Friday, January 29, 2016

USA Volleyball opens training facility for beach volleyball

USA Volleyball opens training facility for beach volleyball

American beach volleyball players are hoping that their new training center will help them compete with the host Brazilians when the Summer Olympics arrive on the South American sand.
In a warehouse owned by 1963 Indy 500 winner Parnelli Jones, USA Volleyball has set up 4,000 square feet of weights and workout machines exclusively for elite beach volleyball athletes in Torrance, California.
There’s also access to trainers and physical therapists, plus a strength and conditioning coach. Another 11,000 square feet of office space allowed the federation to move its beach operations on-site.
After years of feeling like an afterthought within a national governing body long controlled by indoor volleyball, beach athletes say the new center could help put even more Americans on the podium at the Summer Games and other international events.
“The facility is so rad,” said Kerri Walsh Jennings, a three-time Olympic gold medalist who in the past has campaigned for more support for the sandy side of the sport.
“The weight room is first class, top-rate. Physical therapy staff just fantastic,” she said in a telephone interview this week. “We have all the resources to be a dominant federation. It really is what the sport deserves. It’s nice to see USA Volleyball and the USOC step up.”
Beach volleyball players started working out at the facility since 2014, using limited equipment — some of it donated by the USOC and the University of Southern California. Since then, it has been upgraded with specialized equipment and a full-time athletic trainer, a strength and conditioning coach shared with USA Water Polo and the main offices of USA Volleyball’s beach division.
An open house at the training center was planned for Friday night, when the Olympic banners were to be unveiled.
“I don’t know if I ever expected to see something like this happen when I was playing,” said April Ross, a silver medalist in London in 2012 who is teamed up with Walsh Jennings in an attempt to qualify for the Rio Games. “This is a huge deal for us.”
Lauren Fendrick, a member of the top-rated U.S. team in the Olympic qualification standings, said that teams used to be on their own to find a place to work out and the proper support, like physical therapists, trainers and strength coaches.
“It’s really nice that we can get a lot of it done right there in that one place, focusing on that one goal,” said her teammate, Brooke Sweat. “No one’s in there messing around.”
One thing it doesn’t have: beach volleyball courts. Yet.
“They’re having baby steps,” Ross said.
Beach volleyball traces its roots to California, and the American men and women have won nine of a total 30 Olympic medals since the sport was added to the Summer Games in 1996. (Only Brazil, which will host the 2016 Games, has more, with 11.)
But back home, the U.S. beach players have struggled to find support with an unstable domestic pro tour and a national federation that seemed to make the more traditional court volleyball a priority.
After winning her second straight Olympic gold medal in Beijing, Walsh Jennings was part of an athletes’ movement fighting for more resources from USA Volleyball. Those efforts led to the creation of a beach office within the governing body, and she said the opening of their own training facility is another step forward.
“We’re truly our own individual sport. And now we have people in USAV backing that up,” she said. “I feel like with any new emerging sport you have to prove your worth, and we’ve done that. Whatever happened in the past: Who cares? We’ve all learned and grown. They have the right people in place, and that’s such a big part of it.”

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

USF Announces Beach Volleyball Schedule

2016 beach volleyball
Beach Volleyball |  |

USF Announces Beach Volleyball Schedule

    SAN FRANCISCO – In its first season as a fully-NCAA sanctioned sport and the fourth in program history, the San Francisco beach volleyball squad has loaded the slate with fierce competition from throughout the West Region.

    This summer, the committee voted to make beach volleyball the NCAA's 90th championship, elevating its status from the emerging sports list, where it has been since 2009. The fastest-growing NCAA sport also officially changed its designation from sand volleyball to beach volleyball in the transition.

    With the addition of the NCAA collegiate beach volleyball championship changing the national landscape, this is going to be an exciting year for the program and the sport," said co-head beach volleyball coach Eyal Zimet. "I am very happy to be part of the first 20 teams in the nation that helped the sport emerge so quickly. For us, it's another year of milestones – hosting Stanford at our home courts for the first time, and we're in the second year co-hosting a tournament in Santa Cruz, a continuation of what we hope to be an annual tradition for years to come."

    "I'm excited to start our fourth season outdoors at USF with beach volleyball being named an official NCAA sport," added co-head beach volleyball coach Gilad Doron. "It's a recognition to the tremendous growth of the sport of volleyball as fastest growing sport in the NCAA. The West Coast Conference is one of the first four conferences (Atlantic Sun, PAC-12, Sunbelt) to establish beach volleyball league-wide. I'm glad we can represent USF and the WCC as a premier volleyball conference, both indoor and in beach volleyball."

