July 13, 2024

USAV 14 Open: Gold Medal Rundown

With more out-of-state clubs participating this season during the first stop of the Tour of Texas in Dallas back in January, it led to a development no one could see coming. On the first day of play Dynasty 14 Black and Hou Skyline 14 Royal faced off in Power Pool 2. Dynasty came out ahead in three sets. Additionally, they crossed paths twice more at Triple Crown, with Hou Skyline winning both. Fast forward to Thursday, the final day of competition at USAV nationals in Las Vegas and the sides were the last two standing as they duked it out in the 14 Open championship match. Earlier in the tournament, national No. 3 Hou Skyline beat national No. 8 Dynasty in the final match of the first round of pool play. However, in the rematch in the final it was Dynasty returning the favor and sweeping, 25-22, 26-24, to earn the title of national champions. The victory completed ‘the double’ for Dynasty, which also finished with the 14 Open gold medal at AAUs last month. In contrast to 15 Open, the 14 Open gold bracket didn’t feature the same thrilling ride that saw five of the seven contests go the distance. Instead, just two of the gold bracket showdowns went to three sets, and none past the quarterfinals. However, one of the three-set results was massive as national No. 22 OT 14 Laura upset top-ranked Madfrog 14 Green, 25-22, 23-25, 15-8, in a stunner. With Madfrog out, all attention went to national No. 2 HPSTL 14 Royal. HPSTL managed to sweep national No. 13 Legacy 14-1 Adidas, 25-18, 25-23, in its quarterfinal. That set up a clash between Dynasty and HPSTL, which was 3-2 previously against Dynasty this year. However, Dynasty was victorious in the prior two outings before Thursday’s meeting, as Dynasty beat HPSTL at Show Me and then at the Midwest PreNational event in early June. Dynasty came through once more in the semis, sweeping 25-18, 25-21 and evening the season series at 3-3. The other semifinal featured Hou Skyline and OT Laura. OT defeated Hou Skyline at Sunshine back in March in their only prior meeting. This time, Hou Skyline was ready and swept, 25-20, 25-16. While Hou Skyline had no issues in sweeping national No. 6 TAV 14 Black, 25-13, 25-16, in its quarterfinal, Dynasty was in trouble early against national No. 28 SG Elite 14 Rosh. SG was the lowest-ranked team still in contention and put Dynasty on edge before the AAU champion rallied back and prevailed in three, 19-25, 25-18, 15-9, in its quarterfinal. While Madfrog and HPSTL proved themselves the best teams leading up to nationals, there is no denying no team was playing better at the end of the year than Dynasty. Though the depth of competition wasn’t the same, Dynasty went 12-0 in Orlando where it defeated A5 14-1 Helen in the final. Dynasty went 10-1 in Vegas. For added perspective, Dynasty lost four times at the Windy City qualifier in late March. Since then, Dynasty went 35-2 to close out the season. The only other team beside Hou Skyline to beat Dynasty in that stretch was Ozark 14-1 Elite, which finished tied for 19th in Vegas. It was difficult to see OT Laura’s upset of Madfrog coming. OT ended tied for fifth at AAUs after losing to Legacy in the quarterfinals. In Vegas, OT lost twice in the first round of pool to AVC Cle 14 Red and A5. Madfrog also beat OT at Triple Crown.

Read More »

