Sailors sweep to crown
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Richard Dunn
Even after claiming the CIF Southern Section Division II-AA girls
volleyball championship Saturday afternoon, Newport Harbor High was
aiming higher following a clean sweep over designated visitor
Westlake, 15-7, 15-2, 15-11, in a 62-minute title match at Cypress
College.
“Hopefully, we can go after a state (Division II) championship
now,” said Newport Harbor Coach Dan Glenn, who lobbied for the top
seed in the CIF State Championships, which start Tuesday at home for
the Sailors (25-6) against an opponent to be determined today.
Newport Harbor, expected to battle CIF Division II-A champion
Mater Dei for the state tournament’s No. 1 seed, captured its seventh
CIF Southern Section championship and fourth in the past six years.
The school won three in a row from 1997 through ’99 in Division I-AA
in the April Ross Era. Last year, the Sailors were swept in the CIF
Division II-AA title match against Mira Costa, which moved up to
Division I-A this year.
“It was important to win this, because we didn’t want to repeat
last year,” said Pepperdine-bound senior Kristin McClune, Newport
Harbor’s 6-foot-3 middle blocker and an All-American candidate by
several publications, including Student Sports Magazine.
With no Mira Costa in their way this year, the Sailors swept
through the CIF Playoffs without dropping a game, crowned by their
ambush against Westlake’s Warriors (22-4) in the division title
match.
“Every season’s different, but we try to play the most competitive
schedule we can,” Glenn said. “We have no banners in the gym, and the
kids will never get a (championship) ring from me, but it’s all about
getting better and improving as players ... we live in such a ring
society and such a trophy society, but I don’t think that’s what it’s
about. The pros talk about getting rings, but I don’t think high
school sports should be like that.”
Westlake, which didn’t score two or more points in a row at any
point in the first game, had no answer for McClune or junior outside
hitters Lauren Miller and Alyson Jennings. Miller led Newport Harbor
with 10 kills, while McClune and Jennings added nine each in a
balanced attack. The Sailors also served a dozen aces, including
three by Miller and two by Jennings.
Newport Harbor delayed its celebration on the floor. At match
point, Miller needed a tip ruling on her 10th kill before the Tars
could finish off the Warriors, the second seed and Marmonte League
champion.
Top-seeded Newport Harbor, the Sea View League champion, opened
with an 8-2 on the strength of its serving as Miller and Jennings
provided aces.
After a Jennings kill on a Miller set gave Newport Harbor a
sideout, the Tars rolled off five straight points on a Westlake
unforced error, two hitting errors in a row, a kill by Miller from
the back row and an ace by Miller.
Junior opposite Emily Turner’s kill gave the Sailors a sideout
with an 8-4 lead, then back-to-back aces by Turner put Newport Harbor
in the driver’s seat at 10-4.
Newport Harbor completely dominated the second game, ripping off
seven aces and returning everything the Warriors hit over the net.
The Tars amassed a 14-1 lead, before Westlake could score again.
Alexis Kerns capped the second game with an ace. McClune (two),
Miller (two), Turner and Christina Fulce also served second-game
aces.
“In the third game, they made a few errors,” Westlake Coach Doug
Magorien said of the Tars. “But in the first two games, they were
picking everything up ... it’s not that our girls weren’t trying,
it’s just that our physical capabilities aren’t the same.”
Newport Harbor built a 7-0 third-game lead as McClune and Turner
(three kills and an ace) sparked the winners early on. Elizabeth
Clayton, Kiley Hall and setter Kellie King were instrumental in the
third game. McClune had five kills and her only solo block in the
third game, while Shelley Langford and Stephanie Trinen also
contributed to the win.
“I’m not surprised,” Miller said. “We knew we had to come out
strong ... we couldn’t let down or they’d catch us off guard. I
wasn’t looking at the scoreboard. I was just playing my hardest.”
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