    The Dons take on four teams who finished the 2015 season ranked in the DiG Magazine Top 20, opening up with a weekend at No. 14 Stanford with matches scheduled against No. 13 Pacific, Saint Mary's, Sacramento State and San Jose State. The two-day affair in the South Bay on March 5-6 will be followed by a full day on the sand at Piper Park, in Larkspur, Calif. The Dons will take on Portland and San Jose State on USF's home courts, and the Pilots and Spartans will face off against each other in the San Francisco Invitational on March 9.

    Away dates at Sacramento State and California on March 12 and 15 round out a stretch of six total matches in seven days. On March 29, USF will host Stanford in the North Bay in a 3 p.m. tilt, the first time USF welcomes its South Bay foe to Piper Park. Then, USF and No. 18 Santa Clara team up again to host on the sands of the Santa Cruz beach boardwalk to open up the month of April. Along with the Dons and Broncos, Cal Poly and Cal State Northridge round out the field.

    The Dons then hit the road for the final week of the regular season, playing a match at No. 20 Bakersfield on April 7, and participating in the USAV Collegiate Challenge on April 9-10 on Hermosa Beach.

    In its first season of WCC-sanctioned status, USF will again travel to the Southland to participate in the WCC Championships on April 22-23 in Santa Monica, Calif. The seven conference squads will compete in a double-elimination bracket to determine the league's first beach volleyball champion.  

    The NCAA contests the inaugural National Collegiate Beach Volleyball Championship May 6-8, at the Gulf Shore Public Beach, hosted by the city of Gulf Shores, Ala., and the Orange Beach Sports Commission. The top eight teams in the nation will compete in a double-elimination bracket to determine the national champion. In past iterations held by the AVCA, there has also been a pairs champion crowned in addition to a team title-winner. In the four years beach volleyball has been contested as an emerging sport, all four team champions have come from the West Coast, and WCC competitor Pepperdine has twice been crowned the team champion (2012, '14), illustrating the strength of the league on the beach.

    "Entering an era where the NCAA is taking over the championship and participating in a team-only format is challenging us to have even more of a competitive team from our No. 1 pair through No. 5," explained Zimet. "We can't afford to have any weaknesses, and we're taking it on for the first time in that format. I am looking forward to having the majority of the team with experience on the beach now. It will be interesting to see how far we can progress our skills with our returners and get our newcomers up to speed as fast as possible this spring."

    2016 Schedule:
    DATEOPPONENTTIME
    Stanford Tournament
    3/5/2016Pacific8:30 a.m.
    3/5/2016Saint Mary's2:30 p.m.
    3/6/2016Sacramento State11:30 a.m.
    3/6/2016San Jose State2:30 p.m.
    University of San Francisco Invitational
    3/9/2016Portland9:30 a.m.
    3/9/2016Portland vs. San Jose State12:30 p.m.
    3/9/2016San Jose State3:30 p.m.
    3/12/2016Sacramento State10 a.m.
    3/12/2016Santa Clara1 p.m.
    3/15/2016California10 a.m.
    3/15/2016Pacific1 p.m.
    3/29/2016Stanford3 p.m.
    Santa Cruz Invitational
    4/2/2016Santa ClaraTBD
    4/2/2016Cal PolyTBD
    4/2/2016CSUNTBD
    4/7/2016Bakersfield5 p.m.
    USAV Collegiate Challenge
    4/9-10/2016Dual Match BracketAll Day
    West Coast Conference Championships
    4/22-23/2016Dual Match BracketAll Day
    NCAA National Championships
    5/6/2016Dual Match BracketAll Day
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    Tuesday, January 26, 2016

    Pac Profile: UCLA beach volleyball's Kamila Tan

    Pac Profile: UCLA beach volleyball's Kamila Tan: Kamila Tan talks about her journey to becoming a Bruin and what it's like to be coached by two Olympians.