USAV 15 Open: Gold Medal Rundown

With three of the top four teams from Vballrecruiter’s Top 50 national rankings represented in the 15 Open semifinals at USAV nationals on Thursday in Las Vegas it was truly a heavyweight clash to the finish line. Mixed in was the tournament’s biggest surprise in City 15 Gold, which entered the four-day event ranked No. 31 nationally. The remaining trio consisted of top-ranked Arizona Storm 15 Thunder, No. 2 TAV 15 Black and No. 4 Tstreet 15 Asics. Through last year and this season there is plenty of history between the three clubs. Storm defeated Tstreet twice a season ago, once in the Red Rock Rave finals and once more in the USAV 14 Open quarterfinals in preventing Tstreet from reaching the medal stand. TAV went 2-0 against Storm a season ago, beating Storm in the Triple Crown semifinals and then again to capture the USAV 14 Open gold medal. Tstreet, meanwhile, was one of two teams to defeat TAV last year, topping TAV in the finals of the Salt Lake Showdown. With the teams all returning the almost all their players, it set the stage for 2024. Storm and TAV met twice at Triple Crown, with Storm beating TAV in pool play before TAV downed Storm in the final. Storm then beat TAV in the finals at Sunshine. In April, TAV defeated Tstreet in the Lone Star final. Tstreet and Storm didn’t meet this season. That was until Thursday’s 15 Open final. Both teams reached the championship without losing a match. But not without plenty of drama. Tstreet found a way past national No. 9 Club V 15 Ren Kalee in three sets, 25-20, 18-25, 15-12, in the quarterfinals. Storm was pushed by national No. 10 Mizuno Long Beach 15 Rockstar to three sets before prevailing, 25-18, 18-25, 17-15, in its quarterfinal. Long Beach trailed 14-11 in the third but scored three straight to make it interesting. However, Long Beach never held match point as Storm was able to close it out. With TAV sweeping national No. 8 Hou Skyline 15 Royal in another quarterfinal, it set up a rematch between TAV and Tstreet from Lone Star. Storm, meanwhile, was paired with upstart City after City stunned national No. 6 Wave 15 Brennan in three sets, 19-25, 26-24, 15-13, in another quarterfinal. Wave led 10-6 in the final set before City fought back. The TAV-Tstreet meeting lived up to the hype. It was a back-and-forth slugfest with Tstreet edging TAV, 28-26, 22-25, 16-14. Tstreet was ahead 16-8 in the opening set before TAV roared back and extended the set into overscore. Then in the third set, TAV was up 14-12 and held two match points before Tstreet reeled off four straight to leave the 14 Open defending champions shocked. In the other semifinal, Storm had to fight back after dropping the opening set. There wasn’t nearly the same dramatics as Storm was able to rally and move on in three, 19-25, 25-16, 15-7. In the final, it was all Tstreet. After controlling the opening set, Tstreet took a commanding lead in the second and never looked back in sweeping, 25-20, 25-15. Tstreet concluded nationals by going 11-0. Outside of the quarterfinals and finals, the only other time Tstreet lost a set was to 1United 15 Blue in its second match of the tournament. Storm – which went 10-1 overall – finishes with the silver medal for a second season in a row. TAV went 9-1 in earning the bronze medal. City, meanwhile, was the only team in the top eight to finish with more than two losses. City went 6-4 in winning the bronze. Club V, Hou Skyline, Long Beach and Wave all ended tied for fifth at 7-2. In wrapping up, City deserves a ton of credit. City picked up a clutch victory over No. 5 OT 15 Randy in pool play to help City go 3-2 and take third place. That victory helped City avoid a three-way tie at 2-3 with OT Randy and KC Power 15 Black. Who knows how the tiebreaker would have shaken out? City then swept national No. 12 A5 15-1 Kelly in its three-team pool. Though City lost to Forza1 15 One in its next outing, City clinched first by winning one set. In challenge play, City upset national No. 15 Madfrog 15 Green to make the top eight. City was one of four SCVA clubs in the gold bracket, joining Wave, Long Beach and Tstreet. Overall, seven of the eight gold-bracket participants were from Vballrecruiter’s Top 10 in No. 1 Arizona Storm, No. 2 TAV, No. 4 Tstreet, No. 6 Wave, No. 8 Hou Skyline, No. 9 Club V and No. 10 Long Beach. City was the lone exception. Given that, it was hardly surprising to see everyone else in the gold bracket. Two more teams which did well for themselves were AZ Sky 15G and HPSTL 15 Royal. They tied for ninth. AZ Sky came in ranked No. 29. HPSTL was ranked No. 27. Legacy 15-1 Adidas, which captured the AAU 15 Open championship and was ranked No. 13 nationally, finished tied with KC Power for 11th. KC Power came in ranked No. 26. 1United was one of five at-large recipients and finished the highest of any of them at 13th after going 3-6.

