Thursday, January 12, 2017

Emmy Allen joins LSU

http://www.lsusports.net/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=5200&ATCLID=211405658

Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Sweat and Ross team up for FIVB opener in Fort Lauderdale

http://www.naplesnews.com/story/sports/college/fgcu/2017/01/09/beach-volleyball-brooke-sweat-open-2017-summer-ross-fort-lauderdale/96372614/

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Kessy fired up

http://www.fivb.org/en/BeachVolleyball/viewPressRelease.asp?No=58797&Language=en

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Olympic Silver-Medalist Mike Dodd Joins FIU Beach Volleyball

Mike Dodd
Women's Beach Volleyball |  |

Olympic Silver-Medalist Mike Dodd Joins FIU Beach Volleyball

MIAMI (Feb. 17, 2016) – FIU beach volleyball announced the addition of Olympic Silver-Medalist Mike Dodd to the coaching staff. Dodd brings a wealth of experience, having coached on the men's and women's professional levels as well as in the Olympics. 

 
"We are very excited to have someone of that caliber," shared Head Coach Rita Buck-Crockett. "I mean it doesn't get any better than that. To have Mike on our staff is great. It is going to give us that extra edge we need by having three very talented coaches on our team."
 
Dodd has won 75 titles in his 18-year career, including five Manhattan Beach Open titles. He won the silver medal at the inaugural beach volleyball tournament at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta.
 
Since then, Dodd has worked as a beach analyst for the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games and was an indoor analyst for NBC in 2004. In 2008, Dodd coached Jake Gibb and Sean Rosenthal at the Beijing Olympics.
 
In 2000, Dodd was inducted into the California Beach Volleyball Association Hall of Fame. He has also won the AVP Best Defensive Player (four times), Best Spiker, Most Inspirational (three times), and Sportsman of the Year (twice).

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Fans are encouraged to follow the Panthers on Twitter (@FIUVolleyball) and become a fan on Facebook (Facebook.com/FIUVolleyball) for all the latest FIU volleyball news. Follow all of FIU's 18 athletic teams on Google+ (FIU Athletics), Twitter (@FIUAthletics), Facebook (Facebook.com/FIUSports), YouTube (FIUPanthers), and Instagram (FIUathletics).
 
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About FIU Athletics: FIU Athletics is home to more than 400 student-athletes in 18 different sports. Athletic events are played in seven different venues on FIU's campuses (Modesto A. Maidique and Biscayne Bay), including FIU Arena and Ocean Bank Field at FIU Stadium.
 
About FIU: Florida International University is recognized as a Carnegie engaged university. It is a public research university with colleges and schools that offers more than 180 bachelor's, master's and doctoral programs in fields such as engineering, international relations, architecture, law and medicine. As one of South Florida's anchor institutions, FIU contributes $9.8 billion each year to the local economy. FIU is Worlds Ahead in finding solutions to the most challenging problems of our time. FIU emphasizes research as a major component of its mission. FIU has awarded over 200,000 degrees and enrolls more than 54,000 students in two campuses and three centers including FIU Downtown on Brickell, FIU@I-75, and the Miami Beach Urban Studios. FIU also supports artistic and cultural engagement through its three museums: the Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum, the Wolfsonian-FIU, and the Jewish Museum of Florida-FIU. FIU is a member of Conference USA and has over 400 student-athletes participating in 18 sports. For more information about FIU, visit http://www.fiu.edu/.
 

At 80, this beach volleyball champ is a dynamo on the sand


Most people in their 70s and beyond turn to golf or swimming for recreation. Not Lois Austin.
Even at 80, Austin still can acquit herself ably in a sport she learned 60 years ago, beach volleyball.
She plays the game three times a week, two to three games each of the play days, and she's the oldest in the group, competing with 11 people — six on each team — who are 20 to 30 years younger.
Austin and her husband of 36 years, Ed, ran the California Beach Volleyball Assn. tournaments in Corona del Mar for about 15 years. They usually play against each other during matches.
She also plays on some indoor teams through her participation in the Utah-based Huntsman World Series Games, tournaments that attract athletes 50 and older. This year, her registered team won the gold in the 73-and-up category.
The most important part of playing volleyball isn't the score, says Austin, who placed first in her last tournament. It's meeting people.
"I play because of my friends," she said. "Volleyball is everything for me. It cements relationships with people. You have a bond."
On a recent Thursday morning at Corona del Mar State Beach, Austin planted her feet in the sand, bent her knees and crouched slightly, swinging both arms back in preparation for a jump.
"I've got it!" she shouted to her teammates.
Smack! She snapped the ball across the net and watched the opposing team scurry and miss.
"That was a great set," she said, high-fiving players.
After rallying back and forth, Austin barely looked tired. She displayed a serene intensity.
"She's a freak of nature — truly amazing," said teammate Susie Crone, 54, who was on the volleyball team at Corona del Mar High School and played in the CIF finals all four years. "She's an inspiration to all of us, as an athlete and beyond."
Austin, who grew up in Corona del Mar, played basketball, softball, field hockey and volleyball at Orange High, graduating in 1953. At the time, there were few luxuries — no playoffs, for instance — in girls' sports.
She was a lifeguard secretary for 15 years with the city of Newport Beach. Before she retired in 1996, Austin worked part-time for the city's utilities department.
She met her husband, Ed, in the 1960s, when he was one of the top beach players and she was playing there on the weekends.
Ed earned his way to an AAA ranking, meaning he had intensive training for national tournament competition at the collegiate and semi-professional levels and had obtained a regional or a national ranking.
"He was 30, I was 42 and we decided to play in a tournament together," Austin said. "He'd lower himself to play with me."
"She's a phenomenon," Ed said.
The Austins, who live in Aliso Viejo, have one daughter and one grandson, who is a soccer player at San Francisco State University.
Austin said she has managed to keep doing the thing she has loved her whole life, despite having three knee surgeries, through thoughtful living.
"I watch what I eat, lift weights two times a week and if I get upset, go to my Bible," she said.
Austin said she plays beach volleyball because the sand provides a softer landing and is kinder to her knees. But one day a week, she still plays an indoor game of volleyball, and has been doing so for six years.
The casually formed beach volleyball group that she has played with for two years has not missed a Thursday but did have to cancel a Saturday game because of a washout, Austin said.
"These guys here don't look at my age," Austin said. "They look at what I can do."
After Austin helped her team win 15-12, she walked with her teammates over to a set of beach chairs and took a break before the next two games they'd all play together.
"Look at this," she said as she looked out at the ocean. "Let's sit and talk for a while. It's a little bit of heaven right here."
Copyright © 2016, Daily Pilot

Gold medalist inspires freshmen - Dain Blanton speaks to freshmen


Credit: Andreas Fuhrmann/Record Searchlight
Dain Blanton, gold medal beach volleyball player, talks to freshmen Friday at Enterprise High School as part of their career choice curriculum.
Posted: Yesterday 6:00 p.m.
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Credit: Andreas Fuhrmann/Record Searchlight
Dain Blanton, Olympic gold medal beach volleyball player, talks to freshmen Friday at Enterprise High School.
Freshmen at Enterprise High School learned lessons about what it takes to be a champion directly from an Olympic gold medalist on Friday.
Dain Blanton, a member of the 2000 U.S. gold medal beach volleyball team, spoke to the school's freshmen through the day as part of the school's careers program.
He provided insight on what it takes to set goals, meet them and develop a winning attitude.
Besides motivational speaking, Blanton also works as the broadcast analyst for the NCAA women's college volleyball for ESPN.