Boys volleyball: Tars outlasted
Richard Dunn
SIMI VALLEY - In a highly charged, emotion-filled match, Newport
Harbor High’s boys volleyball team met its equal and then some Friday
night against host Royal in the CIF Southern Section Division II
quarterfinals.
“This was as good a high school volleyball match -- in fact, this was
as good high school athletics as you’re ever going to see,” Royal Coach
Travis Ferguson said after the fourth-seeded Highlanders’ victory in five
games, 15-13, 10-15, 15-13, 10-15, 15-12.
The two-hour 15-minute match included a key 62-minute third game,
which gave Royal (22-3) a 2-1 lead.
But Newport Harbor (26-7) rallied to win the fourth game, after Royal
came back from an 11-4 deficit to pull within 11-9.
“It was a very tough match and it could have gone either way,” said
Newport harbor Coach Dan Glenn, whose team was supported by a large
Newport crowd. “The kids played nice. It came down to who would make
plays at the end. It was a fun match to watch, but I’m disappointed for
my seniors.”
Newport Harbor, which lost to Royal earlier this year in two games in
a best-of-three San Diego Tournament of Champions, let a 13-9 lead slip
away as the Highlanders scored six unanswered points.
After five ties in the second game, Newport Harbor pulled ahead, 11-7,
but Royal came back again to pull within one. Newport senior Greg
Perrine, who finished with a team-high 26 kills, ended the second game
with a kill down the middle.
Senior Brian Gaeta had 18 kills for Newport Harbor, while 6-foot-8
sophomore Jamie Diefenbach added 15 kills.
Royal was led by 6-4 senior middle blocker Kyle Vondrak, who finished
with 44 kills, including 19 in the mammoth game three, while teammate
Kevin Baxter, a 6-2 senior outside hitter, had 33 kills and 17 digs.
Royal’s Shawn Farrell had 14 kills, while teammate Darren Miller had 20
digs.
After Royal’s grueling third-game victory, which featured 96 sideouts
along with 28 points, the Sailors were able to fight back and tie the
match at 2.
“After that third game, because it was so emotional, that fourth game
was bound to happen,” Ferguson said. “(The Sailors) came into the fourth
game hungry, but we came into the fourth game happy that we won the third
game. When we started this program 15 years ago, Newport Harbor was the
model program we fashioned ourselves after.”
In the fifth game, Newport Harbor jumped out to a 3-0 lead and
maintained its edge until Royal tied it, 8-8. It was tied five other
times thereafter. Royal took a 13-12 lead on a Newport hitting error,
then Vondrak recorded one of his three solo blocks for a 14-12 lead,
before putting away the Sailors with a match-ending kill.
“We knew that we could not outfight this team,” Glenn said, “so we had
to outplay them. It was just a great high school volleyball match.”
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