‘Eaters close shop
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Chris Yemma
When asked to describe the entire season in one word, UC Irvine men’s
volleyball coach John Speraw chose his words carefully Saturday night
after a season-ending loss to visiting Long Beach State.
“Well, it’s disappointing,” he said after the Anteaters suffered a
30-26, 30-23, 29-31, 30-25 Mountain Pacific Sports Federation loss to
the 49ers (20-9, 14-8 in the MPSF) to finish the season 9-20. “I
think we got better in certain areas, but we had higher expectations
for ourselves.”
The Anteaters (7-15 in the MPSF) failed to qualify for the MPSF
tournament for the first time under Speraw’s direction, with the
three-year coach leading the team to a semifinal appearance his first
year in 2003 and a first-round showing last season.
UCI, possessing an abundance of youth with not one senior on the
team, finished 10th in the conference out of 12 teams.
“I think we’re optimistic about our future, but we wanted to
accomplish some things this year and we didn’t get it done,” Speraw
said. “When you don’t accomplish your goals, it’s frustrating.”
The Anteaters were patchy throughout the first half of the season,
winning and losing fairly equally, but a string of nine consecutive
losses from Feb. 19 to April 1 caused a major dent in the standings.
Sophomore Jayson Jablonsky led the offensive push throughout the
year, averaging about four kills per game with a career-high 25 in a
match against Northridge last Saturday. Jablonsky, along with
sophomore Matt Webber, led the ‘Eaters in their season finale against
Long Beach.
Jablonsky posted 20 kills, good for 20.5 points, while Webber
notched 21 kills accounting for 24 points.
“Statistically [Jablonsky] certainly led the team,” Speraw said.
“I think everybody led in different ways, and certainly his play was
something that was a bright spot for us for sure. He has great
potential for the future. Everybody does certain things for us and we
just have to get better at them.”
Perhaps another bright spot that was salvaged Saturday night was a
third-game rally to prevent a sweep by the visitors, currently fifth
in the conference and ranked fourth nationally.
After falling in a 2-0 deficit in games, UCI, ranked 12th
nationally, came out firing in Game 3 in the best-of-five series and
only trailed after the 49ers scored the first point. Jablonsky fired
home nine kills and Webber slammed three as the Anteaters won in
extra time, 31-29.
But the 49ers took the fourth game, 30-25, and ended UCI’s chance
of a feel-good season-ending match.
David Smith and Steffin Rangel chipped in four kills apiece for
UCI, while Long Beach had three players with double digits in the
kill category -- Robert Tarr (19), Yassir Sliti (16) and Duncan
Budinger (10). Tyler Hildebrand added three kills and two aces for
the visitors.
“I knew that this year was going to have its challenges as young
as we were,” Speraw said. “But I really felt that despite our youth
we could accomplish some things and certainly I felt we could make
the playoffs and make a run, but that didn’t happen this year. We’ll
just look to do it next year.”
Youth this year for UCI means experience next year and after,
though, as the Anteaters are losing just one player -- junior Dillon
Fitch who is graduating early.
Standouts Jablonsky, Webber, Smith, Rangel, Paul Spittle and Aaron
Harrell all return for Speraw’s fourth season.
“We’re returning everybody,” Speraw said. “Really, we return 90%
of the lineup the next two years, so I think we’re going to be in a
good position.”
UCI closed out this season with a win at UC San Diego Wednesday, a
loss against visiting Northridge last Saturday and back-to-back wins
April 2 and 7 against Pacific and UC Santa Barbara, respectively.
A highlight this year included a season sweep over fifth-ranked
Santa Barbara, with the first win against the Gauchos Jan. 7. In the
more recent match against the Gauchos, UCI lost the first game but
rallied to win the next three. Webber had career-high in kills
against UCSB.
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