    Arizona Sand Volleyball Announces 2016 Schedule

    Courtesy: Arizona Athletics
    Arizona Sand Volleyball Announces 2016 Schedule
    By: Arizona Athletics
    Release: January 25, 2016
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    TUCSON, Ariz. – Head coach Steve Walker and the Arizona sand volleyball program has announced its inaugural 2016 schedule. This will be the first-ever year Arizona Sand Volleyball is recognized as an NCAA Championship sport. The Wildcats will host four events at the Sand Volleyball Courts at Jimenez Field.
    The first chance for fans to see the 2016 Cats will be on Saturday, Feb. 27 for the Red-Blue Exhibition.
    "With this being the first season the sport of beach volleyball will be contested as an NCAA Championship sport, we wanted to give ourselves every opportunity to be selected to the championships by playing a highly competitive schedule vs. many of the best teams in the country", said Head coach Steve Walker. 
    Arizona will officially open the 2016 season by competing against Colorado Mesa on March 3, to then go on and host the Arizona Invitational on March 4-5.
    The Wildcats will have TCU, Cal Poly, Cal and LMU in for the two-day event. UA will open the season against Colorado Mesa on Thursday, March 3 at 4 p.m. In the Arizona Invitational the following day, the Cats will face TCU at 2 p.m., LMU at 11 a.m. and Cal on Saturday at 6 p.m., before closing the tournament.
    UA will then head to the coast to compete against Concordia University in Irvine, Calif. on Friday, March 11 at 11 a.m. The following day Sand Cats will take on UCLA in Los Angeles, Calif. on Saturday, March 12 at 10 a.m.
    Arizona will then host the Wildcat Spring Challenge on March 25-26. The Cats will host New Mexico, Arizona State, CSUN and CSU-Bakersfield in the event. UA will play three times on the weekend, as it will face CSU-Bakersfield at 2 p.m. and New Mexico at 3:30 p.m. on Friday and CSUN on Saturday at noon.
    "We are once again very happy to announce we have multiple home events at BearDown Beach, spread out through the course of the season.  We love playing in front of what we truly believe is the best fan base in the conference, at the best facility in the country and trust me, teams are always motivated to knock us off on our own sand", said Walker.  
    The following weekend, the Wildcats will travel to Long Beach, Calif. for a single-day matchup with reigning AVCA national team champions Long Beach State. 
    Arizona remains on the road as they head to Malibu, Calif. the weekend of April 1-3 to compete against CSU Bakersfield, LMU, and host Pepperdine. They continue on the road to New Orleans, La. to participate in the Tulane Invitational against, Spring Hill College, Georgia State and LSU the weekend of April 8–9.
    Cats will then travel back home to challenge its rivals to the north for a home match on Thursday, April 14 at 3 p.m.
    The Wildcats will close the regular season with another rival match at Arizona State on Wednesday, April 20.
    On April 28 - May 1, UA will participate in the Pac-12 Tournament, with the tournament champion being crowned on the last day of tournament.
    Arizona will then have the opportunity to head to Gulf Shores, Ala. for the second time to compete in the NCAA Tournament on Friday, May 6 – Sunday, May 8.
    For continued coverage of Arizona Wildcat sand volleyball, visit ArizonaWildcats.com. Follow the Cats! Fans can keep up with the latest in Arizona athletics by following us on Twitter (@arizonasandvb), Instagram (arizonasandvolleyball).
    .

    Monday, January 25, 2016

    Texas A&M University-Kingsville head beach volleyball coach Tanya Allen announced her first signing class


    Javelina Volleyball Logo
    Beach Volleyball | | Kelvin Queliz, Director of Sports Information (361-593-2870)

    Allen Announces First Beach Volleyball Class

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    KINGSVILLE, Texas (Beach Volleyball) –
    Texas A&M University-Kingsville head beach volleyball coach Tanya Allen announced her first signing class as sisters Kadi and Marci Shipman and Maelee Sowa inked a national letter of intent to play for the upstart program, set to begin 2016-17.

    Kadi and Marci Shipman played beach volleyball for Georgetown High School under head coach Bobby Jones. Kadi intends to major in pre-med and Marci plans on earning a degree in business and marketing.
     
    Kadi Shipman
    Kadi Shipman


    The daughters of Gary and Laura Shipman, twin sisters Kadi and Marci Shipman have two other siblings; Jordi and Alan.

    A three-sport athlete for Sealy High School, Sowa averaged 3.06 kills and 2.7 digs per set for the volleyball team, tallying 47 aces. The team appeared in the 25-4A volleyball playoffs in 2014-15 and 25-3A postseason in 2012-13. Sowa earned All-District 25-3A academic first team honors as a member of the softball team in 2012, followed by district honors in volleyball from 2013-15. No stranger to college athletics, Sowa's uncle played football at Mars Hill University and her cousin is currently on the Central Methodist University football team.

    Sowa intends to major in biomedical science. The daughter of Clayton and Stephany Sowa, she has a brother Clay.

    "I am extremely excited about the addition of the beach volleyball program," said Allen. "Kadi and Marci are experienced beach players and have trained with some very knowledgeable coaches.  Maelee is very athletic and excels in indoor volleyball.  I think she will transition to beach volleyball with ease.  All three of these players are competitive, talented, and have the kind of character we want for our beach roster."

