Setting pretty
While the Newport-Mesa area has produced a tremendous amount of
collegiate volleyball players, the setting position seems to be the one
that has made the greatest impact in the college game.
From Marie Lunde (USC, Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo), Kari Rush (Stanford)
and Suzie Crone (UCLA) in the 1970s to Wendi Rush (Stanford), Lara Asper
(Stanford), Sienna Curci (Cal), Cindy Kendall (Princeton), Jennifer
Noonan (Golden West), Chickie Moiso (Stanford), Rhonda Schnitger (UCI)
and Prentice Perkins (Long Beach State) in the ‘80s to Kristen Campbell
(Duke), Kim Coleman (UCLA), Kelly Campbell (Colorado), Melissa Ford
(Princeton), Corre Myer (Brown), Jeannette Hecker (Loyola Marymount),
Jennifer Carey (Hawaii), and even Misty May (Long Beach State) in the
‘90s, this area has produced a plethora of talented collegiate setters.
This season has been a banner year for honors for the setting alumni.
Jennifer Carey is the starting setter for the nationally third-ranked
University of Hawaii Rainbow Wahines. With NCAA playoffs favoring the top
four seeds, Hawaii should have every match at home in the playoffs,
including the Final Four.
A very mature freshman, Carey has stepped in very comfortably at Hawaii.
Former Calvary Chapel High star Whitney Hoover, who lives in Corona del
Mar, was recently named the West Coast Conference Player of the Week as
she led St. Mary’s (Moraga) to wins over Portland and Gonzaga.
Hoover had double-digit assists and digs in both matches. While at
Calvary, Hoover went to the state championship twice, once as a setter
and as an outside hitter.
Corona del Mar’s Kelly Campbell is finishing her senior year at the
University of Colorado and on Nov. 8, she was named the Division I
National Player of the Week after Colorado defeated Kansas State and Iowa
State.
Campbell has started every game during her career at Colorado and her
assist-per-game average is a nationally-best 14.32. She has over 6,000
assists in her collegiate career, was an All-American last season and
will surely garner similar honors after this year.
In the Ivy League, CdM’s Corre Myer was named Ivy League Player of the
Week for Oct. 23. Last year’s Ivy League Rookie of the Year, Myer led
Brown to victories over Yale and Stoney Brook.
The season’s stats show Myer leading the league in assists per game with
Princeton’s Melissa Ford (another former CdM setter), a close second.
At the recent Ivy League Championships, Princeton won the title to get
the automatic NCAA tournament bid. Head coach Glenn Nelson (a former
Orange Coast College setter) has produced 10 Ivy League champs in the
20-year history of the Ivy League Championship.
Co-captains Erika Hansen and Ford, who are both seniors and both from
Corona del Mar, led the 1999 Tigers. What a way to finish your career.
Princeton’s Sabrina King, a Harbor Day School alum, was the Ivy League’s
Player of the Year. Other notable Ivy League contributions were made by
Newport Harbor’s Laura Wells, who was fifth in digs and Julia Topik
(mother, Martha, teaches English at Newport) finished high in hitting,
assists (another local setter) and service aces.
At Loyola Marymount, Jeannette Hecker has been a starter for all four
years. With a tremendous talent to play the overall game, she has started
as a setter, outside hitter and a back-row specialist. She is currently
setting for the Lions and is on track to graduate in communications in
May.
Our local setters are making their mark in many different areas in
college. Two years ago, the area produced Corre Myer at Brown, Meghan
Clarke, who led Barry University (Miami, Florida) to the Division II
National Tournament, Kate Dwyer, who was the backup setter at UCLA and
Melissa Plass, who nearly led Pepperdine to the Sweet 16 in the NCAA
Division I Tournament. Pepperdine is currently ranked No. 8 in this
week’s poll.
With Jessica Wright (Calvary Chapel) committing to Eastern Washington and
another local setter applying to a prominent Ivy League school, the
tradition continues.
Hard work, great intensity and successful high school/club experiences
are key reasons for such great success stories throughout the years.
With the CIF Finals on Saturday, it’s important to remember that Jennifer
Carey and Kelly Campbell played in two CIF Finals while Jeanette Hecker
was in three, while Corre Myer’s Corona del Mar team won the 1997 CIF
championship.
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