Mr. Anderson
Mike Sciacca
Matt Anderson remembers a time when he hoped that, one day, he would
play varsity volleyball at Laguna Beach High.
It was four years ago when Anderson, a freshman, played on the
junior varsity team.
“Ever since JV ball, I watched the varsity team and thought to
myself that I really wanted to play at that level,” said the
18-year-old, who will graduate in June. “I was well aware of Laguna’s
volleyball tradition and I wanted to be a part of it. I worked hard
and hoped for the best.”
Anderson’s role that JV year was that of passer. By his own
admission, he said he didn’t know how to spike nor was he a good
jumper.
One thing he could do, though, was pass well.
That same year, the Laguna volleyball program listed Anderson at
“5-feet-7 and 110-pounds,” he recalls.
“I was not big at all, but things changed over the next few
years,” he said.
That’s an understatement.
Anderson’s growth spurt began in the 10th grade and continued into
his junior year, all the while, he was blossoming into a player who
would make a name for himself and fit comfortably in Laguna’s storied
history.
He moved to outside hitter, his current 6-foot-5 frame a force at
that side of the court.
He showed that force in a recent CIF-Southern Section second round
playoff win over Villa Park. He came up with a late set of kills that
helped bring Laguna back from the brink of defeat in game No. 4 of
the match, to a 17-15 victory that clinched the match and sent the
Breakers on to the quarterfinal round.
“Matt was outstanding -- as were all of our players -- down the
stretch,” Laguna coach Curt Hanson said following the Villa Park win.
“His presence really fired up the team and everyone stepped up.”
Anderson can do that: he possesses a will-to-win attitude that
seems contagious on the court.
“We were all fired up,” Laguna setter Nick Aronoff said in regards
to the fourth game of the Villa Park match. “Matt had a couple of
kills, I got one and so did a couple of other guys. It just went from
there. I knew at that point we’d win. We just caught fire.”
Needless to say, Anderson -- as were the rest of his teammates --
was disappointed when top-ranked Valencia ended Laguna’s desire to
add a sixth CIF boys’ volleyball trophy to its case.
The Vikings eliminated the Breakers from Division II contention
following a three-game sweep in quarterfinal round play last Friday.
There was a silver lining in the loss, though.
“The Valencia coach [Dody Garcia] came up to me and my mom after
the match and told us that Laguna was the best team his team had
faced this year,” Anderson said. “Even though we had just lost, that
was a great thing to hear. We did have a pretty good season.”
There was no rest for Anderson, a two-time all-Pacific Coast
League player who led the team in kills with 429 and aces with 45,
and finished among the top three on the team in blocks and digs.
Two days following that loss to Valencia, he was back on the
playing court, practicing with the Balboa Bay Club 18s team.
The team consists of players from such Orange County volleyball
powerhouse schools as Corona del Mar, Newport Harbor and Woodridge.
The 18s team will play in its first tournament on June 20th -- the
day after Anderson will graduate with his fellow senior classmates
and celebrate Grad Night.
“I’m really looking forward to the club season,” he said. “I’m
playing on a club team that has five players over 6-foot-8 and has
some of the best setters in the state. Some of these guys are going
on to play at UC Irvine, Pepperdine and Princeton.”
Anderson is heading somewhere, too: following a turn at the Junior
Olympics in Tucson, Arizona in July, he’ll be enrolled at USC.
He earned a scholarship to play for the Trojans.
“I’m thrilled for the opportunity and can’t wait to go there,”
said Anderson, who said he narrowed his choices between USC and New
York University. “I think playing club ball will help prepare me for
the next level.”
When Anderson looks back on his career, he says that reflection
will take him all the way back to his freshman year.
“It’s great to see where I started and how it all ended up,” he
said. “I was this small kid who couldn’t spike and couldn’t jump. I
just really wanted to play. Now I have the chance to keep on
playing.”
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