A mother’s touch
Mike Sciacca
Linda Hanley is used to following a schedule.
There it was, for all to see on this overcast Saturday morning, a
large tote board, which told those in attendance at the Assn. of
Volleyball Professionals’ Huntington Beach Open, which teams were playing
each other at the south side of the Huntington Beach Pier.
Of all things, Hanley and her teammate, Lisa Arce, were scheduled to
play the sister tandem of Katie and Tracy Lindquist, who grew up and
played in Huntington Beach.
“We were ready to go against the hometown favorites,” Hanley said
after she and Arce defeated the Lindquists, 21-16, 21-11. “They impressed
me.”
Hanley’s schedule was indeed full that day, as she and Arce went on to
play two more matches, gaining a split.
She and Arce finished the three-day women’s tournament tied for third
place, and the two will split $5,825.
That money will come in handy for Hanley during her regular, weekly
schedule, which consists of playing the role of wife and mother of two.
“It certainly adds to the household income,” she said. “It’s great to
get paid for something you love to do.”
Hanley is 1978 graduate of Laguna Beach High School, where she was a
talented athlete who, as a freshman, was the No. 1 girls’ tennis player.
She gave up the sport the following year, to concentrate on volleyball.
“I had to convince my parents that this is what I wanted to do,” she
said. “They thought I was crazy but it turned out for the best.”
Hanley, who went on to star at UCLA, has been playing on the
professional volleyball tour for more than 20 years.
Her two sons, Matthew and Turner, are 11 and 9, respectively.
“Without a doubt, being a wife and mother has been the best thing that
has happened to me,” she said. “My support system is incredible.”
She has been married to John Hanley for 12 years. He knows the ins and
outs of the game. He also enjoyed a career on the professional tour
before going on to study architecture.
Linda Hanley says she is able to juggle the daily aspects of
motherhood with a practice schedule that consists of three or four days
per week on the sand, because of her husband.
“John’s very much a hands-on father. He really relishes being with the
kids,” she said.
The AVP tour makes stops throughout the country, but Hanley says her
boys don’t make the road trips. Her husband, however, does on occasion.
“When we do it’s like a mini-honeymoon,” she said with a smile.
Hanley won her first pro tournament in 1979. She left the game in the
late 1980s and worked as a sales rep for Quicksilver for nearly 10 years.
“It was a great job,” she said.
But she was ready for a comeback.
“I think the main reason I was able to make that comeback to the sport
was that I o7 didf7 take a break,” she explained. “So many players
tend to get burned out playing for so long.”
Hanley was with the Women’s Professional Volleyball Assn. in 1993 when
the AVP wanted to expand. She was one of eight or so women, she said, to
go with a tour that would provide more money and exposure.
The split between the WPVA and AVP, she said, split the sport.
“Linda is one of the greatest women beach volleyball players in
history and an incredible role model to the younger players on the AVP
tour,” said Leonard Armato, co-founder of the AVP.
When Saturday’s matches were complete, festivities continued down at
the Huntington Beach Pier. But Linda Hanley, who took time to enjoy
visits with other athletes, had a schedule to adhere to: this soccer mom
was heading home.
“Being a mother has made me realize just how important it is to teach
my boys the simple qualities of being honest and compassionate,” she
added.
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