    Javelina beach volleyball will practice and compete on sand courts that are part of the Phase I construction for expanded intramural and club sport facilities. 
    Marci Shipman
    Marci Shipman


    The program will be coached by the current Javelina volleyball staff and led by head coach and all-time winningest coach in school history, Tanya Allen. The season runs during the spring, and beach volleyball will host its first official NCAA collegiate championship in the spring of 2016, becoming the 90th sport to hold an NCAA Championship.

    For full coverage of Texas A&M-Kingsville volleyball, please follow @JavelinaVB on Twitter and Instagram, like the /JavelinaVB Facebook page and subscribe to the JavelinaAthletics YouTube channel.
     
    Maelee Sowa
    Maelee Sowa
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    Beach volleyball: Life's a beach but you don't earn big bucks

    David McKenzie, having experienced the Olympics as an indoor volleyball player in London, wants to make it a unique double in beach volleyball at Tokyo 2020, with his new partner Ty Tramblie.
    It is a common assumption of beach volleyball players that they are perennially enjoying the sun, the sand and the sea, basking in their well-toned bodies and bronzed skins.
    Yet, according to David McKenzie, a former Olympian with the United States court volleyball team at the 2012 London Games, the life of the beach volleyball player is not all about the glitz and glamour.
    He told The Sunday Times: "One thing with beach volleyball is that it's not the most lucrative sport in the world and there's not a lot of pride and glory.
    "Money can be made, but you have to win prize money to do that, and it's definitely not like golf or tennis, so a lot of people who do professional beach volleyball have some other sources of income."
    NOT A MONEY SPINNER
    Money can be made, but you have to win prize money to do that, and it's definitely not like golf or tennis, so a lot of people who do professional beach volleyball have some other sources of income.
    ''DAVID MCKENZIE, who competed in indoor volleyball at London 2012, on his fledgling beach volleyball academy, which has a Singapore branch.
    In fact, the International Volleyball Federation (FIVB) Beach Volleyball Grand Slam had a prize money of only US$57,000 (S$81,500) last year, to be split between the winning pair.
    It pales in comparison to the US$2 million prize money made by singles winners at tennis' French Open, which is the lowest paying of the four Grand Slam tournaments in a season.
    McKenzie, 36, was in town to participate in an exhibition tournament at the Singapore Sports Hub yesterday, which featured the Singapore national team as well as some professional players from Japan.
    Since the London Olympics, he has focused on his volleyball academy, and opened a branch here in 2014.
    However, he is ready to revive his beach volleyball career, as he sets his sights on the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.
    "My academy is growing quite well and has gained a very good reputation... so I think I'm ready to get back in the game," said McKenzie.
    "My plan is to stabilise my business and use it pursue my passion.
    "I will focus on the academy in the off season and commit fully in the summer when the season starts."
    In order to qualify for the Tokyo Games, he has found a new partner in Ty Tramblie, 35.
    McKenzie said: "I have known Ty since I was in high school and he is a very good player.
    "He hustles for every ball and I think with him, we can reach our maximum potential and make it to the Olympics, which is the ultimate goal."

    Friday, January 22, 2016

    Pilots introduce beach volleyball - Beach volleyball has been added as the newest WCC sport for the University of Portland

