California golden girls
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The top-seeded women’s beach volleyball duo of former Newport Harbor
High standout Misty May and Kerri Walsh reached the pinnacle of the
Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, Tuesday, defeating Brazil’s Shelda
Bede and Adriana Behar, 21-17, 21-11, to win the gold medal.
The 5-foot-9 May, who spent most of the summer rehabilitating
after an abdominal strain sidelined her for two months, along with
Walsh, continued their powerful run through these Games, finishing
7-0 -- without losing a set in that span -- while earning the United
States’ first gold medal and second overall since women’s beach
volleyball became an Olympic sport in 1996. Earlier Tuesday, fellow
Americans Holly McPeak and Elaine Youngs captured the bronze with a
21-18, 15-21, 15-9 victory over Australia’s Natalie Cook and Nicole
Sanderson.
May, 27, and Walsh, 26, defeated McPeak and Youngs in the
semifinals Monday and showed no signs of slowing against the
second-seeded Brazilians.
In a rematch of the 2003 world championship final, May, a National
Player of the Year when at Long Beach State, and Walsh, an
All-American when she attended Stanford, took control of Brazil from
the start, building off an early 13-7 lead to secure the first game.
The Brazilians tested the California duo early in the second game,
hanging tough at 9-7. But the U.S. controlled the set from that point
on, scoring 14 of the final 16 points to put away the match.
May led the U.S. with 14 kills and 15 digs while Walsh patrolled
the net, tallying five blocks for the reining world champions. Behar
led Brazil with 13 kills while Bede recorded a match-high 19 digs.
May and Walsh’s latest victory improved their record to 108-8 in
the last two years, which included an unprecedented 90-match,
15-tournament winning streak that ended in June.
May teamed with McPeak to take fifth place in the 2000 Games while
Walsh helped the U.S. indoor team to a fourth-place showing.
* In other Olympic news:
Newport Beach resident Peter Wells and UC Irvine product Lanee
Butler-Beashel conclude racing in the men’s and women’s windsurfing
competitions, respectively, today. As of Monday, Butler stood in 17th
place with 10 of 11 races completed while Wells sat in 27th place
with one race remaining.
The U.S. men’s water polo team, which features five former UCI
players, will know its opponent for the consolation round, which
begins Friday. Team USA (2-3) will face either Kazakhstan (0-5) or
Australia (1-3-1), which faced each other late Tuesday night. Team
USA needs two victories to claim seventh place.
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