Sailors sweep into CIF final
Barry Faulkner
Host Mark Keppel High came eye-to-shoulder with the top-seeded
enemy from Newport Harbor Tuesday night and the result was a
dominating 15-2, 15-10, 15-10 victory for the Sailors in a CIF
Southern Section Division II-AA girls volleyball semifinal.
But Coach Dan Glenn’s Sailors (25-6), who will meet No. 2-seeded
Westlake (22-3) for a chance at their seventh Southern Section title,
most likely Saturday at Cypress College, didn’t come away from
Tuesday’s 75-minute sweep without learning something from the
animated Aztecs (19-3).
“That’s what I love about high school volleyball,” Glenn said of
the defensive-minded hosts, whose tallest players, outside hitter
Lani Marsden and middle blocker Jackie Brown, were 5-foot-8. “They
reminded us what volleyball is all about, which is getting the ball
back over the net. It may have been the perfect team for us to play
at this time of the season, because they set such a good example of
how to play defense. You could see how they got to the semifinals,
buy outdigging teams and having more heart.”
Newport Harbor, however, wasn’t about to be outdone by the Almont
League runners-up, whose volleyball program listed a grand total of
one league championship (1981) on the banners decorating the school’s
rustic gymnasium wall.
Utilizing 6-foot-3 senior middle blocker Kristin McClune, who
finished with a match-high 28 kills, the Sailors overwhelmed the
Aztecs in the opening game, then overcame them in the final two.
“When we ran the middle, we were successful,” Glenn said. “They
didn’t have anyone who could stop us.”
The Aztecs often times elected not to oppose Sailor hitters with
blockers, instead assembling their defensive web in the backcourt to
try to dig Harbor’s sizzling spikes. The ploy proved successful much
of the time, though setter Kelly King’s ability to set the back slide
to McClune seemed to create more open areas for balls to find the
floor.
King, a 5-7 junior who towered over a Keppel starting lineup that
averaged just more than 5-3, finished with 34 assists.
Joining McClune on the receiving end of those sets, which included
six assists from Alyson Jennings and five from Jordan Carmack, were
Lauren Miller, Shelly Langford, Emily Turner and Jennings.
Miller, a 5-11 junior outside hitter, had 10 kills, while
Langford, a 5-11 senior middle, added eight. Jennings, a 5-8 junior
outside hitter, chipped in seven kills and Turner, a 5-8 opposite,
added six.
McClune had two stuff blocks and one ace serve, while Turner and
Jennings also had blocks for the winners.
Marsden, a senior, had 16 kills for the hosts, who also received
six kills from 5-5 senior middle blocker Jessica Liang and five from
Brown, a junior. Lisa Yamasaki, a 5-4 junior setter, had 20 assists.
Marsden had the only stuff block for the Aztecs.
The Sailors, who also earned a berth in the CIF State playoffs,
which accepts both finalists from the Southern Section, rolled to a
7-0 lead, before a spirited student section roared over the Aztecs’
first point.
Back-to-back net violations gave Mark Keppel its first two points,
before the Tars scored the next eight to close out an 11-minute
opening game.
Keppel forged leads of 3-0 and 8-5 in the second game, before
consecutive kills by Jennings turned a 9-8 deficit into a 10-9 Harbor
lead.
Keppel Coach Minnie Caluag, who had her team warm up in an
alternate gym, perhaps so as not to be intimidated by the Sailors’
height, kept trying to stall the visitors’ momentum with timeouts.
She called two timeouts in each game, but Newport Harbor kept
pushing for its third sweep in as many playoff matches.
Keppel’s only lead in the third game was at 1-0.
Newport, which lost to Mira Costa in last year’s II-AA title
match, defeated Westlake, 15-3, 15-4, 15-5, in last year’s section
semifinals.
This will be the Sailors’ 11th appearance in a section
championship match. They earned titles in 1999 (Division I-AA), ’98
(I-AA), ’97 (I-AA), ’94 (Division I), ’87 (5-A) and ’79 (4-A).
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