CIF champion Eagles flying high
Barry Faulkner
There was, in the end, as much relief as joy for the Estancia High
boys volleyball team, which claimed the program’s first CIF Southern
Section title with a 25-15, 25-20, 20-25, 26-24 victory over Orange
Lutheran in the Division III final Saturday at Cypress College.
The Eagles (28-6) opened the season ranked atop Division III after
reaching the Division III semifinals last spring with virtually the
same lineup.
This season, they steamrolled to the program’s first outright
league crown since 1984, winning every game in 12 Golden West League
matches.
Then, as the top seed, Coach Tracey Ingraham’s Eagles swept their
first four playoff opponents to reach the final.
Saturday’s triumph, however, came with no shortage of drama, as
the unseeded Lancers (16-3) put up an admirable fight, especially
after a shaky opening game.
“We played really well and we battled,” said Orange Lutheran Coach
Mark Laulhere, whose squad was eliminated, 15-10, 15-2, 15-11, by the
Eagles in last year’s second round. “But [the Eagles] were just a
step above us today.”
The Eagles, who sprung a surprise alignment on the Lancers, never
trailed in the opening game. They then rallied from a 15-13 deficit
to win the second game and take firm command.
The Empire League champion Lancers, however, opened a 19-12
third-game lead and held on to hand Estancia its first taste of
adversity since it dropped the third game of a best-of-three
tournament match against Westlake May 1.
The fourth game was tied nine times, including deadlocks at 17,
19, 20, 21 and 24, before the Eagles were allowed to celebrate.
A stuff block by junior setter Trevor Holmes put the Eagles up,
23-21, but 6-foot-6 Orange Lutheran senior Scott Nickerson’s kill
pulled the Lancers within one.
After a replay call on a would-be kill by Estancia senior opposite
Kris Hartwell, Holmes, who finished with 32 assists, found a hole
with a dump (flipping the ball one-handed over the net, rather than
setting up an opponent for a kill attempt) for a 24-22 edge.
But an Estancia jump serve sailed long and the Eagles followed
with a hitting error to allow the Lancers to pull even.
Hartwell pounded a kill to put the Eagles back on top and
sophomore middle blocker Dallas Kopp turned away a Lancer attacker
with a stuff block for match point.
Estancia’s celebration was joyous, but hardly wild, and senior
Josh Kornegay said immediately following the match that relief was
his overriding sensation.
“I’m just happy we got it over with and we finally got [the
championship],” said Kornegay, the team’s lone four-year varsity
performer who had eight kills, two stuff blocks, one service ace and
seven digs.
Kornegay said last year’s easy playoff win over Orange Lutheran
may have created some complacency.
“I think we came in a little cocky and, after the first game, we
got even more cocky,” Kornegay said. “We kind of let our guard down
and started making some dumb mistakes. This is definitely a relief.”
Scott Sankey, a 6-6 senior middle blocker, had a team-high 12
kills and also chipped in two aces and two stuff blocks for the
winners.
Hartwell, like Kornegay a returning All-CIF performer, had 10
kills, two aces and 10 digs, while senior Brad Larsen chipped in six
kills, and a team-high 11 digs.
Laulhere said Ingraham also made a vital contribution.
“They flip-flopped their lineup on us after we thought we really
had them scouted well,” Laulhere said. “Being a great coach, she made
some changes and we really didn’t adjust well that first game.”
Ingraham said she “spun the dial” on her typical starting
rotation, moving everyone ahead three spots on the floor in order to
match Hartwell up with Lancer junior Brandon Bollweg, who had a
team-high 16 kills in Tuesday’s semifinal win.
“We guessed right,” said Ingraham, who saw Bollweg record just
seven kills, tied for second best on his team behind junior Travis
Pinick, who came off the bench to collect 11.
The Eagles also put pressure on the Lancers with relentlessly
aggressive jump serving. Estancia, blasting a jumper on nearly every
serve, had six aces and two service winners, spread between five
players, including sophomore defensive specialist Scott Markley.
Ingraham said the victory was the fruition of four seasons of hard
work for the senior nucleus that, in their first season together on
the varsity in 2002, struggled to a 4-13 record, including an 0-10
mark in the Pacific Coast League.
“To see that core group of seniors come together and work through
that losing season as sophomores and be able to finish it out like
this is remarkable,” Ingraham said.
“We really wanted it this year. We’ve been counting on this day
for the last couple years and, deep down, we believed this was our
year to shine. It was not even an option not to win. [Losing] was not
even a thought.”
Larsen, who was clutching the championship plaque just outside the
gym after most of his teammates had already filtered to their cars,
summed up what the title meant to him.
“We worked so hard for it,” he said. “That instant when you win
and it just all comes together is the greatest feeling in the world.”
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