesa
athletes this year with 928 assists to help Corona del Mar advance to
the semifinals of the CIF Division II playoffs in what was supposed
to be a rebuilding year. Rubino was a third-team All-CIF recipient
for his jump-setting skills and amassed 13 aces, 20 blocks and 119
digs on the year. He will attend the University of Colorado at
Boulder next year.
Govaars, a 6-foot outside hitter for Newport Harbor, was a second
team All-CIF Division I selection and the Sea View League Most
Valuable Player. Govaars, known for his versatility, helped lead the
Sailors (23-8, 10-0 in league) to the league crown and a second-round
berth in the CIF Division I playoffs. The four-year honor roll
recipient will attend the University of Washington in the fall.
Schlesinger, a 6-6 setter, was a first-team all-league honoree and
will play for NCAA runner-up Long Beach State next year.
Holmes, Estancia’s 6-1 setter, has started since his freshman year
and finished with 843 assists, 60 aces and 150 digs. He was selected
to the All-CIF Division III second team and garnered first-team
all-league honors, as well.
Holmes will have a tough road ahead of him next year as he is the
lone starter not graduating for the Eagles. But Ingraham wouldn’t
want it any other way.
“I think if I’m going to return anyone, I’ll take my setter, no
doubt about it,” she said. “I’m going to miss all these other guys,
but with Trevor running the show, you know he’s solid all the way
around.”
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