Read More »

USAV 14 Open: Gold Medal Rundown

With more out-of-state clubs participating this season during the first stop of the Tour of Texas in Dallas back in January, it led to a development no one could see coming. On the first day of play Dynasty 14 Black and Hou Skyline 14 Royal faced off in Power Pool 2. Dynasty came out ahead in three sets. Additionally, they crossed paths twice more at Triple Crown, with Hou Skyline winning both. Fast forward to Thursday, the final day of competition at USAV nationals in Las Vegas and the sides were the last two standing as they duked it out in the 14 Open championship match. Earlier in the tournament, national No. 3 Hou Skyline beat national No. 8 Dynasty in the final match of the first round of pool play. However, in the rematch in the final it was Dynasty returning the favor and sweeping, 25-22, 26-24, to earn the title of national champions. The victory completed ‘the double’ for Dynasty, which also finished with the 14 Open gold medal at AAUs last month. In contrast to 15 Open, the 14 Open gold bracket didn’t feature the same thrilling ride that saw five of the seven contests go the distance. Instead, just two of the gold bracket showdowns went to three sets, and none past the quarterfinals. However, one of the three-set results was massive as national No. 22 OT 14 Laura upset top-ranked Madfrog 14 Green, 25-22, 23-25, 15-8, in a stunner. With Madfrog out, all attention went to national No. 2 HPSTL 14 Royal. HPSTL managed to sweep national No. 13 Legacy 14-1 Adidas, 25-18, 25-23, in its quarterfinal. That set up a clash between Dynasty and HPSTL, which was 3-2 previously against Dynasty this year. However, Dynasty was victorious in the prior two outings before Thursday’s meeting, as Dynasty beat HPSTL at Show Me and then at the Midwest PreNational event in early June. Dynasty came through once more in the semis, sweeping 25-18, 25-21 and evening the season series at 3-3. The other semifinal featured Hou Skyline and OT Laura. OT defeated Hou Skyline at Sunshine back in March in their only prior meeting. This time, Hou Skyline was ready and swept, 25-20, 25-16. While Hou Skyline had no issues in sweeping national No. 6 TAV 14 Black, 25-13, 25-16, in its quarterfinal, Dynasty was in trouble early against national No. 28 SG Elite 14 Rosh. SG was the lowest-ranked team still in contention and put Dynasty on edge before the AAU champion rallied back and prevailed in three, 19-25, 25-18, 15-9, in its quarterfinal. While Madfrog and HPSTL proved themselves the best teams leading up to nationals, there is no denying no team was playing better at the end of the year than Dynasty. Though the depth of competition wasn’t the same, Dynasty went 12-0 in Orlando where it defeated A5 14-1 Helen in the final. Dynasty went 10-1 in Vegas. For added perspective, Dynasty lost four times at the Windy City qualifier in late March. Since then, Dynasty went 35-2 to close out the season. The only other team beside Hou Skyline to beat Dynasty in that stretch was Ozark 14-1 Elite, which finished tied for 19th in Vegas. It was difficult to see OT Laura’s upset of Madfrog coming. OT ended tied for fifth at AAUs after losing to Legacy in the quarterfinals. In Vegas, OT lost twice in the first round of pool to AVC Cle 14 Red and A5. Madfrog also beat OT at Triple Crown.

Read More »

