Rough seas in store for UCI
The UC Irvine men’s water polo team will be against great odds
next week when the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation playoffs begin.
Factor in UCI’s chances of advancing to the four-team NCAA Tournament
and the Anteaters are the ultimate longshot, the David up against an
incredible Goliath.
UCI will have one more game to prepare for the MPSF Tournament, as
it will take on UC Santa Barbara Saturday at 1 p.m., which will be
the Anteaters’ fifth consecutive road game.
To qualify for the NCAA Tournament, the Anteaters will have to
sweep the tournament. UCI has not reached the NCAAs since 2000, when
the Anteaters won the MPSF title but finished fourth in the NCAA
Tournament.
UCI, led by senior two-meter man Jeff Powers and sophomore Dreason
Barry, is the sixth seed for the MPSF Championship Tournament at the
Los Alamitos Joint Forces Training Base Nov. 29-Dec. 1. The Anteaters will face No. 3 seed California at 2:30 p.m. Nov. 29. They lost to
Cal, 11-7, last week. If UCI wins, it will most likely take on
Stanford, which defeated the Anteaters, 10-9, last week. The loss to
Stanford was the fourth of the season to the Cardinal for the
Anteaters.
“The champ is going to be who is hot at the right time,” UCI Coach
Ted Newland said of the MPSF Tournament. “We can finish second in the
tourney and still not get in the NCAAs. Anybody can beat anybody in
this tournament any day. But we’ll need some luck against Cal.”
Most coaches in the MPSF would agree with Newland, who also said
the MPSF is the most tightly contested its ever been. The team that
wins the MPSF always goes on to win the NCAA Tournament, just like
Stanford did last year and UCLA the year before.
“We could get hot, you never know,” Newland said. “Stanford has
the best chance to go. They’ve only lost two games all year. Their
record is the best. If they don’t win it all they’ll still probably
get picked as the at-large team. If you’re in the MPSF and you’re not
Stanford you have to win out to go on to the NCAAs. It’s going to be
fun next week.”
* UCLA, which features Newport Harbor High product Peter Belden
and former Corona del Mar standout Michael March, opens the
tournament facing rival USC, which includes Newport Harbor product
Robert Weiner. The Bruins face the Trojans at 1 p.m. Nov. 29.
Stanford, coached by former UCI All-American and former CdM head
man John Vargas, will take on University of the Pacific at 5 p.m. The
winner will take on the winner of the UCI-Cal matchup. UCI features
defensive stud Garrett Gentry, a former CdM standout.
UC Santa Barbara, which has freshman Sherwin Kim, a CdM product,
starting at goalie, will kick off the tournament, meeting Long Beach
State at 10:30 a.m.
* This could be a disappointing weekend for Chanda McLeod, or it
could be one of the greatest for the senior leader of the UCI women’s
volleyball team. Last week, McLeod injured her back while she was
warming up to play against Long Beach State. She called it the most
painful injury of her life. Of course, she said she has been blessed
because she has never had to deal with a serious injury throughout
her playing days.
McLeod, who will be honored along with teammate Rebecca Larsen on
senior night before Saturday’s match against Utah State, practiced
only one day this week, with the hopes of playing Friday and/or
today.
“It’s really hard to have to sit out and watch my teammates
practice,” said McLeod, who is third in the UCI season records for
service aces with 44 this season. “It’s really hard not being able to
help them. I’m not used to sitting out. I haven’t been injured, I’ve
been lucky. It’s been hard emotionally and physically.”
* UCI sophomore Kelly Wing became UCI’s all-time season kill
leader last weekend. The outside hitter’s fourth kill in Crawford
Hall against Long Beach State was the record-breaker, as she passed
current AVP pro Ali Wood’s 1989 record of 491 kills. Wing has amassed
517 kills this season and a career total of 818, which puts her
eighth in the career records.
* UCI women’s water polo coach Julie Swail won the 2002
International Triathlon Union Triathlon World Championship Nov. 13 in
Cancun, Mexico. Swail not only won her age group, but also defeated
every other women’s amateur competitor. She completed the 1.5k swim,
40k bike, and 10k run in 2 hours, 8 minutes, 45 seconds.
“I loved every minute of the event,” Swail said. “From getting to
meet all of the other athletes from around the world, to the bond
with the other American athletes, to the beautiful weather and
location, to the grueling competition.”
The UCI women’s water polo team opens its season Feb. 2, playing
at the University of Redlands Invitational.
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