Kiley Hall
Patrick Laverty
To say Kiley Hall was born to play volleyball would be an
understatement.
The junior at Newport Harbor High was on the court while she was
still in her mother’s womb.
Hall’s father played at UCLA. Her mother played professionally in
Italy and on the beach, was on the 1980 Olympic team, but missed out
on the experience because of the boycott of the games by the United
States, and played at the beginning of her pregnancy with Kiley.
Hall’s background is evident in her own play on the court.
A two-year member of the Sailors varsity team, she has been a key
player in Newport Harbor’s jaunts into the state playoffs each of the
past two seasons. In this year’s CIF final against Mira Costa, she
recorded a team-high 13 kills. She added five versus Scripps Ranch in
the first round of the state playoffs and 10 against Mater Dei in a
season-ending loss in the second round, enough to earn Daily Pilot
Athlete of the Week honors.
While also a member of the soccer and track teams at Harbor,
volleyball is Hall’s favorite sport and the one she is most likely to
play down the road in college. Harbor has been known to put more than
a few volleyball players into the collegiate ranks, including Alyson
Jennings and Lauren Miller from the current squad, and Hall could
soon follow.
It’s one of the reasons she chose to attend Newport Harbor,
despite living in the Estancia area.
“It was about athletics and academics,” Hall said. “This school’s
got a lot going for it.”
Brought up around volleyball -- her mother returned to the beach
shortly after giving birth and Hall toured the country with her.
“I hated it,” Hall said. “I was the kid on the sidelines that
would get hit by the ball and scream.”
Hall really got into the sport when she was 11. For her, it became
a year-round activity that now includes playing on the Orange County
Volleyball Club.
An outside hitter on the club ranks, who often finds herself in
the middle with the Sailors, Hall said her strengths on the court
include serving and passing, but the kill statistics might indicate
otherwise.
“I love to hit,” Hall said. “Playing front row, the most
fulfilling feeling is spiking the ball down.”
But she’s also acutely aware that spiking the ball wouldn’t be
possible without her teammates and she says her teammates are one of
the primary reasons for her passion for volleyball.
Soccer is a way to blow off steam and track is not one of her
favorite sports, Hall said, but volleyball provides that feeling of
mutual accomplishment that brings a group of players together.
Unfortunately for Hall, the majority of the group that she has
played with the last two years is graduating from Harbor this year.
Hall was the only underclassman in the starting lineup this season
and one of just five nonseniors on the roster.
Her first volleyball team included Jennings and Alexis Kearns and
now those players are leaving, putting the team in Hall’s hands. Hall
said she will miss their leadership, as well as their friendships.
“Even as of right now, I don’t know that I’m ready to take the
roles that they did,” Hall said. “They’re all role models to me even
though they’re just a year older.”
Hall will be a year older next year, when she is asked to assume
those leadership roles. As long as she’s on the volleyball court, it
should come rather naturally for her.
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