Tars in for long haul
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Barry Faulkner
The Newport Harbor High boys volleyball season could be a
cliffhanger, though veteran coach Dan Glenn is in no mood for many
more surprises.
Glenn, entering his 17th season, watched 6-foot-8 junior middle
blocker Jamie Diefenbach and 6-4 sophomore Brett Perrine both tear an
ACL competing for the basketball team, adding to lineup holes left by
the graduation of former standouts Greg Perrine, Loyd Wright, Brian
Gaeta and Erik Peterson.
Brett Perrine is out for the season, but Glenn expects Diefenbach
to return in late April, around the middle of the Sea View League
season.
Some pleasant surprises have included the return to the program of
6-9 senior Nedim Pajevic, as well as 6-1 senior Chad Rorden. Both
basketball standouts started for the Sailors as they opened their
season Friday in pool play at the San Diego Tournament of Champions.
Pajevic, an Orange County All-Star in basketball, played his only
full volleyball season as a freshman on the frosh-soph. But his size
and athletic ability should help lessen any volleyball rust that has
developed.
“He can play,” Glenn said. “He could have helped us last year
(when the Tars were top-ranked in Orange County and advanced to the
quarterfinals of the CIF Southern Section Division II Playoffs,
before finishing 26-7).”
The Sailors return to Division I this season and, Glenn believes,
should be better prepared to make an extended postseason run by the
time his inexperienced crew has added varsity seasoning.
“We lost some very good seniors last year, but our starters are
all seniors,” Glenn said.
Joining Pajevic and Rorden, an athletic outside hitter, will be
senior setter Nick Kelly, who takes over for Wright after playing in
the back row last spring.
Paul Toman, a 6-2 middle blocker who contributed last season, is
also in a starting lineup that includes outside hitter and captain
Michael Toole, and 6-3 opposite Nick Glassic.
Glenn also said Michael McDonald, a senior returner who
quarterbacked the football team last fall, will add to what he
believes is a solid corps of passers.
“Our ball control should be pretty good, which should help us get
the ball to Nedim,” Glenn said. “The thing I’m worried about is where
we are going to get our kills.”
Pajevic could help allay any fears about a productive hitter at
the net, and Toman, as well as Toole and Rorden, have shown the
potential to carry their share.
The return of Diefenbach, who emerged as an All-Newport-Mesa
performer as a sophomore, should give the Tars unprecedented height
at the net and potentially allow Glenn to shift either Toman or
Pajevic to the right side.
Glenn also believes depth is a strength, as all 11 players
currently available are expected to contribute.
The additional contributors are senior Ryan Newell, as well as
juniors Adam Schlesinger, Jon Langford and Morgan Govaars.
“Some of these guys are up from the junior varsity, but our JV
teams have done pretty well the last few years and Coach Bryan
Cottriel does a good job of getting them ready to help us (on the
varsity),” Glenn said.
Glenn expects Woodbridge to provide the biggest challenge in the
Sea View League. He is pleased that the Warriors are fourth in the
sequence of five league matches.
“The longer the season goes, the better we’re going to be,” Glenn
said. “Right now, there are a lot of question marks for the Tars.”
Newport is scheduled to conclude its regular season with a May 9
showdown with Back Bay rival Corona del Mar.
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