    Pilots introduce beach volleyball

    By Sal Aversa |
    Beach volleyball has been added as the newest WCC sport for the University of Portland. Practice began at the beginning of the semester and play will begin during the spring sport season.
    Six WCC teams — Pepperdine, LMU, Pacific, Saint Mary’s, San Francisco and Santa Clara — already have beach volleyball teams. This year will be the start of competitive beach play in the WCC.
    Head coach Brent Crouch and his staff will be coaching both the fall indoor team and the spring beach and indoor teams. Crouch spent the last four years as the head coach of St. Mary’s beach volleyball program. During his time with the Gaels, Crouch coached beach volleyball in the USA Volleyball High Performance Program.
    At UP, Crouch’s roster for beach will be comprised from the same list as the indoor team that played in the fall of 2015 and will use a ladder system to determine which teammates are paired together.
    “We teach our players to be all-round players indoors so the transition won’t be a massive challenge for them,” Crouch said.
    The University is in the midst of developing a beach volleyball facility, but the team will be practicing primarily in the Chiles Center for now. When the Oregon rain lets up, the Pilots will practice in the sand courts in front of Shipstad and Fields and Schoenfeldt Hall.
    Crouch said that he expects the facility to be in place no later than their second season.
    Sophomore Sarah Savoca and junior Brittney Markwith are excited for the introduction of the beach volleyball team, but say that because of lack of experience, it will be challenging.
    “A lot of us don’t have experience with playing beach volleyball,” Savoca said. “But I think that it will help us connect better as a team for the fall and it can only improve our skill level.”
    While Markwith has never played beach collegiately, coming from Hawaii, she grew up around the sport.
    “I watched a lot of people play for fun on the beach so I’m excited to learn more about the game and I know it will bring our team together,” Markwith said.
    The players will also have to adjust to playing in the sand, which is a challenge to mobility. For UP players, not having a sand court to train on could be a disadvantage.
    “Moving around on the sand is so much different than indoors,” Savoca said. “You can’t jump as high or run down a ball as quickly. Conditioning is harder on sand also.”
    Indoor volleyball is played six on six. Beach is played with two players on each side of the net so that the women have to be all-around players as opposed to focused on one task such as serving, hitting or setting.
    The recruiting process will not change for UP. The school will continue to recruit for the indoor program, but the girls will play for both the indoor and beach volleyball teams. UP will not recruit players specifically for beach volleyball.
    “It’s an amazing sport to play,” Crouch said. “The WCC is adding it as a sponsored sport, and of course, we wanted to be a part of that. It’s also a great compliment to what we do on the indoor side.”

    Growth Evident As 2016 Training Camp Begins Cal Beach Volleyball Team Raises Expectations

    Cal Athletics

    Growth Evident As 2016 Training Camp Begins

    Cal Beach Volleyball Team Raises Expectations
    By Jonathan Okanes on Wed, January 20, 2016
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    BERKELEY – The Cal beach volleyball team came into existence two years ago and featured a roster made up almost exclusively of indoor players that had never played on the sand.
    They laid the ground work for the evolution of the program. On the first day of practice for the 2016 season, the growth the Bears have made since was strikingly apparent.
    Eighteen student-athletes crowded into the Clark Kerr Sand Courts for a three-hour workout that focused mostly on fundamentals. The major difference between the beginning of training camp this year compared with 2014 is that most of the players already had a pretty good sense of the fundamentals.
    That’s because head coach Meagan Schmitt and director of volleyball Rich Feller have since been recruiting strictly beach-only athletes, and with each passing year those athletes arrive in Berkeley with more and more experience in the sand game.
    “Every year, we get more and more players that have been playing sand a long time,” said senior captain Sarah Cole, a transplant from the Bears’ indoor team. “These girls have been doing it longer than the girls who are here already. The freshmen this year have been doing it just as long as the seniors.”
    Of the 18 student-athletes on Cal’s 2016 roster, only three have indoor volleyball experience with the Bears. Cole played for the Bears for two years before deciding this season to only play on the sand. Junior Sabrina Blackwell has played indoor for three years while sophomoreSammy Furlan played inside for just one year after being recruited primarily as a beach volleyball player.
    In the past two years, Schmitt has brought in 12 student-athletes as beach-only prospects, and this year’s freshmen class features three players who have participated in the Team USA High Performance program – Grace Campbell of Manhattan Beach, Mia Merino of Tustin and Kaity Uythoven of Valencia.
    “This group of incoming freshmen have had the most youth beach volleyball experience in their development,” Schmitt said. “Rather than teaching them the beach game, as a coaching staff we can refine their beach game and elevate it. They already have such a great amount of knowledge coming into the program.”
    The addition of the freshmen, the continued development of last year’s class and the leadership provided by seniors Cole, Ashley Johnson and soccer-turned-beach volleyball athlete Kory Lamet has the Bears thinking big in the first season ever in which beach volleyball will be recognized as a championship sport by both the Pac-12 and NCAA. The first-ever Pac-12 championships will take place at the end of April at USC and the inaugural NCAA Championships will be held the following week in Gulf Shores, Alabama.
    “I’m phenomenally excited,” said Cole, who played on the Bears’ No. 1 pair all last season. “This year, we have so much talent that I think it’s going to be a wake-up call for everyone. The freshmen are so good that you are going to have to work hard to keep your spot that you may have been so comfortable in last year. Every single day you are going to have to fight for your spot. It’s going to be way more competitive.”
    The Bears open the season March 4-5 at the Arizona Invitational.  Their first home match is a tri-meet with Pacific and San Francisco on March 15.
    “It was great to be out here this morning,” Schmitt said. “The girls put in a lot of hard work this fall which led us to feeling like we established a culture that we want for the upcoming season. We want to have excellence expected in every moment in our program, whether it be in the weight room, on the courts or in the classroom. It’s become the norm for this program.”