At courtside for a five-set thriller
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MICHAEL VILLANI
“U.S. men win incredible match” could be the headline, but the story
goes far beyond that.
I really had to do some hand-sitting at court side for this one.
Our men’s national indoor volleyball team never looked better or more
intimidating than in its quarterfinal match against Greece. Peace and
Friendship Stadium was packed to its 17,000-seat capacity. The high
pitched chants of “Hellas, Hellas,” the Greek spelling of the word
Greece, thundered throughout the venue. The mostly-Greek crowd
erupted with every Greek score.
The noise was deafening.
Our guys won the first set -- not handily but looking very strong
and confident nonetheless. The Greeks won the second, though it was
close. Then they took the third, a bit easier. I’m thinking, uh-oh,
the momentum is changing here. You could feel the confidence of the
U.S. fans, interspersed throughout the crowd, waning. Being so close
to the action, I could see the look in the guys’ eyes, still
confident, yet now concerned, being down two to one.
The big, powerful Greeks got the serve to open the fourth set.
They got the point, then another and another, and suddenly at the
first technical time out, Greece led 8-1. It wasn’t looking good!
The Greek’s attempted to thwart a kill, and their big,
6-foot-8-inch middle blocker Theodoros Chatziantoniou came down on
the foot of one of his teammates, tearing ligaments in his ankle. As
he’s writhing in agony, you could feel the determination of his
comrades to end this thing, to put away the Americans. They were
furious in their assault, running the score to 10-5, then 17-9. It
looked pretty hopeless; we were going to be knocked out of the medal
round in swift fashion.
We finally get the serve again at 20-12. Then a most-incredible
thing happened. The Americans, with steely determination, ran off
eight straight scores, bringing it even, 20-20. They slowly and
methodically went to work on the last five points, ending the set in
front, 25-23.
It was one of the most gut-wrenching, exhilarating fourth-set
comebacks in the three weeks I’ve been calling these matches. The
momentum had changed again. The fifth and tie-breaking set was hard
fought with the Americans coming out on top 17-15, and the small but
enthusiastic crowd of Americans went wild.
As you probably already know, the American women lost in a
five-set heartbreaker -- after being down two sets to zero -- to
Brazil the night before.
On another note, I just had Jonathan Fogarty -- the very talented
and cleaver Australian announcer for beach volleyball -- get
autographs from beach legend Sinjin Smith and local Misty May for
Judy Straub Adams’ granddaughter, Alexandra, who lives in Phoenix. As
you also know by now, Misty and partner Kerri Walsh have claimed the
gold. Was Misty really hurt? I’m sure she wasn’t 100%, but it didn’t
matter.
What an exhibition, as she and Kerri plowed through the
competition.
I had the day off today, before the medal rounds, and played golf
at the only golf links in Athens, the Glafada Golf Course. It’s an
18-hole, par-72 layout that used to be home to several European
tours. It’s something of a goat path now; the greens are in nowhere
near the condition of the ones at Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club,
but since I was really missing my Saturday morning outing, I made the
best of it.
Besides, I’m playing golf in Greece and getting paid for it, as I
report “From the Games.”
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