‘Eaters aiming for top
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Barry Faulkner
In a season as unexpected as it was unprecedented, a pair of dog
piles are among the most vivid memories of 2003 for UC Irvine men’s
volleyball coach John Speraw.
The first dog pile occurred after UCI’s win over UCLA, in an
early-season tournament contest that helped propel the Anteaters to a
10-0 start and the No. 1 national ranking, both program firsts.
The second, executed by Cal State Northridge players after
upsetting UCI in an early Mountain Pacific Sports Federation match,
came after the No. 1 ranking and helped signal the sudden cachet a
victory over UCI could create.
“The first [dog pile] made me furious, because I don’t believe
that’s how you should act when you win a match in January,” Speraw
recalled. “The second one made me realize how much we had gone from
one extreme to the other.”
It also helped Speraw illustrate to his players that the Anteater
had suddenly become a predator to be feared on the sport’s national
landscape.
“Our guys know, now, we’re never going to walk into a volleyball
match again where people are going to take us lightly,” Speraw, a
former UCLA assistant entering his second season at the UCI helm,
said.
Indeed, last year’s 20-11 record and season-ending No. 5 national
ranking pumped up the reputation of a program previously stuck in the
competitive foothills of the highly competitive MPSF. It also created
lofty expectations for a squad returning five of its top seven
players, including senior outside hitter Jimmy Pelzel, who became the
program’s initial first-team All-American last spring.
“Expectations are higher, yeah, but that’s OK,” said Speraw, who
never discusses the prospect of a national championship with his
players, but admits it may, for the first time, be swirling beyond
their subconscious thoughts.
“As I look at the overall roster, I think we have a lot more
talent in the gym this year,” Speraw said. “I think our returners
understand we want to achieve more than last year’s team. But I’ve
always been a believer that, as a coach, you have to establish fair
expectations. To open the year 10-0 like we did last year would be
unfair expectations, but we want to make the playoffs and go farther
than we did last year (the MPSF tournament semifinals).”
Pelzel, whose 593 kills in 2003 were a school single-season
record, is joined by third-team All-MPSF libero Greg Ford, now a
senior, as well as returning standouts Nic Vislay, Spencer Bemus and
BJ Fell, to provide an experienced, talented nucleus.
But replacing setter David Kniffin, whom Speraw called a catalyst
for last year’s success, as well as outside hitter Monte Tucker, may
define how much this year’s group can improve.
True freshmen Brett Reid (Edison High) and Brian Thornton (San
Clemente High), as well as sophomore Dillon Fitch, are competing to
become Kniffin’s successor.
“Any time you have a true freshman at quarterback, it’s going to
take time for them to develop,” said Speraw, who likes Reid’s
blocking presence at the net, but openly admires Thornton’s
competitive nature.
Speraw also believes Fitch, having spent a year in the program,
could factor into the race, which he rates as wide open.
“It’s anybody’s job,” Speraw said.
The 6-6 Pelzel is everyone’s All-American and will clearly be the
‘Eaters’ go-to hitter.
“He’s a known quantity, who was first-team All-American and spent
the summer with the national team,” Speraw said of Pelzel, who led
UCI with 24 kills in a five-game season-opening triumph Wednesday
over NAIA power Cal Baptist. “He can put the ball away when we need
it and he’s one of the best end blockers in the country.”
Vislay, a 6-4 sophomore whose .411 hitting percentage last season
was a school record, will be joined in the middle by 6-7 senior Kyle
Weichert, who has recovered well from surgery on an injured ankle
that slowed him last season, Speraw said.
Ford’s digging ability will, once again, be counted upon, while
Fell, a 6-4 senior, is the best passer among the team’s outside
hitters, Speraw said.
Bemus, a 6-5 senior, should contribute heavily at outside hitter,
while Speraw believes 6-1 sophomore libero Paul Spittle and 6-5
freshman outside hitter Jayson Jablonsky will also chip in.
Speraw expects an especially challenging campaign in the MPSF,
where he believes several schools have improved from last season.
The Anteaters get an early-season measuring stick in the UC Santa
Barbara tournament, which begins today and continues through
Saturday. They open MPSF play Jan. 16 at the University of the
Pacific.
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