Men's volleyball team heads to Final Four
This has been a season of firsts for Long Beach State men鈥檚 volleyball team, starting with the national ranking.
Long Beach moved in the No. 1 spot in the AVCA rankings in March after winning 12 consecutive matches in March. They went 10-0 at the Pyramid during that streak, and finished undefeated in 16 overall home matches.
It is also the first time the team finished the season as the top-ranked team since 1992.
The Beach then claimed its first Mountain Pacific Sports Federation regular season title since 2001 and added the program鈥檚 first-ever conference championship in any sport with a 3-1 victory against Hawaii on Saturday. The , where Long Beach (27-3) is seeded No. 2.
Long Beach will play the winner of the play-in game between BYU and Barton College at 4 p.m. (PDT) May 4, while top-seeded Ohio State (27-2) will face the Hawaii-Penn State winner later at 6 p.m. (PDT) at St. John鈥檚 Arena in Columbus, Ohio.
While it will be Long Beach State鈥檚 second consecutive trip to the Final Four (last season they won a play-in game to qualify), the team will be aiming for its first national championship since 1991 when Long Beach defeated USC in the final.
Individually, setter Josh Tuaniga is first in the nation with 11.13 assists per set, and a .371 attack percentage.
Yet for all the 鈥渇irsts鈥 the team set this season, Coach Alan Knipe said its about second chances for this group of players.
鈥淔or us, last year it was a huge climb to get our team into position of getting into the tournament,鈥 Knipe said. 鈥淲e had to play the play-in game. We had to wait for the selection committee to give us the at-large bid. So, there were a lot of firsts.
鈥淚t鈥檚 good you have to go through them. Each group has to go through the firsts. The difference of this team is that we came in at the start of the season with a better idea of what we were working towards. It鈥檚 seconds now. The second time to go through the season. The second time to play in the MPSF tournament.
鈥淭hese are all the goals we checked off during the season.鈥
Many players reached goals as well. Sophomores TJ DeFalco and Kyle Ensing has helped Long Beach reach its lofty status by averaging 3.99 and 3.35 kills per set, respectively. Defensively, senior libero Andrew Sato controls the backrow with 2.46 digs per set, while Bryce Yould and Amir Lugo-Rodriguez have .094 and 1.30 blocks, respectively.
Next week鈥檚 trip, however, will not be Long Beach鈥檚 first appearance at the Final Four. It is the fourth time the team has gone under Knipe and ninth time overall. But it is the first time the team has gone in back-to-back seasons since 1990 and 鈥91.
Related