Harbor seeks to replace, repeat
Bryce Alderton
That imposing shadow cast by a certain middle blocker won’t be cast
on the court for the Newport Harbor High girls volleyball team this
fall, but not to fear, said Dan Glenn.
The coach, who will enter his 18th year at Harbor, still has a
slew of returners from a team what went 28-7, won a CIF Southern
Section Division II-AA championship and reached the Division II
Southern California Regional final, largely on the heels of 6-foot-3
middle blocker Kristin McClune, who will continue her volleyball
career at Pepperdine University. McClune ended an accomplished prep
career with CIF Co-Player of the Year honors for Division II.
“We lost 30 kills a match,” Glenn said of McClune’s departure.
“Last year we would rally with people, get the ball to [McClune] for
a kill and the rally would be over. This year we are better
ball-control wise. All the kids have improved. Overall, we are a
better team.”
The onus during preseason practices and the first matches of the
season will be finding consistency in the middle. Shelly Langford, a
5-11 middle blocker, graduated last spring along with McClune and
teammates Jordan Carmack, Christina Fulce and Whitney George.
Glenn will count on 6-foot sophomore Bryana Carey and 5-8 senior
Elizabeth Clayton, both returners, to supply help in the middle.
Senior Holland Osadche, who stands 5-9, along with Hadley Burnham, a
5-10 junior, may work into the varsity rotation from junior varsity,
Glenn added.
Surrounding the middle will be a formidable, experienced cast.
Four-year varsity starter Alyson Jennings returns for her final
Sailor season as the Harbor’s main hitting threat. The 5-9 Jennings
earned first-team All-CIF Division II accolades a year ago and will
play for the University of Texas next year. Depending on the size of
Newport’s opponent, Glenn may use Jennings as a setter.
“For us to do well against some teams, we have to get bigger on
the right side block,” Glenn said. “Kellie [King] is not always in
the front row to help us match up better. If it doesn’t work out,
Kellie will set the whole time and that has worked out well.” King
returns for her senior season and is a three-year varsity player and
captain.
Three-year varsity player and captain Emily Turner played the back
row during Newport’s second-place finish in the Ann Kang Invitational
in Hawaii in mid-August, despite chronic tendinitis in her knees.
When healthy, she plays outside hitter and earned second-team All-Sea
View League honors last year.
Senior outside hitter Lauren Miller enters her second varsity
season and is a threat when healthy. Like Turner, Miller, a
first-team all-league honoree as a junior, is suffering from
tendinitis in her knees and Glenn is unsure when she will be ready
for competition.
“Emily took awhile off before playing in Hawaii, but Lauren has
done nothing at all this summer,” Glenn said in reference to
competitive volleyball. “I hope she can play in the middle. Our first
match is Sept. 12, but I don’t have her penciled in until the 15th or
16th.
“Emily can play in the back row, the question is whether she can
play in the front row. I’ve dealt with this on the [boys] side with
Jamie [Diefenbach] coming back at the end of the year and Brett
Perrine missing the entire year.”
Diefenbach missed the six weeks of the boys volleyball season last
spring after recovering from a torn anterior cruciate ligament.
Perrine missed the entire volleyball season after suffering the same
injury during a Sailor basketball game last winter.
“I hate to see it happen when it’s a player’s senior year,” Glenn
said.
Alexis Kerns, a 5-9 senior outside hitter, returns for her third
varsity season, providing a strong serve. Kiley Hall, a 5-9 junior
outside hitter, enters her second varsity season. Glenn said she had
a solid tournament in Hawaii.
Senior Hannah Lindquist, a 5-6 outside hitter, played the back row
and started many of Newport’s matches in the Ann Kang Invitational.
Junior outside hitter Stephanie Trinen makes her varsity debut and
Taryn Tarnutzer, a 6-foot junior opposite, adds to the Sailors’
depth.
For the players making their varsity debuts, Glenn said the most
important element to learn is the speed of the game, which should
intensify with the advent of rally scoring this season.
“If they can adjust and be ready [for the increased speed of
games], then we will improve,” Glenn said.
Additional rule changes include let serves counting and players
receiving serves with their hands, which Glenn disputes.
“One of the key things we teach is foot movement,” Glenn said.
“This rule enables players to be lazy.”
No matter the changes to the books, Glenn knows this year’s team
will have to produce points a bit differently than last season.
“We are not as strong in the middle so we will have to serve tough
to manufacture points this year,” Glenn said. “These kids understand
how to be successful and that is to win long rallies and keep the
ball in play.”
Newport will get its chance to test its proficiency against not
only the volleyball powerhouses of Orange County, but those of the
entire state.
The Sailors face Mater Dei and Los Alamitos, the Division I-AA
champ last year, in nonleague action, along with trips to take on St.
Francis High of Mountain View, the defending state champion in
Division I, and Archbishop Mitty from San Jose, a state-title holder
two years ago.
Glenn isn’t shy about assessing the Sailors’ chances of returning
to championship form.
“We won’t match up physically with some teams, but we have
experience in the state playoffs last year and many girls are three-
and two-year varsity players,” he said. “If we are healthy, we can
play with anybody.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.