USAV 15 Open: Gold Medal Rundown

With three of the top four teams from Vballrecruiter’s Top 50 national rankings represented in the 15 Open semifinals at USAV nationals on Thursday in Las Vegas it was truly a heavyweight clash to the finish line. Mixed in was the tournament’s biggest surprise in City 15 Gold, which entered the four-day event ranked No. 31 nationally. The remaining trio consisted of top-ranked Arizona Storm 15 Thunder, No. 2 TAV 15 Black and No. 4 Tstreet 15 Asics. Through last year and this season there is plenty of history between the three clubs. Storm defeated Tstreet twice a season ago, once in the Red Rock Rave finals and once more in the USAV 14 Open quarterfinals in preventing Tstreet from reaching the medal stand. TAV went 2-0 against Storm a season ago, beating Storm in the Triple Crown semifinals and then again to capture the USAV 14 Open gold medal. Tstreet, meanwhile, was one of two teams to defeat TAV last year, topping TAV in the finals of the Salt Lake Showdown. With the teams all returning the almost all their players, it set the stage for 2024. Storm and TAV met twice at Triple Crown, with Storm beating TAV in pool play before TAV downed Storm in the final. Storm then beat TAV in the finals at Sunshine. In April, TAV defeated Tstreet in the Lone Star final. Tstreet and Storm didn’t meet this season. That was until Thursday’s 15 Open final. Both teams reached the championship without losing a match. But not without plenty of drama. Tstreet found a way past national No. 9 Club V 15 Ren Kalee in three sets, 25-20, 18-25, 15-12, in the quarterfinals. Storm was pushed by national No. 10 Mizuno Long Beach 15 Rockstar to three sets before prevailing, 25-18, 18-25, 17-15, in its quarterfinal. Long Beach trailed 14-11 in the third but scored three straight to make it interesting. However, Long Beach never held match point as Storm was able to close it out. With TAV sweeping national No. 8 Hou Skyline 15 Royal in another quarterfinal, it set up a rematch between TAV and Tstreet from Lone Star. Storm, meanwhile, was paired with upstart City after City stunned national No. 6 Wave 15 Brennan in three sets, 19-25, 26-24, 15-13, in another quarterfinal. Wave led 10-6 in the final set before City fought back. The TAV-Tstreet meeting lived up to the hype. It was a back-and-forth slugfest with Tstreet edging TAV, 28-26, 22-25, 16-14. Tstreet was ahead 16-8 in the opening set before TAV roared back and extended the set into overscore. Then in the third set, TAV was up 14-12 and held two match points before Tstreet reeled off four straight to leave the 14 Open defending champions shocked. In the other semifinal, Storm had to fight back after dropping the opening set. There wasn’t nearly the same dramatics as Storm was able to rally and move on in three, 19-25, 25-16, 15-7. In the final, it was all Tstreet. After controlling the opening set, Tstreet took a commanding lead in the second and never looked back in sweeping, 25-20, 25-15. Tstreet concluded nationals by going 11-0. Outside of the quarterfinals and finals, the only other time Tstreet lost a set was to 1United 15 Blue in its second match of the tournament. Storm – which went 10-1 overall – finishes with the silver medal for a second season in a row. TAV went 9-1 in earning the bronze medal. City, meanwhile, was the only team in the top eight to finish with more than two losses. City went 6-4 in winning the bronze. Club V, Hou Skyline, Long Beach and Wave all ended tied for fifth at 7-2. In wrapping up, City deserves a ton of credit. City picked up a clutch victory over No. 5 OT 15 Randy in pool play to help City go 3-2 and take third place. That victory helped City avoid a three-way tie at 2-3 with OT Randy and KC Power 15 Black. Who knows how the tiebreaker would have shaken out? City then swept national No. 12 A5 15-1 Kelly in its three-team pool. Though City lost to Forza1 15 One in its next outing, City clinched first by winning one set. In challenge play, City upset national No. 15 Madfrog 15 Green to make the top eight. City was one of four SCVA clubs in the gold bracket, joining Wave, Long Beach and Tstreet. Overall, seven of the eight gold-bracket participants were from Vballrecruiter’s Top 10 in No. 1 Arizona Storm, No. 2 TAV, No. 4 Tstreet, No. 6 Wave, No. 8 Hou Skyline, No. 9 Club V and No. 10 Long Beach. City was the lone exception. Given that, it was hardly surprising to see everyone else in the gold bracket. Two more teams which did well for themselves were AZ Sky 15G and HPSTL 15 Royal. They tied for ninth. AZ Sky came in ranked No. 29. HPSTL was ranked No. 27. Legacy 15-1 Adidas, which captured the AAU 15 Open championship and was ranked No. 13 nationally, finished tied with KC Power for 11th. KC Power came in ranked No. 26. 1United was one of five at-large recipients and finished the highest of any of them at 13th after going 3-6.

Read More »