After a two-year absence, the AVP professionals returns to Hermosa July 8-10. Starting July 5-10 the AVP will concurrently host its Junior Nationals at the courts surrounding the Hermosa Pier. Tuesday was the start of the 16s age group. The field cut from 119 teams to 64 teams for the top half. There was action everywhere on this beautiful day and here are the Show Stoppers who caught our attention.
Sarah Wood/Gella Andrew – Both Wood and Andrew are over 6-0 tall with skills to match. Their net presence changed the way other teams attacked, getting tons of blocks and errors from their opponents. With their good ball control they breezed through Day 1.
Myriah Massey/Lennox Langham – Massey – just off her USAV U19 championship – continued her dominance. She’s extremely athletic at the net and paired with Langham, who is one of the quickest defenders, makes them one of the favorites in Hermosa.
Taylor Ponchak/Danielle Sparks – Sparks’ ball control is truly amazing. She turns medium to hard defensive digs into legitimate easy scoring conversions. Paired with Ponchak’s net play makes this team well balanced.
Kathleen Morley/Erin Inskeep – Inskeep has such great imagination. Whether it was digging one handed to hitting a wide set with her off hand, her skill set gave her team more chances than most.
Savanna Lau/Charlotta Bell – Bell’s size and presence at the net dominated their matches. They seemingly won every point against a tight set by the opposing team. With Lau covering the back with her speed and relentless effort this duo has a chance to make some noise.
Calliandra Otjen/Reese Thai-Sandoval – This group would catch anyone within earshot’s attention. While they are both defenders in size they played with energy and emotion unmatched by any other team there. It was definitely fun to watch them as they pulled of an upset to finish second in the pool.
Audrey Jackson/Kennedy Coakley – Coakley plays the net well. From her ability to either read or drop combined with Jackson’s stellar defense is what makes scoring on this team a tough task. They frustrated a lot of teams on offense as they tried but couldn’t find a consistent way to score against them.
Carly Hixson/Adelina Okazaki – This group can defend. Both are really fast covering. Hixson has a powerful swing and Okazaki converting from defense to offense with her cut shots makes them well balanced.
Elise Lenahan/Keira Tanioka – One word to describe this team is “solid.” They do everything so effortless and clean. So many rallies were controlled by their reads and ball control leading to many easy conversion points.
Hannah Taylor/Ally Fuchs – Taylor and Fuchs were impressive all day. This duo’s ability to put tough serves in the same area continuously put so much pressure on their opponents. Combined with sound ball control and good arm swings let the dominate pool play.
Nya Coury/Ryan Lambert – Lambert bringing the heat and Coury’s defense was the formula they used to take first in their pool. This team is tough. After losing a set they showed their resiliency battling in a seesaw third set and winning a drama-filled match.
Giselle Lau/Sadie Snipes – This duo does all the small things well. Their ball control was excellent and both had good serving runs picking open areas. They were also not afraid to hustle and dive on defense and their ability to convert points after digging led to exciting points.
Madeline Walker/Adeline Walker – Both of these girls showed such confidence in their ability to read and cover the court. Time and time again their ability to hustle and scrap their way to winning rallies was amazing.