CdM gets angry, wins
The Corona del Mar High girls volleyball team was angry. It had
reason to be.
The defending CIF Southern Section Division III-A champion Sea
Kings had stumbled to a 1-8 record through the early part of this
season, and were in the fast lane to mediocrity.
Until Thursday.
“They were a little bit angry that they had lost all of these
matches in the preseason,” CdM Coach Bill Christiansen said.
The anger fueled the fire, and the host Sea Kings responded with a
25-23, 17-25, 25-23, 25-15 Pacific Coast League victory over rival
Laguna Beach, a victory that could trigger some momentum.
“Because we lost so many players [from 2004], it was crucial in
the league race that we win this one,” said Christiansen, last
season’s CIF Co-Coach of the Year. “Plus, it sets the tone and puts
everybody else in the league on notice that we can play a lot better
than we’ve played previously.”
Corona del Mar (2-8, 2-2 in league) lost nine seniors to
graduation last spring.
The 10 newcomers who comprise the squad this year combined with
the returning talent and gelled Thursday against Laguna (10-4, 2-1),
arguably for the first time all season.
Junior setter Kelly Christian and junior outside hitter Juliane
Piggott tied with a match-high 12 kills; junior middle blocker Kasey
Kipp tallied a match-leading 10 blocks; and junior outside hitter
Shannon Johnson posted a match-high 15 digs.
The Sea Kings overcame a second-game trouncing to win the third
and fourth games to seal the match.
Christian, a second-team All-CIF selection last year, upped the
tempo in the deciding Game 4 and slammed six kills to help CdM pull
away.
“I just really wanted it and I kind of got in my groove then,”
Christian said. “We’ve had our ups and downs and I think this really
turns things on. This turns everything around.”
Leading, 13-12, in the fourth game, the Sea Kings rattled off 10
straight points for a 23-12 lead. Minutes later, junior setter Brooke
Terry pounded the match-winning kill.
“We’ve kind of been in a slump and now winning this will probably
bring us closer together and help us mesh,” Kipp said.
“This is a huge turning point, so everyone now is so much more
fired up and ready to play. We were kind of just not playing as a
team before. We had really strong individuals, but we weren’t
meshing.”
The team came together Thursday, however, and sent the Breakers,
ranked fourth in CIF Division IV-AA, home shaking their heads.
CdM pulled out a narrow 25-23 first-game victory behind Christian,
Piggott and a game-clinching service ace from senior Marisa Scott to
gain the early advantage.
But Laguna fired back in Game 2, jumping out to leads at 10-4 and
24-13 before eventually winning, 25-17.
The Sea Kings responded, however, and prevailed in a close third
game and rode the momentum through Game 4.
“I feel like we did an adequate job against them,” Christiansen
said. “We weren’t playing to our potential before. We were struggling
in passing during the last 10 matches. [Thursday] we passed at an OK
level.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.